A Christmas on the Arkansas [pp. 26-40]

Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 13, Issue 73

A Christmas on the A rkansaw. His companions rode up and dismounted. "Bless the little kid; she's blooming as a pink," said Horace Greeley, beaming down upon her. Rupe's eyes were wet as he looked at her. He tried to speak, but his voice stuck in his throat. Jack was the first of them to notice the figure lying at their feet. "My God, a woman here in the snow! He knelt down beside her, and pushed back the thin shawl. "I tell you, she's the one you need to look after; she's cold as death now." Milton made no movement. He seemed not to hear the man's words, but the others turned quickly. Rupe stifled a cry as he saw the still face so white and ghastly in the moonlight, and muttered under his breath, "The child's mother!" Perhaps Dolly heard him. "Paw, mamma's here, don't you see her? She carried me off; I did n't want to go; she don't like you and she says you shan't have me, but you've got me, have n't you?" She laughed gaily, and patted his cheek with her little warm mittened hand. "When our horse slipped on the ice and hurt himself, the Mexican swore awful and rode away. Mamma asked him to take me, but he said the snow was so bad it was all he could do to save himself,'specially as you'd be after him. Pretty soon I got cold and cried, then mamma took off her jacket and wrapped me up, and first I knew I was asleep. I love mamma sometimes, don't you?" Her father said nothing. "Paw, what makes you lpok so? I'm going to give the cloak back to mamma; she told the man she'd die there before he could send anybody to help her, but she won't, will she? you came just in time." She slid from his arms and made her way to her mother. "Don't rub snow on her, Rupe, she's cold enough now; don't you know any better? Jack, you needn't pour that stuff from the bottle down her throat, you'll choke her; she never drinks it that way; she has it in a glass and says, 'Here's looking towards you, Frank,' or may be' Charlie!' Put this fur sack round her; that will make her nice and warm. Wake up, mamma, wake up."' She revived a little under their efforts but showed no consciousness of her surroundings. They wrapped her in blankets, and Jack took her on his own horse; then Milton, still bestowing no attention on the mother, took the child in his arms and they journeyed back, all of them except the little one half dead with cold and exhaustion. Hours later when they reached the camp they found a warm welcome. The Christmas tree with its many stars shone gloriously, and the fire was such that no one could stay near it. Milton staggered and would have fallen with his precious burden; a dozen arms were reached out to take the child. She promptly expressed a preference for AIneas, and it was against the breast of that proud youth that she presently leaned back with a yawn and stretched out her toes to the fire, while the men looked on with worshiping eyes. Every attention was bestowed upon the suffering woman, but it was soon plain that the terrible exposure had been too great for her. She lay on a pile of blankets, and for a long time watched with half-closed eyes the men as they came and went about her, painfully eager to do something to make her more com fortable. "Put it away; brandy can't help me now," she said in a faint voice to Hor ace Greeley who stood near holding a tin cup. "I'm cold all through. Call him," pointing towards Milton. "Go to her, Dave; we think she's dying," whispered Rupe, and Milton obeyed. He looked down unpityingly upon the beautiful face of the woman who had ruined a happy home and made his honest name a reproach. 1889.] 39

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A Christmas on the Arkansas [pp. 26-40]
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Graham, Marshall
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Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 13, Issue 73

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"A Christmas on the Arkansas [pp. 26-40]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/ahj1472.2-13.073. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 23, 2025.
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