![]() But alas, even in matters of sheer luck, the fates played favorites. Then was the time for that equality of opportunity to come which the pioneers sought if ever it was coming. It was a place of adventure men were made rich overnight by the blow of a drill in a well. And suddenly Harvey blossomed into youth. But the railroad moved westward and the cattle trail moved with the railroad and then in the early adolescence of the town came coal and gas and oil. Then came the hegira across the Mississippi and the infant town in the Missouri Valley–the town of the pioneers–the town that only obeyed its call and sought instinctively the school house, the newspaper, orderly government, real estate gambling and “the distant church that topt the neighboring hill.” In the childhood of the town the cattle trail appeared and with the cattle trade came wild days and sad disorder. There was, of course, heredity before the town was the strong New England strain of blood that was mixed in the Ohio Valley and about the Great Lakes and changed by the upheaval of the Civil War. Four or five towns lie buried under the Harvey that is to-day, each one possible only as the other upholds it, and all inexorably pointing to the destiny of the Harvey that is, and to the many other Harveys yet to rise upon the townsite–the Harveys that shall be. They take their character largely from their experiences, laid layer upon layer in their consciousnesses, as time moves, and though the experiences are seemingly forgotten, the results of those experiences are ineffaceably written into the towns. “Stick to it, Henry–by God, stick hard,” and trudged on into the morning gloaming.ĮNTER THE BEAUTY AND CHIVALRY OF HARVEY ALSO HEREIN WE BREAK OUR FIRST HEART The Doctor met the man’s furtive, burning eyes and piped out softly: He too had been fighting hard and he also had won his victory. The Doctor looked up and was astonished to see Henry Fenn, with hard drawn features, trembling limbs, hollow eyes and set lips. ![]() ![]() Then in the pale dawn, a weary man, trudging afoot slowly up the hill into Harvey, met another going out into the fields. And all night the watchers watched, and the watcher who was absent was afraid to pray, and as the daylight came in, wan and gray, the child on the rack of misery sank to sleep, and smiled a little smile of peace at victory. And so hope and fear and love and tenderness and grief are all mingled in the horror that it may die, in the mute question that asks if death would not be merciful and kind. For life is dear to a child–even though its life perpetuates shame and brings only sorrow–life still is dear to that struggling little body there under that humble roof, where even those that love it, and hover in agony over it in its bed of torture, feel that if it goes out into the great mystery from whence it came, it will take a sad blot from the world with it. Thus the watchers watched the fighting through the night, the child fighting so hard to live. ![]()
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