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Village Squire, 1974-12, Page 12necessary to go to town to go to church, many farm children never saw a train or a village or even a store until they were six or seven years old, and even after that did not see these things very often. I watched as the conductor alighted and walked with an air of conscious worth to the side door of the station. Only the elite entered there. He conferred briefly with the station agent. He took out his large railroad watch, looked at it with an inscrutable air, and put it back, seemingly satisfied. One could not help but feel that even in this brief visit a shade of honour was being bestowed on the village. I watched with awe. Even my good friend Mr. McTaggart grew in my esteem from the reflected glow of this great man. The engineer looked from his cab and exchanged bored jokes with some giggling girls. One could see the fireman at the other side; he seemed satisfied just to rest. These people brought me a whiff of excitement; they smelled of the unknown world, of Londesboro and Clinton and far and farther away, of London. Not the London where the King was but our own great city where some fifty thousand people lived. Crowds had gotten off the train and crowds got on. The magic contents were fleeting as a sunset. The conductor grasped the handhold by the steps. He shouted, "Bort!" and waved his hand. The steam shot down in jets, the wheels clanked and groaned and forward, faster and faster, past the weight scales, past the stock yards, over the arches, and grew small and smaller like receding galaxy until it disappeared in the vast unknown world to the north. _ The rest is anti -climax. The bus wheeled and rattled away, grown in importance with its great rival gone. You could smell the perfume of the driver's five -cent cigar. (You could buy a good cigar for five cents then.) The dray followed but was much less impressive. The horse just scuttled along head down like a woodchuck and the driver was only young Hank McWhinney of no great importance. But the dray was piled high with trunks and mysterious boxes belonging to the great world of commerce. Once could think about all this. Peace and quiet now returned and dwelt in the land, and Grandfather and I went home to read about Mutt and Jeff and the great statesman and sage, Sir Wilfred Laurier. Once there was a visitor, my namesake from Toronto, a cousin of Grandfather. This great man was reputed to be a millionaire, but he was disappointing, not at all impressive, only a slightly smoother and more polished version of Grandfather. The two old men sat under the maples in front of the house, and talked. Probably they talked of the past as old men will. I kept discreetly in the background. Grandpa didn't say outright but delicately hinted that children were to be seen and not heard. Sometimes they talked in the broad Scots of the district from which they came. It was not the Scots of the burring R's which we hear from the singers and comedians but rather soft and plaintive, with a lilt like Welsh or Swedish. Years later as I was going into Toronto with a bundle of furs to sell, I saw this man's business sign. There it was in big letters; and it was also my own name. It gave me confidence for the ordeal ahead. If this man could make good why not I? Perhaps it helped. The Jewish gentleman with whom I did business had a certain respect for the Scotch. They regarded them, not as equals exactly, but as people who had rudimentary sense of merchandising and of the manipulative power of money and goods. Later still I shipped furs to. the Scots who controlled the fur trade in England. It is Scots over there, of course, not Scotch, which most of the world knows as a beverage. Then it was that my eyes were opened and I found my education was only beginning. When Grandfather L. was gone I shifted for myself until Grandfather C. took over. Grandfather C. had given up his business in the village and lived much of the time at our home. He was welcome enough, especially with me, since he was quick-witted and livened up the place. One had to look sharp to stay even with him. He and Dad were on good terms, though politically they were on opposite sides of the fence. Here they observed a somewhat wary truce. We had rural mail by this time, and when the mail came at noon each day 1 sped the 200 yards to the box and returned somewhat more slowly trying to gulp down the sports page and the comics before I had to hand over the papers to higher-ups. I can still name most of the ballplayers who made up the Leaf International teams at that time. Dad took the Globe which had not fallen from grace then and was Liberal. Grandpa C. had the Mail and Empire, true blue Tory. After going over the respective sheets they 10, VILLAGE SQUIRE/NOVEMBER W74