"But, father!" I exclaimed, determined to win him back. Dabney was

putting the silver stopper in the decanter over by the sideboard, and I

thought I saw a sob shake his bent old shoulders as his black hands

trembled. "I'd like to know if I'm not as purely American as you are,

and have I not the same right to want, demand and work for an American

nationalism, even in a garden, as you have? I'll have you know, sir,

that the future of the nation is in the hands of the women. We can

produce pure Americans or let the whole country go hybrid." And as I

spoke I let my temper rise to a point which I hoped would shock father

and take his mind from the decanter and the ice. "I demand that you

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allow me to carry out your plans for my garden, and that you help me do

it to the limit of the hinges in your back and Dabney's. And, Dabney,

don't let me hear another word about that hinge until those dahlias are

in bloom. Also get me a half dozen bottles of dynamite to blow out that

Italian garden. I never did like it."

"Yes'm," answered Dabney, meekly but comprehendingly, for he hastily

flung a napkin over the ice and gently set the decanter back in its

rack. "But dynamite, it comes in sticks and not in bottles. And it

would shake the roots of them old poplars clean most down to hell."

"How'll we get that sunken garden out, then, father?" I asked, and I saw

the life and color come back to his face in a flood of humor.

"We might try filling it in," he answered, and then we both laughed at

ourselves, with Dabney joining in.




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