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The Village Feudists
 In a certain Connecticut fishing-town sometime since, where, besides lobstering, a shipyard and some sail-boat-building there existed the several shops and stores which to the wants of those who in those lines, there dwelt a groceryman by the name of Elihu Burridge, whose life and methods strongly point the moral and social successes and failures of the rural man.  
Sixty years of age, with the vanities and desires of the average man's life behind rather than before him, he was at the time not unlike the conventional drawings of Parson Thirdly, which graced the humorous papers of that day. Two moon-shaped eyes, a long upper lip, a mouth like the moon turned downward, prominent ears, a rather long face and a mutton-chop-shaped whisker on either cheek, served to give him that clerical appearance which the humorous artists so religiously seek to . Add to this that he was middle-sized, clerically spare in form, reserved and quiet in , and one can see how he might very readily give the impression of being a minister. His clothes, however, were old, his trousers torn but mended, his little blue gingham jumper which he wore about the store and . Everything about him and his store was so still and dark that one might have been inclined on first sight to consider him crusty and .
 
Even more than himself, however, was his store. I have seen many in my time that were striking because of their neatness; I never saw one before that struck me as more remarkable for its . In the first place it was filled neck-deep with barrels and boxes in the utmost confusion. Dark, greasy, provision-lined led off into sections which the eye could not . Old signs hung about, things which had long since ceased to sell and were forgotten by the public. There were pictures in once but now time-blackened frames, wherein queerly children and pompous-looking grocers offered one commodity and another, all now almost by fly-specks. Shelves were marked on the walls by signs now nearly . Cobwebs hung thickly from corners and pillars. There were oil, lard, and a dust-laden scum of some sort on three of the numerous scales with which he occasionally weighed things and on many of once articles. Pork, lard, molasses, and nails were packed in different corners of the place in barrels. Lying about were household , ship-rigging, furniture and a hundred other things which had nothing to do with the grocery business.
 
As I entered the store the first afternoon I noticed a Bible open at Judges and a number of slips of paper on which questions had been written. On my second visit for oil and vinegar, two strangers from off a yacht which had entered the little harbor nudged one another and demanded to know whether either had ever seen anything like it. On the third, my companion protested that it was not clean, and seeing that there were other stores we to buy our things elsewhere. This was not so easily .
 
"Where can I get a flatiron?" I inquired at the Postoffice when I first entered the village.
 
"Most likely at Burridge's," was the reply.
 
"Do you know where I can get a pair of row-locks?" I asked of a boy who was lounging about the town dock.
 
"At Burridge's," he replied.
 
When we wanted , of a certain variety, golden , and a dozen other things which were essential at times, we were compelled to go to Burridge's, so that at last he obtained a very fair portion of our trade despite the condition of his store.
 
During all these earlier dealings there cropped up something and dry in his conversation. One day we lost a fruit jar which he had loaned, and I took one very much like it back in its place. When I began to apologize he interrupted me with, "A jar's a jar, isn't it?"
 
Another time, when I remarked in a conciliatory tone that he owed me eight cents for a can of potted ham which had proved stale, he exclaimed, "Well, I won't owe you long," and forthwith pulled the money out of the loose jacket of his jumper and paid me.
 
I inquired one day if a certain thing were good. "If it isn't," he replied, with a of the , "your money is. You can have that back."
 
"That's the way you do business, is it?"
 
"Yes, sir," he replied, and his long upper lip thinned out along the line of the lower one like a vise.
 
I was in search of a rocking-chair one day and was directed to Burridge's as the only place likely to have any!
 
"Do you keep furniture?" I inquired.
 
"Some," he said.
 
"Have you a rocking-chair?"
 
"No, sir."
 
A day or two later I was in search of a table and on going to Burridge's found that he had gone to a neighboring city.
 
"Have you got a table?" I inquired of the clerk.
 
"I don't know," he replied. "There's some furniture in the back room, but I don't know as I dare to sell any of it while he's away."
 
"Why?"
 
"Well, he don't like me to sell any of it. He's kind of queer that way. I dunno what he intends to do with it. Gar!" he added in a strangely electric way, "he's a queer man! He's got a lot of things back there—chairs and tables and everything. He's got a lot more in a up the street here. He never seems to want to sell any of 'em. Heard him tell people he didn't have any."
 
I shook my head in puzzled desperation.
 
"Come on, let's go back and look anyway. There's no harm in seeing if he has one."
 
We went back and there amid pork and molasses barrels, old papers, boxes and signs, was furniture in considerable quantity—tables, rocking-chairs, washstands, bureaus—all cornered and tumbled about.
 
"Why, here are rocking-chairs, lots of them," I exclaimed. "Just the kind I want! He said he didn't have any."
 
"Gar! I dunno," replied the clerk. "Here's a table, but I wouldn't dare sell it to you."
 
"Why should he say he didn't have a rocking-chair?"
 
"Gar! I dunno. He's goin' out of the furniture business. He don't want to sell any. I don't know what he intends to do with it."
 
"Well," I said in despair, "what about the table? You can sell that, can't you?"
 
"I couldn't—not till he comes back. I don't know what he'd want to do about it."
 
"What's the price of it?"
 
"I dunno. He could tell you."
 
I went out of the thick-aired backroom with its unwashed windows, and when I got opposite the Bible near the door I said:
 
"What's the matter with him anyhow? Why doesn't he straighten things out here?"
 
Again the clerk awoke. "Huh!" he exclaimed. "Straighten it out! Gar! I'd like to see anybody try it."
 
"It could be," I said encouragingly.
 
"Gar!" he . "One man did try to straighten it out once when Mr. Burridge was away. Got about a third of it cleaned up when he come back. Gar! You oughta seen him! Gar!"
 
"What did he do?"
 
"What did he do! What didn't he do! Gar! Just took things an' threw them about again. Said he couldn't find anything."
 
"You don't say!"
 
"Gar! I should say so! Man come in an' asked for a hammer. Said he couldn't find any hammer, things was so mixed up. Did it with screws, water-buckets an' everything just the same. Took 'em right off the shelves, where they was all in groups, an' 'em all over the room. Gar! 'Now I guess I can find something when I want it,' he said." The clerk paused to and add, "There ain't anybody tried any straightenin' out around here since then, you bet. Gar!"
 
"How long ago has that been?"
 
"About fourteen years now."
 
Surprised by this sharp variation from the ordinary standards of trade, I began thinking of possible conditions which had produced it, when one evening I happened in on the local barber. He was a lean, individual with a shock of sandy hair and a desire to appear a well-rounded social factor.
 
"What sort of person is this Burridge over here? He keeps such a peculiar store."
 
"Elihu is a bit peculiar," he replied, his smile betraying a desire to appear conservative. "The fault with Elihu, if he has one, is that he's terribly strong on religion. Can't seem to agree with anybody around here."
 
"What's the trouble?" I asked.
 
"It's more'n I could ever make out, what is the matter with him. They're all a little bit cracked on the subject around here. Nothing but and meetin's, year in and year out. They're stronger on it winters than they are in summer."
 
"How do you mean?"
 
"Well, they'll be more against yachtin' and Sunday pleasures when they can't go than when they can."
 
"What about Elihu?" I asked.
 
"Well, he can't seem to get along, somehow. He used to belong to the Baptist Church, but he got out o' that. Then he went to a church up in Graylock, but he had a fallin' out up there. Then he went to Northfield and Eustis. He's been all around, even over on Long Island. He goes to church up at Amherst now, I believe."
 
"What seems to be the trouble?"
 
"Oh, he's just strong-headed, I guess." He paused, and ideas lagged until finally I observed:
 
"It's a very interesting store he keeps."
 
"It's just as Billy Drumgold told him once: 'Burridge,' he says, 'you've got everything in this store that belongs to a full-rigged ship 'cept one thing.' 'What's that?' Burridge asks. 'A pulpit.' 'Got that too,' he answered, and takes him upstairs, and there he had one sure enough."
 
"Well," I said, "what was he doing with it?"
 
"Danged if I know. He had it all right. Has it yet, so they say."
 
Days passed and as the summer the evidences of a peculiar life accumulated. Noank, , was at outs with Burridge on the subject of religion, and he with it. There were instances of genuine hard feeling against him.
 
Writing a letter in the Postoffice one day I ventured to take up this matter with the postmaster.
 
"You know Mr. Burridge, don't you—the grocer?"
 
"Well, I should guess I did," he replied with a .
 
"Anything wrong with him?"
 
"Oh, about everything that's just plain cussed—the most man alive. I never saw such a man. He don't get his mail here no more because he's mad at me, I guess. Took it away because I had Mr. Palmer's help in my fight, I suppose. Wrote me that I should send all his mail up to Mystic, and he goes there three or four miles out of his way every day, just to spite me. It's against the law. I hadn't ought to be doing it, re-addressing his envelopes three or four times a day, but I do do it. He's a strong-headed man, that's the trouble with Elihu."
 
I had no time to follow this up then, but a little later, sitting in the shop of the principal sailboat , which was in the quiet little lane which follows the line of the village, I was one day surprised by the sudden warm feeling which the name of Elihu generated. Something had brought up the subject of religion, and I said that Burridge seemed rather religious.
 
"Yes," said the sailboat maker quickly, "he's religious, all right, only he reads the Bible for others, not for himself."
 
"What do you mean by that?"
 
"Why, he wants to run things, that's what. As long as you agree with Elihu, why, everything's all right. When you don't, the Bible's against you. That's the way he is."
 
"Did he ever disagree with you?" I asked, suspecting some personal in the matter.
 
"Me and Elihu was always good friends as long as I agreed with him," he went on bitterly. "We've been raised together, man and boy, for pretty near sixty years. We never had a word of any kind but what was friendly, as long as I agreed with him, but just as soon as I didn't he took a set against me, and we ain't never a word since."
 
"What was the trouble?" I inquired sweetly, anxious to come at the of this queer situation.
 
"Well," he said, dropping his work and looking up to impress me, "I'm a man that'll sometimes say what I don't believe; that is, I'll agree with what I hadn't ought to, just to be friendly like. I did that way a lot o' times with Elihu till one day he came to me with something about particular . I'm a little more liberal myself. I believe in universal redemption by faith alone. Well, Elihu came to me and began telling me what he believed. Finally he asked me something about particular salvation and wanted to know whether I didn't agree with him. I didn't, and told him so. From that day on he took a set against me, and he ain't never spoke a word to me since."
 
I was that there was anything besides a religious disagreement in this local situation until one day I happened to come into a second friendly contact with the postmaster. We were speaking of the characteristics of certain individuals, and I mentioned Burridge.
 
"He's all right when you take him the way he wants to be taken. When you don't you'll find him quite a different man."
 
"He seems to be and honest," I said.
 
"There ain't anything you can tell me about Elihu Burridge that I don't know," he replied feelingly. "Not a thing. I've lived with him, as you might say, all my life. Been raised right here in town with him, and we went to school together. Man and boy, there ain't ever been a thing that Elihu has agreed with, without he could have the running of it. You can't tell me anything about him that I don't know."
 
I could not help smiling at the warmth of feeling, although something about the man's manner a touch of heart-ache, as if he were grieving.
 
"What was the trouble between you two?" I asked.
 
"It's more'n I could ever find out," he replied in a voice that was really mournful, so difficult and non-understandable was the subject to him. "Before I started to work for this office there wasn't a day that I didn't meet and speak friendly with Elihu. He used to have a good many deeds and papers to sign, and he never failed to call me in when I was passing. When I started to work for this office I noticed he took on a cold manner toward me, and I tried to think of something I might have done, but I couldn't. Finally I wrote and asked him if there was anything between us if he wouldn't set a time and place so's we might talk it over and come to an understanding." He paused and then added, "I wish you could see the letter he wrote me. Comin' from a man—from him to me—I wish you could see it."
 
"Why don't you show it to me?" I asked .
 
He went back into the office and returned with an ancient-looking document, four years old it proved to be, which he had been treasuring. He handed me the thumbed and already yellowed page, and I read:
 
"MATTHEW HOLCOMB, ESQUIRE,
"DEAR SIR:—In reply to your letter asking me to set a time and place in which we might talk over the trouble between us, would say that the time be and the place where God shall call us to .
 
"Very truly,
"ELIHU BURRIDGE."
His eyes rested on me while I read, and the moment I finished he began with:
 
"I never said one word against that man, not one word. I never did a thing he could take at, not one thing. I don't know how a man can himself writing like that."
 
"Perhaps it's political," I said. "You don't belong to the same party, do you?"
 
"Yes, we do," he said. "Sometimes I've thought that maybe it was because I had the support of the shipyard when I first tried to get this office, but then that wasn't anything between him and me," and he looked away as if the mystery were .
 
This shipyard was conducted by a most forceful man but one as narrow and religionistic as this region in which it had had its rise. Old Mr. Palmer, the aged of it, had long been a notable figure in the streets and private of the village. The principal grocery store, coal-yard, sail-loft, hotel and other institutions were conducted in its interests. His opinion was always foremost in the decision of the local authorities. He was still, , unobtrusive. Once I saw him most considerately a cripple up the lane to the local Baptist Church.
 
"What's the trouble between Burridge and Palmer?" I asked of the sail-maker finally, coming to think that here, if anywhere, lay the solution of the difficulty.
 
"Two big fish in too small a basket," he responded .
 
"Can't agree, eh?"
 
"They both want to lead, or did," he said. "Elihu's a beaten man, though, now." He paused and then added, "I'm sorry for Elihu. He's a good man at heart, one of the kindest men you ever saw, when you let him follow his natural way. He's good to the poor, and he's carried more slow-pay people than any man in this country, I do believe. He won't collect an old debt by law. Don't believe in it. No, sir. Just a kind-hearted man, but he loves to rule."
 
"How about Palmer?" I inquired.
 
"Just the same way exactly. He loves to rule, too. Got a good heart, too, but he's got a lot more money than Elihu and so people pay more attention to him, that's all. When Elihu was getting the attention he was just the finest man you ever saw, kind, generous, good-natured. People love to be petted, at least some people do—you know they do. When you don't pet 'em they get kind o' sour and like. Now that's all that's the matter with Elihu, every bit of it. He's sour, now, and a little lonely, I expect. He's drove away every one from him, or nearly all, 'cept his wife and some of his . Anybody can do a good grocery business here, with the strangers off the boats"—the harbor was a lively one—"all you have to do is carry a good stock. That's why he gets along so well. But he's drove nearly all the local folks away from him."
 
I listened to this comfortable sail-loft , and going back to the grocery store one afternoon took another look at the long, grim-faced silent figure. He was sitting in the shadow of one of his corners, and if there had ever been any light of merriment in his face it was not there now. He looked as and solemn as an ancient puritan, and yet there was something so in the man's eye, so sad and disappointed, that it seemed anything but hard. Two or three little children were playing about the door and when he came forward to wait on me one of them sidled forward and put her hand in his.
 
"Your children?" I asked, by way of reaching some friendly understanding.
 
"No," he replied, looking fondly down, "she belongs to a French lady up the street here. She often comes down to see me, don't you?" and he reached over and took the fat little cheek between his thumb and .
 
The little one rubbed her face against his worn trousers' leg and put her arm about his knee. Quietly he stood there in a simple way until she loosened her hold upon him, when he went about his .
 
I was sitting one day in the loft of the comfortable sail-maker, who, by the way, was brother-in-law to Burridge, when I said to him:
 
"I wish you'd tell me the details about Elihu. How did he come to be what he is? You ought to know; you've lived here all your life."
 
"So I do know," he replied . "What do you want me to tell you?"
 
"The whole story of the trouble between him and Palmer; how he comes to be at outs with all these people."
 
"Well," he began, and here followed with many interruptions and side elucidations, which for want of space have been eliminated, the following details:
 
Twenty-five years before Elihu had been the leading citizen of Noank. From operating a small grocery at the close of the Civil War he branched out until he sold everything from ship-rigging to hardware. Noank was then in the height of its career as a fishing town and as a port from which expeditions of all sorts were to sail. Whaling was still in force, and for whaling expeditions were equipped here. Wealthy sea-captains frequently loaded fine three-masted here for various trading expeditions to all parts of the world; the fishers for mackerel, and herring were making three hundred and fifty dollars a day in season, and thousands of dollars' worth of supplies were purchased here.
 
Burridge was then the only tradesman of any importance and, being of a liberal, strong-minded a............
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