The Buying-Farm Story
NCE upon a time there was a farm-house, and it was painted
white and had green blinds; and it stood not far
from the road. And in the fence was a wide gate to let
the wagons through to the barn. The farm
wasn't Uncle Solomon's then, but it belonged to the man
that had built the
farm-house, and that man had built the
barn first and then the house. And he
had cut down the trees and made the
fields smooth and nice where the different things were
to grow. And when he had lived there a good many years,
he was tired of being there, and he wanted to go
somewhere else.
Captain Solomon had sailed on the great ocean a great
many years, and he was tired of being a sailor, and
thought he would like to have a farm; and besides, he
was afraid that if he kept on being a sailor, his
little boys would want to be sailors, too, and he
didn't want them to be. There were three boys,
Uncle John and his two brothers;
and when they got big
enough, Uncle John's brothers ran away and were
sailors. For they didn't like to be on a farm. But
Uncle John stayed on the farm
after Uncle Solomon
bought it.
So one day Captain Solomon came to
the farm and he found the man that had got it all ready
and had built the house. And the man
showed Captain Solomon
all the fields where the things
were growing, and the orchard and
the maple-sugar woods
and the barn and the house. And
Captain Solomon liked the farm. So
he paid the man some money, and the man gave the farm
to Uncle Solomon. For after he had
bought the farm, the people all called Captain Solomon
Uncle Solomon. Then the man took
all his beds and chairs and tables and the other things
from the house, and he moved them
away to another place.
Then Uncle Solomon put all his things in great wagons,
and it took a long time to move them
to the farm, for Uncle Solomon had lived in Wellfleet,
a town that is
on the shore of the great
ocean, and the farm was a long way from that town, and
it was not on the
shore of the ocean. They didn't have railroads then,
and all the things had to
be dragged in the wagons.
But at last the wagons came
to
the farm, and Uncle Solomon took all the things out of
the wagons and put them in the
house. He put the wagons in the shed and the horses in
the barn. That was a very long
time ago, more than one hundred years.
When all the things were put in the house, Uncle
Solomon bought some cows and the
things he needed to do farm work with. Then he began to
do all the things that have to
be done on a farm, the things that the other stories
tell about.
And that's all.
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