Chapter Four
When Joad heard the truck get under way, gear climbing up to gear and the ground throbbing under the rubber beating of the tires, he stopped and turned about and watched it until it disappeared. When it was out of sight he still watched the distance and the blue air-shimmer. Thoughtfully he took the pint from his pocket, unscrewed the metal cap, and sipped the whisky delicately, running his tongue inside the bottle neck, and then around his lips, to gather in any flavor that might have escaped him. He said experimentally, โThere we spied a niggerโโ and that was all he could remember. At last he turned about and faced the dusty side road that cut off at right angles through the fields. The sun was hot, and no wind stirred the sifted dust. The road was cut with furrows where dust had slid and settled back into the wheel tracks. Joad took a few steps, and the flourlike dust spurted up in front of his new yellow shoes, and the yellowness was disappearing under gray dust.
He leaned down and untied the laces, slipped off first one shoe and then the other.
And he worked his damp feet comfortably in the hot dry dust until little spurts of it came up between his toes, and until the skin on his feet tightened with dryness. He took off his coat and wrapped his shoes in it and slipped the bundle under his arm. And at last he moved up the road, shooting the dust ahead of him, making a cloud that hung low to the ground behind him.
The right of way was fenced, two strands of barbed wire on willow poles. The poles were crooked and badly trimmed. Whenever a crotch came to the proper height the wire lay in it, and where there was no crotch the barbed wire was lashed to the post with rusty baling wire. Beyond the fence, the corn lay beaten down by wind and heat and drought, and the cups where leaf joined stalk were filled with dust.
Joad plodded along, dragging his cloud of dust behind him. A little bit ahead he saw the high-domed shell of a land turtle, crawling slowly along through the dust, its legs working stiffly and jerkily. Joad stopped to watch it, and his shadow fell on the turtle.
Instantly head and legs were withdrawn and the short thick tail clamped sideways into the shell. Joad picked it up and turned it over. The back was brown-gray, like the dust, but the underside of the shell was creamy yellow, clean and smooth. Joad shifted his bundle high under his arm and stroked the smooth undershell with his finger, and he pressed it. It was softer than the back. The hard old head came out and tried to look at the pressing finger, and the legs waved wildly. The turtle wetted on Joadโs hand and struggled uselessly in the air. Joad turned it back upright and rolled it up in his coat with his shoes. He could feel it pressing and struggling and fussing under his arm. He moved ahead more quickly now, dragging his heels a little in the fine dust.
Ahead of him, beside the road, a scrawny, dusty willow tree cast a speckled shade.
Joad could see it ahead of him, its poor branches curving over the way, its load of leaves
tattered and scraggly as a molting chicken. Joad was sweating now. His blue shirt darkened down his back and under his arms. He pulled at the visor of his cap and creased it in the middle, breaking its cardboard lining so completely that it could never look new again. And his steps took on new speed and intent toward the shade of the distant willow tree. At the willow he knew there would be shade, at least one hard bar of absolute shade thrown by the trunk, since the sun had passed its zenith. The sun whipped the back of his neck now and made a little humming in his head. He could not see the base of the tree, for it grew out of a little swale that held water longer than the level places. Joad speeded his pace against the sun, and he started down the declivity. He slowed cautiously, for the bar of absolute shade was taken. A man sat on the ground, leaning against the trunk of the tree. His legs were crossed and one bare foot extended nearly as high as his head. He did not hear Joad approaching, for he was whistling solemnly the tune of โYes, Sir, Thatโs My Baby.โ His extended foot swung slowly up and down in the tempo. It was not dance tempo. He stopped whistling and sang in an easy thin tenor:
โYes, sir, thatโs my Saviour,
Jeโsus is my Saviour,
Jeโsus is my Saviour now.
On the level
โS not the devil,
Jesus is my Saviour now.โ
Joad had moved into the imperfect shade of the molting leaves before the man heard him coming, stopped his song, and turned his head. It was a long head, bony, tight of skin, and set on a neck as stringy and muscular as a celery stalk. His eyeballs were heavy and protruding; the lids stretched to cover them, and the lids were raw and red. His cheeks were brown and shiny and hairless and his mouth fullโhumorous or sensual. The nose, beaked and hard, stretched the skin so tightly that the bridge showed white. There was no perspiration on the face, not even on the tall pale forehead. It was an abnormally high forehead, lined with delicate blue veins at the temples. Fully half of the face was above the eyes. His stiff gray hair was mussed back from his brow as though he had combed it back with his fingers. For clothes he wore overalls and a blue shirt. A denim coat with brass buttons and a spotted brown hat creased like a pork pie lay on the ground beside him. Canvas sneakers, gray with dust, lay near by where they had fallen when they were kicked off.
The man looked long at Joad. The light seemed to go far into his brown eyes, and it picked out little golden specks deep in the irises. The strained bundle of neck muscles stood out.
Joad stood still in the speckled shade. He took off his cap and mopped his wet face with it and dropped it and his rolled coat on the ground.
The man in the absolute shade uncrossed his legs and dug with his toes at the earth.
Joad said, โHi. Itโs hotterโn hell on the road.โ
The seated man stared questioningly at him. โNow ainโt you young Tom Joadโolโ Tomโs boy?โ
โYeah,โ said Joad. โAll the way. Goinโ home now.โ
โYou wouldnโ remember me, I guess,โ the man said. He smiled and his full lips revealed great horse teeth. โOh, no, you wouldnโt remember. You was always too busy pullinโ little girlsโ pig-tails when I give you the Holy Sperit. You was all wrapped up in yankinโ that pigtail out by the roots. You maybe donโt recollect, but I do. The two of you come to Jesus at once โcause of that pigtail yankinโ. Baptized both of you in the irrigation ditch at once. Fightinโ anโ yellinโ like a couple a cats.โ
Joad looked at him with drooped eyes, and then he laughed. โWhy, youโre the preacher. Youโre the preacher. I jusโ passed a recollection about you to a guy not an hour ago.โ
โI was a preacher,โ said the man seriously. โReverend Jim Casyโwas a Burning Busher. Used to howl out the name of Jesus to glory. And used to get an irrigation ditch so squirminโ full of repented sinners half of โem like to drownded. But not no more,โ he sighed. โJust Jim Casy now. Ainโt got the call no more. Got a lot of sinful idearsโbut they seem kinda sensible.โ
Joad said, โYouโre bound to get idears if you go thinkinโ about stuff. Sure I remember you. You use ta give a good meetinโ. I recollect one time you give a whole sermon walkinโ around on your hands, yellinโ your head off. Ma favored you more than anybody.
Anโ Granma says you was just lousy with the spirit.โ Joad dug at his rolled coat and found the pocket and brought out his pint. The turtle moved a leg but he wrapped it up tightly. He unscrewed the cap and held out the bottle. โHave a little snort?โ
Casy took the bottle and regarded it broodingly. โI ainโt preachinโ no more much. The sperit ainโt in the people much no more; and worseโn that, the sperit ainโt in me no more.
โCourse now anโ again the sperit gets movinโ anโ I rip out a meetinโ, or when folks sets out food I give โem a grace, but my heart ainโt in it. I onโy do it โcause they expect it.โ
Joad mopped his face with his cap again. โYou ainโt too damn holy to take a drink, are you?โ he asked.
Casy seemed to see the bottle for the first time. He tilted it and took three big swallows. โNice drinkinโ liquor,โ he said.
โOught to be,โ said Joad. โThatโs factโry liquor. Cost a buck.โ
Casy took another swallow before he passed the bottle back. โYes, sir!โ he said. โYes, sir!โ
Joad took the bottle from him, and in politeness did not wipe the neck with his sleeve before he drank. He squatted on his hams and set the bottle upright against his coat roll.
His fingers found a twig with which to draw his thoughts on the ground. He swept the leaves from a square and smoothed the dust. And he drew angles and made little circles.
โI ainโt seen you in a long time,โ he said.
โNobody seen me,โ said the preacher. โI went off alone, anโ I sat and figured. The speritโs strong in me, onโy it ainโt the same. I ainโt so sure of a lot of things.โ He sat up straighter against the tree. His bony hand dug its way like a squirrel into his overall pocket, brought out a black, bitten plug of tobacco. Carefully he brushed off bits of straw and gray pocket fuzz before he bit off a corner and settled the quid into his cheek. Joad waved his stick in negation when the plug was held out to him. The turtle dug at the
rolled coat. Casy looked over at the stirring garment. โWhat you got thereโa chicken?
Youโll smother it.โ
Joad rolled the coat up more tightly. โAn old turtle,โ he said. โPicked him up on the road. An old bulldozer. Thought Iโd take โim to my little brother. Kids like turtles.โ
The preacher nodded his head slowly. โEvery kid got a turtle some time or other.
Nobody canโt keep a turtle though. They work at it and work at it, and at last one day they get out and away they goโoff somewheres. Itโs like me. I wouldnโ take the good olโ gospel that was just layinโ there to my hand. I got to be pickinโ at it anโ workinโ at it until I got it all tore down. Here I got the sperit sometimes anโ nothinโ to preach about. I got the call to lead the people, anโ no place to lead โem.โ
โLead โem around and around,โ said Joad. โSling โem in the irrigation ditch. Tell โem theyโll burn in hell if they donโt think like you. What the hell you want to lead โem someplace for? Jusโ lead โem.โ The straight trunk shade had stretched out along the ground. Joad moved gratefully into it and squatted on his hams and made a new smooth place on which to draw his thoughts with a stick. A thick-furred yellow shepherd dog came trotting down the road, head low, tongue lolling and dripping. Its tail hung limply curled, and it panted loudly. Joad whistled at it, but it only dropped its head an inch and trotted fast toward some definite destination. โGoinโ someplace,โ Joad explained, a little piqued. โGoinโ for home maybe.โ
The preacher could not be thrown from his subject. โGoinโ someplace,โ he repeated.
โThatโs right, heโs goinโ someplace. MeโI donโt know where Iโm goinโ. Tell you whatโ I use ta get the people jumpinโ anโ talkinโ in tongues, anโ glory-shoutinโ till they just fell down anโ passed out. Anโ some Iโd baptize to bring โem to. Anโ thenโyou know what Iโd do? Iโd take one of them girls out in the grass, anโ Iโd lay with her. Done it everโ time.
Then Iโd feel bad, anโ Iโd pray anโ pray, but it didnโt do no good. Come the nexโ time, them anโ me was full of the sperit, Iโd do it again. I figgered there just wasnโt no hope for me, anโ I was a damned olโ hypocrite. But I didnโt mean to be.โ
Joad smiled and his long teeth parted and he licked his lips. โThere ainโt nothing like a good hot meetinโ for pushinโ โem over,โ he said. โI done that myself.โ
Casy leaned forward excitedly. โYou see,โ he cried, โI seen it was that way, anโ I started thinkinโ.โ He waved his bony big-knuckled hand up and down in a patting gesture. โI got to thinkinโ like thisโโHereโs me preachinโ grace. Anโ hereโs them people gettinโ grace so hard theyโre jumpinโ anโ shoutinโ. Now they say layinโ up with a girl comes from the devil. But the more grace a girl got in her, the quicker she wants to go out in the grass.โ Anโ I got to thinkinโ how in hell, sโcuse me, how can the devil get in when a girl is so full of the Holy Sperit that itโs spoutinโ out of her nose anโ ears. Youโd think thatโd be one time when the devil didnโt stand a snowballโs chance in hell. But there it was.โ His eyes were shining with excitement. He worked his cheeks for a moment and then spat into the dust, and the gob of spit rolled over and over, picking up dust until it looked like a round dry little pellet. The preacher spread out his hand and looked at his palm as though he were reading a book. โAnโ thereโs me,โ he went on softly. โThereโs me with all them peopleโs souls in my hanโโresponsible anโ feelinโ my responsibilityโanโ everโ time, I lay with one of them girls.โ He looked over at Joad and his face looked helpless. His expression asked for help.
Joad carefully drew the torso of a woman in the dirt, breasts, hips, pelvis. โI wasnโt never a preacher,โ he said. โI never let nothinโ get by when I could catch it. Anโ I never had no idears about it except I was goddamn glad when I got one.โ
โBut you wasnโt a preacher,โ Casy insisted. โA girl was just a girl to you. They wasnโt nothinโ to you. But to me they was holy vessels. I was savinโ their souls. Anโ here with all that responsibility on me Iโd just get โem frothinโ with the Holy Sperit, anโ then Iโd take โem out in the grass.โ
โMaybe I should of been a preacher,โ said Joad. He brought out his tobacco and papers and rolled a cigarette. He lighted it and squinted through the smoke at the preacher. โI been a long time without a girl,โ he said. โItโs gonna take some catchinโ up.โ
Casy continued, โIt worried me till I couldnโt get no sleep. Here Iโd go to preachinโ and Iโd say, โBy God, this time I ainโt gonna do it.โ And right while I said it, I knowed I was.โ
โYou should a got a wife,โ said Joad. โPreacher anโ his wife stayed at our place one time. Jehovites they was. Slepโ upstairs. Held meetinโs in our barnyard. Us kids would listen. That preacherโs missus took a godawful poundinโ after everโ night meetinโ.โ
โIโm glad you tolโ me,โ said Casy. โI use to think it was jusโ me. Finally it give me such pain I quit anโ went off by myself anโ give her a damn good thinkinโ about.โ He doubled up his legs and scratched between his dry dusty toes. โI says to myself, โWhatโs gnawinโ you? Is it the screwinโ?โ Anโ I says, โNo, itโs the sin.โ Anโ I says, โWhy is it that when a fella ought to be just about mule-ass proof against sin, anโ all full up of Jesus, why is it thatโs the time a fella gets fingerinโ his pants buttons?โ โ He laid two fingers down in his palm in rhythm, as though he gently placed each word there side by side. โI says, โMaybe it ainโt a sin. Maybe itโs just the way folks is. Maybe we been whippinโ the hell out of ourselves for nothinโ.โ Anโ I thought how some sisters took to beatinโ theirselves with a three-foot shag of bobwire. Anโ I thought how maybe they liked to hurt themselves, anโ maybe I liked to hurt myself. Well, I was layinโ under a tree when I figured that out, and I went to sleep. And it come night, anโ it was dark when I come to.
They was a coyote squawkinโ near by. Before I knowed it, I was sayinโ out loud, โThe hell with it! There ainโt no sin and there ainโt no virtue. Thereโs just stuff people do. Itโs all part of the same thing. And some of the things folks do is nice, and some ainโt nice, but thatโs as far as any man got a right to say.โ โ He paused and looked up from the palm of his hand, where he had laid down the words.
Joad was grinning at him, but Joadโs eyes were sharp and interested, too. โYou give her a goinโ-over,โ he said. โYou figured her out.โ
Casy spoke again, and his voice rang with pain and confusion. โI says, โWhatโs this call, this sperit?โ Anโ I says, โItโs love. I love people so much Iโm fit to bust, sometimes.โ Anโ I says, โDonโt you love Jesus?โ Well, I thought anโ thought, anโ finally I says, โNo, I donโt know nobody nameโ Jesus. I know a bunch of stories, but I only love people. Anโ sometimes I love โem fit to bust, anโ I want to make โem happy, so I been preachinโ somepin I thought would make โem happy.โ Anโ thenโI been talkinโ a hell of a lot.
Maybe you wonder about me using bad words. Well, they ainโt bad to me no more.
Theyโre jusโ words folks use, anโ they donโt mean nothing bad with โem. Anyways, Iโll
tell you one more thing I thought out; anโ from a preacher itโs the most unreligious thing, and I canโt be a preacher no more because I thought it anโ I believe it.โ
โWhatโs that?โ Joad asked.
Casy looked shyly at him. โIf it hits you wrong, donโt take no offense at it, will you?โ
โI donโt take no offense โcept a bust in the nose,โ said Joad. โWhat did you figger?โ
โI figgered about the Holy Sperit and the Jesus road. I figgered, โWhy do we got to hang it on God or Jesus? Maybe,โ I figgered, โmaybe itโs all men anโ all women we love; maybe thatโs the Holy Speritโthe human speritโthe whole shebang. Maybe all men got one big soul everโbodyโs a part of.โ Now I sat there thinkinโ it, anโ all of a suddentโI knew it. I knew it so deep down that it was true, and I still know it.โ
Joadโs eyes dropped to the ground, as though he could not meet the naked honesty in the preacherโs eyes. โYou canโt hold no church with idears like that,โ he said. โPeople would drive you out of the country with idears like that. Jumpinโ anโ yellinโ. Thatโs what folks like. Makes โem feel swell. When Granma got to talkinโ in tongues, you couldnโt tie her down. She could knock over a full-growed deacon with her fist.โ
Casy regarded him broodingly. โSomepin I like to ast you,โ he said. โSomepin that
been eatinโ on me.โ
โGo ahead. Iโll talk, sometimes.โ
โWellโโthe preacher said slowlyโโhereโs you that I baptized right when I was in the glory roof-tree. Got little hunks of Jesus jumpinโ outa my mouth that day. You wonโt remember โcause you was busy pullinโ that pigtail.โ
โI remember,โ said Joad. โThat was Susy Little. She bust my finger a year later.โ
โWellโdid you take any good outa that baptizinโ? Was your ways better?โ
Joad thought about it. โNo-o-o, canโt say as I felt anything.โ
โWellโdid you take any bad from it? Think hard.โ
Joad picked up the bottle and took a swig. โThey wasnโt nothing in it, good or bad. I just had fun.โ He handed the flask to the preacher.
He sighed and drank and looked at the low level of the whisky and took another tiny drink. โThatโs good,โ he said. โI got to worryinโ about whether in messinโ around maybe I done somebody a hurt.โ
Joad looked over toward his coat and saw the turtle, free of the cloth and hurrying away in the direction he had been following when Joad found him. Joad watched him for a moment and then got slowly to his feet and retrieved him and wrapped him in the coat again. โI ainโt got no present for the kids,โ he said. โNothinโ but this olโ turtle.โ
โItโs a funny thing,โ the preacher said. โI was thinkinโ about olโ Tom Joad when you come along. Thinkinโ Iโd call in on him. I used to think he was a godless man. How is Tom?โ
โI donโ know how he is. I ainโt been home in four years.โ
โDidnโt he write to you?โ
Joad was embarrassed. โWell, Pa wasnโt no hand to write for pretty, or to write for writinโ. Heโd sign up his name as nice as anybody, anโ lick his pencil. But Pa never did write no letters. He always says what he couldnโ tell a fella with his mouth wasnโt worth leaninโ on no pencil about.โ
โBeen out travelinโ around?โ Casy asked.
Joad regarded him suspiciously. โDidnโ you hear about me? I was in all the papers.โ
โNoโI never. What?โ He jerked one leg over the other and settled lower against the tree. The afternoon was advancing rapidly, and a richer tone was growing on the sun.
Joad said pleasantly, โMightโs well tell you now anโ get it over with. But if you was still preachinโ I wouldnโt tell, fear you get prayinโ over me.โ He drained the last of the pint and flung it from him, and the flat brown bottle skidded lightly over the dust. โI been in McAlester them four years.โ
Casy swung around to him, and his brows lowered so that his tall forehead seemed even taller. โAinโt wantinโ to talk about it, huh? I wonโt ask you no questions, if you done something badโโโ
โIโd do what I doneโagain,โ said Joad. โI killed a guy in a fight. We was drunk at a dance. He got a knife in me, anโ I killed him with a shovel that was layinโ there. Knocked his head plumb to squash.โ
Casyโs eyebrows resumed their normal level. โYou ainโt ashamed of nothinโ then?โ
โNo,โ said Joad, โI ainโt. I got seven years, account of he had a knife in me. Got out in fourโparole.โ
โThen you ainโt heard nothinโ about your folks for four years?โ
โOh, I heard. Ma sent me a card two years ago, anโ lasโ Christmus Granma sent a card. Jesus, the guys in the cell block laughed! Had a tree anโ shiny stuff looks like snow.
It says in poโtry:
โ โMerry Christmus, purty child,
Jesus meek anโ Jesus mild,
Underneath the Christmus tree
Thereโs a gifโ for you from me.โ
I guess Granma never read it. Probโly got it from a drummer anโ picked out the one with the mosโ shiny stuff on it. The guys in my cell block goddamn near died laughinโ. Jesus Meek they called me after that. Granma never meant it funny; she jusโ figgered it was so purty she wouldnโ bother to read it. She lost her glasses the year I went up. Maybe she never did find โem.โ
โHow they treat you in McAlester?โ Casy asked.
โOh, awright. You eat regular, anโ get clean clothes, and thereโs places to take a bath.
Itโs pretty nice some ways. Makes it hard not havinโ no women.โ Suddenly he laughed.
โThey was a guy paroled,โ he said. โ โBout a month heโs back for breakinโ parole. A guy ast him why he bust his parole. โWell, hell,โ he says. โThey got no conveniences at my old manโs place. Got no โlectric lights, got no shower baths. There ainโt no books, anโ the
foodโs lousy.โ Says he come back where they got a few conveniences anโ he eats regular.
He says it makes him feel lonesome out there in the open havinโ to think what to do next.
So he stole a car anโ come back.โ Joad got out his tobacco and blew a brown paper free of the pack and rolled a cigarette. โThe guyโs right, too,โ he said. โLasโ night, thinkinโ where Iโm gonna sleep, I got scared. Anโ I got thinkinโ about my bunk, anโ I wonder what the stir-bug I got for a cell mate is doinโ. Me anโ some guys had a strang band goinโ. Good one. Guy said we ought to go on the radio. Anโ this morninโ I didnโ know what time to get up. Jusโ laid there waitinโ for the bell to go off.โ
Casy chuckled. โFella can get so he misses the noise of a saw mill.โ
The yellowing, dusty, afternoon light put a golden color on the land. The cornstalks looked golden. A flight of swallows swooped overhead toward some waterhole. The turtle in Joadโs coat began a new campaign of escape. Joad creased the visor of his cap. It was getting the long protruding curve of a crowโs beak now. โGuess Iโll mosey along,โ he said. โI hate to hit the sun, but it ainโt so bad now.โ
Casy pulled himself together. โI ainโt seen olโ Tom in a bugโs age,โ he said. โI was gonna look in on him anyways. I brang Jesus to your folks for a long time, anโ I never took up a collection nor nothinโ but a bite to eat.โ
โCome along,โ said Joad. โPaโll be glad to see you. He always said you got too long a pecker for a preacher.โ He picked up his coat roll and tightened it snugly about his shoes and turtle.
Casy gathered in his canvas sneakers and shoved his bare feet into them. โI ainโt got your confidence,โ he said. โIโm always scared thereโs wire or glass under the dust. I donโt know nothinโ I hate so much as a cut toe.โ
They hesitated on the edge of the shade and then they plunged into the yellow sunlight like two swimmers hastening to get to shore. After a few fast steps they slowed to a gentle, thoughtful pace. The cornstalks threw gray shadows sideways now, and the raw smell of hot dust was in the air. The corn field ended and dark green cotton took its place, dark green leaves through a film of dust, and the bolls forming. It was spotty cotton, thick in the low places where water had stood, and bare on the high places. The plants strove against the sun. And distance, toward the horizon, was tan to invisibility.
The dust road stretched out ahead of them, waving up and down. The willows of a stream lined across the west, and to the northwest a fallow section was going back to sparse brush. But the smell of burned dust was in the air, and the air was dry, so that mucus in the nose dried to a crust, and the eyes watered to keep the eyeballs from drying out.
Casy said, โSee how good the corn come along until the dust got up. Been a dinger of a crop.โ
โEverโ year,โ said Joad. โEverโ year I can remember, we had a good crop cominโ, anโ it never come. Grampa says she was good the first five plowinโs, while the wild grass was still in her.โ The road dropped down a little hill and climbed up another rolling hill.
Casy said, โOlโ Tomโs house canโt be moreโn a mile from here. Ainโt she over that third rise?โ
โSure,โ said Joad. โ โLess somebody stole it, like Pa stole it.โ
โYour pa stole it?โ
โSure, got it a mile anโ a half east of here anโ drug it. Was a family livinโ there, anโ they moved away. Grampa anโ Pa anโ my brother Noah like to took the whole house, but she wouldnโ come. They only got part of her. Thatโs why she looks so funny on one end.
They cut her in two anโ drug her over with twelve head of horses and two mules. They was goinโ back for the other half anโ stick her together again, but before they got there Wink Manley come with his boys and stole the other half. Pa anโ Grampa was pretty sore, but a little later them anโ Wink got drunk together anโ laughed their heads off about it. Wink, he says his house is at stud, anโ if weโll bring ourโn over anโ breed โem weโll maybe get a litter of crap houses. Wink was a great olโ fella when he was drunk. After that him anโ Pa anโ Grampa was friends. Got drunk together everโ chance they got.โ
โTomโs a great one,โ Casy agreed. They plodded dustily on down to the bottom of the draw, and then slowed their steps for the rise. Casy wiped his forehead with his sleeve and put on his flat-topped hat again. โYes,โ he repeated, โTom was a great one. For a godless man he was a great one. I seen him in meetinโ sometimes when the sperit got into him just a little, anโ I seen him take ten-twelve foot jumps. I tell you when olโ Tom got a dose of the Holy Sperit you got to move fast to keep from gettinโ run down anโ tromped.
Jumpy as a stud horse in a box stall.โ
They topped the next rise and the road dropped into an old water-cut, ugly and raw, a ragged course, and freshet scars cutting into it from both sides. A few stones were in the crossing. Joad minced across in his bare feet. โYou talk about Pa,โ he said. โMaybe you never seen Uncle John the time they baptized him over to Polkโs place. Why, he got to plunginโ anโ jumpinโ. Jumped over a feeny bush as big as a piana. Over heโd jump, anโ back heโd jump, howlinโ like a dog-wolf in moon time. Well, Pa seen him, anโ Pa, he figgers heโs the besโ Jesus-jumper in these parts. So Pa picks out a feeny bush โbout twicet as big as Uncle Johnโs feeny bush, and Pa lets out a squawk like a sow litterinโ broken bottles, anโ he takes a run at that feeny bush anโ clears her anโ bust his right leg.
That took the sperit out of Pa. Preacher wants to pray it set, but Pa says, no, by God, heโd got his heart full of havinโ a doctor. Well, they wasnโt a doctor, but they was a travelinโ dentist, anโ he set her. Preacher give her a prayinโ over anyways.โ
They plodded up the little rise on the other side of the water-cut. Now that the sun was on the wane some of its impact was gone, and while the air was hot, the hammering rays were weaker. The strung wire on crooked poles still edged the road. On the right- hand side a line of wire fence strung out across the cotton field, and the dusty green cotton was the same on both sides, dusty and dry and dark green.
Joad pointed to the boundary fence. โThat thereโs our line. We didnโt really need no fence there, but we had the wire, anโ Pa kinda liked her there. Said it give him a feelinโ that forty was forty. Wouldnโt of had the fence if Uncle John didnโ come drivinโ in one night with six spools of wire in his wagon. He give โem to Pa for a shoat. We never did know where he got that wire.โ They slowed for the rise, moving their feet in the deep soft dust, feeling the earth with their feet. Joadโs eyes were inward on his memory. He seemed to be laughing inside himself. โUncle John was a crazy bastard,โ he said. โLike what he done with that shoat.โ He chuckled and walked on.
Jim Casy waited impatiently. The story did not continue. Casy gave it a good long time to come out. โWell, whatโd he do with that shoat?โ he demanded at last, with some irritation.
โHuh? Oh! Well, he killed that shoat right there, anโ he got Ma to light up the stove.
He cut out pork chops anโ put โem in the pan, anโ he put ribs anโ a leg in the oven. He et chops till the ribs was done, anโ he et ribs till the leg was done. Anโ then he tore into that leg. Cut off big hunks of her anโ shoved โem in his mouth. Us kids hung around slaverinโ, anโ he give us some, but he wouldnโ give Pa none. By anโ by he et so much he throwed up anโ went to sleep. While heโs asleep us kids anโ Pa finished off the leg. Well, when Uncle John woke up in the morninโ he slaps another leg in the oven. Pa says, โJohn, you gonna eat that whole damn pig?โ Anโ he says, โI aim to, Tom, but Iโm scairt some of herโll spoil โfore I get her et, hungry as I am for pork. Maybe you better get a plate anโ gimme back a couple rolls of wire.โ Well, sir, Pa wasnโt no fool. He jusโ let Uncle John go on anโ eat himself sick of pig, anโ when he drove off he hadnโt et much moreโn half.
Pa says, โWhynโt you salt her down?โ But not Uncle John; when he wants pig he wants a whole pig, anโ when heโs through, he donโt want no pig hanginโ around. So off he goes, and Pa salts down whatโs left.โ
Casy said, โWhile I was still in the preachinโ sperit Iโd a made a lesson of that anโ spoke it to you, but I donโt do that no more. What you sโpose he done a thing like that for?โ
โI dunno,โ said Joad. โHe jusโ got hungry for pork. Makes me hungry jusโ to think of it. I had jusโ four slices of roastinโ pork in four yearsโone slice everโ Christmus.โ
Casy suggested elaborately, โMaybe Tomโll kill the fatted calf like for the prodigal in Scripture.โ
Joad laughed scornfully. โYou donโt know Pa. If he kills a chicken most of the squawkinโ will come from Pa, not the chicken. He donโt never learn. Heโs always savinโ a pig for Christmus and then it dies in September of bloat or somepin so you canโt eat it.
When Uncle John wanted pork he et pork. He had her.โ
They moved over the curving top of the hill and saw the Joad place below them. And Joad stopped. โIt ainโt the same,โ he said. โLooka that house. Somepinโs happened. They ainโt nobody there.โ The two stood and stared at the little cluster of buildings.