In one hand, crumpled in his pocket, he held his
dismissal from Hillsboro school: "On account of age," it said. Next
morning, at nine o'clock, the new teacher was coming to take over the
little schoolhouse, with its splintered desks, the dusty blackboard,
and the colored maps.
As he walked, the sun sank in the west, and evening crept up the road
after him. The air was damp; he could see his breath pass out in fog
before his face. The wind, blowing above his head, showered down the
last dried, yellow leaves upon his path; before him he saw the chilly
sky with its faint, lonely star, and over him the half moon, like a
slice; and he heard the autumn wind, steady and cold. "You fields," he
said, "you trees, you meadows and little paths, I do not believe you
wanted to dismiss me. You must have enjoyed the daisy chains my pupils
used to weave for you in the spring. Now they will learn the use of
figures and percents, and the names of cities I have forgot. I will
never hear again the voices of children at the playhour come tumbling
in through the school windows.
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