|  The Sandman: His Farm Stories  by Willliam J. Hopkins   | 
 
 The Hay Story
 NCE upon a time there was a farm-house, and it was painted
white and had green blinds; and it stood not far from
the road. In the fence was a wide gate to let the
wagons through to the barn. And the wagons, going
through, had made a little track that led up past the
kitchen door and past the shed and past the barn and
past the orchard to the wheat-field.
NCE upon a time there was a farm-house, and it was painted
white and had green blinds; and it stood not far from
the road. In the fence was a wide gate to let the
wagons through to the barn. And the wagons, going
through, had made a little track that led up past the
kitchen door and past the shed and past the barn and
past the orchard to the wheat-field.
All about were other fields. One of
them was a great enormous field, and in this field was
growing grass that would be made into hay.
One day, when the summer was nearly half over, Uncle
John saw that the little tassels at 
the tops of the stems of the grass were getting yellow,
and he knew that the grass was ripe 
enough to cut for hay; and the grass was as high as
little John's head. So, very early the next 
morning, Uncle Solomon and Uncle John took their
scythes and their whetstones and went 
over to the great enormous field, and two other men
came to help. When the grass that these 
other men had was ready to cut, then Uncle Solomon and
Uncle John would go and help 
them cut it.
And they had a jug, and in it was water, with some
molasses and a little
vinegar mixed with it. This was for them to drink when
they got very hot and thirsty, 
mowing, and they put it down by the stone wall, where
it was cool.
![[Illustration]](http://www.gatewaytotheclassics.com/gold/books/hopkins/farm/hopkins_farm_zpage137.gif) 
Then the men all took their whetstones and sharpened
their scythes, and Uncle Solomon 
started first, at the corner of the field, and he swung
his scythe back and forth, and every 
time he swung the scythe it cut down some grass and
made a noise, "Swish." And then he took a little step 
ahead and swung the scythe again, and he walked very
slowly along, cutting the grass. And 
when Uncle Solomon had got a
little way along, so that the next scythe wouldn't cut
him, Uncle John began next to the place 
where Uncle Solomon had begun, and he swung his scythe
and 
walked slowly along, cutting the grass. Then one of the
other men began at the next place, 
when Uncle John had got a little way along, and then
the last man. So all the men were 
walking slowly along, swinging their scythes together,
and cutting the grass, and the
grass fell down in four long rows. And they mowed this
way all the morning, and cut 
down all the grass in the field.
![[Illustration]](http://www.gatewaytotheclassics.com/gold/books/hopkins/farm/hopkins_farm_zpage138.gif) 
And just when they had finished, and all the grass was
cut down, they heard the horn 
that Aunt Deborah was blowing. That meant that dinner
was ready. They had a horn to 
blow for dinner because the men had to work in fields
that were far from the house, 
where they couldn't hear a dinner-bell. But they could
hear the horn. So the horn hung 
on a hook beside the kitchen door; and when dinner was
ready, Aunt Deborah took the 
horn from the hook and blew it.
When the men heard the horn, they took their coats and
their scythes and their whetstones 
and the jug, and they went back along the road to the 
farm-house and left the grass lying there, just as it fell down.
And the sun shone on the grass and 
dried it, so that it was changing to hay.
Then, the next morning, Uncle Solomon and Uncle John
took their pitchforks and went over 
to the field and spread the grass out evenly, so that
it would dry better; and they left it until 
the afternoon.
In the afternoon, Uncle John and Uncle Solomon took two
great wide wooden rakes, and 
little John took a little rake, and they went to the
field. Then Uncle Solomon and Uncle John 
each held one of the great wide rakes so that it
trailed behind, and they walked along and the 
rakes rolled the grass up into long rows. Then they
walked along the other way, trailing the 
rakes, and the grass rolled up
into piles, and little John raked after. They call the
piles of hay haycocks, and they were as 
high as little John's head. Then they went away and
left the hay there all night.
In the morning, when the sun had shone on the haycocks
long enough to dry off the dew, 
Uncle John got out the old oxen. And they put their
heads down, and he put the yoke over 
and the bows under, and he hooked the tongue of the
hay-cart to the yoke. Then he put little 
John up in the cart and took the pitchforks, and gave
little John his little rake. And the old 
oxen started walking slowly along, out into the road
and along the road to the great enormous 
field, and in at the gate. And they walked along beside
one of the haycocks, and there they stopped.
Then Uncle John lifted little John out of the cart, and
Uncle Solomon and Uncle John both 
stuck their pitchforks into the haycock and lifted it
right up and pitched it over the side of the 
cart, so that it fell into the cart. Then they went
along to the next haycock and pitched that in 
the same way, and little John raked after, raking up
the hay that had dropped from the 
pitchforks. So they went along to the other haycocks
and pitched them into the cart, and 
when the hay was nearly up to the top of the side of
the cart, Uncle John climbed in, and 
he made the hay even in the cart, with his fork. Uncle
Solomon pitched the hay up into the 
cart, and Uncle John made it even in the cart, so it
couldn't fall out, and they piled the hay 
up in the cart until it was a great enormous
load, higher than the room. And little John raked
after.
![[Illustration]](http://www.gatewaytotheclassics.com/gold/books/hopkins/farm/hopkins_farm_zpage143.gif) 
When they had made the load as high as they could, the
old oxen started and 
turned around, and walked back through the gate and
along the road to the farm-house, 
and in at the gate and up the track past the kitchen
door and past the shed, and in at the 
big door of the barn. And they went along in the open
place in the barn and stopped in 
the middle, so that the load of hay was beside the
floor of the loft where the hay was 
kept, and the top
of the load was higher than the floor of the loft.
Then Uncle Solomon climbed up the ladder to the loft,
and Uncle John pitched the hay 
from the cart to the loft. And Uncle Solomon took his
fork and pitched the hay back 
against the wall and packed it tight, so that they
could get more in when they brought it, 
and fill the loft as full as it would hold.
When all the hay was out of the cart, Uncle Solomon
came down from the loft, and the 
oxen started walking along, out of the other big door
and around the barn and back to 
the hay-field. Then they filled the cart again, the
same way that they did the first time, 
and put that hay in the barn. And they had to go back
three times after the first time before they
had all the hay that was in the field. And when it was
all in the barn, there was hay 
enough for the horses and the oxen and the cows to eat
all winter.
Then the old oxen walked out through the other door of
the barn, and around the 
barn to the shed. And Uncle John unhooked the tongue of
the cart and put the cart 
in the shed, and he took off the yoke and the oxen went
into the barn and went to sleep.
And that's all.