The building of a bank-barn was a watershed in farm chronology.
Toward that event or from it the years took their flight. For many
summers the big boulders were gathered from the fields and piled in
a long heap at the bottom of the lane on their way to their
ultimate destination, the foundation of the bank-barn. During the
winter, previous the "timber was got out." From the forest trees,
maple, beech or elm--for the pine was long since gone--the main
sills, the plates, the posts and cross-beams were squared and
hauled to the site of the new barn. Hither also the sand from the
pit at the big hill, and the stone from the heap at the bottom of
the lane, were drawn. And before the snow had quite gone the
lighter lumber--flooring, scantling, sheeting and shingles--were
marshalled to the scene of action. Then with the spring the masons
and framers appeared and began their work of organising from this
mass of material the structure that was to be at once the pride of
the farm and the symbol of its prosperity.
From the very first the enterprise was carried on under the
acknowledged, but none the less critical, observation of the
immediate neighbourhood. For instance, it had been a matter of
free discussion whether "them timbers of McLeod's new barn wasn't
too blamed heavy," and it was Jack McKenzie's openly expressed
opinion that "one of them 'purline plates' was so all-fired crooked
that it would do for both sides at onct." But the confidence of
the community in Jack Murray, framer, was sufficiently strong to
allay serious forebodings. And by the time the masons had set firm
and solid the many-coloured boulders in the foundation, the
community at large had begun to take interest in the undertaking.
The McLeod raising was to be an event of no ordinary importance.
It had the distinction of being, in the words of Jack Murray,
framer, "the biggest thing in buildin's ever seen in them parts."
Indeed, so magnificent were its dimensions that Ben Fallows, who
stood just five feet in his stocking soles, and was, therefore, a
man of considerable importance in his estimation, was overheard to
exclaim with an air of finality, "What! two twenty-foot floors and
two thirty-foot mows! It cawn't be did." Such was, therefore, the
magnitude of the undertaking, and such the far-famed hospitality of
the McLeods, that no man within the range of the family
acquaintance who was not sick, or away from home, or prevented by
some special act of Providence, failed to appear at the raising
that day.
It was still the early afternoon, but most of the men invited were
already there when the mill people drove up in the family democrat.
The varied shouts of welcome that greeted them proclaimed their
popularity.
"Hello, Barney! Good-day, Mrs. Boyle," said Mr. McLeod, who stood
at the gate receiving his guests.
"Ye've brought the baby, I see, Charley, me boy," shouted Tom
Magee, a big, good-natured son of Erin, the richness of whose
brogue twenty years of life in Canada had failed to impoverish.
"We could hardly leave the baby at home to-day," replied the
miller, as with tender care he handed the green bag containing his
precious violin to his wife.
"No, indeed, Mr. Boyle," replied Mr. McLeod. "The girls yonder
would hardly forgive us if Charley Boyle's fiddle were not to the
fore. You'll find some oats in the granary, Barney. Come along,
Mrs. Boyle. The wife will be glad of your help to keep those wild
colts in order yonder, eh, Margaret, lassie?"
"Indeed, it is not Margaret Robertson that will be needing to be
kept in order," replied Mrs. Boyle.
"Don't you be too sure of that, Mrs. Boyle," replied Mr. McLeod.
"A girl with an eye and a chin like that may break through any
time, and then woe betide you."
"Then I warn you, don't try the curb on me," said Margaret,
springing lightly over the wheel and turning away with Mrs. Boyle
toward the house, which was humming with that indescribable but
altogether bewitching medley of sounds that only a score or two of
girls overflowing with life can produce.
"Come along, Charley," roared Magee. "We're waitin' to make ye the
boss."
"All right, Tom," replied the little man, with a quiet chuckle.
"If you make me the boss, here's my orders, Up you get yourself and
take hold of the gang. What do you say, men?"
"Ay, that's it." "Tom it is." "Jump in, Tom," were the answering
shouts.
"Aw now," said Tom, "there's better than me here. Take Big Angus
there. He's the man fer ye! Or what's the matter wid me frind,
Rory Ross? It's the foine boss he'd make fer yez! Sure, he'll put
the fire intil ye!"
There was a general laugh at this reference to the brilliant colour
of Rory's hair and face.
"Never you mind Rory Ross, Tom Magee," said the fiery-headed,
fiery-hearted little Highlander. "When he's wanted, ye'll not find
him far away, I'se warrant ye."
There was no love lost between the two men. Both were framers,
both famous captains, and more than once had they led the opposing
forces at raisings. The awkward silence following Rory's hot
speech was relieved by Charley Boyle's ready wit.
"We'll divide the work, boys," he said. "Some men do the liftin'
and others the yellin'. Tom and me'll do the yellin'."
A roar of laughter rose at Tom's expense, whose reputation as a
worker was none too brilliant.
"All right then, boys," roared Tom. "Ye'll have to take it. Git
togither an' quit yer blowin'." He cast an experienced eye over
the ground where the huge timbers were strewn about in what to the
uninitiated would seem wild confusion.
"Them's the sills," he cried. "Where's the skids?"
"Right under yer nose, Tom," said the framer quietly.
"Here they are, lads. Git up thim skids! Now thin, fer the sills.
Grab aholt, min, they're not hot! All togither-r-r--heave!
Togither-r-r--heave! Once more, heave! Walk her up, boys! Walk
her up! Come on, Angus! Where's yer porridge gone to? Move over,
two av ye! Don't take advantage av a little man loike that!"
Angus was just six feet four. "Now thin, yer pikes! Shove her
along! Up she is! Steady! Cant her over! How's that, framer?
More to the east, is it? Climb up on her, ye cats, an' dig in yer
claws! Now thin, east wid her! Togither-r-r--heave! Aw now,
where are ye goin'? Don't be too rambunctious! Ye'll be afther
knockin' a hole in to-morrow mornin'. Back a little now! Whoa!
How's that, framer? Will that suit yer riverence? All right. Now
thin, the nixt! Look lively there! The gurls are comin' down to
pick the winners, an a small chance there'll be fer some of yez."
And so with this running fire of exhortation, more or less pungent,
the sills were got in place upon the walls, pinned and spliced.
The "bents" were the cross sections of heavy square timbers which,
fastened together with cross ties, formed the framework of the
barn. Dividing his men into groups, the bents were put together on
the barn floor, and, one by one, raised into their places, each one
being firmly joined to the one previously erected.
"Mind yer braces, now, an' yer pins!" admonished Tom. "We don't
want no slitherin' timbers round here when we get into the ruction
a little later on!"
In spite of all Tom's tumultuous vocal energy, it was nearly five
before the last bent was reached. One by one they had fitted into
their places, but not without some few hitches, each of which was
the occasion for an outburst of exhortations on the part of the
boss, more or less sulphurous, although the presence of the ladies
interfered very considerably with Tom's fluency in this regard. He
worked his men like galley slaves, and rowed them unmercifully.
But for the most part they took it all with good humour, though
some few who had the misfortune to fall specially under his tongue
began to show signs that the lash had bitten into the raw. The
timbers of the last bent were specially heavy, and the men, more or
less fagged with their hard driving, didn't spring to their work
with the alacrity that Tom deemed suitable.
"At it, min!" he roared. "Snatch it alive! Begob, ye'd think it
was plate glass ye're liftin', ye're so tinder about it! Now thin!
Togither-r-r--heave! Once again, heave! Ye didn't git it an inch
that time! Stidy there a minute! Here you min on that pike, what
in the blank, blank are ye bunchin' in one ind loike a swarm av
bees on a cowld day! Shift over there, will ye!"
In obedience to the word two pike-poles were withdrawn at the same
moment, leaving only a single pike with Big Angus and two others to
sustain the full weight of the heavy timbers. Immediately the bent
swayed backward as if to fall upon the throng below. Some of the
men sprang back from under the huge bent. It was a moment of
supreme peril.
"Howld there, fer yer lives, ye divils!" howled Tom, "or the hull
of ye'll be in hell in two howly minutes."
At the cry Barney and Rory sprang to Angus's side and threw
themselves upon the pike. Immediately they were followed by
others, and the calamity was averted.
"Up wid her now thin, me lads, God bliss ye!" cried Tom. But there
was a new note in Tom's voice, the note that is heard when men
stand in the presence of serious danger. There was no more pause.
The bent was walked up to its place, pinned and made secure. Tom
sprang down from the building, his face white, his voice shaking.
"Give me yer hand, Barney Boyle, an' yours, Rory Ross, for be all
the saints an' the Blessid Virgin, ye saved min's lives this day!"
Around the two crowded the men, shaking their hands and clapping
them on the back with varied exclamations. "You're the lads!"
"Good boys!" "You're the stuff!" "Put it there!"
"What are ye doin' to us?" cried Rory at last; "I didn't see
anything happen. Did you, Barney?"
For once Tom Magee was silent. He walked about among the crowd
chewing hard upon his quid of tobacco, fighting to recover his
nerve. He had seen as no other of the men the terrible catastrophe
from which the men had been saved. It was Charley Boyle that again
relieved the strain.
"Did any of you hear the cowbell?" he said. "It strikes me it's
not quitting time yet. Better get your captains, hadn't you?"
"Oh, come on, Tom. You'll be all right. Get your men."
"All right, am I? Be jabbers, I couldn't hit a pin onct in the
same place, let alone twice. By me sowl, min, it's a splash of
blood an' brains I've jist been lookin' at, an' that's true fer ye.
Take Barney there. He's the man, I kin tell ye."
"Me!" cried Barney, seeking to escape through the crowd. "I have
never done anything but carry pins and braces at a raising all my
life."
There was a loud laugh of scorn, for no man in all the crowd had
Barney's reputation for agility, nerve and quickness.
"Carry pins, is it?" said Tom. "Ye can carry yer head level, me
boy. So at it ye go, an' ye'll bate Rory fer me, so ye will."
"Well then," cried Barney, "I will, if you give me first choice,
and I'll take Tom here."
"Hooray!" yelled Tom, "I'm wid ye." So it was agreed, and in a few
minutes the sides were chosen, little Ben Fallows falling to Rory
as last choice.
"We'll give ye Ben," said Tom, whose nerve was coming back to him.
"We don't want to hog on ye too much."
"Never you mind, Ben," said Rory, as the little Englishman strutted
to his place among Rory's men. "You'll earn your supper to-day
with the best of them."
"If I cawn't hearn it I can heat it, by Jove!" cried Ben, to the
huge delight of the crowd.
And now the thrilling moment had arrived, for from this point out
there was to be a life-and-death contest as to which side should
complete each its part of the structure first. The main plates,
the "purline" plates, posts and braces, the rafters and collar
beams, must all be set securely in position. The side whose last
man was first down from the building after its work was done
claimed the victory. In two opposing lines a hundred men stood,
hats, coats, vests and, in case of those told off to "ride" the
plates, boots discarded. A brawny, sinewy lot they were, quick of
eye and steady of nerve, strong of hand and sure of foot, men to be
depended upon whether to raise a barn or to build an empire. The
choice of sides fell to Rory, who took the north, or bank, side.
"Niver fret, Barney," cried Tom Magee, who in the near approach of
battle was his own man again. "Niver ye fret. It's birrds we are,
an' the more air for us the better."
Between the sides stood the framer ready to give the word.
"Aren't they splendid!" said Margaret in a low tone to Mrs. Boyle,
her cheek pale and her blue eyes blazing with excitement. "Oh, if
I were only a boy!"
"Ay," said Mrs. Boyle, "ye'd be riding the plate, I doubt."
"Wouldn't I, though! My! they're fine!" answered the girl, with
her eyes upon Barney. And more eyes than hers were upon the young
captain, whose rugged face showed pale even at that distance.
"Now then, men," cried the framer. "Mind your pins. Are you
ready?" holding his hat high in the air.
"Git then!" he cried, flinging his hat hard on the ground. Like
hounds after a hare in full sight, like racers springing from the
tape, they leaped at the timbers, every man to his place, yelling
like men possessed. At once the admiring female friends broke into
rival camps, wildly enthusiastic, fiercely partisan.
"Well done, Rory! He's up first!" cried a girl whose brilliant
complexion and still more brilliant locks proclaimed her
relationship to the captain of the north side.
"Indeed, he will need to hurry," cried Rory's sister, mercilessly
exultant. "He's up! He's up!"
Sure enough, Rory, riding the first half of his plate over the
bent, had just "broken it down," and in half a minute, seized by
the men detailed for this duty, it was in its place upon the posts.
Like cats, three men with mauls were upon it driving the pins home
just as the second half was making its appearance over the bent, to
be seized and placed and pinned as its mate had been.
"Barney! Barney!" screamed his contingent reproachfully.
"Well done, Rory! Keep at it! You've got them beaten!"
"Beaten, indeed!" was the scornful reply. "Just wait a minute."
"They're at the 'purlines'!" shrieked Rory's sister, and her
friends, proceeding to scream wildly after the female method of
expressing emotion under such circumstances.
"My!" sniffed a contemptuous member of Barney's faction, suffering
unutterable pangs of humiliation. "Some people don't mind making a
show of themselves."
"Oh, Barney! why don't you hurry?" cried Margaret, to whose eager
spirit Barney's movements seemed painfully and almost wilfully
slow.
But Barney had laid his plans. Dividing his men into squads, he
had been carrying out the policy of simultaneous preparation, and
while part of his men had been getting the plates to their places,
others had been making ready the "purlines" and laying the rafters
in order so that, although beaten by Rory in the initial stages of
the struggle, when once his plates were in position, while Rory's
men were rushing about in more or less confusion after their
rafters, Barney's purlins and rafters moved to their positions as
if by magic. Consequently, though when they arrived at the rafters
Barney was half a dozen behind, the rest of his rafters were lifted
almost as one into their places.
At once the ranks of Barney's faction, which up to this point had
been enduring the poignant pangs of what looked like humiliating
defeat, rose in a tumult of triumph to heights of bliss
inexpressible, save by a series of ear-piercing but altogether
rapturous shrieks.
"They're down! They're down!" screamed Margaret, dancing in an
ecstasy of joy, while hand over hand down posts, catching at
braces, slipping, sliding, springing, the men of both sides kept
dropping from incredible distances to the ground. Suddenly through
all the tumultuous shouts of victory a heart-rending scream rang
out, followed by a shuddering groan and dead silence. One-half of
Rory's purlin plate slipped from its splicing, the pin having been
neglected in the furious haste, and swinging free, fell crashing
through the timbers upon the scurrying, scrambling men below. On
its way it swept off the middle bent Rory, who was madly entreating
a laggard to drop to the earth, but who, flung by good fortune
against a brace, clung there. On the plate went in its path of
destruction, missing several men by hairs' breadths, but striking
at last with smashing cruel force across the ankle of poor little
Ben Fallows, in the act of sliding down a post to the ground. In a
moment two or three men were beside him. He was lifted up groaning
and screaming and carried to an open grassy spot. After some
moments of confusion Barney was seen to emerge from the crowd and
hurry after his horse. A stretcher was hastily knocked together, a
mattress and pillow placed thereon, to which Ben, still groaning
piteously, was tenderly lifted.
"I'll go wid ye," said Tom Magee, throwing on his coat and hat.
Before they drove out of the yard the little Englishman pulled
himself together. "Stop a bit, Barney," he said. He beckoned Rory
to his side. "Tell them," he said between his gasps, "not to spoil
their supper for me. I cawn't heat my share, but I guess perhaps I
hearned it."
"And that you did, lad," cried Rory. "No man better, and I'll tell
them."
The men who were standing near and who had heard Ben's words broke
out into admiring expletives, "Good boy, Benny!" "Benny's the
stuff!" till finally someone swinging his hat in the air cried,
"Three cheers for Benny!" and the feelings of the crowd, held in
check for so many minutes, at length found expression in three
times three, and with the cheers ringing in his ears and with a
smile upon his drawn face, poor Ben, forgetting his agony for the
time, was borne away on his three-mile drive to the doctor.
The raising was over, but no man asked which side had won.