He paused so long that she prompted him in a voice that threatened to

become unsteady. "Tell me more about him. What is his godship's name?"

"He looked so protestingly wise," Benton went on, "that I named him

Jonesy. I liked that name because it fitted him so badly. Jonesy is not

conventional in his ideas, but his morals are sound. He has seen

religions and civilizations and dynasties flourish and decay, and it has

all given him a certain perspective on life. He has occasionally given

me good council."

He paused again, but, noting that the singing voices were drawing

nearer, he continued more rapidly.

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"In Alaska I used to lie flat on my cot before a great open fire and his

god-ship would perch cross-legged on my chest. When I breathed, he

seemed to shake his fat sides and laugh. When a pagan god from Peru

laughs at you in a Yukon cabin, the situation calls for attention. I

gave attention.

"Jonesy said that the major human motives sweep in deep channels,

full-tide ahead. He said you might in some degree regulate their floods

by rearing abutments, but that when you try to build a dam to stop the

Amazon you are dealing with folly. He argued that when one sets out to

dam up the tides set flowing back in the tributaries of the heart it is

written that one must fail. That is the gospel according to Jonesy."

He turned his face to the front and shot the canoe forward. There was

silence except for the quiet dipping of their paddles, the dripping of

the water from the lifted blades, and the song drifting down river.

Finally Benton added: "I don't know what he will say to you, but perhaps he will give you good

advice--on those matters which the centuries can't change."

Cara's voice came soft, with a hint of repressed tears. "He has already

given me good advice, dear--" she said, "good advice that I can't

follow."




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