Page:Folks from Dixie (1898).pdf/94

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FOLKS FROM DIXIE

Estridge had laid his heart, and there it had stayed. Time stopped, and his faculties wandered. He lived always in the dear past. The present and future were not. He did not even know when the fortunes of war brought an opposing host to his very doors. He was unconscious of it all when they devoured his substance like a plague of locusts. It was all a blank to him when the old manor house was fired and he was like to lose his possessions and his life. When his servants left him he did not know, but sat and gave orders to the one faithful retainer as though he were ordering the old host of blacks. And so for more than a generation he had lived.

"Hope you gwine to enjoy yo' Christmas Eve breakfus', Mas' Estridge," said the old servant.

"Christmas Eve, Christmas Eve? Yes, yes, so it is. To-morrow is Christmas Day, and I'm afraid I have been rather sluggish in getting things ready for the celebration. I reckon the darkies have already begun to jubilate and to shirk in consequence, and I won't be able to get a thing done decently for a week."

"Don't you bother 'bout none o' de res', Mas'

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