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HOME > Classical Novels > The Girl from Alsace > Chapter XX. Discipline
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Chapter XX. Discipline
 He made the preparation for supper with such easy speed that everything seemed to be done by magic hands. When Joan's mother cooked supper there was always much of the stove, then the building of the fire, a long preparation of food, and another when things steamed and sizzled on the fire. There followed the setting of the table, and then a long, aching time of hunger when the food was in sight, but one could not eat until Daddy Dan had done this, and Munner had done that. Also, when one did eat, half the taste was taken from things by the necessity of various complicated evolutions of knife and fork. Instance the of taking the fork under the thumb with the pressing along the back of the wobbly instrument, when any one could see that the proper, natural way of using a fork was to grasp it daggerwise and drive it firmly through that piece of meat. Not only this, but a cup must be held in one hand, and bread must be broken into little pieces before putting butter on it. Above all, no matter how terribly hard one tried, there was sure to be a mistake, and then: “Now, Joan, don't do that. This is the way—”  
But how different everything was in this house of Daddy Dan!
 
In an incredibly short time three torches about them and filled the air with of freshness and the outdoors-scents that went up the nose and filled one with immense possibilities of eating. At the very same time, a few motions caused a heap of wood to catch fire and blaze among the stones while a steady stream of blue-white smoke wavered up toward the top of the cave and disappeared in the shadows. After this her father showed her a little stream of water which must come from a spring far back in the cave, and the current slipped noiselessly along one wall, and dipped of sight again before it reached the entrance to the place. Here she discovered a little bowl, made out of small stones nicely fitted together, and allowing the water to pour over one edge and out at another with a delicious purling—such crystal clear water that one actually wanted to wash in it even if it was cold, and even if one had the many sore places on fingers and nose and behind the ears.
 
! no sooner did one turn from the washing of hands and face than the table was spread upon the surface of a flat rock, with other stones nearby to serve as chairs; and on the table steamed “,” warmed over; coffee with milk in it—coffee, which was so banned at home!—potatoes sliced to thinness and fried to crisp brown at the edges, and a great of meat that fairly shouted to the appetite.
 
So far so good, but the was a thousand fold better than . No cutting of one's own meat at this board! The shining knife of Daddy Dan divided it into bits with the speed of light, and it needed only the slightest amount of experimenting and cautious glances to discover that one could use a fork daggerwise, and when in doubt even seize upon a with one's fingers and wipe the fingers afterwards on a bit of the dry grass. One could grasp the cup by both sides, scorning the silly handle, and if occasionally one the coffee with a little noise—which added astonishingly to the taste—there was no sharp warning, no frowning eye to overlook. Besides, at Munner's table, there was never time to pay attention to Joan, for there was talk about vague, abstract things—the price of skins, the melting of the snows, the condition of the passes, the long and troubling argument about the wicker chairs, with some foolish asides, now and then, concerning happiness and love—when all the time any one with half an eye could see that the thing to do was to eat and eat and eat until that hollow place ceased to be. Talking came afterwards.
 
In the house of Daddy Dan all these things were ordered as they should be. Not a word was said; not a glance of criticism rested upon her; when her tin plate was cleared she heard no for eating too greedily, but she was furnished anew from the store of good things on the rock.
 
In place of conversation, there were other matters to occupy the mind during the meal. For presently she observed the beautiful head of Satan just behind his master—Satan, who could pass over noisy with the softness of a cat, and now out of the deeper night down the . Inch by inch, with infinite caution and keenly ears, the head lowered beside Dan, and the quivering, delicate stole towards a fragment of the “pone.” Joan watched breathlessly and then she saw that in spite of the caution of that movement her father knew all about it—just a glint of amusement in the corner of his eyes, just a slight at the corners of his mouth to tell Joan that he was as delighted as a boy playing a trick. Barely in time to save the morsel of pone, he and the head was dashed up. Yet Satan was not discouraged. If he could not steal the bread he would beg for it. It made Joan pause in her destruction of the , not to watch openly, for an instinct told her that the thing to do was to note these by-plays from the corner of one's eye, as Daddy Dan did, and swallow the of mirth that came in the throat. She knew well that Satan would have it in the end, for of all living things not even Munner had such power over Dan as the black stallion. He . First he circled the table and stood opposite the master, begging with his eyes, but Dan looked down at the rock until an impatient whinny called up his eyes. Then he pretended the most absolute surprise.
 
“Why, Satan, you old scoundrel, what are you doin' over there? Get back where you belong?”
 
He gestured with a thumb over his shoulder and Satan around the rock and stood once more behind Dan.
 
“Manners?” continued Dan. “You ain't got 'em. You'll be tryin' to sit down at the table with me, pretty soon.” He concluded: “But I'll teach you one of these days, and yo............
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