Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  

John Henry: An American Legend 50th Anniversary Edition

Ezra Jack Keats



  THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF

  Copyright © 1965 by Ezra J. Keats, copyright renewed 1993 by Martin Pope, executor of the estate of the author All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House LLC, a Penguin Random House Company, New York. Originally published in hardcover in the United States by Pantheon Books, a division of Random House LLC, New York, in 1965.

  Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House LLC.

  Visit us on the Web! randomhousekids.com

  Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at RHTeachersLibrarians.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Keats, Ezra Jack.

  John Henry, an American Legend.

  Summary: Describes the life of the legendary steel-driving man who was born and died

  with a hammer in his hand.

  ISBN 978-0-394-99052-1 (lib. bdg) — ISBN 978-0-394-89052-4 (pbk.) —

  ISBN 978-0-553-51307-3 (trade; 50th anniversary ed.) — ISBN 978-0-553-51308-0 (lib. bdg.; 50th anniversary ed.) —

  ISBN 978-0-553-51313-4 (ebook; 50th anniversary ed.)

  1. John Henry (Legendary character)—Juvenile literature. [1. John Henry (Legendary character).

  2. Folklore—United States.] I. Title.

  PZ8.I.KI98Jo 1987 398.2’2’0973 87017336

  Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

  v3.1

  For Charlemae and Joseph

  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  First Page

  About the Author

  A hush settled over the hills.

  The sky swirled soundlessly round the moon.

  The river stopped murmuring,

  the wind stopped whispering,

  and the frogs and the owls

  and the crickets fell silent—

  all watching and waiting and listening.

  Then—the river roared!

  The wind whispered and whistled and sang.

  The frogs croaked, the owls hooted,

  and all the crickets chirped.

  “Welcome, welcome!” echoed through the hills.

  And John Henry was born,

  born with a hammer in his hand!

  “Bang! Bang! Bang!” rang little John Henry’s hammer

  through the cabin as he crawled about.

  “What’s that rascal up to now?” his mother chuckled.

  And before she knew it, he was big enough to help her

  around the house.

  As he grew up, he did a man’s work with his father.

  One day John Henry thought, “I’m taller and stronger than

  anyone around. It’s time I went out into the world.”

  He said goodbye to his mother and father, and off he went.

  He worked on farms and in cotton fields,

  but all that was too tame.

  So he got himself a job on a riverboat.

  One stormy night the ship plowed through the darkness. Suddenly

  the big steel rod that turned the paddle wheel broke. The wheel

  stopped turning. Smash! went the rod through the bottom of the ship.

  “Pump water!” shouted the captain. “Get to port before we sink!”

  John Henry leaped to the paddle-wheel crank. He seized it, pushed,

  and grunted and pulled. Slowly the giant wheel turned. With all his

  strength he kept it turning. “Lord Almighty, help us,” someone

  whispered in that long, dark night. As day broke, they sighted shore

  and pulled into port. A thunderous cheer went up for John Henry!

  John Henry felt a new excitement in the air. Men were talking

  of railroads being built from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

  “They’re goin’ to lay those tracks over rivers, across prairies

  and deserts, and right through mountains.”

  “And through Indian lands and stampeding buffalo herds, and bad lands.”

  “Goodbye, boys,” cried John Henry. “I’m goin’ to swing me a hammer

  on them beautiful new tracks!”

  “My hands are just itchin’ to hold a hammer again,” John Henry said.

  He tried one for size, and laughed. “It sure does feel fine.”

  How he drove those spikes, singing to the clanging of his hammer!

  The men joined in, their voices singing, hammers ringing.

  And John Henry’s gang was in the lead

  as day after day the tracks moved steadily westward.

  Rising across their path was a sprawling mountain range.

  Its snow-capped peaks reached high into the clouds.

  “We’ll have to tunnel through,” said his friend, Li’l Bill.

  “It’ll be awful dangerous. Could be cave-ins,” someone put in.

  “That suits me fine,” said John Henry.

  “Me, too,” added Li’l Bill.

  “Here’s how we’ll do it, boys,” the foreman called out.

  “A couple of men’ll drive a hole into the rock.

  Then the powder men’ll put dynamite into the hole and explode it.

  The others’ll cart the loose rock away.

  We’ll do this again and again until we have a tunnel right through

  this mountain. And it’s goin’ to be a real big tunnel, boys.

  Big enough for a giant locomotive pullin’ one o’ them long strings

  o’ trains. All right, boys, blast away!”

  Deep into the mountain they worked, as John Henry’s singing

  echoed through the tunnel. The powder men got ready to blast more rock.

  They filled a hole with dynamite, put in a long fuse, and lit it.

  “Run, men!” cried the foreman.

  They all scrambled back, ready to dash clear of the blast.

  At that instant came a great cracking and rumbling

  and the entire tunnel trembled around them.

  “It’s a cave-in!” “We’re trapped!”

  There was no place to run. The fuse burned closer to the dynamite.

  John Henry was nearest the fuse.

  He ran to put it out but tripped and fell!

  “Oooh, I’m hurt bad,” he groaned. “I can’t get up.”

  The fuse burned farther out of reach. Others rushed toward it,

  but they were too far away. Suddenly John Henry remembered—

  he still had his hammer in his hand!

  Down came the hammer. Smack! on the burning tip.

  The fuse was out, danger past.

  Sighs of relief filled the smoky tunnel.

  “Whew! Help me up, boys,” mumbled John Henry.

  Clearing their way through the cave-in,

  the men carried him to safety.

  Some days later they heard an unfamiliar clatter.

  Down the tunnel came a group of men with a strange machine.

  “This is a steam drill. It can drill holes faster than

  any six men combined,” a new man bragged. “Who can beat that?”

  John Henry stepped forward. “Try me!”

  He and Li’l Bill took their work places.

  John Henry gripped his hammer. Li’l Bill clutched his steel drill.

  “Check the machine,” came an order. A nervous hand fell on the switch.

  In the dark, both sides waited for the signal to start.

  A hoarse voi
ce counted, “One, two—

  —THREE!”

  The machine shrieked as it started.

  John Henry swung his hammer—and a crash

  of steel on steel split the air!

  Clang! Bang! Clang!

  The drill got red-hot in Li’l Bill’s hands.

  He quickly dropped it and picked up another.

  Hiss! Whistle! Rattle!

  Men frantically heaved coal into the hungry, roaring

  engine and poured water into the steaming boiler.

  Whoop! Clang! Whoop! Bang!

  John Henry’s hammer whistled as he swung it.

  Chug, chug! Clatter!

  rattled the machine.

  Hour after hour raced by. The machine was ahead!

  “Hand me that twenty-pound hammer, Li’l Bill!”

  Harder and faster crashed the hammer.

  Great chunks of rock fell as John Henry ripped

  hole after hole into the tunnel wall.

  The machine rattled and whistled and drilled even faster.

  Friends doused John Henry and Li’l Bill with cold water

  to keep them going.

  Then John Henry took a deep breath,

  picked up two sledge hammers, and sang:

  “Ain’t no hammers

  Strike such fire,

  Strike like lightning, Lawd,

  And I won’t tire!

  “Hammers like this, Lawd,

  There’s never been!

  I’ll keep swingin’ ’em, Lawd,

  Until we win!”

  John Henry swung both mighty hammers—faster and faster.

  He moved so fast the men could see only a blur

  and sparks from his striking hammers.

  His strokes rang out like great heart-beats.

  At the other side of the tunnel, the machine shrieked, groaned

  and rattled, and drilled. Then all at once it shook and shuddered—

  wheezed—and stopped. Frantically men worked to get it going again.

  But they couldn’t. It had collapsed! John Henry’s hammering still rang

  and echoed through the tunnel with a strong and steady beat.

  Suddenly there was a great crash.

  Light streamed into the dark tunnel.

  John Henry had broken through!

  Wild cries of joy burst from the men.

  Still holding one of his hammers, John Henry stepped out

  into the glowing light of a dying day.

  It was the last step he ever took.

  Even the great heart of John Henry could not bear

  the strain of his last task.

  John Henry died with his hammer in his hand.

  If you listen to the locomotives roaring through

  the tunnels and across the land, you’ll hear them singing—

  singing of that great steel-driving man—John Henry.

  Listen!

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Ezra Jack Keats (1916–1983) was the Caldecott Medal–winning creator of The Snowy Day, which broke ground as one of the first picture books for young children to portray a realistic, multicultural urban setting. By the time of his death, Keats had illustrated over eighty-five books for children, and had written and illustrated twenty-four children’s classics.

  For more information on Ezra Jack Keats, his books, and the work of the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation, go to ezra-jack-keats.org.

 

 

  Ezra Jack Keats, John Henry: An American Legend 50th Anniversary Edition

  Thank you for reading books on BookFrom.Net