Page Four DF.Rs PECr TT VEFS. Pag F or 1 P1:x 7 C T T TJ17 THE THREE RAVENS ...Continued from Page 3 tensely, but each of them was affected. In his first class the next day the in- strc'etor managed to tell his students, in soft tones, that a dear friend of his, a woman who had shared her home with him for six years, was going to die. Var- ious'members of the class assumed facial expressions proper to the occasion, and some of the others laughed without mov- ing their faces. After the hour the in- structor sat for a long time in his small office, thinking. After that he wrote a short essay in German on the inevitabil- ity and beauty of death, using three quotations, two from Geothe and one fr Rilke. Mr. Webb thought about it as he walked about in his room. Sometimes his face changed slightly, and sometimes' he rubbed his palm over his forehead and eyes and mouth and then struck himself foolishly on the thigh with his fist. In little more than an hour he smoked a package of cigarettes, taking only two or three long puffs on each one before pressing it out in the ashtray. He did not go out for supper, having lost his appetite, but later in the evening when he decided on a walk he stopped downstairs, intending perhaps to say something-kind to Mr. Gauss. Then the old man came-out Weeping, his hands working indications of inexpressible woe and his face a mask of the profoundest grief, and Mr. Webb lost his desire in revulsion, broke away without saying a single word. Mr. Gauss felt the insult: SHORTLY BEFORE Mrs. Gauss' death the doctor allowed the German in- structor to visit her in her room. Mr. Wilde waited in the parlor, speaking to the doctor while the visit was made, wondering at the thought of death. Upon entering the room Mr. York, the instructor, tried to be cheerful, smiled behind his brisk British accent. "Well," he smiled, speaking softly, "how does the patient feel today?" She must have heard him, for she looked up, working her lips clumsily, her nose twitching. "Pray for me to the Holy Mother of God when I'm gone." She moaned, and her vole fell into a mumble. The German instructor was very em- barrassed and shaken. He tried to quiet her by stroking her forehead, but the nurse asked him to refrain from exciting her. He drew back then and sat on a chair by her bed, looking at her, then at the nurse, trying to think of something appropriate to say or do. The nurse sat knitting by the window, looking up only -occasionally to be certain that all was as it should be. Mrs. Gauss' head rolled back and forth on the pillow, her eyes opened like almonds, looking around the room and at the chandelier and at the bottles, her voice praying, then crying, then bursting into moans. Half drugged she was, and talking in the soft dream time when to think was an effort that kept her from the terrible sleep. She felt sighs of sleep rising in her body to swell and' stem the warm blood in her thick head. She felt helpless rubber rest in the relax of muscle in the arms and hands and fingers and legs and thighs and calves and toes. This is death com- ing for me, she thought. The quiet mumble in the large room, the soft afternoon sunlight coming through the yellow ihades, the nurse knitting purl, curl, stitch, purl. The German instructor was frightened, con- fused in the presence of something with which he was so familiar in Heine and Goethe and Rilke, in the presence of so simple a thing as death. He tried to speak to Mrs. Gauss again, and she turned toward him, her mouth soft, soggy and half open, her almond eyes looking at him as though through water, sometimes knowing him and his voice, sometimes calling on him to pray for her. When lie finally got up from the chair to leave the room he was sweating, could feel it on his forehead and sides. The strength in his slim legs had gone into shaky nervousness which he could not control. Mr. Wilde, the sophomore, met him in the parlor and saw that he had to _be- helped up the stairs. The instructor went to sit in his room, alone, and a little while later he went to the bath- room for a moment. Mr. Wilde inspected his own reactions and found himself, to tell the truth, not deeply affected. MRS.GAUSS DIED at five o'clock in the morning, just as the first pink gold of the morning sun came flowing across the sky. Removed from the room, in the clear space of the coming day, there was a bird somewhere concerned with his breakfast. In the room the nurse heard the song. The doctor wasj not there, but she went to waken Mr. Gauss, and he came to stand in his slippers and watch his wife die. She was very quiet, her great bosom moving only slightly beneath the blanketing, her face soft, the features so relaxed hat they could scarcely be distinguished. He could not bring himself to touch her but remained at the foot of the bed, holding onto the wooden post at the corner; he was afraid, and yet he did not cry. He did not grip with tight fingers. He stood quietly, painful in his heart, cold on his spine, quietly watching as his wife died, died with nothing to tell it but the stop of motion under the blanketing. After the nurse had felt for her pulse he left, going back to his room. He lay flat on his back, rubbing the dr<,palm of his hand across his forehead, thinking of nothing. For one day the body lay in its coffin in the parlor of the house. Neighbors came with black handkerchiefs, the wo- men bringing consolation, the men standing restlessly somewhere in the roomd. There was wine, and they drank from fat glasses through which the light came in a deep rich purple. The three roomers came to pay their final respects, and the German instructor remained long enough to have a glass of the wine. The sophomore went to the'florist and bought flowers to be pfit on the grave after the burial. The graduate student came to stand for a moment in the parlor, looking down at the body. He did not seem to be much affected by all the ceremony, and though Mr. Gauss did not find the time to ask him to leave the house, he moved within one month. No one was sorry that he had gone. CERTAIN HIDDEN THINGS .Continued from Page 2 rhubarb left over from supper, the big pieces of cake, slices of cold meat, the five gallon coffee pot standing to one side: of the glowing red center plate of the stove. And so for awhile my mother was dead. I had not seen the moon after we left the house, forthe houses along the street had shut it out there in the east, but here it was in the sky again, higher now, farther away and harder looking. The white floodlights made the unlighted stretches seem very dark in spite of the moonlight, and our shadows often went three ways at once, two sharp from the lights, and one blurred from the moon. We passed the roundhouse and the ser- Vice building and the big wooden vats with the bad smell, and finally with cinders in both my shoes, both of us scuffing in the dust, we came to the tall cement buil'ding that hummed, and went through the arch under the hop- pers out to the dock. The boat was black and high now be- cause it was nearly unloaded. The after ladder was down right in front of us, and two deckhands came down it to take our stuff. Both of them said hello to the captain and shook hands with me. Mark took the suitcase and duffel bag, and Don said did I want a ride up,. but I said I wanted to climb the ladder. The captain came right up be- hind me, making the ladder sag and bounce a little with his weight, but I knew he was just making sure I didn't slip so I didn't mind. "You want these up for'ard sir?" Mark said, and the captain said yes, just put them in the room. Mark went up the deck, and we went into the galley to 4offee up. The first assistant engineer snd the cook were there, and the cook was drunk. He was telling about what some old barfly had said up at Min's tonight, but he stopped talking when we came in, and both of them said hello to the captain as if they were sort of un- easya Then they shook hands with me, and Terry, the cook, said he had some cookies in the pantry for me, and he took me in there, msking me laugh at the way he slammed boxes around and juggled two cans of beans as he got out the cardboard box with the cookies in it. I heard Mr. Blair, the first assis- tant say "Jim, I just want you to know we all feel mighty bad about the Mrs.-" and the captain said "Thanks, Aleck," but then Terry was telling me a story about an old Irishman in Killaloo, On- tarioTerry's home town, so I didn't hear" any more of what they said in the galley. I ate some cookies and watched Terry put things away, and once he did a clog dance for me, and then we went back in the galley to get me a cup of coffee with lots of canned milk in it. The captain and Mr. Blair were talking about the fuel coal they had put on down in Toledo, and then Mr. Blair said well he had to get tkck dowh there and see how Harry was getting along, and the captain said we'd better get up for'ard, she must be pretty near unloaded now. I said goodnight to Mr. Blair and thank- ed Terry for the cookies, and they said goodnight, see you at' breakfast, Jim, and laughed because sometimes I didn't get up in time for breakfast, it was at six o'clock. The captain and I went up the deck, past the after hatches with their covers on, and past the for'ard hatches with their covers piled up on deck so you had to walk crabwise past them, your back rubbing against the cables of the rail. Down in the number one hatch there was a ladder, and I saw Mark and Don straddling the bottom of the hoppers, pounding with their hoes to shake loose a few stray chunks of limestone. Archy the Indian was on watch up on deck. He squatted at the head of the ladder looking down in the hatch at Mark and Don, and just as we went by, one of the boys whistled loud from down there, and Archy looked up at the captain and said "All through, captain." "All right," the captain said. "Get one of those men up her and out on the dock to handle the lines." The conveyor man, Alvy, had shut off the engine that made the big wheel turn, and now after an instant that was very quiet he started swinging the boom in- board with the noisy, steamy little don- key. The wheelman came out from the foc'sle carrying his spittoon and stood there waiting for the captain to go ahead of him up the steps to the pilot house. Mark and Don climbed up out of the hatch and hauled the ladder up. The captain said "You coming up on top with me, Jim, or do you want to hang around on deck here for awhile?" I said I guessed I'd stay and watch the deck engines if it was all right. The captain went up, and the wheelsman after him. What I really wanted to watch was Archy, and talk to him too. I hadn't found out about his being a real Indian until the last trip last summer. Of course he was only a Mackinac Is- land Indian, and I had been there and all they did now was drive carriakes around the Island or sell souvenirs, moccasins or porcupine quill baskets, but I had read some about Inidians, just stories, and Archy seemed even here in his dungarees and work shoes, a lot more like the Indians in the stories than the ones on the Island. It was mostly that he seemed proud, not like he wanted to make anybody think he had a tough time getting along. So I wanted to talk to Archy, and get him to tell me stories or teach me the sign language, and I wanted to look at him for a long time and know he was a real Indian. I thought maybe he might have a toma- hawk he'd give me, or a bow and arrow he would teach me to shoot.' But more than getting him to give me or showme anything, I wanted to look at his face, dark and lined like the leather of my aunt Del's briefcase, and at the sharp, broken way his nose was, and at his long black'hair, and when I thought how he would look if he had a feather bonnet on his head, or just a single feather in his hair, it was like the proud chief pic- tures in my books, or the Indians on the nickels and some of the pennies, Archy sent Mark out on the dock to throw the lines off, and Don went back aft to run the deck engines there. The whistle blew one blast and Archy waved his arms upward at the rail, and then the deck engines started jangling and crashing here where I was and back aft too, and then they snapped into hissing silence here as the cable nooses ran dripping to the drums, and I saw Mark climb up the after ladder and then haul it up, and the deck winches aft stopped and the dock started to move slowly astern. Archy was busy, and when I asked him what he was going to do he said he had to rinse down soon as they got those hatch covers on, so I went up in the pilot house to watch the river for awhile. I wanted to help rinse down, but I had my good pants on, and I didn't think I'd better. I sat in the high chair on the star- board side where I was out of the way. The captain looked over.at me and said "Aren't you going to turn in pretty soon?" I said no,~I'd like to stay up till we got out of the river. My uncle Bob was in the pilot house, and Oley the wheelsman. Uncle Bob was first mate, and he really wasn't my uncle, he was my godfather, but he wasn't married, (Continued on Page Eight)