<h2> <SPAN name="ch29" id="ch29"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIX. </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<p>Philip Sterling was on his way to Ilium, in the state of Pennsylvania.
Ilium was the railway station nearest to the tract of wild land which Mr.
Bolton had commissioned him to examine.</p>
<p>On the last day of the journey as the railway train Philip was on was
leaving a large city, a lady timidly entered the drawing-room car, and
hesitatingly took a chair that was at the moment unoccupied. Philip saw
from the window that a gentleman had put her upon the car just as it was
starting. In a few moments the conductor entered, and without waiting an
explanation, said roughly to the lady,</p>
<p>"Now you can't sit there. That seat's taken. Go into the other car."</p>
<p>"I did not intend to take the seat," said the lady rising, "I only sat
down a moment till the conductor should come and give me a seat."</p>
<p>"There aint any. Car's full. You'll have to leave."</p>
<p>"But, sir," said the lady, appealingly, "I thought—"</p>
<p>"Can't help what you thought—you must go into the other car."</p>
<p>"The train is going very fast, let me stand here till we stop."</p>
<p>"The lady can have my seat," cried Philip, springing up.</p>
<p>The conductor turned towards Philip, and coolly and deliberately surveyed
him from head to foot, with contempt in every line of his face, turned his
back upon him without a word, and said to the lady,</p>
<p>"Come, I've got no time to talk. You must go now."</p>
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<p>The lady, entirely disconcerted by such rudeness, and frightened, moved
towards the door, opened it and stepped out. The train was swinging along
at a rapid rate, jarring from side to side; the step was a long one
between the cars and there was no protecting grating. The lady attempted
it, but lost her balance, in the wind and the motion of the car, and fell!
She would inevitably have gone down under the wheels, if Philip, who had
swiftly followed her, had not caught her arm and drawn her up. He then
assisted her across, found her a seat, received her bewildered thanks, and
returned to his car.</p>
<p>The conductor was still there, taking his tickets, and growling something
about imposition. Philip marched up to him, and burst out with,</p>
<p>"You are a brute, an infernal brute, to treat a woman that way."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you'd like to make a fuss about it," sneered the conductor.</p>
<p>Philip's reply was a blow, given so suddenly and planted so squarely in
the conductor's face, that it sent him reeling over a fat passenger, who
was looking up in mild wonder that any one should dare to dispute with a
conductor, and against the side of the car.</p>
<p>He recovered himself, reached the bell rope, "Damn you, I'll learn you,"
stepped to the door and called a couple of brakemen, and then, as the
speed slackened; roared out,</p>
<p>"Get off this train."</p>
<p>"I shall not get off. I have as much right here as you."</p>
<p>"We'll see," said the conductor, advancing with the brakemen. The
passengers protested, and some of them said to each other, "That's too
bad," as they always do in such cases, but none of them offered to take a
hand with Philip. The men seized him, wrenched him from his seat, dragged
him along the aisle, tearing his clothes, thrust him from the car, and,
then flung his carpet-bag, overcoat and umbrella after him. And the train
went on.</p>
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<p><br/> <br/> <br/> <br/></p>
<p>The conductor, red in the face and puffing from his exertion, swaggered
through the car, muttering "Puppy, I'll learn him." The passengers, when
he had gone, were loud in their indignation, and talked about signing a
protest, but they did nothing more than talk.</p>
<p>The next morning the Hooverville Patriot and Clarion had this "item":—</p>
<p>SLIGHTUALLY OVERBOARD.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"We learn that as the down noon express was leaving H——
yesterday a lady! (God save the mark) attempted to force herself into
the already full palatial car. Conductor Slum, who is too old a bird to
be caught with chaff, courteously informed her that the car was full,
and when she insisted on remaining, he persuaded her to go into the car
where she belonged. Thereupon a young sprig, from the East, blustered
like a Shanghai rooster, and began to sass the conductor with his chin
music. That gentleman delivered the young aspirant for a muss one of his
elegant little left-handers, which so astonished him that he began to
feel for his shooter. Whereupon Mr. Slum gently raised the youth,
carried him forth, and set him down just outside the car to cool off.
Whether the young blood has yet made his way out of Bascom's swamp, we
have not learned. Conductor Slum is one of the most gentlemanly and
efficient officers on the road; but he ain't trifled with, not much. We
learn that the company have put a new engine on the seven o'clock train,
and newly upholstered the drawing-room car throughout. It spares no
effort for the comfort of the traveling public."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Philip never had been before in Bascom's swamp, and there was nothing
inviting in it to detain him. After the train got out of the way he
crawled out of the briars and the mud, and got upon the track. He was
somewhat bruised, but he was too angry to mind that. He plodded along over
the ties in a very hot condition of mind and body. In the scuffle, his
railway check had disappeared, and he grimly wondered, as he noticed the
loss, if the company would permit him to walk over their track if they
should know he hadn't a ticket.</p>
<p>Philip had to walk some five miles before he reached a little station,
where he could wait for a train, and he had ample time for reflection. At
first he was full of vengeance on the company. He would sue it. He would
make it pay roundly. But then it occurred to him that he did not know the
name of a witness he could summon, and that a personal fight against a
railway corporation was about the most hopeless in the world. He then
thought he would seek out that conductor, lie in wait for him at some
station, and thrash him, or get thrashed himself.</p>
<p>But as he got cooler, that did not seem to him a project worthy of a
gentleman exactly. Was it possible for a gentleman to get even with such a
fellow as that conductor on the letter's own plane? And when he came to
this point, he began to ask himself, if he had not acted very much like a
fool. He didn't regret striking the fellow—he hoped he had left a
mark on him. But, after all, was that the best way? Here was he, Philip
Sterling, calling himself a gentleman, in a brawl with a vulgar conductor,
about a woman he had never seen before. Why should he have put himself in
such a ridiculous position? Wasn't it enough to have offered the lady his
seat, to have rescued her from an accident, perhaps from death? Suppose he
had simply said to the conductor, "Sir, your conduct is brutal, I shall
report you." The passengers, who saw the affair, might have joined in a
report against the conductor, and he might really have accomplished
something. And, now! Philip looked at his torn clothes, and thought with
disgust of his haste in getting into a fight with such an autocrat.</p>
<p>At the little station where Philip waited for the next train, he met a man—who
turned out to be a justice of the peace in that neighborhood, and told him
his adventure. He was a kindly sort of man, and seemed very much
interested.</p>
<p>"Dum 'em," said he, when he had heard the story.</p>
<p>"Do you think any thing can be done, sir?"</p>
<p>"Wal, I guess tain't no use. I hain't a mite of doubt of every word you
say. But suin's no use. The railroad company owns all these people along
here, and the judges on the bench too. Spiled your clothes! Wal, 'least
said's soonest mended.' You haint no chance with the company."</p>
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<p><br/> <br/> <br/> <br/></p>
<p>When next morning, he read the humorous account in the Patriot and
Clarion, he saw still more clearly what chance he would have had before
the public in a fight with the railroad company.</p>
<p>Still Philip's conscience told him that it was his plain duty to carry the
matter into the courts, even with the certainty of defeat. He confessed
that neither he nor any citizen had a right to consult his own feelings or
conscience in a case where a law of the land had been violated before his
own eyes. He confessed that every citizen's first duty in such case is to
put aside his own business and devote his time and his best efforts to
seeing that the infraction is promptly punished; and he knew that no
country can be well governed unless its citizens as a body keep
religiously before their minds that they are the guardians of the law, and
that the law officers are only the machinery for its execution, nothing
more. As a finality he was obliged to confess that he was a bad citizen,
and also that the general laxity of the time, and the absence of a sense
of duty toward any part of the community but the individual himself were
ingrained in him, and he was no better than the rest of the people.</p>
<p>The result of this little adventure was that Philip did not reach Ilium
till daylight the next morning, when he descended sleepy and sore, from a
way train, and looked about him. Ilium was in a narrow mountain gorge,
through which a rapid stream ran. It consisted of the plank platform on
which he stood, a wooden house, half painted, with a dirty piazza
(unroofed) in front, and a sign board hung on a slanting pole—bearing
the legend, "Hotel. P. Dusenheimer," a sawmill further down the stream, a
blacksmith-shop, and a store, and three or four unpainted dwellings of the
slab variety.</p>
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<p>As Philip approached the hotel he saw what appeared to be a wild beast
crouching on the piazza. It did not stir, however, and he soon found that
it was only a stuffed skin. This cheerful invitation to the tavern was the
remains of a huge panther which had been killed in the region a few weeks
before. Philip examined his ugly visage and strong crooked fore-arm, as he
was waiting admittance, having pounded upon the door.</p>
<p>"Yait a bit. I'll shoost—put on my trowsers," shouted a voice from
the window, and the door was soon opened by the yawning landlord.</p>
<p>"Morgen! Didn't hear d' drain oncet. Dem boys geeps me up zo spate. Gom
right in."</p>
<p>Philip was shown into a dirty bar-room. It was a small room, with a stove
in the middle, set in a long shallow box of sand, for the benefit of the
"spitters," a bar across one end—a mere counter with a sliding
glass-case behind it containing a few bottles having ambitious labels, and
a wash-sink in one corner. On the walls were the bright yellow and black
handbills of a traveling circus, with pictures of acrobats in human
pyramids, horses flying in long leaps through the air, and sylph-like
women in a paradisaic costume, balancing themselves upon the tips of their
toes on the bare backs of frantic and plunging steeds, and kissing their
hands to the spectators meanwhile.</p>
<p>As Philip did not desire a room at that hour, he was invited to wash
himself at the nasty sink, a feat somewhat easier than drying his face,
for the towel that hung in a roller over the sink was evidently as much a
fixture as the sink itself, and belonged, like the suspended brush and
comb, to the traveling public. Philip managed to complete his toilet by
the use of his pocket-handkerchief, and declining the hospitality of the
landlord, implied in the remark, "You won'd dake notin'?" he went into the
open air to wait for breakfast.</p>
<p>The country he saw was wild but not picturesque. The mountain before him
might be eight hundred feet high, and was only a portion of a long
unbroken range, savagely wooded, which followed the stream. Behind the
hotel, and across the brawling brook, was another level-topped, wooded
range exactly like it. Ilium itself, seen at a glance, was old enough to
be dilapidated, and if it had gained anything by being made a wood and
water station of the new railroad, it was only a new sort of grime and
rawness. P. Dusenheimer, standing in the door of his uninviting groggery,
when the trains stopped for water; never received from the traveling
public any patronage except facetious remarks upon his personal
appearance. Perhaps a thousand times he had heard the remark, "Ilium
fuit," followed in most instances by a hail to himself as "AEneas," with
the inquiry "Where is old Anchises?" At first he had replied, "Dere ain't
no such man;" but irritated by its senseless repetition, he had latterly
dropped into the formula of, "You be dam."</p>
<p>Philip was recalled from the contemplation of Ilium by the rolling and
growling of the gong within the hotel, the din and clamor increasing till
the house was apparently unable to contain it; when it burst out of the
front door and informed the world that breakfast was on the table.</p>
<p>The dining room was long, low and narrow, and a narrow table extended its
whole length. Upon this was spread a cloth which from appearance might
have been as long in use as the towel in the barroom. Upon the table was
the usual service, the heavy, much nicked stone ware, the row of plated
and rusty castors, the sugar bowls with the zinc tea-spoons sticking up in
them, the piles of yellow biscuits, the discouraged-looking plates of
butter. The landlord waited, and Philip was pleased to observe the change
in his manner. In the barroom he was the conciliatory landlord. Standing
behind his guests at table, he had an air of peremptory patronage, and the
voice in which he shot out the inquiry, as he seized Philip's plate,
"Beefsteak or liver?" quite took away Philip's power of choice. He begged
for a glass of milk, after trying that green hued compound called coffee,
and made his breakfast out of that and some hard crackers which seemed to
have been imported into Ilium before the introduction of the iron horse,
and to have withstood a ten years siege of regular boarders, Greeks and
others.</p>
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<p>The land that Philip had come to look at was at least five miles distant
from Ilium station. A corner of it touched the railroad, but the rest was
pretty much an unbroken wilderness, eight or ten thousand acres of rough
country, most of it such a mountain range as he saw at Ilium.</p>
<p>His first step was to hire three woodsmen to accompany him. By their help
he built a log hut, and established a camp on the land, and then began his
explorations, mapping down his survey as he went along, noting the timber,
and the lay of the land, and making superficial observations as to the
prospect of coal.</p>
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<p>The landlord at Ilium endeavored to persuade Philip to hire the services
of a witch-hazel professor of that region, who could walk over the land
with his wand and tell him infallibly whether it contained coal, and
exactly where the strata ran. But Philip preferred to trust to his own
study of the country, and his knowledge of the geological formation. He
spent a month in traveling over the land and making calculations; and made
up his mind that a fine vein of coal ran through the mountain about a mile
from the railroad, and that the place to run in a tunnel was half way
towards its summit.</p>
<p>Acting with his usual promptness, Philip, with the consent of Mr. Bolton,
broke ground there at once, and, before snow came, had some rude buildings
up, and was ready for active operations in the spring. It was true that
there were no outcroppings of coal at the place, and the people at Ilium
said he "mought as well dig for plug terbaccer there;" but Philip had
great faith in the uniformity of nature's operations in ages past, and he
had no doubt that he should strike at this spot the rich vein that had
made the fortune of the Golden Briar Company.</p>
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