[The Grandissimes by George Washington Cable]@TWC D-Link book
The Grandissimes

CHAPTER XXIX
9/18

The plough went not out; the herds wandered through broken hedges from field to field and came up with staring bones and shrunken sides; a frenzied mob of weeds and thorns wrestled and throttled each other in a struggle for standing-room--rag-weed, smart-weed, sneeze-weed, bindweed, iron-weed--until the burning skies of midsummer checked their growth and crowned their unshorn tops with rank and dingy flowers.
"Why in the name of--St.Francis," asked the priest of the overseer, "didn't the senora use her power over the black scoundrel when he stood and cursed, that day ?" "Why, to tell you the truth, father," said the overseer, in a discreet whisper, "I can only suppose she thought Bras-Coupe had half a right to do it." "Ah, ah, I see; like her brother Honore--looks at both sides of a question--a miserable practice; but why couldn't Palmyre use _her_ eyes?
They would have stopped him." "Palmyre?
Why Palmyre has become the best _monture_ (Plutonian medium) in the parish.

Agricola Fusilier himself is afraid of her.

Sir, I think sometimes Bras-Coupe is dead and his spirit has gone into Palmyre.

She would rather add to his curse than take from it." "Ah!" said the jovial divine, with a fat smile, "castigation would help her case; the whip is a great sanctifier.

I fancy it would even make a Christian of the inexpugnable Bras-Coupe." But Bras-Coupe kept beyond the reach alike of the lash and of the Latin Bible.
By and by came a man with a rumor, whom the overseer brought to the master's sick-room, to tell that an enterprising Frenchman was attempting to produce a new staple in Louisiana, one that worms would not annihilate.


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