Amanda: A Daughter of the Mennonites - Page 126/147

"And that's no easy achievement." The girl spoke from her own

experience. "It's like pulling molars to press your lips together and

be quiet when you want to rear and tear and stamp your feet."

"Well, come down to hard facts, and how many of us will have to admit

that we have feelings like that at times? There is still a good share

of the primitive man left in our natures. We're not saints. Why, even

the churches that believe in saints don't canonize mortals until they

have been a hundred years dead--they want to be sure they are dead and

their mortal weaknesses forgotten."

Amanda laughed. A moment later they turned from the country road and

followed a narrower path that was bordered on one side by green fields

and on the other by a strip of woods, an irregular arm reaching out

from Amanda's moccasin haunt. The road led up-hill at a sharp angle, so

that when the traveler reached the top, panting and tired, there

stretched before him in delightful panorama a view of Lancaster County

that more than compensated for the discomfort and effort of the climb.

Amanda and Martin stood facing that sight. Behind them lay the cool,

tree-clad hill, before them the blue August sky looked down on

Lancaster County farms, whose houses and red barns seemed dropped like

kindergarten toys into the midst of undulating green fields. One could

sit or stand under the sheltering shade of the trees along the edge of

the woods and yet look up to the sky or out upon the Garden Spot and

farther off, to the blue, hazy mountain ridge that touched the sky-line

and cut off the view of what lay beyond.

Martin threw the pillows on the ground and they sat down in the cool

shade.

"Can anything beat this?" he asked lazily as he ruffled the dry

leaves about him with his hands. "You know, Amanda, I could never

understand why, with my love for outdoors, I can't be a farmer. When I

was a boy I used to consider it the natural thing for me to do as my

father did. I did help him, but I never liked the work. You couldn't

coax the other boys to the city; they'd rather pitch hay or plant corn.

And yet I like nothing better than to be out in the open. During the

summer I'm out in the garden after I come home from the city, and that

much of working the soil I like, but for a steady job--not for me!"

"It's best to do work one likes," said the girl. "Not every person who

likes outdoors was meant to be a farmer. Be glad you like to be out in

the open. But I can't conceive of any person not liking it. I could sit

and look at the sky for one whole day. It's so encouraging. Sometimes

when I walk home from school after a hard day and I look down on the

road and think over the problems of handling certain trying children so

as to get the best out of them and the latent best in them developed, I

look up all of a sudden and the sky is so wonderful that, somehow, my

troubles seem trivial. It's just as though the sky were saying, 'Child,

you've been looking down so long and worrying about little things that

you've forgotten that the sky is blue and the clouds are still sailing

over you.' And, Martin, don't you like the stars? I never get tired of

looking at them. I never care to gaze at the full moon unless there are

clouds sailing over her. She's too big and brazen, too compelling. But

the twinkle of the stars and the sudden flashing out of dim ones you

didn't see at first always makes me feel like singing. Ever feel that

way?"