Reading of "Was" (concluded)
DATE: 8 May 1957
OCCASION: Engineering School Students
TAPE: T-125
LENGTH: 8:25
Play the full recording:
William Faulkner:
"I'll buy the damn girl then and we'll call the rest of
this foolishness off."
"Hah," Mr Hubert said again. "This is the most
serious foolishness you ever took part in in your life. No, you said you
wanted your chance, and now you've got it. Here it is, right here on this
table, waiting on you."
So Uncle Buck shuffled the cards and Mr Hubert cut them.
Then he took up the deck and dealt in turn until Uncle Buck and Mr Hubert
had five. And Uncle Buck looked at his hand a long time and then said two
cards and he gave them to him, and Mr Hubert looked at his hand quick and
said one card and he gave it to him and Mr Hubert flipped his discard onto
the two which Uncle Buck had discarded and slid the new card into his hand
and opened it out and looked at it quick again and closed it and looked at
Uncle Buck and said, "Well? Did you help them threes?"
"No," Uncle Buck said.
"Well I did," Mr Hubert said. He shot his hand across the table so the
cards fell face-up in front of Uncle Buck and they were three kings and two
fives, and said, "By God, Buck McCaslin, you have met your match at
last."
"And that was all?" Uncle Buddy said. It was late then,
near sunset; they would be at Mr Hubert's in another fifteen minutes.
"Yes,
sir," he said, telling that too: how Uncle Buck waked him at daylight and he
climbed out a window and got the pony and left, and how Uncle Buck said that
if they pushed him too close in the meantime, he would climb down the gutter
too and hide in the woods until Uncle Buddy arrived.
"Hah," Uncle—Uncle Buddy
said. "Was Tomey's Turl there?"
"Yes, sir," he said. "He was waiting in the
stable when I got the pony. He said, 'Aint they settled it yet?'"
"And what
did you say?" Uncle Buddy said.
"I said, 'Uncle Buck looks like he's
settled. But Uncle Buddy aint got here yet.'"
"Hah," Uncle Buck—Uncle Buddy
said.
And that was about all. They reached the house. Maybe
Uncle Buck was watching them, but if he was, he never showed himself, never
came out of the woods. So Miss Sophonsiba was nowhere in sight either, so at
least Uncle Buck didn't give—hadn't quite given up; at least he hadn't asked her yet.
And he and Uncle Buddy and Mr Hubert ate supper and they came in from the
kitchen and cleared the table, leaving only the lamp on it and the deck of
cards. Then it was just like last night, except that Uncle Buddy had no
necktie and Mr Hubert wore the clothes now instead of a nightshirt and it
was a shaded lamp on the table instead of a candle, and Mr Hubert sitting at
his end of the table with the deck in his hands, riffling the edges with his
thumb and looking at Uncle Buddy. Then he tapped the edges even and set the
deck out in the middle of the table under the lamp, and folded his arms on
the edge of the table and leaned forward a little on the table, looking at
Uncle Buddy, who was sitting at his end of the table with his hands in his
lap, all one gray color, like an old gray rock or a stump with gray moss on
it, that still, with his round white head like Uncle Buck's but he didn't
blink like Uncle Buck and he was a little thicker than Uncle Buck, as if
from sitting down so much watching food cook, as if the things he cooked had
made him a little thicker than he would have been and the things he cooked
with, and the flour and such, had made him all one same quiet color.
"Little toddy before we start?" Mr Hubert said.
"I dont
drink," Uncle Buddy said.
"That's right," Mr Hubert said. "I knew there was
some thing else besides just being woman-weak that makes 'Filus seem human.
But no matter." He batted his eyes twice at Uncle Buddy. "Buck McCaslin
against the land and niggers you have heard me promise as Sophonsiba's dowry
on the day she marries. If I beat you, 'Filus marries Sibbey without any
dowry. If you beat me, you get 'Filus. But I still get the three hundred
dollars 'Filus owes me for Tennie. Is that correct?"
"That's correct," Uncle
Buddy said.
"Stud," Mr Hubert said. "One hand. You to shuffle, me to cut,
this boy to deal."
"No," Uncle Buddy said. "Not Cass. He's too young. I dont
want him mixed up in any gambling."
"Hah," Mr Hubert said. "It's said that a
man playing cards with Amodeus McCaslin aint gambling. But no matter."
He was still looking at Uncle Buddy; he never even turned his head when he
spoke: "Go to the back door and holler. Bring the first creature that
answers, animal mule or human, that can deal ten cards."
So he went to the back door. But he didn't even need to call
because Tomey's Turl was squatting against the wall just outside the door,
and they returned to the drawing-room where Mr Hubert still sat with his
arms folded on his side of the table and Uncle Buddy sat with his hands in
his lap on his side and the deck of cards face-down under the lamp between
them. Neither of them even looked up when he and Tomey's Turl entered.
"Shuffle," Mr Hubert said. Uncle Buddy shuffled and set the cards back under
the lamp and put his hands back in his lap and Mr Hubert cut the deck and
folded his arms back onto the table-edge. "Deal," he said. Still neither he
nor Uncle Buddy looked up. They just sat there while—while Tomey's Turl's
saddle-colored hands came into the light and took up the deck and dealt, one
card face-down to Mr Hubert and one face-down to Uncle Buddy, and one
face-up to Mr Hubert and it was a king, and one face-up to Uncle Buddy and
it was a six.
"Buck McCaslin against Sibbey's dowry," Mr Hubert said.
"Deal." And the hand dealt Mr Hubert a card and it was a three, and Uncle
Buddy a card and it was a two. Mr Hubert looked at Uncle Buddy. Uncle Buddy
rapped once with his knuckles on the table.
"Deal," Mr Hubert said. And the
hand dealt Mr Hubert a card and it was another three, and Uncle Buddy a card
and it was a four. Mr Hubert looked at Uncle Buddy's cards. Then he looked
at Uncle Buddy and Uncle Buddy rapped on the table again with his
knuckles.
"Deal," Mr Hubert said, and the hand dealt him an ace
and Uncle Buddy a five and now Mr Hubert just sat still. He didn't look at
anything or move for a whole minute; he just sat there and watched Uncle
Buddy put one hand onto the table for the first time since he shuffled and
pinch up one corner of his face-down card and look at it and and then put
his hand back into his lap. "Check," Mr Hubert said.
"I'll bet you them two
niggers," Uncle Buck—Buddy said. He didn't move either. He just sat just like he
sat in the wagon or on a horse or in the rocking chair he cooked from.
"Against what?" Mr Hubert said.
"Against the three hundred dollars
Theophilus owes you for Tennie, and the three hundred you and Theophilus
agreed on for Tomey's Turl," Uncle Buddy said.
"Hah," Mr Hubert said, only
it wasn't loud at all this time, nor even short. Then he said "Hah. Hah.
Hah" and not loud either. Then he said, "Well." Then he said, "Well, well."
Then he said: "We'll check up for a minute. If I win, you take Sibbey
without a dowry and the two niggers, and I dont owe 'Filus anything. If you
win—"
"—Theophilus is free," Uncle Buddy said. "And you owe him the three hundred dollars for
Tomey's Turl."
"That's just if I call you," Mr Hubert said. "If I dont
call you, 'Filus wont owe me nothing and I wont owe 'Filus nothing, unless I
take that nigger which I have been trying to explain to you and him both for
years I wont have on my place. We will be right back where all this
foolishness started from, except for that. So what it comes down to is, I
either got to give a nigger away, or risk buying one that you done already
admitted you cant keep at home." Then he stopped talking. For about a minute
it was like he and Uncle Buddy had both gone to sleep. Then Mr Hubert picked
up his face-down card and turned it over. It was another three, and Mr
Hubert sat there without looking at anything at all, his fingers beating a
tattoo, slow and steady and not very loud, on the table. "H'm," he said.
"And you need a trey and there aint but four of them and I already got
three. And you just shuffled. And I cut afterward. And if I call you, I will
have to buy that nigger. Who dealt these cards, Amodeus?" Only he didn't
wait to be answered. He reached out and tilted the lamp-shade, the light
moving up Tomey's Turl's arms that were supposed to be black but were not
quite white, up his Sunday shirt that was supposed to be white but wasn't
quite either, that he put on every time he ran away just as Uncle Buck put
on the necktie each time he went to bring him back, and on to his face; and
Mr Hubert sat there, holding the lampshade and looking at Tomey's Turl. Then
he tilted the shade back down and took up his cards and turned them
face-down and pushed them across the middle of the table. "I pass, Amodeus,"
he said.
He was still too worn out for sleep to sit on a horse,
so this time he and Uncle Buddy and Tennie all three rode in the wagon,
while Tomey's Turl led the pony from old Jake. And when they got home just
after daylight, this time Uncle Buddy never even had time to get breakfast
started and the fox never even got out of the crate, because the dogs were
right there in the room. Old Moses went right into the crate with the fox,
so that both of them went right—right on out through the back end of it. That is,
the fox went through, because when Uncle Buddy opened the door to come in,
old Moses was still wearing most of the crate around his neck until Uncle
Buddy kicked it off of him. So they made just one run, across the front
gallery and around the house and they could hear the fox's claws when—when he
went scrabbling up the lean-pole, onto the roof—a fine race while it lasted,
but—but the tree was too quick.
"What in damn's hell do you mean," Uncle Buddy said,
"casting that damn thing with the dogs right in the same room?"
"Damn the
fox," Uncle Buck said. "Go on and start breakfast. It seems to me I've been
away from home a whole damn month." [applause]
[end of recording]