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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Humorous Masterpieces from American
+Literature, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Humorous Masterpieces from American Literature
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: April 8, 2005 [EBook #15585]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HUMOROUS MASTERPIECES FROM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams, Josephine Paolucci and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HUMOROUS MASTERPIECES
+
+FROM
+
+AMERICAN LITERATURE
+
+
+EDITED BY
+
+EDWARD T. MASON
+
+
+NEW YORK & LONDON
+
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+
+The Knickerbocker Press
+
+1886
+
+
+COPYRIGHT
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+1886
+
+
+Press of
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+New York
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ BAYARD TAYLOR
+ Selections from the Experiences of the A.C.
+
+ WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER
+ Dobbs His Ferry
+
+ JOHN WILLIAM DE FOREST
+ Father Higgins's Preferment
+
+ JOHN TOWNSEND TROWBRIDGE
+ Fred Trover's Little Iron-Clad
+
+ OLIVER BELL BUNCE
+ Mr. Bluff Discourses on the Country and Kindred Themes
+
+ CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER
+ Garden Ethics
+
+ FRANCES LEE PRATT
+ Captain Ben's Choice
+
+ LOUISA MAY ALCOTT
+ Street Scenes in Washington
+ Selections from Transcendental Wild Oats
+
+ WILLIAM WIRT HOWE
+ Conversational Depravity
+
+ CHARLES FARRAR BROWNE ("_Artemus Ward_")
+ The Tower of London
+ Science and Natural History
+ From the "Lecture"
+
+ FRANK R. STOCKTON
+ Our Tavern
+ A Piece of Red Calico
+
+ HARRIETT PRESCOTT SPOFFORD
+ Aunt Pen's Funeral
+
+ SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS ("_Mark Twain_")
+ The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
+
+ FITZ HUGH LUDLOW
+ Ben Thirlwall's School-days
+ Selections from a Brace of Boys
+
+ THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH
+ A Rivermouth Romance
+
+
+
+
+BAYARD TAYLOR.
+
+(BORN, 1825--DIED, 1878)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SELECTIONS FROM THE EXPERIENCES OF THE A.C.
+
+
+"Bridgeport! Change cars for the Naugatuck Railroad!" shouted the
+conductor of the New York and Boston Express Train, on the evening of
+May 27, 1858.... Mr. Johnson, carpet-bag in hand, jumped upon the
+platform, entered the office, purchased a ticket for Waterbury, and was
+soon whirling in the Naugatuck train towards his destination.
+
+On reaching Waterbury, in the soft spring twilight, Mr. Johnson walked
+up and down in front of the station, curiously scanning the faces of the
+assembled crowd. Presently he noticed a gentleman who was performing the
+same operation upon the faces of the alighting passengers. Throwing
+himself directly in the way of the latter, the two exchanged a steady
+gaze.
+
+"Is your name Billings?" "Is your name Johnson?" were simultaneous
+questions, followed by the simultaneous exclamations,--"Ned!" "Enos!"
+
+Then there was a crushing grasp of hands, repeated after a pause, in
+testimony of ancient friendship, and Mr. Billings, returning to
+practical life asked:
+
+"Is that all your baggage? Come, I have a buggy here: Eunice has heard
+the whistle, and she'll be impatient to welcome you."
+
+The impatience of Eunice (Mrs. Billings, of course) was not of long
+duration; for in five minutes thereafter she stood at the door of her
+husband's chocolate-colored villa, receiving his friend....
+
+J. Edward Johnson was a tall, thin gentleman of forty-five.... A year
+before, some letters, signed "Foster, Kirkup, & Co., per Enos Billings,"
+had accidentally revealed to him the whereabouts of the old friend of
+his youth with whom we now find him domiciled....
+
+"Enos," said he, as he stretched out his hand for the third cup of tea
+(which he had taken only for the purpose of prolonging the pleasant
+table-chat), "I wonder which of us is most changed."
+
+"You, of course," said Mr. Billings, "with your brown face and big
+moustache. Your own brother wouldn't have known you, if he had seen you
+last, as I did, with smooth cheeks and hair of unmerciful length. Why,
+not even your voice is the same!"
+
+"That is easily accounted for," replied Mr. Johnson. "But in your case,
+Enos, I am puzzled to find where the difference lies. Your features seem
+to be but little changed, now that I can examine them at leisure; yet it
+is not the same face. But really, I never looked at you for so long a
+time, in those days. I beg pardon; you used to be so--so remarkably
+shy."
+
+Mr. Billings blushed slightly, and seemed at a loss what to answer. His
+wife, however, burst into a merry laugh, exclaiming:
+
+"Oh, that was before the days of the A.C.!"
+
+He, catching the infection, laughed also; in fact, Mr. Johnson laughed,
+but without knowing why.
+
+"The 'A.C.'!" said Mr. Billings. "Bless me, Eunice! how long it is since
+we have talked of that summer! I had almost forgotten that there ever
+was an A.C.... Well, the A.C. culminated in '45. You remember something
+of the society of Norridgeport, the last winter you were there? Abel
+Mallory, for instance?"
+
+"Let me think a moment," said Mr. Johnson, reflectively. "Really, it
+seems like looking back a hundred years. Mallory,--wasn't that the
+sentimental young man, with wispy hair, a tallowy skin, and big, sweaty
+hands, who used to be spouting Carlyle on the 'reading evenings' at
+Shelldrake's? Yes, to be sure; and there was Hollins, with his clerical
+face and infidel talk,--and Pauline Ringtop, who used to say, 'The
+Beautiful is the Good.' I can still hear her shrill voice singing,
+'Would that _I_ were beautiful, would that _I_ were fair!'"
+
+There was a hearty chorus of laughter at poor Miss Ringtop's expense. It
+harmed no one, however; for the tar-weed was already thick over her
+Californian grave.
+
+"Oh, I see," said Mr. Billings, "you still remember the absurdities of
+those days. In fact, I think you partially saw through them then. But I
+was younger, and far from being so clearheaded, and I looked upon those
+evenings at Shelldrake's as being equal, at least, to the _symposia_ of
+Plato. Something in Mallory always repelled me. I detested the sight of
+his thick nose, with the flaring nostrils, and his coarse, half-formed
+lips, of the bluish color of raw corned-beef. But I looked upon these
+feelings as unreasonable prejudices, and strove to conquer them, seeing
+the admiration which he received from others. He was an oracle on the
+subject of 'Nature.' Having eaten nothing for two years, except Graham
+bread, vegetables without salt, and fruits, fresh or dried, he
+considered himself to have attained an antediluvian purity of
+health,--or that he would attain it, so soon as two pimples on his left
+temple should have healed. These pimples he looked upon as the last
+feeble stand made by the pernicious juices left from the meat he had
+formerly eaten and the coffee he had drunk. His theory was, that through
+a body so purged and purified none but true and natural impulses could
+find access to the soul. Such, indeed, was the theory we all held....
+
+"Shelldrake was a man of more pretence than real cultivation, as I
+afterwards discovered. He was in good circumstances, and always glad to
+receive us at his house, as this made him virtually the chief of our
+tribe, and the outlay for refreshments involved only the apples from his
+own orchard, and water from his well....
+
+"Well, 't was in the early part of '45,--I think in April,--when we
+were all gathered together, discussing, as usual, the possibility of
+leading a life in accordance with Nature. Abel Mallory was there, and
+Hollins, and Miss Ringtop, and Faith Levis, with her knitting,--and also
+Eunice Hazleton, a lady whom you have never seen, but you may take my
+wife as her representative....
+
+"I wish I could recollect some of the speeches made on that occasion.
+Abel had but one pimple on his temple (there was a purple spot where the
+other had been), and was estimating that in two or three months more he
+would be a true, unspoiled man. His complexion, nevertheless, was more
+clammy and whey-like than ever.
+
+"'Yes,' said he, 'I also am an Arcadian! This false dual existence which
+I have been leading will soon be merged in the unity of Nature. Our
+lives must conform to her sacred law. Why can't we strip off these
+hollow Shams,' (he made great use of that word,) 'and be our true
+selves, pure, perfect, and divine?' ...
+
+"Shelldrake, however, turning to his wife, said,--
+
+"'Elviry, how many up-stairs rooms is there in that house down on the
+Sound?'
+
+"'Four,--besides three small ones under the roof. Why, what made you
+think of that, Jesse?' said she.
+
+"'I've got an idea, while Abel's been talking,' he answered. 'We've
+taken a house for the summer, down the other side of Bridgeport, right
+on the water, where there's good fishing and a fine view of the Sound.
+Now, there's room enough for all of us,--at least, all that can make it
+suit to go. Abel, you and Enos, and Pauline and Eunice might fix matters
+so that we could all take the place in partnership, and pass the summer
+together, living a true and beautiful life in the bosom of Nature. There
+we shall be perfectly free and untrammelled by the chains which still
+hang around us in Norridgeport. You know how often we have wanted to be
+set on some island in the Pacific Ocean, where we could build up a true
+society, right from the start. Now, here's a chance to try the
+experiment for a few months, anyhow.'
+
+"Eunice clapped her hands (yes, you did!) and cried out,--
+
+"'Splendid! Arcadian! I'll give up my school for the summer.' ...
+
+"Abel Mallory, of course, did not need to have the proposal repeated.
+He was ready for any thing which promised indolence, and the indulgence
+of his sentimental tastes. I will do the fellow the justice to say that
+he was not a hypocrite. He firmly believed both in himself and his
+ideas,--especially the former. He pushed both hands through the long
+wisps of his drab-colored hair, and threw his head back until his wide
+nostrils resembled a double door to his brain.
+
+"'O Nature!' he said, 'you have found your lost children! We shall obey
+your neglected laws! we shall hearken to your divine whispers! we shall
+bring you back from your ignominious exile, and place you on your
+ancestral throne!' ...
+
+"The company was finally arranged to consist of the Shelldrakes,
+Hollins, Mallory, Eunice, Miss Ringtop, and myself. We did not give much
+thought, either to the preparations in advance, or to our mode of life
+when settled there. We were to live near to Nature: that was the main
+thing.
+
+"'What shall we call the place?" asked Eunice.
+
+"'Arcadia!' said Abel Mallory, rolling up his large green eyes.
+
+"'Then,' said Hollins, 'let us constitute ourselves the Arcadian
+Club!'"
+
+--"Aha!" interrupted Mr. Johnson, "I see! The A.C.!"
+
+"Yes, you see the A.C. now, but to understand it fully, you should have
+had a share in those Arcadian experiences.... It was a lovely afternoon
+in June when we first approached Arcadia.... Perkins Brown, Shelldrake's
+boy-of-all-work, awaited us at the door. He had been sent on two or
+three days in advance, to take charge of the house, and seemed to have
+had enough of hermit-life, for he hailed us with a wild whoop, throwing
+his straw hat half-way up one of the poplars. Perkins was a boy of
+fifteen, the child of poor parents, who were satisfied to get him off
+their hands, regardless as to what humanitarian theories might be tested
+upon him. As the Arcadian Club recognized no such thing as caste, he was
+always admitted to our meetings, and understood just enough of our
+conversation to excite a silly ambition in his slow mind....
+
+"Our board, that evening, was really tempting. The absence of meat was
+compensated to us by the crisp and racy onions, and I craved only a
+little salt, which had been interdicted, as a most pernicious substance.
+I sat at one corner of the table, beside Perkins Brown, who took an
+opportunity, while the others were engaged in conversation, to jog my
+elbow gently. As I turned towards him, he said nothing, but dropped his
+eyes significantly. The little rascal had the lid of a blacking-box,
+filled with salt, upon his knee, and was privately seasoning his onions
+and radishes. I blushed at the thought of my hypocrisy, but the onions
+were so much better that I couldn't help dipping into the lid with him.
+
+"'Oh,' said Eunice, 'we must send for some oil and vinegar! This lettuce
+is very nice.'
+
+"'Oil and vinegar?' exclaimed Abel.
+
+"'Why, yes,' said she, innocently: 'they are both vegetable substances.'
+
+"Abel at first looked rather foolish, but quickly recovering herself,
+said,--
+
+"'All vegetable substances are not proper for food: you would not taste
+the poison-oak, or sit under the upas-tree of Java.'
+
+"'Well, Abel,' Eunice rejoined, 'how are we to distinguish what is best
+for us? How are we to know _what_ vegetables to choose, or what animal
+and mineral substances to avoid?'
+
+"'I will tell you,' he answered, with a lofty air. 'See here!' pointing
+to his temple, where the second pimple--either from the change of air,
+or because, in the excitement of the last few days, he had forgotten
+it--was actually healed. 'My blood is at last pure. The struggle between
+the natural and the unnatural is over, and I am beyond the depraved
+influences of my former taste. My instincts are now, therefore, entirely
+pure also. What is good for man to eat, that I shall have a natural
+desire to eat: what is bad will be naturally repelled. How does the cow
+distinguish between the wholesome and the poisonous herbs of the meadow?
+And is man less than a cow, that he cannot cultivate his instincts to an
+equal point? Let me walk through the woods and I can tell you every
+berry and root which God designed for food, though I know not its name,
+and have never seen it before. I shall make use of my time, during our
+sojourn here, to test, by my purified instinct, every substance, animal,
+mineral, and vegetable, upon which the human race subsists, and to
+create a catalogue of the True Food of Man!' ...
+
+"Our lazy life during the hot weather had become a little monotonous.
+The Arcadian plan had worked tolerably well, on the whole, for there
+was very little for any one to do,--Mrs. Shelldrake and Perkins Brown
+excepted. Our conversation, however, lacked spirit and variety. We were,
+perhaps unconsciously, a little tired of hearing and assenting to the
+same sentiments. But, one evening, about this time, Hollins struck upon
+a variation, the consequences of which he little foresaw. We had been
+reading one of Bulwer's works, (the weather was too hot for Psychology,)
+and came upon this paragraph, or something like it:--
+
+"'Ah, Behind the Veil! We see the summer smile of the Earth,--enamelled
+meadow and limpid stream,--but what hides she in her sunless heart?
+Caverns of serpents, or grottoes of priceless gems? Youth, whose soul
+sits on thy countenance, thyself wearing no mask, strive not to lift the
+masks of others! Be content with what thou seest; and wait until Time
+and Experience shall teach thee to find jealousy behind the sweet smile,
+and hatred under the honeyed word!'
+
+"This seemed to us a dark and bitter reflection but one or another of us
+recalled some illustration of human hypocrisy, and the evidences, by the
+simple fact of repetition, gradually led to a division of
+opinion,--Rollins, Shelldrake, and Miss Ringtop on the dark side, and
+the rest of us on the bright. The last, however, contented herself with
+quoting from her favorite poet Gamaliel J. Gawthrop:--
+
+ "'I look beyond thy brow's concealment!
+ I see thy spirit's dark revealment!
+ Thy inner self betrayed I see:
+ Thy coward, craven, shivering ME!'
+
+"'We think we know one another,' exclaimed Rollins; 'but do we? We see
+the faults of others, their weaknesses, their disagreeable qualities,
+and we keep silent. How much we should gain, were candor as universal as
+concealment Then each one, seeing himself as others see him, would truly
+know himself. How much misunderstanding might be avoided, how much
+hidden shame be removed, hopeless because unspoken love made glad,
+honest admiration cheer its object, uttered sympathy mitigate
+misfortune,--in short, how much brighter and happier the world would
+become, if each one expressed, everywhere and at all times, his true and
+entire feeling! Why, even Evil would lose half its power!'
+
+"There seemed to be so much practical wisdom in these views that we were
+all dazzled and half-convinced at the start. So, when Hollins, turning
+towards me, as he continued, exclaimed,--'Come, why should not this
+candor be adopted in our Arcadia? Will any one--will you, Enos--commence
+at once by telling me now--to my face--my principal faults?' I answered,
+after a moment's reflection,--'You have a great deal of intellectual
+arrogance, and you are, physically, very indolent.'
+
+"He did not flinch from the self-invited test, though he looked a little
+surprised.
+
+"'Well put,' said he, 'though I do not say that you are entirely
+correct. Now, what are my merits?'
+
+"'You are clear-sighted,' I answered, 'an earnest seeker after truth,
+and courageous in the avowal of your thoughts.'
+
+"This restored the balance, and we soon began to confess our own private
+faults and weaknesses. Though the confessions did not go very deep,--no
+one betraying any thing we did not all know already,--yet they were
+sufficient to strengthen Hollins in his new idea, and it was unanimously
+resolved that Candor should thenceforth be the main charm of our
+Arcadian life....
+
+"The next day, Abel, who had resumed his researches after the True
+Food, came home to supper with a healthier color than I had before seen
+on his face.
+
+"'Do you know,' said he, looking shyly at Hollins, 'that I begin to
+think Beer must be a natural beverage? There was an auction in the
+village to-day, as I passed through, and I stopped at a cake-stand to
+get a glass of water, as it was very hot. There was no water,--only
+beer: so I thought I would try a glass, simply as an experiment. Really,
+the flavor was very agreeable. And it occurred to me, on the way home,
+that all the elements contained in beer are vegetable. Besides,
+fermentation is a natural process. I think the question has never been
+properly tested before.'
+
+"'But the alcohol!' exclaimed Hollins.
+
+"'I could not distinguish any, either by taste or smell. I know that
+chemical analysis is said to show it; but may not the alcohol be
+created, somehow, during the analysis?'
+
+"'Abel,' said Hollins, in a fresh burst of candor, 'you will never be a
+Reformer, until you possess some of the commonest elements of
+knowledge.'
+
+"The rest of us were much diverted: it was a pleasant relief to our
+monotonous amiability.
+
+"Abel, however, had a stubborn streak in his character. The next day he
+sent Perkins Brown to Bridgeport for a dozen bottles of 'Beer.' Perkins,
+either intentionally or by mistake, (I always suspected the former,)
+brought pint-bottles of Scotch ale, which he placed in the coolest part
+of the cellar. The evening happened to be exceedingly hot and sultry;
+and, as we were all fanning ourselves and talking languidly, Abel
+bethought him of his beer. In his thirst, he drank the contents of the
+first bottle, almost at a single draught.
+
+"'The effect of beer,' said he, 'depends, I think, on the commixture of
+the nourishing principle of the grain with the cooling properties of the
+water. Perhaps, hereafter, a liquid food of the same character may be
+invented, which shall save us from mastication and all the diseases of
+the teeth.'
+
+"Hollins and Shelldrake, at his invitation, divided a bottle between
+them, and he took a second. The potent beverage was not long in acting
+on a brain so unaccustomed to its influence. He grew unusually talkative
+and sentimental, in a few minutes.
+
+"'Oh, sing, somebody!' he sighed in hoarse rapture: 'the night was made
+for Song.'
+
+"Miss Ringtop, nothing loath, immediately commenced, 'When stars are in
+the quiet skies'; but scarcely had she finished the first verse before
+Abel interrupted her.
+
+"'Candor's the order of the day, isn't it?' he asked.
+
+"'Yes!' 'Yes!' two or three answered.
+
+"'Well, then,' said he, 'candidly, Pauline, you've got the darn'dest
+squeaky voice'--
+
+"Miss Ringtop gave a faint little scream of horror.
+
+"'Oh, never mind!' he continued. 'We act according to impulse, don't we?
+And I've the impulse to swear; and it's right. Let Nature have her way.
+Listen! Damn, damn, damn, damn! I never knew it was so easy. Why,
+there's a pleasure in it! Try it, Pauline! try it on me!'
+
+"'Oh-ooh!' was all Miss Ringtop could utter.
+
+"'Abel! Abel!' exclaimed Hollins, 'the beer has got into your head.'
+
+"'No, it isn't Beer,--it's Candor!' said Abel. 'It's your own proposal,
+Hollins. Suppose it's evil to swear: isn't it better I should express
+it, and be done with it, than keep it bottled up, to ferment in my
+mind? Oh, you're a precious, consistent old humbug, _you_ are!'
+
+"And therewith he jumped off the stoop, and went dancing awkwardly down
+towards the water, singing in a most unmelodious voice, ''Tis home
+where'er the heart is.' ...
+
+"We had an unusually silent breakfast the next morning. Abel scarcely
+spoke, which the others attributed to a natural feeling of shame, after
+his display of the previous evening. Hollins and Shelldrake discussed
+Temperance, with a special view to his edification, and Miss Ringtop
+favored us with several quotations about 'the maddening bowl,'--but he
+paid no attention to them....
+
+"The forenoon was overcast, with frequent showers. Each one occupied his
+or her room until dinner-time, when we met again with something of the
+old geniality. There was an evident effort to restore our former flow of
+good feeling. Abel's experience with the beer was freely discussed. He
+insisted strongly that he had not been laboring under its effects, and
+proposed a mutual test. He, Shelldrake, and Hollins were to drink it in
+equal measures, and compare observations as to their physical
+sensations. The others agreed,--quite willingly, I thought,--but I
+refused....
+
+"There was a sound of loud voices, as we approached the stoop. Hollins,
+Shelldrake and his wife, and Abel Mallory were sitting together near the
+door. Perkins Brown, as usual, was crouched on the lowest step, with one
+leg over the other, and rubbing the top of his boot with a vigor which
+betrayed to me some secret mirth. He looked up at me from under his
+straw hat with the grin of a malicious Puck, glanced towards the group,
+and made a curious gesture with his thumb. There were several empty pint
+bottles on the stoop.
+
+"'Now, are you sure you can bear the test?' we heard Hollins ask, as we
+approached.
+
+"'Bear it? Why, to be sure!' replied Shelldrake 'if I couldn't bear it,
+or if _you_ couldn't, your theory's done for. Try! I can stand it as
+long as you can.'
+
+"'Well, then,' said Hollins, 'I think you are a very ordinary man. I
+derive no intellectual benefit from my intercourse with you, but your
+house is convenient to me. I'm under no obligations for your
+hospitality, however, because my company is an advantage to you. Indeed,
+if I were treated according to my deserts, you couldn't do enough for
+me.'
+
+"Mrs. Shelldrake was up in arms.
+
+"'Indeed,' she exclaimed, 'I think you get as good as you deserve, and
+more too.'
+
+"Elvira,' said he, with a benevolent condescension, 'I have no doubt you
+think so, for your mind belongs to the lowest and most material sphere.
+You have your place in Nature, and you fill it; but it is not for you to
+judge of intelligences which move only on the upper planes.'
+
+"'Hollins,' said Shelldrake, 'Elviry's a good wife and a sensible woman,
+and I won't allow you to turn up your nose at her.'
+
+"'I am not surprised,' he answered, 'that you should fail to stand the
+test. I didn't expect it.'
+
+"'Let me try it on _you_!' cried Shelldrake. 'You, now, have some
+intellect,--I don't deny that,--but not so much, by a long shot, as you
+think you have. Besides that, you're awfully selfish in your opinions.
+You won't admit that anybody can be right who differs from you. You've
+sponged on me for a long time; but I suppose I've learned something from
+you, so we'll call it even. I think, however, that what you call acting
+according to impulse is simply an excuse to cover your own laziness.'
+
+"'Gosh! that's it!' interrupted Perkins, jumping up; then, recollecting
+himself, he sank down on the steps again, and shook with a suppressed
+'Ho! ho! ho!'
+
+"Hollins, however, drew himself up with an exasperated air.
+
+"'Shelldrake,' said he, 'I pity you. I always knew your ignorance, but I
+thought you honest in your human character. I never suspected you of
+envy and malice. However, the true Reformer must expect to be
+misunderstood and misrepresented by meaner minds. That love which I bear
+to all creatures teaches me to forgive you. Without such love, all plans
+of progress must fail. Is it not so, Abel?'"
+
+"Shelldrake could only ejaculate the words, 'Pity!' 'Forgive!' in his
+most contemptuous tone; while Mrs. Shelldrake, rocking violently in her
+chair, gave utterance to that peculiar clucking '_ts, ts, ts, ts_,'
+whereby certain women express emotions too deep for words.
+
+"Abel, roused by Hollins' question, answered, with a sudden energy,--
+
+"Love! there is no love in the world. Where will you find it? Tell me,
+and I'll go there. Love! I'd like to see it! If all human hearts were
+like mine, we might have an Arcadia; but most men have no hearts. The
+world is a miserable, hollow, deceitful shell of vanity and hypocrisy.
+No: let us give up. We were born before our time: this age is not worthy
+of us.'
+
+"Hollins stared at the speaker in utter amazement. Shelldrake gave a
+long whistle, and finally gasped out,--
+
+"'Well, what next?'
+
+"None of us were prepared for such a sudden and complete wreck of our
+Arcadian scheme. The foundations had been sapped before, it is true; but
+we had not perceived it; and now, in two short days, the whole edifice
+tumbled about our ears. Though it was inevitable, we felt a shock of
+sorrow, and a silence fell upon us. Only that scamp of a Perkins Brown,
+chuckling and rubbing his boot, really rejoiced. I could have kicked
+him.
+
+"We all went to bed, feeling that the charm of our Arcadian life was
+over.... In the first revulsion of feeling, I was perhaps unjust to my
+associates. I see now, more clearly, the causes of those vagaries, which
+originated in a genuine aspiration, and failed from an ignorance of the
+true nature of Man, quite as much as from the egotism of the
+individuals. Other attempts at reorganizing Society were made about the
+same time by men of culture and experience, but in the A.C. we had
+neither. Our leaders had caught a few half-truths, which, in their
+minds, were speedly warped into errors." ...--_The Atlantic Monthly_,
+February, 1862.
+
+
+
+
+WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER.
+
+(BORN, 1825.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DOBBS HIS FERRY.
+
+A Legend of the Lower Hudson.
+
+
+ The days were at their longest,
+ The heat was at its strongest,
+ When Brown, old friend and true,
+ Wrote thus: "Dear Jack, why swelter
+ In town when shade and shelter
+ Are waiting here for you?
+ Quit Bulls and Bears and gambling,
+ For rural sports and rambling
+ Forsake your Wall Street tricks;
+ Come without hesitation,
+ Check to Dobbs' Ferry Station,
+ We dine at half-past six."
+
+ I went,--a welcome hearty,
+ A merry country party,
+ A drive, and then croquet,
+ A quiet, well-cooked dinner,
+ Three times at billiards winner,--
+ The evening sped away;
+ When Brown, the dear old joker,
+ Cried, "Come, my worthy broker,
+ The hour is growing late;
+ Your room is cool and quiet,
+ As for the bed, just try it,
+ Breakfast at half-past eight."
+
+ I took Brown's hand, applauded
+ His generous care, and lauded
+ Dobbs' Ferry to the skies.
+ A shade came o'er his features,
+ "We should be happy creatures,
+ And this a paradise,
+ But, ah! the deep disgrace is,
+ This loveliest of places
+ A vulgar name should blight!
+ But, death to Dobbs! we'll change it,
+ If money can arrange it,
+ So, pleasant dreams; good night!"
+
+ I could not sleep, but, raising
+ The window, stood, moon-gazing,
+ In fairyland a guest;
+ "On such a night," _et cetera_--
+ See Shakespeare for much better a
+ Description of the rest,--
+ I mused, how sweet to wander
+ Beside the river, yonder;
+ And then the sudden whim
+ Seized my head to pillow
+ On Hudson's sparkling billow,
+ A midnight, moonlight swim!
+
+ Soon thought and soon attempted;
+ At once my room was emptied
+ Of its sole occupant;
+ The roof was low, and easily,
+ In fact, quite Japanese-ily,
+ I took the downward slant,
+ Then, without stay or stopping,
+ My first and last eaves-dropping,
+ By leader-pipe I sped,
+ And through the thicket gliding,
+ Down the steep hillside sliding,
+ Soon reached the river's bed.
+
+ But what was my amazement,--
+ The fair scene from the casement,
+ How changed! I could not guess
+ Where track or rails had vanished,
+ Town, villas, station, banished,--
+ All was a wilderness.
+ Only one ancient gable,
+ A low-roofed inn and stable,
+ A creaking sign displayed,
+ An antiquated wherry,
+ Below it--"DOBBS HIS FERRY"--
+ In the clear moonlight swayed.
+
+ I turned, and there the craft was,
+ Its shape 'twixt scow and raft was,
+ Square ends, low sides, and flat,
+ And standing close beside me,
+ An ancient chap who eyed me,
+ Beneath a steeple-hat;
+ Short legs--long pipe--style very
+ Pre-Revolutionary,--
+ I bow, he grimly bobs,
+ Then, with some perturbation,
+ By way of salutation,
+ Says I, "How are you, Dobbs!"
+
+ He grum and silent beckoned,
+ And I, in half a second,
+ Scarce knowing what I did,
+ Took the stern seat, Dobbs throwing
+ Himself 'midships, and rowing,
+ Swift through the stream we slid;
+ He pulled awhile, then stopping,
+ And both oars slowly dropping,
+ His pipe aside he laid,
+ Drew a long breath, and taking
+ An attitude, and shaking
+ His fist towards shore, thus said:--
+
+ "Of all sharp cuts the keenest,
+ Of all mean turns the meanest,
+ Vilest of all vile jobs,
+ Worse than the Cow-Boy pillagers,
+ Are these Dobbs' Ferry villagers
+ A going back on Dobbs!
+ 'Twould not be more anom'lous
+ If Rome went back on Rom'lus
+ (Old rum-un like myself),
+ Or Hail Columbia, played out
+ By Southern Dixie, laid out
+ Columbus on the shelf!
+
+ "They say 'Dobbs' ain't melodious,
+ It's 'horrid,' 'vulgar,' 'odious,'
+ In all their crops it sticks;
+ And then the worse addendum
+ Of 'Ferry' does offend 'em
+ More than its vile prefix.
+ Well, it does seem distressing,
+ But, if I'm good at guessing,
+ Each one of these same nobs,
+ If there was money in it,
+ Would ferry in a minute,
+ And change his name to Dobbs!
+
+ "That's it, they're not partic'lar,
+ Respecting the auric'lar,
+ At a stiff market rate;
+ But Dobbs' especial vice is,
+ That he keeps down the prices
+ Of all their real estate!
+ A name so unattractive
+ Keeps villa-sites inactive,
+ And spoils the broker's jobs;
+ They think that speculation
+ Would rage at 'Paulding's Station,'
+ Which stagnates now at 'Dobbs.'
+
+ "'Paulding's!"--that's sentimental!
+ An old Dutch Continental,
+ Bushwhacked up there a spell;
+ But why he should come blustering
+ Round here, and filibustering,
+ Is more than I can tell;
+ Sat playing for a wager,
+ And nabbed a British major.
+ Well, if the plans and charts
+ From Andre's boots he hauled out,
+ Is his name to be bawled out
+ Forever, round these parts?
+
+ "Guess not! His pay and bounty
+ And mon'ment from the county
+ Paid him off, every cent,
+ While this snug town and station,
+ To every generation,
+ Shall be Dobbs' monument;
+ Spite of all speculators
+ And ancient-landmark traitors,
+ Who, all along this shore,
+ Are ever substitutin'
+ The modern, highfalutin',
+ For the plain names of yore.
+
+ "Down there, on old Manhattan,
+ Where land-sharks breed and fatten,
+ They've wiped out Tubby Hook.
+ That famous promontory,
+ Renowned in song and story,
+ Which time nor tempest shook,
+ Whose name for aye had been good,
+ Stands newly christened 'Inwood,'
+ And branded with the shame
+ Of some old rogue who passes
+ By dint of aliases,
+ Afraid of his own name!
+
+ "See how they quite outrival,
+ Plain barnyard Spuytenduyvil,
+ By peacock Riverdale,
+ Which thinks all else it conquers,
+ And over homespun Yonkers
+ Spreads out its flaunting tail!
+ There's new-named Mount St. Vincent,
+ Where each dear little inn'cent
+ Is taught the Popish rites,--
+ Well, ain't it queer, wherever
+ These saints possess the river
+ They get the finest sites!
+
+ "They've named a place for Irving,
+ A trifle more deserving
+ Than your French, foreign saints,
+ But if he has such mention,
+ It's past my comprehension
+ Why Dobbs should cause complaints;
+ Wrote histories and such things,
+ About Old Knick and Dutch things,
+ Dolph Heyligers and Rips;
+ But no old antiquary
+ Like him could keep a ferry,
+ With all his authorships!
+
+ "By aid of these same showmen,
+ Some fanciful cognomen
+ Old Cro'nest stock might bring
+ As high as Butter Hill is,
+ Which, patronized by Willis,
+ Leaves cards now as 'Storm-King!'
+ Can't some poetic swell-beau
+ Re-christen old Crum Elbow
+ And each prosaic bluff,
+ Bold Breakneck gently flatter,
+ And Dunderberg bespatter,
+ With euphony and stuff!
+
+ "'T would be a _magnum opus_
+ To bury old Esopus
+ In Time's sepulchral vaults,
+ Or in Oblivion's deep sea
+ Submerge renowned Poughkeepsie,
+ And also ancient Paltz;
+ How it would give them rapture
+ Brave Stony Point to capture,
+ And make it face about;
+ Bid Rhinebeck sound much smoother
+ Than in the tongue of Luther,
+ And wipe the Catskills out!
+
+ "Well, DOBBS is DOBBS, and faster
+ Than pitch or mustard-plaster
+ Shall it stick hereabouts,
+ While Tappan Sea rolls yonder,
+ Or round High Torn the thunder
+ Along these ramparts shouts.
+ No corner-lot banditti,
+ Or brokers from the City--
+ Like you--" Here Dobbs began
+ Wildly both oars to brandish,
+ As fierce as old Miles Standish,
+ Or young Phil Sheridan.
+
+ Sternwards he rushed,--I, ducking,
+ Seized both his legs, and chucking
+ Dobbs sideways, splash he went,--
+ The wherry swayed, then righted,
+ While I, somewhat excited,
+ Over the water bent;
+ Three times he rose, but vainly
+ I clutched his form ungainly,
+ He sank, while sighs and sobs
+ Beneath the waves seemed muttered,
+ And all the night-winds uttered
+ In sad tones, "Dobbs! Dobbs! Dobbs!"
+
+ Just then some giant boulders
+ Upon my head and shoulders
+ Made sudden, fearful raids,
+ And on my face and forehead,
+ With din and uproar horrid,
+ Came several Palisades;
+ I screamed, and woke, in screaming,
+ To see, by gaslight's gleaming,
+ Brown's face above my bed;
+ "Why, Jack, what is the matter?
+ We heard a dreadful clatter
+ And found you on the shed!
+
+ "It's plain enough, supposing
+ You sat there, moon-struck, dozing,
+ Upon the window's edge,
+ Then lost yourself, and falling,
+ Just where we found you, sprawling,
+ Struck the piazza ledge;
+ A lucky hit, old fellow,
+ Of black and blue and yellow
+ It gives your face a touch,
+ You saved your neck, but barely;
+ To state the matter fairly,
+ You took a drop too much!"
+
+ I took the train next morning,
+ Some lumps my nose adorning,
+ My forehead, sundry knobs,
+ My ideas slightly wandering,
+ But, as I went, much pondering
+ Upon my night with Dobbs;
+ Brown thinks it, dear old sinner,
+ A case of "after dinner,"
+ And won't believe a word,
+ Talks of "hallucination,"
+ "Laws of association,"
+ And calls my tale "absurd."
+
+ Perhaps it is, but never,
+ Say I, should we dissever
+ Old places and old names;
+ Guard the old landmarks truly,
+ On the old altars duly
+ Keep bright the ancient flames.
+ For me the face of Nature,
+ No luckless nomenclature
+ Of grace or beauty robs;
+ No, when of town I weary,
+ I'll make a strike in Erie,
+ And buy a place at DOBBS!
+
+--_Poems._
+
+
+
+
+JOHN WILLIAM DE FOREST.
+
+(BORN, 1826.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FATHER HIGGINS'S PREFERMENT.
+
+
+Father Higgins was not the kind of divine who easily finds preferment in
+the Catholic Church, or who would be apt to make a shining mark in any
+other.
+
+Fat and red-faced and pudding-headed was Father Higgins; uncommonly in
+the way of good eating, and now and then disposed for good drinking; as
+lazy as he dared be, ignorant enough for a hermit, and simple enough for
+a monk. His chief excellence lay in his kindliness of heart, which would
+doubtless have made him very serviceable and comfortable to his
+fellow-men, had it not been for his indolence, his spare intellectual
+gifts, and perhaps a little leaven of selfishness.
+
+Such as he was, however, Father Higgins had no small "consate" of
+himself, and sometimes thought that even a bishopric would not be
+"beyant his desarts." He pleased himself with imagining how finely he
+would fill an episcopal chair, what apostolic labors he would accomplish
+in his diocese, what swarms of heretics or pagans he would convert, what
+a self-sacrificing and heroic life he would lead, and what a saintly
+name he would leave. One day, or to speak with a precision worthy of
+this true history, one evening, he became a bishop.
+
+It happened on this wise. Father Higgins had ventured to treat himself
+to a spectacle. He had attended, for the first time in his life, an
+exhibition of legerdemain; this one being given by that celebrated
+master of the black-art, Professor Heller. He had seen the professor
+change turnips into gold watches, draw a dozen live pigeons in
+succession out of an empty box, send rings into ladies' handkerchiefs at
+the other end of the hall, catch a bullet out of an exploded pistol in
+his hand, and perform other marvels equally irrational and disturbing.
+From this raree-show Father Higgins had gone home feeling that he had
+witnessed something about as unearthly as he was likely to be confronted
+with in the next world.
+
+For an hour or more he sat in his elbow-chair, puzzling over the
+professor's "diviltries," and crossing himself at the remembrance of
+each one of them. It was black midnight, and stormy at that; there was
+such an uproar in the elm branches over his house as if all the Salem
+witches were holding Sabbath there; the whole village of Sableburg
+swarmed with windy rushings and shriekings and slammings. It was one of
+those midnights when the devil evidently "has business on his hand."
+
+Of a sudden there was a rustle in the room, and looking around to
+discover the cause of it, Father Higgins beheld a tall and dark man with
+startling black eyes, in whom he recognized Professor Heller.
+
+"What's yer will, sir?" demanded the Father, a good deal astonished, but
+not a bit frightened.
+
+"I understand, sir, that you would like to be a bishop," replied the
+professor, bowing politely, but seating himself unceremoniously.
+
+"That's thrue enough, sir," replied Father Higgins, who somehow felt
+curiously at his ease, and disposed at once to be confidential with this
+utter stranger. "I've often imagined meself a bishop, an' doin' wondhers
+in me office. But it's nonsinse."
+
+"What post would suit you?" inquired the visitor. "The diocese of New
+York?"
+
+"No, no," said the father. "I'm not ayqual to sich a risponsebility;
+that is, not at wanst, ye ondherstand. I'd like best to come up to sich
+a place as that gintly an' by degrays. It's been a drame av mine to
+begin my prefarmint as biship av some far-away continent or archypilago,
+like, an' convart slathers av haythins an' cannebals for a practice. It
+ud plase me imagenation to prache among corrils an' coky-nuts an' naked
+crachurs. Y' are aware, I suppose, Misther Heller--or Professor
+Heller--av sich islands as Owyhee an' the Marquesas, famous a'ready in
+the history av the Propaganda Fide. Jist suppose me havin' me episkepal
+raysedence on wan av 'um, an' makin' me progresses to the others. There
+be great devoshin to a spiritual father among thim simple people, I'm
+thinkin.' I'd be a god to 'um, like. Sich obeyjince ud jist shuit me.
+Yes, I'd enj'y bein' Biship av the Cannebal Islands, or even av wan av
+um."
+
+"Faith is necessary," replied Heller. "You must believe that you are to
+be Bishop of the Cannibal Islands."
+
+"Sure an' it's not aisy at this distance to belave in the islands
+thimselves, let alone bein' spiritual father av the same," smiled the
+priest. "Howandiver, there's no harrum in tryin' to belave, an' so here
+goes for the exparimint. If ye'll kape silence a bit, I'll jist collect
+me moind on the subject, an' we'll see what happens."
+
+For a moment the gray, piggish eyes of the Father, and the black,
+gleaming, mysterious orbs of his visitor were fixed upon each other. In
+the next moment Heller, bowing with a ceremonious air of respect,
+inquired, "What are your commands, my lord bishop?"
+
+Startled by a consciousness of some wonderful change, doubtful in what
+land he was, or even in what age of the world, Father Higgins stared
+about him in expectation. A sunny shore, scattered groves of cocoa-nut
+trees, distant villages of circular huts, beyond them far-stretching
+forests and a smoking volcano; on the hither side bays alive with carved
+and painted canoes, near at hand a gathering crowd of half-naked
+savages--such were the objects that filled his vision.
+
+"So this is me diocese," he said, without feeling the least surprise.
+"Well, the climate is deloightful. Let us hope that the coky-nuts will
+agree wid us, an' that the natives won't urge upon us the blissins av
+martyrdom. Professor, what may be the spiritual condition av things
+hereaway, do ye think?"
+
+"A clear field--not a convert yet. Your predecessor, who went through
+the office of being eaten a year ago, had not even learned the
+language."
+
+"The blissid saints watch over us! To hear the likes av that, whin I
+expected to be a god, like, among these wretches! Well, it's our duty we
+must do, Heller; we mustn't run away from our post; indade, we can't.
+Moreover, I feel a sthrong confidence that the howly Catholic Church is
+to be greatly glorified by me on these islands. What do ye say now to
+meself exhibitin' the gift av miracles an' tongues? If I should
+discoorse to these cannebals in their own contimptible language, would
+it surprise ye, Heller?"
+
+"No," smiled the professor. "I have seen greater marvels in my time. I
+have seen men preach not merely words, but feelings and faiths, that
+they were ignorant of."
+
+Father Higgins, closely followed by Heller, now advanced to a green
+hillock, a few rods from the shelly and pebbly beach, knelt down upon
+the thin sward, and repeated a prayer. Meantime the population gathered;
+behind them canoe after canoe touched the shore; before them there was
+a swift, tumultuous hurrying from the villages; presently they were
+surrounded by a compact, eager, barbaric multitude. The babble of its
+wonder turned to silence as the priest rose, extended his fat hands, and
+commenced a sermon.
+
+Father Higgins was not a bit astonished at hearing himself pour forth a
+torrent of words which he did not understand, nor at seeing in the faces
+of his wild listeners that they perfectly comprehended his discourse. It
+was merely a supernatural inspiration; it was but another exhibition of
+the heavenly gifts of the Church; he was as much at his ease as if he
+had been in the habit of working miracles from his cradle. At the close
+of his harangue he took out his breviary, and translated a prayer into
+the unknown tongue. Evidently the auditors understood this also, for
+while some crouched to earth in undisguisable terror, others looked
+upward as if expecting an answer from the sky.
+
+Presently a savage, in a many-colored robe of feathers, stepped in front
+of the multitude, and uttered a few sentences.
+
+"It's a mighty quare providence that this miracle works ownly wan way,"
+observed Father Higgins to Heller. "It's meself can prache acceptably to
+this poor haythin, an' it's meself, loikewise, can't sense a blissid
+word he gabbles."
+
+"He is comparing you with your predecessor," exclaimed the professor.
+"He says the other man called himself a messenger from God; but as he
+could not talk Feejee, they saw that he was a liar, because God knows
+every language; and so, having found him a liar, they fattened him with
+fish and cocoa-nuts, and ate him. As for you, they admit that you are a
+heavenly personage, and they mean to worship you."
+
+"How came ye to larn the language, annyway?" demanded the priest.
+
+"I have wandered to and fro in the earth a good deal," replied Heller.
+"I have performed some of my best black-art in these islands."
+
+Father Higgins, rather bothered by these statements, was about to ask
+further questions, when he was seized by four sturdy natives, who
+mounted him upon their naked shoulders, while four others uplifted the
+professor in like manner, all then setting off rapidly toward the
+village, followed by the whole crowd in procession.
+
+"An' what if I should tell ye I had conscientious scruples agenst
+lettin' meself be adored for a heavenly personage?" objected the good
+Father.
+
+"Don't think of it," counselled Heller. "Being worshipped is infinitely
+more agreeable than being eaten. Besides, consider the interests of the
+Church. If you are set up as a god, you can use the position to sprinkle
+holy water on your adorers, and so convert the whole island without
+trouble."
+
+"Sure y' are mighty well varsed in the precepts and customs av the
+Jesuit Fathers," answered the priest, with a stare of wonder and
+admiration. "I moind me now that the missionaries in Chaynee baptized
+lashins av haythin babies under pretinse av rubbin' um with medicine.
+An' it's a maxim that whin the ind is salvatory, the manes are
+justified. It's a maxim, also, that y' ave no business to lead yer
+felly-crachurs into sin. Now cannebalism is a sin; it ud be a sin
+capital for these fellies to ate us; an', av coorse, it follies that it
+ud be a sin in me to timpt um to do it. But, by sufferin' meself to be
+worshipped I prevint that same. So, I advise an' counsel, Heller, that
+we go on as we are for a bit longer, until a proper time comes to
+expose the whole av the thrue faith."
+
+Beguiling the way with such like discourse, Father Higgins journeyed on
+to the nearest village, where his bearers halted before an unusually
+large hut, evidently serving as a temple. In the door of this building
+the principal chief took post, and waving his hand toward the crowd,
+made the following speech:
+
+"Hear, O chiefs! hear, O priests of our religion ye men of Feejee, hear!
+The god who can come over the waters is greater than the god who can
+only abide upon the land, and shall have his house and his sacrifices.
+Whosoever disapproves of this, let him offer himself for the trial of
+the sacred poison; if he is not ready so to do, let him hereafter hold
+his peace and submit."
+
+No one objecting, the chief beckoned the bearers to follow him, and led
+the way into the temple. Mounting a platform eight or ten feet high, he
+advanced to an ugly scarecrow of an idol, slapped it, kicked it, and
+toppled it to the ground. Then, with vast labor and much joyful
+shouting, the ponderous form of Father Higgins was hoisted aloft, and
+installed in the seat of the dethroned deity. Next Professor Heller was
+set down upon his feet beside an altar which stood in front of the
+platform.
+
+"What are ye afther doin', Heller?" inquired the clergyman from his
+eminence.
+
+"I am about to sacrifice to your divinity two green cocoa-nuts, two
+roasted bread-fruit, and half a dozen fishes," was the answer.
+
+"Well, I suppose it must be permitted," sighed Father Higgins. "Go on
+wid yer sacrifice, me dear felly. I presume, av coorse, that it will be
+in ordher for me to ate some av it. Let the fishes be well cooked,
+by-the-way, and sarved wid some kind av sauce. I'd almost as lave be
+devoured meself as devour raw fishes."
+
+"Really, I have some scruples," smiled the mischievous professor. "You
+might shock the devotional feelings of your new worshippers."
+
+"I insist upon it, Heller. I tell ye I won't ate raw fishes to convart a
+continent av haythins, much less a little bit island av 'um."
+
+The fish being promptly broiled on the coals of the altar, were handed
+up to Father Higgins on a large leaf, together with one of the
+cocoa-nuts and a bread-fruit. The worthy man immediately proceeded to
+make a hearty meal, vastly to the delight and confirmation in the faith
+of his worshippers, they having never before been blessed with a god
+who could fairly and squarely eat his dinner. After another brief speech
+from the chief, and a benediction from the padre, the multitude
+dispersed.
+
+"Is it me unavoidable duty to live on this perch, Heller?" demanded
+Father Higgins. "Me opinion is that in that case I shall get mightily
+tired av me mission. I'd about as lave be a parrot, an' sit in a tin
+ring."
+
+"My dear Father, remember that blessed saint who roosted for twenty
+years on the top of a pillar," urged the professor. "Stay where you are
+until you have got a firm grip on the faith of these cannibals."
+
+"Very good," assented Higgins, with a yawn. "But get me a bucket of
+wather, me dear felly. Sure I must have some blessed an' ready for use.
+The next time sarvice is conducted here I propose to sprinkle the
+worshippers. It'll benefit um in more ways nor wan, if I'm a judge of
+ayther sowl or body."
+
+Such was the installation of Bishop Higgins, or, as the Feejeeans
+insisted upon considering him, Divinity Higgins, over the diocese of the
+Pacific.
+
+There was something mysterious about the Cannibal Islands. Time flew
+like a bird there; the days seemed no more than minutes; they were
+coming, and they were gone. Events, emotions, changes of belief,
+transformations of character, succeeded each other with magical
+rapidity. Every thing was transacted at the wildest speed of dreams; and
+yet, what was strangest of all, every thing went smoothly and naturally;
+nothing excited astonishment. In a few days, or a few seconds, whatever
+the period of time might have been, Father Higgins enjoyed being
+Divinity Higgins.
+
+"I think it best for the eventual spiritual interests av me paple that
+they should continue to worship me for a while longer," he said to
+Heller. "Human nature in a savage state, ye see, wont go at wan jump
+from a log av wood to the thrue Deity. I'm playin' the part av a
+steppin'-stone betwixt the two. Afther they've larned to lift their
+sowls to Higgins, they'll be able to go a bit higher, say to the saints
+first, an' thin to the blissid Vargin, an' so on, wan step at a time,
+till they've got the whole av it. But it'll be mortial slow, I'm
+doubtin'. I may have to bear an' forbear as I am for an intire
+gineration av the poor crachurs."
+
+"Certainly," assented the professor. "Nothing so injurious to weak eyes
+as too much light."
+
+"Y' 'ave put it in a nutshell," replied the priest. "Sure an' that's
+the rason we're opposed to gineral schoolin', an' to readin' the Bible
+to the children. Y' are a masther mind, Heller, an' ought to been in
+howly ordhers. An' that brings me to another idee av high importince.
+There should be somebody to run about with howly wather an' exthrame
+unction, an' the like. Now that business wouldn't shuit me pheesical
+conformation, an' nayther would it shuit the character I have to bear.
+It's betther that you should do the outside trampin', Heller. Ye know
+the tradditions an' docthrines av the Church well enough, an' y' are a
+dab at Latin. As for yer not bein' av the prastely office, I'll jist lay
+hands on ye an' qualify ye for the same. If it happens to be a bit
+irregular, why, the ind justifies the manes, ye remimber, or the ancient
+Fathers are all wrong, which is onpossible. An' now, Heller, do tell
+these poor, benighted, lazy loons that I must have me coky-nuts fresh,
+an' as great a variety av fish as can be procured in these wathers. The
+chap that preshumes to bring me an owld coky-nut I'll curse his basket
+an' his shtore."
+
+After a brief missionary effort, Heller reported that the whole
+population of the island, barring a few obstinate seniors, had been
+baptized.
+
+"That's well, me son," replied Father Higgins. "I s'pose y' 'ave done it
+rather on the wholesale, sprinklin' a hundred or so at a fling, but I've
+no doubt y' 'ave done it the best ye could in the time y' 'ave had; and
+surely it's a great work, no matter how done. As for the apostates--I
+mane the fellows that stick to their owld haythinism--it might be well
+to make an example av a few av thim, jist for the encouragemint av the
+faithful. Suppose ye should organize an inquisition, or howly office,
+Heller, an' conduct the proceedin's yerself intirely, be way av seein'
+that they are regular an' effective? Y' are parfectly able for it, wid
+your knowledge av Church history."
+
+It was not long before Heller was able to state that all the old fogies
+and silver-grays who remained alive had been converted.
+
+"Ah, but isn't that blissid news!" responded Father Higgins, joyfully.
+"An' wouldn't me brethren, the other biships, be glad to hear that same
+concernin' their dioceses! That's betther nor coky-nuts--of which,
+be-the-way, I'm gettin' a bit tired. I wondher, Heller, if some av
+these other islands wouldn't furnish us a change of diet? If we could
+find pataties an' grapes, it ud be a blessin' to body an' sowl. Surely
+it ud be a good deed to bring all this archypilago into the thrue faith.
+Couldn't the chafe, now, take an army out in his doubled-barrelled
+canoes, an' commince the work av convarsion? Tell him if he'll do that
+same, I'll grant him all the indulgences he can think av."
+
+Another magical moment of these lightning-like days brought about
+important events. With an armament of scores of canoes and hundreds of
+warriors the chief invaded a large island, and was beaten in a bloody
+battle by its painim inhabitants, escaping with but a remnant of his
+followers. Then came a counter invasion. The worshippers of Father
+Higgins fought for their deity under his eye; the unbelievers were
+defeated and driven with great slaughter to their dug-outs. But as the
+hostile fleet still held command of the sea and hovered menacingly off
+the coast, keeping the faithful under arms and preventing them from
+fishing, the good Father decided that peace was necessary.
+
+"This livin' on coky-nuts and bread-fruits intirely is bad for the
+stomich, Heller," he observed. "We must come to an ondherstandin' wid
+these raskilly infidels an' idolaters. See if ye can't make tarms wid
+um."
+
+The adroit Heller soon arranged a secret treaty with the enemy to the
+following effect: Their chief, Umbaho, was to be universal king and his
+orthodox rival, Patoo-patoo, was to be beheaded; polygamy, cannibalism,
+and the use of the sacred poison were to continue in force; both islands
+were to adore Father Higgins and bring him sacrifices.
+
+"Seems to me they're mighty sevare tarms," commented the Father. "I'd 'a
+been glad to get howld av a bit av timporal sovereighnty, don't you see?
+Moreover, I'm sorry about that poor divil, Patoo-patoo; he was my first
+convart. Annyway, I'll give um full absolution, so that death can't hurt
+um sariously, an' I'll canonize him as a martyr. Saint Patoo-patoo! If
+that don't satisfy um, an' if he ain't willin' to die for the extinsion
+av the faith, he's no thrue belayver, and desarves no pity. So jist see
+to gettin' um off aisy."
+
+After another brief period of time, such as periods of time were in
+these mysterious islands, Father Higgins found himself the acknowledged
+divinity of the whole archipelago.
+
+"This cannebalism an' polygamy an' the like greatly distresses me,
+however," he confessed to Heller. "Be moments I'm timpted to unfold the
+naked truth, an' bring these paple square up to the canons of the Church
+at wanst. But it ud be risky. We read av times, ye know, Heller, that
+God winked at. No doubt it's me duty, as a divinity, to go on winkin' at
+these polygamies an' cannebalisms a bit longer. Slow an' aisy is me
+motto, an' I've noticed it's the way of Providence mostly. Sure it was
+so at home in Sableburg, ye know, Heller; we didn't average a convart in
+twinty years."
+
+Now ensued an event which troubled the holy Father more than any thing
+that had yet occurred during his episcopate. Two German priests, Heller
+informed him, had landed on one of the islands of the archipelago, and
+were preaching the pure doctrines of the Christian faith, denouncing
+cannibalism and polygamy, and otherwise sapping the established
+religion.
+
+"Some av the New Catholics, I'll warrant ye!" exclaimed Higgins,
+indignantly. "Some of thim blatherskites av the Döllinger school, come
+over here to stir up sedition in the Church, as though they hadn't made
+worry enough in the owld counthries. An' what business has Dutchmen
+here, annyway, whin an Irishman has begun the good worrk? They've no
+right to take the labor of convartin' these haythins out of me hands
+that a-way. Me conscience won't allow me to permit such distarbances an'
+innovations. See if ye can't get um to lave the islands peaceable,
+Heller. If they won't, I shall have to let Umbaho settle wid um afther
+his fashion."
+
+An embassy to the missionaries having obtained from them no other
+response than that they would welcome martyrdom rather than relinquish
+their labors, Umbaho was dispatched against them at the head of a
+sufficient army, with instructions to treat them as enemies of Feejee
+and of the unity of the Church.
+
+But instead of slaughtering the missionaries, Umbaho was converted by
+them. He renounced cannibalism, polygamy, and the sacred poison; he
+denied Father Higgins. Accompanied by one of the Germans, he returned to
+Feejee at the head of his army, bent on establishing the true Christian
+faith.
+
+"We must press a lot av min, an' beat um," responded the good Father,
+when Heller informed him of the approach and purposes of the chief.
+"Tell the faithful to give no quarter; tell um to desthroy ivery wan of
+these schismatics; an' as for the Dutchman, burrn him at the stake, as
+they used to do in the good owld times."
+
+A great battle ensued; the adherents of Higginsism were defeated and
+dispersed; the door of the temple opened to Umbaho and the German.
+Father Higgins, by this time a helpless mass of fat, swaying perilously
+on his unsteady platform, looked down upon them with terror through the
+smoke of his altar.
+
+"Sacrilegious wretch!" cried the German, God has put an end to thy mad
+and selfish and wicked dominion."
+
+"I wish I had niver been a biship!" screamed Father Higgins at the top
+of his voice, as he rolled off the platform.
+
+All the way from the Cannibal Islands he fell and tumbled and dropped,
+until, with a dull thump, he alighted upon the floor of his own study.
+
+"There! y' 'ave rolled out av yer chair agen, Father Higgins," said his
+housekeeper, who at that moment entered the room to order him to bed, as
+was her merciful custom.
+
+"So I have," returned the Father, picking himself up. "An' sarved me
+right, too. I thought I was the biggest raskil on the face av the earth.
+I wondher if it's true. The Lord presarve me from the timptation av
+great power, or I'll abuse it, an' abuse me felly-men and the
+Church!"--_Harper's Magazine_, May, 1872.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN TOWNSEND TROWBRIDGE.
+
+(BORN, 1827.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRED TROVER'S LITTLE IRON-CLAD.
+
+
+Did I never tell you the story? Is it possible? Draw up your chair.
+Stick of wood, Harry. Smoke?
+
+You've heard of my Uncle Popworth, though. Why, yes! You've seen
+him;--the eminently respectable elderly gentleman who came one day last
+summer just as you were going; book under his arm, you remember; weed on
+his hat; dry smile on bland countenance; tall, lank individual in very
+seedy black. With him my tale begins; for if I had never indulged in an
+Uncle Popworth I should never have sported an Iron-Clad.
+
+Quite right, sir; his arrival _was_ a surprise to me. To know how great
+a surprise, you must understand why I left city, friends, business, and
+settled down in this quiet village. It was chiefly, sir, to escape the
+fascinations of that worthy old gentleman that I bought this place, and
+took refuge here with my wife and little ones. Here we had respite,
+respite and nepenthe from our memories of Uncle Popworth; here we used
+to sit down in the evening and talk of the past with grateful and
+tranquil emotions, as people speak of awful things endured in days that
+are no more. To us the height of human happiness was raising green corn
+and strawberries, in a retired neighborhood where uncles were unknown.
+But, sir, when that Phantom, that Vampire, that Fate, loomed before my
+vision that day, if you had said, "Trover, I'll give ye sixpence for
+this neat little box of yours," I should have said, "Done!" with the
+trifling proviso that you should take my uncle in the bargain.
+
+The matter with him? What indeed could invest human flesh with such
+terrors,--what but this? he was--he is--let me shriek it in your ear--a
+bore--a BORE! of the most malignant type; an intolerable, terrible,
+unmitigated BORE!
+
+That book under his arm was a volume of his own sermons;--nine hundred
+and ninety-nine octavo pages, O Heaven! It wasn't enough for him to
+preach and re-preach those appalling discourses, but then the ruthless
+man must go and print 'em! When I consider what booksellers--worthy men,
+no doubt, many of them, deserving well of their kind--he must have
+talked nearly into a state of syncope before ever he found one to give
+way, in a moment of weakness, of utter exhaustion and despair, and
+consent to publish him; and when I reflect what numbers of inoffensive
+persons, in the quiet walks of life, have been made to suffer the
+infliction of that Bore's Own Book, I pause, I stand aghast at the
+inscrutability of Divine Providence.
+
+Don't think me profane, and don't for a moment imagine I underrate the
+function of the preacher. There's nothing better than a good
+sermon,--one that puts new life into you. But what of a sermon that
+takes life out of you? instead of a spiritual fountain, a spiritual
+sponge that absorbs your powers of body and soul, so that the longer you
+listen the more you are impoverished? A merely poor sermon isn't so bad;
+you will find, if you are the right kind of a hearer, that it will
+suggest something better than itself; a good hen will lay to a bit of
+earthen. But the discourse of your ministerial vampire, fastening by
+some mystical process upon the hearer who has life of his own,--though
+not every one has that,--sucks and sucks and sucks; and he is exhausted
+while the preacher is refreshed. So it happens that your born bore is
+never weary of his own boring; he thrives upon it; while he seems to be
+giving, he is mysteriously taking in--he is drinking your blood.
+
+But you say nobody is obliged to _read_ a sermon. O my unsophisticated
+friend! if a man will put his thoughts--or his words, if thoughts are
+lacking--between covers,--spread his banquet, and respectfully invite
+Public Taste to partake of it, Public Taste being free to decline, then
+your observation is sound. If an author quietly buries himself in his
+book,--very good! hic jacet; peace to his ashes!
+
+ "The times have been,
+ That, when the brains were out, the man would die,
+ And there an end; but now they rise again,"
+
+as Macbeth observes, with some confusion of syntax, excusable in a
+person of his circumstances. Now, suppose they--or he--the man whose
+brains are out--goes about with his coffin under his arm, like my worthy
+uncle? and suppose he blandly, politely, relentlessly insists upon
+reading to you, out of that octavo sarcophagus, passages which in his
+opinion prove that he is not only not dead, but immortal? If such a man
+be a stranger, snub him; if a casual acquaintance, met in an evil hour,
+there is still hope,--doors have locks, and there are two sides to a
+street, and nearsightedness is a blessing, and (as a last resort)
+buttons may be sacrificed (you remember Lamb's story of Coleridge), and
+left in the clutch of the fatal fingers. But one of your own kindred,
+and very respectable, adding the claim of misfortune to his other claims
+upon you,--pachydermatous to slights, smilingly persuasive, gently
+persistent,--as imperturbable as a ship's wooden figurehead through all
+the ups and downs of the voyage of life, and as insensible to cold
+water;--in short, an uncle like my uncle, whom there was no getting rid
+of;--what the deuce would you do?
+
+Exactly; run away as I did. There was nothing else to be done, unless,
+indeed, I had throttled the old gentleman; in which case I am confident
+that one of our modern model juries would have brought in the popular
+verdict of justifiable insanity. But, being a peaceable man, I was
+averse to extreme measures. So I did the next best thing,--consulted my
+wife, and retired to this village.
+
+Then consider the shock to my feelings when I looked up that day and saw
+the enemy of our peace stalking into our little Paradise with his book
+under his arm and his carpet-bag in his hand! coming with his sermons
+and his shirts, prepared to stay a week--that is to say a year--that is
+to say forever, if we would suffer him,--and how was he to be hindered
+by any desperate measures short of burning the house down!
+
+"My dear nephew!" says he, striding toward me with eager steps, as you
+perhaps remember, smiling his eternally dry, leathery smile,--"Nephew
+Frederick!"--and he held out both hands to me, book in one and bag in
+t'other,--"I am rejoiced! One would almost think you had tried to hide
+away from your old uncle! for I've been three days hunting you up. And
+how is Dolly? she ought to be glad to see me, after all the trouble I've
+had in finding you! And, Nephew Frederick!--h'm!--can you lend me three
+dollars for the hackman? for I don't happen to have--thank you! I should
+have been saved this if you had only known I was stopping last night at
+a public house in the next village, for I know how delighted you would
+have been to drive over and fetch me!"
+
+If you were not already out of hearing, you may have noticed that I made
+no reply to this affecting speech. The old gentleman has grown quite
+deaf of late years,--an infirmity which was once a source of untold
+misery to his friends, to whom he was constantly appealing for their
+opinions, which they were obliged to shout in his ear. But now, happily,
+the world has about ceased responding to him, and he has almost ceased
+to expect responses from the world. He just catches your eye, and, when
+he says, "Don't you think so, sir?" or, "What is your opinion, sir?" an
+approving nod does your business.
+
+The hackman paid, my dear uncle accompanied me to the house, unfolding
+the catalogue of his woes by the way. For he is one of those worthy,
+unoffending persons, whom an ungrateful world jostles and tramples
+upon,--whom unmerciful disaster follows fast and follows faster. In his
+younger days, he was settled over I don't know how many different
+parishes; but secret enmity pursued him everywhere, poisoning the
+parochial mind against him, and driving him relentlessly from place to
+place. Then he relapsed into agencies, and went through a long list of
+them, each terminating in flat failure, to his ever-recurring
+surprise,--the simple old soul never suspecting, to this day, who his
+one great, tireless, terrible enemy is!
+
+I got him into the library, and went to talk over this unexpected
+visit--or visitation--with Dolly. She bore up under it more cheerfully
+than could have been expected,--suppressed a sigh,--and said she would
+go down and meet him. She received him with a hospitable smile (I verily
+believe that more of the world's hypocrisy proceeds from too much
+good-nature than from too little), and listened patiently to his
+explanations.
+
+"You will observe that I have brought my bag," says he, "for I knew you
+wouldn't let me off for a day or two,--though I must positively leave in
+a week,--in two weeks, at the latest. I have brought my volume, too, for
+I am contemplating a new edition" (he is always contemplating a new
+edition, making that a pretext for lugging the book about with him),
+"and I wish to enjoy the advantages of your and Frederick's
+criticism;--I anticipate some good, comfortable, old-time talks over the
+old book, Frederick!"
+
+We had invited some village friends to come in and eat strawberries and
+cream with us that afternoon; and the question arose, what should be
+done with the old gentleman? Harry, who is a lad of a rather lively
+fancy, coming in while we were taking advantage of his great uncle's
+deafness to discuss the subject in his presence, proposed a pleasant
+expedient. "Trot him out into the cornfield, introduce him to the
+scarecrow, and let him talk to that," says he, grinning up into the
+visitor's face, who grinned down at him, no doubt thinking what a
+wonderfully charming boy he was! If he were as blind as he is deaf, he
+might have been disposed of very comfortably in some such ingenious
+way;--the scarecrow, or any other lay figure, might have served to
+engage him in one of his immortal monologues. As it was, the suggestion
+bore fruit later, as you will see.
+
+While we were consulting--keeping up our scattering fire of small-arms
+under the old talker's heavy guns--our parish minister called,--old
+Doctor Wortleby, for whom we have a great liking and respect. Of course
+we had to introduce him to Uncle Popworth,--for they met face to face;
+and of course Uncle Popworth fastened at once upon the brother
+clergyman. Being my guest, Wortleby could do no less than listen to
+Popworth, who is my uncle. He listened with interest and sympathy for
+the first half-hour; and then continued listening for another half-hour,
+after his interest and sympathy were exhausted. Then, attempting to go,
+he got his hat, and sat with it in his hand half an hour longer. Then he
+stood half an hour on his poor old gouty feet, desperately edging toward
+the door.
+
+"Ah, certainly," says he, with a weary smile, repeatedly endeavoring to
+break the spell that bound him. "I shall be most happy to hear the
+conclusion of your remarks at some future time" (even ministers can lie
+out of politeness); "but just now--"
+
+"One word more, and I am done," cries my Uncle Popworth, for the
+fiftieth time; and Wortleby, in despair, sat down again.
+
+Then our friends arrived.
+
+Dolly and I, who had all the while been benevolently wishing Wortleby
+would go, and trying to help him off, now selfishly hoped he would
+remain and share our entertainment--and our Uncle Popworth.
+
+"I ought to have gone two hours ago," he said, with a plaintive smile,
+in reply to our invitation; "but, really, I am feeling the need of a
+cup of tea" (and no wonder!) "and I think I will stay."
+
+We cruelly wished that he might continue to engage my uncle in
+conversation; but that would have been too much to hope from the sublime
+endurance of a martyr,--if ever there was one more patient than he.
+Seeing the Lintons and the Greggs arrive, he craftily awaited his
+opportunity, and slipped off, to give them a turn on the gridiron. First
+Linton was secured; and you should have seen him roll his mute,
+appealing orbs, as he settled helplessly down under the infliction.
+Suddenly he made a dash. "I am ignorant of these matters," said he; "but
+Gregg understands them;--Gregg will talk with you." But Gregg took
+refuge behind the ladies. The ladies receiving a hint from poor
+distressed Dolly, scattered. But no artifice availed against the
+dreadful man. Piazza, parlor, garden,--he ranged everywhere, and was
+sure to seize a victim.
+
+At last tea was ready, and we all went in. The Lintons and Greggs are
+people of the world, who would hardly have cared to wait for a blessing
+on such lovely heaps of strawberries and mugs of cream as they saw
+before them; but, there being two clergymen at the table, the ceremony
+was evidently expected. We were placidly seated; there was a hush,
+agreeably filled with the fragrance of the delicious fruit: even my
+uncle Popworth, from long habit, turned off his talk at that suggestive
+moment: when I did what I thought a shrewd thing. I knew too well my
+relative's long-windedness at his devotions, as at everything else (I
+wonder if Heaven itself isn't bored by such fellows!)--I had suffered, I
+had seen my guests suffer, too much from him already,--to think of
+deliberately yielding him a fearful advantage over us; so I coolly
+passed him by, and gave an expressive nod to the old Doctor.
+
+Wortleby began; and I was congratulating myself on my adroit management
+of a delicate matter, when--conceive my consternation!--Popworth--not to
+speak it profanely--followed suit! The reverend egotist couldn't take in
+the possibility of anybody but himself being invited to say grace at our
+table, he being present;--he hadn't noticed my nod to the Doctor, and
+the Doctor's low, earnest voice didn't reach him;--and there, with one
+blessing going on one side of the table, he, as I said, pitched in on
+the other! His eyes shut, his hands spread over his plate, his elbows on
+the board, his head bowed, he took care that grace should abound with us
+for once! His mill started, I knew there was no stopping it, and I hoped
+Wortleby would desist. But he didn't know his man. He seemed to feel
+that he had the stroke-oar, and he pulled away manfully. As Popworth
+lifted up his loud, nasal voice, the old Doctor raised his voice, in the
+vain hope, I suppose, of making himself heard by his lusty competitor.
+If you have never had two blessings running opposition at your table, in
+the presence of invited guests, you can never imagine how astounding,
+how killingly ludicrous it was! I felt that both Linton and Gregg were
+ready to tumble over, each in an apoplexy of suppressed emotions; while
+I had recourse to my handkerchief to hide my tears. At length, poor
+Wortleby yielded to fate,--withdrew from the unequal contest--hauled
+off--for repairs; and the old seventy-two gun-ship thundered away in
+triumph.
+
+At last (as there must be an end to everything under the sun) my uncle
+came to a close; and a moment of awful silence ensued, during which no
+man durst look at another. But in my weak and jelly-like condition I
+ventured a glance at him, and noticed that he looked up and around with
+an air of satisfaction at having performed a solemn duty in a becoming
+manner, blissfully unconscious of having run a poor brother off the
+track. Seeing us all with moist eyes and much affected,--two or three
+handkerchiefs still going,--he no doubt flattered himself that the
+pathetic touches in his prayer had told.
+
+This will give you some idea of the kind of man we had on our hands; and
+I won't risk making myself as great a bore as he is, by attempting a
+history of his stay with us; for I remember I set out to tell you about
+my little Iron-Clad. I'm coming to that.
+
+Suffice it to say, he stayed--he _stayed_--he STAYED!--five mortal
+weeks; refusing to take hints when they almost became kicks; driving our
+friends from us, and ourselves almost to distraction; his misfortunes
+alone protecting him from a prompt and vigorous elimination: when a
+happy chance helped me to a solution of this awful problem of destiny.
+
+More than once I had recalled Harry's vivacious suggestion of the
+scarecrow--if one could only have been invented that would sit
+composedly in a chair and nod when spoken to! I was wishing for some
+such automaton, to bear the brunt of the boring with which we were
+afflicted, when one day there came a little man into the garden, where I
+had taken refuge.
+
+He was a short, swarthy, foreign-looking, diminutive, stiff, rather
+comical fellow,--little figure mostly head, little head mostly face,
+little face mostly nose, which was by no means little--a sort of human
+vegetable (to my horticultural eye) running marvellously to seed in that
+organ. The first thing I saw, on looking up at the sound of footsteps,
+was the said nose coming toward me, among the sweet-corn tassels. Nose
+of a decidedly Hebraic cast,--the bearer respectably dressed, though his
+linen had an unwholesome sallowness, and his cloth a shiny,
+much-brushed, second-hand appearance.
+
+Without a word he walks up to me, bows solemnly, and pulls from his
+pocket (I thought he was laying his hand on his heart) the familiar,
+much-worn weapon of his class,--the folded, torn yellow paper, ready to
+fall to pieces as you open it,--in short, the respectable beggar's
+certificate of character. With another bow (which gave his nose the
+aspect of the beak of a bird of prey making a pick at me) he handed the
+document. I found that it was dated in Milwaukee, and signed by the
+mayor of that city, two physicians, three clergymen, and an editor, who
+bore united testimony to the fact that Jacob Menzel--I think that was
+his name--the bearer, any way,--was a deaf mute, and, considering that
+fact, a prodigy of learning, being master of no less than five different
+languages (a pathetic circumstance, considering that he was unable to
+speak one); moreover, that he was a converted Jew; and, furthermore, a
+native of Germany, who had come to this country in company with two
+brothers, both of whom had died of cholera in St. Louis in one day; in
+consequence of which affliction, and his recent conversion, he was now
+anxious to return to Fatherland, where he proposed to devote his life to
+the conversion of his brethren;--the upshot of all which was that good
+Christians and charitable souls everywhere were earnestly recommended to
+aid the said Jacob Menzel in his pious undertaking.
+
+I was fumbling in my pocket for a little change wherewith to dismiss
+him,--for that is usually the easiest way of getting off your premises
+and your conscience the applicant for "aid," who is probably an
+impostor, yet possibly not,--when my eye caught the words (for I still
+held the document), "would be glad of any employment which may help to
+pay his way." The idea of finding employment for a man of such a large
+nose and little body, such extensive knowledge and diminutive legs--who
+had mastered five languages yet could not speak or understand a word of
+any one of them,--struck me as rather pleasant, to say the least; yet,
+after a moment's reflection,--wasn't he the very thing I wanted, the
+manikin, the target for my uncle?
+
+Meanwhile he was scribbling rapidly on a small slate he had taken from
+his pocket. With another bow (as if he had written something wrong and
+was going to wipe it out with his nose), he handed me the slate, on
+which I found written in a neat hand half-a-dozen lines in as many
+different languages,--English, Latin, Hebrew, German, French,
+Greek,--each, as far as I could make out, conveying the cheerful
+information that he could communicate with me in that particular tongue.
+I tried him in English, French, and Latin, and I must acknowledge that
+he stood the test; he then tried me In Greek and Hebrew, and I as freely
+confess that I didn't stand the test. He smiled intelligently, nodded,
+and condescendingly returned to the English tongue, writing quickly,--"I
+am a poor exile from Fatherland, and I much need friends."
+
+I wrote: "You wish employment?" He replied: "I shall be much obliged for
+any service I shall be capable to do,"--and passed me the slate with a
+hopeful smile.
+
+"What can you do?" I asked. He answered: "I copy the manuscripts, I
+translate from the one language to others with some perfect exactitude,
+I arrange the libraries, I make the catalogues, I am capable to be any
+secretary." And he looked up as if he saw in my eyes a vast vista of
+catalogues, manuscripts, libraries, and Fatherland at the end of it.
+
+"How would you like to be companion to a literary man?" I inquired.
+
+He nodded expressively, and wrote: "I should that like overall. But I
+speak and hear not."
+
+"No matter," I replied. "You will only have to sit and appear to listen,
+and nod occasionally."
+
+"You shall be the gentleman?" he asked with a bright, pleased look.
+
+I explained to him that the gentleman was an unfortunate connection of
+my family, whom we could not regard as being quite in his right mind.
+
+Jacob Menzel smiled, and touched his fore head interrogatively.
+
+I nodded, adding on the slate,--"He is perfectly harmless; but he can
+only be kept quiet by having some person to talk and read to. He will
+talk and read to you. He must not know you are deaf. He is very deaf
+himself, and will not expect you to reply." And, for a person wishing a
+light and easy employment, I recommended the situation.
+
+He wrote at once, "How much you pay?"
+
+"One dollar a day, and board you," I replied.
+
+He of the nose nodded eagerly at that, and wrote, "Also you make to be
+washed my shirt?"
+
+I agreed; and the bargain was closed. I got him into the house, and gave
+him a bath, a clean shirt, and complete instructions how to act.
+
+The gravity with which he entered upon the situation was astonishing. He
+didn't seem to taste the slightest flavor of a joke in it all. It was a
+simple matter of business; he saw in it only money and Fatherland.
+
+Meanwhile I explained my intentions to Dolly, saying in great glee: "His
+deafness is his defence: the old three-decker may bang away at him; he
+is IRON-CLAD!" And that suggested the name we have called him by ever
+since.
+
+When he was ready for action, I took him in tow, and ran him in to draw
+the Popworth's fire--in other words, introduced him to my uncle in the
+library. The meeting of my tall, lank relative and the big-nosed little
+Jew was a spectacle to cure a hypochondriac! "Mr. Jacob
+Menzel--gentleman from Germany--travelling in this country," I yelled in
+the old fellow's ear. He of the diminutive legs and stupendous nose
+bowed with perfect decorum, and seated himself, stiff and erect, in the
+big chair I placed for him. The avuncular countenance lighted up: here
+were fresh woods and pastures new to that ancient shepherd. As for
+myself, I was wellnigh strangled by a cough which just then seized me,
+and obliged to retreat,--for I never was much of an actor, and the
+comedy of that first interview was overpowering.
+
+As I passed the dining-room door, Dolly, who was behind it, gave my arm
+a fearful pinch, that answered, I supposed, in the place of a scream, as
+a safety-valve for her hysterical emotions. "O you cruel man--you
+miserable humbug!" says she; and went off into convulsions of laughter.
+The door was open, and we could see and hear every thing.
+
+"You are travelling, h'm?" says my uncle. The nose nodded duly. "H'm! I
+have travelled, myself," the old gentleman proceeded; "my life has been
+one of vicissitudes, h'm! I have journeyed, I have preached, I have
+published;--perhaps you have heard of my literary venture"--and over
+went the big volume to the little man, who took it, turned the leaves,
+and nodded and smiled, according to instructions.
+
+"You are very kind to say so; thank you!" says my uncle, rubbing his
+husky hands with satisfaction. "Rejoiced to meet with you, truly! It is
+always a gratification to have an intelligent and sympathizing brother
+to open one's mind to; it is especially refreshing to me, for, as I may
+say without egotism, my life and labors have _not_ been appreciated."
+
+From that the old interminable story took its start and flowed on, the
+faithful nose nodding assent at every turn in that winding stream.
+
+The children came in for their share of the fun; and for the first time
+in our lives we took pleasure in the old gentleman's narration of his
+varied experiences.
+
+"O hear him! see him go it!" said Robbie. "What a nose!"
+
+"Long may it wave!" said Harry.
+
+With other remarks of a like genial nature; while there they sat, the
+two,--my uncle on one side, long, lathy, self-satisfied, gesticulating,
+earnestly laying his case before a grave jury of one, whom he was bound
+to convince, if time would allow; my little Jew facing him, upright in
+his chair, stiff, imperturbable, devoted to business, honorably earning
+his money, the nose in the air, immovable, except when it played duly up
+and down at fitting intervals: in which edifying employment I left them,
+and went about my business, a cheerier man.
+
+Ah, what a relief it was to feel myself free for a season from the
+attacks of the enemy--to know that my plucky little Iron-Clad was
+engaging him! In a hour I passed through the hall again, heard the loud
+blatant voice still discoursing (it had got as far as the difficulties
+with the second parish), and saw the unflinching nasal organ perform its
+graceful see-saw of assent. An hour later it was the same,--except that
+the speaker had arrived at the persecutions which drove him from parish
+number three. When I went to call them to dinner, the scene had changed
+a little, for now the old gentleman, pounding the table for a pulpit,
+was reading aloud passages from a powerful farewell sermon preached to
+his ungrateful parishioners. I was sorry I couldn't give my man a hint
+to use his handkerchief at the affecting periods, for the nose can
+hardly be called a sympathetic feature (unless indeed you blow it), and
+these nods were becoming rather too mechanical, except when the old
+gentleman switched off on the argumentative track, as he frequently did.
+"What think you of that?" he would pause in his reading to inquire.
+"Isn't that logic? isn't that unanswerable?" In responding to which
+appeals nobody could have done better than my serious, my devoted, my
+lovely little Jew.
+
+"Dinner!" I shouted over my uncle's dickey. It was almost the only word
+that had the magic in it to rouse him from the feast of reason which his
+own conversation was to him. It was always easy to head him toward the
+dining-room--to steer him into port for necessary supplies. The little
+Iron-Clad followed in his wake. At table, the old gentleman resumed the
+account of his dealings with parish number three, and got on as far as
+negotiations with number four; occasionally stopping to eat his soup or
+roast-beef very fast; at which time Jacob Menzel, who was very much
+absorbed in his dinner, but never permitted himself to neglect business
+for pleasure, paused at the proper intervals, with his spoon or fork
+half-way to his mouth, and nodded,--just as if my uncle had been
+speaking,--yielding assent to his last remarks after mature
+consideration, no doubt the old gentleman thought.
+
+The fun of the thing wore off after a while, and then we experienced
+the solid advantages of having an Iron-Clad in the house;
+Afternoon--evening--the next day--my little man of business performed
+his function promptly and assiduously. But in the afternoon of the
+second day he began to change perceptibly. He wore an aspect of languor
+and melancholy that alarmed me. The next morning he was pale, and went
+to his work with an air of sorrowful resignation.
+
+"He is thinking of Fatherland," said the sympathizing Dolly; while
+Harry's less refined but more sprightly comment was, that the nose had
+about played out.
+
+Indeed it had almost ceased to wave; and I feared that I was about to
+lose a most valuable servant, whose place it would be impossible to
+fill. Accordingly I wrote on a slip of paper, which I sent in to him,"--
+
+"You have done well, and I raise your salary to a dollar and a quarter a
+day. Your influence over our unfortunate relative is soothing and
+beneficial. Go on as you have begun,--continue in well-doing, and merit
+the lasting gratitude of an afflicted family."
+
+That seemed to cheer him a little--to wind him up, as Harry said, and
+set the pendulum swinging again. But it was not long before the
+listlessness and low spirits returned; Menzel showed a sad tendency to
+shirk his duty; and before noon there came a crash.
+
+I was in the garden, when I heard a shriek of rage and despair, and saw
+the little Jew coming toward me with frantic gestures.
+
+"I yielt! I abandone! I take my moneys and my shirt, and I go!" says he.
+
+I stood in perfect astonishment at hearing the dumb speak; while he
+threw his arms wildly above his head, exclaiming:
+
+"I am not teaf! I am not teaf! I am not teaf! He is one terreeble mon!
+He vill haf my life! So I go--I fly--I take my moneys and my shirt--I
+leafe him, I leafe your house! I vould earn honest living, but--Gott im
+himmel! dieu des dieux! all de devils!" he shrieked, mixing up several
+of his languages at once, in his violent mental agitation.
+
+"Jacob Menzel!" said I, solemnly, "I little thought I was having to do
+with an impostor!"
+
+"If I haf you deceive, I haf myself more dan punish!" was his reply.
+"Now I resign de position. I ask for de moneys and de shirt, and I
+part!"
+
+Just then my uncle came up, amazed at his new friend's sudden revolt and
+flight, and anxious to finish up with his seventh parish. "I vill hear
+no more of your six, of your seven,--I know not how many parish!"
+screamed the furious little Jew, turning on him.
+
+"What means all this?" said my bewildered uncle.
+
+"I tell you vat means it all!" the vindictive little impostor, tiptoeing
+up to him, yelled at his cheek. "I make not vell my affairs in your
+country; I vould return to Faderlant; for conwenience I carry dis
+pappeer. I come here; I am suppose teaf; I accept de position to be your
+companion, for if a man hear, you kill him tead soon vid your book and
+your ten, twenty parish! I hear! you kill me! and I go!"
+
+And, having obtained his moneys and his shirt, he went. That is the last
+I ever saw of my little Iron-Clad. I remember him with gratitude, for he
+did me good service, and he had but one fault, namely, that he was _not_
+iron-clad!
+
+As for my uncle, for the first time in his life, I think, he said never
+a word, but stalked into the house. Dolly soon came running out to ask
+what was the matter; Popworth was actually packing his carpet-bag! I
+called Andrew, and ordered him to be in readiness with the buggy to take
+the old gentleman over to the railroad.
+
+"What! going?" I cried, as my uncle presently appeared, bearing his book
+and his baggage.
+
+"Nephew Frederick!" said he, "after this treatment, can you ask me if am
+going?"
+
+"Really," I shouted, "it is not my fault that the fellow proved an
+impostor. I employed him with the best of intentions, for your--and
+our--good!" "Nephew Frederick," said he, "this is insufferable; you
+will regret it! I shall never--NEVER" (as if he had been pronouncing my
+doom)--"accept of your hospitalities again!"
+
+He did, however, accept some money which I offered him, and likewise a
+seat in the buggy. I watched his departure with joy and terror,--for at
+any moment he might relent and stay nor was I at ease in my mind until I
+saw Andrew come riding back alone.
+
+We have never seen the old gentleman since But last winter I received a
+letter from him he wrote in a forgiving tone, to inform me that he had
+been appointed chaplain in a prison, and to ask for a loan of money to
+buy a suit of clothes. I sent him fifty dollars and my congratulations.
+I consider him eminently qualified to fill the new situation. As a
+hardship he can't be beat; and what are the rogues sent to prison for,
+but to suffer punishment?
+
+Yes, it would be a joke if my little Iron-Clad should end his career of
+imposture in that public institution, and sit once more under my
+excellent uncle! But I can't wish him any such misfortune. His mission
+to us was one of mercy. The place has been Paradise again, ever since
+his visit.--_Scribners Magazine_, August, 1873.
+
+
+
+
+OLIVER BELL BUNCE.
+
+(BORN, 1828.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. BLUFF DISCOURSES OF THE COUNTRY AND KINDRED THEMES.
+
+(_In a Country Lane_.)
+
+BACHELOR BLUFF. A LISTENER.
+
+
+"The country," exclaimed Mr. Bluff, with an air of candor and
+impartiality, "is, I admit, a very necessary and sometimes a very
+charming place. I thank Heaven for the country when I eat my first green
+peas, when the lettuce is crisp, when the potatoes are delicate and
+mealy, when the well-fed poultry comes to town, when the ruddy peach and
+the purple grape salute me at the fruit-stands. I love the country when
+I think of a mountain ramble; when I am disposed to wander with rod and
+reel along the forest-shadowed brook; when the apple-orchards are in
+blossom; when the hills blaze with autumn foliage. But I protest
+against the dogmatism of rural people, who claim all the cardinal and
+all the remaining virtues for their rose-beds and cabbage-patches. The
+town, sir, bestows felicities higher in character than the country does;
+for men and women, and the works of men and women, are always worthier
+our love and concern than the rocks and the hills ...
+
+--"Oh, yes! I have heard before of the pleasures of the garden. Poets
+have sung, enthusiasts have written, and old men have dreamed of them
+since History began her chronicles. But have the _pains_ of the garden
+ever been dwelt upon? Have people, now, been entirely honest in what
+they have said and written on this theme? When enthusiasts have told us
+of their prize pears, their early peas of supernatural tenderness, their
+asparagus, and their roses, and their strawberries, have they not hidden
+a good deal about their worm-eaten plums--about their cherries that were
+carried off by armies of burglarious birds; about their potatoes that
+proved watery and unpalatable; about their melons that fell victims to
+their neighbors' fowls; about their peaches that succumbed to the
+unexpected raid of Jack Frost; about their grapes that fell under the
+blight of mildew; about their green corn that withered in the hill;
+about the mighty host of failures that, if all were told, would tower in
+high proportion above the few much blazoned successes?
+
+"Who is it that says a garden is a standing source of pleasure? Amend
+this, I say, by asserting that a garden is a standing source of
+discomfort and vexation ... A hopeless restlessness, according to my
+observation, takes possession of every amateur gardener. Discontent
+abides in his soul. There is, indeed, so much to be done, changed,
+rearranged, watched, nursed, that the amateur gardener is really
+entitled to praise and generous congratulations when one of his thousand
+schemes comes to fruition. We ought in pity to rejoice with him over his
+big Lawton blackberries, and say nothing of the cherries, and the pears,
+and the peaches, that once were budding hopes, but have gone the way of
+Moore's 'dear gazelle.' Then the large expenditures which were needed to
+bring about his triumph of the Lawtons. 'Those potatoes,' said an
+enthusiastic amateur gardener to me once, 'cost twenty-five cents
+apiece!' And they were very good potatoes, too--almost equal to those
+that could be bought in market at a dollar a bushel.
+
+"And then, amateur gardeners are feverishly addicted to early rising.
+Men with gardens are like those hard drinkers whose susceptibilities are
+hopelessly blunted. Who but a man diverted from the paths of honest
+feeling and natural enjoyment, possessed of a demoniac mania, lost to
+the peace and serenity of the virtuous and the blessed, could find
+pleasure amid the damps, and dews, and chills, and raw-edgedness of a
+garden in the early morning, absolutely find pleasure in saturated
+trousers, in shoes swathed in moisture, in skies that are gray and
+gloomy, in flowers that are, as Mantalini would put it, 'demnition
+moist'? The thing is incredible! Now, a garden, after the sun has dried
+the paths, warmed the air, absorbed the dew, is admissible. But a
+possession that compels an early turning out into fogs and discomforts
+deserves for this fact alone the anathema of all rational beings.
+
+"I really believe, sir, that the literature of the garden, so abundant
+everywhere, is written in the interest of suburban land-owners. The
+inviting one-sided picture so persistently held up is only a covert bit
+of advertising, intended to seduce away happy cockneys of the town--men
+supremely contented with their attics, their promenades in Fifth Avenue,
+their visits to Central Park, where all is arranged for them without
+their labor or concern, their evenings at the music gardens, their soft
+morning slumbers, which know no dreadful chills and dews! How could a
+back-ache over the pea-bed compensate for these felicities? How could
+sour cherries, or half-ripe strawberries, or wet rosebuds, even if they
+do come from one's own garden, reward him for the lose of the ease and
+the serene conscience of one who sings merrily in the streets, and cares
+not whether worms burrow, whether suns burn, whether birds steal,
+whether winds overturn, whether droughts destroy, whether floods drown,
+whether gardens flourish, or not?"--_Bachelor Bluff: his Opinions,
+Sentiments, and Disputations_.
+
+
+
+
+CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER.
+
+(BORN, 1829.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GARDEN ETHICS.
+
+
+I believe that I have found, if not original sin, at least vegetable
+total depravity in my garden; and it was there before I went into it. It
+is the bunch-, or joint-, or snake-grass,--whatever it is called. As I
+do not know the names of all the weeds and plants, I have to do as Adam
+did in his garden,--name things as I find them. This grass has a
+slender, beautiful stalk: and when you cut it down, or pull up a long
+root of it, you fancy it is got rid of; but in a day or two it will come
+up in the same spot in half a dozen vigorous blades. Cutting down and
+pulling up is what it thrives on. Extermination rather helps it. If you
+follow a slender white root, it will be found to run under the ground
+until it meets another slender white root; and you will soon unearth a
+network of them, with a knot somewhere, sending out dozens of
+sharp-pointed, healthy shoots, every joint prepared to be an independent
+life and plant. The only way to deal with it is to take one part hoe and
+two parts fingers, and carefully dig it out, not leaving a joint
+anywhere. It will take a little time, say all summer, to dig out
+thoroughly a small patch; but if you once dig it out, and keep it out,
+you will have no further trouble.
+
+I have said it was total depravity. Here it is. If you attempt to pull
+up and root out sin in you, which shows on the surface,--if it does not
+show, you do not care for it,--you may have noticed how it runs into an
+interior network of sins, and an ever-sprouting branch of these roots
+somewhere; and that you cannot pull out one without making a general
+internal disturbance, and rooting up your whole being. I suppose it is
+less trouble to quietly cut them off at the top--say once a week, on
+Sunday, when you put on your religious clothes and face,--so that no one
+will see them, and not try to eradicate the network within.
+
+_Remark_.--This moral vegetable figure is at the service of any
+clergyman who will have the manliness to come forward and help me at a
+day's hoeing on my potatoes. None but the orthodox need apply.
+
+I, however, believe in the intellectual, if not the moral, qualities of
+vegetables, and especially weeds. There was a worthless vine that (or
+who) started up about midway between a grape-trellis and a row of
+bean-poles, some three feet from each, but a little nearer the trellis.
+When it came out of the ground, it looked around to see what it should
+do. The trellis was already occupied. The bean-pole was empty. There was
+evidently the a little best chance of light, air, and sole
+proprietorship on the pole. And the vine started for the pole, and began
+to climb it with determination. Here was as distinct an act of choice,
+of reason, as a boy exercises when he goes into a forest, and, looking
+about, decides which tree he will climb. And, besides, how did the vine
+know enough to travel in exactly the right direction, three feet, to
+find what it wanted? This is intellect. The weeds, on the other hand,
+have hateful moral qualities. To cut down a weed is, therefore, to do a
+moral action. I feel as if I were destroying a sin. My hoe becomes an
+instrument of retributive justice. I am an apostle of nature. This view
+of the matter lends a dignity to the art of hoeing which nothing else
+does, and lifts it into the region of ethics. Hoeing becomes, not a
+pastime, but a duty. And you get to regard it so, as the days and the
+weeds lengthen.
+
+_Observation_.--Nevertheless, what a man needs in gardening is a
+cast-iron back, with a hinge in it. The hoe is an ingenious instrument,
+calculated to call out a great deal of strength at a great disadvantage.
+
+The striped bug has come, the saddest of the year. He is a moral
+double-ender, iron-clad at that. He is unpleasant in two ways. He
+burrows in the ground so that you cannot find him, and he flies away so
+that you cannot catch him. He is rather handsome, as bugs go, but
+utterly dastardly, in that he gnaws the stem of the plant close to the
+ground, and ruins it without any apparent advantage to himself. I find
+him on the hills of cucumbers (perhaps it will be a cholera-year, and we
+shall not want any), the squashes (small loss), and the melons (which
+never ripen). The best way to deal with the striped bug is to sit down
+by the hills, and patiently watch for him. If you are spry, you can
+annoy him. This, however, takes time. It takes all day and part of the
+night. For he flieth in the darkness, and wasteth at noonday. If you get
+up before the dew is off the plants,--it goes off very early,--you can
+sprinkle soot on the plant (soot is my panacea: if I can get the
+disease of a plant reduced to the necessity of soot, I am all right);
+and soot is unpleasant to the bug. But the best thing to do is set a
+toad to catch the bugs. The toad at once establishes the most intimate
+relations with the bug. It is a pleasure to see such unity among the
+lower animals. The difficulty is to make the toad stay and watch the
+hill. If you know your toad, it is all right. If you do not, you must
+build a tight fence round the plants, which the toad cannot jump over.
+This, however, introduces a new element. I find that I have a zoological
+garden on my hands. It is an unexpected result of my little enterprise,
+which never aspired to the completeness of the Paris "Jardin des
+Plantes."--_My Summer in a Garden_.
+
+
+THE PLUMBER.
+
+Speaking of the philosophical temper, there is no class of men whose
+society is to be more desired for this quality than that of plumbers!
+They are the most agreeable men I know; and the boys in the business
+begin to be agreeable very early. I suspect the secret of it is, that
+they are agreeable by the hour. In the driest days, my fountain became
+disabled: the pipe was stopped up. A couple of plumbers, with the
+implements of their craft, came out to view the situation. There was a
+good deal of difference of opinion about where the stoppage was. I found
+the plumbers perfectly willing to sit down and talk about it,--talk by
+the hour. Some of their guesses and remarks were exceedingly ingenious;
+and their general observations on other subjects were excellent in their
+way, and could hardly have been better if they had been made by the job.
+The work dragged a little,--as it is apt to do by the hour. The plumbers
+had occasion to make me several visits. Sometimes they would find, upon
+arrival, that they had forgotten some indispensable tool; and one would
+go back to the shop, a mile and a half, after it; and his comrade would
+await his return with the most exemplary patience, and sit down and
+talk,--always by the hour. I do not know but it is a habit to have
+something wanted at the shop. They seemed to me very good workmen, and
+always willing to stop and talk about the job, or any thing else, when I
+went near them. Nor had they any of that impetuous hurry that is said to
+be the bane of our American civilization. To their credit be it said,
+that I never observed any thing of it in them. They can afford to wait.
+Two of them will sometimes wait nearly half a day while a comrade goes
+for a tool. They are patient and philosophical. It is a great pleasure
+to meet such men. One only wishes there was some work he could do for
+_them_ by the hour. There ought to be reciprocity. I think they have
+very nearly solved the problem of Life: it is to work for other people,
+never for yourself, and get your pay by the hour. You then have no
+anxiety, and little work. If you do things by the job, you are
+perpetually driven: the hours are scourges. If you work by the hour, you
+gently sail on the stream of Time, which is always bearing you on to the
+haven of Pay, whether you make any effort or not. Working by the hour
+tends to make one moral. A plumber working by the job, trying to unscrew
+a rusty, refractory nut, in a cramped position, where the tongs
+continually slipped off, would swear; but I never heard one of them
+swear, or exhibit the least impatience at such a vexation, working by
+the hour. Nothing can move a man who is paid by the hour. How sweet the
+flight of time seems to his calm mind!--_My Summer in a Garden_.
+
+
+
+
+FRANCES LEE PRATT.
+
+(BORN, 1830.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CAPTAIN BEN'S CHOICE.
+
+
+An old red house on a rocky shore, with a fisherman's blue boat rocking
+on the bay, and two white sails glistening far away over the water.
+Above, the blue, shining sky; and below, the blue shining sea.
+
+"It seems clever to have a pleasant day," said Mrs. Davids, sighing.
+
+Mrs. Davids said every thing with a sigh, and now she wiped her eyes
+also on her calico apron. She was a woman with a complexion like faded
+sea-weed, who seemed always pitying herself.
+
+"I tell them," said she, "I have had real hard luck. My husband is
+buried away off in California, and my son died in the army, and he is
+buried away down South. Neither one of them is buried together."
+
+Then she sighed again. Twice, this time.
+
+"And so," she continued, taking out a pinch of bayberry snuff, "I am
+left alone in the world. _Alone_, I say! why, I've got a daughter, but
+she is away out West. She is married to an engineer-man. And I've got
+two grandchildren."
+
+Mrs. Davids took the pinch of bayberry and shook her head, looking as
+though that was the "hardest luck" of all.
+
+"Well, everybody has to have their pesters, and you'll have to take
+yours," rejoined Miss Persis Tame, taking a pinch of snuff--the real
+Maccaboy--twice as large, with twice as fierce an action. "I don't know
+what it is to bury children, nor to lose a husband; I s'pose I don't;
+but I know what it is to be jammed round the world and not have a ruff
+to stick my head under. I wish I had all the money I ever spent
+travelling,--and _that's_ twelve dollars," she continued, regretfully.
+
+"Why in the world don't you marry and have a home of your own," sighed
+Mrs. Davids.
+
+"Well, I don't _expect_ to marry. I don't know as I do at my time of
+life," responded the spinster. "I rather guess my day for chances is
+gone by."
+
+"You ain't such a dreadful sight older than I am, though," replied Mrs.
+Davids, reflectively.
+
+"Not so old by two full years," returned Miss Tame, taking another smart
+pinch of snuff, as though it touched the empty spot in her heart and did
+it good. "But _you_ ain't looking out for opportunities yet, I suppose."
+
+Mrs. Davids sighed, evasively. "We can't tell what is before us. There
+is more than one man in want of a wife."
+
+As though to point her words, Captain Ben Lundy came in sight on the
+beach, his head a long way forward and his shambling feet trying in vain
+to keep up.
+
+"Thirteen months and a half since Lyddy was buried," continued Mrs.
+Davids, accepting this application to her words, "and there is Captain
+Ben taking up with just what housekeeper he can get, and _no_
+housekeeper at all. It would be an excellent home for you, Persis.
+Captain Ben always had the name of making a kind husband."
+
+She sighed again, whether from regret for the bereaved man, or for the
+multitude of women bereft of such a husband.
+
+By this time Captain Ben's head was at the door.
+
+"Morning!" said he, while his feet were coming up. "Quite an accident
+down here below the lighthouse last night. Schooner ran ashore in the
+blow and broke all up into kindling-wood in less than no time. Captain
+Tisdale's been out looking for dead bodies ever since daylight."
+
+"I knowed it," sighed Mrs. Davids. "I heard a rushing sound sometime
+about the break of day that waked me out of a sound sleep, and I knowed
+then there was a spirit leaving its body. I heard it the night Davids
+went, or I expect I did. It must have been very nearly at that time."
+
+"Well, I guess it wasn't a spirit, last night," said Captain Ben; "for
+as I was going on to say, after searching back and forth, Captain
+Tisdale came upon the folks, a man and a boy, rolled up in their wet
+blankets asleep behind the life-boat house. He said he felt like he
+could shake them for staying out in the wet. Wrecks always make for the
+lighthouse, so he s'posed those ones were drowned to death, sure
+enough."
+
+"Oh, then it couldn't have been them, I was warned of!" returned Mrs.
+Davids, looking as though she regretted it. "It was right over my head,
+and I waked up just as the thing was rushing past. You haven't heard,
+have you," she continued, "whether or no there was any other damage
+done by the gale?"
+
+"I don't know whether you would call it damage exactly," returned
+Captain Ben; "but Loizah Mullers got so scared she left me and went
+home. She said she couldn't stay and run the chance of another of our
+coast blows, and off she trapsed."
+
+Mrs. Davids sighed like November. "So you have some hard luck as well as
+myself. I don't suppose you can _get_ a housekeeper to keep her long,"
+said she, dismally.
+
+"Abel Grimes tells me it is enough sight easier getting wives than
+housekeepers, and I'm some of a mind to try that tack," replied Captain
+Ben, smiling grimly.
+
+Mrs. Davids put up her hand to feel of her back hair, and smoothed down
+her apron; while Miss Persis Tame blushed like a withered rose, and
+turned her eyes modestly out of the window.
+
+"I am _so_. But the difficulty is, who will it be? There are so many to
+select from it is fairly bothersome," continued Captain Ben, winking
+fast and looking as though he was made of dry corncobs and hay.
+
+Miss Persis Tame turned about abruptly. "The land alive!" she
+ejaculated with such sudden emphasis that the dishes shook on their
+shelves and Captain Ben in his chair. "It makes me mad as a March hare
+to hear men go on as though all they'd got to do was to throw down their
+handkerchers to a woman, and, no matter who, she'd spring and run to
+pick it up. It is always 'Who will I marry?' and not 'Who will marry
+me?'"
+
+"Why, there is twice the number of widders that there is of widderers
+here at the P'int. That was what was in my mind," said Captain Ben, in a
+tone of meek apology. "There is the Widow Keens, she that was Azubah
+Muchmore. I don't know but what she would do; Lyddy used to think every
+thing of her, and she is a first-rate of a housekeeper."
+
+"Perhaps so," assented Mrs. Davids, dubiously. "But she is troubled a
+sight with the head complaint; I suppose you know she is. That is
+against her."
+
+"Yes," assented Miss Tame. "The Muchmores all have weak heads. And, too,
+the Widow Keens, she's had a fall lately. She was up in a chair cleaning
+her top buttery shelf, and somehow one of the chair-leg's give way,--it
+was loose or something, I expect,--and down she went her whole heft.
+She keeps about, but she goes with two staves."
+
+"I want to know if that is so," said Captain Ben, his honest soul
+warming with sudden sympathy. "The widder has seen a sight of trouble."
+
+"Yes, she has lived through a good deal, that woman has. I couldn't live
+through so much, 'pears to me; but we don't know what we can live
+through," rejoined Miss Tame.
+
+Captain Ben did not reply, but his ready feet began to move to and fro
+restlessly; for his heart, more ready yet, had already gone out toward
+the unfortunate widow.
+
+"It is so bad for a woman to be alone," said he to himself, shambling
+along the shingly beach a moment after. "Nobody to mend her chairs or
+split up her kindlings, or do a chore for her; and she lame into the
+bargain. It is _too_ bad."
+
+"He has steered straight for the Widow Keens's, as sure as A is
+apple-dumpling," remarked Miss Persis, peering after him from the
+window.
+
+"Well, I must admit I wouldn't have thought of Captain Ben's being
+en-a-mored after such a sickly piece of business. But men never know
+what they want. Won't you just hand me that gum-cam-phyer bottle, now
+you are up? It is on that chest of drawers behind you."
+
+"No more they don't," returned Miss Tame, with a plaintive cadence,
+taking a sniff from the camphor-bottle on the way. "However, I don't
+begrutch him to her,--I don't know as I do. It will make her a good hum,
+though, if she concludes to make arrangements."
+
+Meantime, Captain Ben Lundy's head was wellnigh to Mrs. Keens's door,
+for it was situated only around the first sand-hill. She lived in a
+little bit of a house that looked as though it had been knocked together
+for a crockery-crate, in the first place, with two windows and a rude
+door thrown in as afterthoughts. In the rear of this house was another
+tiny building, something like a grown-up hen-coop; and this was where
+Mrs. Keens carried on the business bequeathed to her by her deceased
+husband, along with five small children, and one not so small. But,
+worse than that, one who was "not altogether there," as the English say.
+
+She was about this business now, dressed in a primitive sort of bloomer,
+with a wash-tub and clothes-ringer before her, and an army of
+bathing-suits of every kind and color flapping wildly in the fresh sea
+air at one side.
+
+From a little farther on, mingling with the sound of the beating surf,
+came the merry voices of bathers,--boarders at the great hotels on the
+hill.
+
+"Here you be! Hard at it!" said Captain Ben, puffing around the corner
+like a portable west-wind. I've understood you've had a hurt. Is that
+so?"
+
+"Oh, no! Nothing to mention," returned Mrs. Keens, turning about a face
+bright and cheerful as the full moon; and throwing, as by accident, a
+red bathing-suit over the two broomsticks that leaned against her tub.
+
+Unlike Mrs. Davids, Mrs. Keens neither pitied herself nor would allow
+anybody else to do so.
+
+"Sho!" remarked Captain Ben, feeling defrauded. He had counted on
+sacrificing himself to his sympathies, but he didn't give up yet. "You
+must see some pretty tough times 'pears to me with such a parcel of
+little ones, and only yourself to look to," said he, proceeding
+awkwardly enough to hang the pile of wrung-out clothes upon an empty
+line.
+
+"I don't complain," returned the widow, bravely. "My children are not
+_teusome_; and Jack, why you would be surprised to see how many things
+Jack can do, for all he isn't quite right."
+
+As she spoke thus with affectionate pride, Jack came up wheeling a
+roughly made cart filled with wet bathing clothes from the beach. He
+looked up at sound of his mother's voice with something of the dumb
+tenderness of an intelligent dog. "Jack helps, Jack good boy," said he,
+nodding with a happy smile.
+
+"Yes, Jack helps. We don't complain," repeated the mother.
+
+"It would come handy, though, to have a man around to see to things and
+kind o' provide, wouldn't it, though?" persisted Captain Ben.
+
+"Some might think so," replied Mrs. Keens, stopping her wringer to
+reflect a little. "But I haven't any wish to change my situation," she
+added, decidedly, going on again with her work.
+
+"Sure on 't?" persisted the Captain.
+
+"Certain," replied the widow.
+
+Captain Ben sighed. "I thought ma'be you was having a hard row to hoe,
+and I thought like enough--"
+
+_What_ he never said, excepting by a beseeching glance at the cheerful
+widow, for just then an interruption came from some people after
+bathing-suits.
+
+So Captain Ben moved off with a dismal countenance. But before he had
+gone far it suddenly brightened. "It might not be for the best," quoth
+he to himself, "Like enough not. I was very careful not to commit
+myself, and I am very glad I didn't." He smiled as he reflected on his
+judicious wariness. "But, however," he continued, "I might as well
+finish up this business now. There is Rachel Doolittle. Who knows but
+she'd make a likely wife? Lyddy sot a good deal by her. She never had a
+quilting or a sewing bee but what nothing would do but she must give
+Rachel Doolittle an invite. Yes; I wonder I never decided on her before.
+She will be glad of a home sure enough, for she haves to live around, as
+it were, upon her brothers."
+
+Captain Ben's feet quickened themselves at these thoughts, and had
+almost overtaken his head, when behold! at a sudden turn in the road
+there stood Miss Rachel Doolittle, picking barberries from a wayside
+bush. "My sakes! If she ain't right here, like Rachel in the Bible!"
+ejaculated Captain Ben, taking heart at the omen.
+
+Miss Doolittle looked up from under her tied-down brown hat in surprise
+at such a salutation. But her surprise was increased by Captain Ben's
+next remark.
+
+"It just came into my mind," said he, "that you was the right one to
+take Lyddy's place. You two used to be such great knit-ups that it will
+seem 'most like having Lyddy back again. No," he continued, after a
+little reflection, "I don't know of anybody I had rather see sitting in
+Lyddy's chair and wearing Lyddy's things than yourself."
+
+"Dear me, Captain Lundy, I couldn't think of it. Paul's folks expect me
+to stay with them while the boarder-season lasts, and I've as good as
+promised Jacob's wife I'll spend the winter with her."
+
+"Ain't that a hard life you are laying out for yourself? And then bum-by
+you will get old or sick ma' be, and who is going to want you around
+then? Every woman needs a husband of her own to take care of her."
+
+"I'm able to take care of myself as yet, thanks to goodness! And I am
+not afraid my brothers will see me suffer in case of sickness,"
+returned Miss Doolittle, her cheeks flaming up like a sumach in October.
+
+"But hadn't you better take a little time to think it over? Ma' be it
+come sudden to you," pleaded Captain Ben.
+
+"No, I thank you. Some things don't need thinking over," answered Miss
+Doolittle, plucking at the barberries more diligently than ever.
+
+"I wish Lyddy was here. She would convince you you were standing in your
+own light," returned Lyddy's widower in a perplexed tone.
+
+"I don't need one to come from the dead to show me my own mind,"
+retorted Miss Doolittle, firmly.
+
+"Well, like enough you are right," said Captain Ben, mildly, putting a
+few stems of barberries in her pail; "ma' be it wouldn't be best. I
+don't want to be rash."
+
+And with that he moved off, on the whole congratulating himself he had
+not decided to marry Miss Doolittle.
+
+"I thought after she commenced her miserable gift of the gab, that Lyddy
+used to be free to admit she had a fiery tongue, for all they were such
+friends. And I'm all for peace myself. I guess, on the whole, ma' be she
+ain't the one for me, perhaps, and it is as well to look further.
+_Why_! what in _the_ world! Well, there! what have I been thinking of?
+There is Mrs. Davids, as neat as a new cent, and the master hand to
+save. She is always taking on; and she will be glad enough to have
+somebody to look out for her,--why, sure enough! And there I was right
+at her house this very day, and never once thought of her! What an old
+dunce!"
+
+But, fortunately, this not being a sin of commission, it could easily be
+rectified; and directly Captain Ben had turned about and was trotting
+again toward the red house on the beach.
+
+"Pound for pound of the best white sugar," he heard Miss Tame say as he
+neared the door.
+
+"White, sugar!" repeated Mrs. Davids, her usual sigh drawn out into a
+little groan. "_White_ sugar for _cram_ berries! Who ever heard of such
+a thing? I've always considered I did well when I had plenty of brown."
+
+"Poor creeter!" thought Captain Ben. "How she will enjoy getting into my
+pantry. Lyddy never complained that she didn't have enough of every
+thing to do _with_"
+
+And in the full ardor of his intended benevolence, he went right in and
+opened the subject at once. But, to his astonishment, Mrs. Davids
+refused him. She sighed, but she refused him.
+
+"I've seen trouble enough a'ready, without my rushing into more with my
+eyes wide open," sighed she.
+
+"Trouble? Why, that is just what I was meaning to save you!" exclaimed
+the bewildered widower. "Pump right in the house, and stove e'enamost
+new. And Lyddy never knew what it was to want for a spoonful of sugar or
+a pound of flour. And such a _handy_ buttery and sink! Lyddy used to say
+she felt the worst about leaving her buttery of any thing."
+
+"Should thought she would," answered Mrs. Davids, forgetting to sigh.
+"However, I can't say that I feel any hankering after marrying a
+buttery. I've got buttery-room enough here, without the trouble of
+getting set up in a new place."
+
+"Just as you say," returned the rejected. "I ain't sure as you'd be
+exactly the one. I _was_ a thinking of looking for somebody a little
+younger."
+
+"Well, here is Persis Tame. Why don't you bespeak her? _She_ is younger,
+and she is in need of a good home. I can recommend her, too, as the
+first-rate of a cook," remarked Mrs. Davids, benevolently.
+
+Miss Tame had been sitting a little apart by the open window, smiling to
+herself.
+
+But now she turned about at once. "Hm!" said she, with contempt. "I
+should rather live under an umbrella tied to a stake, than marry for a
+_hum_."
+
+So Captain Ben went home without engaging either wife or housekeeper.
+
+And the first thing he saw was Captain Jacob Doolittle's old one-eyed
+horse eating the apples Loizah Mullers had strung and festooned from
+nails against the house, to dry.
+
+The next thing he saw was, that, having left a window open, the hens had
+flown in and gone to housekeeping on their own account. But they were
+not, like Mrs. Davids, as neat as a new cent, and _not_, also, such
+master hands to save.
+
+"Shoo! shoo! Get out. Go 'long there with you!" cried Captain Ben,
+waving the dish-cloth and the poker. "I declare for 't! I most hadn't
+ought to have left that bread out on the table. They've made a pretty
+mess of it, and it is every spec there is in the house too. Well, I
+must make a do of potatoes for supper, with a bit of pie and a mouthful
+of cake."
+
+Accordingly he went to work building a fire that wouldn't burn. Then,
+forgetting the simple matter of dampers, the potatoes wouldn't bake. The
+tea-kettle boiled over and cracked the stove, and after that boiled dry
+and cracked itself. Finally the potatoes fell to baking with so much
+ardor that they overdid it and burnt up. And, last of all, the cake-jar
+and pie-cupboard proved to be entirely empty. Loizah had left on the eve
+of baking-day.
+
+"The old cat! Well, I'd just as soon live on slapjacks a spell," said
+Captain Ben, when he made this discovery.
+
+But even slapjacks palled on his palate, especially when he had them
+always to cook for himself.
+
+"'T ain't no way to live, this ain't," said he at last. "I'm a good mind
+to marry as ever I had to eat."
+
+So he put on his hat and walked out. The first person he met was Miss
+Persis Tame, who turned her back and fell to picking thoroughwort
+blossoms as he came up.
+
+"Look a here," said he, stopping short, "I'm dreadful put to 't. I
+can't get ne'er a wife nor ne'er a housekeeper, and I am e'enamost
+starved to death. I wish you _would_ consent to marry with me, if you
+feel as if you could bring your mind to it. I am sure it would have been
+Lyddy's wish."
+
+Miss Tame smelt of the thoroughwort blossoms.
+
+"It comes pretty sudden on me," she replied. "I hadn't given the subject
+any thought. But you _are_ to be pitied in your situation."
+
+"Yes. And I'm dreadful lonesome. I've always been used to having Lyddy
+to talk over things with, and I miss her a sight. And I don't know
+anybody that has her ways more than you have. You are a good deal such a
+built woman, and you have the same hitch to your shoulders when you
+walk. You've got something the same look to your eyes, too; I noticed it
+last Sunday in meeting-time," continued the widower, anxiously.
+
+"I do feel for you. A man alone is in a deplorable situation," replied
+Miss Tame. "I'm sure I'd do any thing in my power to help you."
+
+"Well, marry with me then. That is what I want. We could be real
+comfortable together. I'll go for the license this minute, and we'll be
+married right away," returned the impatient suitor. "You go up to Elder
+Crane's, and I'll meet you there as soon as I can fetch around."
+
+Then he hurried away, "without giving me a chance to say 'no,'" said
+"she that was" Persis Tame, afterward. "So I _had_ to marry with him, as
+you might say. But I've never seen cause to regret it, I've got a
+first-rate of a hum, and Captain Ben makes a first-rate of a husband.
+And no hain't he, I hope, found cause to regret it," she added, with a
+touch of wifely pride; "though I do expect he might have had his pick
+among all the single women at the Point; but out of them all he chose
+_me_."--_The Atlantic Monthly_, March, 1870.
+
+
+
+
+LOUISA MAY ALCOTT.
+
+(BORN, 1832.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STREET SCENES IN WASHINGTON.
+
+
+The mules were my especial delight; and an hour's study of a constant
+succession of them introduced me to many of their characteristics; for
+six of these odd little beasts drew each army wagon, and went hopping
+like frogs through the stream of mud that gently rolled along the
+street. The coquettish mule had small feet, a nicely trimmed tassel of a
+tail, perked-up ears, and seemed much given to little tosses of the
+head, affected skips and prances; and, if he wore the bells, or were
+bedizened with a bit of finery, put on as many airs as any belle. The
+moral mule was a stout, hardworking creature, always tugging with all
+his might; often pulling away after the rest had stopped, laboring under
+the conscientious delusion that food for the entire army depended upon
+his private exertions. I respected this style of mule; and, had I
+possessed a juicy cabbage, would have pressed it upon him, with thanks
+for his excellent example. The histrionic mule was a melodramatic
+quadruped, prone to startling humanity by erratic leaps, and wild
+plunges, much shaking of his stubborn head, and lashing out of his
+vicious heels; now and then falling flat, and apparently dying _a la_
+Forrest; a gasp--a squirm--a flop, and so on, till the street was well
+blocked up, the drivers all swearing like demons in bad hats, and the
+chief actor's circulation decidedly quickened by every variety of kick,
+cuff, jerk, and haul. When the last breath seemed to have left his body,
+and "doctors were in vain," a sudden resurrection took place; and if
+ever a mule laughed with scornful triumph, that was the beast, as he
+leisurely rose, gave a comfortable shake, and, calmly regarding the
+excited crowd seemed to say--"A hit! a decided hit! for the stupidest of
+animals has bamboozled a dozen men. Now, then! what are _you_ stopping
+the way for?" The pathetic mule was, perhaps, the most interesting of
+all; for, though he always seemed to be the smallest, thinnest, weakest
+of the six, the postillion, with big boots, long-tailed coat, and heavy
+whip, was sure to bestride this one, who struggled feebly along, head
+down, coat muddy and rough, eye spiritless and sad, his very tail a
+mortified stump, and the whole beast a picture of meek misery, fit to
+touch a heart of stone. The jovial mule was a roly poly, happy-go-lucky
+little piece of horse-flesh, taking every thing easily, from cudgeling
+to caressing; strolling along with a roguish twinkle of the eye, and, if
+the thing were possible, would have had his hands in his pockets, and
+whistled as he went. If there ever chanced to be an apple core, a stray
+turnip, or wisp of hay, in the gutter, this Mark Tapley was sure to find
+it, and none of his mates seemed to begrudge him his bite. I suspected
+this fellow was the peacemaker, confidant, and friend of all the others,
+for he had a sort of "Cheer-up,-old-boy,-I'll-pull-you-through" look,
+which was exceedingly engaging.
+
+Pigs also possessed attractions for me, never having had an opportunity
+of observing their graces of mind and manner, till I came to Washington,
+whose porcine citizens appeared to enjoy a larger liberty than many of
+its human ones. Stout, sedate-looking pigs, hurried by each morning to
+their places of business, with a preoccupied air, and sonorous greeting
+to their friends. Genteel pigs, with an extra curl to their tails,
+promenaded in pairs, lunching here and there, like gentlemen of leisure.
+Rowdy pigs pushed the passers-by off the sidewalk; tipsy pigs hiccoughed
+their version of "We won't go home till morning," from the gutter; and
+delicate young pigs tripped daintily through the mud, as if they plumed
+themselves upon their ankles, and kept themselves particularly neat in
+point of stockings. Maternal pigs, with their interesting families,
+strolled by in the sun; and often the pink, baby-like squealers lay
+down for a nap, with a trust in Providence worthy of human
+imitation.--_Hospital Sketches_.
+
+
+SELECTIONS FROM TRANSCENDENTAL WILD OATS.
+
+On the first day of June, 184-, a large wagon, drawn by a small horse,
+and containing a motley load, went lumbering over certain New England
+hills, with the pleasing accompaniments of wind, rain, and hail. A
+serene man with a serene child upon his knee was driving, or rather
+being driven, for the small horse had it all his own way. A brown boy
+with a William Penn style of countenance sat beside him, firmly
+embracing a bust of Socrates. Behind them was an energetic-looking
+woman, with a benevolent brow, satirical mouth, and eyes brimful of hope
+and courage. A baby reposed upon her lap, a mirror leaned against her
+knee, and a basket of provisions danced about at her feet, as she
+struggled with a large, unruly umbrella. Two blue-eyed little girls,
+with hands full of childish treasures, sat under one old shawl, chatting
+happily together.
+
+In front of this lively party stalked a tall, sharp-featured man, in a
+long blue cloak; and a fourth small girl trudged along beside him
+through the mud as if she rather enjoyed it.
+
+The wind whistled over the bleak hills; the rain fell in a despondent
+drizzle, and twilight began to fall. But the calm man gazed as
+tranquilly into the fog as if he beheld a radiant bow of promise
+spanning the gray sky. The cheery woman tried to cover every one but
+herself with the big umbrella. The brown boy pillowed his head on the
+bald pate of Socrates and slumbered peacefully. The little girls sang
+lullabies to their dolls in soft, maternal murmers. The sharp-nosed
+pedestrian marched steadily on, with the blue cloak streaming out behind
+him like a banner; and the lively infant splashed through the puddles
+with a duck-like satisfaction pleasant to behold.
+
+Thus these modern pilgrims journeyed hopefully out of the old world, to
+found a new one in the wilderness.
+
+The editors of "The Transcendental Tripod" had received from Messrs.
+Lion & Lamb (two of the aforesaid pilgrims) a communication from which
+the following statement is an extract:
+
+"We have made arrangements with the proprietor of an estate of about a
+hundred acres which liberates this tract from human ownership. Here we
+shall prosecute our effort to initiate a Family in harmony with the
+primitive instincts of man.
+
+"Ordinary secular farming is not our object. Fruit, grain, pulse, herbs,
+flax, and other vegetable products, receiving assiduous attention, will
+afford ample manual occupation, and chaste supplies for the bodily
+needs. It is intended to adorn the pastures with orchards, and to
+supersede the labor of cattle by the spade and the pruning-knife.
+
+"Consecrated to human freedom, the land awaits the sober culture of
+devoted men. Beginning with small pecuniary means, this enterprise must
+be rooted on a reliance on the succors of an over-bounteous Providence,
+whose vital affinities being secured by this union with uncorrupted
+field and unwordly persons, the cares and injuries of a life of gain are
+avoided.
+
+"The inner nature of each member of the Family is at no time neglected.
+Our plan contemplates all such disciplines, cultures, and habits as
+evidently conduce to the purifying of the inmates.
+
+"Pledged to the spirit alone, the founders anticipate no hasty or
+numerous addition to their numbers. The kingdom of peace is entered only
+through the gates of self-denial; and felicity is the test and the
+reward of loyalty to the unswerving law of Love."
+
+This prospective Eden at present consisted of an old red farm-house, a
+dilapidated barn, many acres of meadow-land, and a grove. Ten ancient
+apple-trees were all the "chaste supply" which the place offered as yet;
+but, in the firm belief that plenteous orchards were soon to be evoked
+from their inner consciousness, these sanguine founders had christened
+their domain Fruitlands.
+
+Here Timon Lion intended to found a colony of Latter Day Saints, who,
+under his patriarchal sway, should regenerate the world and glorify his
+name for ever. Here Abel Lamb, with the devoutest faith in the high
+ideal which was to him a living truth, desired to plant a Paradise,
+where Beauty, Virtue, Justice, and Love might live happily together,
+without the possibility of a serpent entering in. And here his wife,
+unconverted but faithful to the end, hoped, after many wanderings over
+the face of the earth, to find rest for herself and a home for her
+children.
+
+"There is our new abode," anounced the enthusiast, smiling with the
+satisfaction quite undamped by the drops dripping from his hat-brim, as
+they turned at length into a cart-path that wound along a steep hillside
+into a barren-looking valley.
+
+"A little difficult of access," observed his practical wife, as she
+endeavored to keep her various household gods from going overboard with
+every lurch of the laden ark.
+
+"Like all good things. But those who earnestly desire and patiently seek
+will soon find us," placidly responded the philosopher from the mud,
+through which he was now endeavoring to pilot the much-enduring horse.
+
+"Truth lies at the bottom of a well, Sister Hope," said Brother Timon,
+pausing to detach his small comrade from a gate, whereon she was perched
+for a clearer gaze into futurity.
+
+"That's the reason we so seldom get at it, I suppose," replied Mrs.
+Hope, making a vain clutch at the mirror, which a sudden jolt sent
+flying out of her hands.
+
+"We want no false reflections here," said Timon, with a grim smile, as
+he crunched the fragments under foot in his onward march.
+
+Sister Hope held her peace, and looked wistfully through the mist at her
+promised home. The old red house with a hospitable glimmer at its
+windows cheered her eyes; and, considering the weather, was a fitter
+refuge than the sylvan bowers some of the more ardent souls might have
+preferred.
+
+The new-comers were welcomed by one of the elect precious,--a regenerate
+farmer, whose idea of reform consisted chiefly in wearing white cotton
+raiment and shoes of untanned leather. This costume, with a snowy beard,
+gave him a venerable, and at the same time a somewhat bridal appearance.
+
+The goods and chattels of the Society not having arrived, the weary
+family reposed before the fire on blocks of wood, while Brother Moses
+White regaled them with roasted potatoes, brown bread and water, in two
+plates, a tin pan, and one mug; his table service being limited. But,
+having cast the forms and vanities of a depraved world behind them, the
+elders welcomed hardship with the enthusiasm of new pioneers, and the
+children heartily enjoyed this foretaste of what they believed was to be
+a sort of perpetual picnic.
+
+During the progress of this frugal meal, two more brothers appeared. One
+a dark, melancholy man, clad in homespun, whose peculiar mission was to
+turn his name hind part before and use as few words as possible. The
+other was a bland, bearded Englishman, who expected to be saved by
+eating uncooked food and going without clothes. He had not yet adopted
+the primitive costume, however; but contented himself with meditatively
+chewing dry beans out of a basket.
+
+"Every meal should be a sacrament, and the vessels used should be
+beautiful and symbolical," observed Brother Lamb, mildly, righting the
+tin pan slipping about on his knees. "I priced a silver service when in
+town, but it was too costly; so I got some graceful cups and vases of
+Britannia ware."
+
+"Hardest things in the world to keep bright. Will whiting be allowed in
+the community?" inquired Sister Hope, with a housewife's interest in
+labor-saving institutions.
+
+"Such trivial questions will be discussed at a more fitting time,"
+answered Brother Timon, sharply, as he burnt his fingers with a very hot
+potato. "Neither sugar, molasses, milk, butter, cheese, nor flesh are to
+be used among us, for nothing is to be admitted which has caused wrong
+or death to man or beast."
+
+"Our garments are to be linen till we learn to raise our own cotton or
+some substitute for woollen fabrics," added Brother Abel, blissfully
+basking in an imaginary future as warm and brilliant as the generous
+fire before him.
+
+"Haou abaout shoes?" asked Brother Moses, surveying his own with
+interest.
+
+"We must yield that point till we can manufacture an innocent substitute
+for leather. Bark, wood, or some durable fabric will be invented in
+time. Meanwhile, those who desire to carry out our idea to the fullest
+extent can go barefooted," said Lion, who liked extreme measures.
+
+"I never will, nor let my girls," murmured rebellious Sister Hope, under
+her breath.
+
+"Haou do you cattle'ate to treat the ten-acre lot? Ef things ain't
+'tended to right smart, we sha'n't hev no crops," observed the practical
+patriarch in cotton.
+
+"We shall spade it," replied Abel, in such perfect good faith that Moses
+said no more, though he indulged in a shake of the head as he glanced at
+hands that held nothing heavier than a pen for years. He was a paternal
+old soul and regarded the younger men as promising boys on a new sort of
+lark.
+
+"What shall we do for lamps, if we cannot use any animal substance? I do
+hope light of some sort is to be thrown upon the enterprise," said Mrs.
+Lamb, with anxiety, for in those days kerosene and camphene were not,
+and gas was unknown in the wilderness.
+
+"We shall go without till we have discovered some vegetable oil or wax
+to serve us," replied Brother Timon, in a decided tone, which caused
+Sister Hope to resolve that her private lamp should be always trimmed,
+if not burning.
+
+"Each member is to perform the work for which experience, strength, and
+taste best fit him," continued Dictator Lion. "Thus drudgery and
+disorder will be avoided and harmony prevail. We shall rise at dawn,
+begin the day by bathing, followed by music, and then a chaste repast
+of fruit and bread. Each one finds congenial occupation till the
+meridian meal; when some deep-searching conversation gives rest to the
+body, and development to the mind. Healthful labor again engages us till
+the last meal, when we assemble in social communion, prolonged till
+sunset, when we retire to sweet repose, ready for the next day's
+activity."
+
+"What part of the work do you incline to yourself?" asked Sister Hope,
+with a humorous glimmer in her keen eyes.
+
+"I shall wait till it is made clear to me. Being in preference to doing
+is the great aim, and this comes to us rather by a resigned willingness
+than a wilful activity, which is a check to all divine growth,"
+responded Brother Timon.
+
+"I thought so," and Mrs. Lamb sighed audibly, for during the year he had
+spent in her family, Brother Timon had so faithfully carried out his
+idea of "being, not doing," that she had found his "divine growth" both
+an expensive and unsatisfactory process.
+
+Here her husband struck into the conversation, his face shining with the
+light and joy of the splendid dreams and high ideals hovering before
+him.
+
+"In these steps of reform, we do not rely so much on scientific
+reasoning or physiological skill as on the spirit's dictates. The
+greater part of man's duty consists in leaving alone much that he now
+does. Shall I stimulate with tea, coffee, or wine? No. Shall I consume
+flesh? Not if I value health. Shall I subjugate cattle? Shall I claim
+property in any created thing? Shall I trade? Shall I adopt a form of
+religion? Shall I interest myself in politics? To how many of these
+questions--could we ask them deeply enough and could they be heard as
+having relation to our eternal welfare--would the response be
+'Abstain'?"
+
+A mild snore seemed to echo the last word of Abel's rhapsody, for
+Brother Moses had succumbed to mundane slumber, and sat nodding like a
+massive ghost. Forest Absalom, the silent man, and John Pease, the
+English member, now departed to the barn; and Mrs. Lamb led her flock to
+a temporary fold, leaving the founders of the "Consociate Family" to
+build castles in the air till the fire went out and the symposium ended
+in smoke.
+
+The furniture arrived next day, and was soon bestowed; for the
+principal property of the community consisted in books. To this rare
+library was devoted the best room in the house, and the few busts and
+pictures that still survived many flittings were added to beautify the
+sanctuary, for here the family was to meet for amusement, instruction,
+and worship.
+
+Any housewife can imagine the emotions of Sister Hope, when she took
+possession of a large, dilapidated kitchen, containing an old stove and
+the peculiar stores out of which food was to be evolved for her little
+family of eleven. Cakes of maple sugar, dried peas and beans, barley and
+hominy, meal of all sorts, potatoes, and dried fruit. No milk, butter,
+cheese, tea, or meat appeared. Even salt was considered a useless
+luxury, and spice entirely forbidden by these lovers of Spartan
+simplicity. A ten years' experience of vegetarian vagaries had been good
+training for this new freak, and her sense of the ludicrous supported
+her through many trying scenes.
+
+Unleavened bread, porridge, and water for breakfast; bread, vegetables,
+and water for dinner; bread, fruit, and water for supper was the bill of
+fare ordained by the elders. No teapot profaned that sacred stove, no
+gory steak cried aloud for vengeance from her chaste gridiron and only
+a brave woman's taste, time, and temper were sacrificed on that domestic
+altar.
+
+The vexed question of light was settled by buying a quantity of bayberry
+wax for candles; and, on discovering that no one knew how to make them,
+pine-knots were introduced, to be used when absolutely necessary. Being
+summer, the evenings were not long, and the weary fraternity found it no
+great hardship to retire with the birds. The inner light was sufficient
+for most of them. But Mrs. Lamb rebelled. Evening was the only time she
+had to herself, and while the tired feet rested the skilful hands mended
+torn frocks and little stockings, or anxious heart forgot its burden in
+a book.
+
+So "mother's lamp" burned steadily, while the philosophers built a new
+heaven and earth by moonlight; and through all the metaphysical mists
+and philanthropic pyrotechnics of that period Sister Hope played her own
+little game of "throwing light," and none but the moths were the worse
+for it.
+
+Such farming probably was never seen before since Adam delved. The band
+of brothers began by spading garden and field; but a few days of it
+lessened their ardor amazingly. Blistered hands and aching backs
+suggested the expediency of permitting the use of cattle till the
+workers were better fitted for noble toil by a summer of the new life.
+
+Brother Moses brought a yoke of oxen from his farm,--at least, the
+philosophers thought so till it was discovered that one of the animals
+was a cow; and Moses confessed that he "must be let down easy, for he
+couldn't live on garden sarse entirely."
+
+Great was Dictator Lion's indignation at this lapse from virtue. But
+time pressed, the work must be done; so the meek cow was permitted to
+wear the yoke, and the recreant brother continued to enjoy forbidden
+draughts in the barn, which dark proceeding caused the children to
+regard him as one set apart for destruction.
+
+The sowing was equally peculiar, for, owing to some mistake, the three
+brethren who devoted themselves to this graceful task, found when about
+half through the job that each had been sowing a different sort of grain
+in the same field; a mistake which caused much perplexity, as it could
+not be remedied; but, after a long consultation and a good deal of
+laughter, it was decided to say nothing and see what would come of it.
+
+The garden was planted with a generous supply of useful roots and herbs;
+but, as manure was not allowed to profane the virgin soil, few of these
+vegetable treasures ever came up. Purslane reigned supreme, and the
+disappointed planters ate it philosophically, deciding that Nature knew
+what was best for them, and would generously supply their needs, if they
+could only learn to digest her "sallets" and wild roots.
+
+The orchard was laid out, a little grafting done, new trees and vines
+set, regardless of the unfit season and entire ignorance of the
+husbandmen, who honestly believed that in the autumn they would reap a
+bounteous harvest.
+
+Slowly things got into order, and rapidly rumors of the new experiment
+went abroad, causing many strange spirits to flock thither, for in those
+days communities were the fashion and transcendentalism raged wildly.
+Some came to look on and laugh, some to be supported in poetic idleness,
+a few to believe sincerely and work heartily. Each member was allowed to
+mount his favorite hobby, and ride it to his heart's content. Very queer
+were some of the riders, and very rampant some of the hobbies.
+
+One youth, believing that language was of little consequence if the
+spirit was only right, startled new-comers by blandly greeting them with
+"good-morning, damn you," and other remarks of an equally mixed order. A
+second irrepressible being held that all the emotions of the soul should
+be freely expressed, and illustrated his theory by antics that would
+have sent him to a lunatic asylum, if, as an unregenerate wag said, he
+had not already been in one. When his spirit soared, he climbed trees
+and shouted; when doubt assailed him, he lay upon the floor and groaned
+lamentably. At joyful periods, he raced, leaped, and sang; when sad, he
+wept aloud; and when a great thought burst upon him in the watches of
+the night, he crowed like a jocund cockerel, to the great delight of the
+children and the great annoyance of the elders. One musical brother
+fiddled whenever so moved, sang sentimentally to the four little girls,
+and put a music-box on the wall when he hoed corn.
+
+Brother Pease ground away at his uncooked food, or browsed over the farm
+on sorrel, mint, green fruit, and new vegetables. Occasionally he took
+his walks abroad, airily attired in an unbleached cotton _poncho_, which
+was the nearest approach to the primeval costume he was allowed to
+indulge in. At midsummer he retired to the wilderness, to try his plan
+where the woodchucks were without prejudices and huckleberry-bushes were
+hospitably full. A sunstroke unfortunately spoilt his plan, and he
+returned to semi-civilization a sadder and wiser man.
+
+Forest Absalom preserved his Pythagorean silence, cultivated his fine
+dark locks, and worked like a beaver, setting an excellent example of
+brotherly love, justice, and fidelity by his upright life. He it was who
+helped overworked Sister Hope with her heavy washes, kneaded the endless
+succession of batches of bread, watched over the children, and did the
+many tasks left undone by the brethren, who were so busy discussing and
+defining great duties that they forgot to perform the small ones.
+
+Moses White placidly plodded about, "chorin' raound," as he called it,
+looking like an old-time patriarch, with his silver hair and flowing
+beard, and saving the community from many a mishap by his thrift and
+Yankee shrewdness.
+
+Brother Lion domineered over the whole concern; for, having put the
+most money into the speculation, he was resolved to make it pay,--as if
+any thing founded on an ideal basis could be expected to do so by any
+but enthusiasts.
+
+Abel Lamb simply revelled in the Newness, firmly believing that his
+dream was to be beautifully realized and in time not only little
+Fruitlands, but the whole earth, be turned into a Happy Valley. He
+worked with every muscle of his body, for _he_ was in deadly earnest. He
+taught with his whole head and heart; planned and sacrificed, preached
+and prophesied, with a soul full of the purest aspirations, most
+unselfish purposes, and desires for a life devoted to God and man, too
+high and tender to bear the rough usage of this world.
+
+It was a little remarkable that only one woman ever joined this
+community. Mrs. Lamb merely followed wheresoever her husband led,--"as
+ballast for his balloon," as she said, in her bright way.
+
+Miss Jane Gage was a stout lady of mature years, sentimental, amiable,
+and lazy. She wrote verses copiously, and had vague yearnings and
+graspings after the unknown, which led her to believe herself fitted for
+a higher sphere than any she had yet adorned.
+
+Having been a teacher, she was set to instructing the children in the
+common branches. Each adult member took a turn at the infants; and, as
+each taught in his own way, the result was a chronic state of chaos in
+the minds of these much-afflicted innocents.
+
+Sleep, food, and poetic musings were the desires of dear Jane's life,
+and she shirked all duties as clogs upon her spirit's wings. Any thought
+of lending a hand with the domestic drudgery never occurred to her; and
+when to the question, "Are there any beasts of burden on the place?"
+Mrs. Lamb answered, with a face that told its own tale, "Only one
+woman!" the buxom Jane took no shame to herself, but laughed at the
+joke, and let the stout-hearted sister tug on alone.
+
+Unfortunately, the poor lady hankered after the flesh-pots, and
+endeavored to stay herself with private sips of milk, crackers, and
+cheese, and on one dire occasion she partook of fish at a neighbor's
+table.
+
+One of the children reported this sad lapse from virtue, and poor Jane
+was publicly reprimanded by Timon.
+
+"I only took a little bit of the tail," sobbed the penitent poetess.
+
+"Yes, but the whole fish had to be tortured and slain that you might
+tempt your carnal appetite with that one taste of the tail. Know ye not,
+consumers of flesh meat, that ye are nourishing the wolf and tiger in
+your bosoms?"
+
+At this awful question and the peal of laughter which arose from some of
+the younger brethren, tickled by the ludicrous contrast between the
+stout sinner, the stern judge, and the naughty satisfaction of the young
+detective, poor Jane fled from the room to pack her trunk, and return to
+a world where fishes' tails were not forbidden fruit.
+
+Transcendental wild oats were sown broadcast that year, and the fame
+thereof has not yet ceased in the land; for, futile as this crop seemed
+to outsiders, it bore an invisible harvest, worth much to those who
+planted in earnest. As none of the members of this particular community
+have ever recounted their experiences before, a few of them may not be
+amiss, since the interest in these attempts has never died out and
+Fruitlands was the most ideal of all these castles in Spain.--_Silver
+Pitchers, and Other Stories_.
+
+
+
+
+WILLIAM WIRT HOWE.
+
+(BORN, 1833.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONVERSATIONAL DEPRAVITY
+
+
+_To the Chief-Justice of Glenwood_,
+
+SUBLIME SIR: ... What can be more destructive of the higher forms of
+conversation than a pun? What right has any one to explode a petard in
+the midst of sweet sociality, and blow every thing like sequence and
+sentiment sky-high? And therefore, since you, as translator of the
+Pasha's Letters, have taken pains to publish his observations on many
+social subjects, I think it eminently proper that you should ventilate
+the ideas of his friend Tompkins upon a not less important theme.
+
+Happily, I have been saved the trouble of original composition, by a
+discovery made by my landlady while I was boarding a year ago on St.
+John's Park. Mr. Green, our attic boarder, went off suddenly one day to
+see a friend in the country, as he said. Of course our landlady
+searched his room, with a view of reading his letters; and in a brown
+hair-trunk, with a boot-jack, a razor-strop, a box of Seidlitz powders,
+and an odd volume of Young's Night Thoughts, she found the following
+manuscript. The females of the house were satisfied with reading such
+letters as were left by Mr. Green in his apartment, and so this paper
+was handed over to me. I may say that it was marked with pencil,
+"Declined with Thanks."
+
+
+"THE PUN FIEND.
+
+"BY C. GREEN.
+
+"I used to be corpulent, rosy-cheeked, and cheerful. I am gaunt, pale,
+and morose now. I used to sleep sweetly; but now I toss about upon my
+bed, terrified by hideous visions, and feelings as of a clammy hand or
+wet cloth laid on my face. I was wont to walk about our streets after
+business hours, and on Sundays, with a genuine smile of enjoyment
+lighting up my face; but now I hurry along with my eyes cast down, and I
+seek by-ways and dark lanes for my rambles. My friends think I am in
+love; persons who know me but slightly, suppose me a victim to
+remorse--imagine that I wear a hair shirt, and macerate my flesh. They
+are all wrong. An old bachelor like myself has long ago buried the
+light of love in a tomb, and set a seal upon the great stone at the
+door; and as for remorse, I owe no tailor any thing, and do not at
+present blame myself for any great fault, except having once subscribed
+for six months to the New York _Morning Cretan_. Nevertheless, my face
+grows haggard, my step weary, and even our Thursday's beef _à la mode_
+fails to tempt my enfeebled appetite.
+
+"I am haunted, haunted by a foul fiend. He meets me at six, P.M., in our
+festive dining-room, and the fork or spoon drops from my nerveless
+grasp. He follows me up to the parlor, where I sometimes talk of an
+evening to Miss Pipkin (Miss P. is our fourth story, front), and I
+become silent in his presence, and Pipkin votes me a bore. He sits by my
+side when I am playing at whist, and I trump my partner's trick, and the
+dear old game becomes disgusting. He even dared once to follow me into
+church, but I cried 'Avaunt!' in a tone so peremptory, that he fled for
+a moment. He joined me, however, as soon as service was over, and walked
+from Tenth Street to Madison Square, with his grizzly arm thurst through
+mine, and his diabolical jeers drumming on my tympana. In dreams he
+perches on my breast, and clutches me by the throat.
+
+"Like the arch fiend, he assumes many shapes. He is now a tall man, and
+again a short man; sometimes young and audacious, sometimes old and
+leering. He only once took a feminine guise: that blessed form was
+irksome to him. He prefers the freedom of masculinity and ineffables. He
+was once a bookkeeper like myself; then a young attorney; then a medical
+student; then a bald-headed old gentleman, who seemed to blow a
+flageolet for a living; and lately, he has taken the shape of a
+well-to-do President of 'The Arkansas and Arizona Sky Rocket
+Transportation Company,' but through all these shifting shapes, I
+recognize him and shudder.
+
+"He is known as the Funny Fellow.
+
+"Very glorious are wit and humor. I have heard many eminent lecturers
+discourse on the distinctions, definitions, and value of these airy good
+gifts. I remember being especially edified by the skill with which
+Spout, the eloquent, dissected the philosophy of mirth in the same style
+and with the same effect that the boy in the story dissected his
+grandmamma's bellows to see how the wind was raised. I agree with Spout
+that wit and humor are glorious; that satire, pricking the balloons of
+conceit, vain glory, and hypocrisy, is invaluable; that a good laugh can
+come only from a warm heart; that the man in motley is often wiser than
+the judge in ermine or the priest in lawn. These qualities are goodly in
+literature. We all love the kindly humorist from Chaucer to Holmes,
+inclusive. How genial and gentle they are, as they sit with us around
+the fireside, chucking us under the chins, and slyly poking us in the
+ribs; and in the field how nobly they have charged upon humbugs and
+shams. They have been true knights, chivalrous, kind-hearted, brave,
+religious; their spears are slender, perhaps, yet sharp and elastic as
+the blades of Toledo; and as they have galloped up and down in the
+lists, gaily caparisoned and cheery, it has done our hearts good to see
+how they have hurled into the dust the pompous, sleepy champions of
+error and hypocrisy.
+
+"So too, consider how pleasant a thing is mirth on the stage. Who does
+not thank William the Great for Falstaff, and Hackett for his
+personation of the fat knight? Who does not chuckle over the humors of
+Autolycus, rogue and peddler? Who has not felt his eye glisten, as his
+lips smiled, when Jesse Rural has spoken, and who will not say to
+Ollapod, 'Thank you, good sir, I owe you one'?
+
+"Ah me! how I used to read those jolly unctuous authors when I was
+young, in the old 'sitting-room' at home! The great fire-place glows
+before me now; its light dances on the wall; my mother's hand is on my
+head; my sister's eyes are beaming on her lover over in the darker
+corner; there is a murmur of pleasant voices; there are quiet mirth and
+deep joy. I lose myself in revery when I think of these pleasures, and
+almost forget the Funny Fellow.
+
+"He is pestiferous. If I were in the habit of profanity, I would let
+loose upon him an octagonal oath. If I were a man of muscle, it would be
+pleasant to get his head in chancery, and bruise it. It would be a
+relief to serve him with subpoenas, or present him long bills and demand
+immediate payment. Was my name providentially ordered to be Green, that
+he might pass verbal contumely upon it? Does he suppose that a man can
+live thirty-five years in this state of probation, without becoming
+slightly calloused to a pun on his own name? Yet he continues to pun on
+mine as if the process were highly amusing. Then again he interrupts
+any little attempts at pleasing conversation with his infernal
+absurdities. I was speaking one day at the dinner-table of a well-known
+orator who had been entertaining the town, and I flatter myself that my
+remarks were critically just as well as deeply interesting. The wretched
+being interposed--
+
+"'Mr. Green, when you say there was too much American Eagle in the
+speaker's discourse, do you mean that it was a talon-ted production, and
+to what claws of the speech do you especially refer?'
+
+"Miss Pipkin, who had been deeply intent on my observations, commenced
+to titter; what could I do but hang my head and swallow the rest of the
+meal in silence? If I had been possessed of a quick tongue, I would have
+lashed him with sarcasms, and Pipkin would have rejoiced with me in his
+groans. But no--I am slow of speech--and so I was bound to submit. After
+that he was more tyrannical than ever. He would come stealthily into my
+room and garotte me in a conversational way. He would seem to take me by
+the throat, saying, 'why don't you laugh--why don't you burst with
+merriment?' and then I would force a dismal grin, just to get rid of
+him.
+
+"I said to myself, I will leave this selfish Sahara called the city and
+county of New York I will leave its dust, dirt, carts, confusion, bulls,
+bears, Peter Funks, Jeremy Diddlers, and, best of all, the Funny Fellow.
+I will take board in some rural, as well as accessible place; the
+mosquitoes and ague of Flushing shall refresh my frame; the cottages of
+Astoria, with their pleasant view of the Penitentiary, shall revive my
+wounded spirit; I will exile myself from my native land to the shores of
+Jersey; I will sit beneath the shadow of the Quarantine on Staten
+Island. No--I won't--I will go to Yonkers--Yonkers that looks as though
+it had been built on a gentle slope, and then had suffered a violent
+attack of earthquake; daily boats shall convey me from my ledger to my
+bed and board, at convenient hours, so that while I post books in New
+York by day, I may revel in breezes, moonbeams, sweet milk, and gentle
+influences, by night. There, said I, in a burst of excusable enthusiasm,
+I will recline beneath wide-spreading beeches, and pipe upon an oaten
+reed. There will I listen to the soft bleating of lambs, and scent the
+fresh breath of cows; Nature shall touch and thrill me with her gentle
+hand; I will see the dear flowers turn their faces up to receive the
+kiss of the rising sun, or the benediction of the summer shower. There,
+too, I will meet the members of the mystic P.B., so that I shall talk of
+books other than day-books and blotters: we will discourse reverently of
+authors and their creations. I will not meet the Funny Fellow, for such
+a wretch can be produced only in the corrupt social hot-bed of Gotham.
+
+"So to Yonkers I went. I chose a room looking out upon the Hudson and
+the noble Palisades. I took with me a flute, a copy of the Bucolics of
+Virgil, and numerous linen garments. A great calm came over me. I was no
+longer haunted, goaded, oppressed. With peace nestling in my bosom, I
+went down to my first supper in the new boarding-house. A goodly meal
+smoked on the table, and the savor of baked shad, sweetest of smells,
+went up. While I sat choking myself with the bones of this delicious
+fish, I heard a voice on the opposite side of the table that sent the
+blood to my heart. If I had been feminine, there would have been a
+scene.
+
+"He was there: his eyes gloated over the board, a malicious quirk sat
+astride his fat lips. The Funny Fellow spoke to Miss Grasscloth:
+
+"'Why are the fishermen who catch these shad like wigmakers?'
+
+"'I don't know,'
+
+"'Because they make their living from bare poles.'
+
+"I ate no more supper. A nausea supervened. I left the table, rushed
+into the cool evening air, and let the fresh breeze visit my faded
+cheek. I strolled up the main street of Yonkers, and as I crushed my
+toes against the stones which then adorned that highway, I resolved to
+call on my sweet friend Julia ----. Her gentle smile, said I, will
+console me. She is not a Funny Fellow. We will talk together calmly,
+earnestly, in the moonlight, close by the great river. I will sit as
+near to her as her fashionable garments will permit, and forget my foe.
+
+"We walked together--Julia and I. We talked of things good and true. We
+spoke of the beauty of the nocturnal scene. Alas! a fearful, a demoniac
+change came over the girl's face. She said:
+
+"'Yes, my friend, we ought to enjoy this scene--for we are fine-night
+beings.'
+
+"I bid a hasty farewell to the large eyes and gentle smile. She was not
+much offended at my abrupt and angry departure, for my salary is small,
+my hair is turning grey, and I do not dance. But I was not entirely
+discouraged. I resolved to give Yonkers a fair trial, and a true verdict
+to render according to the evidence. So I frequented the tea-parties and
+sociables so common in that wretched town, and strove to shake off the
+melancholy that clung to me like the Old Man of the Sea. To my horror,
+the Funny Fellow became multiplied like the reflections in a shivered
+mirror. Men and women, and even young innocent children, became Funny,
+and danced about me in a horrible maze, and squeaked and gibbered, and
+tossed their jokes in my face. In one week I made five mortal enemies by
+refusing to smile when their tormenting squibs were exploded in my eyes.
+I felt like a rustic pony, who comes in his simple way into town on the
+Fourth of July, and has Chinese crackers and fiery serpents cast under
+his heels. One evening, in particular, they asked me to play the game of
+Comparisons (a proverbially odious game, that could exist only in an
+effete and degenerate civilization), in which the entire company tried
+to see how Funny they could be; and because I made stupid answers, I was
+laughed at by the young ladies.
+
+"I became disgusted with Yonkers, and returned to my intramural
+boarding-house in St. John's Park. The sidewalk near the house was in a
+dilapidated state, through the carelessness of the contractor, who had
+stipulated to pave it properly, but had not paved it at all, except with
+good intentions. And therefore, as I came along, I first besmeared my
+boots with muck then tripped my toes against a pile of brick: and
+finally fell headlong into the gutter. As I rose up and denounced, in
+somewhat loud language, the idleness and inefficiency of the contractor
+who had the work in charge, the Funny Fellow stood before me, his eyes
+glaring with triumph. He spoke in reply to my denunciations:
+
+"' My dear Green, do not call the contractor lazy and inefficient. I am
+sure that his is an energy that never FLAGS!'
+
+"I rushed to the room where I am now sealed. There is but one hope left
+me.
+
+"In the Territory of Nebraska, far to the west thereof, lies a tract of
+land which the early French trappers, with shrewd fitness called the'
+Mauvaises Terres.' It is a region of rocks, petrifactions, and other
+pre-Adamite peculiarities. In a paper written by Dr. Leid of
+Philadelphia, and published by the Smithsonian Institute, we are assured
+that there once lived in these bad lands, turtles six feet square, and
+alligators, compared with which the present squatter sovereigns of the
+territory are lovely and refined. The fossil remains of these ancient
+inhabitants still encumber the earth of that region, and make it
+unpleasant to view with an agricultural eye; but here and there the
+general desolation is relieved by a fertile valley, with a running brook
+and green slopes. White men, whisky, and Funny Fellows have not yet
+penetrated there. I will go to this sanctuary. A snug cabin will contain
+my necessary household--to wit--twelve shirts and a Bible. I will plant
+my corn, and tobacco, and vines on the fertile slope that looks to the
+south; my cattle and sheep shall browse the rest of the valley, while a
+few agile goats shall stand in picturesque positions upon the rocky
+monsters described by Dr. Leidy. My guests shall be the brave and wise
+red men who never try to make bad jokes. I do not think they ever try to
+be Funny; but to make assurance doubly sure, I shall not learn their
+language, so that any melancholy attempts they may possibly make, will
+fall upon unappreciative ears. By day I will cultivate my crops and
+tend my flocks and herds; and in the long evenings smoke the calumet
+with the worthy aborigines. If I should find there some dusky maiden,
+like Palmer's Indian girl, who has no idea of puns, polkas, crinoline,
+or eligible matches, I will woo her in savage hyperbole, and she shall
+light my pipe with her slender fingers, and beat for me the tom-tom when
+I am sad. I will live in a calm and conscientious way; the Funny Fellow
+shall become like the dim recollection of some horrible dream, and"--
+
+Mr. Green seems not to have finished his interesting reflections, and I
+shall not attempt to complete them. As well might I try to finish the
+Cathedral at Cologne. But I heartily sympathize with the feelings he has
+expressed, and trust that his new home in the West will never be invaded
+by conversational garroters.
+
+Sincerely your friend,
+
+TOMPKINS.
+
+--_The Pasha Papers_.
+
+
+
+
+CHARLES FARRAR BROWNE.
+
+("ARTEMUS WARD.")
+
+(BORN, 1834--DIED, 1867.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+
+
+MR. PUNCH,--_My Dear Sir_:--I skurcely need inform you that your
+excellent Tower is very pop'lar with pe'ple from the agricultooral
+districks, and it was chiefly them class which I found waitin at the
+gates the other mornin.
+
+I saw at once that the Tower was established on a firm basis. In the
+entire history of firm basisis I don't find a basis more firmer than
+this one.
+
+"You have no Tower in America?" said a man in the crowd, who had somehow
+detected my denomination.
+
+"Alars! no," I anserd; "we boste of our enterprise and improovements,
+and yit we are devoid of a Tower. America oh my onhappy country! thou
+hast not got no Tower! It's a sweet Boon."
+
+The gates was opened after a while, and we all purchist tickets, and
+went into a waitin-room.
+
+"My frens," said a pale-faced little man, in black close, "this is a sad
+day."
+
+"Inasmuch as to how?" I said.
+
+"I mean it is sad to think that so many peple have been killed within
+these gloomy walls. My frens, let us drop a tear!"
+
+"No," I said, "you must excuse me. Others may drop one if they feel like
+it; but as for me, I decline. The early managers of this institootion
+were a bad lot, and their crimes were trooly orful; but I can't sob for
+those who died four or five hundred years ago. If they was my own
+relations I couldn't. It's absurd to shed sobs over things which occurd
+during the rain of Henry the Three. Let us be cheerful," I continnered.
+"Look at the festiv Warders, in their red flannil jackets. They are
+cheerful, and why should it not be thusly with us?"
+
+A Warder now took us in charge, and showed us the Trater's Gate, the
+armers, and things. The Trater's Gate is wide enuff to admit about
+twenty traters abrest, I should jedge; but beyond this, I couldn't see
+that it was superior to gates in gen'ral.
+
+Traters, I will here remark, are a onfornit class of peple. If they
+wasn't, they wouldn't be traters. They conspire to bust up a
+country--they fail, and they're traters. They bust her, and they become
+statesmen and heroes.
+
+Take the case of Gloster, afterwards Old Dick the Three, who may be seen
+at the Tower on horseback, in a heavy tin overcoat--take Mr. Gloster's
+case. Mr. G. was a conspirator of the basist dye, and if he'd failed, he
+would have been hung on a sour apple tree. But Mr. G. succeeded, and
+became great. He was slewed by Col. Richmond, but he lives in history,
+and his equestrian figger may be seen daily for a sixpence, in
+conjunction with other em'nent persons, and no extra charge for the
+Warder's able and bootiful lectur.
+
+There's one king in this room who is mounted onto a foaming steed, his
+right hand graspin a barber's pole. I didn't learn his name.
+
+The room where the daggers and pistils and other weppins is kept is
+interestin. Among this collection of choice cuttlery I notist the bow
+and arrer which those hot-heded old chaps used to conduct battles with.
+It is quite like the bow and arrer used at this day by certain tribes
+of American Injuns, and they shoot 'em off with such a excellent
+precision that I almost sigh'd to be an Injun when I was in the Rocky
+Mountain regin. They are a pleasant lot them Injuns. Mr. Cooper and Dr.
+Catlin have told us of the red man's wonerful eloquence, and I found it
+so. Our party was stopt on the plains of Utah by a band of Shoshones,
+whose chief said:
+
+"Brothers! the pale-face is welcome. Brothers! the sun is sinking in the
+west, and Wa-na-bucky-she will soon cease speakin. Brothers! the poor
+red man belongs to a race which is fast becomin extink."
+
+He then whooped in a shrill manner, stole all our blankets and whisky,
+and fled to the primeval forest to conceal his emotions.
+
+I will remark here, while on the subjeck of Injuns, that they are in the
+main a very shaky set, with even less sense than the Fenians, and when I
+hear philanthropists bewailin the fack that every year "carries the
+noble red man nearer the settin sun," I simply have to say I'm glad of
+it, tho' it is rough on the settin sun. They call you by the sweet name
+of Brother one minit, and the next they scalp you with their
+Thomas-hawks. But I wander. Let us return to the Tower.
+
+At one end of the room where the weppins is kept, is a wax figger of
+Queen Elizabeth, mounted on a fiery stuffed hoss, whose glass eye
+flashes with pride, and whose red morocker nostril dilates hawtily, as
+if conscious of the royal burden he bears. I have associated Elizabeth
+with the Spanish Armady. She's mixed up with it at the Surrey Theatre,
+where _Troo to the Core_ is bein acted, and in which a full bally core
+is introjooced on board the Spanish Admiral's ship, giving the audiens
+the idee that he intends openin a moosic-hall in Plymouth the moment he
+conkers that town. But a very interesting drammer is _Troo to the Core_,
+notwithstandin the eccentric conduct of the Spanish Admiral; and very
+nice it is in Queen Elizabeth to make Martin Truegold a baronet.
+
+The Warder shows us some instrooments of tortur, such as thumbscrews,
+throat-collars, etc., statin that these was conkered from the Spanish
+Armady, and addin what a crooil peple the Spaniards was in them
+days--which elissited from a bright-eyed little girl of about twelve
+summers the remark that she tho't it _was_ rich to talk about the
+crooilty of the Spaniards usin thumbscrews, when he was in a Tower
+where so many poor peple's heads had been cut off. This made the Warder
+stammer and turn red.
+
+I was so pleased with the little girl's brightness that I could have
+kissed the dear child, and I would if she'd been six years older.
+
+I think my companions intended makin a day of it, for they all had
+sandwiches, sassiges, etc. The sad-lookin man, who had wanted us to drop
+a tear afore we started to go round, fling'd such quantities of sassige
+into his mouth that I expected to see him choke hisself to death; he
+said to me, in the Beauchamp Tower, where the poor prisoners writ their
+onhappy names on the cold walls, "This is a sad sight."
+
+"It is indeed," I anserd. "You're black in the face. You shouldn't eat
+sassige in public without some rehearsals beforehand. You manage it
+orkwardly."
+
+"No," he said, "I mean this sad room."
+
+Indeed, he was quite right. Tho' so long ago all these drefful things
+happened, I was very glad to git away from this gloomy room, and go
+where the rich and sparklin Crown Jewils is kept. I was so pleased with
+the Queen's Crown, that it occurd to me what a agree'ble surprise it
+would be to send a sim'lar one home to my wife; and I asked the Warder
+what was the vally of a good, well-constructed Crown like that. He told
+me, but on cypherin up up with a pencil the amount of funs I have in the
+Jint Stock Bank, I conclooded I'd send her a genteel silver watch
+instid.
+
+And so I left the Tower. It is a solid and commandin edifis, but I deny
+that it is cheerful. I bid it adoo without a pang.
+
+I was droven to my hotel by the most melancholly driver of a
+four-wheeler that I ever saw. He heaved a deep sigh as I gave him two
+shillings.
+
+"I'll give you six d.'s more," I said, "if it hurts you so."
+
+"It isn't that," he said, with a hart-rendin groan, "it's only a way I
+have. My mind's upset to-day. I at one time tho't I'd drive you into the
+Thames. I've been readin all the daily papers to try and understand
+about Governor Eyre, and my mind is totterin. It's really wonderful I
+didn't drive you into the Thames."
+
+I asked the onhappy man what his number was, so I could redily find him
+in case I should want him agin, and bad him good-bye. And then I tho't
+what a frollicsome day I'd made of it. Respectably, etc.,
+
+ARTEMUS WARD.
+
+--_Punch_,1866.
+
+
+SCIENCE AND NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+Mr. Punch _My Dear Sir_:--I was a little disapinted at not receivin a
+invitation to jine in the meetins of the Social Science Congress....
+
+I prepared an Essy on Animals to read before the Social Science meetins.
+It is a subjeck I may troothfully say I have successfully wrastled with.
+I tackled it when only nineteen years old. At that tender age I writ a
+Essy for a lit'ry Institoot entitled, "Is Cats to be trusted?" Of the
+merits of that Essy it doesn't becum me to speak, but I may be excoos'd
+for mentionin that the Institoot parsed a resolution that "whether we
+look upon the length of this Essy, or the manner in which it is written,
+we feel that we will not express any opinion of it, and we hope it will
+be read in other towns."
+
+Of course the Essy I writ for the Social Science Society is a more
+finisheder production than the one on Cats, which was wroten when my
+mind was crood, and afore I had masterd a graceful and ellygant stile
+of composition. I could not even punctooate my sentences proper at that
+time, and I observe with pane, on lookin over this effort of my youth,
+that its beauty is in one or two instances mar'd by ingrammaticisms.
+This was inexcusable, and I'm surprised I did it. A writer who can't
+write in a grammerly manner better shut up shop.
+
+You shall hear this Essy on Animals. Some day when you have four hours
+to spare, I'll read it to you. I think you'll enjoy it. Or, what will be
+much better, if I may suggest--omit all picturs in next week's _Punch_,
+and do not let your contributors write eny thing whatever (et them have
+a holiday; they can go to the British Mooseum;) and publish my Essy
+intire. It will fill all your collumes full, and create comment. Does
+this proposition strike you? Is it a go?
+
+In case I had read the Essy to the Social Sciencers, I had intended it
+should be the closin attraction. I intended it should finish the
+proceedins. I think it would have finished them. I understand animals
+better than any other class of human creatures. I have a very animal
+mind, and I've been identified with 'em doorin my entire perfessional
+career as a showman, more especial bears, wolves, leopards and
+serpunts.
+
+The leopard is as lively a animal as I ever came into contack with. It
+is troo he cannot change his spots, but you can change 'em for him with
+a paint-brush, as I once did in the case of a leopard who wasn't
+nat'rally spotted in a attractive manner. In exhibitin him I used to
+stir him up in his cage with a protracted pole, and for the purpuss of
+makin him yell and kick up in a leopardy manner, I used to casionally
+whack him over the head. This would make the children inside the booth
+scream with fright, which would make fathers of families outside the
+booth very anxious to come in--because there is a large class of parents
+who have a uncontrollable passion for takin their children to places
+where they will stand a chance of being frightened to death.
+
+One day I whacked this leopard more than ushil, which elissited a
+remonstrance from a tall gentleman in spectacles, who said, "My good
+man, do not beat the poor caged animal. Rather fondle him."
+
+"I'll fondle him with a club," I ansered, hitting him another whack.
+
+"I prithy desist," said the gentleman; "stand aside, and see the effeck
+of kindness. I understand the idiosyncracies of these creeturs better
+than you do."
+
+With that he went up to the cage, and thrustin his face in between the
+iron bars, he said, soothingly, "Come hither, pretty creetur."
+
+The pretty creetur come-hithered rayther speedy, and seized the
+gentleman by the whiskers, which he tore off about enuff to stuff a
+small cushion with.
+
+He said "You vagabone, I'll have you indicted for exhibitin dangerous
+and immoral animals."
+
+I replied, "Gentle Sir, there isn't a animal here that hasn't a
+beautiful moral, but you mustn't fondle 'em. You mustn't meddle with
+their idiotsyncracies."
+
+The gentleman was a dramatic cricket, and he wrote a article for a
+paper, in which he said my entertainment wos a decided failure.
+
+As regards Bears, you can teach 'em to do interestin things, but they're
+onreliable. I had a very large grizzly bear once, who would dance, and
+larf, and lay down, and bow his head in grief, and give a mournful wale,
+etsetry. But he often annoyed me. It will be remembered that on the
+occasion of the first battle of Bull Run, it suddenly occurd to the
+Fed'ral soldiers that they had business in Washington which ought not to
+be neglected, and they all started for that beautiful and romantic city,
+maintainin a rate of speed durin the entire distance that would have
+done credit to the celebrated French steed _Gladiateur_. Very nat'rally
+our Gov'ment was deeply grieved at this defeat; and I said to my Bear
+shortly after, as I was givin a exhibition in Ohio--I said, "Brewin, are
+you not sorry the National arms has sustained a defeat?" His business
+was to wale dismal, and bow his head down, the band (a barrel origin and
+a wiolin) playing slow and melancholy moosic. What did the grizzly old
+cuss do, however, but commence darncin and larfin in the most joyous
+manner? I had a narrer escape from being imprisoned for
+disloyalty.--_Works_.
+
+
+FROM THE "LECTURE."
+
+Some years ago I engaged a celebrated Living American Skeleton for a
+tour through Australia. He was the thinnest man I ever saw. He was a
+splendid skeleton. He didn't weigh any thing scarcely,--and I said to
+myself,--the people of Australia will flock to see this tremendous
+curiosity. It is a long voyage--as you know--from New York to
+Melbourne--and to my utter surprise the skeleton had no sooner got out
+to sea than he commenced eating in the most horrible manner. He
+had never been on the ocean before--and he said it agreed with
+him.--I thought so!--I never saw a man eat so much in my life.
+Beef--mutton--pork--he swallowed them all like a shark--and between
+meals he was often discovered behind barrels eating hard-boiled eggs.
+The result was that when we reached Melbourne this infamous skeleton
+weighed sixty-four pounds more than I did!
+
+I thought I was ruined--but I wasn't. I took him on to
+California--another very long sea voyage--and when I got him to San
+Francisco I exhibited him as a fat man.
+
+This story hasn't any thing to do with my Entertainment, I know--but one
+of the principal features of my Entertainment is that it contains so
+many things that don't have any thing to do with it....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I like Music.--I can't sing. As a singist I am not a success. I am
+saddest when I sing. So are those who hear me. They are sadder even
+than I am....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I met a man in Oregon who hadn't any teeth--not a tooth in his head--yet
+that man could play on the bass drum better than any man I ever met....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Brigham Young has two hundred wives. Just think of that! Oblige me by
+thinking of that. That is--he has eighty actual wives, and he is
+spiritually married to one hundred and twenty more. These spiritual
+marriages--as the Mormons call them--are contracted with aged
+widows--who think it a great honor to be sealed--the Mormons call it
+being sealed--to the Prophet.
+
+So we may say he has two hundred wives. He loves not wisely--but two
+hundred well. He is dreadfully married. He's the most married man I ever
+saw in my life....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I regret to say that efforts were made to make a Mormon of me while I
+was in Utah.
+
+It was leap-year when I was there--and seventeen young widows--the wives
+of a deceased Mormon--offered me their hearts and hands. I called on
+them one day--and taking their soft white hands in mine--which made
+eighteen hands altogether--I found them in tears.
+
+And I said--"Why is this thus? What is the reason of this thusness?"
+
+They hove a sigh--seventeen sighs of different size.--They said--
+
+"Oh--soon thou wilt be gonested away!"
+
+I told them that when I got ready to leave a place I wentested.
+
+They said--"Doth not like us?"
+
+I said--"I doth--I doth!"
+
+I also said--"I hope your intentions are honorable--as I am a lone
+child--my parents being far--far away."
+
+They then said--"Wilt not marry us?"
+
+I said--"Oh no--it cannot was."
+
+Again they asked me to marry them--and again I declined. When they
+cried--
+
+"Oh--cruel man! This is too much--oh! too much!"
+
+I told them that it was on account of the muchness that I
+declined.--_Works_.
+
+
+
+
+FRANK R. STOCKTON.
+
+(BORN, 1834.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR TAVERN.
+
+
+It was about noon of a very fair July day, when Euphemia and myself
+arrived at the little town where we were to take the stage up into the
+mountains. We were off for a two weeks' vacation and our minds were a
+good deal easier than when we went away before, and left Pomona at the
+helm. We had enlarged the boundaries of Rudder Grange, having purchased
+the house, with enough adjoining land to make quite a respectable farm.
+Of course I could not attend to the manifold duties on such a place, and
+my wife seldom had a happier thought than when she proposed that we
+should invite Pomona and her husband to come and live with us. Pomona
+was delighted, and Jonas was quite willing to run our farm. So
+arrangements were made, and the young couple were established in
+apartments in our back building, and went to work as if taking care of
+us and our possessions was the ultimate object of their lives. Jonas was
+such a steady fellow that we feared no trouble from tree-man or
+lightning rodder during this absence.
+
+Our destination was a country tavern on the stage-road, not far from the
+point where the road crosses the ridge of the mountain range, and about
+sixteen miles from the town. We had heard of this tavern from a friend
+of ours, who had spent a summer there. The surrounding country was
+lovely, and the house was kept by a farmer, who was a good soul, and
+tried to make his guests happy. These were generally passing farmers and
+wagoners, or stage-passengers, stopping for a meal, but occasionally a
+person from the cities, like our friend, came to spend a few weeks in
+the mountains.
+
+So hither we came, for an out-of-the-world spot like this was just what
+we wanted. When I took our place at the stage-office, I inquired for
+David Button, the farm tavern-keeper before mentioned, but the agent did
+not know of him.
+
+"However," said he, "the driver knows everybody on the road, and he'll
+set you down at the house."
+
+So, off we started, having paid for our tickets on the basis that we
+were to ride about sixteen miles. We had seats on top, and the trip,
+although slow,--for the road wound uphill steadily,--was a delightful
+one. Our way lay, for the greater part of the time, through the woods,
+but now and then we came to a farm, and a turn in the road often gave us
+lovely views of the foot-hills and the valleys behind us.
+
+But the driver did not know where Dutton's tavern was. This we found out
+after we had started. Some persons might have thought it wiser to settle
+this matter before starting, but I am not at all sure that it would have
+been so. We were going to this tavern, and did not wish to go anywhere
+else. If people did not know where it was, it would be well for us to go
+and look for it. We knew the road that it was on, and the locality in
+which it was to be found.
+
+Still, it was somewhat strange that a stage-driver, passing along the
+road every week-day,--one day one way, and the next the other
+way,--should not know a public-house like Dutton's.
+
+"If I remember rightly," I said, "the stage used to stop there for the
+passengers to take supper."
+
+"Well, then, it ain't on this side o' the ridge," said the driver; "we
+stop for supper, about a quarter of a mile on the other side, at Pete
+Lowry's. Perhaps Dutton used to keep that place. Was it called the
+'Ridge House'?"
+
+I did not remember the name of the house, but I knew very well that it
+was not on the other side of the ridge.
+
+"Then," said the driver, "I'm sure I don't know where it is. But I've
+only been on the road about a year, and your man may 'a' moved away
+afore I come. But there ain't no tavern this side the ridge, arter ye
+leave Delhi, and, that's nowhere's nigh the ridge."
+
+There were a couple of farmers who were sitting by the driver, and who
+had listened with considerable interest to this conversation. Presently,
+one of them turned around to me and said:
+
+"Is it Dave Dutton ye're askin' about?"
+
+"Yes," I replied, "that's his name."
+
+"Well, I think he's dead," said he.
+
+At this, I began to feel uneasy, and I could see that my wife shared my
+trouble.
+
+Then the other farmer spoke up.
+
+"I don't believe he's dead, Hiram," said he to his companion. "I heerd
+of him this spring. He's got a sheep-farm on the other side o' the
+mountain, and he's a livin' there. That's what I heerd, at any rate. But
+he don't live on this road any more," he continued, turning to us. "He
+used to keep tavern on this road, and the stages did used to stop fur
+supper--or else dinner. I don't jist ree-collect which. But he don't
+keep tavern on this road no more."
+
+"Of course not," said his companion, "if he's a livin' over the
+mountain. But I b'lieve he's dead."
+
+I asked the other farmer if he knew how long it had been since Dutton
+had left this part of the country.
+
+"I don't know fur certain," he said, "but I know he was keeping tavern
+here two year' ago, this fall, fur I came along here, myself, and
+stopped there to git supper--or dinner, I don't jist ree-collect which."
+
+It had been three years since our friend had boarded at Dutton's house.
+There was no doubt that the man was not living at his old place now. My
+wife and I now agreed that it was very foolish in us to come so far
+without making more particular inquiries. But we had had an idea that a
+man who had a place like Dutton's tavern would live there always.
+
+"What are ye goin' to do?" asked the driver, very much interested, for
+it was not every day that he had passengers who had lost their
+destination. "Ye might go on to Lowry's. He takes boarders sometimes."
+
+But Lowry's did not attract us. An ordinary country-tavern, where
+stage-passengers took supper, was not what we came so far to find.
+
+"Do you know where this house o' Dutton's is?" said the driver, to the
+man who had once taken either dinner or supper there.
+
+"Oh yes! I'd know the house well enough, if I saw it. It's the fust
+house this side o' Lowry's."
+
+"With a big pole in front of it?" asked the driver.
+
+"Yes, there was a sign-pole in front of it."
+
+"An' a long porch?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Oh! well!" said the driver, settling himself in his seat. "I know all
+about that house. That's a empty house. I didn't think you meant that
+house. There's nobody lives there. An' yit, now I come to remember, I
+have seen people about, too. I tell ye what ye better do. Since ye're so
+set on staying on this side the ridge, ye better let me put ye down at
+Dan Carson's place. That's jist about quarter of a mile from where
+Dutton used to live. Dan's wife can tell ye all about the Duttons, an'
+about everybody else, too, in this part o' the country, and if there
+aint nobody livin' at the old tavern, ye can stay all night at Carson's,
+and I'll stop an' take you back, to-morrow, when I come along."
+
+We agreed to this plan, for there was nothing better to be done, and,
+late in the afternoon, we were set down with our small trunk--for we
+were traveling under light weight--at Dan Carson's door. The stage was
+rather behind time, and the driver whipped up and left us to settle our
+own affairs. He called back, however, that he would keep a good look-out
+for us to-morrow.
+
+Mrs. Carson soon made her appearance, and, very naturally, was somewhat
+surprised to see visitors with their baggage standing on her little
+porch. She was a plain, coarsely dressed woman, with an apron full of
+chips and kindling wood, and a fine mind for detail, as we soon
+discovered.
+
+"Jist so," she said, putting down the chips and inviting us to seats on
+a bench. "Dave Dutton's folks is all moved away. Dave has a good farm
+on the other side o' the mountain, an' it never did pay him to keep that
+tavern, 'specially as he didn't sell liquor. When he went away, his son
+Al come there to live with his wife, an' the old man left a good deal o'
+furniture and things for him, but Al's wife aint satisfied here, and,
+though they've been here, off an' on, the house is shet up most o' the
+time. It's for sale an' to rent, both, ef enybody wants it. I'm sorry
+about you, too, fur it was a nice tavern, when Dave kept it."
+
+We admitted that we were also very sorry, and the kind-hearted woman
+showed a great deal of sympathy.
+
+"You might stay here, but we haint got no fit room where you two could
+sleep."
+
+At this, Euphemia and I looked very blank.
+
+"But you could go up to the house and stay, jist as well as not," Mrs.
+Carson continued. "There's plenty o' things there, an' I keep the key.
+For the matter o' that, ye might take the house for as long as ye want
+to stay; Dave 'd be glad enough to rent it; and, if the lady knows how
+to keep house, it wouldn't be no trouble at all, jist for you two. We
+could let ye have all the victuals ye'd want, cheap, and there's plenty
+o' wood there, cut, and every thing handy."
+
+We looked at each other. We agreed. Here was a chance for a rare good
+time. It might be better, perhaps, than any thing we had expected.
+
+The bargain was struck. Mrs. Carson, who seemed vested with all the
+necessary powers of attorney, appeared to be perfectly satisfied with
+our trustworthiness, and when I paid on the spot the small sum she
+thought proper for two weeks' rent, she evidently considered she had
+done a very good thing for Dave Dutton and herself.
+
+"I'll jist put some bread, an' eggs, an' coffee, an' pork, an' things in
+the basket, an' I'll have 'em took up for ye, with yer trunk, an' I'll
+go with ye an' take some milk. Here, Danny!" she cried, and directly her
+husband, a long, thin, sun-burnt, sandy-headed man, appeared, and to him
+she told, in a few words, our story, and ordered him to hitch up the
+cart and be ready to take our trunk and the basket up to Dutton's old
+house.
+
+When all was ready, we walked up the hill, followed by Danny and the
+cart. We found the house a large, low, old-fashioned farm-house,
+standing near the road with a long piazza in front, and a magnificent
+view of mountain-tops in the rear. Within, the lower rooms were large
+and low, with quite a good deal of furniture in them. There was no
+earthly reason why we should not be perfectly jolly and comfortable
+here. The more we saw the more delighted we were at the odd experience
+we were about to have. Mrs. Carson busied herself in getting things in
+order for our supper and general accommodation. She made Danny carry our
+trunk to a bedroom in the second story, and then set him to work
+building a fire in a great fire-place, with a crane for the kettle.
+
+When she had done all she could, it was nearly dark, and after lighting
+a couple of candles, she left us, to go home and get supper for her own
+family.
+
+As she and Danny were about to depart in the cart, she ran back to ask
+us if we would like to borrow a dog.
+
+"There aint nuthin to be afeard of," she said; "for nobody hardly ever
+takes the trouble to lock the doors in these parts, but bein' city
+folks, I thought ye might feel better if ye had a dog."
+
+We made haste to tell her that we were not city folks, but declined the
+dog. Indeed, Euphemia remarked that she would be much more afraid of a
+strange dog than of robbers.
+
+After supper, which we enjoyed as much as any meal we ever ate in our
+lives, we each took a candle, and after arranging our bedroom for the
+night, we explored the old house. There were lots of curious things
+everywhere,--things that were apparently so "old timey," as my wife
+remarked, that David Dutton did not care to take them with him to his
+new farm, and so left them for his son, who probably cared for them even
+less than his father did. There was a garret extending over the whole
+house, and filled with old spinning-wheels, and strings of onions, and
+all sorts of antiquated bric-a-brac, which was so fascinating to me that
+I could scarcely tear myself away from it; but Euphemia, who was
+dreadfully afraid that I would set the whole place on fire, at length
+prevailed on me to come down.
+
+We slept soundly that night, in what was probably the best bedroom in
+the house, and awoke with a feeling that we were about to enter on a
+period of some uncommon kind of jollity, which we found to be true when
+we went down to get breakfest. I made the fire, Euphemia made the
+coffee, and Mrs. Carson came with cream and some fresh eggs. The good
+woman was in high spirits. She was evidently pleased at the idea of
+having neighbors, temporary though they were, and it had probably been a
+long time since she had had such a chance of selling milk, eggs, and
+sundries. It was almost the same as opening a country store. We bought
+groceries and every thing of her.
+
+We had a glorious time that day. We were just starting out for a
+mountain stroll when our stage-driver came along on his down trip.
+
+"Hello!" he called out. "Want to go back this morning?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," I cried. "We wont go back for a couple of weeks.
+We've settled here for the present."
+
+The man smiled. He didn't seem to understand it exactly, but he was
+evidently glad to see us so well satisfied. If he had had time to stop
+and have the matter explained to him, he would probably have been better
+satisfied; but as it was, he waved his whip to us and drove on. He was a
+good fellow.
+
+We strolled all day, having locked up the house and taken our lunch with
+us; and when we came back, it seemed really like coming home. Mrs.
+Carson, with whom we had left the key, had brought the milk and was
+making the fire. This woman was too kind. We determined to try and repay
+her in some way. After a splendid supper we went to bed happy.
+
+The next day was a repetition of this one, but the day after it rained.
+So we determined to enjoy the old tavern, and we rummaged about
+everywhere. I visited the garret again, and we went to the old barn,
+with its mows half full of hay, and had rare times climbing about there.
+We were delighted that it happened to rain. In a wood-shed, near the
+house, I saw a big square board with letters on it. I examined the
+board, and found it was a sign,--a hanging sign,--and on it was painted
+in letters that were yet quite plain:
+
+ "FARMERS'
+ AND
+ MECHANICS'
+ HOTEL."
+
+I called to Euphemia and told her that I had found the old tavern sign.
+She came to look at it, and I pulled it out.
+
+"Soldiers and sailors!" she exclaimed; "that's funny."
+
+I looked over on her side of the sign, and, sure enough, there was the
+inscription:
+
+ "SOLDIERS'
+ AND
+ SAILORS'
+ HOUSE."
+
+"They must have bought this comprehensive sign in some town," I said.
+"Such a name would never have been chosen for a country tavern like
+this. But I wish they hadn't taken it down. The house would look more
+like what it ought to be with its sign hanging before it."
+
+"Well, then," said Euphemia, "let's put it up."
+
+I agreed instantly to this proposition, and we went to look for a
+ladder. We found one in the wagon-house, and carried it out to the
+sign-post in the front of the house. It was raining, gently, during
+these performances, but we had on our old clothes, and were so much
+interested in our work that we did not care for a little rain. I carried
+the sign to the post, and then, at the imminent risk of breaking my
+neck, I hung it on its appropriate hooks on the transverse beam of the
+sign-post. Now our tavern was really what it pretended to be. We gazed
+on the sign with admiration and content.
+
+"Do you think we had better keep it up all the time?" I asked of my
+wife.
+
+"Certainly," said she. "It's a part of the house. The place isn't
+complete without it."
+
+"But suppose some one should come along and want to be entertained?"
+
+"But no one will. And if people do come, I'll take care of the soldiers
+and sailors, if you will attend to the farmers and mechanics."
+
+I consented to this, and we went in-doors to prepare dinner.--_Rudder
+Grange_.
+
+
+A PIECE OF RED CALICO.
+
+Mr. Editor:--If the following true experience shall prove of any
+advantage to any of your readers, I shall be glad.
+
+I was going into town the other morning, when my wife handed me a little
+piece of red calico, and asked me if I would have time during the day,
+to buy her two yards and a half of calico like that. I assured her that
+it would be no trouble at all; and putting the piece of calico in my
+pocket, I took the train for the city.
+
+At lunch-time I stopped in at a large dry-goods store to attend to my
+wife's commission. I saw a well-dressed man walking the floor between
+the counters, where long lines of girls were waiting on much longer
+lines of customers, and asked him where I could see some red calico.
+
+"This way, sir," and he led me up the store. "Miss Stone," said he to a
+young lady, "show this gentleman some red calico."
+
+"What shade do you want?" asked Miss Stone.
+
+I showed her the little piece of calico that my wife had given me. She
+looked at it and handed it back to me. Then she took down a great roll
+of red calico and spread it out on the counter.
+
+"Why, that isn't the shade!" said I.
+
+"No, not exactly," said she; "but it is prettier than your sample."
+
+"That may be," said I; "but, you see, I want to match this piece. There
+is something already made of this kind of calico, which needs to be made
+larger, or mended, or something. I want some calico of the same shade."
+
+The girl made no answer, but took down another roll.
+
+"That's the shade," said she.
+
+"Yes," I replied, "but it's striped."
+
+"Stripes are more worn than any thing else in calicoes," said she.
+
+"Yes; but this isn't to be worn. It's for furniture, I think. At any
+rate, I want perfectly plain stuff, to match something already in use."
+
+"Well, I don't think you can find it perfectly plain, unless you get
+Turkey-red."
+
+"What is Turkey-red?" I asked.
+
+"Turkey-red is perfectly plain in calicoes," she answered.
+
+"Well, let me see some."
+
+"We haven't any Turkey-red calico left," she said, "but we have some
+very nice plain calicoes in other colors."
+
+"I don't want any other color. I want stuff to match this."
+
+"It's hard to match cheap calico like that," she said, and so I left
+her.
+
+I next went into a store a few doors farther up Broadway. When I entered
+I approached the "floor-walker," and handing him my sample, said:
+
+"Have you any calico like this?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said he. "Third counter to the right."
+
+I went to the third counter to the right, and showed my sample to the
+saleman in attendance there. He looked at it on both sides. Then he
+said:
+
+"We haven't any of this."
+
+"That gentleman said you had," said I.
+
+"We had it, but we're out of it now. You'll get that goods at an
+upholsterer's."
+
+I went across the street to an upholsterer's.
+
+"Have you any stuff like this?' I asked.
+
+"No," said the salesman. "We haven't. Is it for furniture?"
+
+"Yes," I replied.
+
+"Then Turkey-red is what you want?"
+
+"Is Turkey-red just like this?" I asked.
+
+"No," said he; "but it's much better."
+
+"That makes no difference to me," I replied. "I want something just like
+this."
+
+"But they don't use that for furniture," he said.
+
+"I should think people could use any thing they wanted for furniture," I
+remarked, somewhat sharply.
+
+"They can, but they don't," he said quite calmly. "They don't use red
+like that. They use Turkey-red."
+
+I said no more, but left. The next place I visited was a very large
+dry-goods store. Of the first salesman I saw I inquired if they kept red
+calico like my sample.
+
+"You'll find that on the second story," said he.
+
+I went up-stairs. There I asked a man:
+
+"Where will I find red calico?"
+
+"In the far room to the left. Right over there." And he pointed to a
+distant corner.
+
+I walked through the crowds of purchasers and salespeople, and around
+the counters and tables filled with goods, to the far room to the left.
+When I got there I asked for red calico.
+
+"The second counter down this side," said the man.
+
+I went there and produced my sample. "Calicoes down-stairs," said the
+man.
+
+"They told me they were up here," I said.
+
+"Not these plain goods. You'll find 'em down-stairs at the back of the
+store, over on that side."
+
+I went down-stairs to the back of the store.
+
+"Where will I find red calico like this?" I asked.
+
+"Next counter but one," said the man addressed, walking with me in the
+direction pointed out.
+
+"Dunn, show red calicoes."
+
+Mr. Dunn took my sample and looked at it.
+
+"We haven't this shade in that quality of goods," he said.
+
+"Well, have you it in any quality of goods?" I asked.
+
+"Yes; we've got it finer." And he took down a piece of calico, and
+unrolled a yard or two of it on the counter.
+
+"That's not this shade," I said.
+
+"No," said he. "The goods is finer and the color's better."
+
+"I want it to match this," I said.
+
+"I thought you weren't particular about the match," said the salesman.
+"You said you didn't care for the quality of the goods, and you know you
+can't match goods without you take into consideration quality and color
+both. If you want that quality of goods in red, you ought to get
+Turkey-red."
+
+I did not think it necessary to answer this remark, but said:
+
+"Then you've got nothing to match this?"
+
+"No, sir. But perhaps they may have it in the upholstery department, in
+the sixth story."
+
+So I got in the elevator and went up to the top of the house.
+
+"Have you any red stuff like this?" I said to a young man.
+
+"Red stuff? Upholstery department,--other end of this floor."
+
+I went to the other end of the floor.
+
+"I want some red calico," I said to a man.
+
+"Furniture goods?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said I.
+
+"Fourth counter to the left."
+
+I went to the fourth counter to the left, and showed my sample to a
+salesman. He looked at it, and said:
+
+"You'll get this down on the first floor--calico department."
+
+I turned on my heel, descended in the elevator, and went out on
+Broadway. I was thoroughly sick of red calico. But I determined to make
+one more trial. My wife had bought her red calico not long before, and
+there must be some to be had somewhere. I ought to have asked her where
+she bought it, but I thought a simple little thing like that could be
+bought anywhere.
+
+I went into another large dry-goods store. As I entered the door a
+sudden tremor seized me. I could not bear to take out that piece of red
+calico. If I had had any other kind of a rag about me--a pen-wiper or
+any thing of the sort--I think I would have asked them if they could
+match that.
+
+But I stepped up to a young woman and presented my sample, with the
+usual question.
+
+"Back room, counter on the left," she said.
+
+I went there.
+
+"Have you any red calico like this?" I asked of the lady behind the
+counter.
+
+"No, sir," she said, "but we have it in Turkey-red."
+
+Turkey-red again! I surrendered.
+
+"All right," I said, "give me Turkey-red."
+
+"How much, sir?" she asked.
+
+"I don't know--say five yards."
+
+The lady looked at me rather strangely, but measured off five yards of
+Turkey-red calico. Then she rapped on the counter and called out "cash!"
+A little girl, with yellow hair in two long plaits, came slowly up. The
+lady wrote the number of yards, the name of the goods, her own number,
+the price, the amount of the bank-note I handed her, and some other
+matters, probably the color of my eyes, and the direction and velocity
+of the wind, on a slip of paper. She then copied all this in a little
+book which she kept by her. Then she handed the slip of paper, the
+money, and the Turkey-red to the yellow-haired girl. This young girl
+copied the slip in a little book she carried, and then she went away
+with the calico, the paper slip, and the money.
+
+After a very long time,--during which the little girl probably took the
+goods, the money, and the slip to some central desk, where the note was
+received, its amount and number entered in a book, change given to the
+girl, a copy of the slip made and entered, girl's entry examined and
+approved, goods wrapped up, girl registered, plaits counted and entered
+on a slip of paper and copied by the girl in her book, girl taken to a
+hydrant and washed, number of towel entered on a paper slip and copied
+by the girl in her book, value of my note and amount of change branded
+somewhere on the child, and said process noted on a slip of paper and
+copied in her book,--the girl came to me, bringing my change and the
+package of Turkey-red calico.
+
+I had time for but very little work at the office that afternoon, and
+when I reached home, I handed the package of calico to my wife She
+unrolled it and exclaimed:
+
+"Why, this don't match the piece I gave you!"
+
+"Match it!" I cried. "Oh, no! it don't match it. You didn't want that
+matched. You were mistaken. What you wanted was Turkey-red--third
+counter to the left. I mean, Turkey-red is what they use."
+
+My wife looked at me in amazement, and then I detailed to her my
+troubles.
+
+"Well," said she, "this Turkey-red is a great deal prettier than what I
+had, and you've got so much of it that I needn't use the other at all. I
+wish I had thought of Turkey-red before."
+
+"I wish from my heart you had," said I.
+
+ANDREW SCOGGIN.
+
+--_The Lady or the Tiger, and other stories._
+
+
+
+
+HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD.
+
+(BORN, 1835.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AUNT PEN'S FUNERAL.
+
+
+Poor Aunt Pen! I am sorry to say it, but for a person alive and
+well--tolerably well and very much alive, that is--she did use to make
+the greatest business of dying! Alive! why, when she was stretched out
+on the sofa, after an agony of asthma, or indigestion, or whatever, and
+had called us all about her with faltering and tears, and was apparently
+at her last gasp, she would suddenly rise, like her own ghost, at the
+sound of a second ringing of the door-bell, which our little renegade
+Israel had failed to answer, and declare if she could only once lay
+hands on Israel she would box his ears till they heard!
+
+For the door-bell was, perhaps, among many, one of Aunt Pen's weakest
+points. She knew everybody in town, as you might say. She was
+exceedingly entertaining to everybody outside the family. She was a
+great favorite with everybody. Countless gossips came to see her,
+tinkling at the door-bell, and hated individually by Israel, brought her
+all the news, heard all the previous ones had brought, admired her,
+praised her, pitied her, listened to her, and went away leaving her in
+such satisfied mood that she did not die any more that day. And as they
+went away they always paused at the door to say to some one of us what a
+cheerful invalid Aunt Pen had made herself, and what a nest of sunbeams
+her room always was, and what a lesson her patience and endurance ought
+to be. But, oh dear me, how very little they knew about it all!
+
+We all lived together, as it happened; for when we children were left
+alone with but a small income, Aunt Pen--who was also alone, and only
+five years my senior--wrote word that we might as well come to her house
+in the city, for it wouldn't make expenses more, and might make them
+less if we divided them; and then, too, she said she would always be
+sure of one out of three bright and reasonable nurses. Poor Aunt Pen!
+perhaps she didn't find us either so bright or so reasonable as she had
+expected; for we used to think that in her less degree she went on the
+same principle with the crazy man who declared all the rest of the world
+except himself insane.
+
+In honest truth, as doctor after doctor was turned away by the impatient
+and distempered woman up-stairs, each one took occasion to say to us
+down-stairs that our aunt's illness was of that nature that all the
+physic it required was to have her fancies humored, and that we never
+need give ourselves any uneasiness, for she would doubtless live to a
+good old age, unless some acute disease should intervene, as there was
+nothing at all the matter with her except a slight nervous
+sensitiveness, that never destroyed anybody. I suppose we were a set of
+young heathen, for really there were times, if you will believe it, when
+that was not the most reassuring statement in the world.
+
+However. Sometimes Aunt Pen found a doctor, or a medicine, or a course
+of diet, or something, that gave her great sensations of relief, and
+then she would come down, and go about the house, and praise our
+administration, and say every thing went twice as far as it used to go
+before we came, and tell us delightful stories, of our mother's
+housewifely skill, and be quite herself again; and she would make the
+table ring with laughing, and give charming little tea-parties; and then
+we all did wish that Aunt Pen would live forever--and be down-stairs.
+But probably the next day, after one of the tea-parties, oysters, or
+claret punch, or hot cakes, or all together, had wrought their
+diablerie, and the doctor was sent for, and the warming-pan was brought
+out, and there was another six weeks' siege, in which, obeyed by every
+one, and physicked by herself, and sympathized with to her heart's
+content by callers, and shut up in a hot room with the windows full of
+flowering plants, and somebody reading endless novels to her with the
+lights burning all night long--if she wasn't ill she had every
+inducement to be, and nothing but an indomitable constitution hindered
+it. It was perfectly idle for us to tell her she was hurting herself; it
+only made her very indignant with us, and more determined than ever to
+persist in doing so.
+
+Of course, then, the longer Aunt Pen staid in her own room the worse she
+really did get, and her nerves, with confinement and worry and
+relaxation, would by-and-by be in a condition for any sort of an
+outburst if we attempted the least reasoning with her. She would
+become, for one thing, as sleepless as an owl; then she was thoroughly
+sure she was going to be insane, and down would go the hydrate of
+chloral till the doctor forbade it on pain of death. After the chloral,
+too, such horrid eyes as she had! the eyes, you know, that chloral
+always leaves--inflamed, purple, swollen, heavy, crying, and good for
+any thing but seeing. Immediately then Aunt Pen went into a new tantrum;
+she was going to be stone-blind, and dependent on three heartless
+hussies for all her mercies in this life; but no, thank goodness! she
+had friends that would see she did not go absolutely to the wall, and
+would never suffer her to be imposed on by a parcel of girls who didn't
+care whether she lived or died--who perhaps would rather she did
+die--who stood open-handed for her bequests; she would leave her money
+to the almshouse, and if we wanted it we could go and get it there! And
+after that, to be sure, Aunt Pen would have a fit of remorse for her
+words, and confess her sin chokingly, and have us all come separately
+and forgive her, and would say she was the wretchedest woman on the face
+of the earth, that she should live undesired until her friends were all
+tired, and then die unlamented; and would burst into tears and cry
+herself into a tearing headache, and have ice on her head and a blister
+on the back of her neck, and be quite confident that now she was really
+going off with congestion of the brain.
+
+After that, for a day or two, she would be in a heavenly frame of mind
+with the blister and cabbage leaves and simple cerate, and a couple of
+mirrors by which to examine the rise and fall of the blister; and,
+having had a hint of real illness, she would consent quite smilingly to
+the act of convalescence, and a descent to the healthy region of the
+parlors once more.
+
+But no sooner were we all gay and happy in the house again, running out
+as we pleased, beginning to think of parties and drives and theatres and
+all enjoyment--and rather unobservant, as young folks are apt to be
+unobservant of Aunt Pen's slight habitual pensiveness in the absence of
+guests or excitement, and of her ways generally--than Aunt Pen would
+challenge some lobster-salad to mortal combat, and, of course, come out
+floored by the colic. A little whiskey then; and as a little gave so
+much ease, she would try a great deal. The result always was a
+precipitate retreat up-stairs, a howling hysteric, bilious cramps, the
+doctor, a subcutaneous injection of morphine in her arm; then chattering
+like a magpie, relapsed into awful silence, and, convinced that the
+morphine had been carried straight to her heart, a composing of her
+hands and feet, an injured dismissal of every soul from the room, with
+the assurance that we should find her straight and stiff and stone-dead
+in the morning.
+
+We never did. For, as we seldom had opportunity of an undisturbed
+night's rest, we usually took her at her word if any access of ill
+temper, or despair, or drowsiness occasioned banishment from the
+presence. Not that we had always been so calm about it; there was a time
+when we were excited with every alarm, thrown into flurries and panics
+quite to Aunt Pen's mind, running after the doctor at two o'clock of the
+morning, building a fire in the range ourselves at midnight to make
+gruel for her, rubbing her till we rubbed the skin off our hands,
+combing her hair till we went to sleep standing; but Aunt Pen had cried
+wolf so long, and the doctors had all declared so stoutly that there was
+no wolf, that our once soft hearts had become quite hard and concrete.
+
+When at last Aunt Pen had had an alarm from nearly every illness for
+which the pharmacopoeia prescribes, and she knew that neither we nor
+the doctors would listen to the probability of their recurrence; she had
+an attack of "sinking." No, there was no particular disease, she used to
+say, only sinking; she had been pulled down to an extent from which she
+had no strength to recuperate; she was only sinking, a little weaker
+to-day than she was yesterday--only sinking. But Aunt Pen ate a very
+good breakfast of broiled birds and toast and coffee; a very good lunch
+of cold meats and dainties, and a great goblet of thick cream; a very
+good dinner of soup and roast and vegetables and dessert, and perhaps a
+chicken bone at eleven o'clock in the evening. And when the saucy little
+Israel, who carried up her tray, heard her say she was sinking, he
+remarked that it was because of the load on her stomach.
+
+One day, I remember, Aunt Pen was very much worse than usual. We were
+all in her room, a sunshiny place which she had connected with the
+adjoining one by sliding-doors, so that it might be big enough for us
+all to bring our work on occasion, and make it lively for her. She had
+on a white-cashmere dressing-gown trimmed with swan's-down, and she lay
+among the luxurious cushions of a blue lounge, with a paler blue
+blanket, which she had had one of us tricot for her, lying over her
+feet, and altogether she looked very ideal and ethereal; for Aunt Pen
+always did have such an eye to picturesque effect that I don't know how
+she could ever consent to the idea of mouldering away into dust like
+common clay.
+
+She had sent Maria down for Mel and me to come up-stairs with whatever
+occupied us, for she was convinced that she was failing fast, and knew
+we should regret it if we did not have the last of her. As we had
+received the same message nearly every other day during the last three
+or four weeks, we did not feel extraordinarily alarmed, but composedly
+took our baskets and scissors, and trudged along after Maria.
+
+"I am sure I ought to be glad that I've succeeded in training my nieces
+into such industrious habits," said Aunt Pen, after a little while,
+looking at Mel; "but I should think that when a near relative approached
+the point of death, the fact might throw needle and thread into the
+background for a time." Then she paused for Maria to fan a little more
+breath into her. "It's different with Helen," soon she said; "the white
+silk shawl she is netting for me may be needed at any moment to lay me
+out in."
+
+"Dear me, Aunt Pen!" cried Mel; "what a picture you'd be, laid out in a
+white net shawl!" For the doctor had told us to laugh at these whims all
+we might.
+
+"Oh, you heartless girl!" said Aunt Pen. "To think of pictures at such a
+time!" And she closed her eyes as if weary of the world.
+
+"I never saw anybody who liked to revel in the ghastly the way you do,
+Aunt Pen."
+
+"Mel!" said Aunt Pen, with quite a show of color in her cheek; "I shall
+send you down stairs."
+
+"Do," said Mel; "where I can cut out my gown in peace."
+
+"Cutting a gown at the bedside of the dying! Are you cold-blooded, or
+are you insensible?"
+
+"Aunt Pen," said Mel, leaning on the point of her scissors, "you know
+very well that I have to make my own dresses or go without them. And you
+have kept me running your idle errands, up and down two flights of
+stairs, to the doctor's and the druggist's, and goodness knows where
+and all, till I haven't a thread of any thing that is fit to be seen.
+You've been posturing this grand finale of yours, too, all the last
+three weeks, and it's time you had it perfect now; and you must let me
+alone till I get my gown done."
+
+"It will do to wear at my funeral," said Aunt Pen bitterly, as she
+concluded.
+
+"No, it won't," said Mel, doggedly; "it's red."
+
+"Red!" cried Aunt Pen, suddenly opening her eyes, and half raising on
+one hand. "What in wonder have you bought a red dress for? You are quite
+aware that I can't bear the least intimation of the color. My nerves are
+in such a state that a shred of red makes me--"
+
+"You won't see it, you know," said Mel in what did seem to me an
+unfeeling manner.
+
+"No," said Aunt Pen. "Very true. I sha'n't see it. But what," added she
+presently snapping open her eyes, "considered as a mere piece of
+economy, you bought a red dress for when you are immediately going into
+black, passes common-sense to conjecture! You had better send it down
+and have it dyed at once before you cut it, for the shrinkage will spoil
+it forever if you don't."
+
+"Much black I shall go into," said Mel.
+
+Maria laughed. Aunt Pen cried.
+
+"Aunt Pen," said the cruel Mel, "if you were going to die you wouldn't
+be crying. Dying people have no tears to shed, the doctors say."
+
+"Somebody ought to cry," said poor Aunt Pen, witheringly. "Don't talk to
+me about doctors," she continued, after a silence interrupted only by
+the snipping of the scissors. "They are a set of quacks. They know
+nothing. I will have all the doctors in town at my funeral for
+pall-bearers. It will be a satire too delicate for them to appreciate,
+though. Speaking of that occasion, Helen," she went on, turning to me as
+a possible ally, "I have so many friends that I suppose the house will
+be full."
+
+"Wouldn't you enjoy it more from church, auntie?" said I.
+
+"Oh, you hard and wicked girls!" she cried. "You're all alike. Listen to
+me! If you won't hear my wishes, you must take my commands. Now, in the
+first place, I want the parlors to be overflowing with flowers,
+literally lined with flowers. I don't care how much money it takes;
+there'll be enough left for you--more than you deserve. And I want you
+to be very sure that I'm not to be exposed unless I look exactly as I'd
+like to look. You're to put on my white silk that I was to have been
+married in, and my veil, and the false orange blossoms. They're all in
+the third drawer of the press, and the key's on my chatelaine. And
+if--if--well," said Aunt Pen, more to herself than us, "if he comes,
+he'll understand. The Bride of Death."
+
+After that she did not say any more for some minutes, and we were all
+silent and sorry, and Mel was fidgeting in a riot of repentance; we had
+never, either of us, heard a word of any romance of Aunt Pen's before.
+We began to imagine that there might be some excuse for the overthrow of
+Aunt Pen's nervous system, some reality in the overthrow. "You will
+leave this ring on my finger;" said she; by-and-by. "If Chauncey Read
+comes, and wants it, he will take it off. It will fit his finger as well
+now, I suppose, as it did when he wore it before he gave it to me." Then
+Aunt Pen bit her lip and shut her eyes, and seemed to be slipping off
+into a gentle sleep.
+
+"By-the-way!" said she, suddenly, sitting upright on the lounge, "I
+won't have the horses from Brown's livery--
+
+"The what, auntie?"
+
+"The horses for the cortége. You know Brown puts that magnificent span
+of his in the hearse on account of their handsome action. I'm sure Mrs.
+Gaylard would have been frightened to death if she could only have seen
+the way they pranced at her funeral last fall. I was determined then
+that they should never draw me;" and Aunt Pen shivered for herself
+beforehand. "And I can't have them from Timlin's, for the same reason,"
+said she. "All his animals are skittish; and you remember when a pair of
+them took fright and dashed away from the procession and ran straight to
+the river, and there'd have been four other funerals if the schooner at
+the wharf hadn't stopped the runaways. And Timlins has a way, too, of
+letting white horses follow the hearse with the first mourning-coach,
+and it's very bad luck, very--an ill omen; a prophecy of Death and the
+Pale Horse again, you know. And I won't have them from Shust's, either,"
+said Aunt Pen, "for he is simply the greatest extortioner since old
+Isaac the Jew."
+
+"Well, auntie," said Mel, forgetful of her late repentance, "I don't see
+but you'll have to go with Shank's mare."
+
+Even Aunt Pen laughed then. "Don't you really think you are going to
+lose me, girls?" asked she.
+
+"No, auntie," replied Maria. "We all think you are a hypo."
+
+"A hypo?"
+
+"Not a hypocrite," said Mel, "but a hypochondriac."
+
+"I wish I were," sighed Aunt Pen; "I wish I were. I should have some
+hope of myself then," said the poor inconsistent innocent. "Oh no, no; I
+feel it only too well; I am going fast. You will all regret your
+disbelief when I am gone;" and she lay back among her pillows. "That
+reminds me," she murmured, presently. "About my monument."
+
+"Oh, Aunt Pen, do be still," said Mel.
+
+"No," said Aunt Pen, firmly; "it may be a disagreeable duty, but that is
+all the better reason for me to bring my mind to it. And if I don't
+attend to it now, it never will be attended to. I know what relatives
+are. They put down a slab of slate with a skull and cross-bones
+scratched on it, and think they've done their duty. Not that I mean any
+reflections on you; you're all well-meaning, but you're giddy. I shall
+haunt you if you do any thing of the kind! No; you may send Mr. Mason up
+here this afternoon, and I will go over his designs with him. I am
+going to have carved Carrara marble, set in a base of polished Scotch
+granite, and the inscription is--Girls!" cried Aunt Pen, rising and
+clasping her knees with unexpected energy, "I expressly forbid my age
+being printed in the paper, or on the lid, or on the stone! I won't
+gratify every gossip in town, that I won't! I shall take real pleasure
+in baffling their curiosity. And another thing, while I am about it,
+don't you ask Tom Maltby to my funeral, or let him come in, if he comes
+himself, on any account whatever. I should rise in my shroud if he
+approached me. Yes, I should! Tom Maltby may be all very well; I dare
+say he is; and I hope I die at peace with him and all mankind, as a good
+Christian should. I forgive him; yes, certainly, I forgive him; but it
+doesn't follow that I need forget him; and, so long as I remember him,
+the way he conducted in buying the pew over my head I can't get over,
+dead or alive. And if I only do get well we shall have a reckoning that
+will make his hair stand on end--that he may rely on!" And here Aunt Pen
+took the fan from Maria, and moved it actively, till she remembered
+herself, when she resigned it. "One thing more," she said. "Whatever
+happens, Helen, don't let me be kept over Sunday. There'll certainly be
+another death in the family within the year if you do. If I die on
+Saturday, there's no help for it. Common decency won't let you shove me
+into the ground at once, and so you will have to make up your minds for
+a second summons." And Aunt Pen, contemplating the suttee of some one of
+us with great philosophy, lay down and closed her eyes again. "You might
+have it by torchlight on Sunday night, though," said she, half opening
+them. "That would be very pretty." And then she dropped off to sleep
+with such a satisfied expression of countenance that we judged her to be
+welcoming in imagination the guests at her last rites herself.
+
+Whatever the dream was, she was rudely roused from it by the wreched
+little Israel, who came bounding up the stairs, and, without word or
+warning, burst into the room, almost white with horror. Why Israel was
+afraid I can't conjecture, but, at any rate, a permanent fright would
+have been of great personal advantage to him. "Oh, ma'am! oh, miss!
+dere's a pusson down stairs, a cullud woman, wid der small-pox!" he
+almost whistled in his alarm.
+
+"With the small-pox!" cried Aunt Pen, springing into the middle of the
+floor, regardless of her late repose _in articulo mortis_. "Go away,
+Israel! Have you been near her? Put her out immediately! How on earth
+did she get there?"
+
+"You allus telled me to let everybody in," chattered Israel.
+
+"Put her out! put her out!" cried Aunt Pen, half dancing with
+impatience.
+
+"We can't get her out. She's right acrost der door-step. We's feared ter
+tech her."
+
+But Aunt Pen's head was out of the window, and she was shouting:
+"Police! fire! murder! thieves!" possibly in the order of importance of
+the four calamities, but quite as if she had a plenty of breath left;
+and, for a wonder, the police came to the rescue, and directly afterward
+an ambulance took the poor victim of the frightful epidemic to the
+hospital. I believe it turned out to be only measles after all, though.
+
+"Run, Israel!" screamed Aunt Pen then; "run instantly and bring home a
+couple of pounds of roll-brimstone, and tell the maids to riddle the
+furnace fire and make it as bright and hot as possible, and to light
+fires in the parlor grates, and in the old Latrobe, and in every room
+in the house, without losing a minute. We'll make this house too warm
+for it!"
+
+And, to our amazement, as soon as Israel came darting back with the
+impish material, Aunt Pen took a piece in each hand, directed us to do
+the same, and wrapping the blue afghan round her shoulders, descended to
+the lower rooms three steps at a time, sent for the doctor to come and
+vaccinate us, and having set a chair precisely over the register where a
+red-hot stream of air was pouring up, she placed herself upon it and
+issued her orders.
+
+Every window was closed, every grate from basement to attic had a fire
+lighted in it, and little pans of brimstone were burning in every room
+and hall in the house, while we, astonished, indignant, frightened, and
+amused, sat enduring the torments of vapor and sulphur baths to the
+point of suffocation.
+
+"I can't bear this another moment," wheezed Mel.
+
+"It's the only way," replied Aunt Pen, serenely, with a rivulet
+trickling down her nose. "You kill the germs by heat, and since we can't
+bake ourselves quite to death, we make sure of the work by the fumes."
+
+And as she sat there, her face rubicund, her swan's-down straight,
+drops on her cheeks, her chin, her forehead, and wherever drops could
+cling, her eyes watering, her curls limp, and an atmosphere of
+unbearable odor enveloping her in its cloud, the front door opened, and
+a footstep rung on the tiles.
+
+"Jess you keep out o' yer!" yelled Israel to the intruder, seeing it
+wasn't the doctor. "We's got der small-pox, and am a-killing de
+gemmens--"
+
+"Pen!" cried a man's voice through the smoke--a deep, melodious voice.
+
+"What!" exclaimed Aunt Pen, starting up, and then pausing as if she
+fancied the horrid fumes might have befogged her brain.
+
+"Pen!" the voice cried again.
+
+"Chauncey! Chauncey Read!" she shrieked. "Where do you come from? Am I
+dreaming?"
+
+"From the North Pacific," answered the voice; and we dimly discerned its
+owner groping his way forward. "From the five years' whaling voyage into
+which I was gagged and dragged--shanghaied, they call it. O, Pen, I
+didn't dare to hope I should find--"
+
+"Oh, Chauncey, is it you?" she cried, and fell fainting at his feet.
+
+The draught from the open door after him was blowing away the smoke,
+and we saw what a great, sunburned, handsome fellow it was that had
+caught her in his arms, and was bearing her out to the back balcony and
+the fresh air there, used in the course of his whaling voyage, perhaps,
+to odors no more belonging to Araby the Blest than those of burning
+brimstone do; and, seeing the movement, we divined that he knew as much
+about the resources of the house as we did, and so we discreetly
+withdrew, Israel's head being twisted behind him as he went to such
+extent that you might have supposed he had had his neck wrung.
+
+Well, we put the white silk and the tulle on Aunt Pen after all; yellow
+as it was, she would have no other--only fresh, natural orange blossoms
+in place of the false wreath. And if we had not so often had her word
+for it in past times, we never should have taken her for any thing but
+the gayest bride, the most alive and happy woman in the world. They
+returned to the old house from their wedding journey, and we all live
+together in great peace and pleasantness. But though three years are
+passed and gone since Chauncey Read came home and brought a new
+atmosphere with him into our lives, Aunt Pen has never had a sick day
+yet; and we find that any allusion to her funeral gives her such a
+superstitious trembling that we are pleased to believe it indefinitely
+postponed, and by tacit and mutual consent we never say any thing about
+it.--_Harper's Magazine_, June, 1872.
+
+
+
+
+SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS.
+
+("MARK TWAIN.")
+
+(BORN, 1835.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CELEBRATED JUMPING FROG OF CALAVERAS COUNTY.
+
+
+In compliance with the request of a friend of mine, who wrote me from
+the East, I called on good-natured, garrulous old Simon Wheeler, and
+inquired after my friend's friend, _Leonidas W._ Smiley, as requested to
+do, and I hereunto append the result. I have a lurking suspicion that
+_Leonidas W._ Smiley is a myth; that my friend never knew such a
+personage; and that he only conjectured that, if I asked old Wheeler
+about him, it would remind him of his infamous _Jim_ Smiley, and he
+would go to work and bore me nearly to death with some infernal
+reminiscence of him as long and tedious as it should be useless for me.
+If that was the design, it certainly succeeded.
+
+I found Simon Wheeler dozing comfortably by the bar-room stove of the
+old, dilapidated tavern in the ancient mining camp of Angel's, and I
+noticed that he was fat and bald-headed, and had an expression of
+winning gentleness and simplicity upon his tranquil countenance. He
+roused up and gave me good-day. I told him a friend of mine had
+commissioned me to make some inquiries about a cherished companion of
+his boyhood named _Leonidas W._ Smiley--_Rev. Leonidas W._ Smiley--a
+young minister of the Gospel, who he had heard was at one time a
+resident of Angel's Camp. I added that, if Mr. Wheeler could tell me any
+thing about this Rev. Leonidas W. Smiley, I would feel under many
+obligations to him.
+
+Simon Wheeler backed me into a corner and blockaded me there with his
+chair, and then sat me down and reeled off the monotonous narrative
+which follows this paragraph. He never smiled, he never frowned, he
+never changed his voice from the gentle-flowing key to which he tuned
+the initial sentence, he never betrayed the slightest suspicion of
+enthusiasm; but all through the interminable narrative there ran a vein
+of impressive earnestness and sincerity, which showed me plainly that,
+so far from his imagining that there was any thing ridiculous or funny
+about his story, he regarded it as a really important matter, and
+admired its two heroes as men of transcendent genius in _finesse_. To
+me, the spectacle of a man drifting serenely along through such a queer
+yarn without ever smiling, was exquisitely absurd. As I said before, I
+asked him to tell me what he knew of Rev. Leonidas W. Smiley, and he
+replied as follows. I let him go on in his own way, and never
+interrupted him once:
+
+There was a feller here once by the name of _Jim_ Smiley, in the winter
+of '49--or may be it was the spring of '50--I don't recollect exactly,
+somehow, though what makes me think it was one or the other is because I
+remember the big flume wasn't finished when he first came to the camp;
+but any way he was the curiosest man about always betting on any thing
+that turned up you ever see, if he could get anybody to bet on the other
+side; and if he couldn't, he'd change sides. Any way that suited the
+other man would suit him--any way just so's he got a bet, _he_ was
+satisfied. But still he was lucky, uncommon lucky; he most always come
+out winner. He was always ready and laying for a chance; there couldn't
+be no solitry thing mentioned but that feller'd offer to bet on it, and
+take any side you please, as I was just telling you. If there was a
+horse-race, you'd find him flush, or you'd find him busted at the end of
+it; if there was a dog-fight, he'd bet on it; if there was a cat-fight,
+he'd bet on it; if there was a chicken-fight, he'd bet on it; why, if
+there was two birds sitting on a fence, he would bet you which one would
+fly first; or if there was a camp-meeting, he would be there reg'lar, to
+bet on Parson Walker, which he judged to be the best exhorter about
+here, and so he was, too, and a good man. If he even seen a straddle-bug
+start to go anywheres, he would bet you how long it would take him to
+get wherever he was going to, and if you took him up, he would foller
+that straddle-bug to Mexico but what he would find out where he was
+bound for and how long he was on the road. Lots of the boys here has
+seen that Smiley, and can tell you about him. Why, it never made no
+difference to _him_--he would bet on _any_ thing--the dangdest feller.
+Parson Walker's wife laid very sick once, for a good while, and it
+seemed as if they warn't going to save her; but one morning he come in,
+and Smiley asked how she was, and he said she was considerable
+better--thank the Lord for his inf'nit mercy--and coming on so smart
+that, with the blessing of Prov'dence, she'd get well yet; and Smiley,
+before he thought, says, "Well, I'll risk two-and-a-half that she don't,
+any way."
+
+This-yer Smiley had a mare--the boys called her the fifteen-minute nag,
+but that was only in fun, you know, because, of course, she was faster
+than that--and he used to win money on that horse, for all she was so
+slow and always had the asthma, or the distemper, or the consumption, or
+something of that kind. They used to give her two or three hundred yards
+start, and then pass her under way; but always at the fag-end of the
+race she'd get excited and desperate-like, and come cavorting and
+straddling up, and scattering her legs around limber, sometimes in the
+air, and sometimes out to one side amongst the fences, and kicking up
+m-o-r-e dust, and raising m-o-r-e racket with her coughing and sneezing
+and blowing her nose--and always fetch up at the stand just about a neck
+ahead, as near as you could cipher it down.
+
+And he had a little small bull pup, that to look at him you'd think he
+wan't worth a cent, but to set around and look ornery, and lay for a
+chance to steal something. But as soon as the money was up on him, he
+was a different dog; his under-jaw'd begin to stick out like the
+fo'castle of a steamboat, and his teeth would uncover, and shine savage
+like the furnaces. And a dog might tackle him, and bully-rag him, and
+bite him, and throw him over his shoulder two or three times, and Andrew
+Jackson--which was the name of the pup--Andrew Jackson would never let
+on but what _he_ was satisfied, and hadn't expected nothing else--and
+the bets being doubled and doubled on the other side all the time, till
+the money was all up; and then all of a sudden he would grab that other
+dog jest by the j'int of his hind leg and freeze to it--not chaw, you
+understand, but only jest grip and hang on till they throwed up the
+sponge, if it was a year. Smiley always come out winner on that pup,
+till he harnessed a dog once that didn't have no hind legs, because
+they'd been sawed off by a circular saw, and when the thing had gone
+along far enough, and the money was all up, and he come to make a snatch
+for his pet holt, he saw in a minute how he'd been imposed on, and how
+the other dog had him in the door, so to speak, and he 'peared
+surprised, and then he looked sorter discouraged-like, and didn't try no
+more to win the fight, and so he got shucked out bad. He give Smiley a
+look, as much as to say his heart was broke, and it was _his_ fault, for
+putting up a dog that hadn't no hind legs for him to take holt of, which
+was his main dependence in a fight, and then he limped off a piece and
+laid down and died. It was a good pup, was that Andrew Jackson, and
+would have made a name for hisself if he'd lived, for the stuff was in
+him, and he had genius--I know it, because he hadn't had no
+opportunities to speak of, and it don't stand to reason that a dog could
+make such a fight as he could under them circumstances, if he hadn't no
+talent. It always makes me feel sorry when I think of that last fight of
+his'n, and the way it turned out.
+
+Well, this-yer Smiley had rat-tarriers, and chicken cocks, and tom-cats,
+and all them kind of things, till you couldn't rest, and you couldn't
+fetch nothing for him to bet on but he'd match you. He ketched a frog
+one day, and took him home, and said he cal'klated to edercate him; and
+so he never done nothing for three months but set in his back yard and
+learn that frog to jump. And you bet you he _did_ learn him, too. He'd
+give him a little punch behind, and the next minute you'd see that frog
+whirling in the air like a doughnut--see him turn one summerset, or may
+be a couple, if he got a good start, and come down flat-footed and all
+right, like a cat. He got him up so in the matter of catching flies, and
+kept him in practice so constant, that he'd nail a fly every time as far
+as he could see him. Smiley said all a frog wanted was education, and he
+could do most any thing--and I believe him. Why, I've seen him set Dan'l
+Webster down here on this floor--Dan'l Webster was the name of the
+frog--and sing out, "Flies, Dan'l, flies!" and quicker'n you could wink,
+he'd spring straight up, and snake a fly off'n the counter there, and
+flop down on the floor again as solid as a gob of mud, and fall to
+scratching the side of his head with his hind foot as indifferent as if
+he hadn't no idea he'd been doin' any more'n any frog might do. You
+never see a frog so modest and straight-for'ard as he was, for all he
+was so gifted. And when it come to fair and square jumping on a dead
+level, he could get over more ground at one straddle than any animal of
+his breed you ever see. Jumping on a dead level was his strong suit, you
+understand; and when it come to that, Smiley would ante up money on him
+as long as he had a red. Smiley was monstrous proud of his frog, and
+well he might be, for fellers that had travelled and been everywheres,
+all said he laid over any frog that ever _they_ see.
+
+Well, Smiley kept the beast in a little lattice box, and he used to
+fetch him down town sometimes and lay for a bet. One day a feller--a
+stranger in the camp, he was--come across him with his box, and says,
+
+"What might it be that you've got in the box?"
+
+And Smiley says, sorter indifferent like, "It might be a parrot, or it
+might be a canary, may be, but it ain't--it's only just a frog."
+
+And the feller took it, and looked at it careful, and turned it round
+this way and that, and says, "H'm--so't is. Well, what's _he_ good for?"
+
+"Well," Smiley says, easy and careless, "he's good enough for _one_
+thing, I should judge--he can out-jump ary frog in Calaveras county."
+
+The feller took the box again, and took another long, particular look,
+and give it back to Smiley, and says, very deliberate, "Well, I don't
+see no p'ints about that frog that's any better'n any other frog."
+
+"May be you don't," Smiley says. "May be you understand frogs, and may
+be you don't understand 'em; may be you've had experience, and may be
+you ain't, only a amature, as it were. Any ways, I've got _my_ opinion,
+and I'll risk forty dollars that he can out-jump any frog in Calaveras
+county."
+
+And the feller studied a minute, and then says, kinder sad like, "Well,
+I'm only a stranger here, and I ain't got no frog; but if I had a frog,
+I'd bet you."
+
+And then Smiley says, "That's all right--that's all right--if you'll
+hold my box a minute, I'll go and get you a frog." And so the feller
+took the box, and put up his forty dollars along with Smiley's, and set
+down to wait.
+
+So he set there a good while thinking and thinking to hisself, and then
+he got the frog out and prized his mouth open and took a teaspoon and
+filled him full of quail shot--filled him pretty near up to his
+chin--and set him on the floor. Smiley he went to the swamp and slopped
+around in the mud for a long time, and finally he ketched a frog, and
+fetched him in, and give him to this feller, and says:
+
+"Now, if you're ready, set him alongside of Dan'l, with his fore-paws
+just even with Dan'l, and I'll give the word." Then he says,
+"One--two--three--jump!" and him and the feller touched up the frogs
+from behind, and the new frog hopped off, but Dan'l give a heave, and
+hysted up his shoulders--so--like a Frenchman, but it wan't no use--he
+couldn't budge; he was planted as solid as an anvil, and he couldn't no
+more stir than if he was anchored out. Smiley was a good deal surprised,
+and he was disgusted too, but he didn't have no idea what the matter
+was, of course.
+
+The feller took the money and started away; and when he was going out at
+the door, he sorter jerked his thumb over his shoulders--this way--at
+Dan'l, and says again, very deliberate, "Well, I don't see no pints
+about that frog that's any better'n any other frog."
+
+Smiley he stood scratching his head and looking down at Dan'l a long
+time, and at last he says, "I do wonder what in the nation that frog
+throw'd off for--I wonder if there ain't some thing the matter with
+him--he 'pears to look mighty baggy, somehow." And he ketched Dan'l by
+the nap of the neck, and lifted him up and says, "Why, blame my cats, if
+he don't weigh five pound!" and turned him upside down, and he belched
+out a double handful of shot. And then he see how it was, and he was
+the maddest man--he set the frog down and took out after that feller,
+but he never ketched him. And--
+
+(Here Simon Wheeler heard his name called from the front yard, and got
+up to see what was wanted.) And turning to me as he moved away, he said:
+"Just set where you are, stranger, and rest easy--I an't going to be
+gone a second."
+
+But, by your leave, I did not think that a continuation of the history
+of the enterprising vagabond _Jim_ Smiley would be likely to afford me
+much information concerning the Rev. _Leonidas W._ Smiley, and so I
+started away.
+
+At the door I met the sociable Wheeler returning, and he buttonholed me
+and recommenced:
+
+"Well, this-yer Smiley had a yaller one-eyed cow that didn't have no
+tail, only just a short stump like a bannanner, and--"
+
+"Oh, hang Smiley and his afflicted cow!" I muttered, good-naturedly, and
+bidding the old gentleman good-day, I departed.
+
+
+
+
+FITZ HUGH LUDLOW. (BORN, 1836--DIED, 1870.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BEN THIRLWALL'S SCHOOLDAYS.
+
+
+My name is Ben Thirlwall, and I am the son of rich but honest parents. I
+never had a wish ungratified until I was twelve years of age. My wish
+then was to stay on a two-year-old colt which had never been broken. He
+did not coincide with me, and a vast revelation of the resistances to
+individual will of which the universe is capable, also of a terrestrial
+horizon, bottom upward, burst upon me during the brief space which I
+spent in flying over his head. Picked up senseless, I was carried to the
+bosom of my family on a wheelbarrow, and awoke to the consciousness that
+my parents had decided on sending me to a boarding-school,--a remedy to
+this day sovereign in the opinion of all well-regulated parents for all
+tangential aberrations from the back of a colt or the laws of society.
+
+The principal's name was Barker; and my only clue to his character
+consisted in overhearing that he was an excellent disciplinarian. I was
+afraid to ask what that meant, but on reflection concluded it to be a
+geographical distinction, and, associating him with Mesopotamia or
+Beloochistan, expected to find him a person of mild manners, who shaved
+his head, wore a tall hat of dyed sheep's wool, and did a large business
+in spices with people who visited him on camels in a front-yard
+surrounded by sheds, and having a fountain that played in the middle.
+
+Having read several books of travels, I was corroborated in my view when
+I learned that Mr. Barker lived at the east, and still further, when on
+going around point Judith on the steamboat with my father, I became very
+sick at the stomach, as all the travellers had done in their first
+chapter.
+
+I need not say that the reality of Mr. Barker was a very terrible
+awakening, which contained no lineament of my purple dream, save the
+bastinado. Without distinction of age or season the youths who, as per
+circular, enjoyed the softening influence of his refined Christian home,
+rose to the sound of the gong at five A.M., which may have been very
+nice in a home for the early Christians, but was reported among the boys
+to have entirely stopped the growth of Little Briggs. This was a child,
+whose mother had married again, and whose step-father had felt his duty
+to his future too keenly to deprive him of the benign influences of
+Barker at any time in the last six years. After rising, we had ten
+minutes to wash our faces and hands,--a period by the experience of
+mankind demonstrably insufficient, where the soap is of that kind very
+properly denominated cast-steel (though purists have a different
+spelling), and you have to break an inch of ice to get into the
+available region of your water-pitcher. Chunks, who has since made a
+large fortune on war-contracts, kept himself in peanuts and four-cent
+pies for an entire winter session, by selling an invention of his own,
+which consisted of soap, dissolved in water on the stove during the
+day-time, put in bottles hooked from the lamp-room by means of a false
+key, to be carried to bed and kept warm by boys, whose pocket-money and
+desire for a prompt detergent in the morning were adequate to the
+disbursement of half a dime a package. I myself took several violent
+colds from having the glass next my skin during severe nights; but that
+was nothing so bad as the case of Little Briggs, who from lack of the
+half-dime, often came down to prayers with a stripe of yesterday's
+pencil black on one side of his nose, and a shaving of soap, which, in
+the frenzy of despair he had gouged out of his stony cake, on the other.
+The state of mind consistent with such a condition of countenance did
+not favor correct recitation of the tougher names in Deuteronomy; so, it
+can be a cause of surprise to no one, that, when called on at prayers,
+and prompted by a ridiculous neighbor, little Briggs sometimes asserted
+Joshua to have driven out the Hivites and the Amorites, and the
+Canaanites and the Jebusites, and the Hittites and the Perizzites, and
+the Moabites and the Musquito-bites, for which he was regularly sent to
+bed on Saturday afternoon, as he had no pocket-money to stop, his papa
+desiring him to learn self-denial young, as he was intended for a
+missionary; though goodness knows that there wasn't enough of him to go
+round among many heathen.
+
+From this specimen of discipline may be learned the entire Barkerian
+system of training. I was about to say, "_ex uno disce omnes_," but, as
+it's the only Latin I remember from the lot which got rubbed into--or
+rather over--me at Barker's, I'm rather sparing of it, not knowing but I
+can bring it in somewhere else with better effect. As with the Word of
+God, so with that of man,--the grand Barkerian idea of how to fix it in
+a boy's memory was to send him to bed, or excoriate his palm. If
+religion and polite learning could have been communicated by sheets,
+like chicken-pox, or blistered into one like the stern but curative
+cantharides, Mr. Barker's boys would have become the envy of mankind and
+the beloved of the gods; but not even Little Briggs died young from the
+latter or any other cause, which speaks volumes for his constitution....
+
+The two Misses Moodle came to establish a young ladies' seminary in the
+village of Mungerville, on whose outskirts our own school was situated,
+bringing along with them, as the county paper stated, "that charming
+atmosphere of refinement and intellectuality in which they ever moved";
+and, what was of more consequence, a capital of twenty girls to start
+with. Professional politeness inspired Mr. Barker to make a call on the
+fair strangers, which the personal fascinations of the younger Miss
+Moodle induced him to repeat. The atmosphere of refinement and
+intellectuality gradually acted on him in the nature of an intoxicating
+gas, until at length, after twenty-five years of successfully intrenched
+widowhood, he laid his heart in the mits of the younger Miss Moodle, and
+the two became one Barker.
+
+As a consequence of this union, social relations began to be established
+between the two schools. Mrs. Barker, of an occasional evening, wished
+to run down and visit her sister. If Mr. Barker was engaged in quarrying
+a page of Cicero out of some stony boy in whom nature had never made any
+Latin deposit, or had just put a fresh batch of offenders into the penal
+oven of untimely bed, and felt compelled to run up now and then to keep
+up the fire under them, by a harrowing description of the way their
+parents would feel if they knew of their behavior--an instrument dear to
+Mr. Barker as a favorite poker to a boss-baker in love with his
+profession--then, after a clucking noise, indicative of how much he
+would like to chuck her under the chin, but for the presence of company,
+Mr. Barker would coo to Mrs. Barker, "Lovey, your pick, sweet!" waving
+his hand comprehensively over the whole school-room; or "Dear, suppose
+we say Briggs, or Chunks, or Thirlwall," as the case might be. The only
+difficulty about Briggs was clothes. That used to be obviated by a
+selection from the trunks of intimate friends; and Briggs was such a
+nice boy, that it was a real gratification to see him with your best
+jacket on. Many's the time the old fellow has said to Chunks or me,
+"What a blessing that I grew! If I hadn't, how could I ever wear your
+trousers?" In process of time these occasional visits, as escort to Mrs.
+Barker, expanded into an attendance of all the older boys (when not in
+bed for moral baking purposes) upon a series of bi-monthly soirees,
+given by the remaining Miss Moodle, with a superficial view to her
+pupils' attainment of ease in society; and a material substratum of
+sandwiches, which Miss Moodle preferred to see, through the atmosphere
+of refinement and intellectuality, as "a simple repast." To this was
+occasionally added a refreshment, which I have seen elsewhere only at
+Sunday-school picnics,--a mild tap of slightly sweetened water, which
+tasted as if lemons had formerly been kept in the pail it was made
+in;--only for Sunday-schools they make it strong at the outset, and add
+water during the hymns, with a vague but praiseworthy expectation that,
+in view of the sacredness of the occasion, there will be some miraculous
+interposition, as in the case of the widow's cruse, to keep the beverage
+up to proof; while Miss Moodle's liquor preserved throughout the evening
+a weakness of which generous natures scorned to take advantage beyond
+the first tumbler.
+
+At this portion of my career I was dawned upon by Miss Tucker. From
+mature years I look back with a shudder upon the number of parchmenty
+sandwiches which I ate, the reservoirs of lemony water which I drank, in
+order to be in that lovely creature's society. I experienced agonies in
+thinking how much longer it might be before I could get a coat with
+tails, when I calculated how soon she would be putting up her back hair.
+Her eyes were as blue as I was when I thought she liked Briggs; and she
+had a complexion compared with which strawberries and cream were
+nowhere. When she was sent to the piano, to show people what the Moodle
+system could do in the way of a musical education, I fell into a
+cataleptic state and floated off upon a flood of harmony. Miss Moodle
+and her mits, self and lemon kids, even the sleepless eye of Barker,
+watching for an indiscretion, upon the strength of which he might
+defensibly send somebody to bed the next Saturday afternoon, all
+vanished from before me, swallowed up in a mild glory, which contained
+but two objects,--an angel with low neck and short sleeves, and an
+insensate hippopotamus of a piano, which did not wriggle all over with
+ecstasy when her white fingers tickled him.
+
+At such moments I would gladly have gone down on all fours, and had a
+key-board mortised into my side at any expense of personal torture, if
+Miss Tucker could only have played a piece on me, and herself been
+conscious of the chords she was awakening inside my jacket. I loved her
+to that degree that my hair never seemed brushed enough when I beheld
+her; and I quite spoiled the shape of my best boots through an elevation
+of the instep, caused by putting a rolled-up pair of stockings inside
+each heel, to approximate the manly stature, at our bi-monthly meetings.
+Even her friend, Miss Crickey, a mealy-faced little girl, with saffron
+hair, who had been pushed by Miss Moodle so far into the higher
+branches, that she had a look of being perpetually frightened to death
+with the expectation of hearing them crack and let her down from a
+great height,--seemed beautiful to me from the mere fact of daily
+breathing the same air with such an angel, sharing her liquorice-stick,
+and borrowing her sweet little thimble.
+
+I had other reasons for prejudice in Miss Crickey's favor. She was the
+only person to whom I could talk freely regarding the depth of my
+passion for Miss Tucker. Not even to the object of that tremendous
+feeling could I utter a syllable which seemed in any way adequate. With
+an overpowering consciousness how ridiculous it was, and not only so,
+but how far from original, I could give her papers of lemon
+Jackson-balls, hinting simultaneously that, though plump as her cheeks,
+they were not half so sweet; and through a figure, whose correct name I
+have since learned to be periphrasis, I could suggest how much my soul
+yearned to expire on her ruby lips, by asking if she had ever played
+doorkeeper; regretting that the atmosphere of refinement and
+intellectuality did not admit of that healthful recreation at Moodle's,
+and begging her to guess whom I would call out if I were doorkeeper
+myself. When she opened her blue eyes innocently, and said, "Miss
+Crickey?" the intimation was rejected with a melancholy
+dissatisfaction, which would have been disdain but for the character of
+my feelings to its source. And when, on my pressing her for the name of
+the favored mortal whom she would call out if she were doorkeeper, she
+slyly dropped her eyes and asked if Briggs sounded any thing like it, I
+savagely refused to consider the proposition at all, and for the rest of
+the evening ate sandwiches to that degree I wonder my life was not
+despaired of, and fled for relief to the lemony bowl. The result of this
+mad vortex having been colic and calomel, after my return to Barker's on
+that evening, I foreswore such dangerous excesses at the next
+bi-monthly; but putting a larger pair of stockings in each boot-heel, to
+impress Miss Tucker with a sense of what she had lost, I devoted myself
+during the earlier part of the evening to a growing young woman, of the
+name of Wagstaff, considerably older than myself and runing straight up
+and down from whatever side one might contemplate her. Her conversation
+was not entertaining, unless from the Chinese point of view, which, I
+understand, distinctly favors monosyllables, and she giggled at me so
+persistently that I feared Miss Tucker would think I must be making
+myself ridiculous; but, on her being sent to the piano, I stood and
+turned over her music with a consciousness that if I ever looked
+impressive it was then. All this I did in the effort to seem gay,
+although my heart was breaking. I had no comfort on earth save the
+thought that I had been brutal to Briggs, and that he sat in an obscure
+corner of the room among some little girls in Long Division, hiding,
+behind an assistant teacher's skirts, the whitey-brown toe which my
+blacking-brush refused to refresh, while I bore my grief upon a pair of
+new boots plentifully provided with squeak-leather. When Miss Tucker
+slipped a little piece of paper into my hand, as I made a hollow show of
+passing her the sandwiches, I came very near dropping the plate; and
+when I had a chance to open it unobserved, and read the words, "Are you
+mad with me?" I could not occupy my cold and dreary pinnacle a moment
+longer, but sought an early opportunity of squeezing her hand two seats
+behind the voluminous asylum of Briggs's toes, and whispering, slightly
+confused by intensity of feeling, that if I had done any thing I was
+sorry for, I was willing to be forgiven. From that moment I was Miss
+Tucker's slave. Oh, woman, woman! The string on which you play us is as
+long as life; it ties your baby-bib; it laces your queenly bodice; and
+on its slenderest tag we dangle everywhere!--_Little Briggs and I._
+(_From Little Brother and Other Genre Pictures_.)
+
+
+SELECTIONS FROM A BRACE OF BOYS.
+
+I am a bachelor uncle. That, as a mere fact, might happen to anybody;
+but I am a bachelor uncle by internal fitness. I am one essentially,
+just as I am an individual of the Caucasian division of the human race;
+and if, through untoward circumstances,--which Heaven forbid,--I should
+lose my present position, I shouldn't be surprised if you saw me out in
+the _Herald_ under "Situations Wanted--Males." Thanks to a marrying
+tendency in the rest of my family, I have now little need to advertise,
+all the business being thrown into my way which a single member of my
+profession can attend to....
+
+I meander, like a desultory, placid river of an old bachelor as I am,
+through the flowery mead of several nurseries. I am detained by all the
+little roots that run down into me to drink happiness, but I linger
+longest among the children of my sister Lu.
+
+Lu married Mr. Lovegrove. He is a merchant, retired with a fortune
+amassed by the old-fashioned, slow processes of trade, and regards the
+mercantile life of the present day only as so much greed and gambling
+Christianly baptized.... Lu is my favorite sister; Lovegrove an
+unusually good article of brother-in-law and I cannot say that any of my
+nieces and nephews interest me more than their two children, Daniel and
+Billy, who are more unlike than words can paint them. They are far apart
+in point of years; Daniel is twenty-two, Billy eleven. I was reminded of
+this fact the other day by Billy, as he stood between my legs, scowling
+at his book of sums.
+
+"'A boy has eighty-five turnips, and gives his sister thirty,'--pretty
+present for a girl, isn't it?" said Billy, with an air of supreme
+contempt. "Could _you_ stand such stuff,--say?"
+
+I put on my instructive face and answered,--
+
+"Well, my dear Billy, you know that arithmetic is necessary to you if
+you mean to be an industrious man and succeed in business. Suppose your
+parents were to lose all their property, what would become of them
+without a little son who could make money and keep accounts?"
+
+"Oh," said Billy, with surprise. "Hasn't father got enough stamps to
+see him through?"
+
+"He has now, I hope; but people don't always keep them. Suppose they
+should go by some accident, when your father was too old to make any
+more stamps for himself?"
+
+"You haven't thought of brother Daniel--"
+
+True; for nobody ever had, in connection with the active employments of
+life.
+
+"No, Billy," I replied, "I forgot him; but then, you know, Daniel is
+more of a student than a business man, and--"
+
+"O Uncle Teddy! you don't think I mean he'd support them? I meant I'd
+have to take care of father and mother, and him too, when they'd all got
+to be old people together. Just think! I'm eleven, and he's twenty-two
+so he is just twice as old as I am. How old are you?"
+
+"Forty, Billy, last August."
+
+"Well, you aren't so awful old, and when I get to be as old as you,
+Daniel will be eighty. Seth Kendall's grandfather isn't more than that,
+and he has to be fed with a spoon, and a nurse puts him to bed, and
+wheels him round in a chair like a baby. That takes the stamps, I bet!
+Well, I'll tell you how I'll keep my accounts; I'll have a stick, like
+Robinson Crusoe, and every time I make a toadskin I'll gouge a piece out
+of one side of the stick, and every time I spend one I'll gouge a piece
+out of the other."
+
+"Spend a _what_?" said the gentle and astonished voice of my sister Lu,
+who, unperceived, had slipped into the room.
+
+"A toadskin, ma," replied Billy, shutting up Colburn with a farewell
+glance of contempt.
+
+"Dear, dear! Where does the boy learn such horrid words?"
+
+"Why, ma, don't you know what a toadskin is? Here's one," said Billy,
+drawing a dingy five-cent stamp from his pocket. "And don't I wish I had
+lots of 'em!"
+
+"Oh!" sighed his mother, "to think I should have a child so addicted to
+slang! How I wish he were like Daniel!"
+
+"Well, mother," replied Billy, "if you wanted two boys just alike you'd
+oughter had twins. There ain't any use of my trying to be like Daniel
+now, when he's got eleven years the start. Whoop! There's a dog-fight;
+hear 'em! It's Joe Casey's dog,--I know his bark!"
+
+With these words my nephew snatched his Glengarry bonnet from the table
+and bolted downstairs to see the fun.
+
+"What will become of him?" said Lu, hopelessly; "he has no taste for any
+thing but rough play; and then such language as he uses! Why _isn't_ he
+like Daniel?"
+
+"I suppose because his Maker never repeats himself. Even twins often
+possess strongly marked individualities. Don't you think it would be a
+good plan to learn Billy better before you try to teach him? If you do,
+you'll make something as good of him as Daniel though it will be rather
+different from that model."
+
+"Remember, Ned, that you never did like Daniel as well as you do Billy.
+But we all know the proverb about old maid's daughters and old
+bachelor's sons. I wish you had Billy for a month,--then you'd see."
+
+"I'm not sure that I'd do any better than you. I might err as much in
+other directions But I'd try to start right by acknowledging that he was
+a new problem, not to be worked without finding out the value of X in
+his particular instance. The formula which solves one boy will no more
+solve the next one than the rule-of-three will solve a question in
+calculus,--or, to rise into your sphere, than the receipt for
+one-two-three-four cake will conduct you to a successful issue through
+plum-pudding."
+
+I excel in metaphysical discussion, and was about giving further
+elaboration to my favorite idea, when the door burst open. Master Billy
+came tumbling in with a torn jacket, a bloody nose, the trace of a few
+tears in his eyes, and the mangiest of cur dogs in his hands.
+
+"Oh my! my!! my!!!" exclaimed his mother.
+
+"Don't you get scared, ma!" cried Billy, smiling a stern smile of
+triumph; "I smashed the nose off him! He wont sass me again for nothing
+_this_ while! Uncle Teddy, d'ye know it wasn't a dog-fight, after all?
+There was that nasty, good-for-nothing Joe Casey, 'n Patsy Grogan, and a
+lot of bad boys from Mackerelville; and they'd caught this poor little
+ki-oodle and tied a tin pot to his tail, and were trying to set Joe's
+dog on him, though he's ten times littler."
+
+"You naughty, naughty boy! How did you suppose your mother'd feel to see
+you playing with those ragamuffins?"
+
+"Yes, I _played_ 'em! I polished 'em,--that's the play I did! Says I,
+'Put down that poor little pup; ain't you ashamed of yourself, Patsy
+Grogan?' 'I guess you don't know who I am,' says he. That's the way they
+always say, Uncle Teddy, to make a fellow think they're some awful great
+fighters. So says I again, 'Well, you put down that dog, or I'll show
+you who I am'; and when he held on, I let him have. Then he dropped the
+pup, and as I stooped to pick it up he gave me one on the bugle."
+
+"_Bugle_! Oh! oh! oh!"
+
+"The rest pitched in to help him; but I grabbed the pup, and while I was
+trying to give as good as I got,--only a fellow can't do it well with
+only one hand, Uncle Teddy,--up came a policeman, and the whole crowd
+ran away. So I got the dog safe, and here he is!"
+
+With that Billy set down his "ki-oodle," bid farewell to every fear, and
+wiped his bleeding nose. The unhappy beast slunk back between the legs
+of his preserver and followed him out of the room, as Lu, with an
+expression of maternal despair, bore him away for the correction of his
+dilapidated raiment and depraved associations. I felt such sincere pride
+in this young Mazzini of the dog-nation, that I was vexed at Lu for
+bestowing on him reproof instead of congratulation; but she was not the
+only conservative who fails to see a good cause and a heroic heart
+under a bloody nose and torn jacket. I resolved that if Billy was
+punished he should have his recompense before long in an extra holiday
+at Barnum's or the Hippotheatron.
+
+You already have some idea of my other nephew, if you have noticed that
+none of us, not even that habitual disrespecter of dignities, Billy,
+ever called him Dan. It would have seemed as incongruous as to call
+Billy William. He was one of those youths who never gave their parents a
+moment's uneasiness; who never had to have their wills broken, and never
+forget to put on their rubbers or take an umbrella. In boyhood he was
+intended for a missionary. Had it been possible for him to go to
+Greenland's icy mountains without catching cold, or India's coral
+strand, without getting bilious, his parents would have carried out
+their pleasing dream of contributing him to the world's evangelization.
+Lu and Mr. Lovegrove had no doubt that he would have been greatly
+blessed if he could have stood it....
+
+Both she and his father always encouraged old manners in him. I think
+they took such pride in raising a peculiarly pale boy as a gardener
+does in getting a nice blanch on his celery, and so long as he was not
+absolutely sick, the graver he was the better. He was a sensitive plant,
+a violet by a mossy stone, and all that sort of thing....
+
+At the time I introduce Billy, both Lu and her husband were much
+changed. They had gained a great deal in width of view and liberality of
+judgment. They read Dickens, and Thackeray with avidity; went now and
+then to the opera; proposed to let Billy take a quarter at Dodworth's;
+had statues in their parlor without any thought of shame at their lack
+of petticoats, and did multitudes of things which, in their early
+married life, they would have considered shocking.... They would greatly
+have liked to see Daniel shine in society. Of his erudition they were
+proud even to worship. The young man never had any business, and his
+father never seemed to think of giving him any, knowing, as Billy would
+say, that he had stamps enough to "see him through." If Daniel liked,
+his father would have endowed a professorship in some college and given
+him the chair; but that would have taken him away from his own room and
+the family physician.
+
+Daniel knew how much his parents wished him to make a figure in the
+world, and only blamed himself for his failure, magnanimously forgetting
+that they had crushed out the faculties which enable a man to mint the
+small change of every-day society, in the exclusive cultivation of such
+as fit him for smelting its ponderous ingots. With that merciful
+blindness which alone prevents all our lives from becoming a horror of
+nerveless self-reproach, his parents were equally unaware of their share
+in the harm done him, when they ascribed to a delicate organization the
+fact that, at an age when love runs riot in all healthy blood, he could
+not see a Balmoral without his cheeks rivalling the most vivid stripe in
+it. They flattered themselves that he would outgrow his bashfulness; but
+Daniel had no such hope, and frequently confided in me that he thought
+he should never marry at all.
+
+About two hours after Billy's disappearance under his mother's convoy,
+the defender of the oppressed returned to my room bearing the dog under
+his arm. His cheeks shone with washing like a pair of waxy spitzenbergs,
+and other indignities had been offered him to the extent of the brush
+and comb. He also had a whole jacket on....
+
+Billy and I also obtained permission to go out together and be gone the
+entire afternoon. We put Crab on a comfortable bed of rags in an old
+shoe-box, and then strolled hand-in-hand across that most delightful of
+New York breathing-places--Stuyvesant Square.
+
+"Uncle Teddy," exclaimed Billy, with ardor, "I wish I could do something
+to show you how much I think of you for being so good to me. I don't
+know how. Would it make you happy if I was to learn a hymn for you,--a
+smashing big hymn--six verses, long metre, and no grumbling?"
+
+"No, Billy; you make me happy enough just by being a good boy."
+
+"Oh, Uncle Teddy!" replied Billy, decidedly, "I'm afraid I can't do it.
+I've tried so often, and I always make such an awful mess of it." ...
+
+We now got into a Broadway stage going down, and being unable, on
+account of the noise, to converse further upon those spiritual conflicts
+of Billy's which so much interested me, amused ourselves with looking
+out until just as we reached the Astor House, when he asked me where we
+were going.
+
+"Where do you guess?" said I.
+
+He cast a glance through the front window, and his face became
+irradiated. Oh, there's nothing like the simple, cheap luxury of
+pleasing a child, to create sunshine enough for the chasing away of the
+bluest adult devils.
+
+"We're going to Barnum's!" said Billy, involuntarily clapping his hands.
+
+So we were; and, much as stuck-up people pretend to look down on the
+place, I frequently am. Not only so, but I always see that class largely
+represented there when I do go. To be sure, they always make believe
+that they only come to amuse the children, or because they've country
+cousins visiting them, and never fail to refer to the vulgar set one
+finds there, and the fact of the animals smelling like any thing but
+Jockey Club; yet I notice that after they've been in the hall three
+minutes they're as much interested as any of the people they come to
+pooh-pooh, and only put on the high-bred air when they fancy some of
+their own class are looking at them. I boldly acknowledge that I go
+because I like it. I am especially happy, to be sure, if I have a child
+along to go into ecstasies, and give me a chance, by asking questions,
+for the exhibition of that fund of information which is said to be one
+of my chief charms in the social circle, and on several occasions has
+led that portion of the public immediately about the Happy Family into
+the erroneous impression that I was Mr. Barnum, explaining his five
+hundred thousand curiosities.
+
+On the present occasion, we found several visitors of the better class
+in the room devoted to the aquarium. Among these was a young lady,
+apparently about nineteen, in a tight-fitting basque of black velvet,
+which showed her elegant figure to fine advantage, a skirt of garnet
+silk, looped up over a pretty Balmoral, and the daintiest imaginable
+pair of kid walking-boots. Her height was a trifle over the medium; her
+eyes a soft, expressive brown, shaded by masses of hair which exactly
+matched their color, and, at that rat-and-miceless day fell in such
+graceful abandon as to show at once that nature was the only maid who
+crimped their waves into them. Her complexion was rosy with health and
+sympathetic enjoyment; her mouth was faultless, her nose sensitive, her
+manners full of refinement, and her voice musical as a wood-robin's,
+when she spoke to the little boy of six at her side, to whom she was
+revealing the palace of the great show-king. Billy and I were
+flattening our noses against the abode of the balloon-fish, and
+determining whether he looked most like a horse-chestnut burr or a ripe
+cucumber, when his eyes and my own simultaneously fell on the child and
+lady, In a moment, to Billy, the balloon-fish was as though he had not
+been.
+
+"That's a pretty little boy!" said I. And then I asked Billy one of
+those senseless routine questions which must make children look at us,
+regarding the scope of our intellects very much as we look at Bushmen.
+
+"How would you like to play with him?"
+
+"Him!" replied Billy, scornfully, "that's his first pair of boots; see
+him pull up his little breeches to show the red tops to 'em! But,
+crackey! isn't _she_ a smasher!"
+
+After that we visited the wax figures and the sleepy snakes, the learned
+seal and the glass-blowers. Whenever we passed from one room into
+another, Billy could be caught looking anxiously to see if the pretty
+girl and child were coming, too.
+
+Time fails me to describe how Billy was lost in astonishment at the
+Lightning Calculator,--wanted me to beg the secret of that prodigy for
+him to do his sums by,--finally thought he had discovered it, and
+resolved to keep his arm whirling all the time he studied his arithmetic
+lesson the next morning. Equally inadequate is it to relate in full how
+he became so confused among the wax-works that he pinched the solemnest
+showman's legs to see if he was real, and perplexed the beautiful
+Circassian to the verge of idiocy by telling her he had read all about
+the way they sold girls like her in his geography.
+
+We had reached the stairs to that subterranean chamber in which the
+Behemoth of Holy Writ was wallowing about without a thought of the
+dignity which one expects from a canonical character. Billy had always
+languished upon his memories of this diverting beast, and I stood ready
+to see him plunge headlong the moment that he read the sign-board at the
+head of the stairs. When he paused and hesitated there, not seeming at
+all anxious to go down till he saw the pretty girl and the child
+following after,--a sudden intuition flashed across me. Could it be
+possible that Billy was caught in that vortex which whirled me down at
+ten years,--a little boy's first love?
+
+We were lingering about the elliptical basin, and catching occasional
+glimpses between bubbles of a vivified hair trunk of monstrous compass,
+whose knobby lid opened at one end and showed a red morocco lining, when
+the pretty girl, in leaning over to point out the rising monster,
+dropped into the water one of her little gloves, and the swash made by
+the hippopotamus drifted it close under Billy's hand. Either in play or
+as a mere coincidence the animal followed it. The other children about
+the tank screamed and started back as he bumped his nose against the
+side; but Billy manfully bent down and grabbed the glove not an inch
+from one of his big tusks, then marched around the tank and presented it
+to the lady with a chivalry of manner in one of his years quite
+surprising.
+
+"That's a real nice boy,--you said so, didn't you, Lottie?--and I wish
+he'd come and play with me," said the little fellow by the young lady's
+side, as Billy turned away, gracefully thanked, to come back to me with
+his cheeks roseate with blushes.
+
+As he heard this, Billy idled along the edge of the tank for a moment,
+then faced about and said,--
+
+"P'raps I will some day,--where do you live?"
+
+"I live on East Seventeenth street with papa,--and Lottie stays there,
+too, now,--she's my cousin. Where d' you live?"
+
+"Oh, I live close by,--right on that big green square, where I guess the
+nurse takes you once in a while," said Billy, patronizingly. Then,
+looking up pluckily at the young lady, he added, "I never saw you out
+there."
+
+"No; Jimmy's papa has only been in his new house a little while, and
+I've just come to visit him."
+
+"Say, will you come and play with me some time?" chimed in the
+inextinguishable Jimmy. "I've got a cooking-stove,--for real fire,--and
+blocks and a ball with a string."
+
+Billy, who belonged to a club for the practice of the great American
+game, and was what A. Ward would call the most superior battist among
+the I.G.B.B.C., or "Infant Giants," smiled from that altitude upon
+Jimmy, but promised to go and play with him the next Saturday afternoon.
+
+Late that evening, after we had got home and dined, as I sat in my room
+over Pickwick with a sedative cigar, a gentle knock at the door told of
+Daniel. I called "Come in!" and entering with a slow, dejected air, he
+sat down by my fire. For ten minutes he remained silent, though
+occasionally looking up as if about to speak, then dropping his head
+again to ponder on the coals. Finally I laid down Dickens, and spoke
+myself.
+
+"You don't seem well to-night, Daniel?"
+
+"I don't feel very well, uncle."
+
+"What's the matter, my boy?"
+
+"Oh-ah, I don't know. That is, I wish I knew how to tell you."
+
+I studied him for a few moments with kindly curiosity, then answered,--
+
+"Perhaps I can save you the trouble by cross-examining it out of you.
+Let's try the method of elimination. I know that you're not harassed by
+any economical considerations, for you've all the money you want; and I
+know that ambition doesn't trouble you, for your tastes are scholarly.
+This narrows down the investigation of your symptoms--listlessness,
+general dejection, and all--to three causes,--dyspepsia, religious
+conflicts, love. Now, is your digestion awry?"
+
+"No, sir; good as usual. I'm not melanancholy on religion, and"--
+
+"You don't tell me you're in love?"
+
+"Well--yes--I suppose that's about it, Uncle Teddy."
+
+I took a long breath to recover from my astonishment at this
+unimaginable revelation, then said:
+
+"Is your feeling returned?"
+
+"I really don't know, uncle; I don't believe it is. I don't see how it
+can be. I never did any thing to make her love me. What is there in me
+to love? I've borne nothing for her,--that is, nothing that could do her
+any good,--though I've endured on her account, I may say, anguish. So,
+look at it any way you please, I neither am, do, nor suffer any thing
+that can get a woman's love."
+
+"Oh, you man of learning! Even in love you tote your grammar along with
+you, and arrange a divine passion under the active, passive, and
+neuter!"
+
+Daniel smiled faintly.
+
+"You've no idea, Uncle Teddy, that you are twitting on facts; but you
+hit the truth there; indeed you do. If she were a Greek or Latin woman,
+I could talk Anacreon or Horace to her. If women only understood the
+philosophy of the flowers as well as they do the poetry"--
+
+"Thank God they don't, Daniel!" sighed I, devoutly.
+
+"Never mind,--in that case I could entrance her for hours, talking
+about the grounds of difference between Linnæus and Jussieu. Women like
+the star business, they say,--and I could tell her where all the
+constellations are; but sure as I tried to get off any sentiment about
+them, I'd break down and make myself ridiculous. But what earthly chance
+would the greatest philosopher that ever lived have with the woman he
+loved, if he depended for her favor on his ability to analyze her
+bouquet or tell her when she might look out for the next occultation of
+Orion? I can't talk bread-and-butter talk. I can't do any thing that
+makes a man even tolerable to a woman!"
+
+"I hope you don't mean that nothing but bread-and-butter talk is
+tolerable to a woman!"
+
+"No; but it's necessary to some extent,--at any rate the ability is,--in
+order to succeed in society; and it's in society men first meet and
+strike women. And oh, Uncle Teddy! I'm such a fish out of water in
+society!--such a dreadful floundering fish! When I see her dancing
+gracefully as a swan swims, and feel that fellows, like little Jack
+Mankyn, who 'don't know twelve times,' can dance to her perfect
+admiration; when I see that she likes ease of manners,--and all sorts
+of men without an idea in their heads have that,--while I turn all
+colors when I speak to her, and am clumsy, and abrupt, and abstracted,
+and bad at repartee,--Uncle Teddy! sometimes (though it seems so
+ungrateful to father and mother, who have spent such pains for
+me)--sometimes, do you know, it seems to me as if I'd exchange all I've
+ever learned for the power to make a good appearance before her!"
+
+"Daniel, my boy, it's too much a matter of reflection with you! A woman
+is not to be taken by laying plans. If you love the lady (whose name I
+don't ask you, because I know you'll tell me as soon as you think best),
+you must seek her companionship until you're well enough acquainted with
+her to have her regard you as something different from the men whom she
+meets merely in society, and judge your qualities by another standard
+than that she applies to them. If she's a sensible girl (and God forbid
+you should marry her otherwise), she knows that people can't always be
+dancing, or holding fans, or running after orange-ice. If she's a girl
+capable of appreciating your best points (and woe to you if you marry a
+girl who can't!), she'll find them out upon closer intimacy, and, once
+found, they'll a hundred times outweigh all brilliant advantages kept in
+the show-case of fellows who have nothing on the shelves. When this
+comes about, you will pop the question unconsciously, and, to adapt
+Milton, she'll drop into your lap 'gathered--not harshly plucked.'"
+
+"I know that's sensible, Uncle Teddy, and I'll try. Let me tell you the
+sacredest of secrets,--regularly every day of my life I send her a
+little poem fastened round the prettiest bouquet I can get at Hanft's."
+
+"Does she know who sends them?'"
+
+"She can't have any idea. The German boy that takes them knows not a
+word of English except her name and address. You'll forgive me, uncle,
+for not mentioning her name yet? You see she may despise or hate me some
+day when she knows who it is that has paid her these attentions; and
+then I'd like to be able to feel that at least I've never hurt her by
+any absurd connection with myself."
+
+"Forgive you? Nonsense! The feeling does your heart infinite credit,
+though a little counsel with your head would show you that your only
+absurdity is self-depreciation."
+
+Daniel bid me good-night. As I put out my cigar and went to bed, my
+mind reverted to the dauntless little Hotspur who had spent the
+afternoon with me and reversed his mother's wish, thinking,--
+
+"Oh, if Daniel were more like Billy!"
+
+It was always Billy's habit to come and sit with me while I smoked my
+after-breakfast cigar, but the next morning did not see him enter my
+room till St. George's hands pointed to a quarter of nine.
+
+"Well, Billy Boy Blue, come blow your horn; what haystack have you been
+under till this time of day? We sha'n't have a minute to look over our
+spelling together, and I know a boy who's going in for promotion next
+week. Have you had your breakfast, and taken care of Crab?"
+
+"Yes, sir; but I didn't feel like getting up this morning."
+
+"Are you sick?"
+
+"No-o-o--it isn't that; but you'll laugh at me if I tell you."
+
+"Indeed I won't, Billy!"
+
+"Well,"--his voice dropped to a whisper, and he stole close to my
+side,--"I had such a nice dream about _her_ just the last thing before
+the bell rang; and when I woke up I felt so queer,--so kinder good and
+kinder bad,--and I wanted to see her so much, that if I hadn't been a
+big boy I believe I should have blubbered. I tried ever so much to go to
+sleep and see her again; but the more I tried the more I couldn't. After
+all, I had to get up without it, though I didn't want any breakfast, and
+only ate two buckwheat cakes, when I always eat six, you know, Uncle
+Teddy. Can you keep a secret?"
+
+"Yes, dear, so you couldn't get it out of me if you were to shake me
+upside-down like a savings-bank."
+
+"Oh, ain't you mean! That was when I was small I did that. I'll tell you
+the secret, though,--that girl and I are going to get married. I mean to
+ask her the first chance I get. Oh, isn't she a smasher!"
+
+"My dear Billy, sha'n't you wait a little while to see if you always
+like her as well as you do now? Then, too, you'll be older."
+
+"I'm old enough, Uncle Teddy, and I love her dearly! I'm as old as the
+kings of France used to be when they got married,--I read it in Abbott's
+histories. But there's the clock striking nine! I must run or I shall
+get a tardy mark, and, perhaps, she'll want to see my certificate
+sometimes."
+
+So saying, he kissed me on the cheek and set off for school as fast as
+his legs could carry him. O Love, omnivorous Love, that sparest neither
+the dotard leaning on his staff nor the boy with pantaloons buttoning on
+his jacket,--omnipotent Love, that, after parents and teachers have
+failed, in one instant can make Billy try to become a good boy!
+
+With both of my nephews hopelessly enamored, and myself the confidant of
+both, I had my hands full. Daniel was generally dejected and
+distrustful; Billy buoyant and jolly. Daniel found it impossible to
+overcome his bashfulness; was spontaneous only in sonnets, brilliant
+only in bouquets. Billy was always coming to me with pleasant news, told
+in his slangy New-York boy vernacular. One day he would exclaim,--"Oh,
+I'm getting on prime! I got such a smile off her this morning as I went
+by the window!" Another day he wanted counsel how to get a valentine to
+her,--because it was too big to shove in a lamp-post, and she might
+catch him if he left it on the steps, rang the bell, and ran away.
+Daniel wrote his own valentine; but, despite its originality, that
+document gave him no such comfort as Billy got from twenty-five cents'
+worth of embossed paper, pink cupids, and doggerel. Finally, Billy
+announced to me that he had been to play with Jimmy, and got introduced
+to his girl.
+
+Shortly after this Lu gave what they call "a little company,"--not a
+party, but a reunion of forty or fifty people with whom the family were
+well acquainted, several of them living in our immediate neighborhood.
+There was a goodly proportion of young folk, and there was to be dancing
+but the music was limited to a single piano played by the German exile
+usual on such occasions, and the refreshments did not rise to the
+splendor of a costly supper. This kind of compromise with fashionable
+gayety was wisely deemed by Lu the best method of introducing Daniel to
+the _beau monde_,--a push given the timid eaglet by the maternal bird,
+with a soft tree-top between him and the vast expanse of society. How
+simple was the entertainment may be inferred from the fact that Lu felt
+somewhat discomposed when she got a note from one of her guests asking
+leave to bring along her niece, who was making her a few weeks' visit.
+As a matter of course, however, she returned answer to bring the young
+lady and welcome.
+
+Daniel's dressing-room having been given up to the gentlemen I invited
+him to make his toilet in mine, and, indeed, wanting him to create a
+favorable impression, became his valet _pro tem._, tying his cravat, and
+teasing the divinity-student look out of his side-hair. My little dandy
+Billy came in for another share of attention, and when I managed to
+button his jacket for him so that it showed his shirt-studs "like a
+man's," Count d'Orsay could not have felt a more pleasing sense of his
+sufficiency for all the demands of the gay world.
+
+When we reached the parlor we found Pa and Ma Lovegrove already
+receiving. About a score of guests had arrived. Most of them were old
+married couples, which, after paying their devoirs, fell in two like
+unriveted scissors,--the gentlemen finding a new pivot in pa and the
+ladies in ma, where they mildly opened and shut upon such questions as
+severally concerned them, such as "the way gold closed," and "how the
+children were."
+
+Besides the old married people there were several old young men of
+distinctly hopeless and unmarried aspect, who, having nothing in common
+with the other class, nor sufficient energy of character to band
+themselves for mutual protection, hovered dejectedly about the arch
+pillars, or appeared to be considering whether, on the whole, it would
+not be feasible and best to sit down on the centre-table. These
+subsisted upon such crumbs of comfort as Lu could get an occasional
+chance to throw them by rapid sorties of conversation,--became
+galvanically active the moment they were punched up, and fell flat the
+moment the punching was remitted. I did all I could for them, but,
+having Daniel in tow, dared not sail too near the edge of the Doldrums,
+lest he should drop into sympathetic stagnation and be taken
+preternaturally bashful, with his sails all aback, just as I wanted to
+carry him gallantly into action with some clipper-built cruiser of a
+nice young lady. Finally, Lu bethought herself of that last plank of
+drowning conversationists, the photograph album. All the dejected young
+men made for it at once, some reaching it just as they were about to
+sink for the last time, but all getting a grip on it somehow, and
+staying there in company with other people's babies whom they didn't
+know, and celebrities whom they knew to death, until, one by one, they
+either stranded upon a motherly dowager by the Fire-place Shoals, or
+were rescued from the Sofa Reef by some gallant wrecker of a
+strong-minded young lady, with a view to taking salvage out of them in
+the German.
+
+Besides these, were already arrived a dozen nice little boys and girls,
+who had been invited to make it pleasant for Billy. I had to remind him
+of the fact that they were his guests, for, in comparison with the queen
+of his affections, they were in danger of being despised by him as small
+fry.
+
+The younger ladies and gentlemen,--those who had fascinations to
+disport, or were in the habit of disporting what they considered such,
+were probably still at home consulting the looking-glass until that
+oracle should announce the auspicious moment for their setting forth.
+
+Daniel was in conversation with a perfect godsend of a girl, who
+understood Latin and had begun Greek. Billy was taking a moment's
+vacation from his boys and girls, busy with "Old Maid" in the
+extension-room, and whispering with his hand in mine, "Oh, don't I wish
+_she_ were here!" when a fresh invoice of ladies, just unpacked from the
+dressing-room in all the airy elegance of evening costume, floated
+through the door. I heard Lu say,--
+
+"Ah, Mrs. Rumbullion! Happy to see your niece, too. How d'ye do, Miss
+Pilgrim?"
+
+At this last word Billy jumped as if he had been shot, and the bevy of
+ladies opening about sister Lu disclosed the charming face and figure of
+the pretty girl we had met at Barnum's.
+
+Billy's countenance rapidly changed from astonishment to joy.
+
+"Isn't that splendid, Uncle Teddy? Just as I was wishing it! It's just
+like the fairy books!" and, rushing up to the party of new-comers, "My
+dear Lottie!" cried he, "if I'd only known you were coming I'd have gone
+after you!"
+
+As he caught her by the hand I was pleased to see her soft eyes brighten
+with gratification at his enthusiasm, but my sister Lu looked on
+naturally with astonishment in every feature.
+
+"Why, Billy!" said she, "you ought not to call a strange young lady'
+_Lottie_!' Miss Pilgrim, you must excuse my wild boy."
+
+"And you must excuse my mother, Lottie," said Billy, affectionately
+patting Miss Pilgrim's rose kid, "for calling you a strange young lady.
+You are not strange at all,--you're just as nice a girl as there is."
+
+"There are no excuses necessary," said Miss Pilgrim, with a bewitching
+little laugh. "Billy and I know each other intimately well, Mrs.
+Lovegrove; and I confess that when I heard the lady aunt had been
+invited to visit was his mother, I felt all the more willing to infringe
+etiquette this evening by coming where I had no previous introduction."
+
+"Don't you care!" said Billy, encouragingly. "I'll introduce you to
+every one of our family; I know 'em if you don't."
+
+At this moment I came up as Billy's reinforcement, and fearing lest in
+his enthusiasm he might forget the canon of society which introduces a
+gentleman to a lady, not the lady to him, I ventured to suggest it
+delicately by saying,--
+
+"Billy, will you grant me the favor of a presentation to Miss Pilgrim?"
+
+"In a minute, Uncle Teddy," answered Billy, considerably lowering his
+voice. "The older people first"; and after this reproof I was left to
+wait in the cold until he had gone through the ceremony of introducing
+to the young lady his father and his mother.
+
+Billy, who had now assumed entire guardianship of Miss Pilgrim, with an
+air of great dignity intrusted her to my care and left us promenading
+while he went in search of Daniel. I myself looked in vain for that
+youth, whom I had not seen since the entrance of the last comers. Miss
+Pilgrim and I found a congenial common ground in Billy, whom she spoke
+of as one of the most delightfully original boys she had ever met; in
+fact, altogether the most fascinating young gentleman she had seen in
+New York society. You may be sure it wasn't Billy's left ear which
+burned when I made my responses.
+
+In five minutes he reappeared to announce, in a tone of disappointment,
+that he could find Daniel nowhere. He could see a light through his
+keyhole, but the door was locked and he could get no admittance. Just
+then Lu came up to present a certain--no, an uncertain--young man of the
+fleet stranded on parlor furniture earlier in the evening. To Lu's great
+astonishment Miss Pilgrim asked Billy's permission to leave him. It was
+granted with all the courtesy of a _preux chevalier_, on the condition,
+readily assented to by the lady, that she should dance one Lancers with
+him during the evening.
+
+"Dear me!" exclaimed Lu, after Billy had gone back like a superior being
+to assist at the childish amusement of his contemporaries, "Would any
+body ever suppose that was our Billy?"
+
+"I should, my dear sister," said I, with proud satisfaction; "but you
+remember I always was just to Billy."
+
+Left free, I went myself to hunt up Daniel. I found his door locked and
+a light shining through the keyhole, as Billy had stated. I made no
+attempt to enter by knocking; but going to my room and opening the
+window next his, leaned out as far as I could, shoved up his sash with
+my cane, and pushed aside his curtain. Such an unusual method of
+communication could not fail to bring him to the window with a rush.
+When he saw me he trembled like a guilty thing, his countenance fell,
+and, no longer able to feign absence, he unlocked his door and let me
+enter by the normal mode.
+
+"Why, Daniel Lovegrove, my nephew, what does this mean? Are you sick?"
+
+"Uncle Edward, I am not sick,--and this means that I am a fool. Even a
+little boy like Billy puts me to shame. I feel humbled to the very dust.
+I wish I'd been a missionary and got massacred by savages. Oh that I'd
+been permitted to wear damp stockings in childhood, or that my mother
+hadn't carried me through the measles! If it weren't wrong to take my
+life into my own hands, I'd open that window, and--and--sit in a draught
+this very evening! Oh, yes! I'm just that bitter! Oh, oh, oh!"
+
+And Daniel paced the floor with strides of frenzy.
+
+"Well, my dear fellow, let's look at the matter calmly a minute. What
+brought on this sudden attack? You seemed doing well enough the first
+ten minutes after we came down. I was only out of your sight long enough
+to speak to the Rumbullion party who had just come in, and when I turned
+around you were gone. Now you are in this fearful condition. What is
+there in the Rumbullions to start you off on such a bender of
+bashfulness as this which I here behold?"
+
+"Rumbullion indeed!" said Daniel. "A hundred Rumbullions could not make
+me feel as I do. But _she_ can shake me into a whirlwind with her little
+finger; and _she_ came with the Rumbullions!"
+
+"What! D'you--Miss Pilgrim?"
+
+"Miss Pilgrim!"
+
+I labored with Daniel for ten minutes, using every encouragement and
+argument I could think of, and finally threatened him that I would
+bring up the whole Rumbullion party, Miss Pilgrim included, telling them
+that he had invited them to look at his conchological cabinet, unless he
+instantly shook the ice out of his manner and accompanied me down
+stairs. This dreadful menace had the desired effect. He knew that I
+would not scruple to fulfil it; and at the same time that it made him
+surrender, it also provoked him with me to a degree which gave his eyes
+and cheeks as fine a glow as I could have wished for the purpose of a
+favorable impression. The stimulus of wrath was good for him, and there
+was little tremor in his knees when he descended the stairs. Well-a-day!
+So Daniel and Billy were rivals!
+
+The latter gentleman met us at the foot of the staircase.
+
+"Oh, there you are, Daniel!" said he, cheerily. "I was just going to
+look after you and Uncle Teddy. We've wanted you for the dances. We've
+had the Lancers twice and three round dances; and I danced the second
+Lancers with Lottie. Now we're going to play some games,--to amuse the
+children, you know," he added, loftily, with the adult gesture of
+pointing his thumb over his shoulder at the extension-room. "Lottie's
+going to play, too; so will you and Daniel, won't you, uncle? Oh, here
+comes Lottie now! This is my brother, Miss Pilgrim,--let me introduce
+him to you. I'm sure you'll like him. There's nothing he don't know."
+
+Miss Pilgrim had just come to the newel-post of the staircase, and, when
+she looked into Daniel's face, blushed like the red, red rose, losing
+her self-possession perceptibly more than Daniel.
+
+The courage of weak warriors and timid gallants mounts as the opposite
+party's falls, and Daniel made out to say, in a firm tone, that it was
+long since he had enjoyed the pleasure of meeting Miss Pilgrim.
+
+"Not since Mrs. Cramcroud's last sociable, I think," replied Miss
+Pilgrim, her cheeks and eyes still playing the tell-tale.
+
+"Oho! so you don't want any introduction!" exclaimed Master Billy. "I
+didn't know you knew each other, Lottie?"
+
+"I have met Mr. Lovegrove in society. Shall we go and join the plays?"
+
+"To be sure we shall!" cried Billy. "You needn't mind,--all the grown
+people are going too."
+
+On entering the parlor we found it as he had said. The guests being
+almost all well acquainted with each other, at the solicitation of jolly
+little Mrs. Bloomingal, sister Lu had consented to make a pleasant
+Christmas kind of time of it, in which everybody was permitted to be
+young again, and romp with the rompiest. We played Blindman's-buff till
+we were tired of that,--Daniel, to Lu's great delight, coming out
+splendidly as Blindman, and evincing such "cheek" in the style he hunted
+down and caught the ladies, as satisfied me that nothing but his
+eyesight stood in the way of his making an audacious figure in the
+world. Then a pretty little girl, Tilly Turtelle, who seemed quite a
+premature flirt, proposed "Door-keeper,"--a suggestion accepted with
+great _éclat_ by all the children, several grown people assenting.
+
+To Billy--quite as much on account of his shining prominence in the
+executive faculties as of his character as host--was committed the duty
+of counting out the first person to be sent into the hall. There were so
+many of us that "Aina-maina-mona-mike" would not go quite round; but,
+with that promptness of expedience which belongs to genius, Billy
+instantly added on, "Intery-mintery-cutery-corn," and the last word of
+the cabalistic formula fell upon me--Edward Balbus. I disappeared into
+the entry amidst peals of happy laughter from both old and young,
+calling, when the door opened again to ask me whom I wanted, for the
+pretty lisping flirt who had proposed the game. After giving me a
+coquettish little chirrup of a kiss, and telling me my beard scratched,
+she bade me, on my return, send out to her "Mithter Billy Lovegrove." I
+obeyed her; my youngest nephew retired; and after a couple of seconds,
+during which Tilly undoubtedly got what she proposed the game for, Billy
+being a great favorite with the little girls, she came back, pouting and
+blushing, to announce that he wanted Miss Pilgrim. That young lady
+showed no mock-modesty, but arose at once, and laughingly went out to
+her youthful admirer, who, as I afterward learned, embraced her
+ardently, and told her he loved her better than any girl in the world.
+As he turned to go back, she told him that he might send to her one of
+her juvenile cousins, Reginald Rumbullion. Now, whether because on this
+youthful Rumbullion's account Billy had suffered the pangs of that most
+terrible passion, jealousy, or from his natural enjoyment of playing
+practical jokes destructive of all dignity in his elders, Billy marched
+into the room, and, having shut the door behind him, paralyzed the
+crowded parlor by an announcement that Mr. Daniel Lovegrove was wanted.
+
+I was standing at his side, and could feel him tremble,--see him turn
+pale.
+
+"Dear me!" he whispered, in a choking voice; "can she mean me?"
+
+"Of course she does," said I. "Who else? Do you hesitate? Surely you
+can't refuse such an invitation from a lady."
+
+"No, I suppose not," said he, mechanically. And amidst much laughter
+from the disinterested, while the faces of Mrs. Rumbullion and his
+mother were spectacles of crimson astonishment, he made his exit
+from the room. Never in my life did I so much long for that
+instrument described by Mr. Samuel Weller,--a pair of patent
+double-million-magnifying microscopes of hextry power, to see
+through a deal door. Instead of this, I had to learn what happened
+only by report.
+
+Lottie Pilgrim was standing under the hall burners with her elbow on the
+newel-post, looking more vividly charming than he had ever seen her
+before at Mrs. Cramcroud's sociable or elsewhere. When startled by the
+apparition of Mr. Daniel Lovegrove instead of the little Rumbullion
+whom she was expecting,--she had no time to exclaim or hide her mounting
+color, none at all to explain to her own mind the mistake that had
+occurred, before his arm was clasped around her waist, and his lips so
+closely pressed to hers, that through her soft thick hair she could feel
+the throbbing of his temples. As for Daniel, he seemed in a walking
+dream, from which he waked to see Miss Pilgrim looking into his eyes
+with utter though not incensed stupefaction,--to stammer,--
+
+"Forgive me! Do forgive me! I thought you were in earnest."
+
+"So I was," she said, tremulously, as soon as she could catch her voice,
+"in sending for my cousin Reginald."
+
+"Oh, dear, what shall I do! Believe me, I was told you wanted me,--let
+me go and explain it to mother,--she'll tell the rest,--I couldn't do
+it,--I'd die of mortification. Oh, that wretched boy Billy!"
+
+On the principle already mentioned, his agitation reassured her.
+
+"Don't try to explain it now,--it may get Billy a scolding. Are there
+any but intimate family friends here this evening?"
+
+"No--I believe--no--I'm sure," replied Daniel, collecting his
+faculties.
+
+"Then I don't mind what they think. Perhaps they'll suppose we've known
+each other long; but we'll arrange it by-and-by. They'll think the more
+of it the longer we stay out here,--hear them laugh! I must run back
+now. I'll send you somebody."
+
+A round of juvenile applause greeted her as she hurried into the parlor,
+and a number of grown people smiled quite musically. Her quick woman-wit
+showed her how to retaliate and divide the embarrassment of the
+occasion. As she passed me she said in an undertone,--"Answer quick!
+Who's that fat lady on the sofa, that laughs so loud?"
+
+"Mrs. Cromwell Craggs," said I, as quietly.
+
+Miss Pilgrim made a satirically low courtesy, and spoke in a modest but
+distinct voice,--"I really must be excused for asking. I'm a stranger,
+you know; but is there such a lady here as Mrs. Craggs,--Mrs. _Cromwell_
+Craggs? For if so, the present doorkeeper would like to see Mrs.
+Cromwell Craggs."
+
+Then came the turn of the fat lady to be laughed at; but out she had to
+go and get kissed like the rest of us.
+
+Before the close of the evening, Billy was made as jealous as his
+parents and I were surprised to see Daniel in close conversation with
+Miss Pilgrim among the geraniums and fuschias of the conservatory. "A
+regular flirtation," said Billy, somewhat indignantly. The conclusion
+they arrived at was, that after all no great harm had been done, and
+that the dear little fellow ought not to be peached on for his fun. If I
+had known at the time how easily they forgave him, I should have
+suspected that the offence Billy had led Daniel into committing was not
+unlikely to be repeated on the offender's own account; but so much as I
+could see showed me that the ice was broken....
+
+--_Little Brother, and Other Genre Pictures_.
+
+
+
+
+THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH.
+
+(BORN, 1836.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A RIVERMOUTH ROMANCE.
+
+
+I.
+
+At five o'clock in the morning of the tenth of July, 1860, the front
+door of a certain house on Anchor Street, in the ancient seaport town of
+Rivermouth, might have been observed to open with great caution. This
+door, as the least imaginative reader may easily conjecture, did not
+open itself. It was opened by Miss Margaret Callaghan, who immediately
+closed it softly behind her, paused for a few seconds with an
+embarrassed air on the stone step, and then, throwing a furtive glance
+up at the second-story windows, passed hastily down the street towards
+the river, keeping close to the fences and garden walls on her left.
+
+There was a ghost-like stealthiness to Miss Margaret's movements, though
+there was nothing whatever of the ghost about Miss Margaret herself.
+She was a plump, short person, no longer young, with coal-black hair
+growing low on the forehead, and a round face that would have been
+nearly meaningless if the features had not been emphasized--italicized,
+so to speak--by the small-pox. Moreover, the brilliancy of her toilet
+would have rendered any ghostly hypothesis untenable. Mrs. Solomon (we
+refer to the dressiest Mrs. Solomon, which ever one that was) in all her
+glory was not arrayed like Miss Margaret on that eventful summer
+morning. She wore a light-green, shot-silk frock, a blazing red shawl,
+and a yellow crape bonnet profusely decorated with azure, orange, and
+magenta artificial flowers. In her hand she carried a white parasol. The
+newly risen sun, ricocheting from the bosom of the river and striking
+point-blank on the top-knot of Miss Margaret's gorgeousness, made her an
+imposing spectacle in the quiet street of that Puritan village. But, in
+spite of the bravery of her apparel, she stole guiltily along by garden
+walls and fences until she reached a small, dingy frame-house near the
+wharves, in the darkened doorway of which she quenched her burning
+splendor, if so bold a figure is permissible.
+
+Three quarters of an hour passed. The sunshine moved slowly up Anchor
+Street, fingered noiselessly the well-kept brass knockers on either
+side, and drained the heeltaps of dew which had been left from the
+revels of the fairies overnight in the cups of the morning-glories. Not
+a soul was stirring yet in this part of the town, though the
+Rivermouthians are such early birds that not a worm may be said to
+escape them. By and by one of the brown Holland shades at one of the
+upper windows of the Bilkins Mansion--the house from which Miss Margaret
+had emerged--was drawn up, and old Mr. Bilkins in spiral nightcap looked
+out on the sunny street. Not a living creature was to be seen, save the
+dissipated family cat--a very Lovelace of a cat that was not allowed a
+night-key--who was sitting on the curbstone opposite, waiting for the
+hall door to be opened. Three quarters of an hour, we repeat, had
+passed, when Mrs. Margaret O'Rourke, _née_ Callaghan, issued from the
+small, dingy house by the river, and regained the door-step of the
+Bilkins mansion in the same stealthy fashion in which she had left it.
+
+Not to prolong a mystery that must already oppress the reader, Mr.
+Bilkins's cook had, after the manner of her kind, stolen out
+of the premises before the family were up, and got herself
+married--surreptitiously and artfully married, as if matrimony were an
+indictable offence.
+
+And something of an offence it was in this instance. In the first place
+Margaret Callaghan had lived nearly twenty years with the Bilkins
+family, and the old people--there were no children now--had rewarded
+this long service by taking Margaret into their affections. It was a
+piece of subtle ingratitude for her to marry without admitting the
+worthy couple to her confidence. In the next place, Margaret had married
+a man some eighteen years younger than herself. That was the young man's
+lookout, you say. We hold it was Margaret that was to blame. What does a
+young blade of twenty-two know? Not half so much as he thinks he does.
+His exhaustless ignorance at that age is a discovery which is left for
+him to make in his prime.
+
+ "Curly gold locks cover foolish brains,
+ Billing and cooing is all your cheer;
+ Sighing and singing of midnight strains,
+ Under Bonnybells window panes,--
+ Wait till you come to Forty Year!"
+
+In one sense Margaret's husband _had_ come to forty year--she was forty
+to a day.
+
+Mrs. Margaret O'Rourke, with the baddish cat following closely at her
+heels, entered the Bilkins mansion, reached her chamber in the attic
+without being intercepted, and there laid aside her finery. Two or three
+times, while arranging her more humble attire, she paused to take a look
+at the marriage certificate, which she had deposited between the leaves
+of her Prayer-Book, and on each occasion held that potent document
+upside down; for Margaret's literary culture was of the severest order,
+and excluded the art of reading.
+
+The breakfast was late that morning. As Mrs. O'Rourke set the coffee-urn
+in front of Mrs. Bilkins and flanked Mr. Bilkins with the broiled
+mackerel and buttered toast, Mrs. O'Rourke's conscience smote her. She
+afterwards declared that when she saw the two sitting there so
+innocent-like, not dreaming of the _comether_ she had put upon them, she
+secretly and unbeknownt let a few tears fall into the cream-pitcher.
+Whether or not it was this material expression of Margaret's penitence
+that spoiled the coffee does not admit of inquiry; but the coffee was
+bad. In fact, the whole breakfast was a comedy of errors.
+
+It was a blessed relief to Margaret when the meal was ended. She retired
+in a cold perspiration to the penetralia of the kitchen, and it was
+remarked by both Mr. and Mrs. Bilkins that those short flights of
+vocalism--apropos of the personal charms of one Kate Kearney, who lived
+on the banks of Killarney--which ordinarily issued from the direction of
+the scullery we're unheard that forenoon.
+
+The town clock was striking eleven, and the antiquated time-piece on the
+staircase (which never spoke but it dropped pearls and crystals, like
+the fairy in the story) was lisping the hour, when there came three
+tremendous knocks at the street door. Mrs. Bilkins, who was dusting the
+brass-mounted chronometer in the hall, stood transfixed, with arm
+uplifted. The admirable old lady had for years been carrying on a
+guerilla warfare with itinerant venders of furniture polish, and
+pain-killer, and crockery cement and the like. The effrontery of the
+triple knock convinced her the enemy was at her gates--possibly that
+dissolute creature with twenty-four sheets of note-paper and twenty-four
+envelopes for fifteen cents.
+
+Mrs. Bilkins swept across the hall, and opened the door with a jerk.
+The suddenness of the movement was apparently not anticipated by the
+person outside, who, with one arm stretched feebly towards the receding
+knocker, tilted gently forward, and rested both hands on the threshold
+in an attitude which was probably common enough with our ancestors of
+the Simian period, but could never have been considered graceful. By an
+effort that testified to the excellent condition of his muscles, the
+person instantly righted himself, and stood swaying unsteadily on his
+toes and heels, and smiling rather vaguely on Mrs. Bilkins.
+
+It was a slightly-built but well-knitted young fellow, in the not
+unpicturesque garb of our marine service. His woollen cap, pitched
+forward at an acute angle with his nose, showed the back part of a head
+thatched with short yellow hair, which had broken into innumerable curls
+of painful tightness. On his ruddy cheeks a sparse, sandy beard was
+making a timid _début_. Add to this a weak, good-natured mouth, a pair
+of devil-may-care blue eyes, and the fact that the man was very drunk,
+and you have a pre-Raphaelite portrait--we may as well say at once--of
+Mr. Larry O'Rourke of Mullingar, County Westmeath, and late of the
+United States sloop-of-war Santee.
+
+The man was a total stranger to Mrs. Bilkins but the instant she caught
+sight of the double white anchors embroidered on the lapels of his
+jacket, she unhesitatingly threw back the door, which with great
+presence of mind she had partly closed.
+
+A drunken sailor standing on the step of the Bilkins mansion was no
+novelty. The street, as we have stated, led down to the wharves, and
+sailors were constantly passing. The house abutted directly on the
+street; the granite door-step was almost flush with the sidewalk, and
+the huge, old-fashioned brass knocker--seemingly a brazen hand that had
+been cut off at the wrist, and nailed against the oak as a warning to
+malefactors--extended itself in a kind of grim appeal to everybody. It
+seemed to possess strange fascinations for all seafaring folk; and when
+there was a man-of-war in port the rat-tat-tat of that knocker would
+frequently startle the quiet neighborhood long after midnight. There
+appeared to be an occult understanding between it and the blue-jackets.
+Years ago there was a young Bilkins, one Pendexter Bilkins--a sad
+losel, we fear--who ran away to try his fortunes before the mast, and
+fell overboard in a gale off Hatteras. "Lost at sea," says the chubby
+marble slab in the Old South Burying-Ground, "_ætat._ 18." Perhaps that
+is why no blue-jacket, sober or drunk, was ever repulsed from the door
+of the Bilkins mansion.
+
+Of course Mrs. Bilkins had her taste in the matter, and preferred them
+sober. But as this could not always be, she tempered her wind, so to
+speak, to the shorn lamb. The flushed, prematurely-old face that now
+looked up at her moved the good lady's pity.
+
+"What do you want?" she asked, kindly.
+
+"Me wife."
+
+"There's no wife for you here," said Mrs. Bilkins, somewhat taken aback.
+"His wife!" she thought; "it's a mother the poor boy stands in need of."
+
+"Me wife," repeated Mr. O'Rourke, "for betther or for worse."
+
+"You had better go away," said Mrs. Bilkins, bridling up, "or it will be
+the worse for you."
+
+"To have and to howld," continued Mr. O'Rourke, wandering
+retrospectively in the mazes of the marriage service, "to have and to
+howld till death--bad luck to him!--takes one or the ither of us."
+
+"You're a blasphemous creature," said Mrs. Bilkins, severely.
+
+"Thim's the words his riverince spake this mornin', standin' foreninst
+us," explained Mr. O'Rourke. "I stood here, see, and me jew'l stood
+there, and the howly chaplain beyont."
+
+And Mr. O'Rourke with a wavering forefinger drew a diagram of the
+interesting situation on the door-step.
+
+"Well," returned Mrs. Bilkins, "if you're a married man, all I have to
+say is, there's a pair of fools instead of one. You had better be off;
+the person you want doesn't live here."
+
+"Bedad, thin, but she does."
+
+"Lives here?"
+
+"Sorra a place else."
+
+"The man's crazy," said Mrs. Bilkins to herself.
+
+While she thought him simply drunk, she was not in the least afraid; but
+the idea that she was conversing with a madman sent a chill over her.
+She reached back her hand preparatory to shutting the door, when Mr.
+O'Rourke, with an agility that might have been expected from his
+previous gymnastics, set one foot on the threshold and frustrated the
+design.
+
+"I want me wife," he said sternly.
+
+Unfortunately, Mr. Bilkins had gone uptown, and there was no one in the
+house except Margaret, whose pluck was not to be depended on. The case
+was urgent. With the energy of despair Mrs. Bilkins suddenly placed the
+toe of her boot against Mr. O'Rourke's invading foot, and pushed it
+away. The effect of this attack was to cause Mr. O'Rourke to describe a
+complete circle on one leg, and then sit down heavily on the threshold.
+The lady retreated to the hat-stand, and rested her hand mechanically on
+the handle of a blue cotton umbrella. Mr. O'Rourke partly turned his
+head and smiled upon her with conscious superiority. At this juncture a
+third actor appeared on the scene, evidently a friend of Mr. O'Rourke,
+for he addressed that gentleman as "a spalpeen," and told him to go
+home.
+
+"Divil an inch," replied the spalpeen; but he got himself off the
+threshold, and resumed his position on the step.
+
+"It's only Larry, mum," said the man, touching his forelock politely;
+"as dacent a lad as ever lived, when he's not in liquor; an' I've known
+him to be sober for days togither," he added, reflectively. "He don't
+mane a ha'p'orth o' harum, but jist now he's not quite in his right
+moind."
+
+"I should think not," said Mrs. Bilkins, turning from the speaker to Mr.
+O'Rourke, who had seated himself gravely on the scraper, and was
+weeping. "Hasn't the man any friends?"
+
+"Too many of 'em, mum, an' it's along wid dhrinkin' toasts wid 'em that
+Larry got throwed. The punch that spalpeen has dhrunk this day would
+amaze ye. He give us the slip awhiles ago, bad 'cess to him, an' come up
+here. Didn't I tell ye, Larry, not to be afther ringin' at the owle
+gintleman's knocker? Ain't ye got no sinse at all?"
+
+"Misther Donnehugh," responded Mr. O'Rourke with great dignity, "ye're
+dhrunk again."
+
+Mr. Donnehugh, who had not taken more than thirteen ladles of rum-punch,
+disdained to reply directly.
+
+"He's a dacent lad enough"--this to Mrs. Bilkins--"but his head is wake.
+Whin he's had two sups o' whiskey he belaves he's dhrunk a bar'l full. A
+gill o' wather out of a jimmy-john'd fuddle him, mum."
+
+"Isn't there anybody to look after him?"
+
+"No, mum, he's an orphan; his father and mother live in the owld
+counthry, an' a fine hale owld couple they are."
+
+"Hasn't he any family in the town?"
+
+"Sure, mum, he has a family; wasn't he married this blessed mornin'?"
+
+"He said so."
+
+"Indade, thin, he was--the pore divil!"
+
+"And the--the person?" inquired Mrs. Bilkins.
+
+"Is it the wife, ye mane?"
+
+"Yes, the wife; where is she?"
+
+"Well, thin, mum," said Mr. Donnehugh, "it's yerself can answer that."
+
+"I?" exclaimed Mrs. Bilkins. "Good heavens this man's as crazy as the
+other!"
+
+"Begorra, if anybody's crazy, it's Larry, for it's Larry has married
+Margaret."
+
+"What Margaret?" cried Mrs. Bilkins, with a start.
+
+"Margaret Callaghan, sure."
+
+"_Our_ Margaret? Do you mean to say that Our Margaret has married
+that--that good-for-nothing, inebriated wretch!"
+
+"It's a civil tongue the owld lady has, any way," remarked Mr. O'Rourke,
+critically, from the scraper.
+
+Mrs. Bilkins's voice during the latter part of the colloquy had been
+pitched in a high key; it rung through the hall and penetrated to the
+kitchen, where Margaret was thoughtfully wiping the breakfast things.
+She paused with a half-dried saucer in her hand, and listened. In a
+moment more she stood, with bloodless face and limp figure, leaning
+against the banister, behind Mrs. Bilkins.
+
+"Is it there ye are, me jew'l!" cried Mr. O'Rourke, discovering her.
+
+Mrs. Bilkins wheeled upon Margaret.
+
+"Margaret Callaghan, _is_ that thing your husband?"
+
+"Ye--yes, mum," faltered Mrs. O'Rourke, with a woful lack of spirit.
+
+"Then take it away!" cried Mrs. Bilkins.
+
+Margaret, with a slight flush on either cheek, glided past Mrs. Bilkins,
+and the heavy oak door closed with a bang, as the gates of Paradise must
+have closed of old upon Adam and Eve.
+
+"Come!" said Margaret, taking Mr. O'Rourke by the hand; and the two
+wandered forth upon their wedding journey down Anchor Street, with all
+the world before them where to choose. They chose to halt at the small,
+shabby tenement-house by the river, through the doorway of which the
+bridal pair disappeared with a reeling, eccentric gait; for Mr.
+O'Rourke's intoxication seemed to have run down his elbow, and
+communicated itself to Margaret.
+
+O Hymen! who burnest precious gums and scented woods in thy torch at the
+melting of aristocratic hearts, with what a pitiful penny-dip thou hast
+lighted up our little back-street romance.--_Marjorie Daw, and Other
+Stories_.
+
+
+END OF VOL. II.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Humorous Masterpieces from American
+Literature, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HUMOROUS MASTERPIECES FROM ***
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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Humorous Masterpieces from American
+Literature, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Humorous Masterpieces from American Literature
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: April 8, 2005 [EBook #15585]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HUMOROUS MASTERPIECES FROM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams, Josephine Paolucci and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>HUMOROUS MASTERPIECES</h1>
+
+<h1>FROM</h1>
+
+<h1>AMERICAN LITERATURE</h1>
+
+
+<h3>EDITED BY</h3>
+
+<h2>EDWARD T. MASON</h2>
+
+
+<p>NEW YORK &amp; LONDON</p>
+
+<p>G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS</p>
+
+<p>The Knickerbocker Press</p>
+
+<p>1886</p>
+
+<p>
+COPYRIGHT<br />
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS<br />
+1886<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Press of<br />
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS<br />
+New York<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+
+<p>
+<a href="#BAYARD_TAYLOR">BAYARD TAYLOR</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#SELECTIONS_FROM_THE_EXPERIENCES_OF_THE_AC">Selections from the Experiences of the A.C.</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#WILLIAM_ALLEN_BUTLER">WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#DOBBS_HIS_FERRY">Dobbs His Ferry</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#JOHN_WILLIAM_DE_FOREST">JOHN WILLIAM DE FOREST.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#FATHER_HIGGINSS_PREFERMENT">Father Higgins's Preferment</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#JOHN_TOWNSEND_TROWBRIDGE">JOHN TOWNSEND TROWBRIDGE.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#FRED_TROVERS_LITTLE_IRON_CLAD">Fred Trover's Little Iron-Clad</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#OLIVER_BELL_BUNCE">OLIVER BELL BUNCE.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#MR_BLUFF_DISCOURSES_OF_THE_COUNTRY_AND_KINDRED_THEMES">Mr. Bluff Discourses on the Country and Kindred Themes</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#CHARLES_DUDLEY_WARNER">CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#GARDEN_ETHICS">Garden Ethics</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#FRANCES_LEE_PRATT">FRANCES LEE PRATT.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CAPTAIN_BENS_CHOICE">Captain Ben's Choice</a></span><br />
+<br />
+ <a href="#LOUISA_MAY_ALCOTT">LOUISA MAY ALCOTT.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#STREET_SCENES_IN_WASHINGTON">Street Scenes in Washington</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#SELECTIONS_FROM_TRANSCENDENTAL_WILD_OATS">Selections from Transcendental Wild Oats</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#WILLIAM_WIRT_HOWE">WILLIAM WIRT HOWE.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#CONVERSATIONAL_DEPRAVITY">Conversational Depravity</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#CHARLES_FARRAR_BROWNE">CHARLES FARRAR BROWNE.</a> (&quot;<i>Artemus Ward</i>&quot;)<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#THE_TOWER_OF_LONDON">The Tower of London</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#SCIENCE_AND_NATURAL_HISTORY">Science and Natural History</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#FROM_THE_LECTURE">From the &quot;Lecture&quot;</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#FRANK_R_STOCKTON">FRANK R. STOCKTON.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#OUR_TAVERN">Our Tavern</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#A_PIECE_OF_RED_CALICO">A Piece of Red Calico</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#HARRIET_PRESCOTT_SPOFFORD">HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#AUNT_PENS_FUNERAL">Aunt Pen's Funeral</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#SAMUEL_LANGHORNE_CLEMENS">SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS.</a> (&quot;<i>Mark Twain</i>&quot;)<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#THE_CELEBRATED_JUMPING_FROG_OF_CALAVERAS_COUNTY">The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#FITZ_HUGH_LUDLOW">FITZ HUGH LUDLOW.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#BEN_THIRLWALLS_SCHOOLDAYS">Ben Thirlwall's School-days</a></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#SELECTIONS_FROM_A_BRACE_OF_BOYS">Selections from a Brace of Boys</a></span><br />
+<br />
+<a href="#THOMAS_BAILEY_ALDRICH">THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH.</a><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><a href="#A_RIVERMOUTH_ROMANCE">A Rivermouth Romance</a></span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="BAYARD_TAYLOR" id="BAYARD_TAYLOR"></a>BAYARD TAYLOR.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1825&mdash;DIED, 1878)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="SELECTIONS_FROM_THE_EXPERIENCES_OF_THE_AC" id="SELECTIONS_FROM_THE_EXPERIENCES_OF_THE_AC"></a>SELECTIONS FROM THE EXPERIENCES OF THE
+A.C.</h2>
+
+
+<p>&quot;Bridgeport! Change cars for the
+Naugatuck Railroad!&quot; shouted the
+conductor of the New York and Boston Express
+Train, on the evening of May 27, 1858.... Mr.
+Johnson, carpet-bag in hand, jumped
+upon the platform, entered the office, purchased
+a ticket for Waterbury, and was soon whirling
+in the Naugatuck train towards his destination.</p>
+
+<p>On reaching Waterbury, in the soft spring
+twilight, Mr. Johnson walked up and down in
+front of the station, curiously scanning the
+faces of the assembled crowd. Presently he
+noticed a gentleman who was performing the
+same operation upon the faces of the alighting
+passengers. Throwing himself directly in the
+way of the latter, the two exchanged a steady
+gaze.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is your name Billings?&quot; &quot;Is your name
+Johnson?&quot; were simultaneous questions, followed
+by the simultaneous exclamations,&mdash;&quot;Ned!&quot;
+&quot;Enos!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a crushing grasp of hands,
+repeated after a pause, in testimony of ancient
+friendship, and Mr. Billings, returning to practical
+life asked:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is that all your baggage? Come, I have
+a buggy here: Eunice has heard the whistle,
+and she'll be impatient to welcome you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The impatience of Eunice (Mrs. Billings, of
+course) was not of long duration; for in five
+minutes thereafter she stood at the door of her
+husband's chocolate-colored villa, receiving his
+friend....</p>
+
+<p>J. Edward Johnson was a tall, thin gentleman
+of forty-five.... A year before, some
+letters, signed &quot;Foster, Kirkup, &amp; Co., per
+Enos Billings,&quot; had accidentally revealed to him
+the whereabouts of the old friend of his youth
+with whom we now find him domiciled....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Enos,&quot; said he, as he stretched out his hand
+for the third cup of tea (which he had taken
+only for the purpose of prolonging the pleasant
+table-chat), &quot;I wonder which of us is most
+changed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You, of course,&quot; said Mr. Billings, &quot;with
+your brown face and big moustache. Your
+own brother wouldn't have known you, if he
+had seen you last, as I did, with smooth cheeks
+and hair of unmerciful length. Why, not even
+your voice is the same!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is easily accounted for,&quot; replied Mr.
+Johnson. &quot;But in your case, Enos, I am puzzled
+to find where the difference lies. Your features
+seem to be but little changed, now that I
+can examine them at leisure; yet it is not the
+same face. But really, I never looked at you
+for so long a time, in those days. I beg pardon;
+you used to be so&mdash;so remarkably shy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Billings blushed slightly, and seemed at
+a loss what to answer. His wife, however,
+burst into a merry laugh, exclaiming:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, that was before the days of the A.C.!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He, catching the infection, laughed also; in
+fact, Mr. Johnson laughed, but without knowing
+why.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The 'A.C.'!&quot; said Mr. Billings. &quot;Bless
+me, Eunice! how long it is since we have
+talked of that summer! I had almost forgotten
+that there ever was an A.C....
+Well, the A.C. culminated in '45. You remember
+something of the society of Norridgeport,
+the last winter you were there? Abel
+Mallory, for instance?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me think a moment,&quot; said Mr. Johnson,
+reflectively. &quot;Really, it seems like looking
+back a hundred years. Mallory,&mdash;wasn't that
+the sentimental young man, with wispy hair, a
+tallowy skin, and big, sweaty hands, who used
+to be spouting Carlyle on the 'reading evenings'
+at Shelldrake's? Yes, to be sure; and there
+was Hollins, with his clerical face and infidel
+talk,&mdash;and Pauline Ringtop, who used to say,
+'The Beautiful is the Good.' I can still hear
+her shrill voice singing, 'Would that <i>I</i> were
+beautiful, would that <i>I</i> were fair!'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There was a hearty chorus of laughter at
+poor Miss Ringtop's expense. It harmed no
+one, however; for the tar-weed was already
+thick over her Californian grave.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, I see,&quot; said Mr. Billings, &quot;you still remember
+the absurdities of those days. In fact,
+I think you partially saw through them then.
+But I was younger, and far from being so clearheaded,
+and I looked upon those evenings at
+Shelldrake's as being equal, at least, to the
+<i>symposia</i> of Plato. Something in Mallory always
+repelled me. I detested the sight of his
+thick nose, with the flaring nostrils, and his
+coarse, half-formed lips, of the bluish color of
+raw corned-beef. But I looked upon these
+feelings as unreasonable prejudices, and strove
+to conquer them, seeing the admiration which
+he received from others. He was an oracle on
+the subject of 'Nature.' Having eaten nothing
+for two years, except Graham bread, vegetables
+without salt, and fruits, fresh or dried, he considered
+himself to have attained an antediluvian
+purity of health,&mdash;or that he would
+attain it, so soon as two pimples on his left
+temple should have healed. These pimples he
+looked upon as the last feeble stand made by
+the pernicious juices left from the meat he had
+formerly eaten and the coffee he had drunk.
+His theory was, that through a body so purged
+and purified none but true and natural impulses
+could find access to the soul. Such, indeed,
+was the theory we all held....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shelldrake was a man of more pretence than
+real cultivation, as I afterwards discovered.
+He was in good circumstances, and always glad
+to receive us at his house, as this made him
+virtually the chief of our tribe, and the outlay
+for refreshments involved only the apples from
+his own orchard, and water from his well....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, 't was in the early part of '45,&mdash;I
+think in April,&mdash;when we were all gathered together,
+discussing, as usual, the possibility of
+leading a life in accordance with Nature. Abel
+Mallory was there, and Hollins, and Miss
+Ringtop, and Faith Levis, with her knitting,&mdash;and
+also Eunice Hazleton, a lady whom you
+have never seen, but you may take my wife as
+her representative....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish I could recollect some of the
+speeches made on that occasion. Abel had
+but one pimple on his temple (there was a
+purple spot where the other had been), and
+was estimating that in two or three months
+more he would be a true, unspoiled man. His
+complexion, nevertheless, was more clammy
+and whey-like than ever.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Yes,' said he, 'I also am an Arcadian! This
+false dual existence which I have been leading
+will soon be merged in the unity of Nature. Our
+lives must conform to her sacred law. Why
+can't we strip off these hollow Shams,' (he
+made great use of that word,) 'and be our true
+selves, pure, perfect, and divine?' ...</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shelldrake, however, turning to his wife,
+said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Elviry, how many up-stairs rooms is there
+in that house down on the Sound?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Four,&mdash;besides three small ones under the
+roof. Why, what made you think of that,
+Jesse?' said she.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I've got an idea, while Abel's been talking,'
+he answered. 'We've taken a house for
+the summer, down the other side of Bridgeport,
+right on the water, where there's good fishing
+and a fine view of the Sound. Now, there's
+room enough for all of us,&mdash;at least, all that
+can make it suit to go. Abel, you and Enos,
+and Pauline and Eunice might fix matters so
+that we could all take the place in partnership,
+and pass the summer together, living a true
+and beautiful life in the bosom of Nature.
+There we shall be perfectly free and untrammelled
+by the chains which still hang around
+us in Norridgeport. You know how often we
+have wanted to be set on some island in the
+Pacific Ocean, where we could build up a true
+society, right from the start. Now, here's a
+chance to try the experiment for a few months,
+anyhow.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Eunice clapped her hands (yes, you did!)
+and cried out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Splendid! Arcadian! I'll give up my
+school for the summer.' ...</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Abel Mallory, of course, did not need to
+have the proposal repeated. He was ready
+for any thing which promised indolence, and
+the indulgence of his sentimental tastes. I will
+do the fellow the justice to say that he was not
+a hypocrite. He firmly believed both in himself
+and his ideas,&mdash;especially the former. He
+pushed both hands through the long wisps of
+his drab-colored hair, and threw his head back
+until his wide nostrils resembled a double door
+to his brain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'O Nature!' he said, 'you have found your
+lost children! We shall obey your neglected
+laws! we shall hearken to your divine whispers!
+we shall bring you back from your ignominious
+exile, and place you on your ancestral
+throne!' ...</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The company was finally arranged to consist
+of the Shelldrakes, Hollins, Mallory, Eunice,
+Miss Ringtop, and myself. We did not
+give much thought, either to the preparations
+in advance, or to our mode of life when settled
+there. We were to live near to Nature: that
+was the main thing.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'What shall we call the place?&quot; asked
+Eunice.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Arcadia!' said Abel Mallory, rolling up
+his large green eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Then,' said Hollins, 'let us constitute ourselves
+the Arcadian Club!'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;&quot;Aha!&quot; interrupted Mr. Johnson, &quot;I
+see! The A.C.!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, you see the A.C. now, but to
+understand it fully, you should have had
+a share in those Arcadian experiences....
+It was a lovely afternoon in June when
+we first approached Arcadia.... Perkins
+Brown, Shelldrake's boy-of-all-work, awaited
+us at the door. He had been sent on
+two or three days in advance, to take charge
+of the house, and seemed to have had enough
+of hermit-life, for he hailed us with a wild
+whoop, throwing his straw hat half-way up
+one of the poplars. Perkins was a boy of fifteen,
+the child of poor parents, who were satisfied
+to get him off their hands, regardless as to
+what humanitarian theories might be tested
+upon him. As the Arcadian Club recognized
+no such thing as caste, he was always admitted
+to our meetings, and understood just enough
+of our conversation to excite a silly ambition in
+his slow mind....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Our board, that evening, was really tempting.
+The absence of meat was compensated to
+us by the crisp and racy onions, and I craved
+only a little salt, which had been interdicted, as
+a most pernicious substance. I sat at one corner
+of the table, beside Perkins Brown, who
+took an opportunity, while the others were engaged
+in conversation, to jog my elbow gently.
+As I turned towards him, he said nothing, but
+dropped his eyes significantly. The little rascal
+had the lid of a blacking-box, filled with salt,
+upon his knee, and was privately seasoning his
+onions and radishes. I blushed at the thought
+of my hypocrisy, but the onions were so much
+better that I couldn't help dipping into the
+lid with him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh,' said Eunice, 'we must send for some
+oil and vinegar! This lettuce is very nice.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oil and vinegar?' exclaimed Abel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Why, yes,' said she, innocently: 'they are
+both vegetable substances.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Abel at first looked rather foolish, but
+quickly recovering herself, said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'All vegetable substances are not proper
+for food: you would not taste the poison-oak,
+or sit under the upas-tree of Java.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well, Abel,' Eunice rejoined, 'how are we
+to distinguish what is best for us? How are
+we to know <i>what</i> vegetables to choose, or what
+animal and mineral substances to avoid?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I will tell you,' he answered, with a lofty
+air. 'See here!' pointing to his temple, where
+the second pimple&mdash;either from the change of
+air, or because, in the excitement of the last
+few days, he had forgotten it&mdash;was actually
+healed. 'My blood is at last pure. The struggle
+between the natural and the unnatural is over,
+and I am beyond the depraved influences of my
+former taste. My instincts are now, therefore,
+entirely pure also. What is good for man to
+eat, that I shall have a natural desire to eat:
+what is bad will be naturally repelled. How
+does the cow distinguish between the wholesome
+and the poisonous herbs of the meadow?
+And is man less than a cow, that he cannot cultivate
+his instincts to an equal point? Let me
+walk through the woods and I can tell you every
+berry and root which God designed for food,
+though I know not its name, and have never
+seen it before. I shall make use of my time,
+during our sojourn here, to test, by my purified
+instinct, every substance, animal, mineral, and
+vegetable, upon which the human race subsists,
+and to create a catalogue of the True Food of
+Man!' ...</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Our lazy life during the hot weather had
+become a little monotonous. The Arcadian
+plan had worked tolerably well, on the whole,
+for there was very little for any one to do,&mdash;Mrs.
+Shelldrake and Perkins Brown excepted.
+Our conversation, however, lacked spirit and
+variety. We were, perhaps unconsciously, a
+little tired of hearing and assenting to the same
+sentiments. But, one evening, about this time,
+Hollins struck upon a variation, the consequences
+of which he little foresaw. We had been
+reading one of Bulwer's works, (the weather
+was too hot for Psychology,) and came upon
+this paragraph, or something like it:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Ah, Behind the Veil! We see the summer
+smile of the Earth,&mdash;enamelled meadow
+and limpid stream,&mdash;but what hides she in her
+sunless heart? Caverns of serpents, or grottoes
+of priceless gems? Youth, whose soul sits on
+thy countenance, thyself wearing no mask, strive
+not to lift the masks of others! Be content
+with what thou seest; and wait until Time and
+Experience shall teach thee to find jealousy
+behind the sweet smile, and hatred under the
+honeyed word!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This seemed to us a dark and bitter reflection
+but one or another of us recalled some
+illustration of human hypocrisy, and the
+evidences, by the simple fact of repetition,
+gradually led to a division of opinion,&mdash;Rollins,
+Shelldrake, and Miss Ringtop on the dark side,
+and the rest of us on the bright. The last,
+however, contented herself with quoting from
+her favorite poet Gamaliel J. Gawthrop:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;'I look beyond thy brow's concealment!<br />
+I see thy spirit's dark revealment!<br />
+Thy inner self betrayed I see:<br />
+Thy coward, craven, shivering ME!'<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'We think we know one another,' exclaimed
+Rollins; 'but do we? We see the faults of
+others, their weaknesses, their disagreeable
+qualities, and we keep silent. How much we
+should gain, were candor as universal as concealment
+Then each one, seeing himself as
+others see him, would truly know himself.
+How much misunderstanding might be avoided,
+how much hidden shame be removed,
+hopeless because unspoken love made glad,
+honest admiration cheer its object, uttered
+sympathy mitigate misfortune,&mdash;in short, how
+much brighter and happier the world would
+become, if each one expressed, everywhere and
+at all times, his true and entire feeling! Why,
+even Evil would lose half its power!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There seemed to be so much practical wisdom
+in these views that we were all dazzled and
+half-convinced at the start. So, when Hollins,
+turning towards me, as he continued, exclaimed,&mdash;'Come,
+why should not this candor be adopted
+in our Arcadia? Will any one&mdash;will you,
+Enos&mdash;commence at once by telling me now&mdash;to
+my face&mdash;my principal faults?' I answered,
+after a moment's reflection,&mdash;'You have a great
+deal of intellectual arrogance, and you are,
+physically, very indolent.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He did not flinch from the self-invited test,
+though he looked a little surprised.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well put,' said he, 'though I do not say
+that you are entirely correct. Now, what are
+my merits?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'You are clear-sighted,' I answered, 'an
+earnest seeker after truth, and courageous in
+the avowal of your thoughts.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This restored the balance, and we soon began
+to confess our own private faults and weaknesses.
+Though the confessions did not go
+very deep,&mdash;no one betraying any thing we did
+not all know already,&mdash;yet they were sufficient
+to strengthen Hollins in his new idea, and it
+was unanimously resolved that Candor should
+thenceforth be the main charm of our Arcadian
+life....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The next day, Abel, who had resumed his
+researches after the True Food, came home to
+supper with a healthier color than I had before
+seen on his face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Do you know,' said he, looking shyly at
+Hollins, 'that I begin to think Beer must
+be a natural beverage? There was an auction
+in the village to-day, as I passed through, and
+I stopped at a cake-stand to get a glass of water,
+as it was very hot. There was no water,&mdash;only
+beer: so I thought I would try a glass, simply
+as an experiment. Really, the flavor was very
+agreeable. And it occurred to me, on the way
+home, that all the elements contained in beer
+are vegetable. Besides, fermentation is a
+natural process. I think the question has never
+been properly tested before.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'But the alcohol!' exclaimed Hollins.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I could not distinguish any, either by taste
+or smell. I know that chemical analysis is said
+to show it; but may not the alcohol be created,
+somehow, during the analysis?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Abel,' said Hollins, in a fresh burst of candor,
+'you will never be a Reformer, until you
+possess some of the commonest elements of
+knowledge.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The rest of us were much diverted: it was
+a pleasant relief to our monotonous amiability.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Abel, however, had a stubborn streak in his
+character. The next day he sent Perkins
+Brown to Bridgeport for a dozen bottles of
+'Beer.' Perkins, either intentionally or by mistake,
+(I always suspected the former,) brought
+pint-bottles of Scotch ale, which he placed in the
+coolest part of the cellar. The evening happened
+to be exceedingly hot and sultry; and, as we
+were all fanning ourselves and talking languidly,
+Abel bethought him of his beer. In his thirst,
+he drank the contents of the first bottle, almost
+at a single draught.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'The effect of beer,' said he, 'depends, I
+think, on the commixture of the nourishing
+principle of the grain with the cooling properties
+of the water. Perhaps, hereafter, a liquid
+food of the same character may be invented,
+which shall save us from mastication and all the
+diseases of the teeth.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hollins and Shelldrake, at his invitation,
+divided a bottle between them, and he took a
+second. The potent beverage was not long in
+acting on a brain so unaccustomed to its influence.
+He grew unusually talkative and
+sentimental, in a few minutes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh, sing, somebody!' he sighed in hoarse
+rapture: 'the night was made for Song.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Ringtop, nothing loath, immediately
+commenced, 'When stars are in the quiet skies';
+but scarcely had she finished the first verse
+before Abel interrupted her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Candor's the order of the day, isn't it?'
+he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Yes!' 'Yes!' two or three answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well, then,' said he, 'candidly, Pauline,
+you've got the darn'dest squeaky voice'&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Ringtop gave a faint little scream of
+horror.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh, never mind!' he continued. 'We act
+according to impulse, don't we? And I've
+the impulse to swear; and it's right. Let Nature
+have her way. Listen! Damn, damn,
+damn, damn! I never knew it was so easy.
+Why, there's a pleasure in it! Try it, Pauline!
+try it on me!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Oh-ooh!' was all Miss Ringtop could
+utter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Abel! Abel!' exclaimed Hollins, 'the
+beer has got into your head.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'No, it isn't Beer,&mdash;it's Candor!' said
+Abel. 'It's your own proposal, Hollins.
+Suppose it's evil to swear: isn't it better I
+should express it, and be done with it, than
+keep it bottled up, to ferment in my mind?
+Oh, you're a precious, consistent old humbug,
+<i>you</i> are!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And therewith he jumped off the stoop,
+and went dancing awkwardly down towards the
+water, singing in a most unmelodious voice,
+''Tis home where'er the heart is.' ...</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We had an unusually silent breakfast the
+next morning. Abel scarcely spoke, which the
+others attributed to a natural feeling of shame,
+after his display of the previous evening. Hollins
+and Shelldrake discussed Temperance, with
+a special view to his edification, and Miss Ringtop
+favored us with several quotations about
+'the maddening bowl,'&mdash;but he paid no attention
+to them....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The forenoon was overcast, with frequent
+showers. Each one occupied his or her room
+until dinner-time, when we met again with
+something of the old geniality. There was an
+evident effort to restore our former flow of
+good feeling. Abel's experience with the beer
+was freely discussed. He insisted strongly
+that he had not been laboring under its effects,
+and proposed a mutual test. He, Shelldrake,
+and Hollins were to drink it in equal measures,
+and compare observations as to their physical
+sensations. The others agreed,&mdash;quite willingly,
+I thought,&mdash;but I refused....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There was a sound of loud voices, as we
+approached the stoop. Hollins, Shelldrake
+and his wife, and Abel Mallory were sitting together
+near the door. Perkins Brown, as usual,
+was crouched on the lowest step, with one leg
+over the other, and rubbing the top of his boot
+with a vigor which betrayed to me some secret
+mirth. He looked up at me from under his straw
+hat with the grin of a malicious Puck, glanced
+towards the group, and made a curious gesture
+with his thumb. There were several empty
+pint bottles on the stoop.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Now, are you sure you can bear the test?'
+we heard Hollins ask, as we approached.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Bear it? Why, to be sure!' replied Shelldrake
+'if I couldn't bear it, or if <i>you</i> couldn't,
+your theory's done for. Try! I can stand it
+as long as you can.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well, then,' said Hollins, 'I think you are
+a very ordinary man. I derive no intellectual
+benefit from my intercourse with you, but your
+house is convenient to me. I'm under no
+obligations for your hospitality, however, because
+my company is an advantage to you.
+Indeed, if I were treated according to my deserts,
+you couldn't do enough for me.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mrs. Shelldrake was up in arms.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Indeed,' she exclaimed, 'I think you get
+as good as you deserve, and more too.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Elvira,' said he, with a benevolent condescension,
+'I have no doubt you think so, for
+your mind belongs to the lowest and most material
+sphere. You have your place in Nature,
+and you fill it; but it is not for you to judge of
+intelligences which move only on the upper
+planes.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Hollins,' said Shelldrake, 'Elviry's a good
+wife and a sensible woman, and I won't allow
+you to turn up your nose at her.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I am not surprised,' he answered, 'that
+you should fail to stand the test. I didn't
+expect it.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Let me try it on <i>you</i>!' cried Shelldrake.
+'You, now, have some intellect,&mdash;I don't deny
+that,&mdash;but not so much, by a long shot, as you
+think you have. Besides that, you're awfully
+selfish in your opinions. You won't admit that
+anybody can be right who differs from you.
+You've sponged on me for a long time; but
+I suppose I've learned something from you, so
+we'll call it even. I think, however, that what
+you call acting according to impulse is simply
+an excuse to cover your own laziness.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Gosh! that's it!' interrupted Perkins,
+jumping up; then, recollecting himself, he
+sank down on the steps again, and shook
+with a suppressed 'Ho! ho! ho!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hollins, however, drew himself up with an
+exasperated air.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Shelldrake,' said he, 'I pity you. I always
+knew your ignorance, but I thought you honest
+in your human character. I never suspected
+you of envy and malice. However, the true Reformer
+must expect to be misunderstood and
+misrepresented by meaner minds. That love
+which I bear to all creatures teaches me to forgive
+you. Without such love, all plans of progress
+must fail. Is it not so, Abel?'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shelldrake could only ejaculate the words,
+'Pity!' 'Forgive!' in his most contemptuous
+tone; while Mrs. Shelldrake, rocking violently
+in her chair, gave utterance to that peculiar
+clucking '<i>ts, ts, ts, ts</i>,' whereby certain women
+express emotions too deep for words.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Abel, roused by Hollins' question, answered,
+with a sudden energy,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Love! there is no love in the world. Where
+will you find it? Tell me, and I'll go there.
+Love! I'd like to see it! If all human hearts
+were like mine, we might have an Arcadia; but
+most men have no hearts. The world is a miserable,
+hollow, deceitful shell of vanity and hypocrisy.
+No: let us give up. We were born
+before our time: this age is not worthy of us.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hollins stared at the speaker in utter amazement.
+Shelldrake gave a long whistle, and finally
+gasped out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Well, what next?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;None of us were prepared for such a sudden
+and complete wreck of our Arcadian scheme.
+The foundations had been sapped before, it is
+true; but we had not perceived it; and now,
+in two short days, the whole edifice tumbled
+about our ears. Though it was inevitable, we
+felt a shock of sorrow, and a silence fell upon
+us. Only that scamp of a Perkins Brown, chuckling
+and rubbing his boot, really rejoiced. I
+could have kicked him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We all went to bed, feeling that the charm
+of our Arcadian life was over.... In the
+first revulsion of feeling, I was perhaps unjust
+to my associates. I see now, more clearly, the
+causes of those vagaries, which originated in a
+genuine aspiration, and failed from an ignorance
+of the true nature of Man, quite as much as
+from the egotism of the individuals. Other attempts
+at reorganizing Society were made about
+the same time by men of culture and experience,
+but in the A.C. we had neither. Our
+leaders had caught a few half-truths, which,
+in their minds, were speedly warped into
+errors.&quot; ...&mdash;<i>The Atlantic Monthly</i>, February,
+1862.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="WILLIAM_ALLEN_BUTLER" id="WILLIAM_ALLEN_BUTLER"></a>WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1825.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="DOBBS_HIS_FERRY" id="DOBBS_HIS_FERRY"></a>DOBBS HIS FERRY.</h2>
+
+<p>A Legend of the Lower Hudson.</p>
+
+
+<p>
+The days were at their longest,<br />
+The heat was at its strongest,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">When Brown, old friend and true,</span><br />
+Wrote thus: &quot;Dear Jack, why swelter<br />
+In town when shade and shelter<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Are waiting here for you?</span><br />
+Quit Bulls and Bears and gambling,<br />
+For rural sports and rambling<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Forsake your Wall Street tricks;</span><br />
+Come without hesitation,<br />
+Check to Dobbs' Ferry Station,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">We dine at half-past six.&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+I went,&mdash;a welcome hearty,<br />
+A merry country party,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A drive, and then croquet,</span><br />
+A quiet, well-cooked dinner,<br />
+Three times at billiards winner,&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The evening sped away;</span><br />
+When Brown, the dear old joker,<br />
+Cried, &quot;Come, my worthy broker,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The hour is growing late;</span><br />
+Your room is cool and quiet,<br />
+As for the bed, just try it,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Breakfast at half-past eight.&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+I took Brown's hand, applauded<br />
+His generous care, and lauded<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dobbs' Ferry to the skies.</span><br />
+A shade came o'er his features,<br />
+&quot;We should be happy creatures,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And this a paradise,</span><br />
+But, ah! the deep disgrace is,<br />
+This loveliest of places<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A vulgar name should blight!</span><br />
+But, death to Dobbs! we'll change it,<br />
+If money can arrange it,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">So, pleasant dreams; good night!&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+I could not sleep, but, raising<br />
+The window, stood, moon-gazing,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In fairyland a guest;</span><br />
+&quot;On such a night,&quot; <i>et cetera</i>&mdash;<br />
+See Shakespeare for much better a<br />
+Description of the rest,&mdash;<br />
+I mused, how sweet to wander<br />
+Beside the river, yonder;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And then the sudden whim</span><br />
+Seized my head to pillow<br />
+On Hudson's sparkling billow,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A midnight, moonlight swim!</span><br />
+<br />
+Soon thought and soon attempted;<br />
+At once my room was emptied<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of its sole occupant;</span><br />
+The roof was low, and easily,<br />
+In fact, quite Japanese-ily,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I took the downward slant,</span><br />
+Then, without stay or stopping,<br />
+My first and last eaves-dropping,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">By leader-pipe I sped,</span><br />
+And through the thicket gliding,<br />
+Down the steep hillside sliding,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Soon reached the river's bed.</span><br />
+<br />
+But what was my amazement,&mdash;<br />
+The fair scene from the casement,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">How changed! I could not guess</span><br />
+Where track or rails had vanished,<br />
+Town, villas, station, banished,&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">All was a wilderness.</span><br />
+Only one ancient gable,<br />
+A low-roofed inn and stable,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A creaking sign displayed,</span><br />
+An antiquated wherry,<br />
+Below it&mdash;&quot;DOBBS HIS FERRY&quot;&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In the clear moonlight swayed.</span><br />
+<br />
+I turned, and there the craft was,<br />
+Its shape 'twixt scow and raft was,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Square ends, low sides, and flat,</span><br />
+And standing close beside me,<br />
+An ancient chap who eyed me,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Beneath a steeple-hat;</span><br />
+Short legs&mdash;long pipe&mdash;style very<br />
+Pre-Revolutionary,&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I bow, he grimly bobs,</span><br />
+Then, with some perturbation,<br />
+By way of salutation,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Says I, &quot;How are you, Dobbs!&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+He grum and silent beckoned,<br />
+And I, in half a second,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Scarce knowing what I did,</span><br />
+Took the stern seat, Dobbs throwing<br />
+Himself 'midships, and rowing,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Swift through the stream we slid;</span><br />
+He pulled awhile, then stopping,<br />
+And both oars slowly dropping,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">His pipe aside he laid,</span><br />
+Drew a long breath, and taking<br />
+An attitude, and shaking<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">His fist towards shore, thus said:&mdash;</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;Of all sharp cuts the keenest,<br />
+Of all mean turns the meanest,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Vilest of all vile jobs,</span><br />
+Worse than the Cow-Boy pillagers,<br />
+Are these Dobbs' Ferry villagers<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">A going back on Dobbs!</span><br />
+'Twould not be more anom'lous<br />
+If Rome went back on Rom'lus<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">(Old rum-un like myself),</span><br />
+Or Hail Columbia, played out<br />
+By Southern Dixie, laid out<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Columbus on the shelf!</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;They say 'Dobbs' ain't melodious,<br />
+It's 'horrid,' 'vulgar,' 'odious,'<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In all their crops it sticks;</span><br />
+And then the worse addendum<br />
+Of 'Ferry' does offend 'em<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">More than its vile prefix.</span><br />
+Well, it does seem distressing,<br />
+But, if I'm good at guessing,<br />
+Each one of these same nobs,<br />
+If there was money in it,<br />
+Would ferry in a minute,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And change his name to Dobbs!</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;That's it, they're not partic'lar,<br />
+Respecting the auric'lar,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">At a stiff market rate;</span><br />
+But Dobbs' especial vice is,<br />
+That he keeps down the prices<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of all their real estate!</span><br />
+A name so unattractive<br />
+Keeps villa-sites inactive,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And spoils the broker's jobs;</span><br />
+They think that speculation<br />
+Would rage at 'Paulding's Station,'<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which stagnates now at 'Dobbs.'</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;'Paulding's!&quot;&mdash;that's sentimental!<br />
+An old Dutch Continental,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bushwhacked up there a spell;</span><br />
+But why he should come blustering<br />
+Round here, and filibustering,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is more than I can tell;</span><br />
+Sat playing for a wager,<br />
+And nabbed a British major.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Well, if the plans and charts</span><br />
+From Andre's boots he hauled out,<br />
+Is his name to be bawled out<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Forever, round these parts?</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;Guess not! His pay and bounty<br />
+And mon'ment from the county<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Paid him off, every cent,</span><br />
+While this snug town and station,<br />
+To every generation,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Shall be Dobbs' monument;</span><br />
+Spite of all speculators<br />
+And ancient-landmark traitors,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who, all along this shore,</span><br />
+Are ever substitutin'<br />
+The modern, highfalutin',<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">For the plain names of yore.</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;Down there, on old Manhattan,<br />
+Where land-sharks breed and fatten,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">They've wiped out Tubby Hook.</span><br />
+That famous promontory,<br />
+Renowned in song and story,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which time nor tempest shook,</span><br />
+Whose name for aye had been good,<br />
+Stands newly christened 'Inwood,'<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And branded with the shame</span><br />
+Of some old rogue who passes<br />
+By dint of aliases,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Afraid of his own name!</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;See how they quite outrival,<br />
+Plain barnyard Spuytenduyvil,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">By peacock Riverdale,</span><br />
+Which thinks all else it conquers,<br />
+And over homespun Yonkers<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spreads out its flaunting tail!</span><br />
+There's new-named Mount St. Vincent,<br />
+Where each dear little inn'cent<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Is taught the Popish rites,&mdash;</span><br />
+Well, ain't it queer, wherever<br />
+These saints possess the river<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">They get the finest sites!</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;They've named a place for Irving,<br />
+A trifle more deserving<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Than your French, foreign saints,</span><br />
+But if he has such mention,<br />
+It's past my comprehension<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Why Dobbs should cause complaints;</span><br />
+Wrote histories and such things,<br />
+About Old Knick and Dutch things,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dolph Heyligers and Rips;</span><br />
+But no old antiquary<br />
+Like him could keep a ferry,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">With all his authorships!</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;By aid of these same showmen,<br />
+Some fanciful cognomen<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Old Cro'nest stock might bring</span><br />
+As high as Butter Hill is,<br />
+Which, patronized by Willis,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Leaves cards now as 'Storm-King!'</span><br />
+Can't some poetic swell-beau<br />
+Re-christen old Crum Elbow<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And each prosaic bluff,</span><br />
+Bold Breakneck gently flatter,<br />
+And Dunderberg bespatter,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">With euphony and stuff!</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;'T would be a <i>magnum opus</i><br />
+To bury old Esopus<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In Time's sepulchral vaults,</span><br />
+Or in Oblivion's deep sea<br />
+Submerge renowned Poughkeepsie,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And also ancient Paltz;</span><br />
+How it would give them rapture<br />
+Brave Stony Point to capture,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And make it face about;</span><br />
+Bid Rhinebeck sound much smoother<br />
+Than in the tongue of Luther,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And wipe the Catskills out!</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;Well, DOBBS is DOBBS, and faster<br />
+Than pitch or mustard-plaster<br />
+Shall it stick hereabouts,<br />
+While Tappan Sea rolls yonder,<br />
+Or round High Torn the thunder<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Along these ramparts shouts.</span><br />
+No corner-lot banditti,<br />
+Or brokers from the City&mdash;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Like you&mdash;&quot; Here Dobbs began</span><br />
+Wildly both oars to brandish,<br />
+As fierce as old Miles Standish,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Or young Phil Sheridan.</span><br />
+<br />
+Sternwards he rushed,&mdash;I, ducking,<br />
+Seized both his legs, and chucking<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dobbs sideways, splash he went,&mdash;</span><br />
+The wherry swayed, then righted,<br />
+While I, somewhat excited,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Over the water bent;</span><br />
+Three times he rose, but vainly<br />
+I clutched his form ungainly,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">He sank, while sighs and sobs</span><br />
+Beneath the waves seemed muttered,<br />
+And all the night-winds uttered<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In sad tones, &quot;Dobbs! Dobbs! Dobbs!&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+Just then some giant boulders<br />
+Upon my head and shoulders<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Made sudden, fearful raids,</span><br />
+And on my face and forehead,<br />
+With din and uproar horrid,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Came several Palisades;</span><br />
+I screamed, and woke, in screaming,<br />
+To see, by gaslight's gleaming,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Brown's face above my bed;</span><br />
+&quot;Why, Jack, what is the matter?<br />
+We heard a dreadful clatter<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And found you on the shed!</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;It's plain enough, supposing<br />
+You sat there, moon-struck, dozing,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Upon the window's edge,</span><br />
+Then lost yourself, and falling,<br />
+Just where we found you, sprawling,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Struck the piazza ledge;</span><br />
+A lucky hit, old fellow,<br />
+Of black and blue and yellow<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">It gives your face a touch,</span><br />
+You saved your neck, but barely;<br />
+To state the matter fairly,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">You took a drop too much!&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+I took the train next morning,<br />
+Some lumps my nose adorning,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">My forehead, sundry knobs,</span><br />
+My ideas slightly wandering,<br />
+But, as I went, much pondering<br />
+Upon my night with Dobbs;<br />
+Brown thinks it, dear old sinner,<br />
+A case of &quot;after dinner,&quot;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And won't believe a word,</span><br />
+Talks of &quot;hallucination,&quot;<br />
+&quot;Laws of association,&quot;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And calls my tale &quot;absurd.&quot;</span><br />
+<br />
+Perhaps it is, but never,<br />
+Say I, should we dissever<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Old places and old names;</span><br />
+Guard the old landmarks truly,<br />
+On the old altars duly<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Keep bright the ancient flames.</span><br />
+For me the face of Nature,<br />
+No luckless nomenclature<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of grace or beauty robs;</span><br />
+No, when of town I weary,<br />
+I'll make a strike in Erie,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">And buy a place at DOBBS!</span><br />
+<br />
+&mdash;<i>Poems.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="JOHN_WILLIAM_DE_FOREST" id="JOHN_WILLIAM_DE_FOREST"></a>JOHN WILLIAM DE FOREST.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1826.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="FATHER_HIGGINSS_PREFERMENT" id="FATHER_HIGGINSS_PREFERMENT"></a>FATHER HIGGINS'S PREFERMENT.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Father Higgins was not the kind of
+divine who easily finds preferment in
+the Catholic Church, or who would be apt to
+make a shining mark in any other.</p>
+
+<p>Fat and red-faced and pudding-headed was
+Father Higgins; uncommonly in the way of
+good eating, and now and then disposed for
+good drinking; as lazy as he dared be, ignorant
+enough for a hermit, and simple enough for a
+monk. His chief excellence lay in his kindliness
+of heart, which would doubtless have
+made him very serviceable and comfortable to
+his fellow-men, had it not been for his indolence,
+his spare intellectual gifts, and perhaps a
+little leaven of selfishness.</p>
+
+<p>Such as he was, however, Father Higgins had
+no small &quot;consate&quot; of himself, and sometimes
+thought that even a bishopric would not be
+&quot;beyant his desarts.&quot; He pleased himself with
+imagining how finely he would fill an episcopal
+chair, what apostolic labors he would accomplish
+in his diocese, what swarms of heretics or
+pagans he would convert, what a self-sacrificing
+and heroic life he would lead, and what a saintly
+name he would leave. One day, or to speak
+with a precision worthy of this true history, one
+evening, he became a bishop.</p>
+
+<p>It happened on this wise. Father Higgins
+had ventured to treat himself to a spectacle.
+He had attended, for the first time in his life,
+an exhibition of legerdemain; this one being
+given by that celebrated master of the black-art,
+Professor Heller. He had seen the professor
+change turnips into gold watches, draw a
+dozen live pigeons in succession out of an
+empty box, send rings into ladies' handkerchiefs
+at the other end of the hall, catch a
+bullet out of an exploded pistol in his hand,
+and perform other marvels equally irrational
+and disturbing. From this raree-show Father
+Higgins had gone home feeling that he had witnessed
+something about as unearthly as he was
+likely to be confronted with in the next world.</p>
+
+<p>For an hour or more he sat in his elbow-chair,
+puzzling over the professor's &quot;diviltries,&quot;
+and crossing himself at the remembrance of
+each one of them. It was black midnight, and
+stormy at that; there was such an uproar in
+the elm branches over his house as if all the
+Salem witches were holding Sabbath there; the
+whole village of Sableburg swarmed with windy
+rushings and shriekings and slammings. It was
+one of those midnights when the devil evidently
+&quot;has business on his hand.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Of a sudden there was a rustle in the room,
+and looking around to discover the cause of it,
+Father Higgins beheld a tall and dark man with
+startling black eyes, in whom he recognized
+Professor Heller.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's yer will, sir?&quot; demanded the Father,
+a good deal astonished, but not a bit frightened.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I understand, sir, that you would like to be
+a bishop,&quot; replied the professor, bowing politely,
+but seating himself unceremoniously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's thrue enough, sir,&quot; replied Father
+Higgins, who somehow felt curiously at his
+ease, and disposed at once to be confidential
+with this utter stranger. &quot;I've often imagined
+meself a bishop, an' doin' wondhers in me office.
+But it's nonsinse.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What post would suit you?&quot; inquired the
+visitor. &quot;The diocese of New York?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no,&quot; said the father. &quot;I'm not ayqual
+to sich a risponsebility; that is, not at wanst,
+ye ondherstand. I'd like best to come up to
+sich a place as that gintly an' by degrays.
+It's been a drame av mine to begin my prefarmint
+as biship av some far-away continent or
+archypilago, like, an' convart slathers av haythins
+an' cannebals for a practice. It ud plase
+me imagenation to prache among corrils an'
+coky-nuts an' naked crachurs. Y' are aware, I
+suppose, Misther Heller&mdash;or Professor Heller&mdash;av
+sich islands as Owyhee an' the Marquesas,
+famous a'ready in the history av the Propaganda
+Fide. Jist suppose me havin' me episkepal
+raysedence on wan av 'um, an' makin' me
+progresses to the others. There be great devoshin
+to a spiritual father among thim simple
+people, I'm thinkin.' I'd be a god to 'um,
+like. Sich obeyjince ud jist shuit me. Yes,
+I'd enj'y bein' Biship av the Cannebal Islands,
+or even av wan av um.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Faith is necessary,&quot; replied Heller. &quot;You
+must believe that you are to be Bishop of the
+Cannibal Islands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sure an' it's not aisy at this distance to belave
+in the islands thimselves, let alone bein'
+spiritual father av the same,&quot; smiled the priest.
+&quot;Howandiver, there's no harrum in tryin' to
+belave, an' so here goes for the exparimint. If
+ye'll kape silence a bit, I'll jist collect me
+moind on the subject, an' we'll see what
+happens.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the gray, piggish eyes of the
+Father, and the black, gleaming, mysterious
+orbs of his visitor were fixed upon each other.
+In the next moment Heller, bowing with a
+ceremonious air of respect, inquired, &quot;What
+are your commands, my lord bishop?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Startled by a consciousness of some wonderful
+change, doubtful in what land he was, or
+even in what age of the world, Father Higgins
+stared about him in expectation. A sunny
+shore, scattered groves of cocoa-nut trees, distant
+villages of circular huts, beyond them far-stretching
+forests and a smoking volcano; on
+the hither side bays alive with carved and
+painted canoes, near at hand a gathering crowd
+of half-naked savages&mdash;such were the objects
+that filled his vision.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So this is me diocese,&quot; he said, without
+feeling the least surprise. &quot;Well, the climate
+is deloightful. Let us hope that the coky-nuts
+will agree wid us, an' that the natives won't
+urge upon us the blissins av martyrdom. Professor,
+what may be the spiritual condition av
+things hereaway, do ye think?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A clear field&mdash;not a convert yet. Your
+predecessor, who went through the office of
+being eaten a year ago, had not even learned
+the language.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The blissid saints watch over us! To hear
+the likes av that, whin I expected to be a god,
+like, among these wretches! Well, it's our
+duty we must do, Heller; we mustn't run
+away from our post; indade, we can't. Moreover,
+I feel a sthrong confidence that the howly
+Catholic Church is to be greatly glorified by
+me on these islands. What do ye say now to
+meself exhibitin' the gift av miracles an'
+tongues? If I should discoorse to these cannebals
+in their own contimptible language,
+would it surprise ye, Heller?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; smiled the professor. &quot;I have seen
+greater marvels in my time. I have seen men
+preach not merely words, but feelings and
+faiths, that they were ignorant of.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Father Higgins, closely followed by Heller,
+now advanced to a green hillock, a few rods
+from the shelly and pebbly beach, knelt down
+upon the thin sward, and repeated a prayer.
+Meantime the population gathered; behind
+them canoe after canoe touched the shore; before
+them there was a swift, tumultuous hurrying
+from the villages; presently they were
+surrounded by a compact, eager, barbaric multitude.
+The babble of its wonder turned to
+silence as the priest rose, extended his fat
+hands, and commenced a sermon.</p>
+
+<p>Father Higgins was not a bit astonished at
+hearing himself pour forth a torrent of words
+which he did not understand, nor at seeing in
+the faces of his wild listeners that they perfectly
+comprehended his discourse. It was
+merely a supernatural inspiration; it was but
+another exhibition of the heavenly gifts of the
+Church; he was as much at his ease as if he
+had been in the habit of working miracles from
+his cradle. At the close of his harangue he
+took out his breviary, and translated a prayer
+into the unknown tongue. Evidently the auditors
+understood this also, for while some
+crouched to earth in undisguisable terror,
+others looked upward as if expecting an answer
+from the sky.</p>
+
+<p>Presently a savage, in a many-colored robe
+of feathers, stepped in front of the multitude,
+and uttered a few sentences.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's a mighty quare providence that this
+miracle works ownly wan way,&quot; observed Father
+Higgins to Heller. &quot;It's meself can prache
+acceptably to this poor haythin, an' it's meself,
+loikewise, can't sense a blissid word he gabbles.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is comparing you with your predecessor,&quot;
+exclaimed the professor. &quot;He says the
+other man called himself a messenger from
+God; but as he could not talk Feejee, they
+saw that he was a liar, because God knows
+every language; and so, having found him a
+liar, they fattened him with fish and cocoa-nuts,
+and ate him. As for you, they admit that you
+are a heavenly personage, and they mean to
+worship you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How came ye to larn the language, annyway?&quot;
+demanded the priest.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have wandered to and fro in the earth a
+good deal,&quot; replied Heller. &quot;I have performed
+some of my best black-art in these islands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Father Higgins, rather bothered by these
+statements, was about to ask further questions,
+when he was seized by four sturdy natives, who
+mounted him upon their naked shoulders, while
+four others uplifted the professor in like manner,
+all then setting off rapidly toward the village,
+followed by the whole crowd in procession.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;An' what if I should tell ye I had conscientious
+scruples agenst lettin' meself be
+adored for a heavenly personage?&quot; objected
+the good Father.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't think of it,&quot; counselled Heller. &quot;Being
+worshipped is infinitely more agreeable than
+being eaten. Besides, consider the interests of
+the Church. If you are set up as a god, you
+can use the position to sprinkle holy water on
+your adorers, and so convert the whole island
+without trouble.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sure y' are mighty well varsed in the precepts
+and customs av the Jesuit Fathers,&quot; answered
+the priest, with a stare of wonder and
+admiration. &quot;I moind me now that the missionaries
+in Chaynee baptized lashins av haythin
+babies under pretinse av rubbin' um with
+medicine. An' it's a maxim that whin the ind
+is salvatory, the manes are justified. It's a
+maxim, also, that y' ave no business to lead
+yer felly-crachurs into sin. Now cannebalism
+is a sin; it ud be a sin capital for these fellies
+to ate us; an', av coorse, it follies that it ud be
+a sin in me to timpt um to do it. But, by sufferin'
+meself to be worshipped I prevint that
+same. So, I advise an' counsel, Heller, that we
+go on as we are for a bit longer, until a proper
+time comes to expose the whole av the thrue
+faith.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Beguiling the way with such like discourse,
+Father Higgins journeyed on to the nearest
+village, where his bearers halted before an unusually
+large hut, evidently serving as a temple.
+In the door of this building the principal chief
+took post, and waving his hand toward the
+crowd, made the following speech:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hear, O chiefs! hear, O priests of our religion
+ye men of Feejee, hear! The god who
+can come over the waters is greater than the
+god who can only abide upon the land, and
+shall have his house and his sacrifices. Whosoever
+disapproves of this, let him offer himself
+for the trial of the sacred poison; if he is not
+ready so to do, let him hereafter hold his peace
+and submit.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>No one objecting, the chief beckoned the
+bearers to follow him, and led the way into the
+temple. Mounting a platform eight or ten feet
+high, he advanced to an ugly scarecrow of an
+idol, slapped it, kicked it, and toppled it to the
+ground. Then, with vast labor and much joyful
+shouting, the ponderous form of Father
+Higgins was hoisted aloft, and installed in the
+seat of the dethroned deity. Next Professor
+Heller was set down upon his feet beside an
+altar which stood in front of the platform.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are ye afther doin', Heller?&quot; inquired
+the clergyman from his eminence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am about to sacrifice to your divinity two
+green cocoa-nuts, two roasted bread-fruit, and
+half a dozen fishes,&quot; was the answer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I suppose it must be permitted,&quot;
+sighed Father Higgins. &quot;Go on wid yer sacrifice,
+me dear felly. I presume, av coorse, that
+it will be in ordher for me to ate some av it.
+Let the fishes be well cooked, by-the-way, and
+sarved wid some kind av sauce. I'd almost as
+lave be devoured meself as devour raw fishes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Really, I have some scruples,&quot; smiled the
+mischievous professor. &quot;You might shock the
+devotional feelings of your new worshippers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I insist upon it, Heller. I tell ye I won't
+ate raw fishes to convart a continent av haythins,
+much less a little bit island av 'um.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The fish being promptly broiled on the coals
+of the altar, were handed up to Father Higgins
+on a large leaf, together with one of the cocoa-nuts
+and a bread-fruit. The worthy man immediately
+proceeded to make a hearty meal,
+vastly to the delight and confirmation in the
+faith of his worshippers, they having never before
+been blessed with a god who could fairly
+and squarely eat his dinner. After another
+brief speech from the chief, and a benediction
+from the padre, the multitude dispersed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it me unavoidable duty to live on this
+perch, Heller?&quot; demanded Father Higgins.
+&quot;Me opinion is that in that case I shall get
+mightily tired av me mission. I'd about as
+lave be a parrot, an' sit in a tin ring.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Father, remember that blessed
+saint who roosted for twenty years on the top
+of a pillar,&quot; urged the professor. &quot;Stay where
+you are until you have got a firm grip on the
+faith of these cannibals.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very good,&quot; assented Higgins, with a
+yawn. &quot;But get me a bucket of wather, me
+dear felly. Sure I must have some blessed an'
+ready for use. The next time sarvice is conducted
+here I propose to sprinkle the worshippers.
+It'll benefit um in more ways nor wan, if
+I'm a judge of ayther sowl or body.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Such was the installation of Bishop Higgins,
+or, as the Feejeeans insisted upon considering
+him, Divinity Higgins, over the diocese of the
+Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>There was something mysterious about the
+Cannibal Islands. Time flew like a bird there;
+the days seemed no more than minutes; they
+were coming, and they were gone. Events,
+emotions, changes of belief, transformations of
+character, succeeded each other with magical
+rapidity. Every thing was transacted at the
+wildest speed of dreams; and yet, what was
+strangest of all, every thing went smoothly and
+naturally; nothing excited astonishment. In a
+few days, or a few seconds, whatever the period
+of time might have been, Father Higgins enjoyed
+being Divinity Higgins.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think it best for the eventual spiritual
+interests av me paple that they should continue
+to worship me for a while longer,&quot; he said to
+Heller. &quot;Human nature in a savage state, ye
+see, wont go at wan jump from a log av wood
+to the thrue Deity. I'm playin' the part av a
+steppin'-stone betwixt the two. Afther they've
+larned to lift their sowls to Higgins, they'll be
+able to go a bit higher, say to the saints first,
+an' thin to the blissid Vargin, an' so on, wan
+step at a time, till they've got the whole av it.
+But it'll be mortial slow, I'm doubtin'. I
+may have to bear an' forbear as I am for an
+intire gineration av the poor crachurs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly,&quot; assented the professor. &quot;Nothing
+so injurious to weak eyes as too much light.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Y' 'ave put it in a nutshell,&quot; replied the
+priest. &quot;Sure an' that's the rason we're opposed
+to gineral schoolin', an' to readin' the
+Bible to the children. Y' are a masther mind,
+Heller, an' ought to been in howly ordhers.
+An' that brings me to another idee av high importince.
+There should be somebody to run
+about with howly wather an' exthrame unction,
+an' the like. Now that business wouldn't shuit
+me pheesical conformation, an' nayther would
+it shuit the character I have to bear. It's
+betther that you should do the outside
+trampin', Heller. Ye know the tradditions an'
+docthrines av the Church well enough, an'
+y' are a dab at Latin. As for yer not bein' av
+the prastely office, I'll jist lay hands on ye an'
+qualify ye for the same. If it happens to be a
+bit irregular, why, the ind justifies the manes,
+ye remimber, or the ancient Fathers are all
+wrong, which is onpossible. An' now, Heller,
+do tell these poor, benighted, lazy loons that I
+must have me coky-nuts fresh, an' as great a
+variety av fish as can be procured in these
+wathers. The chap that preshumes to bring
+me an owld coky-nut I'll curse his basket an'
+his shtore.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>After a brief missionary effort, Heller reported
+that the whole population of the island,
+barring a few obstinate seniors, had been baptized.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's well, me son,&quot; replied Father Higgins.
+&quot;I s'pose y' 'ave done it rather on the
+wholesale, sprinklin' a hundred or so at a fling,
+but I've no doubt y' 'ave done it the best ye
+could in the time y' 'ave had; and surely it's a
+great work, no matter how done. As for the
+apostates&mdash;I mane the fellows that stick to
+their owld haythinism&mdash;it might be well to
+make an example av a few av thim, jist for the
+encouragemint av the faithful. Suppose ye
+should organize an inquisition, or howly office,
+Heller, an' conduct the proceedin's yerself intirely,
+be way av seein' that they are regular
+an' effective? Y' are parfectly able for it,
+wid your knowledge av Church history.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was not long before Heller was able to
+state that all the old fogies and silver-grays
+who remained alive had been converted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, but isn't that blissid news!&quot; responded
+Father Higgins, joyfully. &quot;An'
+wouldn't me brethren, the other biships, be
+glad to hear that same concernin' their dioceses!
+That's betther nor coky-nuts&mdash;of
+which, be-the-way, I'm gettin' a bit tired. I
+wondher, Heller, if some av these other islands
+wouldn't furnish us a change of diet? If we
+could find pataties an' grapes, it ud be a blessin'
+to body an' sowl. Surely it ud be a good
+deed to bring all this archypilago into the thrue
+faith. Couldn't the chafe, now, take an army
+out in his doubled-barrelled canoes, an' commince
+the work av convarsion? Tell him if
+he'll do that same, I'll grant him all the indulgences
+he can think av.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Another magical moment of these lightning-like
+days brought about important events.
+With an armament of scores of canoes and
+hundreds of warriors the chief invaded a large
+island, and was beaten in a bloody battle by its
+painim inhabitants, escaping with but a remnant
+of his followers. Then came a counter
+invasion. The worshippers of Father Higgins
+fought for their deity under his eye; the unbelievers
+were defeated and driven with great
+slaughter to their dug-outs. But as the hostile
+fleet still held command of the sea and hovered
+menacingly off the coast, keeping the faithful
+under arms and preventing them from fishing,
+the good Father decided that peace was necessary.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This livin' on coky-nuts and bread-fruits
+intirely is bad for the stomich, Heller,&quot; he observed.
+&quot;We must come to an ondherstandin'
+wid these raskilly infidels an' idolaters. See if
+ye can't make tarms wid um.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The adroit Heller soon arranged a secret
+treaty with the enemy to the following effect:
+Their chief, Umbaho, was to be universal king
+and his orthodox rival, Patoo-patoo, was to be
+beheaded; polygamy, cannibalism, and the use
+of the sacred poison were to continue in force;
+both islands were to adore Father Higgins and
+bring him sacrifices.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Seems to me they're mighty sevare
+tarms,&quot; commented the Father. &quot;I'd 'a been
+glad to get howld av a bit av timporal sovereighnty,
+don't you see? Moreover, I'm
+sorry about that poor divil, Patoo-patoo; he
+was my first convart. Annyway, I'll give um
+full absolution, so that death can't hurt um
+sariously, an' I'll canonize him as a martyr.
+Saint Patoo-patoo! If that don't satisfy um,
+an' if he ain't willin' to die for the extinsion av
+the faith, he's no thrue belayver, and desarves
+no pity. So jist see to gettin' um off aisy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>After another brief period of time, such as
+periods of time were in these mysterious
+islands, Father Higgins found himself the acknowledged
+divinity of the whole archipelago.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This cannebalism an' polygamy an' the
+like greatly distresses me, however,&quot; he confessed
+to Heller. &quot;Be moments I'm timpted
+to unfold the naked truth, an' bring these paple
+square up to the canons of the Church at wanst.
+But it ud be risky. We read av times, ye
+know, Heller, that God winked at. No doubt
+it's me duty, as a divinity, to go on winkin'
+at these polygamies an' cannebalisms a bit
+longer. Slow an' aisy is me motto, an' I've
+noticed it's the way of Providence mostly.
+Sure it was so at home in Sableburg, ye know,
+Heller; we didn't average a convart in twinty
+years.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Now ensued an event which troubled the
+holy Father more than any thing that had yet
+occurred during his episcopate. Two German
+priests, Heller informed him, had landed on
+one of the islands of the archipelago, and were
+preaching the pure doctrines of the Christian
+faith, denouncing cannibalism and polygamy,
+and otherwise sapping the established religion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Some av the New Catholics, I'll warrant
+ye!&quot; exclaimed Higgins, indignantly. &quot;Some
+of thim blatherskites av the D&ouml;llinger school,
+come over here to stir up sedition in the Church,
+as though they hadn't made worry enough in
+the owld counthries. An' what business has
+Dutchmen here, annyway, whin an Irishman
+has begun the good worrk? They've no right
+to take the labor of convartin' these haythins
+out of me hands that a-way. Me conscience
+won't allow me to permit such distarbances an'
+innovations. See if ye can't get um to lave
+the islands peaceable, Heller. If they won't, I
+shall have to let Umbaho settle wid um afther
+his fashion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>An embassy to the missionaries having obtained
+from them no other response than
+that they would welcome martyrdom rather
+than relinquish their labors, Umbaho was dispatched
+against them at the head of a sufficient
+army, with instructions to treat them as enemies
+of Feejee and of the unity of the Church.</p>
+
+<p>But instead of slaughtering the missionaries,
+Umbaho was converted by them. He renounced
+cannibalism, polygamy, and the sacred
+poison; he denied Father Higgins. Accompanied
+by one of the Germans, he returned
+to Feejee at the head of his army, bent on establishing
+the true Christian faith.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We must press a lot av min, an' beat um,&quot;
+responded the good Father, when Heller informed
+him of the approach and purposes of
+the chief. &quot;Tell the faithful to give no quarter;
+tell um to desthroy ivery wan of these schismatics;
+an' as for the Dutchman, burrn him at the
+stake, as they used to do in the good owld times.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A great battle ensued; the adherents of
+Higginsism were defeated and dispersed; the
+door of the temple opened to Umbaho and the
+German. Father Higgins, by this time a helpless
+mass of fat, swaying perilously on his unsteady
+platform, looked down upon them with
+terror through the smoke of his altar.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sacrilegious wretch!&quot; cried the German,
+God has put an end to thy mad and selfish and
+wicked dominion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish I had niver been a biship!&quot; screamed
+Father Higgins at the top of his voice, as he
+rolled off the platform.</p>
+
+<p>All the way from the Cannibal Islands he
+fell and tumbled and dropped, until, with a
+dull thump, he alighted upon the floor of his
+own study.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There! y' 'ave rolled out av yer chair
+agen, Father Higgins,&quot; said his housekeeper,
+who at that moment entered the room to order
+him to bed, as was her merciful custom.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So I have,&quot; returned the Father, picking
+himself up. &quot;An' sarved me right, too. I
+thought I was the biggest raskil on the face
+av the earth. I wondher if it's true. The
+Lord presarve me from the timptation av great
+power, or I'll abuse it, an' abuse me felly-men
+and the Church!&quot;&mdash;<i>Harper's Magazine</i>, May,
+1872.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="JOHN_TOWNSEND_TROWBRIDGE" id="JOHN_TOWNSEND_TROWBRIDGE"></a>JOHN TOWNSEND TROWBRIDGE.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1827.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="FRED_TROVERS_LITTLE_IRON_CLAD" id="FRED_TROVERS_LITTLE_IRON_CLAD"></a>FRED TROVER'S LITTLE IRON-CLAD.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Did I never tell you the story? Is it
+possible? Draw up your chair. Stick
+of wood, Harry. Smoke?</p>
+
+<p>You've heard of my Uncle Popworth,
+though. Why, yes! You've seen him;&mdash;the
+eminently respectable elderly gentleman who
+came one day last summer just as you were
+going; book under his arm, you remember;
+weed on his hat; dry smile on bland countenance;
+tall, lank individual in very seedy black.
+With him my tale begins; for if I had never
+indulged in an Uncle Popworth I should never
+have sported an Iron-Clad.</p>
+
+<p>Quite right, sir; his arrival <i>was</i> a surprise to
+me. To know how great a surprise, you must
+understand why I left city, friends, business,
+and settled down in this quiet village. It was
+chiefly, sir, to escape the fascinations of that
+worthy old gentleman that I bought this place,
+and took refuge here with my wife and little
+ones. Here we had respite, respite and nepenthe
+from our memories of Uncle Popworth;
+here we used to sit down in the evening and
+talk of the past with grateful and tranquil emotions,
+as people speak of awful things endured
+in days that are no more. To us the height of
+human happiness was raising green corn and
+strawberries, in a retired neighborhood where
+uncles were unknown. But, sir, when that
+Phantom, that Vampire, that Fate, loomed
+before my vision that day, if you had said,
+&quot;Trover, I'll give ye sixpence for this neat
+little box of yours,&quot; I should have said,
+&quot;Done!&quot; with the trifling proviso that you
+should take my uncle in the bargain.</p>
+
+<p>The matter with him? What indeed could
+invest human flesh with such terrors,&mdash;what
+but this? he was&mdash;he is&mdash;let me shriek it in
+your ear&mdash;a bore&mdash;a BORE! of the most malignant
+type; an intolerable, terrible, unmitigated
+BORE!</p>
+
+<p>That book under his arm was a volume of
+his own sermons;&mdash;nine hundred and ninety-nine
+octavo pages, O Heaven! It wasn't
+enough for him to preach and re-preach those
+appalling discourses, but then the ruthless man
+must go and print 'em! When I consider what
+booksellers&mdash;worthy men, no doubt, many of
+them, deserving well of their kind&mdash;he must
+have talked nearly into a state of syncope
+before ever he found one to give way, in a
+moment of weakness, of utter exhaustion and
+despair, and consent to publish him; and when
+I reflect what numbers of inoffensive persons,
+in the quiet walks of life, have been made to
+suffer the infliction of that Bore's Own Book, I
+pause, I stand aghast at the inscrutability of
+Divine Providence.</p>
+
+<p>Don't think me profane, and don't for a
+moment imagine I underrate the function of
+the preacher. There's nothing better than a
+good sermon,&mdash;one that puts new life into you.
+But what of a sermon that takes life out of
+you? instead of a spiritual fountain, a spiritual
+sponge that absorbs your powers of body and
+soul, so that the longer you listen the more
+you are impoverished? A merely poor sermon
+isn't so bad; you will find, if you are the right
+kind of a hearer, that it will suggest something
+better than itself; a good hen will lay to a bit of
+earthen. But the discourse of your ministerial
+vampire, fastening by some mystical process
+upon the hearer who has life of his own,&mdash;though
+not every one has that,&mdash;sucks and
+sucks and sucks; and he is exhausted while the
+preacher is refreshed. So it happens that your
+born bore is never weary of his own boring; he
+thrives upon it; while he seems to be giving,
+he is mysteriously taking in&mdash;he is drinking
+your blood.</p>
+
+<p>But you say nobody is obliged to <i>read</i> a sermon.
+O my unsophisticated friend! if a man
+will put his thoughts&mdash;or his words, if thoughts
+are lacking&mdash;between covers,&mdash;spread his banquet,
+and respectfully invite Public Taste to
+partake of it, Public Taste being free to decline,
+then your observation is sound. If an author
+quietly buries himself in his book,&mdash;very good!
+hic jacet; peace to his ashes!</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;The times have been,</span><br />
+That, when the brains were out, the man would die,<br />
+And there an end; but now they rise again,&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>as Macbeth observes, with some confusion of
+syntax, excusable in a person of his circumstances.
+Now, suppose they&mdash;or he&mdash;the man
+whose brains are out&mdash;goes about with his
+coffin under his arm, like my worthy uncle?
+and suppose he blandly, politely, relentlessly
+insists upon reading to you, out of that octavo
+sarcophagus, passages which in his opinion
+prove that he is not only not dead, but immortal?
+If such a man be a stranger, snub
+him; if a casual acquaintance, met in an evil
+hour, there is still hope,&mdash;doors have locks, and
+there are two sides to a street, and nearsightedness
+is a blessing, and (as a last resort) buttons
+may be sacrificed (you remember Lamb's story
+of Coleridge), and left in the clutch of the fatal
+fingers. But one of your own kindred, and very
+respectable, adding the claim of misfortune to
+his other claims upon you,&mdash;pachydermatous to
+slights, smilingly persuasive, gently persistent,&mdash;as
+imperturbable as a ship's wooden figurehead
+through all the ups and downs of the
+voyage of life, and as insensible to cold water;&mdash;in
+short, an uncle like my uncle, whom there
+was no getting rid of;&mdash;what the deuce would
+you do?</p>
+
+<p>Exactly; run away as I did. There was
+nothing else to be done, unless, indeed, I had
+throttled the old gentleman; in which case I
+am confident that one of our modern model
+juries would have brought in the popular verdict
+of justifiable insanity. But, being a peaceable
+man, I was averse to extreme measures.
+So I did the next best thing,&mdash;consulted my
+wife, and retired to this village.</p>
+
+<p>Then consider the shock to my feelings when
+I looked up that day and saw the enemy of our
+peace stalking into our little Paradise with his
+book under his arm and his carpet-bag in his
+hand! coming with his sermons and his shirts,
+prepared to stay a week&mdash;that is to say a year&mdash;that
+is to say forever, if we would suffer him,&mdash;and
+how was he to be hindered by any desperate
+measures short of burning the house
+down!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear nephew!&quot; says he, striding toward
+me with eager steps, as you perhaps remember,
+smiling his eternally dry, leathery smile,&mdash;&quot;Nephew
+Frederick!&quot;&mdash;and he held out both
+hands to me, book in one and bag in t'other,&mdash;&quot;I
+am rejoiced! One would almost think you
+had tried to hide away from your old uncle!
+for I've been three days hunting you up. And
+how is Dolly? she ought to be glad to see me,
+after all the trouble I've had in finding you!
+And, Nephew Frederick!&mdash;h'm!&mdash;can you lend
+me three dollars for the hackman? for I don't
+happen to have&mdash;thank you! I should have
+been saved this if you had only known I was
+stopping last night at a public house in the
+next village, for I know how delighted you
+would have been to drive over and fetch me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>If you were not already out of hearing, you
+may have noticed that I made no reply to this
+affecting speech. The old gentleman has grown
+quite deaf of late years,&mdash;an infirmity which
+was once a source of untold misery to his
+friends, to whom he was constantly appealing
+for their opinions, which they were obliged to
+shout in his ear. But now, happily, the world
+has about ceased responding to him, and he
+has almost ceased to expect responses from the
+world. He just catches your eye, and, when
+he says, &quot;Don't you think so, sir?&quot; or, &quot;What
+is your opinion, sir?&quot; an approving nod does
+your business.</p>
+
+<p>The hackman paid, my dear uncle accompanied
+me to the house, unfolding the catalogue
+of his woes by the way. For he is one of those
+worthy, unoffending persons, whom an ungrateful
+world jostles and tramples upon,&mdash;whom unmerciful
+disaster follows fast and follows faster.
+In his younger days, he was settled over I
+don't know how many different parishes; but
+secret enmity pursued him everywhere, poisoning
+the parochial mind against him, and driving
+him relentlessly from place to place. Then he
+relapsed into agencies, and went through a long
+list of them, each terminating in flat failure, to
+his ever-recurring surprise,&mdash;the simple old soul
+never suspecting, to this day, who his one great,
+tireless, terrible enemy is!</p>
+
+<p>I got him into the library, and went to talk
+over this unexpected visit&mdash;or visitation&mdash;with
+Dolly. She bore up under it more cheerfully
+than could have been expected,&mdash;suppressed a
+sigh,&mdash;and said she would go down and meet
+him. She received him with a hospitable smile
+(I verily believe that more of the world's
+hypocrisy proceeds from too much good-nature
+than from too little), and listened patiently to
+his explanations.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will observe that I have brought my
+bag,&quot; says he, &quot;for I knew you wouldn't let
+me off for a day or two,&mdash;though I must positively
+leave in a week,&mdash;in two weeks, at the
+latest. I have brought my volume, too, for I
+am contemplating a new edition&quot; (he is always
+contemplating a new edition, making that a
+pretext for lugging the book about with him),
+&quot;and I wish to enjoy the advantages of your
+and Frederick's criticism;&mdash;I anticipate some
+good, comfortable, old-time talks over the old
+book, Frederick!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We had invited some village friends to come
+in and eat strawberries and cream with us that
+afternoon; and the question arose, what should
+be done with the old gentleman? Harry, who
+is a lad of a rather lively fancy, coming in
+while we were taking advantage of his great
+uncle's deafness to discuss the subject in his
+presence, proposed a pleasant expedient.
+&quot;Trot him out into the cornfield, introduce
+him to the scarecrow, and let him talk to
+that,&quot; says he, grinning up into the visitor's
+face, who grinned down at him, no doubt thinking
+what a wonderfully charming boy he was!
+If he were as blind as he is deaf, he might have
+been disposed of very comfortably in some such
+ingenious way;&mdash;the scarecrow, or any other
+lay figure, might have served to engage him in
+one of his immortal monologues. As it was,
+the suggestion bore fruit later, as you will see.</p>
+
+<p>While we were consulting&mdash;keeping up our
+scattering fire of small-arms under the old
+talker's heavy guns&mdash;our parish minister called,&mdash;old
+Doctor Wortleby, for whom we have a
+great liking and respect. Of course we had to
+introduce him to Uncle Popworth,&mdash;for they
+met face to face; and of course Uncle Popworth
+fastened at once upon the brother clergyman.
+Being my guest, Wortleby could do no
+less than listen to Popworth, who is my uncle.
+He listened with interest and sympathy for the
+first half-hour; and then continued listening
+for another half-hour, after his interest and
+sympathy were exhausted. Then, attempting
+to go, he got his hat, and sat with it in his
+hand half an hour longer. Then he stood half
+an hour on his poor old gouty feet, desperately
+edging toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, certainly,&quot; says he, with a weary smile,
+repeatedly endeavoring to break the spell that
+bound him. &quot;I shall be most happy to hear
+the conclusion of your remarks at some future
+time&quot; (even ministers can lie out of politeness);
+&quot;but just now&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One word more, and I am done,&quot; cries my
+Uncle Popworth, for the fiftieth time; and
+Wortleby, in despair, sat down again.</p>
+
+<p>Then our friends arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Dolly and I, who had all the while been
+benevolently wishing Wortleby would go, and
+trying to help him off, now selfishly hoped he
+would remain and share our entertainment&mdash;and
+our Uncle Popworth.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I ought to have gone two hours ago,&quot; he
+said, with a plaintive smile, in reply to our invitation;
+&quot;but, really, I am feeling the need of
+a cup of tea&quot; (and no wonder!) &quot;and I think I
+will stay.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We cruelly wished that he might continue to
+engage my uncle in conversation; but that
+would have been too much to hope from the
+sublime endurance of a martyr,&mdash;if ever there
+was one more patient than he. Seeing the
+Lintons and the Greggs arrive, he craftily
+awaited his opportunity, and slipped off, to
+give them a turn on the gridiron. First Linton
+was secured; and you should have seen him
+roll his mute, appealing orbs, as he settled
+helplessly down under the infliction. Suddenly
+he made a dash. &quot;I am ignorant of these
+matters,&quot; said he; &quot;but Gregg understands
+them;&mdash;Gregg will talk with you.&quot; But Gregg
+took refuge behind the ladies. The ladies
+receiving a hint from poor distressed Dolly,
+scattered. But no artifice availed against the
+dreadful man. Piazza, parlor, garden,&mdash;he
+ranged everywhere, and was sure to seize a
+victim.</p>
+
+<p>At last tea was ready, and we all went in.
+The Lintons and Greggs are people of the
+world, who would hardly have cared to wait for
+a blessing on such lovely heaps of strawberries
+and mugs of cream as they saw before them;
+but, there being two clergymen at the table,
+the ceremony was evidently expected. We
+were placidly seated; there was a hush, agreeably
+filled with the fragrance of the delicious
+fruit: even my uncle Popworth, from long
+habit, turned off his talk at that suggestive
+moment: when I did what I thought a shrewd
+thing. I knew too well my relative's long-windedness
+at his devotions, as at everything
+else (I wonder if Heaven itself isn't bored by
+such fellows!)&mdash;I had suffered, I had seen my
+guests suffer, too much from him already,&mdash;to
+think of deliberately yielding him a fearful advantage
+over us; so I coolly passed him by, and
+gave an expressive nod to the old Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>Wortleby began; and I was congratulating
+myself on my adroit management of a delicate
+matter, when&mdash;conceive my consternation!&mdash;Popworth&mdash;not
+to speak it profanely&mdash;followed
+suit! The reverend egotist couldn't take in
+the possibility of anybody but himself being
+invited to say grace at our table, he being
+present;&mdash;he hadn't noticed my nod to the
+Doctor, and the Doctor's low, earnest voice
+didn't reach him;&mdash;and there, with one blessing
+going on one side of the table, he, as I said,
+pitched in on the other! His eyes shut, his
+hands spread over his plate, his elbows on the
+board, his head bowed, he took care that grace
+should abound with us for once! His mill
+started, I knew there was no stopping it, and I
+hoped Wortleby would desist. But he didn't
+know his man. He seemed to feel that he had
+the stroke-oar, and he pulled away manfully.
+As Popworth lifted up his loud, nasal voice, the
+old Doctor raised his voice, in the vain hope, I
+suppose, of making himself heard by his lusty
+competitor. If you have never had two blessings
+running opposition at your table, in the
+presence of invited guests, you can never imagine
+how astounding, how killingly ludicrous
+it was! I felt that both Linton and Gregg were
+ready to tumble over, each in an apoplexy of
+suppressed emotions; while I had recourse to
+my handkerchief to hide my tears. At length,
+poor Wortleby yielded to fate,&mdash;withdrew from
+the unequal contest&mdash;hauled off&mdash;for repairs;
+and the old seventy-two gun-ship thundered
+away in triumph.</p>
+
+<p>At last (as there must be an end to everything
+under the sun) my uncle came to a close;
+and a moment of awful silence ensued, during
+which no man durst look at another. But in
+my weak and jelly-like condition I ventured a
+glance at him, and noticed that he looked up
+and around with an air of satisfaction at having
+performed a solemn duty in a becoming
+manner, blissfully unconscious of having run a
+poor brother off the track. Seeing us all with
+moist eyes and much affected,&mdash;two or three
+handkerchiefs still going,&mdash;he no doubt flattered
+himself that the pathetic touches in his prayer
+had told.</p>
+
+<p>This will give you some idea of the kind of
+man we had on our hands; and I won't risk
+making myself as great a bore as he is, by attempting
+a history of his stay with us; for I
+remember I set out to tell you about my little
+Iron-Clad. I'm coming to that.</p>
+
+<p>Suffice it to say, he stayed&mdash;he <i>stayed</i>&mdash;he
+STAYED!&mdash;five mortal weeks; refusing to take
+hints when they almost became kicks; driving
+our friends from us, and ourselves almost to
+distraction; his misfortunes alone protecting
+him from a prompt and vigorous elimination:
+when a happy chance helped me to a solution
+of this awful problem of destiny.</p>
+
+<p>More than once I had recalled Harry's vivacious
+suggestion of the scarecrow&mdash;if one
+could only have been invented that would sit
+composedly in a chair and nod when spoken
+to! I was wishing for some such automaton,
+to bear the brunt of the boring with which we
+were afflicted, when one day there came a little
+man into the garden, where I had taken
+refuge.</p>
+
+<p>He was a short, swarthy, foreign-looking,
+diminutive, stiff, rather comical fellow,&mdash;little
+figure mostly head, little head mostly face, little
+face mostly nose, which was by no means
+little&mdash;a sort of human vegetable (to my horticultural
+eye) running marvellously to seed in
+that organ. The first thing I saw, on looking
+up at the sound of footsteps, was the said nose
+coming toward me, among the sweet-corn
+tassels. Nose of a decidedly Hebraic cast,&mdash;the
+bearer respectably dressed, though his
+linen had an unwholesome sallowness, and his
+cloth a shiny, much-brushed, second-hand appearance.</p>
+
+<p>Without a word he walks up to me, bows
+solemnly, and pulls from his pocket (I thought
+he was laying his hand on his heart) the familiar,
+much-worn weapon of his class,&mdash;the
+folded, torn yellow paper, ready to fall to
+pieces as you open it,&mdash;in short, the respectable
+beggar's certificate of character. With
+another bow (which gave his nose the aspect
+of the beak of a bird of prey making a pick at
+me) he handed the document. I found that
+it was dated in Milwaukee, and signed by the
+mayor of that city, two physicians, three
+clergymen, and an editor, who bore united
+testimony to the fact that Jacob Menzel&mdash;I
+think that was his name&mdash;the bearer, any way,&mdash;was
+a deaf mute, and, considering that fact,
+a prodigy of learning, being master of no less
+than five different languages (a pathetic circumstance,
+considering that he was unable to
+speak one); moreover, that he was a converted
+Jew; and, furthermore, a native of Germany,
+who had come to this country in company with
+two brothers, both of whom had died of cholera
+in St. Louis in one day; in consequence of
+which affliction, and his recent conversion, he
+was now anxious to return to Fatherland,
+where he proposed to devote his life to the
+conversion of his brethren;&mdash;the upshot of all
+which was that good Christians and charitable
+souls everywhere were earnestly recommended
+to aid the said Jacob Menzel in his pious undertaking.</p>
+
+<p>I was fumbling in my pocket for a little
+change wherewith to dismiss him,&mdash;for that is
+usually the easiest way of getting off your
+premises and your conscience the applicant for
+&quot;aid,&quot; who is probably an impostor, yet possibly
+not,&mdash;when my eye caught the words
+(for I still held the document), &quot;would be glad
+of any employment which may help to pay his
+way.&quot; The idea of finding employment for a
+man of such a large nose and little body, such
+extensive knowledge and diminutive legs&mdash;who
+had mastered five languages yet could not
+speak or understand a word of any one of them,&mdash;struck
+me as rather pleasant, to say the least;
+yet, after a moment's reflection,&mdash;wasn't he the
+very thing I wanted, the manikin, the target for
+my uncle?</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile he was scribbling rapidly on a
+small slate he had taken from his pocket.
+With another bow (as if he had written something
+wrong and was going to wipe it out with
+his nose), he handed me the slate, on which I
+found written in a neat hand half-a-dozen lines
+in as many different languages,&mdash;English, Latin,
+Hebrew, German, French, Greek,&mdash;each, as far
+as I could make out, conveying the cheerful information
+that he could communicate with me
+in that particular tongue. I tried him in English,
+French, and Latin, and I must acknowledge
+that he stood the test; he then tried me In
+Greek and Hebrew, and I as freely confess that
+I didn't stand the test. He smiled intelligently,
+nodded, and condescendingly returned
+to the English tongue, writing quickly,&mdash;&quot;I am
+a poor exile from Fatherland, and I much need
+friends.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I wrote: &quot;You wish employment?&quot; He replied:
+&quot;I shall be much obliged for any service
+I shall be capable to do,&quot;&mdash;and passed me the
+slate with a hopeful smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What can you do?&quot; I asked. He answered:
+&quot;I copy the manuscripts, I translate from the
+one language to others with some perfect exactitude,
+I arrange the libraries, I make the catalogues,
+I am capable to be any secretary.&quot; And
+he looked up as if he saw in my eyes a vast
+vista of catalogues, manuscripts, libraries, and
+Fatherland at the end of it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How would you like to be companion to
+a literary man?&quot; I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded expressively, and wrote: &quot;I
+should that like overall. But I speak and
+hear not.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No matter,&quot; I replied. &quot;You will only
+have to sit and appear to listen, and nod occasionally.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You shall be the gentleman?&quot; he asked
+with a bright, pleased look.</p>
+
+<p>I explained to him that the gentleman was an
+unfortunate connection of my family, whom we
+could not regard as being quite in his right
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>Jacob Menzel smiled, and touched his fore
+head interrogatively.</p>
+
+<p>I nodded, adding on the slate,&mdash;&quot;He is perfectly
+harmless; but he can only be kept quiet
+by having some person to talk and read to. He
+will talk and read to you. He must not know
+you are deaf. He is very deaf himself, and will
+not expect you to reply.&quot; And, for a person
+wishing a light and easy employment, I recommended
+the situation.</p>
+
+<p>He wrote at once, &quot;How much you pay?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One dollar a day, and board you,&quot; I replied.</p>
+
+<p>He of the nose nodded eagerly at that, and
+wrote, &quot;Also you make to be washed my
+shirt?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I agreed; and the bargain was closed. I got
+him into the house, and gave him a bath, a
+clean shirt, and complete instructions how to
+act.</p>
+
+<p>The gravity with which he entered upon the
+situation was astonishing. He didn't seem to
+taste the slightest flavor of a joke in it all.
+It was a simple matter of business; he saw in it
+only money and Fatherland.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile I explained my intentions to Dolly,
+saying in great glee: &quot;His deafness is his
+defence: the old three-decker may bang away at
+him; he is IRON-CLAD!&quot; And that suggested
+the name we have called him by ever since.</p>
+
+<p>When he was ready for action, I took him in
+tow, and ran him in to draw the Popworth's
+fire&mdash;in other words, introduced him to my
+uncle in the library. The meeting of my tall,
+lank relative and the big-nosed little Jew was a
+spectacle to cure a hypochondriac! &quot;Mr. Jacob
+Menzel&mdash;gentleman from Germany&mdash;travelling
+in this country,&quot; I yelled in the old fellow's
+ear. He of the diminutive legs and stupendous
+nose bowed with perfect decorum, and seated
+himself, stiff and erect, in the big chair I placed
+for him. The avuncular countenance lighted
+up: here were fresh woods and pastures new to
+that ancient shepherd. As for myself, I was
+wellnigh strangled by a cough which just then
+seized me, and obliged to retreat,&mdash;for I never
+was much of an actor, and the comedy of that
+first interview was overpowering.</p>
+
+<p>As I passed the dining-room door, Dolly, who
+was behind it, gave my arm a fearful pinch, that
+answered, I supposed, in the place of a scream,
+as a safety-valve for her hysterical emotions.
+&quot;O you cruel man&mdash;you miserable humbug!&quot;
+says she; and went off into convulsions of
+laughter. The door was open, and we could
+see and hear every thing.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are travelling, h'm?&quot; says my uncle.
+The nose nodded duly. &quot;H'm! I have travelled,
+myself,&quot; the old gentleman proceeded;
+&quot;my life has been one of vicissitudes, h'm! I
+have journeyed, I have preached, I have published;&mdash;perhaps
+you have heard of my literary
+venture&quot;&mdash;and over went the big volume to the
+little man, who took it, turned the leaves, and
+nodded and smiled, according to instructions.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are very kind to say so; thank you!&quot;
+says my uncle, rubbing his husky hands with
+satisfaction. &quot;Rejoiced to meet with you,
+truly! It is always a gratification to have an
+intelligent and sympathizing brother to open
+one's mind to; it is especially refreshing to me,
+for, as I may say without egotism, my life and
+labors have <i>not</i> been appreciated.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>From that the old interminable story took its
+start and flowed on, the faithful nose nodding
+assent at every turn in that winding stream.</p>
+
+<p>The children came in for their share of the
+fun; and for the first time in our lives we took
+pleasure in the old gentleman's narration of his
+varied experiences.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O hear him! see him go it!&quot; said Robbie.
+&quot;What a nose!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Long may it wave!&quot; said Harry.</p>
+
+<p>With other remarks of a like genial nature;
+while there they sat, the two,&mdash;my uncle on
+one side, long, lathy, self-satisfied, gesticulating,
+earnestly laying his case before a grave
+jury of one, whom he was bound to convince,
+if time would allow; my little Jew facing him,
+upright in his chair, stiff, imperturbable, devoted
+to business, honorably earning his money, the
+nose in the air, immovable, except when it
+played duly up and down at fitting intervals:
+in which edifying employment I left them, and
+went about my business, a cheerier man.</p>
+
+<p>Ah, what a relief it was to feel myself free
+for a season from the attacks of the enemy&mdash;to
+know that my plucky little Iron-Clad was engaging
+him! In a hour I passed through the
+hall again, heard the loud blatant voice still
+discoursing (it had got as far as the difficulties
+with the second parish), and saw the unflinching
+nasal organ perform its graceful see-saw
+of assent. An hour later it was the same,&mdash;except
+that the speaker had arrived at the
+persecutions which drove him from parish number
+three. When I went to call them to dinner,
+the scene had changed a little, for now the old
+gentleman, pounding the table for a pulpit, was
+reading aloud passages from a powerful farewell
+sermon preached to his ungrateful parishioners.
+I was sorry I couldn't give my man a
+hint to use his handkerchief at the affecting
+periods, for the nose can hardly be called a
+sympathetic feature (unless indeed you blow it),
+and these nods were becoming rather too mechanical,
+except when the old gentleman switched
+off on the argumentative track, as he frequently
+did. &quot;What think you of that?&quot; he
+would pause in his reading to inquire. &quot;Isn't
+that logic? isn't that unanswerable?&quot; In responding
+to which appeals nobody could have
+done better than my serious, my devoted, my
+lovely little Jew.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dinner!&quot; I shouted over my uncle's dickey.
+It was almost the only word that had the
+magic in it to rouse him from the feast of reason
+which his own conversation was to him. It
+was always easy to head him toward the dining-room&mdash;to
+steer him into port for necessary
+supplies. The little Iron-Clad followed in his
+wake. At table, the old gentleman resumed
+the account of his dealings with parish number
+three, and got on as far as negotiations with
+number four; occasionally stopping to eat his
+soup or roast-beef very fast; at which time
+Jacob Menzel, who was very much absorbed
+in his dinner, but never permitted himself to
+neglect business for pleasure, paused at the
+proper intervals, with his spoon or fork half-way
+to his mouth, and nodded,&mdash;just as if my
+uncle had been speaking,&mdash;yielding assent to
+his last remarks after mature consideration, no
+doubt the old gentleman thought.</p>
+
+<p>The fun of the thing wore off after a while,
+and then we experienced the solid advantages
+of having an Iron-Clad in the house; Afternoon&mdash;evening&mdash;the
+next day&mdash;my little man
+of business performed his function promptly
+and assiduously. But in the afternoon of the
+second day he began to change perceptibly.
+He wore an aspect of languor and melancholy
+that alarmed me. The next morning he was
+pale, and went to his work with an air of sorrowful
+resignation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is thinking of Fatherland,&quot; said the sympathizing
+Dolly; while Harry's less refined but
+more sprightly comment was, that the nose had
+about played out.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed it had almost ceased to wave; and I
+feared that I was about to lose a most valuable
+servant, whose place it would be impossible to
+fill. Accordingly I wrote on a slip of paper,
+which I sent in to him,&quot;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have done well, and I raise your salary
+to a dollar and a quarter a day. Your influence
+over our unfortunate relative is soothing and
+beneficial. Go on as you have begun,&mdash;continue
+in well-doing, and merit the lasting gratitude
+of an afflicted family.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That seemed to cheer him a little&mdash;to wind
+him up, as Harry said, and set the pendulum
+swinging again. But it was not long before
+the listlessness and low spirits returned; Menzel
+showed a sad tendency to shirk his duty;
+and before noon there came a crash.</p>
+
+<p>I was in the garden, when I heard a shriek
+of rage and despair, and saw the little Jew
+coming toward me with frantic gestures.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I yielt! I abandone! I take my moneys
+and my shirt, and I go!&quot; says he.</p>
+
+<p>I stood in perfect astonishment at hearing
+the dumb speak; while he threw his arms
+wildly above his head, exclaiming:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not teaf! I am not teaf! I am not
+teaf! He is one terreeble mon! He vill haf
+my life! So I go&mdash;I fly&mdash;I take my moneys
+and my shirt&mdash;I leafe him, I leafe your house!
+I vould earn honest living, but&mdash;Gott im himmel!
+dieu des dieux! all de devils!&quot; he shrieked,
+mixing up several of his languages at once, in
+his violent mental agitation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Jacob Menzel!&quot; said I, solemnly, &quot;I little
+thought I was having to do with an impostor!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I haf you deceive, I haf myself more
+dan punish!&quot; was his reply. &quot;Now I resign
+de position. I ask for de moneys and de shirt,
+and I part!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Just then my uncle came up, amazed at his
+new friend's sudden revolt and flight, and
+anxious to finish up with his seventh parish.
+&quot;I vill hear no more of your six, of your
+seven,&mdash;I know not how many parish!&quot;
+screamed the furious little Jew, turning on
+him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What means all this?&quot; said my bewildered
+uncle.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I tell you vat means it all!&quot; the vindictive
+little impostor, tiptoeing up to him, yelled at
+his cheek. &quot;I make not vell my affairs in your
+country; I vould return to Faderlant; for conwenience
+I carry dis pappeer. I come here; I
+am suppose teaf; I accept de position to be
+your companion, for if a man hear, you kill
+him tead soon vid your book and your ten,
+twenty parish! I hear! you kill me! and I go!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, having obtained his moneys and his
+shirt, he went. That is the last I ever saw of
+my little Iron-Clad. I remember him with gratitude,
+for he did me good service, and he had
+but one fault, namely, that he was <i>not</i> iron-clad!</p>
+
+<p>As for my uncle, for the first time in his life,
+I think, he said never a word, but stalked into
+the house. Dolly soon came running out to
+ask what was the matter; Popworth was actually
+packing his carpet-bag! I called Andrew, and
+ordered him to be in readiness with the buggy
+to take the old gentleman over to the railroad.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What! going?&quot; I cried, as my uncle presently
+appeared, bearing his book and his baggage.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nephew Frederick!&quot; said he, &quot;after this
+treatment, can you ask me if am going?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Really,&quot; I shouted, &quot;it is not my fault that
+the fellow proved an impostor. I employed him
+with the best of intentions, for your&mdash;and our&mdash;good!&quot;
+&quot;Nephew Frederick,&quot; said he, &quot;this is insufferable;
+you will regret it! I shall never&mdash;NEVER&quot;
+(as if he had been pronouncing my
+doom)&mdash;&quot;accept of your hospitalities again!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He did, however, accept some money which
+I offered him, and likewise a seat in the buggy.
+I watched his departure with joy and terror,&mdash;for
+at any moment he might relent and stay
+nor was I at ease in my mind until I saw Andrew
+come riding back alone.</p>
+
+<p>We have never seen the old gentleman since
+But last winter I received a letter from him
+he wrote in a forgiving tone, to inform me that
+he had been appointed chaplain in a prison, and
+to ask for a loan of money to buy a suit of
+clothes. I sent him fifty dollars and my congratulations.
+I consider him eminently qualified
+to fill the new situation. As a hardship
+he can't be beat; and what are the rogues sent
+to prison for, but to suffer punishment?</p>
+
+<p>Yes, it would be a joke if my little Iron-Clad
+should end his career of imposture in that public
+institution, and sit once more under my excellent
+uncle! But I can't wish him any such
+misfortune. His mission to us was one of mercy.
+The place has been Paradise again, ever since
+his visit.&mdash;<i>Scribners Magazine</i>, August, 1873.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="OLIVER_BELL_BUNCE" id="OLIVER_BELL_BUNCE"></a>OLIVER BELL BUNCE.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1828.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="MR_BLUFF_DISCOURSES_OF_THE_COUNTRY_AND_KINDRED_THEMES" id="MR_BLUFF_DISCOURSES_OF_THE_COUNTRY_AND_KINDRED_THEMES"></a>MR. BLUFF DISCOURSES OF THE COUNTRY
+AND KINDRED THEMES.</h2>
+
+<p>(<i>In a Country Lane</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>BACHELOR BLUFF.
+A LISTENER.</p>
+
+
+<p>&quot;The country,&quot; exclaimed Mr. Bluff, with
+an air of candor and impartiality,
+&quot;is, I admit, a very necessary and sometimes
+a very charming place. I thank Heaven for
+the country when I eat my first green peas,
+when the lettuce is crisp, when the potatoes are
+delicate and mealy, when the well-fed poultry
+comes to town, when the ruddy peach and the
+purple grape salute me at the fruit-stands. I
+love the country when I think of a mountain
+ramble; when I am disposed to wander with
+rod and reel along the forest-shadowed brook;
+when the apple-orchards are in blossom; when
+the hills blaze with autumn foliage. But I protest
+against the dogmatism of rural people,
+who claim all the cardinal and all the remaining
+virtues for their rose-beds and cabbage-patches.
+The town, sir, bestows felicities higher in character
+than the country does; for men and
+women, and the works of men and women, are
+always worthier our love and concern than the
+rocks and the hills ...</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;&quot;Oh, yes! I have heard before of the
+pleasures of the garden. Poets have sung, enthusiasts
+have written, and old men have
+dreamed of them since History began her
+chronicles. But have the <i>pains</i> of the garden
+ever been dwelt upon? Have people, now,
+been entirely honest in what they have said
+and written on this theme? When enthusiasts
+have told us of their prize pears, their early
+peas of supernatural tenderness, their asparagus,
+and their roses, and their strawberries,
+have they not hidden a good deal about their
+worm-eaten plums&mdash;about their cherries that
+were carried off by armies of burglarious birds;
+about their potatoes that proved watery and
+unpalatable; about their melons that fell victims
+to their neighbors' fowls; about their
+peaches that succumbed to the unexpected
+raid of Jack Frost; about their grapes that fell
+under the blight of mildew; about their green
+corn that withered in the hill; about the
+mighty host of failures that, if all were told,
+would tower in high proportion above the few
+much blazoned successes?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who is it that says a garden is a standing
+source of pleasure? Amend this, I say, by
+asserting that a garden is a standing source of
+discomfort and vexation ... A hopeless
+restlessness, according to my observation, takes
+possession of every amateur gardener. Discontent
+abides in his soul. There is, indeed, so
+much to be done, changed, rearranged, watched,
+nursed, that the amateur gardener is really entitled
+to praise and generous congratulations
+when one of his thousand schemes comes to
+fruition. We ought in pity to rejoice with him
+over his big Lawton blackberries, and say
+nothing of the cherries, and the pears, and the
+peaches, that once were budding hopes, but
+have gone the way of Moore's 'dear gazelle.'
+Then the large expenditures which were needed
+to bring about his triumph of the Lawtons.
+'Those potatoes,' said an enthusiastic amateur
+gardener to me once, 'cost twenty-five cents
+apiece!' And they were very good potatoes,
+too&mdash;almost equal to those that could be
+bought in market at a dollar a bushel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And then, amateur gardeners are feverishly
+addicted to early rising. Men with gardens are
+like those hard drinkers whose susceptibilities
+are hopelessly blunted. Who but a man diverted
+from the paths of honest feeling and
+natural enjoyment, possessed of a demoniac
+mania, lost to the peace and serenity of the
+virtuous and the blessed, could find pleasure
+amid the damps, and dews, and chills, and raw-edgedness
+of a garden in the early morning,
+absolutely find pleasure in saturated trousers,
+in shoes swathed in moisture, in skies that are
+gray and gloomy, in flowers that are, as Mantalini
+would put it, 'demnition moist'? The
+thing is incredible! Now, a garden, after the
+sun has dried the paths, warmed the air, absorbed
+the dew, is admissible. But a possession
+that compels an early turning out into
+fogs and discomforts deserves for this fact
+alone the anathema of all rational beings.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I really believe, sir, that the literature of
+the garden, so abundant everywhere, is written
+in the interest of suburban land-owners. The
+inviting one-sided picture so persistently held
+up is only a covert bit of advertising, intended
+to seduce away happy cockneys of the town&mdash;men
+supremely contented with their attics, their
+promenades in Fifth Avenue, their visits to
+Central Park, where all is arranged for them
+without their labor or concern, their evenings
+at the music gardens, their soft morning slumbers,
+which know no dreadful chills and dews!
+How could a back-ache over the pea-bed compensate
+for these felicities? How could sour
+cherries, or half-ripe strawberries, or wet rosebuds,
+even if they do come from one's own garden,
+reward him for the lose of the ease and
+the serene conscience of one who sings merrily
+in the streets, and cares not whether worms
+burrow, whether suns burn, whether birds steal,
+whether winds overturn, whether droughts
+destroy, whether floods drown, whether gardens
+flourish, or not?&quot;&mdash;<i>Bachelor Bluff: his Opinions,
+Sentiments, and Disputations</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHARLES_DUDLEY_WARNER" id="CHARLES_DUDLEY_WARNER"></a>CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1829.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="GARDEN_ETHICS" id="GARDEN_ETHICS"></a>GARDEN ETHICS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I believe that I have found, if not
+original sin, at least vegetable total depravity
+in my garden; and it was there before
+I went into it. It is the bunch-, or joint-, or
+snake-grass,&mdash;whatever it is called. As I do
+not know the names of all the weeds and plants,
+I have to do as Adam did in his garden,&mdash;name
+things as I find them. This grass has a slender,
+beautiful stalk: and when you cut it down, or
+pull up a long root of it, you fancy it is got rid
+of; but in a day or two it will come up in the
+same spot in half a dozen vigorous blades.
+Cutting down and pulling up is what it thrives
+on. Extermination rather helps it. If you
+follow a slender white root, it will be found to
+run under the ground until it meets another
+slender white root; and you will soon unearth
+a network of them, with a knot somewhere,
+sending out dozens of sharp-pointed, healthy
+shoots, every joint prepared to be an independent
+life and plant. The only way to deal with
+it is to take one part hoe and two parts fingers,
+and carefully dig it out, not leaving a joint anywhere.
+It will take a little time, say all summer,
+to dig out thoroughly a small patch; but
+if you once dig it out, and keep it out, you will
+have no further trouble.</p>
+
+<p>I have said it was total depravity. Here it
+is. If you attempt to pull up and root out sin
+in you, which shows on the surface,&mdash;if it does
+not show, you do not care for it,&mdash;you may
+have noticed how it runs into an interior network
+of sins, and an ever-sprouting branch of
+these roots somewhere; and that you cannot
+pull out one without making a general internal
+disturbance, and rooting up your whole being.
+I suppose it is less trouble to quietly cut them
+off at the top&mdash;say once a week, on Sunday,
+when you put on your religious clothes and
+face,&mdash;so that no one will see them, and not try
+to eradicate the network within.</p>
+
+<p><i>Remark</i>.&mdash;This moral vegetable figure is at
+the service of any clergyman who will have the
+manliness to come forward and help me at a
+day's hoeing on my potatoes. None but the
+orthodox need apply.</p>
+
+<p>I, however, believe in the intellectual, if not
+the moral, qualities of vegetables, and especially
+weeds. There was a worthless vine that (or
+who) started up about midway between a grape-trellis
+and a row of bean-poles, some three feet
+from each, but a little nearer the trellis. When
+it came out of the ground, it looked around to
+see what it should do. The trellis was already
+occupied. The bean-pole was empty. There was
+evidently the a little best chance of light, air,
+and sole proprietorship on the pole. And the vine
+started for the pole, and began to climb it with
+determination. Here was as distinct an act of
+choice, of reason, as a boy exercises when he
+goes into a forest, and, looking about, decides
+which tree he will climb. And, besides, how
+did the vine know enough to travel in exactly
+the right direction, three feet, to find what it
+wanted? This is intellect. The weeds, on the
+other hand, have hateful moral qualities. To
+cut down a weed is, therefore, to do a moral
+action. I feel as if I were destroying a sin.
+My hoe becomes an instrument of retributive
+justice. I am an apostle of nature. This view
+of the matter lends a dignity to the art of hoeing
+which nothing else does, and lifts it into
+the region of ethics. Hoeing becomes, not a
+pastime, but a duty. And you get to regard it
+so, as the days and the weeds lengthen.</p>
+
+<p><i>Observation</i>.&mdash;Nevertheless, what a man needs
+in gardening is a cast-iron back, with a hinge in
+it. The hoe is an ingenious instrument, calculated
+to call out a great deal of strength at a
+great disadvantage.</p>
+
+<p>The striped bug has come, the saddest of the
+year. He is a moral double-ender, iron-clad at
+that. He is unpleasant in two ways. He burrows
+in the ground so that you cannot find him,
+and he flies away so that you cannot catch him.
+He is rather handsome, as bugs go, but utterly
+dastardly, in that he gnaws the stem of the
+plant close to the ground, and ruins it without
+any apparent advantage to himself. I find him
+on the hills of cucumbers (perhaps it will be a
+cholera-year, and we shall not want any), the
+squashes (small loss), and the melons (which
+never ripen). The best way to deal with the
+striped bug is to sit down by the hills, and
+patiently watch for him. If you are spry, you
+can annoy him. This, however, takes time. It
+takes all day and part of the night. For he
+flieth in the darkness, and wasteth at noonday.
+If you get up before the dew is off the plants,&mdash;it
+goes off very early,&mdash;you can sprinkle soot on
+the plant (soot is my panacea: if I can get the
+disease of a plant reduced to the necessity of
+soot, I am all right); and soot is unpleasant to
+the bug. But the best thing to do is set a toad
+to catch the bugs. The toad at once establishes
+the most intimate relations with the bug. It is
+a pleasure to see such unity among the lower
+animals. The difficulty is to make the toad
+stay and watch the hill. If you know your
+toad, it is all right. If you do not, you must
+build a tight fence round the plants, which the
+toad cannot jump over. This, however, introduces
+a new element. I find that I have a
+zoological garden on my hands. It is an unexpected
+result of my little enterprise, which
+never aspired to the completeness of the Paris
+&quot;Jardin des Plantes.&quot;&mdash;<i>My Summer in a
+Garden</i>.</p>
+
+
+<h2>THE PLUMBER.</h2>
+
+<p>Speaking of the philosophical temper, there
+is no class of men whose society is to be more
+desired for this quality than that of plumbers!
+They are the most agreeable men I know; and
+the boys in the business begin to be agreeable
+very early. I suspect the secret of it is, that
+they are agreeable by the hour. In the driest
+days, my fountain became disabled: the pipe
+was stopped up. A couple of plumbers, with
+the implements of their craft, came out to view
+the situation. There was a good deal of difference
+of opinion about where the stoppage was.
+I found the plumbers perfectly willing to sit
+down and talk about it,&mdash;talk by the hour.
+Some of their guesses and remarks were exceedingly
+ingenious; and their general observations
+on other subjects were excellent in their
+way, and could hardly have been better if they
+had been made by the job. The work dragged
+a little,&mdash;as it is apt to do by the hour. The
+plumbers had occasion to make me several
+visits. Sometimes they would find, upon arrival,
+that they had forgotten some indispensable
+tool; and one would go back to the shop,
+a mile and a half, after it; and his comrade
+would await his return with the most exemplary
+patience, and sit down and talk,&mdash;always by the
+hour. I do not know but it is a habit to have
+something wanted at the shop. They seemed
+to me very good workmen, and always willing
+to stop and talk about the job, or any thing
+else, when I went near them. Nor had they
+any of that impetuous hurry that is said to be
+the bane of our American civilization. To their
+credit be it said, that I never observed any
+thing of it in them. They can afford to wait.
+Two of them will sometimes wait nearly half
+a day while a comrade goes for a tool. They
+are patient and philosophical. It is a great
+pleasure to meet such men. One only wishes
+there was some work he could do for <i>them</i> by
+the hour. There ought to be reciprocity. I
+think they have very nearly solved the problem
+of Life: it is to work for other people,
+never for yourself, and get your pay by the
+hour. You then have no anxiety, and little
+work. If you do things by the job, you are
+perpetually driven: the hours are scourges. If
+you work by the hour, you gently sail on the
+stream of Time, which is always bearing you
+on to the haven of Pay, whether you make any
+effort or not. Working by the hour tends to
+make one moral. A plumber working by the
+job, trying to unscrew a rusty, refractory nut,
+in a cramped position, where the tongs continually
+slipped off, would swear; but I never heard
+one of them swear, or exhibit the least impatience
+at such a vexation, working by the hour.
+Nothing can move a man who is paid by the
+hour. How sweet the flight of time seems to his
+calm mind!&mdash;<i>My Summer in a Garden</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="FRANCES_LEE_PRATT" id="FRANCES_LEE_PRATT"></a>FRANCES LEE PRATT.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1830.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="CAPTAIN_BENS_CHOICE" id="CAPTAIN_BENS_CHOICE"></a>CAPTAIN BEN'S CHOICE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>An old red house on a rocky shore, with a
+fisherman's blue boat rocking on the
+bay, and two white sails glistening far away
+over the water. Above, the blue, shining sky;
+and below, the blue shining sea.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It seems clever to have a pleasant day,&quot;
+said Mrs. Davids, sighing.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Davids said every thing with a sigh, and
+now she wiped her eyes also on her calico apron.
+She was a woman with a complexion like faded
+sea-weed, who seemed always pitying herself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I tell them,&quot; said she, &quot;I have had real hard
+luck. My husband is buried away off in California,
+and my son died in the army, and he is
+buried away down South. Neither one of them
+is buried together.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then she sighed again. Twice, this time.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And so,&quot; she continued, taking out a pinch
+of bayberry snuff, &quot;I am left alone in the world.
+<i>Alone</i>, I say! why, I've got a daughter, but she
+is away out West. She is married to an engineer-man.
+And I've got two grandchildren.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Davids took the pinch of bayberry and
+shook her head, looking as though that was the
+&quot;hardest luck&quot; of all.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, everybody has to have their pesters,
+and you'll have to take yours,&quot; rejoined Miss
+Persis Tame, taking a pinch of snuff&mdash;the real
+Maccaboy&mdash;twice as large, with twice as fierce
+an action. &quot;I don't know what it is to bury
+children, nor to lose a husband; I s'pose I
+don't; but I know what it is to be jammed
+round the world and not have a ruff to stick
+my head under. I wish I had all the money
+I ever spent travelling,&mdash;and <i>that's</i> twelve dollars,&quot;
+she continued, regretfully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why in the world don't you marry and have
+a home of your own,&quot; sighed Mrs. Davids.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I don't <i>expect</i> to marry. I don't know
+as I do at my time of life,&quot; responded the spinster.
+&quot;I rather guess my day for chances is
+gone by.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You ain't such a dreadful sight older than
+I am, though,&quot; replied Mrs. Davids, reflectively.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not so old by two full years,&quot; returned
+Miss Tame, taking another smart pinch of
+snuff, as though it touched the empty spot in
+her heart and did it good. &quot;But <i>you</i> ain't looking
+out for opportunities yet, I suppose.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Davids sighed, evasively. &quot;We can't
+tell what is before us. There is more than
+one man in want of a wife.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As though to point her words, Captain Ben
+Lundy came in sight on the beach, his head
+a long way forward and his shambling feet trying
+in vain to keep up.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thirteen months and a half since Lyddy
+was buried,&quot; continued Mrs. Davids, accepting
+this application to her words, &quot;and there is
+Captain Ben taking up with just what housekeeper
+he can get, and <i>no</i> housekeeper at all.
+It would be an excellent home for you, Persis.
+Captain Ben always had the name of making a
+kind husband.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She sighed again, whether from regret for
+the bereaved man, or for the multitude of
+women bereft of such a husband.</p>
+
+<p>By this time Captain Ben's head was at the
+door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Morning!&quot; said he, while his feet were coming
+up. &quot;Quite an accident down here below
+the lighthouse last night. Schooner ran ashore
+in the blow and broke all up into kindling-wood
+in less than no time. Captain Tisdale's been
+out looking for dead bodies ever since daylight.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I knowed it,&quot; sighed Mrs. Davids. &quot;I
+heard a rushing sound sometime about the
+break of day that waked me out of a sound
+sleep, and I knowed then there was a spirit
+leaving its body. I heard it the night Davids
+went, or I expect I did. It must have been
+very nearly at that time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I guess it wasn't a spirit, last night,&quot;
+said Captain Ben; &quot;for as I was going on to
+say, after searching back and forth, Captain
+Tisdale came upon the folks, a man and a boy,
+rolled up in their wet blankets asleep behind
+the life-boat house. He said he felt like he
+could shake them for staying out in the wet.
+Wrecks always make for the lighthouse, so he
+s'posed those ones were drowned to death, sure
+enough.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, then it couldn't have been them, I
+was warned of!&quot; returned Mrs. Davids, looking
+as though she regretted it. &quot;It was right over
+my head, and I waked up just as the thing was
+rushing past. You haven't heard, have you,&quot;
+she continued, &quot;whether or no there was any
+other damage done by the gale?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know whether you would call it
+damage exactly,&quot; returned Captain Ben; &quot;but
+Loizah Mullers got so scared she left me and
+went home. She said she couldn't stay and
+run the chance of another of our coast blows,
+and off she trapsed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Davids sighed like November. &quot;So
+you have some hard luck as well as myself. I
+don't suppose you can <i>get</i> a housekeeper to
+keep her long,&quot; said she, dismally.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Abel Grimes tells me it is enough sight
+easier getting wives than housekeepers, and
+I'm some of a mind to try that tack,&quot; replied
+Captain Ben, smiling grimly.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Davids put up her hand to feel of her
+back hair, and smoothed down her apron;
+while Miss Persis Tame blushed like a withered
+rose, and turned her eyes modestly out of
+the window.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am <i>so</i>. But the difficulty is, who will it
+be? There are so many to select from it is
+fairly bothersome,&quot; continued Captain Ben,
+winking fast and looking as though he was
+made of dry corncobs and hay.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Persis Tame turned about abruptly.
+&quot;The land alive!&quot; she ejaculated with such
+sudden emphasis that the dishes shook on their
+shelves and Captain Ben in his chair. &quot;It
+makes me mad as a March hare to hear men
+go on as though all they'd got to do was to
+throw down their handkerchers to a woman,
+and, no matter who, she'd spring and run to
+pick it up. It is always 'Who will I marry?'
+and not 'Who will marry me?'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, there is twice the number of widders
+that there is of widderers here at the P'int.
+That was what was in my mind,&quot; said Captain
+Ben, in a tone of meek apology. &quot;There is
+the Widow Keens, she that was Azubah Muchmore.
+I don't know but what she would do;
+Lyddy used to think every thing of her, and
+she is a first-rate of a housekeeper.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Perhaps so,&quot; assented Mrs. Davids, dubiously.
+&quot;But she is troubled a sight with the
+head complaint; I suppose you know she is.
+That is against her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; assented Miss Tame. &quot;The Muchmores
+all have weak heads. And, too, the
+Widow Keens, she's had a fall lately. She
+was up in a chair cleaning her top buttery shelf,
+and somehow one of the chair-leg's give way,&mdash;it
+was loose or something, I expect,&mdash;and down
+she went her whole heft. She keeps about,
+but she goes with two staves.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I want to know if that is so,&quot; said Captain
+Ben, his honest soul warming with sudden
+sympathy. &quot;The widder has seen a sight of
+trouble.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, she has lived through a good deal,
+that woman has. I couldn't live through so
+much, 'pears to me; but we don't know what
+we can live through,&quot; rejoined Miss Tame.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Ben did not reply, but his ready feet
+began to move to and fro restlessly; for his
+heart, more ready yet, had already gone out
+toward the unfortunate widow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is so bad for a woman to be alone,&quot;
+said he to himself, shambling along the shingly
+beach a moment after. &quot;Nobody to mend her
+chairs or split up her kindlings, or do a chore
+for her; and she lame into the bargain. It is
+<i>too</i> bad.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He has steered straight for the Widow
+Keens's, as sure as A is apple-dumpling,&quot; remarked
+Miss Persis, peering after him from the
+window.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I must admit I wouldn't have
+thought of Captain Ben's being en-a-mored
+after such a sickly piece of business. But men
+never know what they want. Won't you just
+hand me that gum-cam-phyer bottle, now you
+are up? It is on that chest of drawers behind
+you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No more they don't,&quot; returned Miss Tame,
+with a plaintive cadence, taking a sniff from
+the camphor-bottle on the way. &quot;However, I
+don't begrutch him to her,&mdash;I don't know as I
+do. It will make her a good hum, though, if
+she concludes to make arrangements.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Meantime, Captain Ben Lundy's head was
+wellnigh to Mrs. Keens's door, for it was situated
+only around the first sand-hill. She lived
+in a little bit of a house that looked as though
+it had been knocked together for a crockery-crate,
+in the first place, with two windows and
+a rude door thrown in as afterthoughts. In the
+rear of this house was another tiny building,
+something like a grown-up hen-coop; and this
+was where Mrs. Keens carried on the business
+bequeathed to her by her deceased husband,
+along with five small children, and one not so
+small. But, worse than that, one who was
+&quot;not altogether there,&quot; as the English say.</p>
+
+<p>She was about this business now, dressed in
+a primitive sort of bloomer, with a wash-tub
+and clothes-ringer before her, and an army of
+bathing-suits of every kind and color flapping
+wildly in the fresh sea air at one side.</p>
+
+<p>From a little farther on, mingling with the
+sound of the beating surf, came the merry
+voices of bathers,&mdash;boarders at the great hotels
+on the hill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here you be! Hard at it!&quot; said Captain
+Ben, puffing around the corner like a portable
+west-wind. I've understood you've had a
+hurt. Is that so?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no! Nothing to mention,&quot; returned
+Mrs. Keens, turning about a face bright and
+cheerful as the full moon; and throwing, as by
+accident, a red bathing-suit over the two broomsticks
+that leaned against her tub.</p>
+
+<p>Unlike Mrs. Davids, Mrs. Keens neither
+pitied herself nor would allow anybody else to
+do so.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sho!&quot; remarked Captain Ben, feeling defrauded.
+He had counted on sacrificing himself
+to his sympathies, but he didn't give up yet.
+&quot;You must see some pretty tough times 'pears
+to me with such a parcel of little ones, and
+only yourself to look to,&quot; said he, proceeding
+awkwardly enough to hang the pile of wrung-out
+clothes upon an empty line.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't complain,&quot; returned the widow,
+bravely. &quot;My children are not <i>teusome</i>; and
+Jack, why you would be surprised to see how
+many things Jack can do, for all he isn't quite
+right.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As she spoke thus with affectionate pride,
+Jack came up wheeling a roughly made cart
+filled with wet bathing clothes from the beach.
+He looked up at sound of his mother's voice
+with something of the dumb tenderness of an
+intelligent dog. &quot;Jack helps, Jack good boy,&quot;
+said he, nodding with a happy smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, Jack helps. We don't complain,&quot; repeated
+the mother.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It would come handy, though, to have a
+man around to see to things and kind o' provide,
+wouldn't it, though?&quot; persisted Captain
+Ben.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Some might think so,&quot; replied Mrs. Keens,
+stopping her wringer to reflect a little. &quot;But
+I haven't any wish to change my situation,&quot;
+she added, decidedly, going on again with her
+work.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sure on 't?&quot; persisted the Captain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certain,&quot; replied the widow.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Ben sighed. &quot;I thought ma'be you
+was having a hard row to hoe, and I thought
+like enough&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p><i>What</i> he never said, excepting by a beseeching
+glance at the cheerful widow, for just then
+an interruption came from some people after
+bathing-suits.</p>
+
+<p>So Captain Ben moved off with a dismal
+countenance. But before he had gone far it
+suddenly brightened. &quot;It might not be for
+the best,&quot; quoth he to himself, &quot;Like enough
+not. I was very careful not to commit myself,
+and I am very glad I didn't.&quot; He smiled as he
+reflected on his judicious wariness. &quot;But,
+however,&quot; he continued, &quot;I might as well finish
+up this business now. There is Rachel Doolittle.
+Who knows but she'd make a likely wife?
+Lyddy sot a good deal by her. She never had
+a quilting or a sewing bee but what nothing
+would do but she must give Rachel Doolittle
+an invite. Yes; I wonder I never decided on
+her before. She will be glad of a home sure
+enough, for she haves to live around, as it were,
+upon her brothers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Captain Ben's feet quickened themselves at
+these thoughts, and had almost overtaken his
+head, when behold! at a sudden turn in the
+road there stood Miss Rachel Doolittle, picking
+barberries from a wayside bush. &quot;My sakes!
+If she ain't right here, like Rachel in the
+Bible!&quot; ejaculated Captain Ben, taking heart
+at the omen.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Doolittle looked up from under her tied-down
+brown hat in surprise at such a salutation.
+But her surprise was increased by Captain
+Ben's next remark.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It just came into my mind,&quot; said he, &quot;that
+you was the right one to take Lyddy's place.
+You two used to be such great knit-ups that it
+will seem 'most like having Lyddy back again.
+No,&quot; he continued, after a little reflection, &quot;I
+don't know of anybody I had rather see sitting
+in Lyddy's chair and wearing Lyddy's things
+than yourself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dear me, Captain Lundy, I couldn't think
+of it. Paul's folks expect me to stay with them
+while the boarder-season lasts, and I've as good
+as promised Jacob's wife I'll spend the winter
+with her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ain't that a hard life you are laying out for
+yourself? And then bum-by you will get old or
+sick ma' be, and who is going to want you
+around then? Every woman needs a husband
+of her own to take care of her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm able to take care of myself as yet,
+thanks to goodness! And I am not afraid my
+brothers will see me suffer in case of sickness,&quot;
+returned Miss Doolittle, her cheeks flaming up
+like a sumach in October.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But hadn't you better take a little time to
+think it over? Ma' be it come sudden to you,&quot;
+pleaded Captain Ben.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I thank you. Some things don't need
+thinking over,&quot; answered Miss Doolittle, plucking
+at the barberries more diligently than ever.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish Lyddy was here. She would convince
+you you were standing in your own
+light,&quot; returned Lyddy's widower in a perplexed
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't need one to come from the dead to
+show me my own mind,&quot; retorted Miss Doolittle,
+firmly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, like enough you are right,&quot; said Captain
+Ben, mildly, putting a few stems of barberries
+in her pail; &quot;ma' be it wouldn't be
+best. I don't want to be rash.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And with that he moved off, on the whole
+congratulating himself he had not decided to
+marry Miss Doolittle.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought after she commenced her miserable
+gift of the gab, that Lyddy used to be
+free to admit she had a fiery tongue, for all
+they were such friends. And I'm all for peace
+myself. I guess, on the whole, ma' be she ain't
+the one for me, perhaps, and it is as well to look
+further. <i>Why</i>! what in <i>the</i> world! Well, there!
+what have I been thinking of? There is Mrs.
+Davids, as neat as a new cent, and the master
+hand to save. She is always taking on; and
+she will be glad enough to have somebody to
+look out for her,&mdash;why, sure enough! And
+there I was right at her house this very day,
+and never once thought of her! What an old
+dunce!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But, fortunately, this not being a sin of
+commission, it could easily be rectified; and
+directly Captain Ben had turned about and
+was trotting again toward the red house on
+the beach.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pound for pound of the best white sugar,&quot;
+he heard Miss Tame say as he neared the door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;White, sugar!&quot; repeated Mrs. Davids, her
+usual sigh drawn out into a little groan. &quot;<i>White</i>
+sugar for <i>cram</i> berries! Who ever heard of such
+a thing? I've always considered I did well
+when I had plenty of brown.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor creeter!&quot; thought Captain Ben.
+&quot;How she will enjoy getting into my pantry.
+Lyddy never complained that she didn't have
+enough of every thing to do <i>with</i>&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And in the full ardor of his intended benevolence,
+he went right in and opened the subject
+at once. But, to his astonishment, Mrs. Davids
+refused him. She sighed, but she refused him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I've seen trouble enough a'ready, without
+my rushing into more with my eyes wide open,&quot;
+sighed she.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Trouble? Why, that is just what I was
+meaning to save you!&quot; exclaimed the bewildered
+widower. &quot;Pump right in the house,
+and stove e'enamost new. And Lyddy never
+knew what it was to want for a spoonful of
+sugar or a pound of flour. And such a <i>handy</i>
+buttery and sink! Lyddy used to say she felt
+the worst about leaving her buttery of any
+thing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Should thought she would,&quot; answered Mrs.
+Davids, forgetting to sigh. &quot;However, I can't
+say that I feel any hankering after marrying a
+buttery. I've got buttery-room enough here,
+without the trouble of getting set up in a new
+place.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just as you say,&quot; returned the rejected. &quot;I
+ain't sure as you'd be exactly the one. I <i>was</i>
+a thinking of looking for somebody a little
+younger.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, here is Persis Tame. Why don't you
+bespeak her? <i>She</i> is younger, and she is in
+need of a good home. I can recommend her,
+too, as the first-rate of a cook,&quot; remarked Mrs.
+Davids, benevolently.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Tame had been sitting a little apart by
+the open window, smiling to herself.</p>
+
+<p>But now she turned about at once. &quot;Hm!&quot;
+said she, with contempt. &quot;I should rather live
+under an umbrella tied to a stake, than marry
+for a <i>hum</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So Captain Ben went home without engaging
+either wife or housekeeper.</p>
+
+<p>And the first thing he saw was Captain Jacob
+Doolittle's old one-eyed horse eating the apples
+Loizah Mullers had strung and festooned from
+nails against the house, to dry.</p>
+
+<p>The next thing he saw was, that, having left
+a window open, the hens had flown in and gone
+to housekeeping on their own account. But
+they were not, like Mrs. Davids, as neat as a
+new cent, and <i>not</i>, also, such master hands to
+save.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shoo! shoo! Get out. Go 'long there
+with you!&quot; cried Captain Ben, waving the
+dish-cloth and the poker. &quot;I declare for 't!
+I most hadn't ought to have left that bread
+out on the table. They've made a pretty
+mess of it, and it is every spec there is in the
+house too. Well, I must make a do of potatoes
+for supper, with a bit of pie and a mouthful
+of cake.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly he went to work building a fire
+that wouldn't burn. Then, forgetting the simple
+matter of dampers, the potatoes wouldn't
+bake. The tea-kettle boiled over and cracked
+the stove, and after that boiled dry and cracked
+itself. Finally the potatoes fell to baking with
+so much ardor that they overdid it and burnt
+up. And, last of all, the cake-jar and pie-cupboard
+proved to be entirely empty. Loizah had
+left on the eve of baking-day.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The old cat! Well, I'd just as soon live
+on slapjacks a spell,&quot; said Captain Ben, when he
+made this discovery.</p>
+
+<p>But even slapjacks palled on his palate, especially
+when he had them always to cook for
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'T ain't no way to live, this ain't,&quot; said he
+at last. &quot;I'm a good mind to marry as ever
+I had to eat.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So he put on his hat and walked out. The
+first person he met was Miss Persis Tame, who
+turned her back and fell to picking thoroughwort
+blossoms as he came up.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look a here,&quot; said he, stopping short, &quot;I'm
+dreadful put to 't. I can't get ne'er a wife nor
+ne'er a housekeeper, and I am e'enamost starved
+to death. I wish you <i>would</i> consent to marry
+with me, if you feel as if you could bring
+your mind to it. I am sure it would have been
+Lyddy's wish.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Miss Tame smelt of the thoroughwort blossoms.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It comes pretty sudden on me,&quot; she replied.
+&quot;I hadn't given the subject any thought. But
+you <i>are</i> to be pitied in your situation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes. And I'm dreadful lonesome. I've
+always been used to having Lyddy to talk over
+things with, and I miss her a sight. And I
+don't know anybody that has her ways more
+than you have. You are a good deal such
+a built woman, and you have the same hitch to
+your shoulders when you walk. You've got
+something the same look to your eyes, too; I
+noticed it last Sunday in meeting-time,&quot; continued
+the widower, anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do feel for you. A man alone is in a deplorable
+situation,&quot; replied Miss Tame. &quot;I'm
+sure I'd do any thing in my power to help
+you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, marry with me then. That is what I
+want. We could be real comfortable together.
+I'll go for the license this minute, and we'll
+be married right away,&quot; returned the impatient
+suitor. &quot;You go up to Elder Crane's, and I'll
+meet you there as soon as I can fetch around.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then he hurried away, &quot;without giving me a
+chance to say 'no,'&quot; said &quot;she that was&quot; Persis
+Tame, afterward. &quot;So I <i>had</i> to marry with him,
+as you might say. But I've never seen cause
+to regret it, I've got a first-rate of a hum,
+and Captain Ben makes a first-rate of a husband.
+And no hain't he, I hope, found cause
+to regret it,&quot; she added, with a touch of wifely
+pride; &quot;though I do expect he might have had
+his pick among all the single women at the
+Point; but out of them all he chose <i>me</i>.&quot;&mdash;<i>The
+Atlantic Monthly</i>, March, 1870.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="LOUISA_MAY_ALCOTT" id="LOUISA_MAY_ALCOTT"></a>LOUISA MAY ALCOTT.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1832.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="STREET_SCENES_IN_WASHINGTON" id="STREET_SCENES_IN_WASHINGTON"></a>STREET SCENES IN WASHINGTON.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The mules were my especial delight; and
+an hour's study of a constant succession
+of them introduced me to many of their characteristics;
+for six of these odd little beasts
+drew each army wagon, and went hopping like
+frogs through the stream of mud that gently
+rolled along the street. The coquettish mule
+had small feet, a nicely trimmed tassel of a tail,
+perked-up ears, and seemed much given to little
+tosses of the head, affected skips and prances;
+and, if he wore the bells, or were bedizened
+with a bit of finery, put on as many airs as any
+belle. The moral mule was a stout, hardworking
+creature, always tugging with all his
+might; often pulling away after the rest had
+stopped, laboring under the conscientious delusion
+that food for the entire army depended
+upon his private exertions. I respected this
+style of mule; and, had I possessed a juicy cabbage,
+would have pressed it upon him, with
+thanks for his excellent example. The histrionic
+mule was a melodramatic quadruped, prone to
+startling humanity by erratic leaps, and wild
+plunges, much shaking of his stubborn head,
+and lashing out of his vicious heels; now and
+then falling flat, and apparently dying <i>a la</i>
+Forrest; a gasp&mdash;a squirm&mdash;a flop, and so on,
+till the street was well blocked up, the drivers
+all swearing like demons in bad hats, and the
+chief actor's circulation decidedly quickened by
+every variety of kick, cuff, jerk, and haul.
+When the last breath seemed to have left his
+body, and &quot;doctors were in vain,&quot; a sudden
+resurrection took place; and if ever a mule
+laughed with scornful triumph, that was the
+beast, as he leisurely rose, gave a comfortable
+shake, and, calmly regarding the excited crowd
+seemed to say&mdash;&quot;A hit! a decided hit! for the
+stupidest of animals has bamboozled a dozen
+men. Now, then! what are <i>you</i> stopping the
+way for?&quot; The pathetic mule was, perhaps,
+the most interesting of all; for, though he
+always seemed to be the smallest, thinnest,
+weakest of the six, the postillion, with big
+boots, long-tailed coat, and heavy whip, was
+sure to bestride this one, who struggled feebly
+along, head down, coat muddy and rough, eye
+spiritless and sad, his very tail a mortified
+stump, and the whole beast a picture of meek
+misery, fit to touch a heart of stone. The
+jovial mule was a roly poly, happy-go-lucky
+little piece of horse-flesh, taking every thing
+easily, from cudgeling to caressing; strolling
+along with a roguish twinkle of the eye, and, if
+the thing were possible, would have had his
+hands in his pockets, and whistled as he went.
+If there ever chanced to be an apple core, a
+stray turnip, or wisp of hay, in the gutter, this
+Mark Tapley was sure to find it, and none of
+his mates seemed to begrudge him his bite.
+I suspected this fellow was the peacemaker,
+confidant, and friend of all the others, for he
+had a sort of &quot;Cheer-up,-old-boy,-I'll-pull-you-through&quot;
+look, which was exceedingly engaging.</p>
+
+<p>Pigs also possessed attractions for me, never
+having had an opportunity of observing their
+graces of mind and manner, till I came to
+Washington, whose porcine citizens appeared
+to enjoy a larger liberty than many of its
+human ones. Stout, sedate-looking pigs, hurried
+by each morning to their places of business,
+with a preoccupied air, and sonorous
+greeting to their friends. Genteel pigs, with
+an extra curl to their tails, promenaded in pairs,
+lunching here and there, like gentlemen of
+leisure. Rowdy pigs pushed the passers-by off
+the sidewalk; tipsy pigs hiccoughed their version
+of &quot;We won't go home till morning,&quot; from
+the gutter; and delicate young pigs tripped
+daintily through the mud, as if they plumed
+themselves upon their ankles, and kept themselves
+particularly neat in point of stockings.
+Maternal pigs, with their interesting families,
+strolled by in the sun; and often the pink,
+baby-like squealers lay down for a nap, with a
+trust in Providence worthy of human imitation.&mdash;<i>Hospital
+Sketches</i>.</p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="SELECTIONS_FROM_TRANSCENDENTAL_WILD_OATS" id="SELECTIONS_FROM_TRANSCENDENTAL_WILD_OATS"></a>SELECTIONS FROM TRANSCENDENTAL WILD OATS.</h2>
+
+<p>On the first day of June, 184-, a large wagon,
+drawn by a small horse, and containing a motley
+load, went lumbering over certain New England
+hills, with the pleasing accompaniments of
+wind, rain, and hail. A serene man with a
+serene child upon his knee was driving, or
+rather being driven, for the small horse had it
+all his own way. A brown boy with a William
+Penn style of countenance sat beside him,
+firmly embracing a bust of Socrates. Behind
+them was an energetic-looking woman, with a
+benevolent brow, satirical mouth, and eyes
+brimful of hope and courage. A baby reposed
+upon her lap, a mirror leaned against her knee,
+and a basket of provisions danced about at her
+feet, as she struggled with a large, unruly umbrella.
+Two blue-eyed little girls, with hands
+full of childish treasures, sat under one old
+shawl, chatting happily together.</p>
+
+<p>In front of this lively party stalked a tall,
+sharp-featured man, in a long blue cloak; and a
+fourth small girl trudged along beside him
+through the mud as if she rather enjoyed it.</p>
+
+<p>The wind whistled over the bleak hills; the
+rain fell in a despondent drizzle, and twilight
+began to fall. But the calm man gazed as
+tranquilly into the fog as if he beheld a radiant
+bow of promise spanning the gray sky. The
+cheery woman tried to cover every one but herself
+with the big umbrella. The brown boy
+pillowed his head on the bald pate of Socrates
+and slumbered peacefully. The little girls sang
+lullabies to their dolls in soft, maternal murmers.
+The sharp-nosed pedestrian marched steadily
+on, with the blue cloak streaming out behind him
+like a banner; and the lively infant splashed
+through the puddles with a duck-like satisfaction
+pleasant to behold.</p>
+
+<p>Thus these modern pilgrims journeyed hopefully
+out of the old world, to found a new one
+in the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>The editors of &quot;The Transcendental Tripod&quot;
+had received from Messrs. Lion &amp; Lamb (two
+of the aforesaid pilgrims) a communication
+from which the following statement is an extract:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have made arrangements with the proprietor
+of an estate of about a hundred acres
+which liberates this tract from human ownership.
+Here we shall prosecute our effort to
+initiate a Family in harmony with the primitive
+instincts of man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ordinary secular farming is not our object.
+Fruit, grain, pulse, herbs, flax, and other vegetable
+products, receiving assiduous attention,
+will afford ample manual occupation, and
+chaste supplies for the bodily needs. It is intended
+to adorn the pastures with orchards,
+and to supersede the labor of cattle by the
+spade and the pruning-knife.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Consecrated to human freedom, the land
+awaits the sober culture of devoted men. Beginning
+with small pecuniary means, this enterprise
+must be rooted on a reliance on the succors
+of an over-bounteous Providence, whose
+vital affinities being secured by this union with
+uncorrupted field and unwordly persons, the
+cares and injuries of a life of gain are avoided.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The inner nature of each member of the
+Family is at no time neglected. Our plan contemplates
+all such disciplines, cultures, and
+habits as evidently conduce to the purifying
+of the inmates.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pledged to the spirit alone, the founders
+anticipate no hasty or numerous addition to
+their numbers. The kingdom of peace is entered
+only through the gates of self-denial; and
+felicity is the test and the reward of loyalty to
+the unswerving law of Love.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This prospective Eden at present consisted of
+an old red farm-house, a dilapidated barn, many
+acres of meadow-land, and a grove. Ten ancient
+apple-trees were all the &quot;chaste supply&quot; which
+the place offered as yet; but, in the firm belief
+that plenteous orchards were soon to be evoked
+from their inner consciousness, these sanguine
+founders had christened their domain Fruitlands.</p>
+
+<p>Here Timon Lion intended to found a colony
+of Latter Day Saints, who, under his patriarchal
+sway, should regenerate the world and glorify
+his name for ever. Here Abel Lamb, with the
+devoutest faith in the high ideal which was to
+him a living truth, desired to plant a Paradise,
+where Beauty, Virtue, Justice, and Love might
+live happily together, without the possibility of
+a serpent entering in. And here his wife, unconverted
+but faithful to the end, hoped, after
+many wanderings over the face of the earth,
+to find rest for herself and a home for her
+children.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is our new abode,&quot; anounced the
+enthusiast, smiling with the satisfaction quite
+undamped by the drops dripping from his
+hat-brim, as they turned at length into a cart-path
+that wound along a steep hillside into a
+barren-looking valley.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A little difficult of access,&quot; observed his
+practical wife, as she endeavored to keep her
+various household gods from going overboard
+with every lurch of the laden ark.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Like all good things. But those who earnestly
+desire and patiently seek will soon find
+us,&quot; placidly responded the philosopher from
+the mud, through which he was now endeavoring
+to pilot the much-enduring horse.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Truth lies at the bottom of a well, Sister
+Hope,&quot; said Brother Timon, pausing to detach
+his small comrade from a gate, whereon she was
+perched for a clearer gaze into futurity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's the reason we so seldom get at it, I
+suppose,&quot; replied Mrs. Hope, making a vain
+clutch at the mirror, which a sudden jolt sent
+flying out of her hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We want no false reflections here,&quot; said
+Timon, with a grim smile, as he crunched the
+fragments under foot in his onward march.</p>
+
+<p>Sister Hope held her peace, and looked wistfully
+through the mist at her promised home.
+The old red house with a hospitable glimmer at
+its windows cheered her eyes; and, considering
+the weather, was a fitter refuge than the sylvan
+bowers some of the more ardent souls might
+have preferred.</p>
+
+<p>The new-comers were welcomed by one of
+the elect precious,&mdash;a regenerate farmer, whose
+idea of reform consisted chiefly in wearing white
+cotton raiment and shoes of untanned leather.
+This costume, with a snowy beard, gave him a
+venerable, and at the same time a somewhat
+bridal appearance.</p>
+
+<p>The goods and chattels of the Society not
+having arrived, the weary family reposed before
+the fire on blocks of wood, while Brother
+Moses White regaled them with roasted potatoes,
+brown bread and water, in two plates,
+a tin pan, and one mug; his table service being
+limited. But, having cast the forms and vanities
+of a depraved world behind them, the elders
+welcomed hardship with the enthusiasm of
+new pioneers, and the children heartily enjoyed
+this foretaste of what they believed was to be a
+sort of perpetual picnic.</p>
+
+<p>During the progress of this frugal meal, two
+more brothers appeared. One a dark, melancholy
+man, clad in homespun, whose peculiar
+mission was to turn his name hind part before
+and use as few words as possible. The other
+was a bland, bearded Englishman, who expected
+to be saved by eating uncooked food
+and going without clothes. He had not yet
+adopted the primitive costume, however; but
+contented himself with meditatively chewing
+dry beans out of a basket.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Every meal should be a sacrament, and the
+vessels used should be beautiful and symbolical,&quot;
+observed Brother Lamb, mildly, righting
+the tin pan slipping about on his knees. &quot;I
+priced a silver service when in town, but it was
+too costly; so I got some graceful cups and
+vases of Britannia ware.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hardest things in the world to keep bright.
+Will whiting be allowed in the community?&quot;
+inquired Sister Hope, with a housewife's interest
+in labor-saving institutions.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Such trivial questions will be discussed at a
+more fitting time,&quot; answered Brother Timon,
+sharply, as he burnt his fingers with a very hot
+potato. &quot;Neither sugar, molasses, milk, butter,
+cheese, nor flesh are to be used among us,
+for nothing is to be admitted which has caused
+wrong or death to man or beast.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Our garments are to be linen till we learn
+to raise our own cotton or some substitute for
+woollen fabrics,&quot; added Brother Abel, blissfully
+basking in an imaginary future as warm and
+brilliant as the generous fire before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Haou abaout shoes?&quot; asked Brother Moses,
+surveying his own with interest.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We must yield that point till we can
+manufacture an innocent substitute for leather.
+Bark, wood, or some durable fabric will be invented
+in time. Meanwhile, those who desire
+to carry out our idea to the fullest extent can
+go barefooted,&quot; said Lion, who liked extreme
+measures.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I never will, nor let my girls,&quot; murmured
+rebellious Sister Hope, under her breath.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Haou do you cattle'ate to treat the ten-acre
+lot? Ef things ain't 'tended to right
+smart, we sha'n't hev no crops,&quot; observed the
+practical patriarch in cotton.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We shall spade it,&quot; replied Abel, in such
+perfect good faith that Moses said no more,
+though he indulged in a shake of the head as he
+glanced at hands that held nothing heavier than
+a pen for years. He was a paternal old soul
+and regarded the younger men as promising
+boys on a new sort of lark.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What shall we do for lamps, if we cannot
+use any animal substance? I do hope light of
+some sort is to be thrown upon the enterprise,&quot;
+said Mrs. Lamb, with anxiety, for in those days
+kerosene and camphene were not, and gas was
+unknown in the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We shall go without till we have discovered
+some vegetable oil or wax to serve us,&quot; replied
+Brother Timon, in a decided tone, which caused
+Sister Hope to resolve that her private lamp
+should be always trimmed, if not burning.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Each member is to perform the work for
+which experience, strength, and taste best fit
+him,&quot; continued Dictator Lion. &quot;Thus drudgery
+and disorder will be avoided and harmony
+prevail. We shall rise at dawn, begin the day
+by bathing, followed by music, and then a
+chaste repast of fruit and bread. Each one
+finds congenial occupation till the meridian
+meal; when some deep-searching conversation
+gives rest to the body, and development to the
+mind. Healthful labor again engages us till
+the last meal, when we assemble in social communion,
+prolonged till sunset, when we retire
+to sweet repose, ready for the next day's
+activity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What part of the work do you incline to
+yourself?&quot; asked Sister Hope, with a humorous
+glimmer in her keen eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall wait till it is made clear to me.
+Being in preference to doing is the great aim,
+and this comes to us rather by a resigned willingness
+than a wilful activity, which is a
+check to all divine growth,&quot; responded Brother
+Timon.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought so,&quot; and Mrs. Lamb sighed
+audibly, for during the year he had spent in her
+family, Brother Timon had so faithfully carried
+out his idea of &quot;being, not doing,&quot; that she
+had found his &quot;divine growth&quot; both an expensive
+and unsatisfactory process.</p>
+
+<p>Here her husband struck into the conversation,
+his face shining with the light and joy of
+the splendid dreams and high ideals hovering
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In these steps of reform, we do not rely so
+much on scientific reasoning or physiological
+skill as on the spirit's dictates. The greater
+part of man's duty consists in leaving alone
+much that he now does. Shall I stimulate with
+tea, coffee, or wine? No. Shall I consume
+flesh? Not if I value health. Shall I subjugate
+cattle? Shall I claim property in any created
+thing? Shall I trade? Shall I adopt a
+form of religion? Shall I interest myself in
+politics? To how many of these questions&mdash;could
+we ask them deeply enough and could
+they be heard as having relation to our eternal
+welfare&mdash;would the response be 'Abstain'?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A mild snore seemed to echo the last word
+of Abel's rhapsody, for Brother Moses had succumbed
+to mundane slumber, and sat nodding
+like a massive ghost. Forest Absalom, the
+silent man, and John Pease, the English member,
+now departed to the barn; and Mrs. Lamb
+led her flock to a temporary fold, leaving the
+founders of the &quot;Consociate Family&quot; to build
+castles in the air till the fire went out and the
+symposium ended in smoke.</p>
+
+<p>The furniture arrived next day, and was soon
+bestowed; for the principal property of the
+community consisted in books. To this rare
+library was devoted the best room in the house,
+and the few busts and pictures that still survived
+many flittings were added to beautify
+the sanctuary, for here the family was to meet
+for amusement, instruction, and worship.</p>
+
+<p>Any housewife can imagine the emotions of
+Sister Hope, when she took possession of a
+large, dilapidated kitchen, containing an old
+stove and the peculiar stores out of which food
+was to be evolved for her little family of eleven.
+Cakes of maple sugar, dried peas and beans,
+barley and hominy, meal of all sorts, potatoes,
+and dried fruit. No milk, butter, cheese, tea,
+or meat appeared. Even salt was considered a
+useless luxury, and spice entirely forbidden by
+these lovers of Spartan simplicity. A ten years'
+experience of vegetarian vagaries had been
+good training for this new freak, and her sense
+of the ludicrous supported her through many
+trying scenes.</p>
+
+<p>Unleavened bread, porridge, and water for
+breakfast; bread, vegetables, and water for
+dinner; bread, fruit, and water for supper was
+the bill of fare ordained by the elders. No teapot
+profaned that sacred stove, no gory steak
+cried aloud for vengeance from her chaste gridiron
+and only a brave woman's taste, time,
+and temper were sacrificed on that domestic
+altar.</p>
+
+<p>The vexed question of light was settled by
+buying a quantity of bayberry wax for candles;
+and, on discovering that no one knew how to
+make them, pine-knots were introduced, to be
+used when absolutely necessary. Being summer,
+the evenings were not long, and the weary
+fraternity found it no great hardship to retire
+with the birds. The inner light was sufficient
+for most of them. But Mrs. Lamb rebelled.
+Evening was the only time she had to herself,
+and while the tired feet rested the skilful hands
+mended torn frocks and little stockings, or
+anxious heart forgot its burden in a book.</p>
+
+<p>So &quot;mother's lamp&quot; burned steadily, while
+the philosophers built a new heaven and earth
+by moonlight; and through all the metaphysical
+mists and philanthropic pyrotechnics
+of that period Sister Hope played her own
+little game of &quot;throwing light,&quot; and none but
+the moths were the worse for it.</p>
+
+<p>Such farming probably was never seen before
+since Adam delved. The band of brothers began
+by spading garden and field; but a few
+days of it lessened their ardor amazingly. Blistered
+hands and aching backs suggested the expediency
+of permitting the use of cattle till the
+workers were better fitted for noble toil by a
+summer of the new life.</p>
+
+<p>Brother Moses brought a yoke of oxen from
+his farm,&mdash;at least, the philosophers thought so
+till it was discovered that one of the animals
+was a cow; and Moses confessed that he &quot;must
+be let down easy, for he couldn't live on garden
+sarse entirely.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Great was Dictator Lion's indignation at this
+lapse from virtue. But time pressed, the work
+must be done; so the meek cow was permitted
+to wear the yoke, and the recreant brother continued
+to enjoy forbidden draughts in the
+barn, which dark proceeding caused the children
+to regard him as one set apart for destruction.</p>
+
+<p>The sowing was equally peculiar, for, owing
+to some mistake, the three brethren who devoted
+themselves to this graceful task, found
+when about half through the job that each had
+been sowing a different sort of grain in the
+same field; a mistake which caused much perplexity,
+as it could not be remedied; but, after
+a long consultation and a good deal of laughter,
+it was decided to say nothing and see what
+would come of it.</p>
+
+<p>The garden was planted with a generous
+supply of useful roots and herbs; but, as
+manure was not allowed to profane the virgin
+soil, few of these vegetable treasures ever came
+up. Purslane reigned supreme, and the disappointed
+planters ate it philosophically, deciding
+that Nature knew what was best for them, and
+would generously supply their needs, if they
+could only learn to digest her &quot;sallets&quot; and wild
+roots.</p>
+
+<p>The orchard was laid out, a little grafting
+done, new trees and vines set, regardless of the
+unfit season and entire ignorance of the husbandmen,
+who honestly believed that in the
+autumn they would reap a bounteous harvest.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly things got into order, and rapidly
+rumors of the new experiment went abroad,
+causing many strange spirits to flock thither,
+for in those days communities were the fashion
+and transcendentalism raged wildly. Some
+came to look on and laugh, some to be supported
+in poetic idleness, a few to believe sincerely
+and work heartily. Each member was
+allowed to mount his favorite hobby, and ride
+it to his heart's content. Very queer were
+some of the riders, and very rampant some of
+the hobbies.</p>
+
+<p>One youth, believing that language was of
+little consequence if the spirit was only right,
+startled new-comers by blandly greeting them
+with &quot;good-morning, damn you,&quot; and other remarks
+of an equally mixed order. A second
+irrepressible being held that all the emotions of
+the soul should be freely expressed, and illustrated
+his theory by antics that would have
+sent him to a lunatic asylum, if, as an unregenerate
+wag said, he had not already been in one.
+When his spirit soared, he climbed trees and
+shouted; when doubt assailed him, he lay upon
+the floor and groaned lamentably. At joyful
+periods, he raced, leaped, and sang; when sad,
+he wept aloud; and when a great thought
+burst upon him in the watches of the night, he
+crowed like a jocund cockerel, to the great delight
+of the children and the great annoyance
+of the elders. One musical brother fiddled
+whenever so moved, sang sentimentally to the
+four little girls, and put a music-box on the
+wall when he hoed corn.</p>
+
+<p>Brother Pease ground away at his uncooked
+food, or browsed over the farm on sorrel, mint,
+green fruit, and new vegetables. Occasionally
+he took his walks abroad, airily attired in an
+unbleached cotton <i>poncho</i>, which was the nearest
+approach to the primeval costume he was
+allowed to indulge in. At midsummer he retired
+to the wilderness, to try his plan where the
+woodchucks were without prejudices and huckleberry-bushes
+were hospitably full. A sunstroke
+unfortunately spoilt his plan, and he returned
+to semi-civilization a sadder and wiser
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Forest Absalom preserved his Pythagorean
+silence, cultivated his fine dark locks, and worked
+like a beaver, setting an excellent example
+of brotherly love, justice, and fidelity by his upright
+life. He it was who helped overworked
+Sister Hope with her heavy washes, kneaded
+the endless succession of batches of bread,
+watched over the children, and did the many
+tasks left undone by the brethren, who were
+so busy discussing and defining great duties
+that they forgot to perform the small ones.</p>
+
+<p>Moses White placidly plodded about, &quot;chorin'
+raound,&quot; as he called it, looking like an old-time
+patriarch, with his silver hair and flowing beard,
+and saving the community from many a mishap
+by his thrift and Yankee shrewdness.</p>
+
+<p>Brother Lion domineered over the whole concern;
+for, having put the most money into the
+speculation, he was resolved to make it pay,&mdash;as
+if any thing founded on an ideal basis could
+be expected to do so by any but enthusiasts.</p>
+
+<p>Abel Lamb simply revelled in the Newness,
+firmly believing that his dream was to be beautifully
+realized and in time not only little Fruitlands,
+but the whole earth, be turned into a
+Happy Valley. He worked with every muscle
+of his body, for <i>he</i> was in deadly earnest. He
+taught with his whole head and heart; planned
+and sacrificed, preached and prophesied, with a
+soul full of the purest aspirations, most unselfish
+purposes, and desires for a life devoted to God
+and man, too high and tender to bear the rough
+usage of this world.</p>
+
+<p>It was a little remarkable that only one
+woman ever joined this community. Mrs.
+Lamb merely followed wheresoever her husband
+led,&mdash;&quot;as ballast for his balloon,&quot; as she
+said, in her bright way.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Jane Gage was a stout lady of mature
+years, sentimental, amiable, and lazy. She
+wrote verses copiously, and had vague yearnings
+and graspings after the unknown, which
+led her to believe herself fitted for a higher
+sphere than any she had yet adorned.</p>
+
+<p>Having been a teacher, she was set to instructing
+the children in the common branches.
+Each adult member took a turn at the infants;
+and, as each taught in his own way, the result
+was a chronic state of chaos in the minds of
+these much-afflicted innocents.</p>
+
+<p>Sleep, food, and poetic musings were the
+desires of dear Jane's life, and she shirked all
+duties as clogs upon her spirit's wings. Any
+thought of lending a hand with the domestic
+drudgery never occurred to her; and when to
+the question, &quot;Are there any beasts of burden
+on the place?&quot; Mrs. Lamb answered, with a
+face that told its own tale, &quot;Only one woman!&quot;
+the buxom Jane took no shame to herself, but
+laughed at the joke, and let the stout-hearted
+sister tug on alone.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, the poor lady hankered after
+the flesh-pots, and endeavored to stay herself
+with private sips of milk, crackers, and cheese,
+and on one dire occasion she partook of fish at
+a neighbor's table.</p>
+
+<p>One of the children reported this sad lapse
+from virtue, and poor Jane was publicly reprimanded
+by Timon.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I only took a little bit of the tail,&quot; sobbed
+the penitent poetess.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, but the whole fish had to be tortured
+and slain that you might tempt your carnal appetite
+with that one taste of the tail. Know
+ye not, consumers of flesh meat, that ye
+are nourishing the wolf and tiger in your
+bosoms?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At this awful question and the peal of laughter
+which arose from some of the younger brethren,
+tickled by the ludicrous contrast between
+the stout sinner, the stern judge, and the
+naughty satisfaction of the young detective,
+poor Jane fled from the room to pack her
+trunk, and return to a world where fishes' tails
+were not forbidden fruit.</p>
+
+<p>Transcendental wild oats were sown broadcast
+that year, and the fame thereof has not
+yet ceased in the land; for, futile as this crop
+seemed to outsiders, it bore an invisible harvest,
+worth much to those who planted in earnest.
+As none of the members of this particular
+community have ever recounted their experiences
+before, a few of them may not be amiss,
+since the interest in these attempts has never
+died out and Fruitlands was the most ideal
+of all these castles in Spain.&mdash;<i>Silver Pitchers,
+and Other Stories</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="WILLIAM_WIRT_HOWE" id="WILLIAM_WIRT_HOWE"></a>WILLIAM WIRT HOWE.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1833.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="CONVERSATIONAL_DEPRAVITY" id="CONVERSATIONAL_DEPRAVITY"></a>CONVERSATIONAL DEPRAVITY</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>To the Chief-Justice of Glenwood</i>,</p>
+
+<p>SUBLIME SIR: ... What can be more
+destructive of the higher forms of conversation
+than a pun? What right has any one to explode
+a petard in the midst of sweet sociality,
+and blow every thing like sequence and sentiment
+sky-high? And therefore, since you, as
+translator of the Pasha's Letters, have taken
+pains to publish his observations on many
+social subjects, I think it eminently proper that
+you should ventilate the ideas of his friend
+Tompkins upon a not less important theme.</p>
+
+<p>Happily, I have been saved the trouble of
+original composition, by a discovery made by
+my landlady while I was boarding a year ago
+on St. John's Park. Mr. Green, our attic
+boarder, went off suddenly one day to see a
+friend in the country, as he said. Of course
+our landlady searched his room, with a view of
+reading his letters; and in a brown hair-trunk,
+with a boot-jack, a razor-strop, a box of Seidlitz
+powders, and an odd volume of Young's Night
+Thoughts, she found the following manuscript.
+The females of the house were satisfied with
+reading such letters as were left by Mr. Green
+in his apartment, and so this paper was handed
+over to me. I may say that it was marked with
+pencil, &quot;Declined with Thanks.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<p>&quot;THE PUN FIEND.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;BY C. GREEN.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I used to be corpulent, rosy-cheeked, and
+cheerful. I am gaunt, pale, and morose now.
+I used to sleep sweetly; but now I toss about
+upon my bed, terrified by hideous visions, and
+feelings as of a clammy hand or wet cloth laid on
+my face. I was wont to walk about our streets
+after business hours, and on Sundays, with a
+genuine smile of enjoyment lighting up my
+face; but now I hurry along with my eyes cast
+down, and I seek by-ways and dark lanes for
+my rambles. My friends think I am in love;
+persons who know me but slightly, suppose me
+a victim to remorse&mdash;imagine that I wear a
+hair shirt, and macerate my flesh. They are all
+wrong. An old bachelor like myself has long
+ago buried the light of love in a tomb, and set
+a seal upon the great stone at the door; and as
+for remorse, I owe no tailor any thing, and do
+not at present blame myself for any great
+fault, except having once subscribed for six
+months to the New York <i>Morning Cretan</i>.
+Nevertheless, my face grows haggard, my step
+weary, and even our Thursday's beef <i>&agrave; la mode</i>
+fails to tempt my enfeebled appetite.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am haunted, haunted by a foul fiend. He
+meets me at six, P.M., in our festive dining-room,
+and the fork or spoon drops from my
+nerveless grasp. He follows me up to the parlor,
+where I sometimes talk of an evening to
+Miss Pipkin (Miss P. is our fourth story, front),
+and I become silent in his presence, and Pipkin
+votes me a bore. He sits by my side when I
+am playing at whist, and I trump my partner's
+trick, and the dear old game becomes disgusting.
+He even dared once to follow me into
+church, but I cried 'Avaunt!' in a tone so peremptory,
+that he fled for a moment. He joined
+me, however, as soon as service was over, and
+walked from Tenth Street to Madison Square,
+with his grizzly arm thurst through mine, and
+his diabolical jeers drumming on my tympana.
+In dreams he perches on my breast, and
+clutches me by the throat.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Like the arch fiend, he assumes many
+shapes. He is now a tall man, and again a
+short man; sometimes young and audacious,
+sometimes old and leering. He only once took
+a feminine guise: that blessed form was irksome
+to him. He prefers the freedom of masculinity
+and ineffables. He was once a bookkeeper
+like myself; then a young attorney;
+then a medical student; then a bald-headed
+old gentleman, who seemed to blow a flageolet
+for a living; and lately, he has taken the shape
+of a well-to-do President of 'The Arkansas and
+Arizona Sky Rocket Transportation Company,'
+but through all these shifting shapes, I recognize
+him and shudder.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is known as the Funny Fellow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very glorious are wit and humor. I have
+heard many eminent lecturers discourse on the
+distinctions, definitions, and value of these airy
+good gifts. I remember being especially edified
+by the skill with which Spout, the eloquent,
+dissected the philosophy of mirth in the same
+style and with the same effect that the boy in
+the story dissected his grandmamma's bellows
+to see how the wind was raised. I agree with
+Spout that wit and humor are glorious; that
+satire, pricking the balloons of conceit, vain
+glory, and hypocrisy, is invaluable; that a good
+laugh can come only from a warm heart; that
+the man in motley is often wiser than the
+judge in ermine or the priest in lawn. These
+qualities are goodly in literature. We all love
+the kindly humorist from Chaucer to Holmes,
+inclusive. How genial and gentle they are, as
+they sit with us around the fireside, chucking
+us under the chins, and slyly poking us in the
+ribs; and in the field how nobly they have
+charged upon humbugs and shams. They have
+been true knights, chivalrous, kind-hearted,
+brave, religious; their spears are slender, perhaps,
+yet sharp and elastic as the blades of
+Toledo; and as they have galloped up and
+down in the lists, gaily caparisoned and cheery,
+it has done our hearts good to see how they
+have hurled into the dust the pompous, sleepy
+champions of error and hypocrisy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So too, consider how pleasant a thing is
+mirth on the stage. Who does not thank William
+the Great for Falstaff, and Hackett for his
+personation of the fat knight? Who does not
+chuckle over the humors of Autolycus, rogue
+and peddler? Who has not felt his eye glisten,
+as his lips smiled, when Jesse Rural has spoken,
+and who will not say to Ollapod, 'Thank you,
+good sir, I owe you one'?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah me! how I used to read those jolly
+unctuous authors when I was young, in the old
+'sitting-room' at home! The great fire-place
+glows before me now; its light dances on the
+wall; my mother's hand is on my head; my
+sister's eyes are beaming on her lover over in
+the darker corner; there is a murmur of pleasant
+voices; there are quiet mirth and deep joy.
+I lose myself in revery when I think of these
+pleasures, and almost forget the Funny Fellow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is pestiferous. If I were in the habit of
+profanity, I would let loose upon him an octagonal
+oath. If I were a man of muscle, it
+would be pleasant to get his head in chancery,
+and bruise it. It would be a relief to serve him
+with subpoenas, or present him long bills and
+demand immediate payment. Was my name
+providentially ordered to be Green, that he
+might pass verbal contumely upon it? Does
+he suppose that a man can live thirty-five years
+in this state of probation, without becoming
+slightly calloused to a pun on his own name?
+Yet he continues to pun on mine as if the process
+were highly amusing. Then again he interrupts
+any little attempts at pleasing conversation
+with his infernal absurdities. I was
+speaking one day at the dinner-table of a well-known
+orator who had been entertaining the
+town, and I flatter myself that my remarks were
+critically just as well as deeply interesting. The
+wretched being interposed&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Mr. Green, when you say there was too
+much American Eagle in the speaker's discourse,
+do you mean that it was a talon-ted
+production, and to what claws of the speech do
+you especially refer?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Pipkin, who had been deeply intent
+on my observations, commenced to titter;
+what could I do but hang my head and swallow
+the rest of the meal in silence? If I had been
+possessed of a quick tongue, I would have
+lashed him with sarcasms, and Pipkin would
+have rejoiced with me in his groans. But no&mdash;I
+am slow of speech&mdash;and so I was bound to
+submit. After that he was more tyrannical
+than ever. He would come stealthily into my
+room and garotte me in a conversational way.
+He would seem to take me by the throat, saying,
+'why don't you laugh&mdash;why don't you
+burst with merriment?' and then I would force
+a dismal grin, just to get rid of him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I said to myself, I will leave this selfish
+Sahara called the city and county of New York
+I will leave its dust, dirt, carts, confusion, bulls,
+bears, Peter Funks, Jeremy Diddlers, and, best
+of all, the Funny Fellow. I will take board in
+some rural, as well as accessible place; the
+mosquitoes and ague of Flushing shall refresh
+my frame; the cottages of Astoria, with their
+pleasant view of the Penitentiary, shall revive
+my wounded spirit; I will exile myself from
+my native land to the shores of Jersey; I will
+sit beneath the shadow of the Quarantine on
+Staten Island. No&mdash;I won't&mdash;I will go to Yonkers&mdash;Yonkers
+that looks as though it had been
+built on a gentle slope, and then had suffered a
+violent attack of earthquake; daily boats shall
+convey me from my ledger to my bed and
+board, at convenient hours, so that while I post
+books in New York by day, I may revel in
+breezes, moonbeams, sweet milk, and gentle influences,
+by night. There, said I, in a burst of
+excusable enthusiasm, I will recline beneath
+wide-spreading beeches, and pipe upon an
+oaten reed. There will I listen to the soft
+bleating of lambs, and scent the fresh breath of
+cows; Nature shall touch and thrill me with
+her gentle hand; I will see the dear flowers
+turn their faces up to receive the kiss of the
+rising sun, or the benediction of the summer
+shower. There, too, I will meet the members
+of the mystic P.B., so that I shall talk of books
+other than day-books and blotters: we will discourse
+reverently of authors and their creations.
+I will not meet the Funny Fellow, for such a
+wretch can be produced only in the corrupt
+social hot-bed of Gotham.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So to Yonkers I went. I chose a room
+looking out upon the Hudson and the noble
+Palisades. I took with me a flute, a copy of
+the Bucolics of Virgil, and numerous linen garments.
+A great calm came over me. I was
+no longer haunted, goaded, oppressed. With
+peace nestling in my bosom, I went down to
+my first supper in the new boarding-house. A
+goodly meal smoked on the table, and the
+savor of baked shad, sweetest of smells, went
+up. While I sat choking myself with the
+bones of this delicious fish, I heard a voice on
+the opposite side of the table that sent the
+blood to my heart. If I had been feminine,
+there would have been a scene.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He was there: his eyes gloated over the
+board, a malicious quirk sat astride his fat lips.
+The Funny Fellow spoke to Miss Grasscloth:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Why are the fishermen who catch these
+shad like wigmakers?'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I don't know,'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Because they make their living from bare
+poles.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I ate no more supper. A nausea supervened.
+I left the table, rushed into the cool
+evening air, and let the fresh breeze visit my
+faded cheek. I strolled up the main street of
+Yonkers, and as I crushed my toes against the
+stones which then adorned that highway, I resolved
+to call on my sweet friend Julia &mdash;&mdash;.
+Her gentle smile, said I, will console me. She
+is not a Funny Fellow. We will talk together
+calmly, earnestly, in the moonlight, close by the
+great river. I will sit as near to her as her fashionable
+garments will permit, and forget my foe.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We walked together&mdash;Julia and I. We
+talked of things good and true. We spoke of
+the beauty of the nocturnal scene. Alas! a
+fearful, a demoniac change came over the girl's
+face. She said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Yes, my friend, we ought to enjoy this
+scene&mdash;for we are fine-night beings.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I bid a hasty farewell to the large eyes and
+gentle smile. She was not much offended at
+my abrupt and angry departure, for my salary
+is small, my hair is turning grey, and I do not
+dance. But I was not entirely discouraged.
+I resolved to give Yonkers a fair trial, and a
+true verdict to render according to the evidence.
+So I frequented the tea-parties and sociables so
+common in that wretched town, and strove to
+shake off the melancholy that clung to me like
+the Old Man of the Sea. To my horror, the
+Funny Fellow became multiplied like the reflections
+in a shivered mirror. Men and women,
+and even young innocent children, became
+Funny, and danced about me in a horrible
+maze, and squeaked and gibbered, and tossed
+their jokes in my face. In one week I made
+five mortal enemies by refusing to smile when
+their tormenting squibs were exploded in my
+eyes. I felt like a rustic pony, who comes in
+his simple way into town on the Fourth of
+July, and has Chinese crackers and fiery serpents
+cast under his heels. One evening, in
+particular, they asked me to play the game of
+Comparisons (a proverbially odious game, that
+could exist only in an effete and degenerate
+civilization), in which the entire company tried
+to see how Funny they could be; and because
+I made stupid answers, I was laughed at by the
+young ladies.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I became disgusted with Yonkers, and returned
+to my intramural boarding-house in St.
+John's Park. The sidewalk near the house was
+in a dilapidated state, through the carelessness
+of the contractor, who had stipulated to pave
+it properly, but had not paved it at all, except
+with good intentions. And therefore, as I came
+along, I first besmeared my boots with muck
+then tripped my toes against a pile of brick:
+and finally fell headlong into the gutter. As I
+rose up and denounced, in somewhat loud language,
+the idleness and inefficiency of the contractor
+who had the work in charge, the Funny
+Fellow stood before me, his eyes glaring with
+triumph. He spoke in reply to my denunciations:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;' My dear Green, do not call the contractor
+lazy and inefficient. I am sure that his is an
+energy that never FLAGS!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I rushed to the room where I am now sealed.
+There is but one hope left me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In the Territory of Nebraska, far to the
+west thereof, lies a tract of land which the
+early French trappers, with shrewd fitness
+called the' Mauvaises Terres.' It is a region
+of rocks, petrifactions, and other pre-Adamite
+peculiarities. In a paper written by Dr. Leid
+of Philadelphia, and published by the Smithsonian
+Institute, we are assured that there once
+lived in these bad lands, turtles six feet square,
+and alligators, compared with which the present
+squatter sovereigns of the territory are lovely
+and refined. The fossil remains of these ancient
+inhabitants still encumber the earth of
+that region, and make it unpleasant to view
+with an agricultural eye; but here and there
+the general desolation is relieved by a fertile
+valley, with a running brook and green slopes.
+White men, whisky, and Funny Fellows have
+not yet penetrated there. I will go to this
+sanctuary. A snug cabin will contain my necessary
+household&mdash;to wit&mdash;twelve shirts and a
+Bible. I will plant my corn, and tobacco, and
+vines on the fertile slope that looks to the
+south; my cattle and sheep shall browse the
+rest of the valley, while a few agile goats shall
+stand in picturesque positions upon the rocky
+monsters described by Dr. Leidy. My guests
+shall be the brave and wise red men who never
+try to make bad jokes. I do not think they
+ever try to be Funny; but to make assurance
+doubly sure, I shall not learn their language, so
+that any melancholy attempts they may possibly
+make, will fall upon unappreciative ears.
+By day I will cultivate my crops and tend my
+flocks and herds; and in the long evenings
+smoke the calumet with the worthy aborigines.
+If I should find there some dusky maiden, like
+Palmer's Indian girl, who has no idea of puns,
+polkas, crinoline, or eligible matches, I will woo
+her in savage hyperbole, and she shall light my
+pipe with her slender fingers, and beat for me
+the tom-tom when I am sad. I will live in a
+calm and conscientious way; the Funny Fellow
+shall become like the dim recollection of some
+horrible dream, and&quot;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Green seems not to have finished his interesting
+reflections, and I shall not attempt to
+complete them. As well might I try to finish
+the Cathedral at Cologne. But I heartily sympathize
+with the feelings he has expressed, and
+trust that his new home in the West will never
+be invaded by conversational garroters.</p>
+
+<p>Sincerely your friend,</p>
+
+<p>TOMPKINS.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;<i>The Pasha Papers</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHARLES_FARRAR_BROWNE" id="CHARLES_FARRAR_BROWNE"></a>CHARLES FARRAR BROWNE.</h2>
+
+<h2>(&quot;ARTEMUS WARD.&quot;)</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1834&mdash;DIED, 1867.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="THE_TOWER_OF_LONDON" id="THE_TOWER_OF_LONDON"></a>THE TOWER OF LONDON.</h2>
+
+
+<p>MR. PUNCH,&mdash;<i>My Dear Sir</i>:&mdash;I skurcely
+need inform you that your excellent
+Tower is very pop'lar with pe'ple from the agricultooral
+districks, and it was chiefly them
+class which I found waitin at the gates the
+other mornin.</p>
+
+<p>I saw at once that the Tower was established
+on a firm basis. In the entire history of firm
+basisis I don't find a basis more firmer than
+this one.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have no Tower in America?&quot; said a
+man in the crowd, who had somehow detected
+my denomination.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Alars! no,&quot; I anserd; &quot;we boste of our enterprise
+and improovements, and yit we are devoid
+of a Tower. America oh my onhappy
+country! thou hast not got no Tower! It's a
+sweet Boon.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The gates was opened after a while, and we
+all purchist tickets, and went into a waitin-room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My frens,&quot; said a pale-faced little man, in
+black close, &quot;this is a sad day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Inasmuch as to how?&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I mean it is sad to think that so many peple
+have been killed within these gloomy walls. My
+frens, let us drop a tear!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; I said, &quot;you must excuse me. Others
+may drop one if they feel like it; but as for me,
+I decline. The early managers of this institootion
+were a bad lot, and their crimes were trooly
+orful; but I can't sob for those who died
+four or five hundred years ago. If they was
+my own relations I couldn't. It's absurd to
+shed sobs over things which occurd during the
+rain of Henry the Three. Let us be cheerful,&quot;
+I continnered. &quot;Look at the festiv Warders,
+in their red flannil jackets. They are cheerful,
+and why should it not be thusly with us?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A Warder now took us in charge, and showed
+us the Trater's Gate, the armers, and things.
+The Trater's Gate is wide enuff to admit about
+twenty traters abrest, I should jedge; but beyond
+this, I couldn't see that it was superior
+to gates in gen'ral.</p>
+
+<p>Traters, I will here remark, are a onfornit
+class of peple. If they wasn't, they wouldn't
+be traters. They conspire to bust up a country&mdash;they
+fail, and they're traters. They bust
+her, and they become statesmen and heroes.</p>
+
+<p>Take the case of Gloster, afterwards Old Dick
+the Three, who may be seen at the Tower on
+horseback, in a heavy tin overcoat&mdash;take Mr.
+Gloster's case. Mr. G. was a conspirator of the
+basist dye, and if he'd failed, he would have
+been hung on a sour apple tree. But Mr. G.
+succeeded, and became great. He was slewed
+by Col. Richmond, but he lives in history, and
+his equestrian figger may be seen daily for a
+sixpence, in conjunction with other em'nent
+persons, and no extra charge for the Warder's
+able and bootiful lectur.</p>
+
+<p>There's one king in this room who is mounted
+onto a foaming steed, his right hand graspin
+a barber's pole. I didn't learn his name.</p>
+
+<p>The room where the daggers and pistils and
+other weppins is kept is interestin. Among this
+collection of choice cuttlery I notist the bow and
+arrer which those hot-heded old chaps used to
+conduct battles with. It is quite like the bow
+and arrer used at this day by certain tribes
+of American Injuns, and they shoot 'em off
+with such a excellent precision that I almost
+sigh'd to be an Injun when I was in the Rocky
+Mountain regin. They are a pleasant lot them
+Injuns. Mr. Cooper and Dr. Catlin have told
+us of the red man's wonerful eloquence, and I
+found it so. Our party was stopt on the plains
+of Utah by a band of Shoshones, whose chief
+said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Brothers! the pale-face is welcome. Brothers!
+the sun is sinking in the west, and Wa-na-bucky-she
+will soon cease speakin. Brothers!
+the poor red man belongs to a race which is
+fast becomin extink.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He then whooped in a shrill manner, stole all
+our blankets and whisky, and fled to the primeval
+forest to conceal his emotions.</p>
+
+<p>I will remark here, while on the subjeck of
+Injuns, that they are in the main a very shaky
+set, with even less sense than the Fenians, and
+when I hear philanthropists bewailin the fack
+that every year &quot;carries the noble red man
+nearer the settin sun,&quot; I simply have to say I'm
+glad of it, tho' it is rough on the settin sun.
+They call you by the sweet name of Brother
+one minit, and the next they scalp you with
+their Thomas-hawks. But I wander. Let us
+return to the Tower.</p>
+
+<p>At one end of the room where the weppins is
+kept, is a wax figger of Queen Elizabeth, mounted
+on a fiery stuffed hoss, whose glass eye flashes
+with pride, and whose red morocker nostril dilates
+hawtily, as if conscious of the royal burden
+he bears. I have associated Elizabeth with the
+Spanish Armady. She's mixed up with it at
+the Surrey Theatre, where <i>Troo to the Core</i> is
+bein acted, and in which a full bally core is introjooced
+on board the Spanish Admiral's ship,
+giving the audiens the idee that he intends
+openin a moosic-hall in Plymouth the moment
+he conkers that town. But a very interesting
+drammer is <i>Troo to the Core</i>, notwithstandin the
+eccentric conduct of the Spanish Admiral; and
+very nice it is in Queen Elizabeth to make
+Martin Truegold a baronet.</p>
+
+<p>The Warder shows us some instrooments of
+tortur, such as thumbscrews, throat-collars, etc.,
+statin that these was conkered from the Spanish
+Armady, and addin what a crooil peple the
+Spaniards was in them days&mdash;which elissited
+from a bright-eyed little girl of about twelve
+summers the remark that she tho't it <i>was</i> rich
+to talk about the crooilty of the Spaniards usin
+thumbscrews, when he was in a Tower where
+so many poor peple's heads had been cut
+off. This made the Warder stammer and turn
+red.</p>
+
+<p>I was so pleased with the little girl's brightness
+that I could have kissed the dear child,
+and I would if she'd been six years older.</p>
+
+<p>I think my companions intended makin a
+day of it, for they all had sandwiches, sassiges,
+etc. The sad-lookin man, who had wanted us
+to drop a tear afore we started to go round,
+fling'd such quantities of sassige into his mouth
+that I expected to see him choke hisself to
+death; he said to me, in the Beauchamp Tower,
+where the poor prisoners writ their onhappy
+names on the cold walls, &quot;This is a sad sight.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is indeed,&quot; I anserd. &quot;You're black in
+the face. You shouldn't eat sassige in public
+without some rehearsals beforehand. You manage
+it orkwardly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; he said, &quot;I mean this sad room.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, he was quite right. Tho' so long
+ago all these drefful things happened, I was
+very glad to git away from this gloomy room,
+and go where the rich and sparklin Crown Jewils
+is kept. I was so pleased with the Queen's
+Crown, that it occurd to me what a agree'ble
+surprise it would be to send a sim'lar one home
+to my wife; and I asked the Warder what was
+the vally of a good, well-constructed Crown
+like that. He told me, but on cypherin up
+up with a pencil the amount of funs I have in
+the Jint Stock Bank, I conclooded I'd send her
+a genteel silver watch instid.</p>
+
+<p>And so I left the Tower. It is a solid and
+commandin edifis, but I deny that it is cheerful.
+I bid it adoo without a pang.</p>
+
+<p>I was droven to my hotel by the most melancholly
+driver of a four-wheeler that I ever saw.
+He heaved a deep sigh as I gave him two shillings.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll give you six d.'s more,&quot; I said, &quot;if it
+hurts you so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It isn't that,&quot; he said, with a hart-rendin
+groan, &quot;it's only a way I have. My mind's
+upset to-day. I at one time tho't I'd drive you
+into the Thames. I've been readin all the
+daily papers to try and understand about Governor
+Eyre, and my mind is totterin. It's
+really wonderful I didn't drive you into the
+Thames.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I asked the onhappy man what his number
+was, so I could redily find him in case I should
+want him agin, and bad him good-bye. And
+then I tho't what a frollicsome day I'd made
+of it. Respectably, etc.,</p>
+
+<p>ARTEMUS WARD.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;<i>Punch</i>,1866.</p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="SCIENCE_AND_NATURAL_HISTORY" id="SCIENCE_AND_NATURAL_HISTORY"></a>SCIENCE AND NATURAL HISTORY.</h2>
+
+<p>Mr. Punch <i>My Dear Sir</i>:&mdash;I was a little disapinted
+at not receivin a invitation to jine in the
+meetins of the Social Science Congress....</p>
+
+<p>I prepared an Essy on Animals to read before
+the Social Science meetins. It is a subjeck
+I may troothfully say I have successfully
+wrastled with. I tackled it when only nineteen
+years old. At that tender age I writ a Essy
+for a lit'ry Institoot entitled, &quot;Is Cats to be
+trusted?&quot; Of the merits of that Essy it
+doesn't becum me to speak, but I may be excoos'd
+for mentionin that the Institoot parsed
+a resolution that &quot;whether we look upon the
+length of this Essy, or the manner in which it
+is written, we feel that we will not express any
+opinion of it, and we hope it will be read in
+other towns.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Of course the Essy I writ for the Social Science
+Society is a more finisheder production
+than the one on Cats, which was wroten when
+my mind was crood, and afore I had masterd
+a graceful and ellygant stile of composition. I
+could not even punctooate my sentences proper
+at that time, and I observe with pane, on lookin
+over this effort of my youth, that its beauty is
+in one or two instances mar'd by ingrammaticisms.
+This was inexcusable, and I'm surprised
+I did it. A writer who can't write in a
+grammerly manner better shut up shop.</p>
+
+<p>You shall hear this Essy on Animals. Some
+day when you have four hours to spare, I'll
+read it to you. I think you'll enjoy it. Or,
+what will be much better, if I may suggest&mdash;omit
+all picturs in next week's <i>Punch</i>, and do
+not let your contributors write eny thing whatever
+(et them have a holiday; they can go to
+the British Mooseum;) and publish my Essy
+intire. It will fill all your collumes full, and
+create comment. Does this proposition strike
+you? Is it a go?</p>
+
+<p>In case I had read the Essy to the Social
+Sciencers, I had intended it should be the
+closin attraction. I intended it should finish
+the proceedins. I think it would have finished
+them. I understand animals better than any
+other class of human creatures. I have a very
+animal mind, and I've been identified with 'em
+doorin my entire perfessional career as a showman,
+more especial bears, wolves, leopards and
+serpunts.</p>
+
+<p>The leopard is as lively a animal as I ever
+came into contack with. It is troo he cannot
+change his spots, but you can change 'em for
+him with a paint-brush, as I once did in the
+case of a leopard who wasn't nat'rally spotted
+in a attractive manner. In exhibitin him I
+used to stir him up in his cage with a protracted
+pole, and for the purpuss of makin him yell and
+kick up in a leopardy manner, I used to casionally
+whack him over the head. This would
+make the children inside the booth scream with
+fright, which would make fathers of families
+outside the booth very anxious to come in&mdash;because
+there is a large class of parents who
+have a uncontrollable passion for takin their
+children to places where they will stand a
+chance of being frightened to death.</p>
+
+<p>One day I whacked this leopard more than
+ushil, which elissited a remonstrance from a tall
+gentleman in spectacles, who said, &quot;My good
+man, do not beat the poor caged animal.
+Rather fondle him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll fondle him with a club,&quot; I ansered,
+hitting him another whack.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I prithy desist,&quot; said the gentleman; &quot;stand
+aside, and see the effeck of kindness. I understand
+the idiosyncracies of these creeturs better
+than you do.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With that he went up to the cage, and
+thrustin his face in between the iron bars, he
+said, soothingly, &quot;Come hither, pretty creetur.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The pretty creetur come-hithered rayther
+speedy, and seized the gentleman by the whiskers,
+which he tore off about enuff to stuff a
+small cushion with.</p>
+
+<p>He said &quot;You vagabone, I'll have you indicted
+for exhibitin dangerous and immoral
+animals.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I replied, &quot;Gentle Sir, there isn't a animal
+here that hasn't a beautiful moral, but you
+mustn't fondle 'em. You mustn't meddle
+with their idiotsyncracies.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The gentleman was a dramatic cricket, and
+he wrote a article for a paper, in which he said
+my entertainment wos a decided failure.</p>
+
+<p>As regards Bears, you can teach 'em to do
+interestin things, but they're onreliable. I
+had a very large grizzly bear once, who would
+dance, and larf, and lay down, and bow his head
+in grief, and give a mournful wale, etsetry.
+But he often annoyed me. It will be remembered
+that on the occasion of the first battle of
+Bull Run, it suddenly occurd to the Fed'ral
+soldiers that they had business in Washington
+which ought not to be neglected, and they all
+started for that beautiful and romantic city,
+maintainin a rate of speed durin the entire distance
+that would have done credit to the celebrated
+French steed <i>Gladiateur</i>. Very nat'rally
+our Gov'ment was deeply grieved at this defeat;
+and I said to my Bear shortly after, as I
+was givin a exhibition in Ohio&mdash;I said, &quot;Brewin,
+are you not sorry the National arms has sustained
+a defeat?&quot; His business was to wale
+dismal, and bow his head down, the band (a
+barrel origin and a wiolin) playing slow and
+melancholy moosic. What did the grizzly old
+cuss do, however, but commence darncin and
+larfin in the most joyous manner? I had a
+narrer escape from being imprisoned for
+disloyalty.&mdash;<i>Works</i>.</p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="FROM_THE_LECTURE" id="FROM_THE_LECTURE"></a>FROM THE &quot;LECTURE.&quot;</h2>
+
+<p>Some years ago I engaged a celebrated Living
+American Skeleton for a tour through Australia.
+He was the thinnest man I ever saw.
+He was a splendid skeleton. He didn't weigh
+any thing scarcely,&mdash;and I said to myself,&mdash;the
+people of Australia will flock to see this tremendous
+curiosity. It is a long voyage&mdash;as
+you know&mdash;from New York to Melbourne&mdash;and
+to my utter surprise the skeleton had no
+sooner got out to sea than he commenced eating
+in the most horrible manner. He had
+never been on the ocean before&mdash;and he said it
+agreed with him.&mdash;I thought so!&mdash;I never saw
+a man eat so much in my life. Beef&mdash;mutton&mdash;pork&mdash;he
+swallowed them all like a shark&mdash;and
+between meals he was often discovered behind
+barrels eating hard-boiled eggs. The result
+was that when we reached Melbourne this infamous
+skeleton weighed sixty-four pounds
+more than I did!</p>
+
+<p>I thought I was ruined&mdash;but I wasn't. I
+took him on to California&mdash;another very long sea
+voyage&mdash;and when I got him to San Francisco
+I exhibited him as a fat man.</p>
+
+<p>This story hasn't any thing to do with my
+Entertainment, I know&mdash;but one of the principal
+features of my Entertainment is that it
+contains so many things that don't have any
+thing to do with it....</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>I like Music.&mdash;I can't sing. As a singist I
+am not a success. I am saddest when I sing.
+So are those who hear me. They are sadder
+even than I am....</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>I met a man in Oregon who hadn't any
+teeth&mdash;not a tooth in his head&mdash;yet that man
+could play on the bass drum better than any
+man I ever met....</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Brigham Young has two hundred wives.
+Just think of that! Oblige me by thinking of
+that. That is&mdash;he has eighty actual wives, and
+he is spiritually married to one hundred and
+twenty more. These spiritual marriages&mdash;as
+the Mormons call them&mdash;are contracted with
+aged widows&mdash;who think it a great honor to be
+sealed&mdash;the Mormons call it being sealed&mdash;to
+the Prophet.</p>
+
+<p>So we may say he has two hundred wives.
+He loves not wisely&mdash;but two hundred well.
+He is dreadfully married. He's the most married
+man I ever saw in my life....</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>I regret to say that efforts were made to
+make a Mormon of me while I was in Utah.</p>
+
+<p>It was leap-year when I was there&mdash;and
+seventeen young widows&mdash;the wives of a deceased
+Mormon&mdash;offered me their hearts and
+hands. I called on them one day&mdash;and taking
+their soft white hands in mine&mdash;which made
+eighteen hands altogether&mdash;I found them in
+tears.</p>
+
+<p>And I said&mdash;&quot;Why is this thus? What is
+the reason of this thusness?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>They hove a sigh&mdash;seventeen sighs of different
+size.&mdash;They said&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh&mdash;soon thou wilt be gonested away!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I told them that when I got ready to leave a
+place I wentested.</p>
+
+<p>They said&mdash;&quot;Doth not like us?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I said&mdash;&quot;I doth&mdash;I doth!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I also said&mdash;&quot;I hope your intentions are
+honorable&mdash;as I am a lone child&mdash;my parents
+being far&mdash;far away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>They then said&mdash;&quot;Wilt not marry us?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I said&mdash;&quot;Oh no&mdash;it cannot was.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Again they asked me to marry them&mdash;and
+again I declined. When they cried&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh&mdash;cruel man! This is too much&mdash;oh!
+too much!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I told them that it was on account of the
+muchness that I declined.&mdash;<i>Works</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="FRANK_R_STOCKTON" id="FRANK_R_STOCKTON"></a>FRANK R. STOCKTON.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1834.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="OUR_TAVERN" id="OUR_TAVERN"></a>OUR TAVERN.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It was about noon of a very fair July day,
+when Euphemia and myself arrived at the
+little town where we were to take the stage up
+into the mountains. We were off for a two
+weeks' vacation and our minds were a good
+deal easier than when we went away before,
+and left Pomona at the helm. We had enlarged
+the boundaries of Rudder Grange, having
+purchased the house, with enough adjoining
+land to make quite a respectable farm. Of
+course I could not attend to the manifold duties
+on such a place, and my wife seldom had a
+happier thought than when she proposed that
+we should invite Pomona and her husband to
+come and live with us. Pomona was delighted,
+and Jonas was quite willing to run our farm.
+So arrangements were made, and the young
+couple were established in apartments in our
+back building, and went to work as if taking
+care of us and our possessions was the ultimate
+object of their lives. Jonas was such a steady
+fellow that we feared no trouble from tree-man
+or lightning rodder during this absence.</p>
+
+<p>Our destination was a country tavern on the
+stage-road, not far from the point where the
+road crosses the ridge of the mountain range,
+and about sixteen miles from the town. We
+had heard of this tavern from a friend of ours,
+who had spent a summer there. The surrounding
+country was lovely, and the house was kept
+by a farmer, who was a good soul, and tried to
+make his guests happy. These were generally
+passing farmers and wagoners, or stage-passengers,
+stopping for a meal, but occasionally a
+person from the cities, like our friend, came to
+spend a few weeks in the mountains.</p>
+
+<p>So hither we came, for an out-of-the-world
+spot like this was just what we wanted. When
+I took our place at the stage-office, I inquired
+for David Button, the farm tavern-keeper before
+mentioned, but the agent did not know
+of him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;However,&quot; said he, &quot;the driver knows everybody
+on the road, and he'll set you down at the
+house.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So, off we started, having paid for our tickets
+on the basis that we were to ride about sixteen
+miles. We had seats on top, and the trip, although
+slow,&mdash;for the road wound uphill steadily,&mdash;was
+a delightful one. Our way lay, for
+the greater part of the time, through the
+woods, but now and then we came to a farm, and
+a turn in the road often gave us lovely views
+of the foot-hills and the valleys behind us.</p>
+
+<p>But the driver did not know where Dutton's
+tavern was. This we found out after we had
+started. Some persons might have thought it
+wiser to settle this matter before starting, but I
+am not at all sure that it would have been so.
+We were going to this tavern, and did not wish
+to go anywhere else. If people did not know
+where it was, it would be well for us to go and
+look for it. We knew the road that it was on,
+and the locality in which it was to be found.</p>
+
+<p>Still, it was somewhat strange that a stage-driver,
+passing along the road every week-day,&mdash;one
+day one way, and the next the other
+way,&mdash;should not know a public-house like
+Dutton's.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I remember rightly,&quot; I said, &quot;the stage
+used to stop there for the passengers to take
+supper.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, then, it ain't on this side o' the ridge,&quot;
+said the driver; &quot;we stop for supper, about a
+quarter of a mile on the other side, at Pete
+Lowry's. Perhaps Dutton used to keep that
+place. Was it called the 'Ridge House'?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I did not remember the name of the house,
+but I knew very well that it was not on the
+other side of the ridge.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then,&quot; said the driver, &quot;I'm sure I don't
+know where it is. But I've only been on the
+road about a year, and your man may 'a' moved
+away afore I come. But there ain't no tavern
+this side the ridge, arter ye leave Delhi, and,
+that's nowhere's nigh the ridge.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There were a couple of farmers who were sitting
+by the driver, and who had listened with
+considerable interest to this conversation. Presently,
+one of them turned around to me and
+said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it Dave Dutton ye're askin' about?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; I replied, &quot;that's his name.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I think he's dead,&quot; said he.</p>
+
+<p>At this, I began to feel uneasy, and I could
+see that my wife shared my trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Then the other farmer spoke up.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't believe he's dead, Hiram,&quot; said he
+to his companion. &quot;I heerd of him this spring.
+He's got a sheep-farm on the other side o' the
+mountain, and he's a livin' there. That's what
+I heerd, at any rate. But he don't live on this
+road any more,&quot; he continued, turning to us.
+&quot;He used to keep tavern on this road, and the
+stages did used to stop fur supper&mdash;or else dinner.
+I don't jist ree-collect which. But he
+don't keep tavern on this road no more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course not,&quot; said his companion, &quot;if
+he's a livin' over the mountain. But I b'lieve
+he's dead.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I asked the other farmer if he knew how long
+it had been since Dutton had left this part of
+the country.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know fur certain,&quot; he said, &quot;but I
+know he was keeping tavern here two year'
+ago, this fall, fur I came along here, myself, and
+stopped there to git supper&mdash;or dinner, I don't
+jist ree-collect which.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It had been three years since our friend had
+boarded at Dutton's house. There was no
+doubt that the man was not living at his old
+place now. My wife and I now agreed that it
+was very foolish in us to come so far without
+making more particular inquiries. But we had
+had an idea that a man who had a place like
+Dutton's tavern would live there always.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are ye goin' to do?&quot; asked the
+driver, very much interested, for it was not
+every day that he had passengers who had lost
+their destination. &quot;Ye might go on to Lowry's.
+He takes boarders sometimes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But Lowry's did not attract us. An ordinary
+country-tavern, where stage-passengers took
+supper, was not what we came so far to find.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you know where this house o' Dutton's
+is?&quot; said the driver, to the man who had once
+taken either dinner or supper there.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh yes! I'd know the house well enough,
+if I saw it. It's the fust house this side o'
+Lowry's.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With a big pole in front of it?&quot; asked the
+driver.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, there was a sign-pole in front of it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;An' a long porch?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh! well!&quot; said the driver, settling himself
+in his seat. &quot;I know all about that house.
+That's a empty house. I didn't think you
+meant that house. There's nobody lives there.
+An' yit, now I come to remember, I have seen
+people about, too. I tell ye what ye better do.
+Since ye're so set on staying on this side the
+ridge, ye better let me put ye down at Dan
+Carson's place. That's jist about quarter of a
+mile from where Dutton used to live. Dan's
+wife can tell ye all about the Duttons, an'
+about everybody else, too, in this part o' the
+country, and if there aint nobody livin' at the
+old tavern, ye can stay all night at Carson's,
+and I'll stop an' take you back, to-morrow,
+when I come along.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We agreed to this plan, for there was nothing
+better to be done, and, late in the afternoon,
+we were set down with our small trunk&mdash;for we
+were traveling under light weight&mdash;at Dan
+Carson's door. The stage was rather behind
+time, and the driver whipped up and left us to
+settle our own affairs. He called back, however,
+that he would keep a good look-out for us
+to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Carson soon made her appearance, and,
+very naturally, was somewhat surprised to see
+visitors with their baggage standing on her
+little porch. She was a plain, coarsely dressed
+woman, with an apron full of chips and kindling
+wood, and a fine mind for detail, as we
+soon discovered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Jist so,&quot; she said, putting down the chips
+and inviting us to seats on a bench. &quot;Dave
+Dutton's folks is all moved away. Dave has a
+good farm on the other side o' the mountain,
+an' it never did pay him to keep that tavern,
+'specially as he didn't sell liquor. When he
+went away, his son Al come there to live with
+his wife, an' the old man left a good deal o'
+furniture and things for him, but Al's wife aint
+satisfied here, and, though they've been here,
+off an' on, the house is shet up most o' the
+time. It's for sale an' to rent, both, ef enybody
+wants it. I'm sorry about you, too, fur
+it was a nice tavern, when Dave kept it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We admitted that we were also very sorry,
+and the kind-hearted woman showed a great
+deal of sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You might stay here, but we haint got no
+fit room where you two could sleep.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At this, Euphemia and I looked very blank.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you could go up to the house and stay,
+jist as well as not,&quot; Mrs. Carson continued.
+&quot;There's plenty o' things there, an' I keep the
+key. For the matter o' that, ye might take the
+house for as long as ye want to stay; Dave 'd
+be glad enough to rent it; and, if the lady
+knows how to keep house, it wouldn't be no
+trouble at all, jist for you two. We could let
+ye have all the victuals ye'd want, cheap, and
+there's plenty o' wood there, cut, and every
+thing handy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We looked at each other. We agreed. Here
+was a chance for a rare good time. It might
+be better, perhaps, than any thing we had expected.</p>
+
+<p>The bargain was struck. Mrs. Carson, who
+seemed vested with all the necessary powers of
+attorney, appeared to be perfectly satisfied with
+our trustworthiness, and when I paid on the
+spot the small sum she thought proper for two
+weeks' rent, she evidently considered she had
+done a very good thing for Dave Dutton and
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll jist put some bread, an' eggs, an' coffee,
+an' pork, an' things in the basket, an' I'll have
+'em took up for ye, with yer trunk, an' I'll go
+with ye an' take some milk. Here, Danny!&quot;
+she cried, and directly her husband, a long,
+thin, sun-burnt, sandy-headed man, appeared,
+and to him she told, in a few words, our story,
+and ordered him to hitch up the cart and be
+ready to take our trunk and the basket up to
+Dutton's old house.</p>
+
+<p>When all was ready, we walked up the hill,
+followed by Danny and the cart. We found
+the house a large, low, old-fashioned farm-house,
+standing near the road with a long
+piazza in front, and a magnificent view of
+mountain-tops in the rear. Within, the lower
+rooms were large and low, with quite a good
+deal of furniture in them. There was no earthly
+reason why we should not be perfectly jolly
+and comfortable here. The more we saw the
+more delighted we were at the odd experience
+we were about to have. Mrs. Carson busied
+herself in getting things in order for our supper
+and general accommodation. She made
+Danny carry our trunk to a bedroom in the
+second story, and then set him to work building
+a fire in a great fire-place, with a crane for
+the kettle.</p>
+
+<p>When she had done all she could, it was nearly
+dark, and after lighting a couple of candles, she
+left us, to go home and get supper for her own
+family.</p>
+
+<p>As she and Danny were about to depart in
+the cart, she ran back to ask us if we would like
+to borrow a dog.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There aint nuthin to be afeard of,&quot; she
+said; &quot;for nobody hardly ever takes the trouble
+to lock the doors in these parts, but bein' city
+folks, I thought ye might feel better if ye had
+a dog.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We made haste to tell her that we were not
+city folks, but declined the dog. Indeed, Euphemia
+remarked that she would be much more
+afraid of a strange dog than of robbers.</p>
+
+<p>After supper, which we enjoyed as much as
+any meal we ever ate in our lives, we each took
+a candle, and after arranging our bedroom for
+the night, we explored the old house. There
+were lots of curious things everywhere,&mdash;things
+that were apparently so &quot;old timey,&quot; as my
+wife remarked, that David Dutton did not care
+to take them with him to his new farm, and so
+left them for his son, who probably cared for
+them even less than his father did. There was
+a garret extending over the whole house, and
+filled with old spinning-wheels, and strings of
+onions, and all sorts of antiquated bric-a-brac,
+which was so fascinating to me that I could
+scarcely tear myself away from it; but Euphemia,
+who was dreadfully afraid that I would set
+the whole place on fire, at length prevailed on
+me to come down.</p>
+
+<p>We slept soundly that night, in what was
+probably the best bedroom in the house, and
+awoke with a feeling that we were about to enter
+on a period of some uncommon kind of jollity,
+which we found to be true when we went
+down to get breakfest. I made the fire, Euphemia
+made the coffee, and Mrs. Carson came
+with cream and some fresh eggs. The good
+woman was in high spirits. She was evidently
+pleased at the idea of having neighbors, temporary
+though they were, and it had probably been
+a long time since she had had such a chance of
+selling milk, eggs, and sundries. It was almost
+the same as opening a country store. We
+bought groceries and every thing of her.</p>
+
+<p>We had a glorious time that day. We were
+just starting out for a mountain stroll when
+our stage-driver came along on his down trip.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hello!&quot; he called out. &quot;Want to go back
+this morning?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not a bit of it,&quot; I cried. &quot;We wont go
+back for a couple of weeks. We've settled
+here for the present.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The man smiled. He didn't seem to understand
+it exactly, but he was evidently glad to
+see us so well satisfied. If he had had time to
+stop and have the matter explained to him, he
+would probably have been better satisfied; but
+as it was, he waved his whip to us and drove
+on. He was a good fellow.</p>
+
+<p>We strolled all day, having locked up the
+house and taken our lunch with us; and when
+we came back, it seemed really like coming
+home. Mrs. Carson, with whom we had left
+the key, had brought the milk and was making
+the fire. This woman was too kind. We determined
+to try and repay her in some way. After
+a splendid supper we went to bed happy.</p>
+
+<p>The next day was a repetition of this one,
+but the day after it rained. So we determined
+to enjoy the old tavern, and we rummaged
+about everywhere. I visited the garret again,
+and we went to the old barn, with its mows
+half full of hay, and had rare times climbing
+about there. We were delighted that it happened
+to rain. In a wood-shed, near the house,
+I saw a big square board with letters on it. I
+examined the board, and found it was a sign,&mdash;a
+hanging sign,&mdash;and on it was painted in
+letters that were yet quite plain:</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;FARMERS'<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">AND</span><br />
+MECHANICS'<br />
+HOTEL.&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I called to Euphemia and told her that I had
+found the old tavern sign. She came to look
+at it, and I pulled it out.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Soldiers and sailors!&quot; she exclaimed; &quot;that's
+funny.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I looked over on her side of the sign, and,
+sure enough, there was the inscription:</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;SOLDIERS'<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">AND</span><br />
+SAILORS'<br />
+HOUSE.&quot;<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They must have bought this comprehensive
+sign in some town,&quot; I said. &quot;Such a name
+would never have been chosen for a country
+tavern like this. But I wish they hadn't taken
+it down. The house would look more like
+what it ought to be with its sign hanging
+before it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, then,&quot; said Euphemia, &quot;let's put it
+up.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I agreed instantly to this proposition, and we
+went to look for a ladder. We found one in
+the wagon-house, and carried it out to the sign-post
+in the front of the house. It was raining,
+gently, during these performances, but we had
+on our old clothes, and were so much interested
+in our work that we did not care for a little
+rain. I carried the sign to the post, and then,
+at the imminent risk of breaking my neck, I
+hung it on its appropriate hooks on the transverse
+beam of the sign-post. Now our tavern
+was really what it pretended to be. We gazed
+on the sign with admiration and content.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you think we had better keep it up all
+the time?&quot; I asked of my wife.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly,&quot; said she. &quot;It's a part of the
+house. The place isn't complete without it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But suppose some one should come along
+and want to be entertained?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But no one will. And if people do come,
+I'll take care of the soldiers and sailors, if you
+will attend to the farmers and mechanics.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I consented to this, and we went in-doors to
+prepare dinner.&mdash;<i>Rudder Grange</i>.</p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_PIECE_OF_RED_CALICO" id="A_PIECE_OF_RED_CALICO"></a>A PIECE OF RED CALICO.</h2>
+
+<p>Mr. Editor:&mdash;If the following true experience
+shall prove of any advantage to any of your
+readers, I shall be glad.</p>
+
+<p>I was going into town the other morning,
+when my wife handed me a little piece of red
+calico, and asked me if I would have time during
+the day, to buy her two yards and a half of
+calico like that. I assured her that it would be
+no trouble at all; and putting the piece of calico
+in my pocket, I took the train for the city.</p>
+
+<p>At lunch-time I stopped in at a large dry-goods
+store to attend to my wife's commission.
+I saw a well-dressed man walking the floor between
+the counters, where long lines of girls
+were waiting on much longer lines of customers,
+and asked him where I could see some red
+calico.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This way, sir,&quot; and he led me up the store.
+&quot;Miss Stone,&quot; said he to a young lady, &quot;show
+this gentleman some red calico.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What shade do you want?&quot; asked Miss
+Stone.</p>
+
+<p>I showed her the little piece of calico that
+my wife had given me. She looked at it and
+handed it back to me. Then she took down a
+great roll of red calico and spread it out on the
+counter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, that isn't the shade!&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, not exactly,&quot; said she; &quot;but it is prettier
+than your sample.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That may be,&quot; said I; &quot;but, you see, I
+want to match this piece. There is something
+already made of this kind of calico, which
+needs to be made larger, or mended, or something.
+I want some calico of the same shade.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The girl made no answer, but took down another
+roll.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's the shade,&quot; said she.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; I replied, &quot;but it's striped.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Stripes are more worn than any thing else
+in calicoes,&quot; said she.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes; but this isn't to be worn. It's for
+furniture, I think. At any rate, I want perfectly
+plain stuff, to match something already in use.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, I don't think you can find it perfectly
+plain, unless you get Turkey-red.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is Turkey-red?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Turkey-red is perfectly plain in calicoes,&quot;
+she answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, let me see some.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We haven't any Turkey-red calico left,&quot;
+she said, &quot;but we have some very nice plain
+calicoes in other colors.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't want any other color. I want stuff
+to match this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's hard to match cheap calico like that,&quot;
+she said, and so I left her.</p>
+
+<p>I next went into a store a few doors farther
+up Broadway. When I entered I approached
+the &quot;floor-walker,&quot; and handing him my sample,
+said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you any calico like this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir,&quot; said he. &quot;Third counter to the
+right.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I went to the third counter to the right, and
+showed my sample to the saleman in attendance
+there. He looked at it on both sides.
+Then he said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We haven't any of this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That gentleman said you had,&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We had it, but we're out of it now. You'll
+get that goods at an upholsterer's.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I went across the street to an upholsterer's.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you any stuff like this?' I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said the salesman. &quot;We haven't. Is
+it for furniture?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; I replied.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then Turkey-red is what you want?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is Turkey-red just like this?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said he; &quot;but it's much better.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That makes no difference to me,&quot; I replied.
+&quot;I want something just like this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But they don't use that for furniture,&quot; he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should think people could use any thing
+they wanted for furniture,&quot; I remarked, somewhat
+sharply.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They can, but they don't,&quot; he said quite
+calmly. &quot;They don't use red like that. They
+use Turkey-red.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I said no more, but left. The next place I
+visited was a very large dry-goods store. Of
+the first salesman I saw I inquired if they kept
+red calico like my sample.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You'll find that on the second story,&quot; said he.</p>
+
+<p>I went up-stairs. There I asked a man:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where will I find red calico?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In the far room to the left. Right over
+there.&quot; And he pointed to a distant corner.</p>
+
+<p>I walked through the crowds of purchasers
+and salespeople, and around the counters and
+tables filled with goods, to the far room to the
+left. When I got there I asked for red calico.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The second counter down this side,&quot; said
+the man.</p>
+
+<p>I went there and produced my sample. &quot;Calicoes
+down-stairs,&quot; said the man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They told me they were up here,&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not these plain goods. You'll find 'em
+down-stairs at the back of the store, over on
+that side.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I went down-stairs to the back of the store.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where will I find red calico like this?&quot; I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Next counter but one,&quot; said the man addressed,
+walking with me in the direction
+pointed out.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dunn, show red calicoes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Dunn took my sample and looked at it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We haven't this shade in that quality of
+goods,&quot; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, have you it in any quality of goods?&quot;
+I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes; we've got it finer.&quot; And he took
+down a piece of calico, and unrolled a yard or
+two of it on the counter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's not this shade,&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said he. &quot;The goods is finer and the
+color's better.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I want it to match this,&quot; I said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought you weren't particular about the
+match,&quot; said the salesman. &quot;You said you
+didn't care for the quality of the goods, and
+you know you can't match goods without you
+take into consideration quality and color both.
+If you want that quality of goods in red, you
+ought to get Turkey-red.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I did not think it necessary to answer this
+remark, but said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you've got nothing to match this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir. But perhaps they may have it in
+the upholstery department, in the sixth
+story.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So I got in the elevator and went up to the
+top of the house.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you any red stuff like this?&quot; I said
+to a young man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Red stuff? Upholstery department,&mdash;other
+end of this floor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I went to the other end of the floor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I want some red calico,&quot; I said to a man.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Furniture goods?&quot; he asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fourth counter to the left.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I went to the fourth counter to the left, and
+showed my sample to a salesman. He looked
+at it, and said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You'll get this down on the first floor&mdash;calico
+department.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I turned on my heel, descended in the elevator,
+and went out on Broadway. I was thoroughly
+sick of red calico. But I determined to
+make one more trial. My wife had bought her
+red calico not long before, and there must be some
+to be had somewhere. I ought to have asked
+her where she bought it, but I thought a simple
+little thing like that could be bought anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>I went into another large dry-goods store.
+As I entered the door a sudden tremor seized
+me. I could not bear to take out that piece of
+red calico. If I had had any other kind of a
+rag about me&mdash;a pen-wiper or any thing of the
+sort&mdash;I think I would have asked them if they
+could match that.</p>
+
+<p>But I stepped up to a young woman and presented
+my sample, with the usual question.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Back room, counter on the left,&quot; she said.</p>
+
+<p>I went there.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you any red calico like this?&quot; I asked
+of the lady behind the counter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir,&quot; she said, &quot;but we have it in Turkey-red.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Turkey-red again! I surrendered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All right,&quot; I said, &quot;give me Turkey-red.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How much, sir?&quot; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know&mdash;say five yards.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The lady looked at me rather strangely, but
+measured off five yards of Turkey-red calico.
+Then she rapped on the counter and called out
+&quot;cash!&quot; A little girl, with yellow hair in two
+long plaits, came slowly up. The lady wrote
+the number of yards, the name of the goods,
+her own number, the price, the amount of the
+bank-note I handed her, and some other matters,
+probably the color of my eyes, and the
+direction and velocity of the wind, on a slip of
+paper. She then copied all this in a little book
+which she kept by her. Then she handed the
+slip of paper, the money, and the Turkey-red
+to the yellow-haired girl. This young girl
+copied the slip in a little book she carried, and
+then she went away with the calico, the paper
+slip, and the money.</p>
+
+<p>After a very long time,&mdash;during which the
+little girl probably took the goods, the money,
+and the slip to some central desk, where the
+note was received, its amount and number
+entered in a book, change given to the girl, a
+copy of the slip made and entered, girl's entry
+examined and approved, goods wrapped up,
+girl registered, plaits counted and entered on a
+slip of paper and copied by the girl in her
+book, girl taken to a hydrant and washed,
+number of towel entered on a paper slip and
+copied by the girl in her book, value of my
+note and amount of change branded somewhere
+on the child, and said process noted on a slip of
+paper and copied in her book,&mdash;the girl came
+to me, bringing my change and the package of
+Turkey-red calico.</p>
+
+<p>I had time for but very little work at the
+office that afternoon, and when I reached home,
+I handed the package of calico to my wife
+She unrolled it and exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, this don't match the piece I gave
+you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Match it!&quot; I cried. &quot;Oh, no! it don't
+match it. You didn't want that matched.
+You were mistaken. What you wanted was
+Turkey-red&mdash;third counter to the left. I mean,
+Turkey-red is what they use.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My wife looked at me in amazement, and
+then I detailed to her my troubles.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; said she, &quot;this Turkey-red is a great
+deal prettier than what I had, and you've got
+so much of it that I needn't use the other at
+all. I wish I had thought of Turkey-red
+before.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish from my heart you had,&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>ANDREW SCOGGIN.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;<i>The Lady or the Tiger, and other stories.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="HARRIET_PRESCOTT_SPOFFORD" id="HARRIET_PRESCOTT_SPOFFORD"></a>HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1835.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="AUNT_PENS_FUNERAL" id="AUNT_PENS_FUNERAL"></a>AUNT PEN'S FUNERAL.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Poor Aunt Pen! I am sorry to say it,
+but for a person alive and well&mdash;tolerably
+well and very much alive, that is&mdash;she did
+use to make the greatest business of dying!
+Alive! why, when she was stretched out on the
+sofa, after an agony of asthma, or indigestion,
+or whatever, and had called us all about her
+with faltering and tears, and was apparently at
+her last gasp, she would suddenly rise, like her
+own ghost, at the sound of a second ringing of
+the door-bell, which our little renegade Israel
+had failed to answer, and declare if she could
+only once lay hands on Israel she would box his
+ears till they heard!</p>
+
+<p>For the door-bell was, perhaps, among many,
+one of Aunt Pen's weakest points. She knew
+everybody in town, as you might say. She was
+exceedingly entertaining to everybody outside
+the family. She was a great favorite with everybody.
+Countless gossips came to see her, tinkling
+at the door-bell, and hated individually by
+Israel, brought her all the news, heard all the
+previous ones had brought, admired her, praised
+her, pitied her, listened to her, and went away
+leaving her in such satisfied mood that she did
+not die any more that day. And as they went
+away they always paused at the door to say to
+some one of us what a cheerful invalid Aunt
+Pen had made herself, and what a nest of sunbeams
+her room always was, and what a lesson
+her patience and endurance ought to be. But,
+oh dear me, how very little they knew about it
+all!</p>
+
+<p>We all lived together, as it happened; for
+when we children were left alone with but a
+small income, Aunt Pen&mdash;who was also alone,
+and only five years my senior&mdash;wrote word that
+we might as well come to her house in the city,
+for it wouldn't make expenses more, and might
+make them less if we divided them; and then,
+too, she said she would always be sure of one
+out of three bright and reasonable nurses. Poor
+Aunt Pen! perhaps she didn't find us either so
+bright or so reasonable as she had expected; for
+we used to think that in her less degree she
+went on the same principle with the crazy man
+who declared all the rest of the world except
+himself insane.</p>
+
+<p>In honest truth, as doctor after doctor was
+turned away by the impatient and distempered
+woman up-stairs, each one took occasion to say
+to us down-stairs that our aunt's illness was of
+that nature that all the physic it required was
+to have her fancies humored, and that we never
+need give ourselves any uneasiness, for she
+would doubtless live to a good old age, unless
+some acute disease should intervene, as there
+was nothing at all the matter with her except a
+slight nervous sensitiveness, that never destroyed
+anybody. I suppose we were a set of
+young heathen, for really there were times, if
+you will believe it, when that was not the most
+reassuring statement in the world.</p>
+
+<p>However. Sometimes Aunt Pen found a
+doctor, or a medicine, or a course of diet, or
+something, that gave her great sensations of
+relief, and then she would come down, and go
+about the house, and praise our administration,
+and say every thing went twice as far as it used
+to go before we came, and tell us delightful
+stories, of our mother's housewifely skill, and be
+quite herself again; and she would make the
+table ring with laughing, and give charming
+little tea-parties; and then we all did wish that
+Aunt Pen would live forever&mdash;and be down-stairs.
+But probably the next day, after one of
+the tea-parties, oysters, or claret punch, or hot
+cakes, or all together, had wrought their diablerie,
+and the doctor was sent for, and the
+warming-pan was brought out, and there was
+another six weeks' siege, in which, obeyed by
+every one, and physicked by herself, and sympathized
+with to her heart's content by callers,
+and shut up in a hot room with the windows
+full of flowering plants, and somebody reading
+endless novels to her with the lights burning all
+night long&mdash;if she wasn't ill she had every inducement
+to be, and nothing but an indomitable
+constitution hindered it. It was perfectly
+idle for us to tell her she was hurting herself;
+it only made her very indignant with us, and
+more determined than ever to persist in doing
+so.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, then, the longer Aunt Pen staid in
+her own room the worse she really did get, and
+her nerves, with confinement and worry and
+relaxation, would by-and-by be in a condition
+for any sort of an outburst if we attempted the
+least reasoning with her. She would become,
+for one thing, as sleepless as an owl; then she
+was thoroughly sure she was going to be insane,
+and down would go the hydrate of chloral till
+the doctor forbade it on pain of death. After
+the chloral, too, such horrid eyes as she had!
+the eyes, you know, that chloral always leaves&mdash;inflamed,
+purple, swollen, heavy, crying, and
+good for any thing but seeing. Immediately
+then Aunt Pen went into a new tantrum; she
+was going to be stone-blind, and dependent on
+three heartless hussies for all her mercies in this
+life; but no, thank goodness! she had friends
+that would see she did not go absolutely to the
+wall, and would never suffer her to be imposed
+on by a parcel of girls who didn't care whether
+she lived or died&mdash;who perhaps would rather
+she did die&mdash;who stood open-handed for her
+bequests; she would leave her money to the
+almshouse, and if we wanted it we could go
+and get it there! And after that, to be sure,
+Aunt Pen would have a fit of remorse for her
+words, and confess her sin chokingly, and have
+us all come separately and forgive her, and
+would say she was the wretchedest woman on
+the face of the earth, that she should live undesired
+until her friends were all tired, and then
+die unlamented; and would burst into tears
+and cry herself into a tearing headache, and
+have ice on her head and a blister on the back
+of her neck, and be quite confident that now
+she was really going off with congestion of the
+brain.</p>
+
+<p>After that, for a day or two, she would be in
+a heavenly frame of mind with the blister and
+cabbage leaves and simple cerate, and a couple
+of mirrors by which to examine the rise and
+fall of the blister; and, having had a hint of
+real illness, she would consent quite smilingly
+to the act of convalescence, and a descent to
+the healthy region of the parlors once more.</p>
+
+<p>But no sooner were we all gay and happy in
+the house again, running out as we pleased, beginning
+to think of parties and drives and
+theatres and all enjoyment&mdash;and rather unobservant,
+as young folks are apt to be unobservant
+of Aunt Pen's slight habitual pensiveness in
+the absence of guests or excitement, and of her
+ways generally&mdash;than Aunt Pen would challenge
+some lobster-salad to mortal combat, and, of
+course, come out floored by the colic. A little
+whiskey then; and as a little gave so much
+ease, she would try a great deal. The result
+always was a precipitate retreat up-stairs, a
+howling hysteric, bilious cramps, the doctor, a
+subcutaneous injection of morphine in her
+arm; then chattering like a magpie, relapsed
+into awful silence, and, convinced that the morphine
+had been carried straight to her heart, a
+composing of her hands and feet, an injured
+dismissal of every soul from the room, with the
+assurance that we should find her straight and
+stiff and stone-dead in the morning.</p>
+
+<p>We never did. For, as we seldom had opportunity
+of an undisturbed night's rest, we
+usually took her at her word if any access of ill
+temper, or despair, or drowsiness occasioned
+banishment from the presence. Not that we
+had always been so calm about it; there was a
+time when we were excited with every alarm,
+thrown into flurries and panics quite to Aunt
+Pen's mind, running after the doctor at two
+o'clock of the morning, building a fire in the
+range ourselves at midnight to make gruel
+for her, rubbing her till we rubbed the skin off
+our hands, combing her hair till we went to
+sleep standing; but Aunt Pen had cried wolf
+so long, and the doctors had all declared so
+stoutly that there was no wolf, that our once
+soft hearts had become quite hard and concrete.</p>
+
+<p>When at last Aunt Pen had had an alarm
+from nearly every illness for which the pharmacop&#339;ia
+prescribes, and she knew that neither
+we nor the doctors would listen to the probability
+of their recurrence; she had an attack of
+&quot;sinking.&quot; No, there was no particular disease,
+she used to say, only sinking; she had been
+pulled down to an extent from which she had
+no strength to recuperate; she was only sinking,
+a little weaker to-day than she was yesterday&mdash;only
+sinking. But Aunt Pen ate a very
+good breakfast of broiled birds and toast and
+coffee; a very good lunch of cold meats and
+dainties, and a great goblet of thick cream; a
+very good dinner of soup and roast and vegetables
+and dessert, and perhaps a chicken bone at
+eleven o'clock in the evening. And when the
+saucy little Israel, who carried up her tray,
+heard her say she was sinking, he remarked
+that it was because of the load on her stomach.</p>
+
+<p>One day, I remember, Aunt Pen was very
+much worse than usual. We were all in her
+room, a sunshiny place which she had connected
+with the adjoining one by sliding-doors,
+so that it might be big enough for us all to
+bring our work on occasion, and make it lively
+for her. She had on a white-cashmere dressing-gown
+trimmed with swan's-down, and she lay
+among the luxurious cushions of a blue lounge,
+with a paler blue blanket, which she had had
+one of us tricot for her, lying over her feet, and
+altogether she looked very ideal and ethereal;
+for Aunt Pen always did have such an eye to
+picturesque effect that I don't know how she
+could ever consent to the idea of mouldering
+away into dust like common clay.</p>
+
+<p>She had sent Maria down for Mel and me to
+come up-stairs with whatever occupied us, for
+she was convinced that she was failing fast, and
+knew we should regret it if we did not have the
+last of her. As we had received the same message
+nearly every other day during the last
+three or four weeks, we did not feel extraordinarily
+alarmed, but composedly took our
+baskets and scissors, and trudged along after
+Maria.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am sure I ought to be glad that I've succeeded
+in training my nieces into such industrious
+habits,&quot; said Aunt Pen, after a little
+while, looking at Mel; &quot;but I should think
+that when a near relative approached the point
+of death, the fact might throw needle and thread
+into the background for a time.&quot; Then she
+paused for Maria to fan a little more breath
+into her. &quot;It's different with Helen,&quot; soon
+she said; &quot;the white silk shawl she is netting
+for me may be needed at any moment to lay
+me out in.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dear me, Aunt Pen!&quot; cried Mel; &quot;what a
+picture you'd be, laid out in a white net
+shawl!&quot; For the doctor had told us to laugh
+at these whims all we might.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you heartless girl!&quot; said Aunt Pen.
+&quot;To think of pictures at such a time!&quot; And
+she closed her eyes as if weary of the world.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I never saw anybody who liked to revel in
+the ghastly the way you do, Aunt Pen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mel!&quot; said Aunt Pen, with quite a show of
+color in her cheek; &quot;I shall send you down
+stairs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do,&quot; said Mel; &quot;where I can cut out my
+gown in peace.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Cutting a gown at the bedside of the dying!
+Are you cold-blooded, or are you insensible?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Aunt Pen,&quot; said Mel, leaning on the point
+of her scissors, &quot;you know very well that I have
+to make my own dresses or go without them.
+And you have kept me running your idle errands,
+up and down two flights of stairs, to the
+doctor's and the druggist's, and goodness knows
+where and all, till I haven't a thread of any
+thing that is fit to be seen. You've been
+posturing this grand finale of yours, too, all
+the last three weeks, and it's time you had it
+perfect now; and you must let me alone till I
+get my gown done.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It will do to wear at my funeral,&quot; said Aunt
+Pen bitterly, as she concluded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, it won't,&quot; said Mel, doggedly; &quot;it's
+red.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Red!&quot; cried Aunt Pen, suddenly opening
+her eyes, and half raising on one hand. &quot;What
+in wonder have you bought a red dress for?
+You are quite aware that I can't bear the least
+intimation of the color. My nerves are in such
+a state that a shred of red makes me&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You won't see it, you know,&quot; said Mel in
+what did seem to me an unfeeling manner.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said Aunt Pen. &quot;Very true. I sha'n't
+see it. But what,&quot; added she presently snapping
+open her eyes, &quot;considered as a mere
+piece of economy, you bought a red dress for
+when you are immediately going into black,
+passes common-sense to conjecture! You had
+better send it down and have it dyed at once
+before you cut it, for the shrinkage will spoil it
+forever if you don't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Much black I shall go into,&quot; said Mel.</p>
+
+<p>Maria laughed. Aunt Pen cried.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Aunt Pen,&quot; said the cruel Mel, &quot;if you
+were going to die you wouldn't be crying.
+Dying people have no tears to shed, the doctors
+say.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Somebody ought to cry,&quot; said poor Aunt
+Pen, witheringly. &quot;Don't talk to me about
+doctors,&quot; she continued, after a silence interrupted
+only by the snipping of the scissors.
+&quot;They are a set of quacks. They know nothing.
+I will have all the doctors in town at my
+funeral for pall-bearers. It will be a satire too
+delicate for them to appreciate, though. Speaking
+of that occasion, Helen,&quot; she went on, turning
+to me as a possible ally, &quot;I have so many
+friends that I suppose the house will be full.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wouldn't you enjoy it more from church,
+auntie?&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you hard and wicked girls!&quot; she cried.
+&quot;You're all alike. Listen to me! If you won't
+hear my wishes, you must take my commands.
+Now, in the first place, I want the parlors to be
+overflowing with flowers, literally lined with
+flowers. I don't care how much money it
+takes; there'll be enough left for you&mdash;more
+than you deserve. And I want you to be very
+sure that I'm not to be exposed unless I look exactly
+as I'd like to look. You're to put on my
+white silk that I was to have been married in,
+and my veil, and the false orange blossoms.
+They're all in the third drawer of the press, and
+the key's on my chatelaine. And if&mdash;if&mdash;well,&quot;
+said Aunt Pen, more to herself than us, &quot;if he
+comes, he'll understand. The Bride of Death.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>After that she did not say any more for some
+minutes, and we were all silent and sorry, and
+Mel was fidgeting in a riot of repentance; we
+had never, either of us, heard a word of any
+romance of Aunt Pen's before. We began to
+imagine that there might be some excuse for
+the overthrow of Aunt Pen's nervous system,
+some reality in the overthrow. &quot;You will
+leave this ring on my finger;&quot; said she; by-and-by.
+&quot;If Chauncey Read comes, and wants it,
+he will take it off. It will fit his finger as well
+now, I suppose, as it did when he wore it before
+he gave it to me.&quot; Then Aunt Pen bit
+her lip and shut her eyes, and seemed to be
+slipping off into a gentle sleep.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By-the-way!&quot; said she, suddenly, sitting
+upright on the lounge, &quot;I won't have the
+horses from Brown's livery&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The what, auntie?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The horses for the cort&eacute;ge. You know
+Brown puts that magnificent span of his in the
+hearse on account of their handsome action.
+I'm sure Mrs. Gaylard would have been frightened
+to death if she could only have seen the
+way they pranced at her funeral last fall. I was
+determined then that they should never draw
+me;&quot; and Aunt Pen shivered for herself beforehand.
+&quot;And I can't have them from Timlin's,
+for the same reason,&quot; said she. &quot;All his
+animals are skittish; and you remember when
+a pair of them took fright and dashed away
+from the procession and ran straight to the
+river, and there'd have been four other funerals
+if the schooner at the wharf hadn't stopped
+the runaways. And Timlins has a way, too, of
+letting white horses follow the hearse with the
+first mourning-coach, and it's very bad luck,
+very&mdash;an ill omen; a prophecy of Death and the
+Pale Horse again, you know. And I won't
+have them from Shust's, either,&quot; said Aunt Pen,
+&quot;for he is simply the greatest extortioner since
+old Isaac the Jew.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, auntie,&quot; said Mel, forgetful of her
+late repentance, &quot;I don't see but you'll have
+to go with Shank's mare.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Even Aunt Pen laughed then. &quot;Don't you
+really think you are going to lose me, girls?&quot;
+asked she.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, auntie,&quot; replied Maria. &quot;We all think
+you are a hypo.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A hypo?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not a hypocrite,&quot; said Mel, &quot;but a hypochondriac.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish I were,&quot; sighed Aunt Pen; &quot;I wish
+I were. I should have some hope of myself
+then,&quot; said the poor inconsistent innocent.
+&quot;Oh no, no; I feel it only too well; I am going
+fast. You will all regret your disbelief when I
+am gone;&quot; and she lay back among her pillows.
+&quot;That reminds me,&quot; she murmured,
+presently. &quot;About my monument.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Aunt Pen, do be still,&quot; said Mel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; said Aunt Pen, firmly; &quot;it may be a
+disagreeable duty, but that is all the better
+reason for me to bring my mind to it. And if
+I don't attend to it now, it never will be attended
+to. I know what relatives are. They
+put down a slab of slate with a skull and cross-bones
+scratched on it, and think they've done
+their duty. Not that I mean any reflections on
+you; you're all well-meaning, but you're giddy.
+I shall haunt you if you do any thing of the
+kind! No; you may send Mr. Mason up here
+this afternoon, and I will go over his designs
+with him. I am going to have carved Carrara
+marble, set in a base of polished Scotch granite,
+and the inscription is&mdash;Girls!&quot; cried Aunt
+Pen, rising and clasping her knees with unexpected
+energy, &quot;I expressly forbid my age
+being printed in the paper, or on the lid, or on
+the stone! I won't gratify every gossip in
+town, that I won't! I shall take real pleasure
+in baffling their curiosity. And another thing,
+while I am about it, don't you ask Tom Maltby
+to my funeral, or let him come in, if he comes
+himself, on any account whatever. I should
+rise in my shroud if he approached me. Yes, I
+should! Tom Maltby may be all very well; I
+dare say he is; and I hope I die at peace with
+him and all mankind, as a good Christian
+should. I forgive him; yes, certainly, I forgive
+him; but it doesn't follow that I need forget
+him; and, so long as I remember him, the way
+he conducted in buying the pew over my head
+I can't get over, dead or alive. And if I only
+do get well we shall have a reckoning that will
+make his hair stand on end&mdash;that he may rely
+on!&quot; And here Aunt Pen took the fan from
+Maria, and moved it actively, till she remembered
+herself, when she resigned it. &quot;One
+thing more,&quot; she said. &quot;Whatever happens,
+Helen, don't let me be kept over Sunday.
+There'll certainly be another death in the family
+within the year if you do. If I die on Saturday,
+there's no help for it. Common decency
+won't let you shove me into the ground at
+once, and so you will have to make up your
+minds for a second summons.&quot; And Aunt
+Pen, contemplating the suttee of some one of
+us with great philosophy, lay down and closed
+her eyes again. &quot;You might have it by torchlight
+on Sunday night, though,&quot; said she, half
+opening them. &quot;That would be very pretty.&quot;
+And then she dropped off to sleep with such a
+satisfied expression of countenance that we
+judged her to be welcoming in imagination the
+guests at her last rites herself.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the dream was, she was rudely
+roused from it by the wreched little Israel, who
+came bounding up the stairs, and, without word
+or warning, burst into the room, almost white
+with horror. Why Israel was afraid I can't
+conjecture, but, at any rate, a permanent fright
+would have been of great personal advantage
+to him. &quot;Oh, ma'am! oh, miss! dere's a pusson
+down stairs, a cullud woman, wid der small-pox!&quot;
+he almost whistled in his alarm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With the small-pox!&quot; cried Aunt Pen,
+springing into the middle of the floor, regardless
+of her late repose <i>in articulo mortis</i>. &quot;Go
+away, Israel! Have you been near her? Put
+her out immediately! How on earth did she
+get there?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You allus telled me to let everybody in,&quot;
+chattered Israel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Put her out! put her out!&quot; cried Aunt
+Pen, half dancing with impatience.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We can't get her out. She's right acrost
+der door-step. We's feared ter tech her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But Aunt Pen's head was out of the window,
+and she was shouting: &quot;Police! fire! murder!
+thieves!&quot; possibly in the order of importance
+of the four calamities, but quite as if she had
+a plenty of breath left; and, for a wonder, the
+police came to the rescue, and directly afterward
+an ambulance took the poor victim of the
+frightful epidemic to the hospital. I believe it
+turned out to be only measles after all, though.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Run, Israel!&quot; screamed Aunt Pen then;
+&quot;run instantly and bring home a couple of
+pounds of roll-brimstone, and tell the maids to
+riddle the furnace fire and make it as bright and
+hot as possible, and to light fires in the parlor
+grates, and in the old Latrobe, and in every
+room in the house, without losing a minute.
+We'll make this house too warm for it!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, to our amazement, as soon as Israel
+came darting back with the impish material,
+Aunt Pen took a piece in each hand, directed
+us to do the same, and wrapping the blue afghan
+round her shoulders, descended to the
+lower rooms three steps at a time, sent for the
+doctor to come and vaccinate us, and having
+set a chair precisely over the register where a
+red-hot stream of air was pouring up, she
+placed herself upon it and issued her orders.</p>
+
+<p>Every window was closed, every grate from
+basement to attic had a fire lighted in it, and
+little pans of brimstone were burning in every
+room and hall in the house, while we, astonished,
+indignant, frightened, and amused, sat
+enduring the torments of vapor and sulphur
+baths to the point of suffocation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can't bear this another moment,&quot; wheezed
+Mel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's the only way,&quot; replied Aunt Pen, serenely,
+with a rivulet trickling down her nose.
+&quot;You kill the germs by heat, and since we
+can't bake ourselves quite to death, we make
+sure of the work by the fumes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And as she sat there, her face rubicund, her
+swan's-down straight, drops on her cheeks, her
+chin, her forehead, and wherever drops could
+cling, her eyes watering, her curls limp, and an
+atmosphere of unbearable odor enveloping her
+in its cloud, the front door opened, and a footstep
+rung on the tiles.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Jess you keep out o' yer!&quot; yelled Israel to
+the intruder, seeing it wasn't the doctor.
+&quot;We's got der small-pox, and am a-killing de
+gemmens&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pen!&quot; cried a man's voice through the
+smoke&mdash;a deep, melodious voice.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What!&quot; exclaimed Aunt Pen, starting up,
+and then pausing as if she fancied the horrid
+fumes might have befogged her brain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pen!&quot; the voice cried again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Chauncey! Chauncey Read!&quot; she shrieked.
+&quot;Where do you come from? Am I dreaming?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;From the North Pacific,&quot; answered the
+voice; and we dimly discerned its owner groping
+his way forward. &quot;From the five years'
+whaling voyage into which I was gagged and
+dragged&mdash;shanghaied, they call it. O, Pen, I
+didn't dare to hope I should find&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Chauncey, is it you?&quot; she cried, and
+fell fainting at his feet.</p>
+
+<p>The draught from the open door after him
+was blowing away the smoke, and we saw what
+a great, sunburned, handsome fellow it was that
+had caught her in his arms, and was bearing
+her out to the back balcony and the fresh air
+there, used in the course of his whaling voyage,
+perhaps, to odors no more belonging to Araby
+the Blest than those of burning brimstone do;
+and, seeing the movement, we divined that he
+knew as much about the resources of the house
+as we did, and so we discreetly withdrew, Israel's
+head being twisted behind him as he went
+to such extent that you might have supposed
+he had had his neck wrung.</p>
+
+<p>Well, we put the white silk and the tulle on
+Aunt Pen after all; yellow as it was, she would
+have no other&mdash;only fresh, natural orange blossoms
+in place of the false wreath. And if we
+had not so often had her word for it in past
+times, we never should have taken her for any
+thing but the gayest bride, the most alive and
+happy woman in the world. They returned to
+the old house from their wedding journey, and
+we all live together in great peace and pleasantness.
+But though three years are passed and
+gone since Chauncey Read came home and
+brought a new atmosphere with him into our
+lives, Aunt Pen has never had a sick day yet;
+and we find that any allusion to her funeral
+gives her such a superstitious trembling that we
+are pleased to believe it indefinitely postponed,
+and by tacit and mutual consent we never say
+any thing about it.&mdash;<i>Harper's Magazine</i>, June,
+1872.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="SAMUEL_LANGHORNE_CLEMENS" id="SAMUEL_LANGHORNE_CLEMENS"></a>SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS.</h2>
+
+<h2>(&quot;MARK TWAIN.&quot;)</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1835.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="THE_CELEBRATED_JUMPING_FROG_OF_CALAVERAS_COUNTY" id="THE_CELEBRATED_JUMPING_FROG_OF_CALAVERAS_COUNTY"></a>THE CELEBRATED JUMPING FROG OF CALAVERAS
+COUNTY.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In compliance with the request of a friend
+of mine, who wrote me from the East, I
+called on good-natured, garrulous old Simon
+Wheeler, and inquired after my friend's friend,
+<i>Leonidas W.</i> Smiley, as requested to do, and I
+hereunto append the result. I have a lurking
+suspicion that <i>Leonidas W.</i> Smiley is a myth;
+that my friend never knew such a personage;
+and that he only conjectured that, if I asked
+old Wheeler about him, it would remind him
+of his infamous <i>Jim</i> Smiley, and he would go
+to work and bore me nearly to death with some
+infernal reminiscence of him as long and tedious
+as it should be useless for me. If that was the
+design, it certainly succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>I found Simon Wheeler dozing comfortably
+by the bar-room stove of the old, dilapidated
+tavern in the ancient mining camp of Angel's,
+and I noticed that he was fat and bald-headed,
+and had an expression of winning gentleness
+and simplicity upon his tranquil countenance.
+He roused up and gave me good-day. I told
+him a friend of mine had commissioned me to
+make some inquiries about a cherished companion
+of his boyhood named <i>Leonidas W.</i>
+Smiley&mdash;<i>Rev. Leonidas W.</i> Smiley&mdash;a young
+minister of the Gospel, who he had heard was
+at one time a resident of Angel's Camp. I
+added that, if Mr. Wheeler could tell me any
+thing about this Rev. Leonidas W. Smiley, I
+would feel under many obligations to him.</p>
+
+<p>Simon Wheeler backed me into a corner and
+blockaded me there with his chair, and then sat
+me down and reeled off the monotonous narrative
+which follows this paragraph. He never
+smiled, he never frowned, he never changed his
+voice from the gentle-flowing key to which he
+tuned the initial sentence, he never betrayed
+the slightest suspicion of enthusiasm; but all
+through the interminable narrative there ran a
+vein of impressive earnestness and sincerity,
+which showed me plainly that, so far from his
+imagining that there was any thing ridiculous
+or funny about his story, he regarded it as a
+really important matter, and admired its two
+heroes as men of transcendent genius in <i>finesse</i>.
+To me, the spectacle of a man drifting serenely
+along through such a queer yarn without ever
+smiling, was exquisitely absurd. As I said before,
+I asked him to tell me what he knew of
+Rev. Leonidas W. Smiley, and he replied as
+follows. I let him go on in his own way, and
+never interrupted him once:</p>
+
+<p>There was a feller here once by the name of
+<i>Jim</i> Smiley, in the winter of '49&mdash;or may be it
+was the spring of '50&mdash;I don't recollect exactly,
+somehow, though what makes me think it was
+one or the other is because I remember the big
+flume wasn't finished when he first came to the
+camp; but any way he was the curiosest man
+about always betting on any thing that turned
+up you ever see, if he could get anybody to bet
+on the other side; and if he couldn't, he'd
+change sides. Any way that suited the other
+man would suit him&mdash;any way just so's he got
+a bet, <i>he</i> was satisfied. But still he was lucky,
+uncommon lucky; he most always come out
+winner. He was always ready and laying for a
+chance; there couldn't be no solitry thing
+mentioned but that feller'd offer to bet on it,
+and take any side you please, as I was just
+telling you. If there was a horse-race, you'd
+find him flush, or you'd find him busted at the
+end of it; if there was a dog-fight, he'd bet on
+it; if there was a cat-fight, he'd bet on it; if
+there was a chicken-fight, he'd bet on it; why,
+if there was two birds sitting on a fence, he
+would bet you which one would fly first; or if
+there was a camp-meeting, he would be there
+reg'lar, to bet on Parson Walker, which he
+judged to be the best exhorter about here, and
+so he was, too, and a good man. If he even
+seen a straddle-bug start to go anywheres, he
+would bet you how long it would take him to
+get wherever he was going to, and if you took
+him up, he would foller that straddle-bug to
+Mexico but what he would find out where he
+was bound for and how long he was on the
+road. Lots of the boys here has seen that
+Smiley, and can tell you about him. Why, it
+never made no difference to <i>him</i>&mdash;he would bet
+on <i>any</i> thing&mdash;the dangdest feller. Parson
+Walker's wife laid very sick once, for a good
+while, and it seemed as if they warn't going to
+save her; but one morning he come in, and
+Smiley asked how she was, and he said she was
+considerable better&mdash;thank the Lord for his
+inf'nit mercy&mdash;and coming on so smart that,
+with the blessing of Prov'dence, she'd get well
+yet; and Smiley, before he thought, says,
+&quot;Well, I'll risk two-and-a-half that she don't,
+any way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This-yer Smiley had a mare&mdash;the boys called
+her the fifteen-minute nag, but that was only
+in fun, you know, because, of course, she was
+faster than that&mdash;and he used to win money on
+that horse, for all she was so slow and always
+had the asthma, or the distemper, or the consumption,
+or something of that kind. They
+used to give her two or three hundred yards
+start, and then pass her under way; but always
+at the fag-end of the race she'd get excited and
+desperate-like, and come cavorting and straddling
+up, and scattering her legs around limber,
+sometimes in the air, and sometimes out to one
+side amongst the fences, and kicking up m-o-r-e
+dust, and raising m-o-r-e racket with her coughing
+and sneezing and blowing her nose&mdash;and
+always fetch up at the stand just about a neck
+ahead, as near as you could cipher it down.</p>
+
+<p>And he had a little small bull pup, that to
+look at him you'd think he wan't worth a cent,
+but to set around and look ornery, and lay for
+a chance to steal something. But as soon as
+the money was up on him, he was a different
+dog; his under-jaw'd begin to stick out like
+the fo'castle of a steamboat, and his teeth would
+uncover, and shine savage like the furnaces.
+And a dog might tackle him, and bully-rag
+him, and bite him, and throw him over his
+shoulder two or three times, and Andrew Jackson&mdash;which
+was the name of the pup&mdash;Andrew
+Jackson would never let on but what <i>he</i> was
+satisfied, and hadn't expected nothing else&mdash;and
+the bets being doubled and doubled on the
+other side all the time, till the money was all
+up; and then all of a sudden he would grab that
+other dog jest by the j'int of his hind leg and
+freeze to it&mdash;not chaw, you understand, but only
+jest grip and hang on till they throwed up the
+sponge, if it was a year. Smiley always come
+out winner on that pup, till he harnessed a dog
+once that didn't have no hind legs, because
+they'd been sawed off by a circular saw, and
+when the thing had gone along far enough, and
+the money was all up, and he come to make a
+snatch for his pet holt, he saw in a minute how
+he'd been imposed on, and how the other dog
+had him in the door, so to speak, and he 'peared
+surprised, and then he looked sorter discouraged-like,
+and didn't try no more to win the
+fight, and so he got shucked out bad. He give
+Smiley a look, as much as to say his heart was
+broke, and it was <i>his</i> fault, for putting up a dog
+that hadn't no hind legs for him to take holt
+of, which was his main dependence in a fight,
+and then he limped off a piece and laid down
+and died. It was a good pup, was that Andrew
+Jackson, and would have made a name for hisself
+if he'd lived, for the stuff was in him, and
+he had genius&mdash;I know it, because he hadn't
+had no opportunities to speak of, and it don't
+stand to reason that a dog could make such a
+fight as he could under them circumstances, if
+he hadn't no talent. It always makes me feel
+sorry when I think of that last fight of his'n,
+and the way it turned out.</p>
+
+<p>Well, this-yer Smiley had rat-tarriers, and
+chicken cocks, and tom-cats, and all them kind
+of things, till you couldn't rest, and you
+couldn't fetch nothing for him to bet on but
+he'd match you. He ketched a frog one day,
+and took him home, and said he cal'klated to
+edercate him; and so he never done nothing
+for three months but set in his back yard and
+learn that frog to jump. And you bet you he
+<i>did</i> learn him, too. He'd give him a little
+punch behind, and the next minute you'd see
+that frog whirling in the air like a doughnut&mdash;see
+him turn one summerset, or may be a
+couple, if he got a good start, and come down
+flat-footed and all right, like a cat. He got
+him up so in the matter of catching flies, and
+kept him in practice so constant, that he'd nail
+a fly every time as far as he could see him.
+Smiley said all a frog wanted was education,
+and he could do most any thing&mdash;and I believe
+him. Why, I've seen him set Dan'l Webster
+down here on this floor&mdash;Dan'l Webster was
+the name of the frog&mdash;and sing out, &quot;Flies,
+Dan'l, flies!&quot; and quicker'n you could wink,
+he'd spring straight up, and snake a fly off'n
+the counter there, and flop down on the floor
+again as solid as a gob of mud, and fall to
+scratching the side of his head with his hind
+foot as indifferent as if he hadn't no idea he'd
+been doin' any more'n any frog might do.
+You never see a frog so modest and straight-for'ard
+as he was, for all he was so gifted. And
+when it come to fair and square jumping on a
+dead level, he could get over more ground at
+one straddle than any animal of his breed you
+ever see. Jumping on a dead level was his
+strong suit, you understand; and when it come
+to that, Smiley would ante up money on him
+as long as he had a red. Smiley was monstrous
+proud of his frog, and well he might be, for
+fellers that had travelled and been everywheres,
+all said he laid over any frog that ever <i>they</i> see.</p>
+
+<p>Well, Smiley kept the beast in a little lattice
+box, and he used to fetch him down town
+sometimes and lay for a bet. One day a feller&mdash;a
+stranger in the camp, he was&mdash;come across
+him with his box, and says,</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What might it be that you've got in the
+box?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And Smiley says, sorter indifferent like, &quot;It
+might be a parrot, or it might be a canary, may
+be, but it ain't&mdash;it's only just a frog.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And the feller took it, and looked at it careful,
+and turned it round this way and that, and
+says, &quot;H'm&mdash;so't is. Well, what's <i>he</i> good
+for?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; Smiley says, easy and careless,
+&quot;he's good enough for <i>one</i> thing, I should
+judge&mdash;he can out-jump ary frog in Calaveras
+county.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The feller took the box again, and took another
+long, particular look, and give it back to
+Smiley, and says, very deliberate, &quot;Well, I
+don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any
+better'n any other frog.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;May be you don't,&quot; Smiley says. &quot;May be
+you understand frogs, and may be you don't
+understand 'em; may be you've had experience,
+and may be you ain't, only a amature, as
+it were. Any ways, I've got <i>my</i> opinion, and
+I'll risk forty dollars that he can out-jump any
+frog in Calaveras county.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And the feller studied a minute, and then
+says, kinder sad like, &quot;Well, I'm only a
+stranger here, and I ain't got no frog; but if I
+had a frog, I'd bet you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And then Smiley says, &quot;That's all right&mdash;that's
+all right&mdash;if you'll hold my box a minute,
+I'll go and get you a frog.&quot; And so the
+feller took the box, and put up his forty dollars
+along with Smiley's, and set down to wait.</p>
+
+<p>So he set there a good while thinking and
+thinking to hisself, and then he got the frog
+out and prized his mouth open and took a teaspoon
+and filled him full of quail shot&mdash;filled
+him pretty near up to his chin&mdash;and set him on
+the floor. Smiley he went to the swamp and
+slopped around in the mud for a long time, and
+finally he ketched a frog, and fetched him in,
+and give him to this feller, and says:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, if you're ready, set him alongside of
+Dan'l, with his fore-paws just even with Dan'l,
+and I'll give the word.&quot; Then he says, &quot;One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;jump!&quot;
+and him and the feller
+touched up the frogs from behind, and the new
+frog hopped off, but Dan'l give a heave, and
+hysted up his shoulders&mdash;so&mdash;like a Frenchman,
+but it wan't no use&mdash;he couldn't budge;
+he was planted as solid as an anvil, and he
+couldn't no more stir than if he was anchored
+out. Smiley was a good deal surprised, and he
+was disgusted too, but he didn't have no idea
+what the matter was, of course.</p>
+
+<p>The feller took the money and started away;
+and when he was going out at the door, he
+sorter jerked his thumb over his shoulders&mdash;this
+way&mdash;at Dan'l, and says again, very deliberate,
+&quot;Well, I don't see no pints about that frog
+that's any better'n any other frog.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Smiley he stood scratching his head and
+looking down at Dan'l a long time, and at last
+he says, &quot;I do wonder what in the nation that
+frog throw'd off for&mdash;I wonder if there ain't
+some thing the matter with him&mdash;he 'pears to
+look mighty baggy, somehow.&quot; And he ketched
+Dan'l by the nap of the neck, and lifted him up
+and says, &quot;Why, blame my cats, if he don't
+weigh five pound!&quot; and turned him upside
+down, and he belched out a double handful of
+shot. And then he see how it was, and he was
+the maddest man&mdash;he set the frog down and
+took out after that feller, but he never ketched
+him. And&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>(Here Simon Wheeler heard his name called
+from the front yard, and got up to see what
+was wanted.) And turning to me as he moved
+away, he said: &quot;Just set where you are,
+stranger, and rest easy&mdash;I an't going to be
+gone a second.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But, by your leave, I did not think that a
+continuation of the history of the enterprising
+vagabond <i>Jim</i> Smiley would be likely to afford
+me much information concerning the Rev. <i>Leonidas
+W.</i> Smiley, and so I started away.</p>
+
+<p>At the door I met the sociable Wheeler
+returning, and he buttonholed me and recommenced:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, this-yer Smiley had a yaller one-eyed
+cow that didn't have no tail, only just a
+short stump like a bannanner, and&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, hang Smiley and his afflicted cow!&quot;
+I muttered, good-naturedly, and bidding the
+old gentleman good-day, I departed.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="FITZ_HUGH_LUDLOW" id="FITZ_HUGH_LUDLOW"></a>FITZ HUGH LUDLOW.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1836&mdash;DIED, 1870.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="BEN_THIRLWALLS_SCHOOLDAYS" id="BEN_THIRLWALLS_SCHOOLDAYS"></a>BEN THIRLWALL'S SCHOOLDAYS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>My name is Ben Thirlwall, and I am the
+son of rich but honest parents. I
+never had a wish ungratified until I was twelve
+years of age. My wish then was to stay on a
+two-year-old colt which had never been broken.
+He did not coincide with me, and a vast revelation
+of the resistances to individual will of
+which the universe is capable, also of a terrestrial
+horizon, bottom upward, burst upon me
+during the brief space which I spent in flying
+over his head. Picked up senseless, I was carried
+to the bosom of my family on a wheelbarrow,
+and awoke to the consciousness that
+my parents had decided on sending me to a
+boarding-school,&mdash;a remedy to this day sovereign
+in the opinion of all well-regulated parents
+for all tangential aberrations from the back of
+a colt or the laws of society.</p>
+
+<p>The principal's name was Barker; and my only
+clue to his character consisted in overhearing
+that he was an excellent disciplinarian. I was
+afraid to ask what that meant, but on reflection
+concluded it to be a geographical distinction,
+and, associating him with Mesopotamia or
+Beloochistan, expected to find him a person of
+mild manners, who shaved his head, wore a tall
+hat of dyed sheep's wool, and did a large business
+in spices with people who visited him on
+camels in a front-yard surrounded by sheds,
+and having a fountain that played in the
+middle.</p>
+
+<p>Having read several books of travels, I was
+corroborated in my view when I learned that
+Mr. Barker lived at the east, and still further,
+when on going around point Judith on the
+steamboat with my father, I became very sick
+at the stomach, as all the travellers had done
+in their first chapter.</p>
+
+<p>I need not say that the reality of Mr. Barker
+was a very terrible awakening, which contained
+no lineament of my purple dream, save the
+bastinado. Without distinction of age or
+season the youths who, as per circular, enjoyed
+the softening influence of his refined Christian
+home, rose to the sound of the gong at five
+A.M., which may have been very nice in a
+home for the early Christians, but was reported
+among the boys to have entirely stopped the
+growth of Little Briggs. This was a child,
+whose mother had married again, and whose
+step-father had felt his duty to his future too
+keenly to deprive him of the benign influences
+of Barker at any time in the last six years.
+After rising, we had ten minutes to wash our
+faces and hands,&mdash;a period by the experience
+of mankind demonstrably insufficient, where
+the soap is of that kind very properly denominated
+cast-steel (though purists have a different
+spelling), and you have to break an inch of ice
+to get into the available region of your water-pitcher.
+Chunks, who has since made a large
+fortune on war-contracts, kept himself in peanuts
+and four-cent pies for an entire winter
+session, by selling an invention of his own, which
+consisted of soap, dissolved in water on the
+stove during the day-time, put in bottles hooked
+from the lamp-room by means of a false key,
+to be carried to bed and kept warm by boys,
+whose pocket-money and desire for a prompt
+detergent in the morning were adequate to the
+disbursement of half a dime a package. I myself
+took several violent colds from having the
+glass next my skin during severe nights; but
+that was nothing so bad as the case of Little
+Briggs, who from lack of the half-dime, often
+came down to prayers with a stripe of yesterday's
+pencil black on one side of his nose, and
+a shaving of soap, which, in the frenzy of despair
+he had gouged out of his stony cake, on
+the other. The state of mind consistent with
+such a condition of countenance did not favor
+correct recitation of the tougher names in
+Deuteronomy; so, it can be a cause of surprise
+to no one, that, when called on at prayers, and
+prompted by a ridiculous neighbor, little Briggs
+sometimes asserted Joshua to have driven out
+the Hivites and the Amorites, and the Canaanites
+and the Jebusites, and the Hittites and the
+Perizzites, and the Moabites and the Musquito-bites,
+for which he was regularly sent to bed on
+Saturday afternoon, as he had no pocket-money
+to stop, his papa desiring him to learn
+self-denial young, as he was intended for a missionary;
+though goodness knows that there
+wasn't enough of him to go round among many
+heathen.</p>
+
+<p>From this specimen of discipline may be
+learned the entire Barkerian system of training.
+I was about to say, &quot;<i>ex uno disce omnes</i>,&quot;
+but, as it's the only Latin I remember from
+the lot which got rubbed into&mdash;or rather over&mdash;me
+at Barker's, I'm rather sparing of it, not
+knowing but I can bring it in somewhere else
+with better effect. As with the Word of God,
+so with that of man,&mdash;the grand Barkerian idea
+of how to fix it in a boy's memory was to send
+him to bed, or excoriate his palm. If religion
+and polite learning could have been communicated
+by sheets, like chicken-pox, or blistered
+into one like the stern but curative cantharides,
+Mr. Barker's boys would have become the envy
+of mankind and the beloved of the gods; but
+not even Little Briggs died young from the latter
+or any other cause, which speaks volumes
+for his constitution....</p>
+
+<p>The two Misses Moodle came to establish a
+young ladies' seminary in the village of Mungerville,
+on whose outskirts our own school
+was situated, bringing along with them, as the
+county paper stated, &quot;that charming atmosphere
+of refinement and intellectuality in
+which they ever moved&quot;; and, what was of
+more consequence, a capital of twenty girls to
+start with. Professional politeness inspired Mr.
+Barker to make a call on the fair strangers, which
+the personal fascinations of the younger Miss
+Moodle induced him to repeat. The atmosphere
+of refinement and intellectuality gradually
+acted on him in the nature of an intoxicating
+gas, until at length, after twenty-five years of
+successfully intrenched widowhood, he laid his
+heart in the mits of the younger Miss Moodle,
+and the two became one Barker.</p>
+
+<p>As a consequence of this union, social relations
+began to be established between the two
+schools. Mrs. Barker, of an occasional evening,
+wished to run down and visit her sister. If Mr.
+Barker was engaged in quarrying a page of
+Cicero out of some stony boy in whom nature
+had never made any Latin deposit, or had just
+put a fresh batch of offenders into the penal
+oven of untimely bed, and felt compelled to
+run up now and then to keep up the fire under
+them, by a harrowing description of the way
+their parents would feel if they knew of their
+behavior&mdash;an instrument dear to Mr. Barker as
+a favorite poker to a boss-baker in love with
+his profession&mdash;then, after a clucking noise, indicative
+of how much he would like to chuck
+her under the chin, but for the presence of
+company, Mr. Barker would coo to Mrs. Barker,
+&quot;Lovey, your pick, sweet!&quot; waving his hand
+comprehensively over the whole school-room;
+or &quot;Dear, suppose we say Briggs, or Chunks,
+or Thirlwall,&quot; as the case might be. The only
+difficulty about Briggs was clothes. That used
+to be obviated by a selection from the trunks of
+intimate friends; and Briggs was such a nice
+boy, that it was a real gratification to see him
+with your best jacket on. Many's the time the
+old fellow has said to Chunks or me, &quot;What a
+blessing that I grew! If I hadn't, how could
+I ever wear your trousers?&quot; In process of
+time these occasional visits, as escort to Mrs.
+Barker, expanded into an attendance of all the
+older boys (when not in bed for moral baking
+purposes) upon a series of bi-monthly soirees,
+given by the remaining Miss Moodle, with a
+superficial view to her pupils' attainment of
+ease in society; and a material substratum of
+sandwiches, which Miss Moodle preferred to
+see, through the atmosphere of refinement and
+intellectuality, as &quot;a simple repast.&quot; To this
+was occasionally added a refreshment, which I
+have seen elsewhere only at Sunday-school picnics,&mdash;a
+mild tap of slightly sweetened water,
+which tasted as if lemons had formerly been
+kept in the pail it was made in;&mdash;only for
+Sunday-schools they make it strong at the outset,
+and add water during the hymns, with a
+vague but praiseworthy expectation that, in
+view of the sacredness of the occasion, there
+will be some miraculous interposition, as in the
+case of the widow's cruse, to keep the beverage
+up to proof; while Miss Moodle's liquor preserved
+throughout the evening a weakness of
+which generous natures scorned to take advantage
+beyond the first tumbler.</p>
+
+<p>At this portion of my career I was dawned
+upon by Miss Tucker. From mature years I
+look back with a shudder upon the number of
+parchmenty sandwiches which I ate, the reservoirs
+of lemony water which I drank, in order
+to be in that lovely creature's society. I experienced
+agonies in thinking how much longer
+it might be before I could get a coat with tails,
+when I calculated how soon she would be
+putting up her back hair. Her eyes were as
+blue as I was when I thought she liked Briggs;
+and she had a complexion compared with
+which strawberries and cream were nowhere.
+When she was sent to the piano, to show
+people what the Moodle system could do in
+the way of a musical education, I fell into a
+cataleptic state and floated off upon a flood of
+harmony. Miss Moodle and her mits, self and
+lemon kids, even the sleepless eye of Barker,
+watching for an indiscretion, upon the strength
+of which he might defensibly send somebody
+to bed the next Saturday afternoon, all vanished
+from before me, swallowed up in a mild
+glory, which contained but two objects,&mdash;an
+angel with low neck and short sleeves, and
+an insensate hippopotamus of a piano, which
+did not wriggle all over with ecstasy when her
+white fingers tickled him.</p>
+
+<p>At such moments I would gladly have gone
+down on all fours, and had a key-board mortised
+into my side at any expense of personal
+torture, if Miss Tucker could only have played
+a piece on me, and herself been conscious of
+the chords she was awakening inside my jacket.
+I loved her to that degree that my hair never
+seemed brushed enough when I beheld her;
+and I quite spoiled the shape of my best boots
+through an elevation of the instep, caused by
+putting a rolled-up pair of stockings inside each
+heel, to approximate the manly stature, at our
+bi-monthly meetings. Even her friend, Miss
+Crickey, a mealy-faced little girl, with saffron
+hair, who had been pushed by Miss Moodle so
+far into the higher branches, that she had a
+look of being perpetually frightened to death
+with the expectation of hearing them crack and
+let her down from a great height,&mdash;seemed
+beautiful to me from the mere fact of daily
+breathing the same air with such an angel,
+sharing her liquorice-stick, and borrowing her
+sweet little thimble.</p>
+
+<p>I had other reasons for prejudice in Miss
+Crickey's favor. She was the only person to
+whom I could talk freely regarding the depth
+of my passion for Miss Tucker. Not even to the
+object of that tremendous feeling could I utter
+a syllable which seemed in any way adequate.
+With an overpowering consciousness how ridiculous
+it was, and not only so, but how far from
+original, I could give her papers of lemon Jackson-balls,
+hinting simultaneously that, though
+plump as her cheeks, they were not half so
+sweet; and through a figure, whose correct name
+I have since learned to be periphrasis, I could
+suggest how much my soul yearned to expire
+on her ruby lips, by asking if she had ever played
+doorkeeper; regretting that the atmosphere of
+refinement and intellectuality did not admit of
+that healthful recreation at Moodle's, and
+begging her to guess whom I would call out if
+I were doorkeeper myself. When she opened
+her blue eyes innocently, and said, &quot;Miss
+Crickey?&quot; the intimation was rejected with a
+melancholy dissatisfaction, which would have
+been disdain but for the character of my feelings
+to its source. And when, on my pressing
+her for the name of the favored mortal whom
+she would call out if she were doorkeeper, she
+slyly dropped her eyes and asked if Briggs
+sounded any thing like it, I savagely refused to
+consider the proposition at all, and for the rest
+of the evening ate sandwiches to that degree I
+wonder my life was not despaired of, and fled
+for relief to the lemony bowl. The result of
+this mad vortex having been colic and calomel,
+after my return to Barker's on that evening, I
+foreswore such dangerous excesses at the next
+bi-monthly; but putting a larger pair of stockings
+in each boot-heel, to impress Miss Tucker
+with a sense of what she had lost, I devoted
+myself during the earlier part of the evening to
+a growing young woman, of the name of Wagstaff,
+considerably older than myself and runing
+straight up and down from whatever side
+one might contemplate her. Her conversation
+was not entertaining, unless from the Chinese
+point of view, which, I understand, distinctly
+favors monosyllables, and she giggled at me so
+persistently that I feared Miss Tucker would
+think I must be making myself ridiculous; but,
+on her being sent to the piano, I stood and
+turned over her music with a consciousness
+that if I ever looked impressive it was then.
+All this I did in the effort to seem gay, although
+my heart was breaking. I had no comfort
+on earth save the thought that I had been
+brutal to Briggs, and that he sat in an obscure
+corner of the room among some little girls in
+Long Division, hiding, behind an assistant
+teacher's skirts, the whitey-brown toe which
+my blacking-brush refused to refresh, while I
+bore my grief upon a pair of new boots plentifully
+provided with squeak-leather. When Miss
+Tucker slipped a little piece of paper into my
+hand, as I made a hollow show of passing her
+the sandwiches, I came very near dropping the
+plate; and when I had a chance to open it unobserved,
+and read the words, &quot;Are you mad
+with me?&quot; I could not occupy my cold and
+dreary pinnacle a moment longer, but sought
+an early opportunity of squeezing her hand two
+seats behind the voluminous asylum of Briggs's
+toes, and whispering, slightly confused by intensity
+of feeling, that if I had done any thing
+I was sorry for, I was willing to be forgiven.
+From that moment I was Miss Tucker's slave.
+Oh, woman, woman! The string on which you
+play us is as long as life; it ties your baby-bib;
+it laces your queenly bodice; and on its slenderest
+tag we dangle everywhere!&mdash;<i>Little
+Briggs and I.</i> (<i>From Little Brother and Other
+Genre Pictures</i>.)</p>
+
+
+<h2><a name="SELECTIONS_FROM_A_BRACE_OF_BOYS" id="SELECTIONS_FROM_A_BRACE_OF_BOYS"></a>SELECTIONS FROM A BRACE OF BOYS.</h2>
+
+<p>I am a bachelor uncle. That, as a mere fact,
+might happen to anybody; but I am a bachelor
+uncle by internal fitness. I am one essentially,
+just as I am an individual of the Caucasian division
+of the human race; and if, through untoward
+circumstances,&mdash;which Heaven forbid,&mdash;I
+should lose my present position, I shouldn't
+be surprised if you saw me out in the <i>Herald</i>
+under &quot;Situations Wanted&mdash;Males.&quot; Thanks
+to a marrying tendency in the rest of my family,
+I have now little need to advertise, all the
+business being thrown into my way which a
+single member of my profession can attend
+to....</p>
+
+<p>I meander, like a desultory, placid river of an
+old bachelor as I am, through the flowery mead
+of several nurseries. I am detained by all the
+little roots that run down into me to drink
+happiness, but I linger longest among the children
+of my sister Lu.</p>
+
+<p>Lu married Mr. Lovegrove. He is a merchant,
+retired with a fortune amassed by the
+old-fashioned, slow processes of trade, and regards
+the mercantile life of the present day
+only as so much greed and gambling Christianly
+baptized.... Lu is my favorite sister;
+Lovegrove an unusually good article of brother-in-law
+and I cannot say that any of my nieces
+and nephews interest me more than their two
+children, Daniel and Billy, who are more unlike
+than words can paint them. They are far apart
+in point of years; Daniel is twenty-two, Billy
+eleven. I was reminded of this fact the other
+day by Billy, as he stood between my legs,
+scowling at his book of sums.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'A boy has eighty-five turnips, and gives
+his sister thirty,'&mdash;pretty present for a girl,
+isn't it?&quot; said Billy, with an air of supreme
+contempt. &quot;Could <i>you</i> stand such stuff,&mdash;say?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I put on my instructive face and answered,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, my dear Billy, you know that arithmetic
+is necessary to you if you mean to be an
+industrious man and succeed in business. Suppose
+your parents were to lose all their property,
+what would become of them without a
+little son who could make money and keep
+accounts?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh,&quot; said Billy, with surprise. &quot;Hasn't
+father got enough stamps to see him through?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He has now, I hope; but people don't
+always keep them. Suppose they should go
+by some accident, when your father was too
+old to make any more stamps for himself?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You haven't thought of brother Daniel&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>True; for nobody ever had, in connection
+with the active employments of life.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Billy,&quot; I replied, &quot;I forgot him; but
+then, you know, Daniel is more of a student
+than a business man, and&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Uncle Teddy! you don't think I mean
+he'd support them? I meant I'd have to
+take care of father and mother, and him too,
+when they'd all got to be old people together.
+Just think! I'm eleven, and he's twenty-two
+so he is just twice as old as I am. How
+old are you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Forty, Billy, last August.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, you aren't so awful old, and when I
+get to be as old as you, Daniel will be eighty.
+Seth Kendall's grandfather isn't more than
+that, and he has to be fed with a spoon, and a
+nurse puts him to bed, and wheels him round
+in a chair like a baby. That takes the stamps,
+I bet! Well, I'll tell you how I'll keep my
+accounts; I'll have a stick, like Robinson Crusoe,
+and every time I make a toadskin I'll
+gouge a piece out of one side of the stick, and
+every time I spend one I'll gouge a piece out
+of the other.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Spend a <i>what</i>?&quot; said the gentle and astonished
+voice of my sister Lu, who, unperceived,
+had slipped into the room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A toadskin, ma,&quot; replied Billy, shutting up
+Colburn with a farewell glance of contempt.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dear, dear! Where does the boy learn such
+horrid words?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, ma, don't you know what a toadskin
+is? Here's one,&quot; said Billy, drawing a dingy
+five-cent stamp from his pocket. &quot;And don't I
+wish I had lots of 'em!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh!&quot; sighed his mother, &quot;to think I should
+have a child so addicted to slang! How I wish
+he were like Daniel!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, mother,&quot; replied Billy, &quot;if you wanted
+two boys just alike you'd oughter had twins.
+There ain't any use of my trying to be like
+Daniel now, when he's got eleven years the
+start. Whoop! There's a dog-fight; hear
+'em! It's Joe Casey's dog,&mdash;I know his
+bark!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With these words my nephew snatched his
+Glengarry bonnet from the table and bolted
+downstairs to see the fun.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What will become of him?&quot; said Lu, hopelessly;
+&quot;he has no taste for any thing but rough
+play; and then such language as he uses! Why
+<i>isn't</i> he like Daniel?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose because his Maker never repeats
+himself. Even twins often possess strongly
+marked individualities. Don't you think it
+would be a good plan to learn Billy better before
+you try to teach him? If you do, you'll
+make something as good of him as Daniel
+though it will be rather different from that
+model.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Remember, Ned, that you never did like
+Daniel as well as you do Billy. But we all
+know the proverb about old maid's daughters
+and old bachelor's sons. I wish you had Billy
+for a month,&mdash;then you'd see.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm not sure that I'd do any better than
+you. I might err as much in other directions
+But I'd try to start right by acknowledging
+that he was a new problem, not to be worked
+without finding out the value of X in his particular
+instance. The formula which solves one
+boy will no more solve the next one than the
+rule-of-three will solve a question in calculus,&mdash;or,
+to rise into your sphere, than the receipt for
+one-two-three-four cake will conduct you to a
+successful issue through plum-pudding.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I excel in metaphysical discussion, and was
+about giving further elaboration to my favorite
+idea, when the door burst open. Master Billy
+came tumbling in with a torn jacket, a bloody
+nose, the trace of a few tears in his eyes, and
+the mangiest of cur dogs in his hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh my! my!! my!!!&quot; exclaimed his
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't you get scared, ma!&quot; cried Billy,
+smiling a stern smile of triumph; &quot;I smashed
+the nose off him! He wont sass me again for
+nothing <i>this</i> while! Uncle Teddy, d'ye know
+it wasn't a dog-fight, after all? There was that
+nasty, good-for-nothing Joe Casey, 'n Patsy
+Grogan, and a lot of bad boys from Mackerelville;
+and they'd caught this poor little ki-oodle
+and tied a tin pot to his tail, and were
+trying to set Joe's dog on him, though he's ten
+times littler.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You naughty, naughty boy! How did you
+suppose your mother'd feel to see you playing
+with those ragamuffins?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I <i>played</i> 'em! I polished 'em,&mdash;that's
+the play I did! Says I, 'Put down that poor
+little pup; ain't you ashamed of yourself, Patsy
+Grogan?' 'I guess you don't know who I am,'
+says he. That's the way they always say,
+Uncle Teddy, to make a fellow think they're
+some awful great fighters. So says I again,
+'Well, you put down that dog, or I'll show you
+who I am'; and when he held on, I let him have.
+Then he dropped the pup, and as I stooped to
+pick it up he gave me one on the bugle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Bugle</i>! Oh! oh! oh!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The rest pitched in to help him; but I
+grabbed the pup, and while I was trying to
+give as good as I got,&mdash;only a fellow can't do
+it well with only one hand, Uncle Teddy,&mdash;up
+came a policeman, and the whole crowd ran
+away. So I got the dog safe, and here he is!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>With that Billy set down his &quot;ki-oodle,&quot; bid
+farewell to every fear, and wiped his bleeding
+nose. The unhappy beast slunk back between
+the legs of his preserver and followed him out
+of the room, as Lu, with an expression of
+maternal despair, bore him away for the correction
+of his dilapidated raiment and depraved
+associations. I felt such sincere pride in this
+young Mazzini of the dog-nation, that I was
+vexed at Lu for bestowing on him reproof
+instead of congratulation; but she was not the
+only conservative who fails to see a good cause
+and a heroic heart under a bloody nose and
+torn jacket. I resolved that if Billy was punished
+he should have his recompense before
+long in an extra holiday at Barnum's or the
+Hippotheatron.</p>
+
+<p>You already have some idea of my other
+nephew, if you have noticed that none of us,
+not even that habitual disrespecter of dignities,
+Billy, ever called him Dan. It would have
+seemed as incongruous as to call Billy William.
+He was one of those youths who never gave
+their parents a moment's uneasiness; who
+never had to have their wills broken, and
+never forget to put on their rubbers or take an
+umbrella. In boyhood he was intended for a
+missionary. Had it been possible for him to
+go to Greenland's icy mountains without catching
+cold, or India's coral strand, without getting
+bilious, his parents would have carried out their
+pleasing dream of contributing him to the
+world's evangelization. Lu and Mr. Lovegrove
+had no doubt that he would have been greatly
+blessed if he could have stood it....</p>
+
+<p>Both she and his father always encouraged old
+manners in him. I think they took such pride
+in raising a peculiarly pale boy as a gardener
+does in getting a nice blanch on his celery, and
+so long as he was not absolutely sick, the graver
+he was the better. He was a sensitive plant,
+a violet by a mossy stone, and all that sort of
+thing....</p>
+
+<p>At the time I introduce Billy, both Lu and
+her husband were much changed. They had
+gained a great deal in width of view and liberality
+of judgment. They read Dickens, and
+Thackeray with avidity; went now and then to
+the opera; proposed to let Billy take a quarter
+at Dodworth's; had statues in their parlor
+without any thought of shame at their lack
+of petticoats, and did multitudes of things
+which, in their early married life, they would
+have considered shocking.... They would
+greatly have liked to see Daniel shine in society.
+Of his erudition they were proud even
+to worship. The young man never had any
+business, and his father never seemed to think
+of giving him any, knowing, as Billy would
+say, that he had stamps enough to &quot;see him
+through.&quot; If Daniel liked, his father would
+have endowed a professorship in some college
+and given him the chair; but that would have
+taken him away from his own room and the
+family physician.</p>
+
+<p>Daniel knew how much his parents wished
+him to make a figure in the world, and only
+blamed himself for his failure, magnanimously
+forgetting that they had crushed out the faculties
+which enable a man to mint the small
+change of every-day society, in the exclusive
+cultivation of such as fit him for smelting its
+ponderous ingots. With that merciful blindness
+which alone prevents all our lives from
+becoming a horror of nerveless self-reproach,
+his parents were equally unaware of their share
+in the harm done him, when they ascribed to a
+delicate organization the fact that, at an age
+when love runs riot in all healthy blood, he
+could not see a Balmoral without his cheeks
+rivalling the most vivid stripe in it. They flattered
+themselves that he would outgrow his
+bashfulness; but Daniel had no such hope, and
+frequently confided in me that he thought he
+should never marry at all.</p>
+
+<p>About two hours after Billy's disappearance
+under his mother's convoy, the defender of the
+oppressed returned to my room bearing the dog
+under his arm. His cheeks shone with washing
+like a pair of waxy spitzenbergs, and other indignities
+had been offered him to the extent of
+the brush and comb. He also had a whole
+jacket on....</p>
+
+<p>Billy and I also obtained permission to go
+out together and be gone the entire afternoon.
+We put Crab on a comfortable bed of rags in
+an old shoe-box, and then strolled hand-in-hand
+across that most delightful of New York
+breathing-places&mdash;Stuyvesant Square.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Uncle Teddy,&quot; exclaimed Billy, with ardor,
+&quot;I wish I could do something to show you how
+much I think of you for being so good to me.
+I don't know how. Would it make you happy
+if I was to learn a hymn for you,&mdash;a smashing
+big hymn&mdash;six verses, long metre, and no
+grumbling?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Billy; you make me happy enough
+just by being a good boy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, Uncle Teddy!&quot; replied Billy, decidedly,
+&quot;I'm afraid I can't do it. I've tried so often,
+and I always make such an awful mess of
+it.&quot; ...</p>
+
+<p>We now got into a Broadway stage going
+down, and being unable, on account of the
+noise, to converse further upon those spiritual
+conflicts of Billy's which so much interested
+me, amused ourselves with looking out until
+just as we reached the Astor House, when he
+asked me where we were going.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where do you guess?&quot; said I.</p>
+
+<p>He cast a glance through the front window,
+and his face became irradiated. Oh, there's
+nothing like the simple, cheap luxury of pleasing
+a child, to create sunshine enough for the
+chasing away of the bluest adult devils.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We're going to Barnum's!&quot; said Billy, involuntarily
+clapping his hands.</p>
+
+<p>So we were; and, much as stuck-up people
+pretend to look down on the place, I frequently
+am. Not only so, but I always see that class
+largely represented there when I do go. To be
+sure, they always make believe that they only
+come to amuse the children, or because they've
+country cousins visiting them, and never fail to
+refer to the vulgar set one finds there, and the
+fact of the animals smelling like any thing but
+Jockey Club; yet I notice that after they've
+been in the hall three minutes they're as much
+interested as any of the people they come to
+pooh-pooh, and only put on the high-bred air
+when they fancy some of their own class are
+looking at them. I boldly acknowledge that I
+go because I like it. I am especially happy, to
+be sure, if I have a child along to go into
+ecstasies, and give me a chance, by asking
+questions, for the exhibition of that fund of information
+which is said to be one of my chief
+charms in the social circle, and on several occasions
+has led that portion of the public immediately
+about the Happy Family into the
+erroneous impression that I was Mr. Barnum,
+explaining his five hundred thousand curiosities.</p>
+
+<p>On the present occasion, we found several
+visitors of the better class in the room devoted
+to the aquarium. Among these was a young
+lady, apparently about nineteen, in a tight-fitting
+basque of black velvet, which showed her
+elegant figure to fine advantage, a skirt of garnet
+silk, looped up over a pretty Balmoral, and the
+daintiest imaginable pair of kid walking-boots.
+Her height was a trifle over the medium; her
+eyes a soft, expressive brown, shaded by
+masses of hair which exactly matched their
+color, and, at that rat-and-miceless day fell in
+such graceful abandon as to show at once that
+nature was the only maid who crimped their
+waves into them. Her complexion was rosy
+with health and sympathetic enjoyment; her
+mouth was faultless, her nose sensitive, her
+manners full of refinement, and her voice
+musical as a wood-robin's, when she spoke to
+the little boy of six at her side, to whom she
+was revealing the palace of the great show-king.
+Billy and I were flattening our noses against
+the abode of the balloon-fish, and determining
+whether he looked most like a horse-chestnut
+burr or a ripe cucumber, when his eyes and my
+own simultaneously fell on the child and lady,
+In a moment, to Billy, the balloon-fish was
+as though he had not been.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's a pretty little boy!&quot; said I. And
+then I asked Billy one of those senseless routine
+questions which must make children look at us,
+regarding the scope of our intellects very much
+as we look at Bushmen.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How would you like to play with him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Him!&quot; replied Billy, scornfully, &quot;that's his
+first pair of boots; see him pull up his little
+breeches to show the red tops to 'em! But,
+crackey! isn't <i>she</i> a smasher!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>After that we visited the wax figures and the
+sleepy snakes, the learned seal and the glass-blowers.
+Whenever we passed from one room
+into another, Billy could be caught looking
+anxiously to see if the pretty girl and child
+were coming, too.</p>
+
+<p>Time fails me to describe how Billy was lost
+in astonishment at the Lightning Calculator,&mdash;wanted
+me to beg the secret of that prodigy for
+him to do his sums by,&mdash;finally thought he had
+discovered it, and resolved to keep his arm
+whirling all the time he studied his arithmetic
+lesson the next morning. Equally inadequate
+is it to relate in full how he became so confused
+among the wax-works that he pinched the
+solemnest showman's legs to see if he was real,
+and perplexed the beautiful Circassian to the
+verge of idiocy by telling her he had read all
+about the way they sold girls like her in his
+geography.</p>
+
+<p>We had reached the stairs to that subterranean
+chamber in which the Behemoth of Holy
+Writ was wallowing about without a thought of
+the dignity which one expects from a canonical
+character. Billy had always languished upon
+his memories of this diverting beast, and I
+stood ready to see him plunge headlong the
+moment that he read the sign-board at the head
+of the stairs. When he paused and hesitated
+there, not seeming at all anxious to go down
+till he saw the pretty girl and the child following
+after,&mdash;a sudden intuition flashed across me.
+Could it be possible that Billy was caught in
+that vortex which whirled me down at ten
+years,&mdash;a little boy's first love?</p>
+
+<p>We were lingering about the elliptical basin,
+and catching occasional glimpses between bubbles
+of a vivified hair trunk of monstrous compass,
+whose knobby lid opened at one end and
+showed a red morocco lining, when the pretty
+girl, in leaning over to point out the rising
+monster, dropped into the water one of her
+little gloves, and the swash made by the hippopotamus
+drifted it close under Billy's hand.
+Either in play or as a mere coincidence the animal
+followed it. The other children about the
+tank screamed and started back as he bumped
+his nose against the side; but Billy manfully
+bent down and grabbed the glove not an inch
+from one of his big tusks, then marched around
+the tank and presented it to the lady with a
+chivalry of manner in one of his years quite
+surprising.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's a real nice boy,&mdash;you said so, didn't
+you, Lottie?&mdash;and I wish he'd come and play
+with me,&quot; said the little fellow by the young
+lady's side, as Billy turned away, gracefully
+thanked, to come back to me with his cheeks
+roseate with blushes.</p>
+
+<p>As he heard this, Billy idled along the edge of
+the tank for a moment, then faced about and
+said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;P'raps I will some day,&mdash;where do you live?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I live on East Seventeenth street with
+papa,&mdash;and Lottie stays there, too, now,&mdash;she's
+my cousin. Where d' you live?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, I live close by,&mdash;right on that big
+green square, where I guess the nurse takes
+you once in a while,&quot; said Billy, patronizingly.
+Then, looking up pluckily at the young lady,
+he added, &quot;I never saw you out there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No; Jimmy's papa has only been in his new
+house a little while, and I've just come to visit
+him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Say, will you come and play with me some
+time?&quot; chimed in the inextinguishable Jimmy.
+&quot;I've got a cooking-stove,&mdash;for real fire,&mdash;and
+blocks and a ball with a string.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Billy, who belonged to a club for the practice
+of the great American game, and was what A.
+Ward would call the most superior battist
+among the I.G.B.B.C., or &quot;Infant Giants,&quot;
+smiled from that altitude upon Jimmy, but
+promised to go and play with him the next
+Saturday afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>Late that evening, after we had got home
+and dined, as I sat in my room over Pickwick
+with a sedative cigar, a gentle knock at the
+door told of Daniel. I called &quot;Come in!&quot; and
+entering with a slow, dejected air, he sat down
+by my fire. For ten minutes he remained silent,
+though occasionally looking up as if
+about to speak, then dropping his head again
+to ponder on the coals. Finally I laid down
+Dickens, and spoke myself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You don't seem well to-night, Daniel?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't feel very well, uncle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What's the matter, my boy?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh-ah, I don't know. That is, I wish I knew
+how to tell you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I studied him for a few moments with kindly
+curiosity, then answered,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Perhaps I can save you the trouble by
+cross-examining it out of you. Let's try the
+method of elimination. I know that you're
+not harassed by any economical considerations,
+for you've all the money you want; and I
+know that ambition doesn't trouble you, for
+your tastes are scholarly. This narrows down
+the investigation of your symptoms&mdash;listlessness,
+general dejection, and all&mdash;to three
+causes,&mdash;dyspepsia, religious conflicts, love.
+Now, is your digestion awry?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, sir; good as usual. I'm not melanancholy
+on religion, and&quot;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You don't tell me you're in love?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well&mdash;yes&mdash;I suppose that's about it, Uncle
+Teddy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I took a long breath to recover from my astonishment
+at this unimaginable revelation,
+then said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is your feeling returned?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I really don't know, uncle; I don't believe
+it is. I don't see how it can be. I never did
+any thing to make her love me. What is there
+in me to love? I've borne nothing for her,&mdash;that
+is, nothing that could do her any good,&mdash;though
+I've endured on her account, I may
+say, anguish. So, look at it any way you
+please, I neither am, do, nor suffer any thing
+that can get a woman's love.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you man of learning! Even in love
+you tote your grammar along with you, and
+arrange a divine passion under the active, passive,
+and neuter!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Daniel smiled faintly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You've no idea, Uncle Teddy, that you are
+twitting on facts; but you hit the truth there;
+indeed you do. If she were a Greek or Latin
+woman, I could talk Anacreon or Horace to
+her. If women only understood the philosophy
+of the flowers as well as they do the poetry&quot;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank God they don't, Daniel!&quot; sighed I,
+devoutly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never mind,&mdash;in that case I could entrance
+her for hours, talking about the grounds of difference
+between Linn&aelig;us and Jussieu. Women
+like the star business, they say,&mdash;and I could tell
+her where all the constellations are; but sure
+as I tried to get off any sentiment about them,
+I'd break down and make myself ridiculous.
+But what earthly chance would the greatest
+philosopher that ever lived have with the
+woman he loved, if he depended for her favor
+on his ability to analyze her bouquet or
+tell her when she might look out for the next
+occultation of Orion? I can't talk bread-and-butter
+talk. I can't do any thing that makes a
+man even tolerable to a woman!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope you don't mean that nothing but
+bread-and-butter talk is tolerable to a woman!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No; but it's necessary to some extent,&mdash;at
+any rate the ability is,&mdash;in order to succeed
+in society; and it's in society men first meet
+and strike women. And oh, Uncle Teddy!
+I'm such a fish out of water in society!&mdash;such
+a dreadful floundering fish! When I see her
+dancing gracefully as a swan swims, and feel
+that fellows, like little Jack Mankyn, who 'don't
+know twelve times,' can dance to her perfect
+admiration; when I see that she likes ease of
+manners,&mdash;and all sorts of men without an idea
+in their heads have that,&mdash;while I turn all colors
+when I speak to her, and am clumsy, and
+abrupt, and abstracted, and bad at repartee,&mdash;Uncle
+Teddy! sometimes (though it seems so
+ungrateful to father and mother, who have
+spent such pains for me)&mdash;sometimes, do you
+know, it seems to me as if I'd exchange all
+I've ever learned for the power to make a good
+appearance before her!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Daniel, my boy, it's too much a matter of
+reflection with you! A woman is not to be
+taken by laying plans. If you love the lady
+(whose name I don't ask you, because I know
+you'll tell me as soon as you think best), you
+must seek her companionship until you're well
+enough acquainted with her to have her regard
+you as something different from the men whom
+she meets merely in society, and judge your
+qualities by another standard than that she applies
+to them. If she's a sensible girl (and God
+forbid you should marry her otherwise), she
+knows that people can't always be dancing, or
+holding fans, or running after orange-ice. If
+she's a girl capable of appreciating your best
+points (and woe to you if you marry a girl who
+can't!), she'll find them out upon closer intimacy,
+and, once found, they'll a hundred times
+outweigh all brilliant advantages kept in the
+show-case of fellows who have nothing on the
+shelves. When this comes about, you will pop
+the question unconsciously, and, to adapt Milton,
+she'll drop into your lap 'gathered&mdash;not
+harshly plucked.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know that's sensible, Uncle Teddy, and
+I'll try. Let me tell you the sacredest of secrets,&mdash;regularly
+every day of my life I send
+her a little poem fastened round the prettiest
+bouquet I can get at Hanft's.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Does she know who sends them?'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She can't have any idea. The German boy
+that takes them knows not a word of English
+except her name and address. You'll forgive
+me, uncle, for not mentioning her name yet?
+You see she may despise or hate me some day
+when she knows who it is that has paid her
+these attentions; and then I'd like to be able
+to feel that at least I've never hurt her by any
+absurd connection with myself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Forgive you? Nonsense! The feeling
+does your heart infinite credit, though a little
+counsel with your head would show you that
+your only absurdity is self-depreciation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Daniel bid me good-night. As I put out my
+cigar and went to bed, my mind reverted to the
+dauntless little Hotspur who had spent the afternoon
+with me and reversed his mother's
+wish, thinking,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, if Daniel were more like Billy!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It was always Billy's habit to come and sit
+with me while I smoked my after-breakfast
+cigar, but the next morning did not see him
+enter my room till St. George's hands pointed
+to a quarter of nine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Billy Boy Blue, come blow your horn;
+what haystack have you been under till this
+time of day? We sha'n't have a minute to
+look over our spelling together, and I know a
+boy who's going in for promotion next week.
+Have you had your breakfast, and taken care
+of Crab?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, sir; but I didn't feel like getting up
+this morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are you sick?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No-o-o&mdash;it isn't that; but you'll laugh at
+me if I tell you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indeed I won't, Billy!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot;&mdash;his voice dropped to a whisper, and
+he stole close to my side,&mdash;&quot;I had such a nice
+dream about <i>her</i> just the last thing before the
+bell rang; and when I woke up I felt so queer,&mdash;so
+kinder good and kinder bad,&mdash;and I
+wanted to see her so much, that if I hadn't
+been a big boy I believe I should have blubbered.
+I tried ever so much to go to sleep and
+see her again; but the more I tried the more I
+couldn't. After all, I had to get up without it,
+though I didn't want any breakfast, and only ate
+two buckwheat cakes, when I always eat six, you
+know, Uncle Teddy. Can you keep a secret?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, dear, so you couldn't get it out of
+me if you were to shake me upside-down like a
+savings-bank.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, ain't you mean! That was when I was
+small I did that. I'll tell you the secret,
+though,&mdash;that girl and I are going to get married.
+I mean to ask her the first chance I get.
+Oh, isn't she a smasher!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Billy, sha'n't you wait a little
+while to see if you always like her as well as
+you do now? Then, too, you'll be older.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm old enough, Uncle Teddy, and I love
+her dearly! I'm as old as the kings of France
+used to be when they got married,&mdash;I read it in
+Abbott's histories. But there's the clock
+striking nine! I must run or I shall get a tardy
+mark, and, perhaps, she'll want to see my certificate
+sometimes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So saying, he kissed me on the cheek and set
+off for school as fast as his legs could carry him.
+O Love, omnivorous Love, that sparest neither
+the dotard leaning on his staff nor the boy with
+pantaloons buttoning on his jacket,&mdash;omnipotent
+Love, that, after parents and teachers
+have failed, in one instant can make Billy try
+to become a good boy!</p>
+
+<p>With both of my nephews hopelessly enamored,
+and myself the confidant of both, I
+had my hands full. Daniel was generally dejected
+and distrustful; Billy buoyant and jolly.
+Daniel found it impossible to overcome his
+bashfulness; was spontaneous only in sonnets,
+brilliant only in bouquets. Billy was always
+coming to me with pleasant news, told in his
+slangy New-York boy vernacular. One day he
+would exclaim,&mdash;&quot;Oh, I'm getting on prime!
+I got such a smile off her this morning as I went
+by the window!&quot; Another day he wanted
+counsel how to get a valentine to her,&mdash;because
+it was too big to shove in a lamp-post, and she
+might catch him if he left it on the steps, rang
+the bell, and ran away. Daniel wrote his own
+valentine; but, despite its originality, that
+document gave him no such comfort as Billy
+got from twenty-five cents' worth of embossed
+paper, pink cupids, and doggerel. Finally,
+Billy announced to me that he had been to
+play with Jimmy, and got introduced to his
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after this Lu gave what they call &quot;a
+little company,&quot;&mdash;not a party, but a reunion of
+forty or fifty people with whom the family were
+well acquainted, several of them living in our immediate
+neighborhood. There was a goodly proportion
+of young folk, and there was to be dancing
+but the music was limited to a single piano
+played by the German exile usual on such occasions,
+and the refreshments did not rise to the
+splendor of a costly supper. This kind of compromise
+with fashionable gayety was wisely
+deemed by Lu the best method of introducing
+Daniel to the <i>beau monde</i>,&mdash;a push given the
+timid eaglet by the maternal bird, with a soft
+tree-top between him and the vast expanse of
+society. How simple was the entertainment
+may be inferred from the fact that Lu felt
+somewhat discomposed when she got a note
+from one of her guests asking leave to bring
+along her niece, who was making her a few
+weeks' visit. As a matter of course, however,
+she returned answer to bring the young lady
+and welcome.</p>
+
+<p>Daniel's dressing-room having been given up
+to the gentlemen I invited him to make his
+toilet in mine, and, indeed, wanting him to
+create a favorable impression, became his valet
+<i>pro tem.</i>, tying his cravat, and teasing the
+divinity-student look out of his side-hair. My
+little dandy Billy came in for another share of
+attention, and when I managed to button his
+jacket for him so that it showed his shirt-studs
+&quot;like a man's,&quot; Count d'Orsay could not have
+felt a more pleasing sense of his sufficiency for
+all the demands of the gay world.</p>
+
+<p>When we reached the parlor we found Pa
+and Ma Lovegrove already receiving. About
+a score of guests had arrived. Most of them
+were old married couples, which, after paying
+their devoirs, fell in two like unriveted scissors,&mdash;the
+gentlemen finding a new pivot in pa and
+the ladies in ma, where they mildly opened and
+shut upon such questions as severally concerned
+them, such as &quot;the way gold closed,&quot; and &quot;how
+the children were.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Besides the old married people there were
+several old young men of distinctly hopeless
+and unmarried aspect, who, having nothing in
+common with the other class, nor sufficient
+energy of character to band themselves for
+mutual protection, hovered dejectedly about
+the arch pillars, or appeared to be considering
+whether, on the whole, it would not be feasible
+and best to sit down on the centre-table.
+These subsisted upon such crumbs of comfort
+as Lu could get an occasional chance to throw
+them by rapid sorties of conversation,&mdash;became
+galvanically active the moment they were
+punched up, and fell flat the moment the
+punching was remitted. I did all I could for
+them, but, having Daniel in tow, dared not sail
+too near the edge of the Doldrums, lest he
+should drop into sympathetic stagnation and
+be taken preternaturally bashful, with his sails
+all aback, just as I wanted to carry him gallantly
+into action with some clipper-built
+cruiser of a nice young lady. Finally, Lu bethought
+herself of that last plank of drowning
+conversationists, the photograph album. All
+the dejected young men made for it at once,
+some reaching it just as they were about to
+sink for the last time, but all getting a grip on
+it somehow, and staying there in company with
+other people's babies whom they didn't know,
+and celebrities whom they knew to death, until,
+one by one, they either stranded upon a motherly
+dowager by the Fire-place Shoals, or were
+rescued from the Sofa Reef by some gallant
+wrecker of a strong-minded young lady, with a
+view to taking salvage out of them in the
+German.</p>
+
+<p>Besides these, were already arrived a dozen
+nice little boys and girls, who had been invited
+to make it pleasant for Billy. I had to remind
+him of the fact that they were his guests, for,
+in comparison with the queen of his affections,
+they were in danger of being despised by him
+as small fry.</p>
+
+<p>The younger ladies and gentlemen,&mdash;those
+who had fascinations to disport, or were in the
+habit of disporting what they considered such,
+were probably still at home consulting the
+looking-glass until that oracle should announce
+the auspicious moment for their setting forth.</p>
+
+<p>Daniel was in conversation with a perfect
+godsend of a girl, who understood Latin and
+had begun Greek. Billy was taking a moment's
+vacation from his boys and girls, busy with
+&quot;Old Maid&quot; in the extension-room, and whispering
+with his hand in mine, &quot;Oh, don't I wish
+<i>she</i> were here!&quot; when a fresh invoice of ladies,
+just unpacked from the dressing-room in all the
+airy elegance of evening costume, floated
+through the door. I heard Lu say,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, Mrs. Rumbullion! Happy to see your
+niece, too. How d'ye do, Miss Pilgrim?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At this last word Billy jumped as if he had
+been shot, and the bevy of ladies opening about
+sister Lu disclosed the charming face and figure
+of the pretty girl we had met at Barnum's.</p>
+
+<p>Billy's countenance rapidly changed from
+astonishment to joy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Isn't that splendid, Uncle Teddy? Just as
+I was wishing it! It's just like the fairy books!&quot;
+and, rushing up to the party of new-comers,
+&quot;My dear Lottie!&quot; cried he, &quot;if I'd only
+known you were coming I'd have gone after
+you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As he caught her by the hand I was pleased
+to see her soft eyes brighten with gratification
+at his enthusiasm, but my sister Lu looked on
+naturally with astonishment in every feature.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, Billy!&quot; said she, &quot;you ought not to
+call a strange young lady' <i>Lottie</i>!' Miss Pilgrim,
+you must excuse my wild boy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you must excuse my mother, Lottie,&quot;
+said Billy, affectionately patting Miss Pilgrim's
+rose kid, &quot;for calling you a strange young lady.
+You are not strange at all,&mdash;you're just as nice
+a girl as there is.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are no excuses necessary,&quot; said Miss
+Pilgrim, with a bewitching little laugh. &quot;Billy
+and I know each other intimately well, Mrs.
+Lovegrove; and I confess that when I heard
+the lady aunt had been invited to visit was his
+mother, I felt all the more willing to infringe
+etiquette this evening by coming where I had
+no previous introduction.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't you care!&quot; said Billy, encouragingly.
+&quot;I'll introduce you to every one of our family;
+I know 'em if you don't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At this moment I came up as Billy's reinforcement,
+and fearing lest in his enthusiasm he
+might forget the canon of society which introduces
+a gentleman to a lady, not the lady to
+him, I ventured to suggest it delicately by
+saying,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Billy, will you grant me the favor of a presentation
+to Miss Pilgrim?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In a minute, Uncle Teddy,&quot; answered Billy,
+considerably lowering his voice. &quot;The older
+people first&quot;; and after this reproof I was left
+to wait in the cold until he had gone through
+the ceremony of introducing to the young lady
+his father and his mother.</p>
+
+<p>Billy, who had now assumed entire guardianship
+of Miss Pilgrim, with an air of great dignity
+intrusted her to my care and left us promenading
+while he went in search of Daniel. I myself
+looked in vain for that youth, whom I had
+not seen since the entrance of the last comers.
+Miss Pilgrim and I found a congenial common
+ground in Billy, whom she spoke of as one of
+the most delightfully original boys she had ever
+met; in fact, altogether the most fascinating
+young gentleman she had seen in New York
+society. You may be sure it wasn't Billy's
+left ear which burned when I made my
+responses.</p>
+
+<p>In five minutes he reappeared to announce,
+in a tone of disappointment, that he could find
+Daniel nowhere. He could see a light through
+his keyhole, but the door was locked and he
+could get no admittance. Just then Lu came
+up to present a certain&mdash;no, an uncertain&mdash;young
+man of the fleet stranded on parlor furniture
+earlier in the evening. To Lu's great
+astonishment Miss Pilgrim asked Billy's permission
+to leave him. It was granted with all the
+courtesy of a <i>preux chevalier</i>, on the condition,
+readily assented to by the lady, that she should
+dance one Lancers with him during the evening.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dear me!&quot; exclaimed Lu, after Billy had
+gone back like a superior being to assist at the
+childish amusement of his contemporaries,
+&quot;Would any body ever suppose that was our
+Billy?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should, my dear sister,&quot; said I, with proud
+satisfaction; &quot;but you remember I always was
+just to Billy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Left free, I went myself to hunt up Daniel.
+I found his door locked and a light shining
+through the keyhole, as Billy had stated. I
+made no attempt to enter by knocking; but
+going to my room and opening the window
+next his, leaned out as far as I could, shoved
+up his sash with my cane, and pushed aside
+his curtain. Such an unusual method of communication
+could not fail to bring him to the
+window with a rush. When he saw me he
+trembled like a guilty thing, his countenance
+fell, and, no longer able to feign absence, he
+unlocked his door and let me enter by the
+normal mode.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, Daniel Lovegrove, my nephew, what
+does this mean? Are you sick?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Uncle Edward, I am not sick,&mdash;and this
+means that I am a fool. Even a little boy like
+Billy puts me to shame. I feel humbled to the
+very dust. I wish I'd been a missionary and
+got massacred by savages. Oh that I'd been
+permitted to wear damp stockings in childhood,
+or that my mother hadn't carried me through
+the measles! If it weren't wrong to take my
+life into my own hands, I'd open that window,
+and&mdash;and&mdash;sit in a draught this very evening!
+Oh, yes! I'm just that bitter! Oh, oh, oh!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And Daniel paced the floor with strides of
+frenzy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, my dear fellow, let's look at the
+matter calmly a minute. What brought on
+this sudden attack? You seemed doing well
+enough the first ten minutes after we came
+down. I was only out of your sight long
+enough to speak to the Rumbullion party who
+had just come in, and when I turned around you
+were gone. Now you are in this fearful condition.
+What is there in the Rumbullions to start
+you off on such a bender of bashfulness as this
+which I here behold?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Rumbullion indeed!&quot; said Daniel. &quot;A
+hundred Rumbullions could not make me feel
+as I do. But <i>she</i> can shake me into a whirlwind
+with her little finger; and <i>she</i> came with
+the Rumbullions!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What! D'you&mdash;Miss Pilgrim?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Pilgrim!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I labored with Daniel for ten minutes, using
+every encouragement and argument I could
+think of, and finally threatened him that I
+would bring up the whole Rumbullion party,
+Miss Pilgrim included, telling them that he had
+invited them to look at his conchological
+cabinet, unless he instantly shook the ice out
+of his manner and accompanied me down stairs.
+This dreadful menace had the desired effect.
+He knew that I would not scruple to fulfil it;
+and at the same time that it made him surrender,
+it also provoked him with me to a degree
+which gave his eyes and cheeks as fine a glow
+as I could have wished for the purpose of a
+favorable impression. The stimulus of wrath
+was good for him, and there was little tremor
+in his knees when he descended the stairs.
+Well-a-day! So Daniel and Billy were rivals!</p>
+
+<p>The latter gentleman met us at the foot of
+the staircase.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, there you are, Daniel!&quot; said he, cheerily.
+&quot;I was just going to look after you and
+Uncle Teddy. We've wanted you for the
+dances. We've had the Lancers twice and
+three round dances; and I danced the second
+Lancers with Lottie. Now we're going to
+play some games,&mdash;to amuse the children, you
+know,&quot; he added, loftily, with the adult gesture
+of pointing his thumb over his shoulder at the
+extension-room. &quot;Lottie's going to play, too;
+so will you and Daniel, won't you, uncle? Oh,
+here comes Lottie now! This is my brother,
+Miss Pilgrim,&mdash;let me introduce him to you.
+I'm sure you'll like him. There's nothing he
+don't know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Miss Pilgrim had just come to the newel-post
+of the staircase, and, when she looked into
+Daniel's face, blushed like the red, red rose,
+losing her self-possession perceptibly more than
+Daniel.</p>
+
+<p>The courage of weak warriors and timid gallants
+mounts as the opposite party's falls, and
+Daniel made out to say, in a firm tone, that it
+was long since he had enjoyed the pleasure of
+meeting Miss Pilgrim.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not since Mrs. Cramcroud's last sociable, I
+think,&quot; replied Miss Pilgrim, her cheeks and
+eyes still playing the tell-tale.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oho! so you don't want any introduction!&quot;
+exclaimed Master Billy. &quot;I didn't know you
+knew each other, Lottie?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have met Mr. Lovegrove in society. Shall
+we go and join the plays?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To be sure we shall!&quot; cried Billy. &quot;You
+needn't mind,&mdash;all the grown people are going
+too.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>On entering the parlor we found it as he
+had said. The guests being almost all well
+acquainted with each other, at the solicitation
+of jolly little Mrs. Bloomingal, sister Lu had
+consented to make a pleasant Christmas kind of
+time of it, in which everybody was permitted
+to be young again, and romp with the rompiest.
+We played Blindman's-buff till we were tired of
+that,&mdash;Daniel, to Lu's great delight, coming
+out splendidly as Blindman, and evincing such
+&quot;cheek&quot; in the style he hunted down and
+caught the ladies, as satisfied me that nothing
+but his eyesight stood in the way of his making
+an audacious figure in the world. Then a pretty
+little girl, Tilly Turtelle, who seemed quite a
+premature flirt, proposed &quot;Door-keeper,&quot;&mdash;a
+suggestion accepted with great <i>&eacute;clat</i> by all the
+children, several grown people assenting.</p>
+
+<p>To Billy&mdash;quite as much on account of his
+shining prominence in the executive faculties
+as of his character as host&mdash;was committed the
+duty of counting out the first person to be sent
+into the hall. There were so many of us that
+&quot;Aina-maina-mona-mike&quot; would not go quite
+round; but, with that promptness of expedience
+which belongs to genius, Billy instantly added
+on, &quot;Intery-mintery-cutery-corn,&quot; and the last
+word of the cabalistic formula fell upon me&mdash;Edward
+Balbus. I disappeared into the entry
+amidst peals of happy laughter from both old
+and young, calling, when the door opened again
+to ask me whom I wanted, for the pretty lisping
+flirt who had proposed the game. After
+giving me a coquettish little chirrup of a kiss,
+and telling me my beard scratched, she bade
+me, on my return, send out to her &quot;Mithter
+Billy Lovegrove.&quot; I obeyed her; my youngest
+nephew retired; and after a couple of seconds,
+during which Tilly undoubtedly got what
+she proposed the game for, Billy being a great
+favorite with the little girls, she came back,
+pouting and blushing, to announce that he
+wanted Miss Pilgrim. That young lady showed
+no mock-modesty, but arose at once, and laughingly
+went out to her youthful admirer, who, as
+I afterward learned, embraced her ardently, and
+told her he loved her better than any girl in the
+world. As he turned to go back, she told him
+that he might send to her one of her juvenile
+cousins, Reginald Rumbullion. Now, whether
+because on this youthful Rumbullion's account
+Billy had suffered the pangs of that most terrible
+passion, jealousy, or from his natural enjoyment
+of playing practical jokes destructive
+of all dignity in his elders, Billy marched into
+the room, and, having shut the door behind him,
+paralyzed the crowded parlor by an announcement
+that Mr. Daniel Lovegrove was wanted.</p>
+
+<p>I was standing at his side, and could feel him
+tremble,&mdash;see him turn pale.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dear me!&quot; he whispered, in a choking
+voice; &quot;can she mean me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course she does,&quot; said I. &quot;Who else?
+Do you hesitate? Surely you can't refuse
+such an invitation from a lady.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I suppose not,&quot; said he, mechanically.
+And amidst much laughter from the disinterested,
+while the faces of Mrs. Rumbullion and
+his mother were spectacles of crimson astonishment,
+he made his exit from the room. Never
+in my life did I so much long for that instrument
+described by Mr. Samuel Weller,&mdash;a pair
+of patent double-million-magnifying microscopes
+of hextry power, to see through a deal
+door. Instead of this, I had to learn what happened
+only by report.</p>
+
+<p>Lottie Pilgrim was standing under the hall
+burners with her elbow on the newel-post, looking
+more vividly charming than he had ever
+seen her before at Mrs. Cramcroud's sociable
+or elsewhere. When startled by the apparition
+of Mr. Daniel Lovegrove instead of the little
+Rumbullion whom she was expecting,&mdash;she had
+no time to exclaim or hide her mounting color,
+none at all to explain to her own mind the mistake
+that had occurred, before his arm was
+clasped around her waist, and his lips so closely
+pressed to hers, that through her soft thick
+hair she could feel the throbbing of his temples.
+As for Daniel, he seemed in a walking dream,
+from which he waked to see Miss Pilgrim looking
+into his eyes with utter though not incensed
+stupefaction,&mdash;to stammer,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Forgive me! Do forgive me! I thought
+you were in earnest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So I was,&quot; she said, tremulously, as soon as
+she could catch her voice, &quot;in sending for my
+cousin Reginald.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, dear, what shall I do! Believe me, I
+was told you wanted me,&mdash;let me go and explain
+it to mother,&mdash;she'll tell the rest,&mdash;I
+couldn't do it,&mdash;I'd die of mortification. Oh,
+that wretched boy Billy!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>On the principle already mentioned, his agitation
+reassured her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't try to explain it now,&mdash;it may get
+Billy a scolding. Are there any but intimate
+family friends here this evening?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No&mdash;I believe&mdash;no&mdash;I'm sure,&quot; replied
+Daniel, collecting his faculties.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then I don't mind what they think. Perhaps
+they'll suppose we've known each other
+long; but we'll arrange it by-and-by. They'll
+think the more of it the longer we stay out
+here,&mdash;hear them laugh! I must run back now.
+I'll send you somebody.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A round of juvenile applause greeted her as
+she hurried into the parlor, and a number of
+grown people smiled quite musically. Her
+quick woman-wit showed her how to retaliate
+and divide the embarrassment of the occasion.
+As she passed me she said in an undertone,&mdash;&quot;Answer
+quick! Who's that fat lady on the
+sofa, that laughs so loud?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mrs. Cromwell Craggs,&quot; said I, as quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Pilgrim made a satirically low courtesy,
+and spoke in a modest but distinct voice,&mdash;&quot;I
+really must be excused for asking. I'm
+a stranger, you know; but is there such a lady
+here as Mrs. Craggs,&mdash;Mrs. <i>Cromwell</i> Craggs?
+For if so, the present doorkeeper would like to
+see Mrs. Cromwell Craggs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then came the turn of the fat lady to be
+laughed at; but out she had to go and get
+kissed like the rest of us.</p>
+
+<p>Before the close of the evening, Billy was
+made as jealous as his parents and I were surprised
+to see Daniel in close conversation with
+Miss Pilgrim among the geraniums and fuschias
+of the conservatory. &quot;A regular flirtation,&quot;
+said Billy, somewhat indignantly. The conclusion
+they arrived at was, that after all no
+great harm had been done, and that the dear
+little fellow ought not to be peached on for his
+fun. If I had known at the time how easily
+they forgave him, I should have suspected that
+the offence Billy had led Daniel into committing
+was not unlikely to be repeated on the
+offender's own account; but so much as I could
+see showed me that the ice was broken....</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;<i>Little Brother, and Other Genre Pictures</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THOMAS_BAILEY_ALDRICH" id="THOMAS_BAILEY_ALDRICH"></a>THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH.</h2>
+
+<h2>(BORN, 1836.)</h2>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<h2><a name="A_RIVERMOUTH_ROMANCE" id="A_RIVERMOUTH_ROMANCE"></a>A RIVERMOUTH ROMANCE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I.</p>
+
+<p>At five o'clock in the morning of the tenth
+of July, 1860, the front door of a certain
+house on Anchor Street, in the ancient seaport
+town of Rivermouth, might have been observed
+to open with great caution. This door, as the
+least imaginative reader may easily conjecture,
+did not open itself. It was opened by Miss
+Margaret Callaghan, who immediately closed it
+softly behind her, paused for a few seconds
+with an embarrassed air on the stone step, and
+then, throwing a furtive glance up at the second-story
+windows, passed hastily down the street
+towards the river, keeping close to the fences
+and garden walls on her left.</p>
+
+<p>There was a ghost-like stealthiness to Miss
+Margaret's movements, though there was nothing
+whatever of the ghost about Miss Margaret
+herself. She was a plump, short person, no
+longer young, with coal-black hair growing low
+on the forehead, and a round face that would
+have been nearly meaningless if the features
+had not been emphasized&mdash;italicized, so to speak&mdash;by
+the small-pox. Moreover, the brilliancy
+of her toilet would have rendered any ghostly
+hypothesis untenable. Mrs. Solomon (we refer
+to the dressiest Mrs. Solomon, which ever one
+that was) in all her glory was not arrayed like
+Miss Margaret on that eventful summer morning.
+She wore a light-green, shot-silk frock, a
+blazing red shawl, and a yellow crape bonnet
+profusely decorated with azure, orange, and
+magenta artificial flowers. In her hand she
+carried a white parasol. The newly risen sun,
+ricocheting from the bosom of the river and
+striking point-blank on the top-knot of Miss
+Margaret's gorgeousness, made her an imposing
+spectacle in the quiet street of that Puritan
+village. But, in spite of the bravery of her apparel,
+she stole guiltily along by garden walls
+and fences until she reached a small, dingy
+frame-house near the wharves, in the darkened
+doorway of which she quenched her burning
+splendor, if so bold a figure is permissible.</p>
+
+<p>Three quarters of an hour passed. The sunshine
+moved slowly up Anchor Street, fingered
+noiselessly the well-kept brass knockers on
+either side, and drained the heeltaps of dew
+which had been left from the revels of the
+fairies overnight in the cups of the morning-glories.
+Not a soul was stirring yet in this
+part of the town, though the Rivermouthians
+are such early birds that not a worm may be
+said to escape them. By and by one of the
+brown Holland shades at one of the upper windows
+of the Bilkins Mansion&mdash;the house from
+which Miss Margaret had emerged&mdash;was drawn
+up, and old Mr. Bilkins in spiral nightcap
+looked out on the sunny street. Not a living
+creature was to be seen, save the dissipated
+family cat&mdash;a very Lovelace of a cat that was
+not allowed a night-key&mdash;who was sitting on
+the curbstone opposite, waiting for the hall
+door to be opened. Three quarters of an hour,
+we repeat, had passed, when Mrs. Margaret
+O'Rourke, <i>n&eacute;e</i> Callaghan, issued from the small,
+dingy house by the river, and regained the
+door-step of the Bilkins mansion in the same
+stealthy fashion in which she had left it.</p>
+
+<p>Not to prolong a mystery that must already
+oppress the reader, Mr. Bilkins's cook had,
+after the manner of her kind, stolen out of the
+premises before the family were up, and got
+herself married&mdash;surreptitiously and artfully
+married, as if matrimony were an indictable
+offence.</p>
+
+<p>And something of an offence it was in this
+instance. In the first place Margaret Callaghan
+had lived nearly twenty years with the Bilkins
+family, and the old people&mdash;there were
+no children now&mdash;had rewarded this long service
+by taking Margaret into their affections.
+It was a piece of subtle ingratitude for her
+to marry without admitting the worthy couple
+to her confidence. In the next place, Margaret
+had married a man some eighteen years
+younger than herself. That was the young
+man's lookout, you say. We hold it was
+Margaret that was to blame. What does a
+young blade of twenty-two know? Not half
+so much as he thinks he does. His exhaustless
+ignorance at that age is a discovery which
+is left for him to make in his prime.</p>
+
+<p>
+&quot;Curly gold locks cover foolish brains,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Billing and cooing is all your cheer;</span><br />
+Sighing and singing of midnight strains,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Under Bonnybells window panes,&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wait till you come to Forty Year!&quot;</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>In one sense Margaret's husband <i>had</i> come
+to forty year&mdash;she was forty to a day.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Margaret O'Rourke, with the baddish
+cat following closely at her heels, entered the
+Bilkins mansion, reached her chamber in the
+attic without being intercepted, and there laid
+aside her finery. Two or three times, while
+arranging her more humble attire, she paused
+to take a look at the marriage certificate,
+which she had deposited between the leaves
+of her Prayer-Book, and on each occasion
+held that potent document upside down;
+for Margaret's literary culture was of
+the severest order, and excluded the art of
+reading.</p>
+
+<p>The breakfast was late that morning. As Mrs.
+O'Rourke set the coffee-urn in front of Mrs. Bilkins
+and flanked Mr. Bilkins with the broiled
+mackerel and buttered toast, Mrs. O'Rourke's
+conscience smote her. She afterwards declared
+that when she saw the two sitting there so innocent-like,
+not dreaming of the <i>comether</i> she
+had put upon them, she secretly and unbeknownt
+let a few tears fall into the cream-pitcher.
+Whether or not it was this material
+expression of Margaret's penitence that
+spoiled the coffee does not admit of inquiry;
+but the coffee was bad. In fact, the whole
+breakfast was a comedy of errors.</p>
+
+<p>It was a blessed relief to Margaret when the
+meal was ended. She retired in a cold perspiration
+to the penetralia of the kitchen, and it
+was remarked by both Mr. and Mrs. Bilkins
+that those short flights of vocalism&mdash;apropos
+of the personal charms of one Kate Kearney,
+who lived on the banks of Killarney&mdash;which
+ordinarily issued from the direction of the
+scullery we're unheard that forenoon.</p>
+
+<p>The town clock was striking eleven, and the
+antiquated time-piece on the staircase (which
+never spoke but it dropped pearls and crystals,
+like the fairy in the story) was lisping the hour,
+when there came three tremendous knocks at
+the street door. Mrs. Bilkins, who was dusting
+the brass-mounted chronometer in the hall,
+stood transfixed, with arm uplifted. The admirable
+old lady had for years been carrying
+on a guerilla warfare with itinerant venders of
+furniture polish, and pain-killer, and crockery
+cement and the like. The effrontery of the
+triple knock convinced her the enemy was at
+her gates&mdash;possibly that dissolute creature with
+twenty-four sheets of note-paper and twenty-four
+envelopes for fifteen cents.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bilkins swept across the hall, and
+opened the door with a jerk. The suddenness
+of the movement was apparently not anticipated
+by the person outside, who, with one
+arm stretched feebly towards the receding
+knocker, tilted gently forward, and rested both
+hands on the threshold in an attitude which
+was probably common enough with our ancestors
+of the Simian period, but could never have
+been considered graceful. By an effort that
+testified to the excellent condition of his
+muscles, the person instantly righted himself,
+and stood swaying unsteadily on his toes and
+heels, and smiling rather vaguely on Mrs. Bilkins.</p>
+
+<p>It was a slightly-built but well-knitted young
+fellow, in the not unpicturesque garb of our
+marine service. His woollen cap, pitched forward
+at an acute angle with his nose, showed
+the back part of a head thatched with short
+yellow hair, which had broken into innumerable
+curls of painful tightness. On his ruddy
+cheeks a sparse, sandy beard was making a
+timid <i>d&eacute;but</i>. Add to this a weak, good-natured
+mouth, a pair of devil-may-care blue eyes, and
+the fact that the man was very drunk, and you
+have a pre-Raphaelite portrait&mdash;we may as well
+say at once&mdash;of Mr. Larry O'Rourke of Mullingar,
+County Westmeath, and late of the United
+States sloop-of-war Santee.</p>
+
+<p>The man was a total stranger to Mrs. Bilkins
+but the instant she caught sight of the
+double white anchors embroidered on the lapels
+of his jacket, she unhesitatingly threw back
+the door, which with great presence of mind
+she had partly closed.</p>
+
+<p>A drunken sailor standing on the step of the
+Bilkins mansion was no novelty. The street,
+as we have stated, led down to the wharves, and
+sailors were constantly passing. The house
+abutted directly on the street; the granite
+door-step was almost flush with the sidewalk,
+and the huge, old-fashioned brass knocker&mdash;seemingly
+a brazen hand that had been cut off
+at the wrist, and nailed against the oak as a
+warning to malefactors&mdash;extended itself in a
+kind of grim appeal to everybody. It seemed
+to possess strange fascinations for all seafaring
+folk; and when there was a man-of-war in port
+the rat-tat-tat of that knocker would frequently
+startle the quiet neighborhood long after midnight.
+There appeared to be an occult understanding
+between it and the blue-jackets.
+Years ago there was a young Bilkins, one Pendexter
+Bilkins&mdash;a sad losel, we fear&mdash;who ran
+away to try his fortunes before the mast, and
+fell overboard in a gale off Hatteras. &quot;Lost at
+sea,&quot; says the chubby marble slab in the Old
+South Burying-Ground, &quot;<i>&aelig;tat.</i> 18.&quot; Perhaps
+that is why no blue-jacket, sober or drunk, was
+ever repulsed from the door of the Bilkins
+mansion.</p>
+
+<p>Of course Mrs. Bilkins had her taste in the
+matter, and preferred them sober. But as this
+could not always be, she tempered her wind, so
+to speak, to the shorn lamb. The flushed,
+prematurely-old face that now looked up at
+her moved the good lady's pity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you want?&quot; she asked, kindly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Me wife.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There's no wife for you here,&quot; said Mrs.
+Bilkins, somewhat taken aback. &quot;His wife!&quot;
+she thought; &quot;it's a mother the poor boy
+stands in need of.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Me wife,&quot; repeated Mr. O'Rourke, &quot;for
+betther or for worse.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You had better go away,&quot; said Mrs. Bilkins,
+bridling up, &quot;or it will be the worse for you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To have and to howld,&quot; continued Mr.
+O'Rourke, wandering retrospectively in the
+mazes of the marriage service, &quot;to have and to
+howld till death&mdash;bad luck to him!&mdash;takes one
+or the ither of us.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You're a blasphemous creature,&quot; said Mrs.
+Bilkins, severely.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thim's the words his riverince spake this
+mornin', standin' foreninst us,&quot; explained Mr.
+O'Rourke. &quot;I stood here, see, and me jew'l
+stood there, and the howly chaplain beyont.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And Mr. O'Rourke with a wavering forefinger
+drew a diagram of the interesting situation
+on the door-step.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well,&quot; returned Mrs. Bilkins, &quot;if you're a
+married man, all I have to say is, there's a
+pair of fools instead of one. You had better
+be off; the person you want doesn't live
+here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bedad, thin, but she does.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lives here?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sorra a place else.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The man's crazy,&quot; said Mrs. Bilkins to
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>While she thought him simply drunk, she
+was not in the least afraid; but the idea that
+she was conversing with a madman sent a chill
+over her. She reached back her hand preparatory
+to shutting the door, when Mr. O'Rourke,
+with an agility that might have been expected
+from his previous gymnastics, set one foot on
+the threshold and frustrated the design.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I want me wife,&quot; he said sternly.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, Mr. Bilkins had gone uptown,
+and there was no one in the house except
+Margaret, whose pluck was not to be depended
+on. The case was urgent. With the energy of
+despair Mrs. Bilkins suddenly placed the toe of
+her boot against Mr. O'Rourke's invading foot,
+and pushed it away. The effect of this attack
+was to cause Mr. O'Rourke to describe a complete
+circle on one leg, and then sit down heavily
+on the threshold. The lady retreated to the
+hat-stand, and rested her hand mechanically on
+the handle of a blue cotton umbrella. Mr.
+O'Rourke partly turned his head and smiled
+upon her with conscious superiority. At this
+juncture a third actor appeared on the scene,
+evidently a friend of Mr. O'Rourke, for he
+addressed that gentleman as &quot;a spalpeen,&quot; and
+told him to go home.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Divil an inch,&quot; replied the spalpeen; but he
+got himself off the threshold, and resumed his
+position on the step.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's only Larry, mum,&quot; said the man,
+touching his forelock politely; &quot;as dacent a
+lad as ever lived, when he's not in liquor; an' I've
+known him to be sober for days togither,&quot;
+he added, reflectively. &quot;He don't mane a
+ha'p'orth o' harum, but jist now he's not quite
+in his right moind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should think not,&quot; said Mrs. Bilkins, turning
+from the speaker to Mr. O'Rourke, who had
+seated himself gravely on the scraper, and was
+weeping. &quot;Hasn't the man any friends?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Too many of 'em, mum, an' it's along wid
+dhrinkin' toasts wid 'em that Larry got throwed.
+The punch that spalpeen has dhrunk this day
+would amaze ye. He give us the slip awhiles
+ago, bad 'cess to him, an' come up here. Didn't
+I tell ye, Larry, not to be afther ringin' at
+the owle gintleman's knocker? Ain't ye got
+no sinse at all?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Misther Donnehugh,&quot; responded Mr.
+O'Rourke with great dignity, &quot;ye're dhrunk
+again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Donnehugh, who had not taken more
+than thirteen ladles of rum-punch, disdained to
+reply directly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He's a dacent lad enough&quot;&mdash;this to Mrs.
+Bilkins&mdash;&quot;but his head is wake. Whin he's
+had two sups o' whiskey he belaves he's dhrunk
+a bar'l full. A gill o' wather out of a jimmy-john'd
+fuddle him, mum.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Isn't there anybody to look after him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, mum, he's an orphan; his father and
+mother live in the owld counthry, an' a fine
+hale owld couple they are.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hasn't he any family in the town?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sure, mum, he has a family; wasn't he
+married this blessed mornin'?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He said so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Indade, thin, he was&mdash;the pore divil!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And the&mdash;the person?&quot; inquired Mrs.
+Bilkins.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it the wife, ye mane?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, the wife; where is she?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, thin, mum,&quot; said Mr. Donnehugh,
+&quot;it's yerself can answer that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I?&quot; exclaimed Mrs. Bilkins. &quot;Good heavens
+this man's as crazy as the other!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Begorra, if anybody's crazy, it's Larry, for
+it's Larry has married Margaret.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What Margaret?&quot; cried Mrs. Bilkins, with
+a start.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Margaret Callaghan, sure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Our</i> Margaret? Do you mean to say that
+Our Margaret has married that&mdash;that good-for-nothing,
+inebriated wretch!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's a civil tongue the owld lady has, any
+way,&quot; remarked Mr. O'Rourke, critically, from
+the scraper.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bilkins's voice during the latter part of
+the colloquy had been pitched in a high key;
+it rung through the hall and penetrated to the
+kitchen, where Margaret was thoughtfully wiping
+the breakfast things. She paused with a
+half-dried saucer in her hand, and listened. In
+a moment more she stood, with bloodless face
+and limp figure, leaning against the banister,
+behind Mrs. Bilkins.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it there ye are, me jew'l!&quot; cried Mr.
+O'Rourke, discovering her.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Bilkins wheeled upon Margaret.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Margaret Callaghan, <i>is</i> that thing your husband?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ye&mdash;yes, mum,&quot; faltered Mrs. O'Rourke,
+with a woful lack of spirit.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then take it away!&quot; cried Mrs. Bilkins.</p>
+
+<p>Margaret, with a slight flush on either cheek,
+glided past Mrs. Bilkins, and the heavy oak door
+closed with a bang, as the gates of Paradise
+must have closed of old upon Adam and Eve.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come!&quot; said Margaret, taking Mr. O'Rourke
+by the hand; and the two wandered forth upon
+their wedding journey down Anchor Street,
+with all the world before them where to choose.
+They chose to halt at the small, shabby tenement-house
+by the river, through the doorway
+of which the bridal pair disappeared with a reeling,
+eccentric gait; for Mr. O'Rourke's intoxication
+seemed to have run down his elbow, and
+communicated itself to Margaret.</p>
+
+<p>O Hymen! who burnest precious gums and
+scented woods in thy torch at the melting of
+aristocratic hearts, with what a pitiful penny-dip
+thou hast lighted up our little back-street
+romance.&mdash;<i>Marjorie Daw, and Other Stories</i>.</p>
+
+
+<p>END OF VOL. II.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Humorous Masterpieces from American
+Literature, by Various
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/15585.txt b/15585.txt
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+++ b/15585.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Humorous Masterpieces from American
+Literature, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Humorous Masterpieces from American Literature
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: April 8, 2005 [EBook #15585]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HUMOROUS MASTERPIECES FROM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alicia Williams, Josephine Paolucci and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+HUMOROUS MASTERPIECES
+
+FROM
+
+AMERICAN LITERATURE
+
+
+EDITED BY
+
+EDWARD T. MASON
+
+
+NEW YORK & LONDON
+
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+
+The Knickerbocker Press
+
+1886
+
+
+COPYRIGHT
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+1886
+
+
+Press of
+G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
+New York
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ BAYARD TAYLOR
+ Selections from the Experiences of the A.C.
+
+ WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER
+ Dobbs His Ferry
+
+ JOHN WILLIAM DE FOREST
+ Father Higgins's Preferment
+
+ JOHN TOWNSEND TROWBRIDGE
+ Fred Trover's Little Iron-Clad
+
+ OLIVER BELL BUNCE
+ Mr. Bluff Discourses on the Country and Kindred Themes
+
+ CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER
+ Garden Ethics
+
+ FRANCES LEE PRATT
+ Captain Ben's Choice
+
+ LOUISA MAY ALCOTT
+ Street Scenes in Washington
+ Selections from Transcendental Wild Oats
+
+ WILLIAM WIRT HOWE
+ Conversational Depravity
+
+ CHARLES FARRAR BROWNE ("_Artemus Ward_")
+ The Tower of London
+ Science and Natural History
+ From the "Lecture"
+
+ FRANK R. STOCKTON
+ Our Tavern
+ A Piece of Red Calico
+
+ HARRIETT PRESCOTT SPOFFORD
+ Aunt Pen's Funeral
+
+ SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS ("_Mark Twain_")
+ The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
+
+ FITZ HUGH LUDLOW
+ Ben Thirlwall's School-days
+ Selections from a Brace of Boys
+
+ THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH
+ A Rivermouth Romance
+
+
+
+
+BAYARD TAYLOR.
+
+(BORN, 1825--DIED, 1878)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SELECTIONS FROM THE EXPERIENCES OF THE A.C.
+
+
+"Bridgeport! Change cars for the Naugatuck Railroad!" shouted the
+conductor of the New York and Boston Express Train, on the evening of
+May 27, 1858.... Mr. Johnson, carpet-bag in hand, jumped upon the
+platform, entered the office, purchased a ticket for Waterbury, and was
+soon whirling in the Naugatuck train towards his destination.
+
+On reaching Waterbury, in the soft spring twilight, Mr. Johnson walked
+up and down in front of the station, curiously scanning the faces of the
+assembled crowd. Presently he noticed a gentleman who was performing the
+same operation upon the faces of the alighting passengers. Throwing
+himself directly in the way of the latter, the two exchanged a steady
+gaze.
+
+"Is your name Billings?" "Is your name Johnson?" were simultaneous
+questions, followed by the simultaneous exclamations,--"Ned!" "Enos!"
+
+Then there was a crushing grasp of hands, repeated after a pause, in
+testimony of ancient friendship, and Mr. Billings, returning to
+practical life asked:
+
+"Is that all your baggage? Come, I have a buggy here: Eunice has heard
+the whistle, and she'll be impatient to welcome you."
+
+The impatience of Eunice (Mrs. Billings, of course) was not of long
+duration; for in five minutes thereafter she stood at the door of her
+husband's chocolate-colored villa, receiving his friend....
+
+J. Edward Johnson was a tall, thin gentleman of forty-five.... A year
+before, some letters, signed "Foster, Kirkup, & Co., per Enos Billings,"
+had accidentally revealed to him the whereabouts of the old friend of
+his youth with whom we now find him domiciled....
+
+"Enos," said he, as he stretched out his hand for the third cup of tea
+(which he had taken only for the purpose of prolonging the pleasant
+table-chat), "I wonder which of us is most changed."
+
+"You, of course," said Mr. Billings, "with your brown face and big
+moustache. Your own brother wouldn't have known you, if he had seen you
+last, as I did, with smooth cheeks and hair of unmerciful length. Why,
+not even your voice is the same!"
+
+"That is easily accounted for," replied Mr. Johnson. "But in your case,
+Enos, I am puzzled to find where the difference lies. Your features seem
+to be but little changed, now that I can examine them at leisure; yet it
+is not the same face. But really, I never looked at you for so long a
+time, in those days. I beg pardon; you used to be so--so remarkably
+shy."
+
+Mr. Billings blushed slightly, and seemed at a loss what to answer. His
+wife, however, burst into a merry laugh, exclaiming:
+
+"Oh, that was before the days of the A.C.!"
+
+He, catching the infection, laughed also; in fact, Mr. Johnson laughed,
+but without knowing why.
+
+"The 'A.C.'!" said Mr. Billings. "Bless me, Eunice! how long it is since
+we have talked of that summer! I had almost forgotten that there ever
+was an A.C.... Well, the A.C. culminated in '45. You remember something
+of the society of Norridgeport, the last winter you were there? Abel
+Mallory, for instance?"
+
+"Let me think a moment," said Mr. Johnson, reflectively. "Really, it
+seems like looking back a hundred years. Mallory,--wasn't that the
+sentimental young man, with wispy hair, a tallowy skin, and big, sweaty
+hands, who used to be spouting Carlyle on the 'reading evenings' at
+Shelldrake's? Yes, to be sure; and there was Hollins, with his clerical
+face and infidel talk,--and Pauline Ringtop, who used to say, 'The
+Beautiful is the Good.' I can still hear her shrill voice singing,
+'Would that _I_ were beautiful, would that _I_ were fair!'"
+
+There was a hearty chorus of laughter at poor Miss Ringtop's expense. It
+harmed no one, however; for the tar-weed was already thick over her
+Californian grave.
+
+"Oh, I see," said Mr. Billings, "you still remember the absurdities of
+those days. In fact, I think you partially saw through them then. But I
+was younger, and far from being so clearheaded, and I looked upon those
+evenings at Shelldrake's as being equal, at least, to the _symposia_ of
+Plato. Something in Mallory always repelled me. I detested the sight of
+his thick nose, with the flaring nostrils, and his coarse, half-formed
+lips, of the bluish color of raw corned-beef. But I looked upon these
+feelings as unreasonable prejudices, and strove to conquer them, seeing
+the admiration which he received from others. He was an oracle on the
+subject of 'Nature.' Having eaten nothing for two years, except Graham
+bread, vegetables without salt, and fruits, fresh or dried, he
+considered himself to have attained an antediluvian purity of
+health,--or that he would attain it, so soon as two pimples on his left
+temple should have healed. These pimples he looked upon as the last
+feeble stand made by the pernicious juices left from the meat he had
+formerly eaten and the coffee he had drunk. His theory was, that through
+a body so purged and purified none but true and natural impulses could
+find access to the soul. Such, indeed, was the theory we all held....
+
+"Shelldrake was a man of more pretence than real cultivation, as I
+afterwards discovered. He was in good circumstances, and always glad to
+receive us at his house, as this made him virtually the chief of our
+tribe, and the outlay for refreshments involved only the apples from his
+own orchard, and water from his well....
+
+"Well, 't was in the early part of '45,--I think in April,--when we
+were all gathered together, discussing, as usual, the possibility of
+leading a life in accordance with Nature. Abel Mallory was there, and
+Hollins, and Miss Ringtop, and Faith Levis, with her knitting,--and also
+Eunice Hazleton, a lady whom you have never seen, but you may take my
+wife as her representative....
+
+"I wish I could recollect some of the speeches made on that occasion.
+Abel had but one pimple on his temple (there was a purple spot where the
+other had been), and was estimating that in two or three months more he
+would be a true, unspoiled man. His complexion, nevertheless, was more
+clammy and whey-like than ever.
+
+"'Yes,' said he, 'I also am an Arcadian! This false dual existence which
+I have been leading will soon be merged in the unity of Nature. Our
+lives must conform to her sacred law. Why can't we strip off these
+hollow Shams,' (he made great use of that word,) 'and be our true
+selves, pure, perfect, and divine?' ...
+
+"Shelldrake, however, turning to his wife, said,--
+
+"'Elviry, how many up-stairs rooms is there in that house down on the
+Sound?'
+
+"'Four,--besides three small ones under the roof. Why, what made you
+think of that, Jesse?' said she.
+
+"'I've got an idea, while Abel's been talking,' he answered. 'We've
+taken a house for the summer, down the other side of Bridgeport, right
+on the water, where there's good fishing and a fine view of the Sound.
+Now, there's room enough for all of us,--at least, all that can make it
+suit to go. Abel, you and Enos, and Pauline and Eunice might fix matters
+so that we could all take the place in partnership, and pass the summer
+together, living a true and beautiful life in the bosom of Nature. There
+we shall be perfectly free and untrammelled by the chains which still
+hang around us in Norridgeport. You know how often we have wanted to be
+set on some island in the Pacific Ocean, where we could build up a true
+society, right from the start. Now, here's a chance to try the
+experiment for a few months, anyhow.'
+
+"Eunice clapped her hands (yes, you did!) and cried out,--
+
+"'Splendid! Arcadian! I'll give up my school for the summer.' ...
+
+"Abel Mallory, of course, did not need to have the proposal repeated.
+He was ready for any thing which promised indolence, and the indulgence
+of his sentimental tastes. I will do the fellow the justice to say that
+he was not a hypocrite. He firmly believed both in himself and his
+ideas,--especially the former. He pushed both hands through the long
+wisps of his drab-colored hair, and threw his head back until his wide
+nostrils resembled a double door to his brain.
+
+"'O Nature!' he said, 'you have found your lost children! We shall obey
+your neglected laws! we shall hearken to your divine whispers! we shall
+bring you back from your ignominious exile, and place you on your
+ancestral throne!' ...
+
+"The company was finally arranged to consist of the Shelldrakes,
+Hollins, Mallory, Eunice, Miss Ringtop, and myself. We did not give much
+thought, either to the preparations in advance, or to our mode of life
+when settled there. We were to live near to Nature: that was the main
+thing.
+
+"'What shall we call the place?" asked Eunice.
+
+"'Arcadia!' said Abel Mallory, rolling up his large green eyes.
+
+"'Then,' said Hollins, 'let us constitute ourselves the Arcadian
+Club!'"
+
+--"Aha!" interrupted Mr. Johnson, "I see! The A.C.!"
+
+"Yes, you see the A.C. now, but to understand it fully, you should have
+had a share in those Arcadian experiences.... It was a lovely afternoon
+in June when we first approached Arcadia.... Perkins Brown, Shelldrake's
+boy-of-all-work, awaited us at the door. He had been sent on two or
+three days in advance, to take charge of the house, and seemed to have
+had enough of hermit-life, for he hailed us with a wild whoop, throwing
+his straw hat half-way up one of the poplars. Perkins was a boy of
+fifteen, the child of poor parents, who were satisfied to get him off
+their hands, regardless as to what humanitarian theories might be tested
+upon him. As the Arcadian Club recognized no such thing as caste, he was
+always admitted to our meetings, and understood just enough of our
+conversation to excite a silly ambition in his slow mind....
+
+"Our board, that evening, was really tempting. The absence of meat was
+compensated to us by the crisp and racy onions, and I craved only a
+little salt, which had been interdicted, as a most pernicious substance.
+I sat at one corner of the table, beside Perkins Brown, who took an
+opportunity, while the others were engaged in conversation, to jog my
+elbow gently. As I turned towards him, he said nothing, but dropped his
+eyes significantly. The little rascal had the lid of a blacking-box,
+filled with salt, upon his knee, and was privately seasoning his onions
+and radishes. I blushed at the thought of my hypocrisy, but the onions
+were so much better that I couldn't help dipping into the lid with him.
+
+"'Oh,' said Eunice, 'we must send for some oil and vinegar! This lettuce
+is very nice.'
+
+"'Oil and vinegar?' exclaimed Abel.
+
+"'Why, yes,' said she, innocently: 'they are both vegetable substances.'
+
+"Abel at first looked rather foolish, but quickly recovering herself,
+said,--
+
+"'All vegetable substances are not proper for food: you would not taste
+the poison-oak, or sit under the upas-tree of Java.'
+
+"'Well, Abel,' Eunice rejoined, 'how are we to distinguish what is best
+for us? How are we to know _what_ vegetables to choose, or what animal
+and mineral substances to avoid?'
+
+"'I will tell you,' he answered, with a lofty air. 'See here!' pointing
+to his temple, where the second pimple--either from the change of air,
+or because, in the excitement of the last few days, he had forgotten
+it--was actually healed. 'My blood is at last pure. The struggle between
+the natural and the unnatural is over, and I am beyond the depraved
+influences of my former taste. My instincts are now, therefore, entirely
+pure also. What is good for man to eat, that I shall have a natural
+desire to eat: what is bad will be naturally repelled. How does the cow
+distinguish between the wholesome and the poisonous herbs of the meadow?
+And is man less than a cow, that he cannot cultivate his instincts to an
+equal point? Let me walk through the woods and I can tell you every
+berry and root which God designed for food, though I know not its name,
+and have never seen it before. I shall make use of my time, during our
+sojourn here, to test, by my purified instinct, every substance, animal,
+mineral, and vegetable, upon which the human race subsists, and to
+create a catalogue of the True Food of Man!' ...
+
+"Our lazy life during the hot weather had become a little monotonous.
+The Arcadian plan had worked tolerably well, on the whole, for there
+was very little for any one to do,--Mrs. Shelldrake and Perkins Brown
+excepted. Our conversation, however, lacked spirit and variety. We were,
+perhaps unconsciously, a little tired of hearing and assenting to the
+same sentiments. But, one evening, about this time, Hollins struck upon
+a variation, the consequences of which he little foresaw. We had been
+reading one of Bulwer's works, (the weather was too hot for Psychology,)
+and came upon this paragraph, or something like it:--
+
+"'Ah, Behind the Veil! We see the summer smile of the Earth,--enamelled
+meadow and limpid stream,--but what hides she in her sunless heart?
+Caverns of serpents, or grottoes of priceless gems? Youth, whose soul
+sits on thy countenance, thyself wearing no mask, strive not to lift the
+masks of others! Be content with what thou seest; and wait until Time
+and Experience shall teach thee to find jealousy behind the sweet smile,
+and hatred under the honeyed word!'
+
+"This seemed to us a dark and bitter reflection but one or another of us
+recalled some illustration of human hypocrisy, and the evidences, by the
+simple fact of repetition, gradually led to a division of
+opinion,--Rollins, Shelldrake, and Miss Ringtop on the dark side, and
+the rest of us on the bright. The last, however, contented herself with
+quoting from her favorite poet Gamaliel J. Gawthrop:--
+
+ "'I look beyond thy brow's concealment!
+ I see thy spirit's dark revealment!
+ Thy inner self betrayed I see:
+ Thy coward, craven, shivering ME!'
+
+"'We think we know one another,' exclaimed Rollins; 'but do we? We see
+the faults of others, their weaknesses, their disagreeable qualities,
+and we keep silent. How much we should gain, were candor as universal as
+concealment Then each one, seeing himself as others see him, would truly
+know himself. How much misunderstanding might be avoided, how much
+hidden shame be removed, hopeless because unspoken love made glad,
+honest admiration cheer its object, uttered sympathy mitigate
+misfortune,--in short, how much brighter and happier the world would
+become, if each one expressed, everywhere and at all times, his true and
+entire feeling! Why, even Evil would lose half its power!'
+
+"There seemed to be so much practical wisdom in these views that we were
+all dazzled and half-convinced at the start. So, when Hollins, turning
+towards me, as he continued, exclaimed,--'Come, why should not this
+candor be adopted in our Arcadia? Will any one--will you, Enos--commence
+at once by telling me now--to my face--my principal faults?' I answered,
+after a moment's reflection,--'You have a great deal of intellectual
+arrogance, and you are, physically, very indolent.'
+
+"He did not flinch from the self-invited test, though he looked a little
+surprised.
+
+"'Well put,' said he, 'though I do not say that you are entirely
+correct. Now, what are my merits?'
+
+"'You are clear-sighted,' I answered, 'an earnest seeker after truth,
+and courageous in the avowal of your thoughts.'
+
+"This restored the balance, and we soon began to confess our own private
+faults and weaknesses. Though the confessions did not go very deep,--no
+one betraying any thing we did not all know already,--yet they were
+sufficient to strengthen Hollins in his new idea, and it was unanimously
+resolved that Candor should thenceforth be the main charm of our
+Arcadian life....
+
+"The next day, Abel, who had resumed his researches after the True
+Food, came home to supper with a healthier color than I had before seen
+on his face.
+
+"'Do you know,' said he, looking shyly at Hollins, 'that I begin to
+think Beer must be a natural beverage? There was an auction in the
+village to-day, as I passed through, and I stopped at a cake-stand to
+get a glass of water, as it was very hot. There was no water,--only
+beer: so I thought I would try a glass, simply as an experiment. Really,
+the flavor was very agreeable. And it occurred to me, on the way home,
+that all the elements contained in beer are vegetable. Besides,
+fermentation is a natural process. I think the question has never been
+properly tested before.'
+
+"'But the alcohol!' exclaimed Hollins.
+
+"'I could not distinguish any, either by taste or smell. I know that
+chemical analysis is said to show it; but may not the alcohol be
+created, somehow, during the analysis?'
+
+"'Abel,' said Hollins, in a fresh burst of candor, 'you will never be a
+Reformer, until you possess some of the commonest elements of
+knowledge.'
+
+"The rest of us were much diverted: it was a pleasant relief to our
+monotonous amiability.
+
+"Abel, however, had a stubborn streak in his character. The next day he
+sent Perkins Brown to Bridgeport for a dozen bottles of 'Beer.' Perkins,
+either intentionally or by mistake, (I always suspected the former,)
+brought pint-bottles of Scotch ale, which he placed in the coolest part
+of the cellar. The evening happened to be exceedingly hot and sultry;
+and, as we were all fanning ourselves and talking languidly, Abel
+bethought him of his beer. In his thirst, he drank the contents of the
+first bottle, almost at a single draught.
+
+"'The effect of beer,' said he, 'depends, I think, on the commixture of
+the nourishing principle of the grain with the cooling properties of the
+water. Perhaps, hereafter, a liquid food of the same character may be
+invented, which shall save us from mastication and all the diseases of
+the teeth.'
+
+"Hollins and Shelldrake, at his invitation, divided a bottle between
+them, and he took a second. The potent beverage was not long in acting
+on a brain so unaccustomed to its influence. He grew unusually talkative
+and sentimental, in a few minutes.
+
+"'Oh, sing, somebody!' he sighed in hoarse rapture: 'the night was made
+for Song.'
+
+"Miss Ringtop, nothing loath, immediately commenced, 'When stars are in
+the quiet skies'; but scarcely had she finished the first verse before
+Abel interrupted her.
+
+"'Candor's the order of the day, isn't it?' he asked.
+
+"'Yes!' 'Yes!' two or three answered.
+
+"'Well, then,' said he, 'candidly, Pauline, you've got the darn'dest
+squeaky voice'--
+
+"Miss Ringtop gave a faint little scream of horror.
+
+"'Oh, never mind!' he continued. 'We act according to impulse, don't we?
+And I've the impulse to swear; and it's right. Let Nature have her way.
+Listen! Damn, damn, damn, damn! I never knew it was so easy. Why,
+there's a pleasure in it! Try it, Pauline! try it on me!'
+
+"'Oh-ooh!' was all Miss Ringtop could utter.
+
+"'Abel! Abel!' exclaimed Hollins, 'the beer has got into your head.'
+
+"'No, it isn't Beer,--it's Candor!' said Abel. 'It's your own proposal,
+Hollins. Suppose it's evil to swear: isn't it better I should express
+it, and be done with it, than keep it bottled up, to ferment in my
+mind? Oh, you're a precious, consistent old humbug, _you_ are!'
+
+"And therewith he jumped off the stoop, and went dancing awkwardly down
+towards the water, singing in a most unmelodious voice, ''Tis home
+where'er the heart is.' ...
+
+"We had an unusually silent breakfast the next morning. Abel scarcely
+spoke, which the others attributed to a natural feeling of shame, after
+his display of the previous evening. Hollins and Shelldrake discussed
+Temperance, with a special view to his edification, and Miss Ringtop
+favored us with several quotations about 'the maddening bowl,'--but he
+paid no attention to them....
+
+"The forenoon was overcast, with frequent showers. Each one occupied his
+or her room until dinner-time, when we met again with something of the
+old geniality. There was an evident effort to restore our former flow of
+good feeling. Abel's experience with the beer was freely discussed. He
+insisted strongly that he had not been laboring under its effects, and
+proposed a mutual test. He, Shelldrake, and Hollins were to drink it in
+equal measures, and compare observations as to their physical
+sensations. The others agreed,--quite willingly, I thought,--but I
+refused....
+
+"There was a sound of loud voices, as we approached the stoop. Hollins,
+Shelldrake and his wife, and Abel Mallory were sitting together near the
+door. Perkins Brown, as usual, was crouched on the lowest step, with one
+leg over the other, and rubbing the top of his boot with a vigor which
+betrayed to me some secret mirth. He looked up at me from under his
+straw hat with the grin of a malicious Puck, glanced towards the group,
+and made a curious gesture with his thumb. There were several empty pint
+bottles on the stoop.
+
+"'Now, are you sure you can bear the test?' we heard Hollins ask, as we
+approached.
+
+"'Bear it? Why, to be sure!' replied Shelldrake 'if I couldn't bear it,
+or if _you_ couldn't, your theory's done for. Try! I can stand it as
+long as you can.'
+
+"'Well, then,' said Hollins, 'I think you are a very ordinary man. I
+derive no intellectual benefit from my intercourse with you, but your
+house is convenient to me. I'm under no obligations for your
+hospitality, however, because my company is an advantage to you. Indeed,
+if I were treated according to my deserts, you couldn't do enough for
+me.'
+
+"Mrs. Shelldrake was up in arms.
+
+"'Indeed,' she exclaimed, 'I think you get as good as you deserve, and
+more too.'
+
+"Elvira,' said he, with a benevolent condescension, 'I have no doubt you
+think so, for your mind belongs to the lowest and most material sphere.
+You have your place in Nature, and you fill it; but it is not for you to
+judge of intelligences which move only on the upper planes.'
+
+"'Hollins,' said Shelldrake, 'Elviry's a good wife and a sensible woman,
+and I won't allow you to turn up your nose at her.'
+
+"'I am not surprised,' he answered, 'that you should fail to stand the
+test. I didn't expect it.'
+
+"'Let me try it on _you_!' cried Shelldrake. 'You, now, have some
+intellect,--I don't deny that,--but not so much, by a long shot, as you
+think you have. Besides that, you're awfully selfish in your opinions.
+You won't admit that anybody can be right who differs from you. You've
+sponged on me for a long time; but I suppose I've learned something from
+you, so we'll call it even. I think, however, that what you call acting
+according to impulse is simply an excuse to cover your own laziness.'
+
+"'Gosh! that's it!' interrupted Perkins, jumping up; then, recollecting
+himself, he sank down on the steps again, and shook with a suppressed
+'Ho! ho! ho!'
+
+"Hollins, however, drew himself up with an exasperated air.
+
+"'Shelldrake,' said he, 'I pity you. I always knew your ignorance, but I
+thought you honest in your human character. I never suspected you of
+envy and malice. However, the true Reformer must expect to be
+misunderstood and misrepresented by meaner minds. That love which I bear
+to all creatures teaches me to forgive you. Without such love, all plans
+of progress must fail. Is it not so, Abel?'"
+
+"Shelldrake could only ejaculate the words, 'Pity!' 'Forgive!' in his
+most contemptuous tone; while Mrs. Shelldrake, rocking violently in her
+chair, gave utterance to that peculiar clucking '_ts, ts, ts, ts_,'
+whereby certain women express emotions too deep for words.
+
+"Abel, roused by Hollins' question, answered, with a sudden energy,--
+
+"Love! there is no love in the world. Where will you find it? Tell me,
+and I'll go there. Love! I'd like to see it! If all human hearts were
+like mine, we might have an Arcadia; but most men have no hearts. The
+world is a miserable, hollow, deceitful shell of vanity and hypocrisy.
+No: let us give up. We were born before our time: this age is not worthy
+of us.'
+
+"Hollins stared at the speaker in utter amazement. Shelldrake gave a
+long whistle, and finally gasped out,--
+
+"'Well, what next?'
+
+"None of us were prepared for such a sudden and complete wreck of our
+Arcadian scheme. The foundations had been sapped before, it is true; but
+we had not perceived it; and now, in two short days, the whole edifice
+tumbled about our ears. Though it was inevitable, we felt a shock of
+sorrow, and a silence fell upon us. Only that scamp of a Perkins Brown,
+chuckling and rubbing his boot, really rejoiced. I could have kicked
+him.
+
+"We all went to bed, feeling that the charm of our Arcadian life was
+over.... In the first revulsion of feeling, I was perhaps unjust to my
+associates. I see now, more clearly, the causes of those vagaries, which
+originated in a genuine aspiration, and failed from an ignorance of the
+true nature of Man, quite as much as from the egotism of the
+individuals. Other attempts at reorganizing Society were made about the
+same time by men of culture and experience, but in the A.C. we had
+neither. Our leaders had caught a few half-truths, which, in their
+minds, were speedly warped into errors." ...--_The Atlantic Monthly_,
+February, 1862.
+
+
+
+
+WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER.
+
+(BORN, 1825.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DOBBS HIS FERRY.
+
+A Legend of the Lower Hudson.
+
+
+ The days were at their longest,
+ The heat was at its strongest,
+ When Brown, old friend and true,
+ Wrote thus: "Dear Jack, why swelter
+ In town when shade and shelter
+ Are waiting here for you?
+ Quit Bulls and Bears and gambling,
+ For rural sports and rambling
+ Forsake your Wall Street tricks;
+ Come without hesitation,
+ Check to Dobbs' Ferry Station,
+ We dine at half-past six."
+
+ I went,--a welcome hearty,
+ A merry country party,
+ A drive, and then croquet,
+ A quiet, well-cooked dinner,
+ Three times at billiards winner,--
+ The evening sped away;
+ When Brown, the dear old joker,
+ Cried, "Come, my worthy broker,
+ The hour is growing late;
+ Your room is cool and quiet,
+ As for the bed, just try it,
+ Breakfast at half-past eight."
+
+ I took Brown's hand, applauded
+ His generous care, and lauded
+ Dobbs' Ferry to the skies.
+ A shade came o'er his features,
+ "We should be happy creatures,
+ And this a paradise,
+ But, ah! the deep disgrace is,
+ This loveliest of places
+ A vulgar name should blight!
+ But, death to Dobbs! we'll change it,
+ If money can arrange it,
+ So, pleasant dreams; good night!"
+
+ I could not sleep, but, raising
+ The window, stood, moon-gazing,
+ In fairyland a guest;
+ "On such a night," _et cetera_--
+ See Shakespeare for much better a
+ Description of the rest,--
+ I mused, how sweet to wander
+ Beside the river, yonder;
+ And then the sudden whim
+ Seized my head to pillow
+ On Hudson's sparkling billow,
+ A midnight, moonlight swim!
+
+ Soon thought and soon attempted;
+ At once my room was emptied
+ Of its sole occupant;
+ The roof was low, and easily,
+ In fact, quite Japanese-ily,
+ I took the downward slant,
+ Then, without stay or stopping,
+ My first and last eaves-dropping,
+ By leader-pipe I sped,
+ And through the thicket gliding,
+ Down the steep hillside sliding,
+ Soon reached the river's bed.
+
+ But what was my amazement,--
+ The fair scene from the casement,
+ How changed! I could not guess
+ Where track or rails had vanished,
+ Town, villas, station, banished,--
+ All was a wilderness.
+ Only one ancient gable,
+ A low-roofed inn and stable,
+ A creaking sign displayed,
+ An antiquated wherry,
+ Below it--"DOBBS HIS FERRY"--
+ In the clear moonlight swayed.
+
+ I turned, and there the craft was,
+ Its shape 'twixt scow and raft was,
+ Square ends, low sides, and flat,
+ And standing close beside me,
+ An ancient chap who eyed me,
+ Beneath a steeple-hat;
+ Short legs--long pipe--style very
+ Pre-Revolutionary,--
+ I bow, he grimly bobs,
+ Then, with some perturbation,
+ By way of salutation,
+ Says I, "How are you, Dobbs!"
+
+ He grum and silent beckoned,
+ And I, in half a second,
+ Scarce knowing what I did,
+ Took the stern seat, Dobbs throwing
+ Himself 'midships, and rowing,
+ Swift through the stream we slid;
+ He pulled awhile, then stopping,
+ And both oars slowly dropping,
+ His pipe aside he laid,
+ Drew a long breath, and taking
+ An attitude, and shaking
+ His fist towards shore, thus said:--
+
+ "Of all sharp cuts the keenest,
+ Of all mean turns the meanest,
+ Vilest of all vile jobs,
+ Worse than the Cow-Boy pillagers,
+ Are these Dobbs' Ferry villagers
+ A going back on Dobbs!
+ 'Twould not be more anom'lous
+ If Rome went back on Rom'lus
+ (Old rum-un like myself),
+ Or Hail Columbia, played out
+ By Southern Dixie, laid out
+ Columbus on the shelf!
+
+ "They say 'Dobbs' ain't melodious,
+ It's 'horrid,' 'vulgar,' 'odious,'
+ In all their crops it sticks;
+ And then the worse addendum
+ Of 'Ferry' does offend 'em
+ More than its vile prefix.
+ Well, it does seem distressing,
+ But, if I'm good at guessing,
+ Each one of these same nobs,
+ If there was money in it,
+ Would ferry in a minute,
+ And change his name to Dobbs!
+
+ "That's it, they're not partic'lar,
+ Respecting the auric'lar,
+ At a stiff market rate;
+ But Dobbs' especial vice is,
+ That he keeps down the prices
+ Of all their real estate!
+ A name so unattractive
+ Keeps villa-sites inactive,
+ And spoils the broker's jobs;
+ They think that speculation
+ Would rage at 'Paulding's Station,'
+ Which stagnates now at 'Dobbs.'
+
+ "'Paulding's!"--that's sentimental!
+ An old Dutch Continental,
+ Bushwhacked up there a spell;
+ But why he should come blustering
+ Round here, and filibustering,
+ Is more than I can tell;
+ Sat playing for a wager,
+ And nabbed a British major.
+ Well, if the plans and charts
+ From Andre's boots he hauled out,
+ Is his name to be bawled out
+ Forever, round these parts?
+
+ "Guess not! His pay and bounty
+ And mon'ment from the county
+ Paid him off, every cent,
+ While this snug town and station,
+ To every generation,
+ Shall be Dobbs' monument;
+ Spite of all speculators
+ And ancient-landmark traitors,
+ Who, all along this shore,
+ Are ever substitutin'
+ The modern, highfalutin',
+ For the plain names of yore.
+
+ "Down there, on old Manhattan,
+ Where land-sharks breed and fatten,
+ They've wiped out Tubby Hook.
+ That famous promontory,
+ Renowned in song and story,
+ Which time nor tempest shook,
+ Whose name for aye had been good,
+ Stands newly christened 'Inwood,'
+ And branded with the shame
+ Of some old rogue who passes
+ By dint of aliases,
+ Afraid of his own name!
+
+ "See how they quite outrival,
+ Plain barnyard Spuytenduyvil,
+ By peacock Riverdale,
+ Which thinks all else it conquers,
+ And over homespun Yonkers
+ Spreads out its flaunting tail!
+ There's new-named Mount St. Vincent,
+ Where each dear little inn'cent
+ Is taught the Popish rites,--
+ Well, ain't it queer, wherever
+ These saints possess the river
+ They get the finest sites!
+
+ "They've named a place for Irving,
+ A trifle more deserving
+ Than your French, foreign saints,
+ But if he has such mention,
+ It's past my comprehension
+ Why Dobbs should cause complaints;
+ Wrote histories and such things,
+ About Old Knick and Dutch things,
+ Dolph Heyligers and Rips;
+ But no old antiquary
+ Like him could keep a ferry,
+ With all his authorships!
+
+ "By aid of these same showmen,
+ Some fanciful cognomen
+ Old Cro'nest stock might bring
+ As high as Butter Hill is,
+ Which, patronized by Willis,
+ Leaves cards now as 'Storm-King!'
+ Can't some poetic swell-beau
+ Re-christen old Crum Elbow
+ And each prosaic bluff,
+ Bold Breakneck gently flatter,
+ And Dunderberg bespatter,
+ With euphony and stuff!
+
+ "'T would be a _magnum opus_
+ To bury old Esopus
+ In Time's sepulchral vaults,
+ Or in Oblivion's deep sea
+ Submerge renowned Poughkeepsie,
+ And also ancient Paltz;
+ How it would give them rapture
+ Brave Stony Point to capture,
+ And make it face about;
+ Bid Rhinebeck sound much smoother
+ Than in the tongue of Luther,
+ And wipe the Catskills out!
+
+ "Well, DOBBS is DOBBS, and faster
+ Than pitch or mustard-plaster
+ Shall it stick hereabouts,
+ While Tappan Sea rolls yonder,
+ Or round High Torn the thunder
+ Along these ramparts shouts.
+ No corner-lot banditti,
+ Or brokers from the City--
+ Like you--" Here Dobbs began
+ Wildly both oars to brandish,
+ As fierce as old Miles Standish,
+ Or young Phil Sheridan.
+
+ Sternwards he rushed,--I, ducking,
+ Seized both his legs, and chucking
+ Dobbs sideways, splash he went,--
+ The wherry swayed, then righted,
+ While I, somewhat excited,
+ Over the water bent;
+ Three times he rose, but vainly
+ I clutched his form ungainly,
+ He sank, while sighs and sobs
+ Beneath the waves seemed muttered,
+ And all the night-winds uttered
+ In sad tones, "Dobbs! Dobbs! Dobbs!"
+
+ Just then some giant boulders
+ Upon my head and shoulders
+ Made sudden, fearful raids,
+ And on my face and forehead,
+ With din and uproar horrid,
+ Came several Palisades;
+ I screamed, and woke, in screaming,
+ To see, by gaslight's gleaming,
+ Brown's face above my bed;
+ "Why, Jack, what is the matter?
+ We heard a dreadful clatter
+ And found you on the shed!
+
+ "It's plain enough, supposing
+ You sat there, moon-struck, dozing,
+ Upon the window's edge,
+ Then lost yourself, and falling,
+ Just where we found you, sprawling,
+ Struck the piazza ledge;
+ A lucky hit, old fellow,
+ Of black and blue and yellow
+ It gives your face a touch,
+ You saved your neck, but barely;
+ To state the matter fairly,
+ You took a drop too much!"
+
+ I took the train next morning,
+ Some lumps my nose adorning,
+ My forehead, sundry knobs,
+ My ideas slightly wandering,
+ But, as I went, much pondering
+ Upon my night with Dobbs;
+ Brown thinks it, dear old sinner,
+ A case of "after dinner,"
+ And won't believe a word,
+ Talks of "hallucination,"
+ "Laws of association,"
+ And calls my tale "absurd."
+
+ Perhaps it is, but never,
+ Say I, should we dissever
+ Old places and old names;
+ Guard the old landmarks truly,
+ On the old altars duly
+ Keep bright the ancient flames.
+ For me the face of Nature,
+ No luckless nomenclature
+ Of grace or beauty robs;
+ No, when of town I weary,
+ I'll make a strike in Erie,
+ And buy a place at DOBBS!
+
+--_Poems._
+
+
+
+
+JOHN WILLIAM DE FOREST.
+
+(BORN, 1826.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FATHER HIGGINS'S PREFERMENT.
+
+
+Father Higgins was not the kind of divine who easily finds preferment in
+the Catholic Church, or who would be apt to make a shining mark in any
+other.
+
+Fat and red-faced and pudding-headed was Father Higgins; uncommonly in
+the way of good eating, and now and then disposed for good drinking; as
+lazy as he dared be, ignorant enough for a hermit, and simple enough for
+a monk. His chief excellence lay in his kindliness of heart, which would
+doubtless have made him very serviceable and comfortable to his
+fellow-men, had it not been for his indolence, his spare intellectual
+gifts, and perhaps a little leaven of selfishness.
+
+Such as he was, however, Father Higgins had no small "consate" of
+himself, and sometimes thought that even a bishopric would not be
+"beyant his desarts." He pleased himself with imagining how finely he
+would fill an episcopal chair, what apostolic labors he would accomplish
+in his diocese, what swarms of heretics or pagans he would convert, what
+a self-sacrificing and heroic life he would lead, and what a saintly
+name he would leave. One day, or to speak with a precision worthy of
+this true history, one evening, he became a bishop.
+
+It happened on this wise. Father Higgins had ventured to treat himself
+to a spectacle. He had attended, for the first time in his life, an
+exhibition of legerdemain; this one being given by that celebrated
+master of the black-art, Professor Heller. He had seen the professor
+change turnips into gold watches, draw a dozen live pigeons in
+succession out of an empty box, send rings into ladies' handkerchiefs at
+the other end of the hall, catch a bullet out of an exploded pistol in
+his hand, and perform other marvels equally irrational and disturbing.
+From this raree-show Father Higgins had gone home feeling that he had
+witnessed something about as unearthly as he was likely to be confronted
+with in the next world.
+
+For an hour or more he sat in his elbow-chair, puzzling over the
+professor's "diviltries," and crossing himself at the remembrance of
+each one of them. It was black midnight, and stormy at that; there was
+such an uproar in the elm branches over his house as if all the Salem
+witches were holding Sabbath there; the whole village of Sableburg
+swarmed with windy rushings and shriekings and slammings. It was one of
+those midnights when the devil evidently "has business on his hand."
+
+Of a sudden there was a rustle in the room, and looking around to
+discover the cause of it, Father Higgins beheld a tall and dark man with
+startling black eyes, in whom he recognized Professor Heller.
+
+"What's yer will, sir?" demanded the Father, a good deal astonished, but
+not a bit frightened.
+
+"I understand, sir, that you would like to be a bishop," replied the
+professor, bowing politely, but seating himself unceremoniously.
+
+"That's thrue enough, sir," replied Father Higgins, who somehow felt
+curiously at his ease, and disposed at once to be confidential with this
+utter stranger. "I've often imagined meself a bishop, an' doin' wondhers
+in me office. But it's nonsinse."
+
+"What post would suit you?" inquired the visitor. "The diocese of New
+York?"
+
+"No, no," said the father. "I'm not ayqual to sich a risponsebility;
+that is, not at wanst, ye ondherstand. I'd like best to come up to sich
+a place as that gintly an' by degrays. It's been a drame av mine to
+begin my prefarmint as biship av some far-away continent or archypilago,
+like, an' convart slathers av haythins an' cannebals for a practice. It
+ud plase me imagenation to prache among corrils an' coky-nuts an' naked
+crachurs. Y' are aware, I suppose, Misther Heller--or Professor
+Heller--av sich islands as Owyhee an' the Marquesas, famous a'ready in
+the history av the Propaganda Fide. Jist suppose me havin' me episkepal
+raysedence on wan av 'um, an' makin' me progresses to the others. There
+be great devoshin to a spiritual father among thim simple people, I'm
+thinkin.' I'd be a god to 'um, like. Sich obeyjince ud jist shuit me.
+Yes, I'd enj'y bein' Biship av the Cannebal Islands, or even av wan av
+um."
+
+"Faith is necessary," replied Heller. "You must believe that you are to
+be Bishop of the Cannibal Islands."
+
+"Sure an' it's not aisy at this distance to belave in the islands
+thimselves, let alone bein' spiritual father av the same," smiled the
+priest. "Howandiver, there's no harrum in tryin' to belave, an' so here
+goes for the exparimint. If ye'll kape silence a bit, I'll jist collect
+me moind on the subject, an' we'll see what happens."
+
+For a moment the gray, piggish eyes of the Father, and the black,
+gleaming, mysterious orbs of his visitor were fixed upon each other. In
+the next moment Heller, bowing with a ceremonious air of respect,
+inquired, "What are your commands, my lord bishop?"
+
+Startled by a consciousness of some wonderful change, doubtful in what
+land he was, or even in what age of the world, Father Higgins stared
+about him in expectation. A sunny shore, scattered groves of cocoa-nut
+trees, distant villages of circular huts, beyond them far-stretching
+forests and a smoking volcano; on the hither side bays alive with carved
+and painted canoes, near at hand a gathering crowd of half-naked
+savages--such were the objects that filled his vision.
+
+"So this is me diocese," he said, without feeling the least surprise.
+"Well, the climate is deloightful. Let us hope that the coky-nuts will
+agree wid us, an' that the natives won't urge upon us the blissins av
+martyrdom. Professor, what may be the spiritual condition av things
+hereaway, do ye think?"
+
+"A clear field--not a convert yet. Your predecessor, who went through
+the office of being eaten a year ago, had not even learned the
+language."
+
+"The blissid saints watch over us! To hear the likes av that, whin I
+expected to be a god, like, among these wretches! Well, it's our duty we
+must do, Heller; we mustn't run away from our post; indade, we can't.
+Moreover, I feel a sthrong confidence that the howly Catholic Church is
+to be greatly glorified by me on these islands. What do ye say now to
+meself exhibitin' the gift av miracles an' tongues? If I should
+discoorse to these cannebals in their own contimptible language, would
+it surprise ye, Heller?"
+
+"No," smiled the professor. "I have seen greater marvels in my time. I
+have seen men preach not merely words, but feelings and faiths, that
+they were ignorant of."
+
+Father Higgins, closely followed by Heller, now advanced to a green
+hillock, a few rods from the shelly and pebbly beach, knelt down upon
+the thin sward, and repeated a prayer. Meantime the population gathered;
+behind them canoe after canoe touched the shore; before them there was
+a swift, tumultuous hurrying from the villages; presently they were
+surrounded by a compact, eager, barbaric multitude. The babble of its
+wonder turned to silence as the priest rose, extended his fat hands, and
+commenced a sermon.
+
+Father Higgins was not a bit astonished at hearing himself pour forth a
+torrent of words which he did not understand, nor at seeing in the faces
+of his wild listeners that they perfectly comprehended his discourse. It
+was merely a supernatural inspiration; it was but another exhibition of
+the heavenly gifts of the Church; he was as much at his ease as if he
+had been in the habit of working miracles from his cradle. At the close
+of his harangue he took out his breviary, and translated a prayer into
+the unknown tongue. Evidently the auditors understood this also, for
+while some crouched to earth in undisguisable terror, others looked
+upward as if expecting an answer from the sky.
+
+Presently a savage, in a many-colored robe of feathers, stepped in front
+of the multitude, and uttered a few sentences.
+
+"It's a mighty quare providence that this miracle works ownly wan way,"
+observed Father Higgins to Heller. "It's meself can prache acceptably to
+this poor haythin, an' it's meself, loikewise, can't sense a blissid
+word he gabbles."
+
+"He is comparing you with your predecessor," exclaimed the professor.
+"He says the other man called himself a messenger from God; but as he
+could not talk Feejee, they saw that he was a liar, because God knows
+every language; and so, having found him a liar, they fattened him with
+fish and cocoa-nuts, and ate him. As for you, they admit that you are a
+heavenly personage, and they mean to worship you."
+
+"How came ye to larn the language, annyway?" demanded the priest.
+
+"I have wandered to and fro in the earth a good deal," replied Heller.
+"I have performed some of my best black-art in these islands."
+
+Father Higgins, rather bothered by these statements, was about to ask
+further questions, when he was seized by four sturdy natives, who
+mounted him upon their naked shoulders, while four others uplifted the
+professor in like manner, all then setting off rapidly toward the
+village, followed by the whole crowd in procession.
+
+"An' what if I should tell ye I had conscientious scruples agenst
+lettin' meself be adored for a heavenly personage?" objected the good
+Father.
+
+"Don't think of it," counselled Heller. "Being worshipped is infinitely
+more agreeable than being eaten. Besides, consider the interests of the
+Church. If you are set up as a god, you can use the position to sprinkle
+holy water on your adorers, and so convert the whole island without
+trouble."
+
+"Sure y' are mighty well varsed in the precepts and customs av the
+Jesuit Fathers," answered the priest, with a stare of wonder and
+admiration. "I moind me now that the missionaries in Chaynee baptized
+lashins av haythin babies under pretinse av rubbin' um with medicine.
+An' it's a maxim that whin the ind is salvatory, the manes are
+justified. It's a maxim, also, that y' ave no business to lead yer
+felly-crachurs into sin. Now cannebalism is a sin; it ud be a sin
+capital for these fellies to ate us; an', av coorse, it follies that it
+ud be a sin in me to timpt um to do it. But, by sufferin' meself to be
+worshipped I prevint that same. So, I advise an' counsel, Heller, that
+we go on as we are for a bit longer, until a proper time comes to
+expose the whole av the thrue faith."
+
+Beguiling the way with such like discourse, Father Higgins journeyed on
+to the nearest village, where his bearers halted before an unusually
+large hut, evidently serving as a temple. In the door of this building
+the principal chief took post, and waving his hand toward the crowd,
+made the following speech:
+
+"Hear, O chiefs! hear, O priests of our religion ye men of Feejee, hear!
+The god who can come over the waters is greater than the god who can
+only abide upon the land, and shall have his house and his sacrifices.
+Whosoever disapproves of this, let him offer himself for the trial of
+the sacred poison; if he is not ready so to do, let him hereafter hold
+his peace and submit."
+
+No one objecting, the chief beckoned the bearers to follow him, and led
+the way into the temple. Mounting a platform eight or ten feet high, he
+advanced to an ugly scarecrow of an idol, slapped it, kicked it, and
+toppled it to the ground. Then, with vast labor and much joyful
+shouting, the ponderous form of Father Higgins was hoisted aloft, and
+installed in the seat of the dethroned deity. Next Professor Heller was
+set down upon his feet beside an altar which stood in front of the
+platform.
+
+"What are ye afther doin', Heller?" inquired the clergyman from his
+eminence.
+
+"I am about to sacrifice to your divinity two green cocoa-nuts, two
+roasted bread-fruit, and half a dozen fishes," was the answer.
+
+"Well, I suppose it must be permitted," sighed Father Higgins. "Go on
+wid yer sacrifice, me dear felly. I presume, av coorse, that it will be
+in ordher for me to ate some av it. Let the fishes be well cooked,
+by-the-way, and sarved wid some kind av sauce. I'd almost as lave be
+devoured meself as devour raw fishes."
+
+"Really, I have some scruples," smiled the mischievous professor. "You
+might shock the devotional feelings of your new worshippers."
+
+"I insist upon it, Heller. I tell ye I won't ate raw fishes to convart a
+continent av haythins, much less a little bit island av 'um."
+
+The fish being promptly broiled on the coals of the altar, were handed
+up to Father Higgins on a large leaf, together with one of the
+cocoa-nuts and a bread-fruit. The worthy man immediately proceeded to
+make a hearty meal, vastly to the delight and confirmation in the faith
+of his worshippers, they having never before been blessed with a god
+who could fairly and squarely eat his dinner. After another brief speech
+from the chief, and a benediction from the padre, the multitude
+dispersed.
+
+"Is it me unavoidable duty to live on this perch, Heller?" demanded
+Father Higgins. "Me opinion is that in that case I shall get mightily
+tired av me mission. I'd about as lave be a parrot, an' sit in a tin
+ring."
+
+"My dear Father, remember that blessed saint who roosted for twenty
+years on the top of a pillar," urged the professor. "Stay where you are
+until you have got a firm grip on the faith of these cannibals."
+
+"Very good," assented Higgins, with a yawn. "But get me a bucket of
+wather, me dear felly. Sure I must have some blessed an' ready for use.
+The next time sarvice is conducted here I propose to sprinkle the
+worshippers. It'll benefit um in more ways nor wan, if I'm a judge of
+ayther sowl or body."
+
+Such was the installation of Bishop Higgins, or, as the Feejeeans
+insisted upon considering him, Divinity Higgins, over the diocese of the
+Pacific.
+
+There was something mysterious about the Cannibal Islands. Time flew
+like a bird there; the days seemed no more than minutes; they were
+coming, and they were gone. Events, emotions, changes of belief,
+transformations of character, succeeded each other with magical
+rapidity. Every thing was transacted at the wildest speed of dreams; and
+yet, what was strangest of all, every thing went smoothly and naturally;
+nothing excited astonishment. In a few days, or a few seconds, whatever
+the period of time might have been, Father Higgins enjoyed being
+Divinity Higgins.
+
+"I think it best for the eventual spiritual interests av me paple that
+they should continue to worship me for a while longer," he said to
+Heller. "Human nature in a savage state, ye see, wont go at wan jump
+from a log av wood to the thrue Deity. I'm playin' the part av a
+steppin'-stone betwixt the two. Afther they've larned to lift their
+sowls to Higgins, they'll be able to go a bit higher, say to the saints
+first, an' thin to the blissid Vargin, an' so on, wan step at a time,
+till they've got the whole av it. But it'll be mortial slow, I'm
+doubtin'. I may have to bear an' forbear as I am for an intire
+gineration av the poor crachurs."
+
+"Certainly," assented the professor. "Nothing so injurious to weak eyes
+as too much light."
+
+"Y' 'ave put it in a nutshell," replied the priest. "Sure an' that's
+the rason we're opposed to gineral schoolin', an' to readin' the Bible
+to the children. Y' are a masther mind, Heller, an' ought to been in
+howly ordhers. An' that brings me to another idee av high importince.
+There should be somebody to run about with howly wather an' exthrame
+unction, an' the like. Now that business wouldn't shuit me pheesical
+conformation, an' nayther would it shuit the character I have to bear.
+It's betther that you should do the outside trampin', Heller. Ye know
+the tradditions an' docthrines av the Church well enough, an' y' are a
+dab at Latin. As for yer not bein' av the prastely office, I'll jist lay
+hands on ye an' qualify ye for the same. If it happens to be a bit
+irregular, why, the ind justifies the manes, ye remimber, or the ancient
+Fathers are all wrong, which is onpossible. An' now, Heller, do tell
+these poor, benighted, lazy loons that I must have me coky-nuts fresh,
+an' as great a variety av fish as can be procured in these wathers. The
+chap that preshumes to bring me an owld coky-nut I'll curse his basket
+an' his shtore."
+
+After a brief missionary effort, Heller reported that the whole
+population of the island, barring a few obstinate seniors, had been
+baptized.
+
+"That's well, me son," replied Father Higgins. "I s'pose y' 'ave done it
+rather on the wholesale, sprinklin' a hundred or so at a fling, but I've
+no doubt y' 'ave done it the best ye could in the time y' 'ave had; and
+surely it's a great work, no matter how done. As for the apostates--I
+mane the fellows that stick to their owld haythinism--it might be well
+to make an example av a few av thim, jist for the encouragemint av the
+faithful. Suppose ye should organize an inquisition, or howly office,
+Heller, an' conduct the proceedin's yerself intirely, be way av seein'
+that they are regular an' effective? Y' are parfectly able for it, wid
+your knowledge av Church history."
+
+It was not long before Heller was able to state that all the old fogies
+and silver-grays who remained alive had been converted.
+
+"Ah, but isn't that blissid news!" responded Father Higgins, joyfully.
+"An' wouldn't me brethren, the other biships, be glad to hear that same
+concernin' their dioceses! That's betther nor coky-nuts--of which,
+be-the-way, I'm gettin' a bit tired. I wondher, Heller, if some av
+these other islands wouldn't furnish us a change of diet? If we could
+find pataties an' grapes, it ud be a blessin' to body an' sowl. Surely
+it ud be a good deed to bring all this archypilago into the thrue faith.
+Couldn't the chafe, now, take an army out in his doubled-barrelled
+canoes, an' commince the work av convarsion? Tell him if he'll do that
+same, I'll grant him all the indulgences he can think av."
+
+Another magical moment of these lightning-like days brought about
+important events. With an armament of scores of canoes and hundreds of
+warriors the chief invaded a large island, and was beaten in a bloody
+battle by its painim inhabitants, escaping with but a remnant of his
+followers. Then came a counter invasion. The worshippers of Father
+Higgins fought for their deity under his eye; the unbelievers were
+defeated and driven with great slaughter to their dug-outs. But as the
+hostile fleet still held command of the sea and hovered menacingly off
+the coast, keeping the faithful under arms and preventing them from
+fishing, the good Father decided that peace was necessary.
+
+"This livin' on coky-nuts and bread-fruits intirely is bad for the
+stomich, Heller," he observed. "We must come to an ondherstandin' wid
+these raskilly infidels an' idolaters. See if ye can't make tarms wid
+um."
+
+The adroit Heller soon arranged a secret treaty with the enemy to the
+following effect: Their chief, Umbaho, was to be universal king and his
+orthodox rival, Patoo-patoo, was to be beheaded; polygamy, cannibalism,
+and the use of the sacred poison were to continue in force; both islands
+were to adore Father Higgins and bring him sacrifices.
+
+"Seems to me they're mighty sevare tarms," commented the Father. "I'd 'a
+been glad to get howld av a bit av timporal sovereighnty, don't you see?
+Moreover, I'm sorry about that poor divil, Patoo-patoo; he was my first
+convart. Annyway, I'll give um full absolution, so that death can't hurt
+um sariously, an' I'll canonize him as a martyr. Saint Patoo-patoo! If
+that don't satisfy um, an' if he ain't willin' to die for the extinsion
+av the faith, he's no thrue belayver, and desarves no pity. So jist see
+to gettin' um off aisy."
+
+After another brief period of time, such as periods of time were in
+these mysterious islands, Father Higgins found himself the acknowledged
+divinity of the whole archipelago.
+
+"This cannebalism an' polygamy an' the like greatly distresses me,
+however," he confessed to Heller. "Be moments I'm timpted to unfold the
+naked truth, an' bring these paple square up to the canons of the Church
+at wanst. But it ud be risky. We read av times, ye know, Heller, that
+God winked at. No doubt it's me duty, as a divinity, to go on winkin' at
+these polygamies an' cannebalisms a bit longer. Slow an' aisy is me
+motto, an' I've noticed it's the way of Providence mostly. Sure it was
+so at home in Sableburg, ye know, Heller; we didn't average a convart in
+twinty years."
+
+Now ensued an event which troubled the holy Father more than any thing
+that had yet occurred during his episcopate. Two German priests, Heller
+informed him, had landed on one of the islands of the archipelago, and
+were preaching the pure doctrines of the Christian faith, denouncing
+cannibalism and polygamy, and otherwise sapping the established
+religion.
+
+"Some av the New Catholics, I'll warrant ye!" exclaimed Higgins,
+indignantly. "Some of thim blatherskites av the Doellinger school, come
+over here to stir up sedition in the Church, as though they hadn't made
+worry enough in the owld counthries. An' what business has Dutchmen
+here, annyway, whin an Irishman has begun the good worrk? They've no
+right to take the labor of convartin' these haythins out of me hands
+that a-way. Me conscience won't allow me to permit such distarbances an'
+innovations. See if ye can't get um to lave the islands peaceable,
+Heller. If they won't, I shall have to let Umbaho settle wid um afther
+his fashion."
+
+An embassy to the missionaries having obtained from them no other
+response than that they would welcome martyrdom rather than relinquish
+their labors, Umbaho was dispatched against them at the head of a
+sufficient army, with instructions to treat them as enemies of Feejee
+and of the unity of the Church.
+
+But instead of slaughtering the missionaries, Umbaho was converted by
+them. He renounced cannibalism, polygamy, and the sacred poison; he
+denied Father Higgins. Accompanied by one of the Germans, he returned to
+Feejee at the head of his army, bent on establishing the true Christian
+faith.
+
+"We must press a lot av min, an' beat um," responded the good Father,
+when Heller informed him of the approach and purposes of the chief.
+"Tell the faithful to give no quarter; tell um to desthroy ivery wan of
+these schismatics; an' as for the Dutchman, burrn him at the stake, as
+they used to do in the good owld times."
+
+A great battle ensued; the adherents of Higginsism were defeated and
+dispersed; the door of the temple opened to Umbaho and the German.
+Father Higgins, by this time a helpless mass of fat, swaying perilously
+on his unsteady platform, looked down upon them with terror through the
+smoke of his altar.
+
+"Sacrilegious wretch!" cried the German, God has put an end to thy mad
+and selfish and wicked dominion."
+
+"I wish I had niver been a biship!" screamed Father Higgins at the top
+of his voice, as he rolled off the platform.
+
+All the way from the Cannibal Islands he fell and tumbled and dropped,
+until, with a dull thump, he alighted upon the floor of his own study.
+
+"There! y' 'ave rolled out av yer chair agen, Father Higgins," said his
+housekeeper, who at that moment entered the room to order him to bed, as
+was her merciful custom.
+
+"So I have," returned the Father, picking himself up. "An' sarved me
+right, too. I thought I was the biggest raskil on the face av the earth.
+I wondher if it's true. The Lord presarve me from the timptation av
+great power, or I'll abuse it, an' abuse me felly-men and the
+Church!"--_Harper's Magazine_, May, 1872.
+
+
+
+
+JOHN TOWNSEND TROWBRIDGE.
+
+(BORN, 1827.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRED TROVER'S LITTLE IRON-CLAD.
+
+
+Did I never tell you the story? Is it possible? Draw up your chair.
+Stick of wood, Harry. Smoke?
+
+You've heard of my Uncle Popworth, though. Why, yes! You've seen
+him;--the eminently respectable elderly gentleman who came one day last
+summer just as you were going; book under his arm, you remember; weed on
+his hat; dry smile on bland countenance; tall, lank individual in very
+seedy black. With him my tale begins; for if I had never indulged in an
+Uncle Popworth I should never have sported an Iron-Clad.
+
+Quite right, sir; his arrival _was_ a surprise to me. To know how great
+a surprise, you must understand why I left city, friends, business, and
+settled down in this quiet village. It was chiefly, sir, to escape the
+fascinations of that worthy old gentleman that I bought this place, and
+took refuge here with my wife and little ones. Here we had respite,
+respite and nepenthe from our memories of Uncle Popworth; here we used
+to sit down in the evening and talk of the past with grateful and
+tranquil emotions, as people speak of awful things endured in days that
+are no more. To us the height of human happiness was raising green corn
+and strawberries, in a retired neighborhood where uncles were unknown.
+But, sir, when that Phantom, that Vampire, that Fate, loomed before my
+vision that day, if you had said, "Trover, I'll give ye sixpence for
+this neat little box of yours," I should have said, "Done!" with the
+trifling proviso that you should take my uncle in the bargain.
+
+The matter with him? What indeed could invest human flesh with such
+terrors,--what but this? he was--he is--let me shriek it in your ear--a
+bore--a BORE! of the most malignant type; an intolerable, terrible,
+unmitigated BORE!
+
+That book under his arm was a volume of his own sermons;--nine hundred
+and ninety-nine octavo pages, O Heaven! It wasn't enough for him to
+preach and re-preach those appalling discourses, but then the ruthless
+man must go and print 'em! When I consider what booksellers--worthy men,
+no doubt, many of them, deserving well of their kind--he must have
+talked nearly into a state of syncope before ever he found one to give
+way, in a moment of weakness, of utter exhaustion and despair, and
+consent to publish him; and when I reflect what numbers of inoffensive
+persons, in the quiet walks of life, have been made to suffer the
+infliction of that Bore's Own Book, I pause, I stand aghast at the
+inscrutability of Divine Providence.
+
+Don't think me profane, and don't for a moment imagine I underrate the
+function of the preacher. There's nothing better than a good
+sermon,--one that puts new life into you. But what of a sermon that
+takes life out of you? instead of a spiritual fountain, a spiritual
+sponge that absorbs your powers of body and soul, so that the longer you
+listen the more you are impoverished? A merely poor sermon isn't so bad;
+you will find, if you are the right kind of a hearer, that it will
+suggest something better than itself; a good hen will lay to a bit of
+earthen. But the discourse of your ministerial vampire, fastening by
+some mystical process upon the hearer who has life of his own,--though
+not every one has that,--sucks and sucks and sucks; and he is exhausted
+while the preacher is refreshed. So it happens that your born bore is
+never weary of his own boring; he thrives upon it; while he seems to be
+giving, he is mysteriously taking in--he is drinking your blood.
+
+But you say nobody is obliged to _read_ a sermon. O my unsophisticated
+friend! if a man will put his thoughts--or his words, if thoughts are
+lacking--between covers,--spread his banquet, and respectfully invite
+Public Taste to partake of it, Public Taste being free to decline, then
+your observation is sound. If an author quietly buries himself in his
+book,--very good! hic jacet; peace to his ashes!
+
+ "The times have been,
+ That, when the brains were out, the man would die,
+ And there an end; but now they rise again,"
+
+as Macbeth observes, with some confusion of syntax, excusable in a
+person of his circumstances. Now, suppose they--or he--the man whose
+brains are out--goes about with his coffin under his arm, like my worthy
+uncle? and suppose he blandly, politely, relentlessly insists upon
+reading to you, out of that octavo sarcophagus, passages which in his
+opinion prove that he is not only not dead, but immortal? If such a man
+be a stranger, snub him; if a casual acquaintance, met in an evil hour,
+there is still hope,--doors have locks, and there are two sides to a
+street, and nearsightedness is a blessing, and (as a last resort)
+buttons may be sacrificed (you remember Lamb's story of Coleridge), and
+left in the clutch of the fatal fingers. But one of your own kindred,
+and very respectable, adding the claim of misfortune to his other claims
+upon you,--pachydermatous to slights, smilingly persuasive, gently
+persistent,--as imperturbable as a ship's wooden figurehead through all
+the ups and downs of the voyage of life, and as insensible to cold
+water;--in short, an uncle like my uncle, whom there was no getting rid
+of;--what the deuce would you do?
+
+Exactly; run away as I did. There was nothing else to be done, unless,
+indeed, I had throttled the old gentleman; in which case I am confident
+that one of our modern model juries would have brought in the popular
+verdict of justifiable insanity. But, being a peaceable man, I was
+averse to extreme measures. So I did the next best thing,--consulted my
+wife, and retired to this village.
+
+Then consider the shock to my feelings when I looked up that day and saw
+the enemy of our peace stalking into our little Paradise with his book
+under his arm and his carpet-bag in his hand! coming with his sermons
+and his shirts, prepared to stay a week--that is to say a year--that is
+to say forever, if we would suffer him,--and how was he to be hindered
+by any desperate measures short of burning the house down!
+
+"My dear nephew!" says he, striding toward me with eager steps, as you
+perhaps remember, smiling his eternally dry, leathery smile,--"Nephew
+Frederick!"--and he held out both hands to me, book in one and bag in
+t'other,--"I am rejoiced! One would almost think you had tried to hide
+away from your old uncle! for I've been three days hunting you up. And
+how is Dolly? she ought to be glad to see me, after all the trouble I've
+had in finding you! And, Nephew Frederick!--h'm!--can you lend me three
+dollars for the hackman? for I don't happen to have--thank you! I should
+have been saved this if you had only known I was stopping last night at
+a public house in the next village, for I know how delighted you would
+have been to drive over and fetch me!"
+
+If you were not already out of hearing, you may have noticed that I made
+no reply to this affecting speech. The old gentleman has grown quite
+deaf of late years,--an infirmity which was once a source of untold
+misery to his friends, to whom he was constantly appealing for their
+opinions, which they were obliged to shout in his ear. But now, happily,
+the world has about ceased responding to him, and he has almost ceased
+to expect responses from the world. He just catches your eye, and, when
+he says, "Don't you think so, sir?" or, "What is your opinion, sir?" an
+approving nod does your business.
+
+The hackman paid, my dear uncle accompanied me to the house, unfolding
+the catalogue of his woes by the way. For he is one of those worthy,
+unoffending persons, whom an ungrateful world jostles and tramples
+upon,--whom unmerciful disaster follows fast and follows faster. In his
+younger days, he was settled over I don't know how many different
+parishes; but secret enmity pursued him everywhere, poisoning the
+parochial mind against him, and driving him relentlessly from place to
+place. Then he relapsed into agencies, and went through a long list of
+them, each terminating in flat failure, to his ever-recurring
+surprise,--the simple old soul never suspecting, to this day, who his
+one great, tireless, terrible enemy is!
+
+I got him into the library, and went to talk over this unexpected
+visit--or visitation--with Dolly. She bore up under it more cheerfully
+than could have been expected,--suppressed a sigh,--and said she would
+go down and meet him. She received him with a hospitable smile (I verily
+believe that more of the world's hypocrisy proceeds from too much
+good-nature than from too little), and listened patiently to his
+explanations.
+
+"You will observe that I have brought my bag," says he, "for I knew you
+wouldn't let me off for a day or two,--though I must positively leave in
+a week,--in two weeks, at the latest. I have brought my volume, too, for
+I am contemplating a new edition" (he is always contemplating a new
+edition, making that a pretext for lugging the book about with him),
+"and I wish to enjoy the advantages of your and Frederick's
+criticism;--I anticipate some good, comfortable, old-time talks over the
+old book, Frederick!"
+
+We had invited some village friends to come in and eat strawberries and
+cream with us that afternoon; and the question arose, what should be
+done with the old gentleman? Harry, who is a lad of a rather lively
+fancy, coming in while we were taking advantage of his great uncle's
+deafness to discuss the subject in his presence, proposed a pleasant
+expedient. "Trot him out into the cornfield, introduce him to the
+scarecrow, and let him talk to that," says he, grinning up into the
+visitor's face, who grinned down at him, no doubt thinking what a
+wonderfully charming boy he was! If he were as blind as he is deaf, he
+might have been disposed of very comfortably in some such ingenious
+way;--the scarecrow, or any other lay figure, might have served to
+engage him in one of his immortal monologues. As it was, the suggestion
+bore fruit later, as you will see.
+
+While we were consulting--keeping up our scattering fire of small-arms
+under the old talker's heavy guns--our parish minister called,--old
+Doctor Wortleby, for whom we have a great liking and respect. Of course
+we had to introduce him to Uncle Popworth,--for they met face to face;
+and of course Uncle Popworth fastened at once upon the brother
+clergyman. Being my guest, Wortleby could do no less than listen to
+Popworth, who is my uncle. He listened with interest and sympathy for
+the first half-hour; and then continued listening for another half-hour,
+after his interest and sympathy were exhausted. Then, attempting to go,
+he got his hat, and sat with it in his hand half an hour longer. Then he
+stood half an hour on his poor old gouty feet, desperately edging toward
+the door.
+
+"Ah, certainly," says he, with a weary smile, repeatedly endeavoring to
+break the spell that bound him. "I shall be most happy to hear the
+conclusion of your remarks at some future time" (even ministers can lie
+out of politeness); "but just now--"
+
+"One word more, and I am done," cries my Uncle Popworth, for the
+fiftieth time; and Wortleby, in despair, sat down again.
+
+Then our friends arrived.
+
+Dolly and I, who had all the while been benevolently wishing Wortleby
+would go, and trying to help him off, now selfishly hoped he would
+remain and share our entertainment--and our Uncle Popworth.
+
+"I ought to have gone two hours ago," he said, with a plaintive smile,
+in reply to our invitation; "but, really, I am feeling the need of a
+cup of tea" (and no wonder!) "and I think I will stay."
+
+We cruelly wished that he might continue to engage my uncle in
+conversation; but that would have been too much to hope from the sublime
+endurance of a martyr,--if ever there was one more patient than he.
+Seeing the Lintons and the Greggs arrive, he craftily awaited his
+opportunity, and slipped off, to give them a turn on the gridiron. First
+Linton was secured; and you should have seen him roll his mute,
+appealing orbs, as he settled helplessly down under the infliction.
+Suddenly he made a dash. "I am ignorant of these matters," said he; "but
+Gregg understands them;--Gregg will talk with you." But Gregg took
+refuge behind the ladies. The ladies receiving a hint from poor
+distressed Dolly, scattered. But no artifice availed against the
+dreadful man. Piazza, parlor, garden,--he ranged everywhere, and was
+sure to seize a victim.
+
+At last tea was ready, and we all went in. The Lintons and Greggs are
+people of the world, who would hardly have cared to wait for a blessing
+on such lovely heaps of strawberries and mugs of cream as they saw
+before them; but, there being two clergymen at the table, the ceremony
+was evidently expected. We were placidly seated; there was a hush,
+agreeably filled with the fragrance of the delicious fruit: even my
+uncle Popworth, from long habit, turned off his talk at that suggestive
+moment: when I did what I thought a shrewd thing. I knew too well my
+relative's long-windedness at his devotions, as at everything else (I
+wonder if Heaven itself isn't bored by such fellows!)--I had suffered, I
+had seen my guests suffer, too much from him already,--to think of
+deliberately yielding him a fearful advantage over us; so I coolly
+passed him by, and gave an expressive nod to the old Doctor.
+
+Wortleby began; and I was congratulating myself on my adroit management
+of a delicate matter, when--conceive my consternation!--Popworth--not to
+speak it profanely--followed suit! The reverend egotist couldn't take in
+the possibility of anybody but himself being invited to say grace at our
+table, he being present;--he hadn't noticed my nod to the Doctor, and
+the Doctor's low, earnest voice didn't reach him;--and there, with one
+blessing going on one side of the table, he, as I said, pitched in on
+the other! His eyes shut, his hands spread over his plate, his elbows on
+the board, his head bowed, he took care that grace should abound with us
+for once! His mill started, I knew there was no stopping it, and I hoped
+Wortleby would desist. But he didn't know his man. He seemed to feel
+that he had the stroke-oar, and he pulled away manfully. As Popworth
+lifted up his loud, nasal voice, the old Doctor raised his voice, in the
+vain hope, I suppose, of making himself heard by his lusty competitor.
+If you have never had two blessings running opposition at your table, in
+the presence of invited guests, you can never imagine how astounding,
+how killingly ludicrous it was! I felt that both Linton and Gregg were
+ready to tumble over, each in an apoplexy of suppressed emotions; while
+I had recourse to my handkerchief to hide my tears. At length, poor
+Wortleby yielded to fate,--withdrew from the unequal contest--hauled
+off--for repairs; and the old seventy-two gun-ship thundered away in
+triumph.
+
+At last (as there must be an end to everything under the sun) my uncle
+came to a close; and a moment of awful silence ensued, during which no
+man durst look at another. But in my weak and jelly-like condition I
+ventured a glance at him, and noticed that he looked up and around with
+an air of satisfaction at having performed a solemn duty in a becoming
+manner, blissfully unconscious of having run a poor brother off the
+track. Seeing us all with moist eyes and much affected,--two or three
+handkerchiefs still going,--he no doubt flattered himself that the
+pathetic touches in his prayer had told.
+
+This will give you some idea of the kind of man we had on our hands; and
+I won't risk making myself as great a bore as he is, by attempting a
+history of his stay with us; for I remember I set out to tell you about
+my little Iron-Clad. I'm coming to that.
+
+Suffice it to say, he stayed--he _stayed_--he STAYED!--five mortal
+weeks; refusing to take hints when they almost became kicks; driving our
+friends from us, and ourselves almost to distraction; his misfortunes
+alone protecting him from a prompt and vigorous elimination: when a
+happy chance helped me to a solution of this awful problem of destiny.
+
+More than once I had recalled Harry's vivacious suggestion of the
+scarecrow--if one could only have been invented that would sit
+composedly in a chair and nod when spoken to! I was wishing for some
+such automaton, to bear the brunt of the boring with which we were
+afflicted, when one day there came a little man into the garden, where I
+had taken refuge.
+
+He was a short, swarthy, foreign-looking, diminutive, stiff, rather
+comical fellow,--little figure mostly head, little head mostly face,
+little face mostly nose, which was by no means little--a sort of human
+vegetable (to my horticultural eye) running marvellously to seed in that
+organ. The first thing I saw, on looking up at the sound of footsteps,
+was the said nose coming toward me, among the sweet-corn tassels. Nose
+of a decidedly Hebraic cast,--the bearer respectably dressed, though his
+linen had an unwholesome sallowness, and his cloth a shiny,
+much-brushed, second-hand appearance.
+
+Without a word he walks up to me, bows solemnly, and pulls from his
+pocket (I thought he was laying his hand on his heart) the familiar,
+much-worn weapon of his class,--the folded, torn yellow paper, ready to
+fall to pieces as you open it,--in short, the respectable beggar's
+certificate of character. With another bow (which gave his nose the
+aspect of the beak of a bird of prey making a pick at me) he handed the
+document. I found that it was dated in Milwaukee, and signed by the
+mayor of that city, two physicians, three clergymen, and an editor, who
+bore united testimony to the fact that Jacob Menzel--I think that was
+his name--the bearer, any way,--was a deaf mute, and, considering that
+fact, a prodigy of learning, being master of no less than five different
+languages (a pathetic circumstance, considering that he was unable to
+speak one); moreover, that he was a converted Jew; and, furthermore, a
+native of Germany, who had come to this country in company with two
+brothers, both of whom had died of cholera in St. Louis in one day; in
+consequence of which affliction, and his recent conversion, he was now
+anxious to return to Fatherland, where he proposed to devote his life to
+the conversion of his brethren;--the upshot of all which was that good
+Christians and charitable souls everywhere were earnestly recommended to
+aid the said Jacob Menzel in his pious undertaking.
+
+I was fumbling in my pocket for a little change wherewith to dismiss
+him,--for that is usually the easiest way of getting off your premises
+and your conscience the applicant for "aid," who is probably an
+impostor, yet possibly not,--when my eye caught the words (for I still
+held the document), "would be glad of any employment which may help to
+pay his way." The idea of finding employment for a man of such a large
+nose and little body, such extensive knowledge and diminutive legs--who
+had mastered five languages yet could not speak or understand a word of
+any one of them,--struck me as rather pleasant, to say the least; yet,
+after a moment's reflection,--wasn't he the very thing I wanted, the
+manikin, the target for my uncle?
+
+Meanwhile he was scribbling rapidly on a small slate he had taken from
+his pocket. With another bow (as if he had written something wrong and
+was going to wipe it out with his nose), he handed me the slate, on
+which I found written in a neat hand half-a-dozen lines in as many
+different languages,--English, Latin, Hebrew, German, French,
+Greek,--each, as far as I could make out, conveying the cheerful
+information that he could communicate with me in that particular tongue.
+I tried him in English, French, and Latin, and I must acknowledge that
+he stood the test; he then tried me In Greek and Hebrew, and I as freely
+confess that I didn't stand the test. He smiled intelligently, nodded,
+and condescendingly returned to the English tongue, writing quickly,--"I
+am a poor exile from Fatherland, and I much need friends."
+
+I wrote: "You wish employment?" He replied: "I shall be much obliged for
+any service I shall be capable to do,"--and passed me the slate with a
+hopeful smile.
+
+"What can you do?" I asked. He answered: "I copy the manuscripts, I
+translate from the one language to others with some perfect exactitude,
+I arrange the libraries, I make the catalogues, I am capable to be any
+secretary." And he looked up as if he saw in my eyes a vast vista of
+catalogues, manuscripts, libraries, and Fatherland at the end of it.
+
+"How would you like to be companion to a literary man?" I inquired.
+
+He nodded expressively, and wrote: "I should that like overall. But I
+speak and hear not."
+
+"No matter," I replied. "You will only have to sit and appear to listen,
+and nod occasionally."
+
+"You shall be the gentleman?" he asked with a bright, pleased look.
+
+I explained to him that the gentleman was an unfortunate connection of
+my family, whom we could not regard as being quite in his right mind.
+
+Jacob Menzel smiled, and touched his fore head interrogatively.
+
+I nodded, adding on the slate,--"He is perfectly harmless; but he can
+only be kept quiet by having some person to talk and read to. He will
+talk and read to you. He must not know you are deaf. He is very deaf
+himself, and will not expect you to reply." And, for a person wishing a
+light and easy employment, I recommended the situation.
+
+He wrote at once, "How much you pay?"
+
+"One dollar a day, and board you," I replied.
+
+He of the nose nodded eagerly at that, and wrote, "Also you make to be
+washed my shirt?"
+
+I agreed; and the bargain was closed. I got him into the house, and gave
+him a bath, a clean shirt, and complete instructions how to act.
+
+The gravity with which he entered upon the situation was astonishing. He
+didn't seem to taste the slightest flavor of a joke in it all. It was a
+simple matter of business; he saw in it only money and Fatherland.
+
+Meanwhile I explained my intentions to Dolly, saying in great glee: "His
+deafness is his defence: the old three-decker may bang away at him; he
+is IRON-CLAD!" And that suggested the name we have called him by ever
+since.
+
+When he was ready for action, I took him in tow, and ran him in to draw
+the Popworth's fire--in other words, introduced him to my uncle in the
+library. The meeting of my tall, lank relative and the big-nosed little
+Jew was a spectacle to cure a hypochondriac! "Mr. Jacob
+Menzel--gentleman from Germany--travelling in this country," I yelled in
+the old fellow's ear. He of the diminutive legs and stupendous nose
+bowed with perfect decorum, and seated himself, stiff and erect, in the
+big chair I placed for him. The avuncular countenance lighted up: here
+were fresh woods and pastures new to that ancient shepherd. As for
+myself, I was wellnigh strangled by a cough which just then seized me,
+and obliged to retreat,--for I never was much of an actor, and the
+comedy of that first interview was overpowering.
+
+As I passed the dining-room door, Dolly, who was behind it, gave my arm
+a fearful pinch, that answered, I supposed, in the place of a scream, as
+a safety-valve for her hysterical emotions. "O you cruel man--you
+miserable humbug!" says she; and went off into convulsions of laughter.
+The door was open, and we could see and hear every thing.
+
+"You are travelling, h'm?" says my uncle. The nose nodded duly. "H'm! I
+have travelled, myself," the old gentleman proceeded; "my life has been
+one of vicissitudes, h'm! I have journeyed, I have preached, I have
+published;--perhaps you have heard of my literary venture"--and over
+went the big volume to the little man, who took it, turned the leaves,
+and nodded and smiled, according to instructions.
+
+"You are very kind to say so; thank you!" says my uncle, rubbing his
+husky hands with satisfaction. "Rejoiced to meet with you, truly! It is
+always a gratification to have an intelligent and sympathizing brother
+to open one's mind to; it is especially refreshing to me, for, as I may
+say without egotism, my life and labors have _not_ been appreciated."
+
+From that the old interminable story took its start and flowed on, the
+faithful nose nodding assent at every turn in that winding stream.
+
+The children came in for their share of the fun; and for the first time
+in our lives we took pleasure in the old gentleman's narration of his
+varied experiences.
+
+"O hear him! see him go it!" said Robbie. "What a nose!"
+
+"Long may it wave!" said Harry.
+
+With other remarks of a like genial nature; while there they sat, the
+two,--my uncle on one side, long, lathy, self-satisfied, gesticulating,
+earnestly laying his case before a grave jury of one, whom he was bound
+to convince, if time would allow; my little Jew facing him, upright in
+his chair, stiff, imperturbable, devoted to business, honorably earning
+his money, the nose in the air, immovable, except when it played duly up
+and down at fitting intervals: in which edifying employment I left them,
+and went about my business, a cheerier man.
+
+Ah, what a relief it was to feel myself free for a season from the
+attacks of the enemy--to know that my plucky little Iron-Clad was
+engaging him! In a hour I passed through the hall again, heard the loud
+blatant voice still discoursing (it had got as far as the difficulties
+with the second parish), and saw the unflinching nasal organ perform its
+graceful see-saw of assent. An hour later it was the same,--except that
+the speaker had arrived at the persecutions which drove him from parish
+number three. When I went to call them to dinner, the scene had changed
+a little, for now the old gentleman, pounding the table for a pulpit,
+was reading aloud passages from a powerful farewell sermon preached to
+his ungrateful parishioners. I was sorry I couldn't give my man a hint
+to use his handkerchief at the affecting periods, for the nose can
+hardly be called a sympathetic feature (unless indeed you blow it), and
+these nods were becoming rather too mechanical, except when the old
+gentleman switched off on the argumentative track, as he frequently did.
+"What think you of that?" he would pause in his reading to inquire.
+"Isn't that logic? isn't that unanswerable?" In responding to which
+appeals nobody could have done better than my serious, my devoted, my
+lovely little Jew.
+
+"Dinner!" I shouted over my uncle's dickey. It was almost the only word
+that had the magic in it to rouse him from the feast of reason which his
+own conversation was to him. It was always easy to head him toward the
+dining-room--to steer him into port for necessary supplies. The little
+Iron-Clad followed in his wake. At table, the old gentleman resumed the
+account of his dealings with parish number three, and got on as far as
+negotiations with number four; occasionally stopping to eat his soup or
+roast-beef very fast; at which time Jacob Menzel, who was very much
+absorbed in his dinner, but never permitted himself to neglect business
+for pleasure, paused at the proper intervals, with his spoon or fork
+half-way to his mouth, and nodded,--just as if my uncle had been
+speaking,--yielding assent to his last remarks after mature
+consideration, no doubt the old gentleman thought.
+
+The fun of the thing wore off after a while, and then we experienced
+the solid advantages of having an Iron-Clad in the house;
+Afternoon--evening--the next day--my little man of business performed
+his function promptly and assiduously. But in the afternoon of the
+second day he began to change perceptibly. He wore an aspect of languor
+and melancholy that alarmed me. The next morning he was pale, and went
+to his work with an air of sorrowful resignation.
+
+"He is thinking of Fatherland," said the sympathizing Dolly; while
+Harry's less refined but more sprightly comment was, that the nose had
+about played out.
+
+Indeed it had almost ceased to wave; and I feared that I was about to
+lose a most valuable servant, whose place it would be impossible to
+fill. Accordingly I wrote on a slip of paper, which I sent in to him,"--
+
+"You have done well, and I raise your salary to a dollar and a quarter a
+day. Your influence over our unfortunate relative is soothing and
+beneficial. Go on as you have begun,--continue in well-doing, and merit
+the lasting gratitude of an afflicted family."
+
+That seemed to cheer him a little--to wind him up, as Harry said, and
+set the pendulum swinging again. But it was not long before the
+listlessness and low spirits returned; Menzel showed a sad tendency to
+shirk his duty; and before noon there came a crash.
+
+I was in the garden, when I heard a shriek of rage and despair, and saw
+the little Jew coming toward me with frantic gestures.
+
+"I yielt! I abandone! I take my moneys and my shirt, and I go!" says he.
+
+I stood in perfect astonishment at hearing the dumb speak; while he
+threw his arms wildly above his head, exclaiming:
+
+"I am not teaf! I am not teaf! I am not teaf! He is one terreeble mon!
+He vill haf my life! So I go--I fly--I take my moneys and my shirt--I
+leafe him, I leafe your house! I vould earn honest living, but--Gott im
+himmel! dieu des dieux! all de devils!" he shrieked, mixing up several
+of his languages at once, in his violent mental agitation.
+
+"Jacob Menzel!" said I, solemnly, "I little thought I was having to do
+with an impostor!"
+
+"If I haf you deceive, I haf myself more dan punish!" was his reply.
+"Now I resign de position. I ask for de moneys and de shirt, and I
+part!"
+
+Just then my uncle came up, amazed at his new friend's sudden revolt and
+flight, and anxious to finish up with his seventh parish. "I vill hear
+no more of your six, of your seven,--I know not how many parish!"
+screamed the furious little Jew, turning on him.
+
+"What means all this?" said my bewildered uncle.
+
+"I tell you vat means it all!" the vindictive little impostor, tiptoeing
+up to him, yelled at his cheek. "I make not vell my affairs in your
+country; I vould return to Faderlant; for conwenience I carry dis
+pappeer. I come here; I am suppose teaf; I accept de position to be your
+companion, for if a man hear, you kill him tead soon vid your book and
+your ten, twenty parish! I hear! you kill me! and I go!"
+
+And, having obtained his moneys and his shirt, he went. That is the last
+I ever saw of my little Iron-Clad. I remember him with gratitude, for he
+did me good service, and he had but one fault, namely, that he was _not_
+iron-clad!
+
+As for my uncle, for the first time in his life, I think, he said never
+a word, but stalked into the house. Dolly soon came running out to ask
+what was the matter; Popworth was actually packing his carpet-bag! I
+called Andrew, and ordered him to be in readiness with the buggy to take
+the old gentleman over to the railroad.
+
+"What! going?" I cried, as my uncle presently appeared, bearing his book
+and his baggage.
+
+"Nephew Frederick!" said he, "after this treatment, can you ask me if am
+going?"
+
+"Really," I shouted, "it is not my fault that the fellow proved an
+impostor. I employed him with the best of intentions, for your--and
+our--good!" "Nephew Frederick," said he, "this is insufferable; you
+will regret it! I shall never--NEVER" (as if he had been pronouncing my
+doom)--"accept of your hospitalities again!"
+
+He did, however, accept some money which I offered him, and likewise a
+seat in the buggy. I watched his departure with joy and terror,--for at
+any moment he might relent and stay nor was I at ease in my mind until I
+saw Andrew come riding back alone.
+
+We have never seen the old gentleman since But last winter I received a
+letter from him he wrote in a forgiving tone, to inform me that he had
+been appointed chaplain in a prison, and to ask for a loan of money to
+buy a suit of clothes. I sent him fifty dollars and my congratulations.
+I consider him eminently qualified to fill the new situation. As a
+hardship he can't be beat; and what are the rogues sent to prison for,
+but to suffer punishment?
+
+Yes, it would be a joke if my little Iron-Clad should end his career of
+imposture in that public institution, and sit once more under my
+excellent uncle! But I can't wish him any such misfortune. His mission
+to us was one of mercy. The place has been Paradise again, ever since
+his visit.--_Scribners Magazine_, August, 1873.
+
+
+
+
+OLIVER BELL BUNCE.
+
+(BORN, 1828.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. BLUFF DISCOURSES OF THE COUNTRY AND KINDRED THEMES.
+
+(_In a Country Lane_.)
+
+BACHELOR BLUFF. A LISTENER.
+
+
+"The country," exclaimed Mr. Bluff, with an air of candor and
+impartiality, "is, I admit, a very necessary and sometimes a very
+charming place. I thank Heaven for the country when I eat my first green
+peas, when the lettuce is crisp, when the potatoes are delicate and
+mealy, when the well-fed poultry comes to town, when the ruddy peach and
+the purple grape salute me at the fruit-stands. I love the country when
+I think of a mountain ramble; when I am disposed to wander with rod and
+reel along the forest-shadowed brook; when the apple-orchards are in
+blossom; when the hills blaze with autumn foliage. But I protest
+against the dogmatism of rural people, who claim all the cardinal and
+all the remaining virtues for their rose-beds and cabbage-patches. The
+town, sir, bestows felicities higher in character than the country does;
+for men and women, and the works of men and women, are always worthier
+our love and concern than the rocks and the hills ...
+
+--"Oh, yes! I have heard before of the pleasures of the garden. Poets
+have sung, enthusiasts have written, and old men have dreamed of them
+since History began her chronicles. But have the _pains_ of the garden
+ever been dwelt upon? Have people, now, been entirely honest in what
+they have said and written on this theme? When enthusiasts have told us
+of their prize pears, their early peas of supernatural tenderness, their
+asparagus, and their roses, and their strawberries, have they not hidden
+a good deal about their worm-eaten plums--about their cherries that were
+carried off by armies of burglarious birds; about their potatoes that
+proved watery and unpalatable; about their melons that fell victims to
+their neighbors' fowls; about their peaches that succumbed to the
+unexpected raid of Jack Frost; about their grapes that fell under the
+blight of mildew; about their green corn that withered in the hill;
+about the mighty host of failures that, if all were told, would tower in
+high proportion above the few much blazoned successes?
+
+"Who is it that says a garden is a standing source of pleasure? Amend
+this, I say, by asserting that a garden is a standing source of
+discomfort and vexation ... A hopeless restlessness, according to my
+observation, takes possession of every amateur gardener. Discontent
+abides in his soul. There is, indeed, so much to be done, changed,
+rearranged, watched, nursed, that the amateur gardener is really
+entitled to praise and generous congratulations when one of his thousand
+schemes comes to fruition. We ought in pity to rejoice with him over his
+big Lawton blackberries, and say nothing of the cherries, and the pears,
+and the peaches, that once were budding hopes, but have gone the way of
+Moore's 'dear gazelle.' Then the large expenditures which were needed to
+bring about his triumph of the Lawtons. 'Those potatoes,' said an
+enthusiastic amateur gardener to me once, 'cost twenty-five cents
+apiece!' And they were very good potatoes, too--almost equal to those
+that could be bought in market at a dollar a bushel.
+
+"And then, amateur gardeners are feverishly addicted to early rising.
+Men with gardens are like those hard drinkers whose susceptibilities are
+hopelessly blunted. Who but a man diverted from the paths of honest
+feeling and natural enjoyment, possessed of a demoniac mania, lost to
+the peace and serenity of the virtuous and the blessed, could find
+pleasure amid the damps, and dews, and chills, and raw-edgedness of a
+garden in the early morning, absolutely find pleasure in saturated
+trousers, in shoes swathed in moisture, in skies that are gray and
+gloomy, in flowers that are, as Mantalini would put it, 'demnition
+moist'? The thing is incredible! Now, a garden, after the sun has dried
+the paths, warmed the air, absorbed the dew, is admissible. But a
+possession that compels an early turning out into fogs and discomforts
+deserves for this fact alone the anathema of all rational beings.
+
+"I really believe, sir, that the literature of the garden, so abundant
+everywhere, is written in the interest of suburban land-owners. The
+inviting one-sided picture so persistently held up is only a covert bit
+of advertising, intended to seduce away happy cockneys of the town--men
+supremely contented with their attics, their promenades in Fifth Avenue,
+their visits to Central Park, where all is arranged for them without
+their labor or concern, their evenings at the music gardens, their soft
+morning slumbers, which know no dreadful chills and dews! How could a
+back-ache over the pea-bed compensate for these felicities? How could
+sour cherries, or half-ripe strawberries, or wet rosebuds, even if they
+do come from one's own garden, reward him for the lose of the ease and
+the serene conscience of one who sings merrily in the streets, and cares
+not whether worms burrow, whether suns burn, whether birds steal,
+whether winds overturn, whether droughts destroy, whether floods drown,
+whether gardens flourish, or not?"--_Bachelor Bluff: his Opinions,
+Sentiments, and Disputations_.
+
+
+
+
+CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER.
+
+(BORN, 1829.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GARDEN ETHICS.
+
+
+I believe that I have found, if not original sin, at least vegetable
+total depravity in my garden; and it was there before I went into it. It
+is the bunch-, or joint-, or snake-grass,--whatever it is called. As I
+do not know the names of all the weeds and plants, I have to do as Adam
+did in his garden,--name things as I find them. This grass has a
+slender, beautiful stalk: and when you cut it down, or pull up a long
+root of it, you fancy it is got rid of; but in a day or two it will come
+up in the same spot in half a dozen vigorous blades. Cutting down and
+pulling up is what it thrives on. Extermination rather helps it. If you
+follow a slender white root, it will be found to run under the ground
+until it meets another slender white root; and you will soon unearth a
+network of them, with a knot somewhere, sending out dozens of
+sharp-pointed, healthy shoots, every joint prepared to be an independent
+life and plant. The only way to deal with it is to take one part hoe and
+two parts fingers, and carefully dig it out, not leaving a joint
+anywhere. It will take a little time, say all summer, to dig out
+thoroughly a small patch; but if you once dig it out, and keep it out,
+you will have no further trouble.
+
+I have said it was total depravity. Here it is. If you attempt to pull
+up and root out sin in you, which shows on the surface,--if it does not
+show, you do not care for it,--you may have noticed how it runs into an
+interior network of sins, and an ever-sprouting branch of these roots
+somewhere; and that you cannot pull out one without making a general
+internal disturbance, and rooting up your whole being. I suppose it is
+less trouble to quietly cut them off at the top--say once a week, on
+Sunday, when you put on your religious clothes and face,--so that no one
+will see them, and not try to eradicate the network within.
+
+_Remark_.--This moral vegetable figure is at the service of any
+clergyman who will have the manliness to come forward and help me at a
+day's hoeing on my potatoes. None but the orthodox need apply.
+
+I, however, believe in the intellectual, if not the moral, qualities of
+vegetables, and especially weeds. There was a worthless vine that (or
+who) started up about midway between a grape-trellis and a row of
+bean-poles, some three feet from each, but a little nearer the trellis.
+When it came out of the ground, it looked around to see what it should
+do. The trellis was already occupied. The bean-pole was empty. There was
+evidently the a little best chance of light, air, and sole
+proprietorship on the pole. And the vine started for the pole, and began
+to climb it with determination. Here was as distinct an act of choice,
+of reason, as a boy exercises when he goes into a forest, and, looking
+about, decides which tree he will climb. And, besides, how did the vine
+know enough to travel in exactly the right direction, three feet, to
+find what it wanted? This is intellect. The weeds, on the other hand,
+have hateful moral qualities. To cut down a weed is, therefore, to do a
+moral action. I feel as if I were destroying a sin. My hoe becomes an
+instrument of retributive justice. I am an apostle of nature. This view
+of the matter lends a dignity to the art of hoeing which nothing else
+does, and lifts it into the region of ethics. Hoeing becomes, not a
+pastime, but a duty. And you get to regard it so, as the days and the
+weeds lengthen.
+
+_Observation_.--Nevertheless, what a man needs in gardening is a
+cast-iron back, with a hinge in it. The hoe is an ingenious instrument,
+calculated to call out a great deal of strength at a great disadvantage.
+
+The striped bug has come, the saddest of the year. He is a moral
+double-ender, iron-clad at that. He is unpleasant in two ways. He
+burrows in the ground so that you cannot find him, and he flies away so
+that you cannot catch him. He is rather handsome, as bugs go, but
+utterly dastardly, in that he gnaws the stem of the plant close to the
+ground, and ruins it without any apparent advantage to himself. I find
+him on the hills of cucumbers (perhaps it will be a cholera-year, and we
+shall not want any), the squashes (small loss), and the melons (which
+never ripen). The best way to deal with the striped bug is to sit down
+by the hills, and patiently watch for him. If you are spry, you can
+annoy him. This, however, takes time. It takes all day and part of the
+night. For he flieth in the darkness, and wasteth at noonday. If you get
+up before the dew is off the plants,--it goes off very early,--you can
+sprinkle soot on the plant (soot is my panacea: if I can get the
+disease of a plant reduced to the necessity of soot, I am all right);
+and soot is unpleasant to the bug. But the best thing to do is set a
+toad to catch the bugs. The toad at once establishes the most intimate
+relations with the bug. It is a pleasure to see such unity among the
+lower animals. The difficulty is to make the toad stay and watch the
+hill. If you know your toad, it is all right. If you do not, you must
+build a tight fence round the plants, which the toad cannot jump over.
+This, however, introduces a new element. I find that I have a zoological
+garden on my hands. It is an unexpected result of my little enterprise,
+which never aspired to the completeness of the Paris "Jardin des
+Plantes."--_My Summer in a Garden_.
+
+
+THE PLUMBER.
+
+Speaking of the philosophical temper, there is no class of men whose
+society is to be more desired for this quality than that of plumbers!
+They are the most agreeable men I know; and the boys in the business
+begin to be agreeable very early. I suspect the secret of it is, that
+they are agreeable by the hour. In the driest days, my fountain became
+disabled: the pipe was stopped up. A couple of plumbers, with the
+implements of their craft, came out to view the situation. There was a
+good deal of difference of opinion about where the stoppage was. I found
+the plumbers perfectly willing to sit down and talk about it,--talk by
+the hour. Some of their guesses and remarks were exceedingly ingenious;
+and their general observations on other subjects were excellent in their
+way, and could hardly have been better if they had been made by the job.
+The work dragged a little,--as it is apt to do by the hour. The plumbers
+had occasion to make me several visits. Sometimes they would find, upon
+arrival, that they had forgotten some indispensable tool; and one would
+go back to the shop, a mile and a half, after it; and his comrade would
+await his return with the most exemplary patience, and sit down and
+talk,--always by the hour. I do not know but it is a habit to have
+something wanted at the shop. They seemed to me very good workmen, and
+always willing to stop and talk about the job, or any thing else, when I
+went near them. Nor had they any of that impetuous hurry that is said to
+be the bane of our American civilization. To their credit be it said,
+that I never observed any thing of it in them. They can afford to wait.
+Two of them will sometimes wait nearly half a day while a comrade goes
+for a tool. They are patient and philosophical. It is a great pleasure
+to meet such men. One only wishes there was some work he could do for
+_them_ by the hour. There ought to be reciprocity. I think they have
+very nearly solved the problem of Life: it is to work for other people,
+never for yourself, and get your pay by the hour. You then have no
+anxiety, and little work. If you do things by the job, you are
+perpetually driven: the hours are scourges. If you work by the hour, you
+gently sail on the stream of Time, which is always bearing you on to the
+haven of Pay, whether you make any effort or not. Working by the hour
+tends to make one moral. A plumber working by the job, trying to unscrew
+a rusty, refractory nut, in a cramped position, where the tongs
+continually slipped off, would swear; but I never heard one of them
+swear, or exhibit the least impatience at such a vexation, working by
+the hour. Nothing can move a man who is paid by the hour. How sweet the
+flight of time seems to his calm mind!--_My Summer in a Garden_.
+
+
+
+
+FRANCES LEE PRATT.
+
+(BORN, 1830.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CAPTAIN BEN'S CHOICE.
+
+
+An old red house on a rocky shore, with a fisherman's blue boat rocking
+on the bay, and two white sails glistening far away over the water.
+Above, the blue, shining sky; and below, the blue shining sea.
+
+"It seems clever to have a pleasant day," said Mrs. Davids, sighing.
+
+Mrs. Davids said every thing with a sigh, and now she wiped her eyes
+also on her calico apron. She was a woman with a complexion like faded
+sea-weed, who seemed always pitying herself.
+
+"I tell them," said she, "I have had real hard luck. My husband is
+buried away off in California, and my son died in the army, and he is
+buried away down South. Neither one of them is buried together."
+
+Then she sighed again. Twice, this time.
+
+"And so," she continued, taking out a pinch of bayberry snuff, "I am
+left alone in the world. _Alone_, I say! why, I've got a daughter, but
+she is away out West. She is married to an engineer-man. And I've got
+two grandchildren."
+
+Mrs. Davids took the pinch of bayberry and shook her head, looking as
+though that was the "hardest luck" of all.
+
+"Well, everybody has to have their pesters, and you'll have to take
+yours," rejoined Miss Persis Tame, taking a pinch of snuff--the real
+Maccaboy--twice as large, with twice as fierce an action. "I don't know
+what it is to bury children, nor to lose a husband; I s'pose I don't;
+but I know what it is to be jammed round the world and not have a ruff
+to stick my head under. I wish I had all the money I ever spent
+travelling,--and _that's_ twelve dollars," she continued, regretfully.
+
+"Why in the world don't you marry and have a home of your own," sighed
+Mrs. Davids.
+
+"Well, I don't _expect_ to marry. I don't know as I do at my time of
+life," responded the spinster. "I rather guess my day for chances is
+gone by."
+
+"You ain't such a dreadful sight older than I am, though," replied Mrs.
+Davids, reflectively.
+
+"Not so old by two full years," returned Miss Tame, taking another smart
+pinch of snuff, as though it touched the empty spot in her heart and did
+it good. "But _you_ ain't looking out for opportunities yet, I suppose."
+
+Mrs. Davids sighed, evasively. "We can't tell what is before us. There
+is more than one man in want of a wife."
+
+As though to point her words, Captain Ben Lundy came in sight on the
+beach, his head a long way forward and his shambling feet trying in vain
+to keep up.
+
+"Thirteen months and a half since Lyddy was buried," continued Mrs.
+Davids, accepting this application to her words, "and there is Captain
+Ben taking up with just what housekeeper he can get, and _no_
+housekeeper at all. It would be an excellent home for you, Persis.
+Captain Ben always had the name of making a kind husband."
+
+She sighed again, whether from regret for the bereaved man, or for the
+multitude of women bereft of such a husband.
+
+By this time Captain Ben's head was at the door.
+
+"Morning!" said he, while his feet were coming up. "Quite an accident
+down here below the lighthouse last night. Schooner ran ashore in the
+blow and broke all up into kindling-wood in less than no time. Captain
+Tisdale's been out looking for dead bodies ever since daylight."
+
+"I knowed it," sighed Mrs. Davids. "I heard a rushing sound sometime
+about the break of day that waked me out of a sound sleep, and I knowed
+then there was a spirit leaving its body. I heard it the night Davids
+went, or I expect I did. It must have been very nearly at that time."
+
+"Well, I guess it wasn't a spirit, last night," said Captain Ben; "for
+as I was going on to say, after searching back and forth, Captain
+Tisdale came upon the folks, a man and a boy, rolled up in their wet
+blankets asleep behind the life-boat house. He said he felt like he
+could shake them for staying out in the wet. Wrecks always make for the
+lighthouse, so he s'posed those ones were drowned to death, sure
+enough."
+
+"Oh, then it couldn't have been them, I was warned of!" returned Mrs.
+Davids, looking as though she regretted it. "It was right over my head,
+and I waked up just as the thing was rushing past. You haven't heard,
+have you," she continued, "whether or no there was any other damage
+done by the gale?"
+
+"I don't know whether you would call it damage exactly," returned
+Captain Ben; "but Loizah Mullers got so scared she left me and went
+home. She said she couldn't stay and run the chance of another of our
+coast blows, and off she trapsed."
+
+Mrs. Davids sighed like November. "So you have some hard luck as well as
+myself. I don't suppose you can _get_ a housekeeper to keep her long,"
+said she, dismally.
+
+"Abel Grimes tells me it is enough sight easier getting wives than
+housekeepers, and I'm some of a mind to try that tack," replied Captain
+Ben, smiling grimly.
+
+Mrs. Davids put up her hand to feel of her back hair, and smoothed down
+her apron; while Miss Persis Tame blushed like a withered rose, and
+turned her eyes modestly out of the window.
+
+"I am _so_. But the difficulty is, who will it be? There are so many to
+select from it is fairly bothersome," continued Captain Ben, winking
+fast and looking as though he was made of dry corncobs and hay.
+
+Miss Persis Tame turned about abruptly. "The land alive!" she
+ejaculated with such sudden emphasis that the dishes shook on their
+shelves and Captain Ben in his chair. "It makes me mad as a March hare
+to hear men go on as though all they'd got to do was to throw down their
+handkerchers to a woman, and, no matter who, she'd spring and run to
+pick it up. It is always 'Who will I marry?' and not 'Who will marry
+me?'"
+
+"Why, there is twice the number of widders that there is of widderers
+here at the P'int. That was what was in my mind," said Captain Ben, in a
+tone of meek apology. "There is the Widow Keens, she that was Azubah
+Muchmore. I don't know but what she would do; Lyddy used to think every
+thing of her, and she is a first-rate of a housekeeper."
+
+"Perhaps so," assented Mrs. Davids, dubiously. "But she is troubled a
+sight with the head complaint; I suppose you know she is. That is
+against her."
+
+"Yes," assented Miss Tame. "The Muchmores all have weak heads. And, too,
+the Widow Keens, she's had a fall lately. She was up in a chair cleaning
+her top buttery shelf, and somehow one of the chair-leg's give way,--it
+was loose or something, I expect,--and down she went her whole heft.
+She keeps about, but she goes with two staves."
+
+"I want to know if that is so," said Captain Ben, his honest soul
+warming with sudden sympathy. "The widder has seen a sight of trouble."
+
+"Yes, she has lived through a good deal, that woman has. I couldn't live
+through so much, 'pears to me; but we don't know what we can live
+through," rejoined Miss Tame.
+
+Captain Ben did not reply, but his ready feet began to move to and fro
+restlessly; for his heart, more ready yet, had already gone out toward
+the unfortunate widow.
+
+"It is so bad for a woman to be alone," said he to himself, shambling
+along the shingly beach a moment after. "Nobody to mend her chairs or
+split up her kindlings, or do a chore for her; and she lame into the
+bargain. It is _too_ bad."
+
+"He has steered straight for the Widow Keens's, as sure as A is
+apple-dumpling," remarked Miss Persis, peering after him from the
+window.
+
+"Well, I must admit I wouldn't have thought of Captain Ben's being
+en-a-mored after such a sickly piece of business. But men never know
+what they want. Won't you just hand me that gum-cam-phyer bottle, now
+you are up? It is on that chest of drawers behind you."
+
+"No more they don't," returned Miss Tame, with a plaintive cadence,
+taking a sniff from the camphor-bottle on the way. "However, I don't
+begrutch him to her,--I don't know as I do. It will make her a good hum,
+though, if she concludes to make arrangements."
+
+Meantime, Captain Ben Lundy's head was wellnigh to Mrs. Keens's door,
+for it was situated only around the first sand-hill. She lived in a
+little bit of a house that looked as though it had been knocked together
+for a crockery-crate, in the first place, with two windows and a rude
+door thrown in as afterthoughts. In the rear of this house was another
+tiny building, something like a grown-up hen-coop; and this was where
+Mrs. Keens carried on the business bequeathed to her by her deceased
+husband, along with five small children, and one not so small. But,
+worse than that, one who was "not altogether there," as the English say.
+
+She was about this business now, dressed in a primitive sort of bloomer,
+with a wash-tub and clothes-ringer before her, and an army of
+bathing-suits of every kind and color flapping wildly in the fresh sea
+air at one side.
+
+From a little farther on, mingling with the sound of the beating surf,
+came the merry voices of bathers,--boarders at the great hotels on the
+hill.
+
+"Here you be! Hard at it!" said Captain Ben, puffing around the corner
+like a portable west-wind. I've understood you've had a hurt. Is that
+so?"
+
+"Oh, no! Nothing to mention," returned Mrs. Keens, turning about a face
+bright and cheerful as the full moon; and throwing, as by accident, a
+red bathing-suit over the two broomsticks that leaned against her tub.
+
+Unlike Mrs. Davids, Mrs. Keens neither pitied herself nor would allow
+anybody else to do so.
+
+"Sho!" remarked Captain Ben, feeling defrauded. He had counted on
+sacrificing himself to his sympathies, but he didn't give up yet. "You
+must see some pretty tough times 'pears to me with such a parcel of
+little ones, and only yourself to look to," said he, proceeding
+awkwardly enough to hang the pile of wrung-out clothes upon an empty
+line.
+
+"I don't complain," returned the widow, bravely. "My children are not
+_teusome_; and Jack, why you would be surprised to see how many things
+Jack can do, for all he isn't quite right."
+
+As she spoke thus with affectionate pride, Jack came up wheeling a
+roughly made cart filled with wet bathing clothes from the beach. He
+looked up at sound of his mother's voice with something of the dumb
+tenderness of an intelligent dog. "Jack helps, Jack good boy," said he,
+nodding with a happy smile.
+
+"Yes, Jack helps. We don't complain," repeated the mother.
+
+"It would come handy, though, to have a man around to see to things and
+kind o' provide, wouldn't it, though?" persisted Captain Ben.
+
+"Some might think so," replied Mrs. Keens, stopping her wringer to
+reflect a little. "But I haven't any wish to change my situation," she
+added, decidedly, going on again with her work.
+
+"Sure on 't?" persisted the Captain.
+
+"Certain," replied the widow.
+
+Captain Ben sighed. "I thought ma'be you was having a hard row to hoe,
+and I thought like enough--"
+
+_What_ he never said, excepting by a beseeching glance at the cheerful
+widow, for just then an interruption came from some people after
+bathing-suits.
+
+So Captain Ben moved off with a dismal countenance. But before he had
+gone far it suddenly brightened. "It might not be for the best," quoth
+he to himself, "Like enough not. I was very careful not to commit
+myself, and I am very glad I didn't." He smiled as he reflected on his
+judicious wariness. "But, however," he continued, "I might as well
+finish up this business now. There is Rachel Doolittle. Who knows but
+she'd make a likely wife? Lyddy sot a good deal by her. She never had a
+quilting or a sewing bee but what nothing would do but she must give
+Rachel Doolittle an invite. Yes; I wonder I never decided on her before.
+She will be glad of a home sure enough, for she haves to live around, as
+it were, upon her brothers."
+
+Captain Ben's feet quickened themselves at these thoughts, and had
+almost overtaken his head, when behold! at a sudden turn in the road
+there stood Miss Rachel Doolittle, picking barberries from a wayside
+bush. "My sakes! If she ain't right here, like Rachel in the Bible!"
+ejaculated Captain Ben, taking heart at the omen.
+
+Miss Doolittle looked up from under her tied-down brown hat in surprise
+at such a salutation. But her surprise was increased by Captain Ben's
+next remark.
+
+"It just came into my mind," said he, "that you was the right one to
+take Lyddy's place. You two used to be such great knit-ups that it will
+seem 'most like having Lyddy back again. No," he continued, after a
+little reflection, "I don't know of anybody I had rather see sitting in
+Lyddy's chair and wearing Lyddy's things than yourself."
+
+"Dear me, Captain Lundy, I couldn't think of it. Paul's folks expect me
+to stay with them while the boarder-season lasts, and I've as good as
+promised Jacob's wife I'll spend the winter with her."
+
+"Ain't that a hard life you are laying out for yourself? And then bum-by
+you will get old or sick ma' be, and who is going to want you around
+then? Every woman needs a husband of her own to take care of her."
+
+"I'm able to take care of myself as yet, thanks to goodness! And I am
+not afraid my brothers will see me suffer in case of sickness,"
+returned Miss Doolittle, her cheeks flaming up like a sumach in October.
+
+"But hadn't you better take a little time to think it over? Ma' be it
+come sudden to you," pleaded Captain Ben.
+
+"No, I thank you. Some things don't need thinking over," answered Miss
+Doolittle, plucking at the barberries more diligently than ever.
+
+"I wish Lyddy was here. She would convince you you were standing in your
+own light," returned Lyddy's widower in a perplexed tone.
+
+"I don't need one to come from the dead to show me my own mind,"
+retorted Miss Doolittle, firmly.
+
+"Well, like enough you are right," said Captain Ben, mildly, putting a
+few stems of barberries in her pail; "ma' be it wouldn't be best. I
+don't want to be rash."
+
+And with that he moved off, on the whole congratulating himself he had
+not decided to marry Miss Doolittle.
+
+"I thought after she commenced her miserable gift of the gab, that Lyddy
+used to be free to admit she had a fiery tongue, for all they were such
+friends. And I'm all for peace myself. I guess, on the whole, ma' be she
+ain't the one for me, perhaps, and it is as well to look further.
+_Why_! what in _the_ world! Well, there! what have I been thinking of?
+There is Mrs. Davids, as neat as a new cent, and the master hand to
+save. She is always taking on; and she will be glad enough to have
+somebody to look out for her,--why, sure enough! And there I was right
+at her house this very day, and never once thought of her! What an old
+dunce!"
+
+But, fortunately, this not being a sin of commission, it could easily be
+rectified; and directly Captain Ben had turned about and was trotting
+again toward the red house on the beach.
+
+"Pound for pound of the best white sugar," he heard Miss Tame say as he
+neared the door.
+
+"White, sugar!" repeated Mrs. Davids, her usual sigh drawn out into a
+little groan. "_White_ sugar for _cram_ berries! Who ever heard of such
+a thing? I've always considered I did well when I had plenty of brown."
+
+"Poor creeter!" thought Captain Ben. "How she will enjoy getting into my
+pantry. Lyddy never complained that she didn't have enough of every
+thing to do _with_"
+
+And in the full ardor of his intended benevolence, he went right in and
+opened the subject at once. But, to his astonishment, Mrs. Davids
+refused him. She sighed, but she refused him.
+
+"I've seen trouble enough a'ready, without my rushing into more with my
+eyes wide open," sighed she.
+
+"Trouble? Why, that is just what I was meaning to save you!" exclaimed
+the bewildered widower. "Pump right in the house, and stove e'enamost
+new. And Lyddy never knew what it was to want for a spoonful of sugar or
+a pound of flour. And such a _handy_ buttery and sink! Lyddy used to say
+she felt the worst about leaving her buttery of any thing."
+
+"Should thought she would," answered Mrs. Davids, forgetting to sigh.
+"However, I can't say that I feel any hankering after marrying a
+buttery. I've got buttery-room enough here, without the trouble of
+getting set up in a new place."
+
+"Just as you say," returned the rejected. "I ain't sure as you'd be
+exactly the one. I _was_ a thinking of looking for somebody a little
+younger."
+
+"Well, here is Persis Tame. Why don't you bespeak her? _She_ is younger,
+and she is in need of a good home. I can recommend her, too, as the
+first-rate of a cook," remarked Mrs. Davids, benevolently.
+
+Miss Tame had been sitting a little apart by the open window, smiling to
+herself.
+
+But now she turned about at once. "Hm!" said she, with contempt. "I
+should rather live under an umbrella tied to a stake, than marry for a
+_hum_."
+
+So Captain Ben went home without engaging either wife or housekeeper.
+
+And the first thing he saw was Captain Jacob Doolittle's old one-eyed
+horse eating the apples Loizah Mullers had strung and festooned from
+nails against the house, to dry.
+
+The next thing he saw was, that, having left a window open, the hens had
+flown in and gone to housekeeping on their own account. But they were
+not, like Mrs. Davids, as neat as a new cent, and _not_, also, such
+master hands to save.
+
+"Shoo! shoo! Get out. Go 'long there with you!" cried Captain Ben,
+waving the dish-cloth and the poker. "I declare for 't! I most hadn't
+ought to have left that bread out on the table. They've made a pretty
+mess of it, and it is every spec there is in the house too. Well, I
+must make a do of potatoes for supper, with a bit of pie and a mouthful
+of cake."
+
+Accordingly he went to work building a fire that wouldn't burn. Then,
+forgetting the simple matter of dampers, the potatoes wouldn't bake. The
+tea-kettle boiled over and cracked the stove, and after that boiled dry
+and cracked itself. Finally the potatoes fell to baking with so much
+ardor that they overdid it and burnt up. And, last of all, the cake-jar
+and pie-cupboard proved to be entirely empty. Loizah had left on the eve
+of baking-day.
+
+"The old cat! Well, I'd just as soon live on slapjacks a spell," said
+Captain Ben, when he made this discovery.
+
+But even slapjacks palled on his palate, especially when he had them
+always to cook for himself.
+
+"'T ain't no way to live, this ain't," said he at last. "I'm a good mind
+to marry as ever I had to eat."
+
+So he put on his hat and walked out. The first person he met was Miss
+Persis Tame, who turned her back and fell to picking thoroughwort
+blossoms as he came up.
+
+"Look a here," said he, stopping short, "I'm dreadful put to 't. I
+can't get ne'er a wife nor ne'er a housekeeper, and I am e'enamost
+starved to death. I wish you _would_ consent to marry with me, if you
+feel as if you could bring your mind to it. I am sure it would have been
+Lyddy's wish."
+
+Miss Tame smelt of the thoroughwort blossoms.
+
+"It comes pretty sudden on me," she replied. "I hadn't given the subject
+any thought. But you _are_ to be pitied in your situation."
+
+"Yes. And I'm dreadful lonesome. I've always been used to having Lyddy
+to talk over things with, and I miss her a sight. And I don't know
+anybody that has her ways more than you have. You are a good deal such a
+built woman, and you have the same hitch to your shoulders when you
+walk. You've got something the same look to your eyes, too; I noticed it
+last Sunday in meeting-time," continued the widower, anxiously.
+
+"I do feel for you. A man alone is in a deplorable situation," replied
+Miss Tame. "I'm sure I'd do any thing in my power to help you."
+
+"Well, marry with me then. That is what I want. We could be real
+comfortable together. I'll go for the license this minute, and we'll be
+married right away," returned the impatient suitor. "You go up to Elder
+Crane's, and I'll meet you there as soon as I can fetch around."
+
+Then he hurried away, "without giving me a chance to say 'no,'" said
+"she that was" Persis Tame, afterward. "So I _had_ to marry with him, as
+you might say. But I've never seen cause to regret it, I've got a
+first-rate of a hum, and Captain Ben makes a first-rate of a husband.
+And no hain't he, I hope, found cause to regret it," she added, with a
+touch of wifely pride; "though I do expect he might have had his pick
+among all the single women at the Point; but out of them all he chose
+_me_."--_The Atlantic Monthly_, March, 1870.
+
+
+
+
+LOUISA MAY ALCOTT.
+
+(BORN, 1832.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+STREET SCENES IN WASHINGTON.
+
+
+The mules were my especial delight; and an hour's study of a constant
+succession of them introduced me to many of their characteristics; for
+six of these odd little beasts drew each army wagon, and went hopping
+like frogs through the stream of mud that gently rolled along the
+street. The coquettish mule had small feet, a nicely trimmed tassel of a
+tail, perked-up ears, and seemed much given to little tosses of the
+head, affected skips and prances; and, if he wore the bells, or were
+bedizened with a bit of finery, put on as many airs as any belle. The
+moral mule was a stout, hardworking creature, always tugging with all
+his might; often pulling away after the rest had stopped, laboring under
+the conscientious delusion that food for the entire army depended upon
+his private exertions. I respected this style of mule; and, had I
+possessed a juicy cabbage, would have pressed it upon him, with thanks
+for his excellent example. The histrionic mule was a melodramatic
+quadruped, prone to startling humanity by erratic leaps, and wild
+plunges, much shaking of his stubborn head, and lashing out of his
+vicious heels; now and then falling flat, and apparently dying _a la_
+Forrest; a gasp--a squirm--a flop, and so on, till the street was well
+blocked up, the drivers all swearing like demons in bad hats, and the
+chief actor's circulation decidedly quickened by every variety of kick,
+cuff, jerk, and haul. When the last breath seemed to have left his body,
+and "doctors were in vain," a sudden resurrection took place; and if
+ever a mule laughed with scornful triumph, that was the beast, as he
+leisurely rose, gave a comfortable shake, and, calmly regarding the
+excited crowd seemed to say--"A hit! a decided hit! for the stupidest of
+animals has bamboozled a dozen men. Now, then! what are _you_ stopping
+the way for?" The pathetic mule was, perhaps, the most interesting of
+all; for, though he always seemed to be the smallest, thinnest, weakest
+of the six, the postillion, with big boots, long-tailed coat, and heavy
+whip, was sure to bestride this one, who struggled feebly along, head
+down, coat muddy and rough, eye spiritless and sad, his very tail a
+mortified stump, and the whole beast a picture of meek misery, fit to
+touch a heart of stone. The jovial mule was a roly poly, happy-go-lucky
+little piece of horse-flesh, taking every thing easily, from cudgeling
+to caressing; strolling along with a roguish twinkle of the eye, and, if
+the thing were possible, would have had his hands in his pockets, and
+whistled as he went. If there ever chanced to be an apple core, a stray
+turnip, or wisp of hay, in the gutter, this Mark Tapley was sure to find
+it, and none of his mates seemed to begrudge him his bite. I suspected
+this fellow was the peacemaker, confidant, and friend of all the others,
+for he had a sort of "Cheer-up,-old-boy,-I'll-pull-you-through" look,
+which was exceedingly engaging.
+
+Pigs also possessed attractions for me, never having had an opportunity
+of observing their graces of mind and manner, till I came to Washington,
+whose porcine citizens appeared to enjoy a larger liberty than many of
+its human ones. Stout, sedate-looking pigs, hurried by each morning to
+their places of business, with a preoccupied air, and sonorous greeting
+to their friends. Genteel pigs, with an extra curl to their tails,
+promenaded in pairs, lunching here and there, like gentlemen of leisure.
+Rowdy pigs pushed the passers-by off the sidewalk; tipsy pigs hiccoughed
+their version of "We won't go home till morning," from the gutter; and
+delicate young pigs tripped daintily through the mud, as if they plumed
+themselves upon their ankles, and kept themselves particularly neat in
+point of stockings. Maternal pigs, with their interesting families,
+strolled by in the sun; and often the pink, baby-like squealers lay
+down for a nap, with a trust in Providence worthy of human
+imitation.--_Hospital Sketches_.
+
+
+SELECTIONS FROM TRANSCENDENTAL WILD OATS.
+
+On the first day of June, 184-, a large wagon, drawn by a small horse,
+and containing a motley load, went lumbering over certain New England
+hills, with the pleasing accompaniments of wind, rain, and hail. A
+serene man with a serene child upon his knee was driving, or rather
+being driven, for the small horse had it all his own way. A brown boy
+with a William Penn style of countenance sat beside him, firmly
+embracing a bust of Socrates. Behind them was an energetic-looking
+woman, with a benevolent brow, satirical mouth, and eyes brimful of hope
+and courage. A baby reposed upon her lap, a mirror leaned against her
+knee, and a basket of provisions danced about at her feet, as she
+struggled with a large, unruly umbrella. Two blue-eyed little girls,
+with hands full of childish treasures, sat under one old shawl, chatting
+happily together.
+
+In front of this lively party stalked a tall, sharp-featured man, in a
+long blue cloak; and a fourth small girl trudged along beside him
+through the mud as if she rather enjoyed it.
+
+The wind whistled over the bleak hills; the rain fell in a despondent
+drizzle, and twilight began to fall. But the calm man gazed as
+tranquilly into the fog as if he beheld a radiant bow of promise
+spanning the gray sky. The cheery woman tried to cover every one but
+herself with the big umbrella. The brown boy pillowed his head on the
+bald pate of Socrates and slumbered peacefully. The little girls sang
+lullabies to their dolls in soft, maternal murmers. The sharp-nosed
+pedestrian marched steadily on, with the blue cloak streaming out behind
+him like a banner; and the lively infant splashed through the puddles
+with a duck-like satisfaction pleasant to behold.
+
+Thus these modern pilgrims journeyed hopefully out of the old world, to
+found a new one in the wilderness.
+
+The editors of "The Transcendental Tripod" had received from Messrs.
+Lion & Lamb (two of the aforesaid pilgrims) a communication from which
+the following statement is an extract:
+
+"We have made arrangements with the proprietor of an estate of about a
+hundred acres which liberates this tract from human ownership. Here we
+shall prosecute our effort to initiate a Family in harmony with the
+primitive instincts of man.
+
+"Ordinary secular farming is not our object. Fruit, grain, pulse, herbs,
+flax, and other vegetable products, receiving assiduous attention, will
+afford ample manual occupation, and chaste supplies for the bodily
+needs. It is intended to adorn the pastures with orchards, and to
+supersede the labor of cattle by the spade and the pruning-knife.
+
+"Consecrated to human freedom, the land awaits the sober culture of
+devoted men. Beginning with small pecuniary means, this enterprise must
+be rooted on a reliance on the succors of an over-bounteous Providence,
+whose vital affinities being secured by this union with uncorrupted
+field and unwordly persons, the cares and injuries of a life of gain are
+avoided.
+
+"The inner nature of each member of the Family is at no time neglected.
+Our plan contemplates all such disciplines, cultures, and habits as
+evidently conduce to the purifying of the inmates.
+
+"Pledged to the spirit alone, the founders anticipate no hasty or
+numerous addition to their numbers. The kingdom of peace is entered only
+through the gates of self-denial; and felicity is the test and the
+reward of loyalty to the unswerving law of Love."
+
+This prospective Eden at present consisted of an old red farm-house, a
+dilapidated barn, many acres of meadow-land, and a grove. Ten ancient
+apple-trees were all the "chaste supply" which the place offered as yet;
+but, in the firm belief that plenteous orchards were soon to be evoked
+from their inner consciousness, these sanguine founders had christened
+their domain Fruitlands.
+
+Here Timon Lion intended to found a colony of Latter Day Saints, who,
+under his patriarchal sway, should regenerate the world and glorify his
+name for ever. Here Abel Lamb, with the devoutest faith in the high
+ideal which was to him a living truth, desired to plant a Paradise,
+where Beauty, Virtue, Justice, and Love might live happily together,
+without the possibility of a serpent entering in. And here his wife,
+unconverted but faithful to the end, hoped, after many wanderings over
+the face of the earth, to find rest for herself and a home for her
+children.
+
+"There is our new abode," anounced the enthusiast, smiling with the
+satisfaction quite undamped by the drops dripping from his hat-brim, as
+they turned at length into a cart-path that wound along a steep hillside
+into a barren-looking valley.
+
+"A little difficult of access," observed his practical wife, as she
+endeavored to keep her various household gods from going overboard with
+every lurch of the laden ark.
+
+"Like all good things. But those who earnestly desire and patiently seek
+will soon find us," placidly responded the philosopher from the mud,
+through which he was now endeavoring to pilot the much-enduring horse.
+
+"Truth lies at the bottom of a well, Sister Hope," said Brother Timon,
+pausing to detach his small comrade from a gate, whereon she was perched
+for a clearer gaze into futurity.
+
+"That's the reason we so seldom get at it, I suppose," replied Mrs.
+Hope, making a vain clutch at the mirror, which a sudden jolt sent
+flying out of her hands.
+
+"We want no false reflections here," said Timon, with a grim smile, as
+he crunched the fragments under foot in his onward march.
+
+Sister Hope held her peace, and looked wistfully through the mist at her
+promised home. The old red house with a hospitable glimmer at its
+windows cheered her eyes; and, considering the weather, was a fitter
+refuge than the sylvan bowers some of the more ardent souls might have
+preferred.
+
+The new-comers were welcomed by one of the elect precious,--a regenerate
+farmer, whose idea of reform consisted chiefly in wearing white cotton
+raiment and shoes of untanned leather. This costume, with a snowy beard,
+gave him a venerable, and at the same time a somewhat bridal appearance.
+
+The goods and chattels of the Society not having arrived, the weary
+family reposed before the fire on blocks of wood, while Brother Moses
+White regaled them with roasted potatoes, brown bread and water, in two
+plates, a tin pan, and one mug; his table service being limited. But,
+having cast the forms and vanities of a depraved world behind them, the
+elders welcomed hardship with the enthusiasm of new pioneers, and the
+children heartily enjoyed this foretaste of what they believed was to be
+a sort of perpetual picnic.
+
+During the progress of this frugal meal, two more brothers appeared. One
+a dark, melancholy man, clad in homespun, whose peculiar mission was to
+turn his name hind part before and use as few words as possible. The
+other was a bland, bearded Englishman, who expected to be saved by
+eating uncooked food and going without clothes. He had not yet adopted
+the primitive costume, however; but contented himself with meditatively
+chewing dry beans out of a basket.
+
+"Every meal should be a sacrament, and the vessels used should be
+beautiful and symbolical," observed Brother Lamb, mildly, righting the
+tin pan slipping about on his knees. "I priced a silver service when in
+town, but it was too costly; so I got some graceful cups and vases of
+Britannia ware."
+
+"Hardest things in the world to keep bright. Will whiting be allowed in
+the community?" inquired Sister Hope, with a housewife's interest in
+labor-saving institutions.
+
+"Such trivial questions will be discussed at a more fitting time,"
+answered Brother Timon, sharply, as he burnt his fingers with a very hot
+potato. "Neither sugar, molasses, milk, butter, cheese, nor flesh are to
+be used among us, for nothing is to be admitted which has caused wrong
+or death to man or beast."
+
+"Our garments are to be linen till we learn to raise our own cotton or
+some substitute for woollen fabrics," added Brother Abel, blissfully
+basking in an imaginary future as warm and brilliant as the generous
+fire before him.
+
+"Haou abaout shoes?" asked Brother Moses, surveying his own with
+interest.
+
+"We must yield that point till we can manufacture an innocent substitute
+for leather. Bark, wood, or some durable fabric will be invented in
+time. Meanwhile, those who desire to carry out our idea to the fullest
+extent can go barefooted," said Lion, who liked extreme measures.
+
+"I never will, nor let my girls," murmured rebellious Sister Hope, under
+her breath.
+
+"Haou do you cattle'ate to treat the ten-acre lot? Ef things ain't
+'tended to right smart, we sha'n't hev no crops," observed the practical
+patriarch in cotton.
+
+"We shall spade it," replied Abel, in such perfect good faith that Moses
+said no more, though he indulged in a shake of the head as he glanced at
+hands that held nothing heavier than a pen for years. He was a paternal
+old soul and regarded the younger men as promising boys on a new sort of
+lark.
+
+"What shall we do for lamps, if we cannot use any animal substance? I do
+hope light of some sort is to be thrown upon the enterprise," said Mrs.
+Lamb, with anxiety, for in those days kerosene and camphene were not,
+and gas was unknown in the wilderness.
+
+"We shall go without till we have discovered some vegetable oil or wax
+to serve us," replied Brother Timon, in a decided tone, which caused
+Sister Hope to resolve that her private lamp should be always trimmed,
+if not burning.
+
+"Each member is to perform the work for which experience, strength, and
+taste best fit him," continued Dictator Lion. "Thus drudgery and
+disorder will be avoided and harmony prevail. We shall rise at dawn,
+begin the day by bathing, followed by music, and then a chaste repast
+of fruit and bread. Each one finds congenial occupation till the
+meridian meal; when some deep-searching conversation gives rest to the
+body, and development to the mind. Healthful labor again engages us till
+the last meal, when we assemble in social communion, prolonged till
+sunset, when we retire to sweet repose, ready for the next day's
+activity."
+
+"What part of the work do you incline to yourself?" asked Sister Hope,
+with a humorous glimmer in her keen eyes.
+
+"I shall wait till it is made clear to me. Being in preference to doing
+is the great aim, and this comes to us rather by a resigned willingness
+than a wilful activity, which is a check to all divine growth,"
+responded Brother Timon.
+
+"I thought so," and Mrs. Lamb sighed audibly, for during the year he had
+spent in her family, Brother Timon had so faithfully carried out his
+idea of "being, not doing," that she had found his "divine growth" both
+an expensive and unsatisfactory process.
+
+Here her husband struck into the conversation, his face shining with the
+light and joy of the splendid dreams and high ideals hovering before
+him.
+
+"In these steps of reform, we do not rely so much on scientific
+reasoning or physiological skill as on the spirit's dictates. The
+greater part of man's duty consists in leaving alone much that he now
+does. Shall I stimulate with tea, coffee, or wine? No. Shall I consume
+flesh? Not if I value health. Shall I subjugate cattle? Shall I claim
+property in any created thing? Shall I trade? Shall I adopt a form of
+religion? Shall I interest myself in politics? To how many of these
+questions--could we ask them deeply enough and could they be heard as
+having relation to our eternal welfare--would the response be
+'Abstain'?"
+
+A mild snore seemed to echo the last word of Abel's rhapsody, for
+Brother Moses had succumbed to mundane slumber, and sat nodding like a
+massive ghost. Forest Absalom, the silent man, and John Pease, the
+English member, now departed to the barn; and Mrs. Lamb led her flock to
+a temporary fold, leaving the founders of the "Consociate Family" to
+build castles in the air till the fire went out and the symposium ended
+in smoke.
+
+The furniture arrived next day, and was soon bestowed; for the
+principal property of the community consisted in books. To this rare
+library was devoted the best room in the house, and the few busts and
+pictures that still survived many flittings were added to beautify the
+sanctuary, for here the family was to meet for amusement, instruction,
+and worship.
+
+Any housewife can imagine the emotions of Sister Hope, when she took
+possession of a large, dilapidated kitchen, containing an old stove and
+the peculiar stores out of which food was to be evolved for her little
+family of eleven. Cakes of maple sugar, dried peas and beans, barley and
+hominy, meal of all sorts, potatoes, and dried fruit. No milk, butter,
+cheese, tea, or meat appeared. Even salt was considered a useless
+luxury, and spice entirely forbidden by these lovers of Spartan
+simplicity. A ten years' experience of vegetarian vagaries had been good
+training for this new freak, and her sense of the ludicrous supported
+her through many trying scenes.
+
+Unleavened bread, porridge, and water for breakfast; bread, vegetables,
+and water for dinner; bread, fruit, and water for supper was the bill of
+fare ordained by the elders. No teapot profaned that sacred stove, no
+gory steak cried aloud for vengeance from her chaste gridiron and only
+a brave woman's taste, time, and temper were sacrificed on that domestic
+altar.
+
+The vexed question of light was settled by buying a quantity of bayberry
+wax for candles; and, on discovering that no one knew how to make them,
+pine-knots were introduced, to be used when absolutely necessary. Being
+summer, the evenings were not long, and the weary fraternity found it no
+great hardship to retire with the birds. The inner light was sufficient
+for most of them. But Mrs. Lamb rebelled. Evening was the only time she
+had to herself, and while the tired feet rested the skilful hands mended
+torn frocks and little stockings, or anxious heart forgot its burden in
+a book.
+
+So "mother's lamp" burned steadily, while the philosophers built a new
+heaven and earth by moonlight; and through all the metaphysical mists
+and philanthropic pyrotechnics of that period Sister Hope played her own
+little game of "throwing light," and none but the moths were the worse
+for it.
+
+Such farming probably was never seen before since Adam delved. The band
+of brothers began by spading garden and field; but a few days of it
+lessened their ardor amazingly. Blistered hands and aching backs
+suggested the expediency of permitting the use of cattle till the
+workers were better fitted for noble toil by a summer of the new life.
+
+Brother Moses brought a yoke of oxen from his farm,--at least, the
+philosophers thought so till it was discovered that one of the animals
+was a cow; and Moses confessed that he "must be let down easy, for he
+couldn't live on garden sarse entirely."
+
+Great was Dictator Lion's indignation at this lapse from virtue. But
+time pressed, the work must be done; so the meek cow was permitted to
+wear the yoke, and the recreant brother continued to enjoy forbidden
+draughts in the barn, which dark proceeding caused the children to
+regard him as one set apart for destruction.
+
+The sowing was equally peculiar, for, owing to some mistake, the three
+brethren who devoted themselves to this graceful task, found when about
+half through the job that each had been sowing a different sort of grain
+in the same field; a mistake which caused much perplexity, as it could
+not be remedied; but, after a long consultation and a good deal of
+laughter, it was decided to say nothing and see what would come of it.
+
+The garden was planted with a generous supply of useful roots and herbs;
+but, as manure was not allowed to profane the virgin soil, few of these
+vegetable treasures ever came up. Purslane reigned supreme, and the
+disappointed planters ate it philosophically, deciding that Nature knew
+what was best for them, and would generously supply their needs, if they
+could only learn to digest her "sallets" and wild roots.
+
+The orchard was laid out, a little grafting done, new trees and vines
+set, regardless of the unfit season and entire ignorance of the
+husbandmen, who honestly believed that in the autumn they would reap a
+bounteous harvest.
+
+Slowly things got into order, and rapidly rumors of the new experiment
+went abroad, causing many strange spirits to flock thither, for in those
+days communities were the fashion and transcendentalism raged wildly.
+Some came to look on and laugh, some to be supported in poetic idleness,
+a few to believe sincerely and work heartily. Each member was allowed to
+mount his favorite hobby, and ride it to his heart's content. Very queer
+were some of the riders, and very rampant some of the hobbies.
+
+One youth, believing that language was of little consequence if the
+spirit was only right, startled new-comers by blandly greeting them with
+"good-morning, damn you," and other remarks of an equally mixed order. A
+second irrepressible being held that all the emotions of the soul should
+be freely expressed, and illustrated his theory by antics that would
+have sent him to a lunatic asylum, if, as an unregenerate wag said, he
+had not already been in one. When his spirit soared, he climbed trees
+and shouted; when doubt assailed him, he lay upon the floor and groaned
+lamentably. At joyful periods, he raced, leaped, and sang; when sad, he
+wept aloud; and when a great thought burst upon him in the watches of
+the night, he crowed like a jocund cockerel, to the great delight of the
+children and the great annoyance of the elders. One musical brother
+fiddled whenever so moved, sang sentimentally to the four little girls,
+and put a music-box on the wall when he hoed corn.
+
+Brother Pease ground away at his uncooked food, or browsed over the farm
+on sorrel, mint, green fruit, and new vegetables. Occasionally he took
+his walks abroad, airily attired in an unbleached cotton _poncho_, which
+was the nearest approach to the primeval costume he was allowed to
+indulge in. At midsummer he retired to the wilderness, to try his plan
+where the woodchucks were without prejudices and huckleberry-bushes were
+hospitably full. A sunstroke unfortunately spoilt his plan, and he
+returned to semi-civilization a sadder and wiser man.
+
+Forest Absalom preserved his Pythagorean silence, cultivated his fine
+dark locks, and worked like a beaver, setting an excellent example of
+brotherly love, justice, and fidelity by his upright life. He it was who
+helped overworked Sister Hope with her heavy washes, kneaded the endless
+succession of batches of bread, watched over the children, and did the
+many tasks left undone by the brethren, who were so busy discussing and
+defining great duties that they forgot to perform the small ones.
+
+Moses White placidly plodded about, "chorin' raound," as he called it,
+looking like an old-time patriarch, with his silver hair and flowing
+beard, and saving the community from many a mishap by his thrift and
+Yankee shrewdness.
+
+Brother Lion domineered over the whole concern; for, having put the
+most money into the speculation, he was resolved to make it pay,--as if
+any thing founded on an ideal basis could be expected to do so by any
+but enthusiasts.
+
+Abel Lamb simply revelled in the Newness, firmly believing that his
+dream was to be beautifully realized and in time not only little
+Fruitlands, but the whole earth, be turned into a Happy Valley. He
+worked with every muscle of his body, for _he_ was in deadly earnest. He
+taught with his whole head and heart; planned and sacrificed, preached
+and prophesied, with a soul full of the purest aspirations, most
+unselfish purposes, and desires for a life devoted to God and man, too
+high and tender to bear the rough usage of this world.
+
+It was a little remarkable that only one woman ever joined this
+community. Mrs. Lamb merely followed wheresoever her husband led,--"as
+ballast for his balloon," as she said, in her bright way.
+
+Miss Jane Gage was a stout lady of mature years, sentimental, amiable,
+and lazy. She wrote verses copiously, and had vague yearnings and
+graspings after the unknown, which led her to believe herself fitted for
+a higher sphere than any she had yet adorned.
+
+Having been a teacher, she was set to instructing the children in the
+common branches. Each adult member took a turn at the infants; and, as
+each taught in his own way, the result was a chronic state of chaos in
+the minds of these much-afflicted innocents.
+
+Sleep, food, and poetic musings were the desires of dear Jane's life,
+and she shirked all duties as clogs upon her spirit's wings. Any thought
+of lending a hand with the domestic drudgery never occurred to her; and
+when to the question, "Are there any beasts of burden on the place?"
+Mrs. Lamb answered, with a face that told its own tale, "Only one
+woman!" the buxom Jane took no shame to herself, but laughed at the
+joke, and let the stout-hearted sister tug on alone.
+
+Unfortunately, the poor lady hankered after the flesh-pots, and
+endeavored to stay herself with private sips of milk, crackers, and
+cheese, and on one dire occasion she partook of fish at a neighbor's
+table.
+
+One of the children reported this sad lapse from virtue, and poor Jane
+was publicly reprimanded by Timon.
+
+"I only took a little bit of the tail," sobbed the penitent poetess.
+
+"Yes, but the whole fish had to be tortured and slain that you might
+tempt your carnal appetite with that one taste of the tail. Know ye not,
+consumers of flesh meat, that ye are nourishing the wolf and tiger in
+your bosoms?"
+
+At this awful question and the peal of laughter which arose from some of
+the younger brethren, tickled by the ludicrous contrast between the
+stout sinner, the stern judge, and the naughty satisfaction of the young
+detective, poor Jane fled from the room to pack her trunk, and return to
+a world where fishes' tails were not forbidden fruit.
+
+Transcendental wild oats were sown broadcast that year, and the fame
+thereof has not yet ceased in the land; for, futile as this crop seemed
+to outsiders, it bore an invisible harvest, worth much to those who
+planted in earnest. As none of the members of this particular community
+have ever recounted their experiences before, a few of them may not be
+amiss, since the interest in these attempts has never died out and
+Fruitlands was the most ideal of all these castles in Spain.--_Silver
+Pitchers, and Other Stories_.
+
+
+
+
+WILLIAM WIRT HOWE.
+
+(BORN, 1833.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONVERSATIONAL DEPRAVITY
+
+
+_To the Chief-Justice of Glenwood_,
+
+SUBLIME SIR: ... What can be more destructive of the higher forms of
+conversation than a pun? What right has any one to explode a petard in
+the midst of sweet sociality, and blow every thing like sequence and
+sentiment sky-high? And therefore, since you, as translator of the
+Pasha's Letters, have taken pains to publish his observations on many
+social subjects, I think it eminently proper that you should ventilate
+the ideas of his friend Tompkins upon a not less important theme.
+
+Happily, I have been saved the trouble of original composition, by a
+discovery made by my landlady while I was boarding a year ago on St.
+John's Park. Mr. Green, our attic boarder, went off suddenly one day to
+see a friend in the country, as he said. Of course our landlady
+searched his room, with a view of reading his letters; and in a brown
+hair-trunk, with a boot-jack, a razor-strop, a box of Seidlitz powders,
+and an odd volume of Young's Night Thoughts, she found the following
+manuscript. The females of the house were satisfied with reading such
+letters as were left by Mr. Green in his apartment, and so this paper
+was handed over to me. I may say that it was marked with pencil,
+"Declined with Thanks."
+
+
+"THE PUN FIEND.
+
+"BY C. GREEN.
+
+"I used to be corpulent, rosy-cheeked, and cheerful. I am gaunt, pale,
+and morose now. I used to sleep sweetly; but now I toss about upon my
+bed, terrified by hideous visions, and feelings as of a clammy hand or
+wet cloth laid on my face. I was wont to walk about our streets after
+business hours, and on Sundays, with a genuine smile of enjoyment
+lighting up my face; but now I hurry along with my eyes cast down, and I
+seek by-ways and dark lanes for my rambles. My friends think I am in
+love; persons who know me but slightly, suppose me a victim to
+remorse--imagine that I wear a hair shirt, and macerate my flesh. They
+are all wrong. An old bachelor like myself has long ago buried the
+light of love in a tomb, and set a seal upon the great stone at the
+door; and as for remorse, I owe no tailor any thing, and do not at
+present blame myself for any great fault, except having once subscribed
+for six months to the New York _Morning Cretan_. Nevertheless, my face
+grows haggard, my step weary, and even our Thursday's beef _a la mode_
+fails to tempt my enfeebled appetite.
+
+"I am haunted, haunted by a foul fiend. He meets me at six, P.M., in our
+festive dining-room, and the fork or spoon drops from my nerveless
+grasp. He follows me up to the parlor, where I sometimes talk of an
+evening to Miss Pipkin (Miss P. is our fourth story, front), and I
+become silent in his presence, and Pipkin votes me a bore. He sits by my
+side when I am playing at whist, and I trump my partner's trick, and the
+dear old game becomes disgusting. He even dared once to follow me into
+church, but I cried 'Avaunt!' in a tone so peremptory, that he fled for
+a moment. He joined me, however, as soon as service was over, and walked
+from Tenth Street to Madison Square, with his grizzly arm thurst through
+mine, and his diabolical jeers drumming on my tympana. In dreams he
+perches on my breast, and clutches me by the throat.
+
+"Like the arch fiend, he assumes many shapes. He is now a tall man, and
+again a short man; sometimes young and audacious, sometimes old and
+leering. He only once took a feminine guise: that blessed form was
+irksome to him. He prefers the freedom of masculinity and ineffables. He
+was once a bookkeeper like myself; then a young attorney; then a medical
+student; then a bald-headed old gentleman, who seemed to blow a
+flageolet for a living; and lately, he has taken the shape of a
+well-to-do President of 'The Arkansas and Arizona Sky Rocket
+Transportation Company,' but through all these shifting shapes, I
+recognize him and shudder.
+
+"He is known as the Funny Fellow.
+
+"Very glorious are wit and humor. I have heard many eminent lecturers
+discourse on the distinctions, definitions, and value of these airy good
+gifts. I remember being especially edified by the skill with which
+Spout, the eloquent, dissected the philosophy of mirth in the same style
+and with the same effect that the boy in the story dissected his
+grandmamma's bellows to see how the wind was raised. I agree with Spout
+that wit and humor are glorious; that satire, pricking the balloons of
+conceit, vain glory, and hypocrisy, is invaluable; that a good laugh can
+come only from a warm heart; that the man in motley is often wiser than
+the judge in ermine or the priest in lawn. These qualities are goodly in
+literature. We all love the kindly humorist from Chaucer to Holmes,
+inclusive. How genial and gentle they are, as they sit with us around
+the fireside, chucking us under the chins, and slyly poking us in the
+ribs; and in the field how nobly they have charged upon humbugs and
+shams. They have been true knights, chivalrous, kind-hearted, brave,
+religious; their spears are slender, perhaps, yet sharp and elastic as
+the blades of Toledo; and as they have galloped up and down in the
+lists, gaily caparisoned and cheery, it has done our hearts good to see
+how they have hurled into the dust the pompous, sleepy champions of
+error and hypocrisy.
+
+"So too, consider how pleasant a thing is mirth on the stage. Who does
+not thank William the Great for Falstaff, and Hackett for his
+personation of the fat knight? Who does not chuckle over the humors of
+Autolycus, rogue and peddler? Who has not felt his eye glisten, as his
+lips smiled, when Jesse Rural has spoken, and who will not say to
+Ollapod, 'Thank you, good sir, I owe you one'?
+
+"Ah me! how I used to read those jolly unctuous authors when I was
+young, in the old 'sitting-room' at home! The great fire-place glows
+before me now; its light dances on the wall; my mother's hand is on my
+head; my sister's eyes are beaming on her lover over in the darker
+corner; there is a murmur of pleasant voices; there are quiet mirth and
+deep joy. I lose myself in revery when I think of these pleasures, and
+almost forget the Funny Fellow.
+
+"He is pestiferous. If I were in the habit of profanity, I would let
+loose upon him an octagonal oath. If I were a man of muscle, it would be
+pleasant to get his head in chancery, and bruise it. It would be a
+relief to serve him with subpoenas, or present him long bills and demand
+immediate payment. Was my name providentially ordered to be Green, that
+he might pass verbal contumely upon it? Does he suppose that a man can
+live thirty-five years in this state of probation, without becoming
+slightly calloused to a pun on his own name? Yet he continues to pun on
+mine as if the process were highly amusing. Then again he interrupts
+any little attempts at pleasing conversation with his infernal
+absurdities. I was speaking one day at the dinner-table of a well-known
+orator who had been entertaining the town, and I flatter myself that my
+remarks were critically just as well as deeply interesting. The wretched
+being interposed--
+
+"'Mr. Green, when you say there was too much American Eagle in the
+speaker's discourse, do you mean that it was a talon-ted production, and
+to what claws of the speech do you especially refer?'
+
+"Miss Pipkin, who had been deeply intent on my observations, commenced
+to titter; what could I do but hang my head and swallow the rest of the
+meal in silence? If I had been possessed of a quick tongue, I would have
+lashed him with sarcasms, and Pipkin would have rejoiced with me in his
+groans. But no--I am slow of speech--and so I was bound to submit. After
+that he was more tyrannical than ever. He would come stealthily into my
+room and garotte me in a conversational way. He would seem to take me by
+the throat, saying, 'why don't you laugh--why don't you burst with
+merriment?' and then I would force a dismal grin, just to get rid of
+him.
+
+"I said to myself, I will leave this selfish Sahara called the city and
+county of New York I will leave its dust, dirt, carts, confusion, bulls,
+bears, Peter Funks, Jeremy Diddlers, and, best of all, the Funny Fellow.
+I will take board in some rural, as well as accessible place; the
+mosquitoes and ague of Flushing shall refresh my frame; the cottages of
+Astoria, with their pleasant view of the Penitentiary, shall revive my
+wounded spirit; I will exile myself from my native land to the shores of
+Jersey; I will sit beneath the shadow of the Quarantine on Staten
+Island. No--I won't--I will go to Yonkers--Yonkers that looks as though
+it had been built on a gentle slope, and then had suffered a violent
+attack of earthquake; daily boats shall convey me from my ledger to my
+bed and board, at convenient hours, so that while I post books in New
+York by day, I may revel in breezes, moonbeams, sweet milk, and gentle
+influences, by night. There, said I, in a burst of excusable enthusiasm,
+I will recline beneath wide-spreading beeches, and pipe upon an oaten
+reed. There will I listen to the soft bleating of lambs, and scent the
+fresh breath of cows; Nature shall touch and thrill me with her gentle
+hand; I will see the dear flowers turn their faces up to receive the
+kiss of the rising sun, or the benediction of the summer shower. There,
+too, I will meet the members of the mystic P.B., so that I shall talk of
+books other than day-books and blotters: we will discourse reverently of
+authors and their creations. I will not meet the Funny Fellow, for such
+a wretch can be produced only in the corrupt social hot-bed of Gotham.
+
+"So to Yonkers I went. I chose a room looking out upon the Hudson and
+the noble Palisades. I took with me a flute, a copy of the Bucolics of
+Virgil, and numerous linen garments. A great calm came over me. I was no
+longer haunted, goaded, oppressed. With peace nestling in my bosom, I
+went down to my first supper in the new boarding-house. A goodly meal
+smoked on the table, and the savor of baked shad, sweetest of smells,
+went up. While I sat choking myself with the bones of this delicious
+fish, I heard a voice on the opposite side of the table that sent the
+blood to my heart. If I had been feminine, there would have been a
+scene.
+
+"He was there: his eyes gloated over the board, a malicious quirk sat
+astride his fat lips. The Funny Fellow spoke to Miss Grasscloth:
+
+"'Why are the fishermen who catch these shad like wigmakers?'
+
+"'I don't know,'
+
+"'Because they make their living from bare poles.'
+
+"I ate no more supper. A nausea supervened. I left the table, rushed
+into the cool evening air, and let the fresh breeze visit my faded
+cheek. I strolled up the main street of Yonkers, and as I crushed my
+toes against the stones which then adorned that highway, I resolved to
+call on my sweet friend Julia ----. Her gentle smile, said I, will
+console me. She is not a Funny Fellow. We will talk together calmly,
+earnestly, in the moonlight, close by the great river. I will sit as
+near to her as her fashionable garments will permit, and forget my foe.
+
+"We walked together--Julia and I. We talked of things good and true. We
+spoke of the beauty of the nocturnal scene. Alas! a fearful, a demoniac
+change came over the girl's face. She said:
+
+"'Yes, my friend, we ought to enjoy this scene--for we are fine-night
+beings.'
+
+"I bid a hasty farewell to the large eyes and gentle smile. She was not
+much offended at my abrupt and angry departure, for my salary is small,
+my hair is turning grey, and I do not dance. But I was not entirely
+discouraged. I resolved to give Yonkers a fair trial, and a true verdict
+to render according to the evidence. So I frequented the tea-parties and
+sociables so common in that wretched town, and strove to shake off the
+melancholy that clung to me like the Old Man of the Sea. To my horror,
+the Funny Fellow became multiplied like the reflections in a shivered
+mirror. Men and women, and even young innocent children, became Funny,
+and danced about me in a horrible maze, and squeaked and gibbered, and
+tossed their jokes in my face. In one week I made five mortal enemies by
+refusing to smile when their tormenting squibs were exploded in my eyes.
+I felt like a rustic pony, who comes in his simple way into town on the
+Fourth of July, and has Chinese crackers and fiery serpents cast under
+his heels. One evening, in particular, they asked me to play the game of
+Comparisons (a proverbially odious game, that could exist only in an
+effete and degenerate civilization), in which the entire company tried
+to see how Funny they could be; and because I made stupid answers, I was
+laughed at by the young ladies.
+
+"I became disgusted with Yonkers, and returned to my intramural
+boarding-house in St. John's Park. The sidewalk near the house was in a
+dilapidated state, through the carelessness of the contractor, who had
+stipulated to pave it properly, but had not paved it at all, except with
+good intentions. And therefore, as I came along, I first besmeared my
+boots with muck then tripped my toes against a pile of brick: and
+finally fell headlong into the gutter. As I rose up and denounced, in
+somewhat loud language, the idleness and inefficiency of the contractor
+who had the work in charge, the Funny Fellow stood before me, his eyes
+glaring with triumph. He spoke in reply to my denunciations:
+
+"' My dear Green, do not call the contractor lazy and inefficient. I am
+sure that his is an energy that never FLAGS!'
+
+"I rushed to the room where I am now sealed. There is but one hope left
+me.
+
+"In the Territory of Nebraska, far to the west thereof, lies a tract of
+land which the early French trappers, with shrewd fitness called the'
+Mauvaises Terres.' It is a region of rocks, petrifactions, and other
+pre-Adamite peculiarities. In a paper written by Dr. Leid of
+Philadelphia, and published by the Smithsonian Institute, we are assured
+that there once lived in these bad lands, turtles six feet square, and
+alligators, compared with which the present squatter sovereigns of the
+territory are lovely and refined. The fossil remains of these ancient
+inhabitants still encumber the earth of that region, and make it
+unpleasant to view with an agricultural eye; but here and there the
+general desolation is relieved by a fertile valley, with a running brook
+and green slopes. White men, whisky, and Funny Fellows have not yet
+penetrated there. I will go to this sanctuary. A snug cabin will contain
+my necessary household--to wit--twelve shirts and a Bible. I will plant
+my corn, and tobacco, and vines on the fertile slope that looks to the
+south; my cattle and sheep shall browse the rest of the valley, while a
+few agile goats shall stand in picturesque positions upon the rocky
+monsters described by Dr. Leidy. My guests shall be the brave and wise
+red men who never try to make bad jokes. I do not think they ever try to
+be Funny; but to make assurance doubly sure, I shall not learn their
+language, so that any melancholy attempts they may possibly make, will
+fall upon unappreciative ears. By day I will cultivate my crops and
+tend my flocks and herds; and in the long evenings smoke the calumet
+with the worthy aborigines. If I should find there some dusky maiden,
+like Palmer's Indian girl, who has no idea of puns, polkas, crinoline,
+or eligible matches, I will woo her in savage hyperbole, and she shall
+light my pipe with her slender fingers, and beat for me the tom-tom when
+I am sad. I will live in a calm and conscientious way; the Funny Fellow
+shall become like the dim recollection of some horrible dream, and"--
+
+Mr. Green seems not to have finished his interesting reflections, and I
+shall not attempt to complete them. As well might I try to finish the
+Cathedral at Cologne. But I heartily sympathize with the feelings he has
+expressed, and trust that his new home in the West will never be invaded
+by conversational garroters.
+
+Sincerely your friend,
+
+TOMPKINS.
+
+--_The Pasha Papers_.
+
+
+
+
+CHARLES FARRAR BROWNE.
+
+("ARTEMUS WARD.")
+
+(BORN, 1834--DIED, 1867.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE TOWER OF LONDON.
+
+
+MR. PUNCH,--_My Dear Sir_:--I skurcely need inform you that your
+excellent Tower is very pop'lar with pe'ple from the agricultooral
+districks, and it was chiefly them class which I found waitin at the
+gates the other mornin.
+
+I saw at once that the Tower was established on a firm basis. In the
+entire history of firm basisis I don't find a basis more firmer than
+this one.
+
+"You have no Tower in America?" said a man in the crowd, who had somehow
+detected my denomination.
+
+"Alars! no," I anserd; "we boste of our enterprise and improovements,
+and yit we are devoid of a Tower. America oh my onhappy country! thou
+hast not got no Tower! It's a sweet Boon."
+
+The gates was opened after a while, and we all purchist tickets, and
+went into a waitin-room.
+
+"My frens," said a pale-faced little man, in black close, "this is a sad
+day."
+
+"Inasmuch as to how?" I said.
+
+"I mean it is sad to think that so many peple have been killed within
+these gloomy walls. My frens, let us drop a tear!"
+
+"No," I said, "you must excuse me. Others may drop one if they feel like
+it; but as for me, I decline. The early managers of this institootion
+were a bad lot, and their crimes were trooly orful; but I can't sob for
+those who died four or five hundred years ago. If they was my own
+relations I couldn't. It's absurd to shed sobs over things which occurd
+during the rain of Henry the Three. Let us be cheerful," I continnered.
+"Look at the festiv Warders, in their red flannil jackets. They are
+cheerful, and why should it not be thusly with us?"
+
+A Warder now took us in charge, and showed us the Trater's Gate, the
+armers, and things. The Trater's Gate is wide enuff to admit about
+twenty traters abrest, I should jedge; but beyond this, I couldn't see
+that it was superior to gates in gen'ral.
+
+Traters, I will here remark, are a onfornit class of peple. If they
+wasn't, they wouldn't be traters. They conspire to bust up a
+country--they fail, and they're traters. They bust her, and they become
+statesmen and heroes.
+
+Take the case of Gloster, afterwards Old Dick the Three, who may be seen
+at the Tower on horseback, in a heavy tin overcoat--take Mr. Gloster's
+case. Mr. G. was a conspirator of the basist dye, and if he'd failed, he
+would have been hung on a sour apple tree. But Mr. G. succeeded, and
+became great. He was slewed by Col. Richmond, but he lives in history,
+and his equestrian figger may be seen daily for a sixpence, in
+conjunction with other em'nent persons, and no extra charge for the
+Warder's able and bootiful lectur.
+
+There's one king in this room who is mounted onto a foaming steed, his
+right hand graspin a barber's pole. I didn't learn his name.
+
+The room where the daggers and pistils and other weppins is kept is
+interestin. Among this collection of choice cuttlery I notist the bow
+and arrer which those hot-heded old chaps used to conduct battles with.
+It is quite like the bow and arrer used at this day by certain tribes
+of American Injuns, and they shoot 'em off with such a excellent
+precision that I almost sigh'd to be an Injun when I was in the Rocky
+Mountain regin. They are a pleasant lot them Injuns. Mr. Cooper and Dr.
+Catlin have told us of the red man's wonerful eloquence, and I found it
+so. Our party was stopt on the plains of Utah by a band of Shoshones,
+whose chief said:
+
+"Brothers! the pale-face is welcome. Brothers! the sun is sinking in the
+west, and Wa-na-bucky-she will soon cease speakin. Brothers! the poor
+red man belongs to a race which is fast becomin extink."
+
+He then whooped in a shrill manner, stole all our blankets and whisky,
+and fled to the primeval forest to conceal his emotions.
+
+I will remark here, while on the subjeck of Injuns, that they are in the
+main a very shaky set, with even less sense than the Fenians, and when I
+hear philanthropists bewailin the fack that every year "carries the
+noble red man nearer the settin sun," I simply have to say I'm glad of
+it, tho' it is rough on the settin sun. They call you by the sweet name
+of Brother one minit, and the next they scalp you with their
+Thomas-hawks. But I wander. Let us return to the Tower.
+
+At one end of the room where the weppins is kept, is a wax figger of
+Queen Elizabeth, mounted on a fiery stuffed hoss, whose glass eye
+flashes with pride, and whose red morocker nostril dilates hawtily, as
+if conscious of the royal burden he bears. I have associated Elizabeth
+with the Spanish Armady. She's mixed up with it at the Surrey Theatre,
+where _Troo to the Core_ is bein acted, and in which a full bally core
+is introjooced on board the Spanish Admiral's ship, giving the audiens
+the idee that he intends openin a moosic-hall in Plymouth the moment he
+conkers that town. But a very interesting drammer is _Troo to the Core_,
+notwithstandin the eccentric conduct of the Spanish Admiral; and very
+nice it is in Queen Elizabeth to make Martin Truegold a baronet.
+
+The Warder shows us some instrooments of tortur, such as thumbscrews,
+throat-collars, etc., statin that these was conkered from the Spanish
+Armady, and addin what a crooil peple the Spaniards was in them
+days--which elissited from a bright-eyed little girl of about twelve
+summers the remark that she tho't it _was_ rich to talk about the
+crooilty of the Spaniards usin thumbscrews, when he was in a Tower
+where so many poor peple's heads had been cut off. This made the Warder
+stammer and turn red.
+
+I was so pleased with the little girl's brightness that I could have
+kissed the dear child, and I would if she'd been six years older.
+
+I think my companions intended makin a day of it, for they all had
+sandwiches, sassiges, etc. The sad-lookin man, who had wanted us to drop
+a tear afore we started to go round, fling'd such quantities of sassige
+into his mouth that I expected to see him choke hisself to death; he
+said to me, in the Beauchamp Tower, where the poor prisoners writ their
+onhappy names on the cold walls, "This is a sad sight."
+
+"It is indeed," I anserd. "You're black in the face. You shouldn't eat
+sassige in public without some rehearsals beforehand. You manage it
+orkwardly."
+
+"No," he said, "I mean this sad room."
+
+Indeed, he was quite right. Tho' so long ago all these drefful things
+happened, I was very glad to git away from this gloomy room, and go
+where the rich and sparklin Crown Jewils is kept. I was so pleased with
+the Queen's Crown, that it occurd to me what a agree'ble surprise it
+would be to send a sim'lar one home to my wife; and I asked the Warder
+what was the vally of a good, well-constructed Crown like that. He told
+me, but on cypherin up up with a pencil the amount of funs I have in the
+Jint Stock Bank, I conclooded I'd send her a genteel silver watch
+instid.
+
+And so I left the Tower. It is a solid and commandin edifis, but I deny
+that it is cheerful. I bid it adoo without a pang.
+
+I was droven to my hotel by the most melancholly driver of a
+four-wheeler that I ever saw. He heaved a deep sigh as I gave him two
+shillings.
+
+"I'll give you six d.'s more," I said, "if it hurts you so."
+
+"It isn't that," he said, with a hart-rendin groan, "it's only a way I
+have. My mind's upset to-day. I at one time tho't I'd drive you into the
+Thames. I've been readin all the daily papers to try and understand
+about Governor Eyre, and my mind is totterin. It's really wonderful I
+didn't drive you into the Thames."
+
+I asked the onhappy man what his number was, so I could redily find him
+in case I should want him agin, and bad him good-bye. And then I tho't
+what a frollicsome day I'd made of it. Respectably, etc.,
+
+ARTEMUS WARD.
+
+--_Punch_,1866.
+
+
+SCIENCE AND NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+Mr. Punch _My Dear Sir_:--I was a little disapinted at not receivin a
+invitation to jine in the meetins of the Social Science Congress....
+
+I prepared an Essy on Animals to read before the Social Science meetins.
+It is a subjeck I may troothfully say I have successfully wrastled with.
+I tackled it when only nineteen years old. At that tender age I writ a
+Essy for a lit'ry Institoot entitled, "Is Cats to be trusted?" Of the
+merits of that Essy it doesn't becum me to speak, but I may be excoos'd
+for mentionin that the Institoot parsed a resolution that "whether we
+look upon the length of this Essy, or the manner in which it is written,
+we feel that we will not express any opinion of it, and we hope it will
+be read in other towns."
+
+Of course the Essy I writ for the Social Science Society is a more
+finisheder production than the one on Cats, which was wroten when my
+mind was crood, and afore I had masterd a graceful and ellygant stile
+of composition. I could not even punctooate my sentences proper at that
+time, and I observe with pane, on lookin over this effort of my youth,
+that its beauty is in one or two instances mar'd by ingrammaticisms.
+This was inexcusable, and I'm surprised I did it. A writer who can't
+write in a grammerly manner better shut up shop.
+
+You shall hear this Essy on Animals. Some day when you have four hours
+to spare, I'll read it to you. I think you'll enjoy it. Or, what will be
+much better, if I may suggest--omit all picturs in next week's _Punch_,
+and do not let your contributors write eny thing whatever (et them have
+a holiday; they can go to the British Mooseum;) and publish my Essy
+intire. It will fill all your collumes full, and create comment. Does
+this proposition strike you? Is it a go?
+
+In case I had read the Essy to the Social Sciencers, I had intended it
+should be the closin attraction. I intended it should finish the
+proceedins. I think it would have finished them. I understand animals
+better than any other class of human creatures. I have a very animal
+mind, and I've been identified with 'em doorin my entire perfessional
+career as a showman, more especial bears, wolves, leopards and
+serpunts.
+
+The leopard is as lively a animal as I ever came into contack with. It
+is troo he cannot change his spots, but you can change 'em for him with
+a paint-brush, as I once did in the case of a leopard who wasn't
+nat'rally spotted in a attractive manner. In exhibitin him I used to
+stir him up in his cage with a protracted pole, and for the purpuss of
+makin him yell and kick up in a leopardy manner, I used to casionally
+whack him over the head. This would make the children inside the booth
+scream with fright, which would make fathers of families outside the
+booth very anxious to come in--because there is a large class of parents
+who have a uncontrollable passion for takin their children to places
+where they will stand a chance of being frightened to death.
+
+One day I whacked this leopard more than ushil, which elissited a
+remonstrance from a tall gentleman in spectacles, who said, "My good
+man, do not beat the poor caged animal. Rather fondle him."
+
+"I'll fondle him with a club," I ansered, hitting him another whack.
+
+"I prithy desist," said the gentleman; "stand aside, and see the effeck
+of kindness. I understand the idiosyncracies of these creeturs better
+than you do."
+
+With that he went up to the cage, and thrustin his face in between the
+iron bars, he said, soothingly, "Come hither, pretty creetur."
+
+The pretty creetur come-hithered rayther speedy, and seized the
+gentleman by the whiskers, which he tore off about enuff to stuff a
+small cushion with.
+
+He said "You vagabone, I'll have you indicted for exhibitin dangerous
+and immoral animals."
+
+I replied, "Gentle Sir, there isn't a animal here that hasn't a
+beautiful moral, but you mustn't fondle 'em. You mustn't meddle with
+their idiotsyncracies."
+
+The gentleman was a dramatic cricket, and he wrote a article for a
+paper, in which he said my entertainment wos a decided failure.
+
+As regards Bears, you can teach 'em to do interestin things, but they're
+onreliable. I had a very large grizzly bear once, who would dance, and
+larf, and lay down, and bow his head in grief, and give a mournful wale,
+etsetry. But he often annoyed me. It will be remembered that on the
+occasion of the first battle of Bull Run, it suddenly occurd to the
+Fed'ral soldiers that they had business in Washington which ought not to
+be neglected, and they all started for that beautiful and romantic city,
+maintainin a rate of speed durin the entire distance that would have
+done credit to the celebrated French steed _Gladiateur_. Very nat'rally
+our Gov'ment was deeply grieved at this defeat; and I said to my Bear
+shortly after, as I was givin a exhibition in Ohio--I said, "Brewin, are
+you not sorry the National arms has sustained a defeat?" His business
+was to wale dismal, and bow his head down, the band (a barrel origin and
+a wiolin) playing slow and melancholy moosic. What did the grizzly old
+cuss do, however, but commence darncin and larfin in the most joyous
+manner? I had a narrer escape from being imprisoned for
+disloyalty.--_Works_.
+
+
+FROM THE "LECTURE."
+
+Some years ago I engaged a celebrated Living American Skeleton for a
+tour through Australia. He was the thinnest man I ever saw. He was a
+splendid skeleton. He didn't weigh any thing scarcely,--and I said to
+myself,--the people of Australia will flock to see this tremendous
+curiosity. It is a long voyage--as you know--from New York to
+Melbourne--and to my utter surprise the skeleton had no sooner got out
+to sea than he commenced eating in the most horrible manner. He
+had never been on the ocean before--and he said it agreed with
+him.--I thought so!--I never saw a man eat so much in my life.
+Beef--mutton--pork--he swallowed them all like a shark--and between
+meals he was often discovered behind barrels eating hard-boiled eggs.
+The result was that when we reached Melbourne this infamous skeleton
+weighed sixty-four pounds more than I did!
+
+I thought I was ruined--but I wasn't. I took him on to
+California--another very long sea voyage--and when I got him to San
+Francisco I exhibited him as a fat man.
+
+This story hasn't any thing to do with my Entertainment, I know--but one
+of the principal features of my Entertainment is that it contains so
+many things that don't have any thing to do with it....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I like Music.--I can't sing. As a singist I am not a success. I am
+saddest when I sing. So are those who hear me. They are sadder even
+than I am....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I met a man in Oregon who hadn't any teeth--not a tooth in his head--yet
+that man could play on the bass drum better than any man I ever met....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Brigham Young has two hundred wives. Just think of that! Oblige me by
+thinking of that. That is--he has eighty actual wives, and he is
+spiritually married to one hundred and twenty more. These spiritual
+marriages--as the Mormons call them--are contracted with aged
+widows--who think it a great honor to be sealed--the Mormons call it
+being sealed--to the Prophet.
+
+So we may say he has two hundred wives. He loves not wisely--but two
+hundred well. He is dreadfully married. He's the most married man I ever
+saw in my life....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I regret to say that efforts were made to make a Mormon of me while I
+was in Utah.
+
+It was leap-year when I was there--and seventeen young widows--the wives
+of a deceased Mormon--offered me their hearts and hands. I called on
+them one day--and taking their soft white hands in mine--which made
+eighteen hands altogether--I found them in tears.
+
+And I said--"Why is this thus? What is the reason of this thusness?"
+
+They hove a sigh--seventeen sighs of different size.--They said--
+
+"Oh--soon thou wilt be gonested away!"
+
+I told them that when I got ready to leave a place I wentested.
+
+They said--"Doth not like us?"
+
+I said--"I doth--I doth!"
+
+I also said--"I hope your intentions are honorable--as I am a lone
+child--my parents being far--far away."
+
+They then said--"Wilt not marry us?"
+
+I said--"Oh no--it cannot was."
+
+Again they asked me to marry them--and again I declined. When they
+cried--
+
+"Oh--cruel man! This is too much--oh! too much!"
+
+I told them that it was on account of the muchness that I
+declined.--_Works_.
+
+
+
+
+FRANK R. STOCKTON.
+
+(BORN, 1834.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR TAVERN.
+
+
+It was about noon of a very fair July day, when Euphemia and myself
+arrived at the little town where we were to take the stage up into the
+mountains. We were off for a two weeks' vacation and our minds were a
+good deal easier than when we went away before, and left Pomona at the
+helm. We had enlarged the boundaries of Rudder Grange, having purchased
+the house, with enough adjoining land to make quite a respectable farm.
+Of course I could not attend to the manifold duties on such a place, and
+my wife seldom had a happier thought than when she proposed that we
+should invite Pomona and her husband to come and live with us. Pomona
+was delighted, and Jonas was quite willing to run our farm. So
+arrangements were made, and the young couple were established in
+apartments in our back building, and went to work as if taking care of
+us and our possessions was the ultimate object of their lives. Jonas was
+such a steady fellow that we feared no trouble from tree-man or
+lightning rodder during this absence.
+
+Our destination was a country tavern on the stage-road, not far from the
+point where the road crosses the ridge of the mountain range, and about
+sixteen miles from the town. We had heard of this tavern from a friend
+of ours, who had spent a summer there. The surrounding country was
+lovely, and the house was kept by a farmer, who was a good soul, and
+tried to make his guests happy. These were generally passing farmers and
+wagoners, or stage-passengers, stopping for a meal, but occasionally a
+person from the cities, like our friend, came to spend a few weeks in
+the mountains.
+
+So hither we came, for an out-of-the-world spot like this was just what
+we wanted. When I took our place at the stage-office, I inquired for
+David Button, the farm tavern-keeper before mentioned, but the agent did
+not know of him.
+
+"However," said he, "the driver knows everybody on the road, and he'll
+set you down at the house."
+
+So, off we started, having paid for our tickets on the basis that we
+were to ride about sixteen miles. We had seats on top, and the trip,
+although slow,--for the road wound uphill steadily,--was a delightful
+one. Our way lay, for the greater part of the time, through the woods,
+but now and then we came to a farm, and a turn in the road often gave us
+lovely views of the foot-hills and the valleys behind us.
+
+But the driver did not know where Dutton's tavern was. This we found out
+after we had started. Some persons might have thought it wiser to settle
+this matter before starting, but I am not at all sure that it would have
+been so. We were going to this tavern, and did not wish to go anywhere
+else. If people did not know where it was, it would be well for us to go
+and look for it. We knew the road that it was on, and the locality in
+which it was to be found.
+
+Still, it was somewhat strange that a stage-driver, passing along the
+road every week-day,--one day one way, and the next the other
+way,--should not know a public-house like Dutton's.
+
+"If I remember rightly," I said, "the stage used to stop there for the
+passengers to take supper."
+
+"Well, then, it ain't on this side o' the ridge," said the driver; "we
+stop for supper, about a quarter of a mile on the other side, at Pete
+Lowry's. Perhaps Dutton used to keep that place. Was it called the
+'Ridge House'?"
+
+I did not remember the name of the house, but I knew very well that it
+was not on the other side of the ridge.
+
+"Then," said the driver, "I'm sure I don't know where it is. But I've
+only been on the road about a year, and your man may 'a' moved away
+afore I come. But there ain't no tavern this side the ridge, arter ye
+leave Delhi, and, that's nowhere's nigh the ridge."
+
+There were a couple of farmers who were sitting by the driver, and who
+had listened with considerable interest to this conversation. Presently,
+one of them turned around to me and said:
+
+"Is it Dave Dutton ye're askin' about?"
+
+"Yes," I replied, "that's his name."
+
+"Well, I think he's dead," said he.
+
+At this, I began to feel uneasy, and I could see that my wife shared my
+trouble.
+
+Then the other farmer spoke up.
+
+"I don't believe he's dead, Hiram," said he to his companion. "I heerd
+of him this spring. He's got a sheep-farm on the other side o' the
+mountain, and he's a livin' there. That's what I heerd, at any rate. But
+he don't live on this road any more," he continued, turning to us. "He
+used to keep tavern on this road, and the stages did used to stop fur
+supper--or else dinner. I don't jist ree-collect which. But he don't
+keep tavern on this road no more."
+
+"Of course not," said his companion, "if he's a livin' over the
+mountain. But I b'lieve he's dead."
+
+I asked the other farmer if he knew how long it had been since Dutton
+had left this part of the country.
+
+"I don't know fur certain," he said, "but I know he was keeping tavern
+here two year' ago, this fall, fur I came along here, myself, and
+stopped there to git supper--or dinner, I don't jist ree-collect which."
+
+It had been three years since our friend had boarded at Dutton's house.
+There was no doubt that the man was not living at his old place now. My
+wife and I now agreed that it was very foolish in us to come so far
+without making more particular inquiries. But we had had an idea that a
+man who had a place like Dutton's tavern would live there always.
+
+"What are ye goin' to do?" asked the driver, very much interested, for
+it was not every day that he had passengers who had lost their
+destination. "Ye might go on to Lowry's. He takes boarders sometimes."
+
+But Lowry's did not attract us. An ordinary country-tavern, where
+stage-passengers took supper, was not what we came so far to find.
+
+"Do you know where this house o' Dutton's is?" said the driver, to the
+man who had once taken either dinner or supper there.
+
+"Oh yes! I'd know the house well enough, if I saw it. It's the fust
+house this side o' Lowry's."
+
+"With a big pole in front of it?" asked the driver.
+
+"Yes, there was a sign-pole in front of it."
+
+"An' a long porch?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Oh! well!" said the driver, settling himself in his seat. "I know all
+about that house. That's a empty house. I didn't think you meant that
+house. There's nobody lives there. An' yit, now I come to remember, I
+have seen people about, too. I tell ye what ye better do. Since ye're so
+set on staying on this side the ridge, ye better let me put ye down at
+Dan Carson's place. That's jist about quarter of a mile from where
+Dutton used to live. Dan's wife can tell ye all about the Duttons, an'
+about everybody else, too, in this part o' the country, and if there
+aint nobody livin' at the old tavern, ye can stay all night at Carson's,
+and I'll stop an' take you back, to-morrow, when I come along."
+
+We agreed to this plan, for there was nothing better to be done, and,
+late in the afternoon, we were set down with our small trunk--for we
+were traveling under light weight--at Dan Carson's door. The stage was
+rather behind time, and the driver whipped up and left us to settle our
+own affairs. He called back, however, that he would keep a good look-out
+for us to-morrow.
+
+Mrs. Carson soon made her appearance, and, very naturally, was somewhat
+surprised to see visitors with their baggage standing on her little
+porch. She was a plain, coarsely dressed woman, with an apron full of
+chips and kindling wood, and a fine mind for detail, as we soon
+discovered.
+
+"Jist so," she said, putting down the chips and inviting us to seats on
+a bench. "Dave Dutton's folks is all moved away. Dave has a good farm
+on the other side o' the mountain, an' it never did pay him to keep that
+tavern, 'specially as he didn't sell liquor. When he went away, his son
+Al come there to live with his wife, an' the old man left a good deal o'
+furniture and things for him, but Al's wife aint satisfied here, and,
+though they've been here, off an' on, the house is shet up most o' the
+time. It's for sale an' to rent, both, ef enybody wants it. I'm sorry
+about you, too, fur it was a nice tavern, when Dave kept it."
+
+We admitted that we were also very sorry, and the kind-hearted woman
+showed a great deal of sympathy.
+
+"You might stay here, but we haint got no fit room where you two could
+sleep."
+
+At this, Euphemia and I looked very blank.
+
+"But you could go up to the house and stay, jist as well as not," Mrs.
+Carson continued. "There's plenty o' things there, an' I keep the key.
+For the matter o' that, ye might take the house for as long as ye want
+to stay; Dave 'd be glad enough to rent it; and, if the lady knows how
+to keep house, it wouldn't be no trouble at all, jist for you two. We
+could let ye have all the victuals ye'd want, cheap, and there's plenty
+o' wood there, cut, and every thing handy."
+
+We looked at each other. We agreed. Here was a chance for a rare good
+time. It might be better, perhaps, than any thing we had expected.
+
+The bargain was struck. Mrs. Carson, who seemed vested with all the
+necessary powers of attorney, appeared to be perfectly satisfied with
+our trustworthiness, and when I paid on the spot the small sum she
+thought proper for two weeks' rent, she evidently considered she had
+done a very good thing for Dave Dutton and herself.
+
+"I'll jist put some bread, an' eggs, an' coffee, an' pork, an' things in
+the basket, an' I'll have 'em took up for ye, with yer trunk, an' I'll
+go with ye an' take some milk. Here, Danny!" she cried, and directly her
+husband, a long, thin, sun-burnt, sandy-headed man, appeared, and to him
+she told, in a few words, our story, and ordered him to hitch up the
+cart and be ready to take our trunk and the basket up to Dutton's old
+house.
+
+When all was ready, we walked up the hill, followed by Danny and the
+cart. We found the house a large, low, old-fashioned farm-house,
+standing near the road with a long piazza in front, and a magnificent
+view of mountain-tops in the rear. Within, the lower rooms were large
+and low, with quite a good deal of furniture in them. There was no
+earthly reason why we should not be perfectly jolly and comfortable
+here. The more we saw the more delighted we were at the odd experience
+we were about to have. Mrs. Carson busied herself in getting things in
+order for our supper and general accommodation. She made Danny carry our
+trunk to a bedroom in the second story, and then set him to work
+building a fire in a great fire-place, with a crane for the kettle.
+
+When she had done all she could, it was nearly dark, and after lighting
+a couple of candles, she left us, to go home and get supper for her own
+family.
+
+As she and Danny were about to depart in the cart, she ran back to ask
+us if we would like to borrow a dog.
+
+"There aint nuthin to be afeard of," she said; "for nobody hardly ever
+takes the trouble to lock the doors in these parts, but bein' city
+folks, I thought ye might feel better if ye had a dog."
+
+We made haste to tell her that we were not city folks, but declined the
+dog. Indeed, Euphemia remarked that she would be much more afraid of a
+strange dog than of robbers.
+
+After supper, which we enjoyed as much as any meal we ever ate in our
+lives, we each took a candle, and after arranging our bedroom for the
+night, we explored the old house. There were lots of curious things
+everywhere,--things that were apparently so "old timey," as my wife
+remarked, that David Dutton did not care to take them with him to his
+new farm, and so left them for his son, who probably cared for them even
+less than his father did. There was a garret extending over the whole
+house, and filled with old spinning-wheels, and strings of onions, and
+all sorts of antiquated bric-a-brac, which was so fascinating to me that
+I could scarcely tear myself away from it; but Euphemia, who was
+dreadfully afraid that I would set the whole place on fire, at length
+prevailed on me to come down.
+
+We slept soundly that night, in what was probably the best bedroom in
+the house, and awoke with a feeling that we were about to enter on a
+period of some uncommon kind of jollity, which we found to be true when
+we went down to get breakfest. I made the fire, Euphemia made the
+coffee, and Mrs. Carson came with cream and some fresh eggs. The good
+woman was in high spirits. She was evidently pleased at the idea of
+having neighbors, temporary though they were, and it had probably been a
+long time since she had had such a chance of selling milk, eggs, and
+sundries. It was almost the same as opening a country store. We bought
+groceries and every thing of her.
+
+We had a glorious time that day. We were just starting out for a
+mountain stroll when our stage-driver came along on his down trip.
+
+"Hello!" he called out. "Want to go back this morning?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," I cried. "We wont go back for a couple of weeks.
+We've settled here for the present."
+
+The man smiled. He didn't seem to understand it exactly, but he was
+evidently glad to see us so well satisfied. If he had had time to stop
+and have the matter explained to him, he would probably have been better
+satisfied; but as it was, he waved his whip to us and drove on. He was a
+good fellow.
+
+We strolled all day, having locked up the house and taken our lunch with
+us; and when we came back, it seemed really like coming home. Mrs.
+Carson, with whom we had left the key, had brought the milk and was
+making the fire. This woman was too kind. We determined to try and repay
+her in some way. After a splendid supper we went to bed happy.
+
+The next day was a repetition of this one, but the day after it rained.
+So we determined to enjoy the old tavern, and we rummaged about
+everywhere. I visited the garret again, and we went to the old barn,
+with its mows half full of hay, and had rare times climbing about there.
+We were delighted that it happened to rain. In a wood-shed, near the
+house, I saw a big square board with letters on it. I examined the
+board, and found it was a sign,--a hanging sign,--and on it was painted
+in letters that were yet quite plain:
+
+ "FARMERS'
+ AND
+ MECHANICS'
+ HOTEL."
+
+I called to Euphemia and told her that I had found the old tavern sign.
+She came to look at it, and I pulled it out.
+
+"Soldiers and sailors!" she exclaimed; "that's funny."
+
+I looked over on her side of the sign, and, sure enough, there was the
+inscription:
+
+ "SOLDIERS'
+ AND
+ SAILORS'
+ HOUSE."
+
+"They must have bought this comprehensive sign in some town," I said.
+"Such a name would never have been chosen for a country tavern like
+this. But I wish they hadn't taken it down. The house would look more
+like what it ought to be with its sign hanging before it."
+
+"Well, then," said Euphemia, "let's put it up."
+
+I agreed instantly to this proposition, and we went to look for a
+ladder. We found one in the wagon-house, and carried it out to the
+sign-post in the front of the house. It was raining, gently, during
+these performances, but we had on our old clothes, and were so much
+interested in our work that we did not care for a little rain. I carried
+the sign to the post, and then, at the imminent risk of breaking my
+neck, I hung it on its appropriate hooks on the transverse beam of the
+sign-post. Now our tavern was really what it pretended to be. We gazed
+on the sign with admiration and content.
+
+"Do you think we had better keep it up all the time?" I asked of my
+wife.
+
+"Certainly," said she. "It's a part of the house. The place isn't
+complete without it."
+
+"But suppose some one should come along and want to be entertained?"
+
+"But no one will. And if people do come, I'll take care of the soldiers
+and sailors, if you will attend to the farmers and mechanics."
+
+I consented to this, and we went in-doors to prepare dinner.--_Rudder
+Grange_.
+
+
+A PIECE OF RED CALICO.
+
+Mr. Editor:--If the following true experience shall prove of any
+advantage to any of your readers, I shall be glad.
+
+I was going into town the other morning, when my wife handed me a little
+piece of red calico, and asked me if I would have time during the day,
+to buy her two yards and a half of calico like that. I assured her that
+it would be no trouble at all; and putting the piece of calico in my
+pocket, I took the train for the city.
+
+At lunch-time I stopped in at a large dry-goods store to attend to my
+wife's commission. I saw a well-dressed man walking the floor between
+the counters, where long lines of girls were waiting on much longer
+lines of customers, and asked him where I could see some red calico.
+
+"This way, sir," and he led me up the store. "Miss Stone," said he to a
+young lady, "show this gentleman some red calico."
+
+"What shade do you want?" asked Miss Stone.
+
+I showed her the little piece of calico that my wife had given me. She
+looked at it and handed it back to me. Then she took down a great roll
+of red calico and spread it out on the counter.
+
+"Why, that isn't the shade!" said I.
+
+"No, not exactly," said she; "but it is prettier than your sample."
+
+"That may be," said I; "but, you see, I want to match this piece. There
+is something already made of this kind of calico, which needs to be made
+larger, or mended, or something. I want some calico of the same shade."
+
+The girl made no answer, but took down another roll.
+
+"That's the shade," said she.
+
+"Yes," I replied, "but it's striped."
+
+"Stripes are more worn than any thing else in calicoes," said she.
+
+"Yes; but this isn't to be worn. It's for furniture, I think. At any
+rate, I want perfectly plain stuff, to match something already in use."
+
+"Well, I don't think you can find it perfectly plain, unless you get
+Turkey-red."
+
+"What is Turkey-red?" I asked.
+
+"Turkey-red is perfectly plain in calicoes," she answered.
+
+"Well, let me see some."
+
+"We haven't any Turkey-red calico left," she said, "but we have some
+very nice plain calicoes in other colors."
+
+"I don't want any other color. I want stuff to match this."
+
+"It's hard to match cheap calico like that," she said, and so I left
+her.
+
+I next went into a store a few doors farther up Broadway. When I entered
+I approached the "floor-walker," and handing him my sample, said:
+
+"Have you any calico like this?"
+
+"Yes, sir," said he. "Third counter to the right."
+
+I went to the third counter to the right, and showed my sample to the
+saleman in attendance there. He looked at it on both sides. Then he
+said:
+
+"We haven't any of this."
+
+"That gentleman said you had," said I.
+
+"We had it, but we're out of it now. You'll get that goods at an
+upholsterer's."
+
+I went across the street to an upholsterer's.
+
+"Have you any stuff like this?' I asked.
+
+"No," said the salesman. "We haven't. Is it for furniture?"
+
+"Yes," I replied.
+
+"Then Turkey-red is what you want?"
+
+"Is Turkey-red just like this?" I asked.
+
+"No," said he; "but it's much better."
+
+"That makes no difference to me," I replied. "I want something just like
+this."
+
+"But they don't use that for furniture," he said.
+
+"I should think people could use any thing they wanted for furniture," I
+remarked, somewhat sharply.
+
+"They can, but they don't," he said quite calmly. "They don't use red
+like that. They use Turkey-red."
+
+I said no more, but left. The next place I visited was a very large
+dry-goods store. Of the first salesman I saw I inquired if they kept red
+calico like my sample.
+
+"You'll find that on the second story," said he.
+
+I went up-stairs. There I asked a man:
+
+"Where will I find red calico?"
+
+"In the far room to the left. Right over there." And he pointed to a
+distant corner.
+
+I walked through the crowds of purchasers and salespeople, and around
+the counters and tables filled with goods, to the far room to the left.
+When I got there I asked for red calico.
+
+"The second counter down this side," said the man.
+
+I went there and produced my sample. "Calicoes down-stairs," said the
+man.
+
+"They told me they were up here," I said.
+
+"Not these plain goods. You'll find 'em down-stairs at the back of the
+store, over on that side."
+
+I went down-stairs to the back of the store.
+
+"Where will I find red calico like this?" I asked.
+
+"Next counter but one," said the man addressed, walking with me in the
+direction pointed out.
+
+"Dunn, show red calicoes."
+
+Mr. Dunn took my sample and looked at it.
+
+"We haven't this shade in that quality of goods," he said.
+
+"Well, have you it in any quality of goods?" I asked.
+
+"Yes; we've got it finer." And he took down a piece of calico, and
+unrolled a yard or two of it on the counter.
+
+"That's not this shade," I said.
+
+"No," said he. "The goods is finer and the color's better."
+
+"I want it to match this," I said.
+
+"I thought you weren't particular about the match," said the salesman.
+"You said you didn't care for the quality of the goods, and you know you
+can't match goods without you take into consideration quality and color
+both. If you want that quality of goods in red, you ought to get
+Turkey-red."
+
+I did not think it necessary to answer this remark, but said:
+
+"Then you've got nothing to match this?"
+
+"No, sir. But perhaps they may have it in the upholstery department, in
+the sixth story."
+
+So I got in the elevator and went up to the top of the house.
+
+"Have you any red stuff like this?" I said to a young man.
+
+"Red stuff? Upholstery department,--other end of this floor."
+
+I went to the other end of the floor.
+
+"I want some red calico," I said to a man.
+
+"Furniture goods?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," said I.
+
+"Fourth counter to the left."
+
+I went to the fourth counter to the left, and showed my sample to a
+salesman. He looked at it, and said:
+
+"You'll get this down on the first floor--calico department."
+
+I turned on my heel, descended in the elevator, and went out on
+Broadway. I was thoroughly sick of red calico. But I determined to make
+one more trial. My wife had bought her red calico not long before, and
+there must be some to be had somewhere. I ought to have asked her where
+she bought it, but I thought a simple little thing like that could be
+bought anywhere.
+
+I went into another large dry-goods store. As I entered the door a
+sudden tremor seized me. I could not bear to take out that piece of red
+calico. If I had had any other kind of a rag about me--a pen-wiper or
+any thing of the sort--I think I would have asked them if they could
+match that.
+
+But I stepped up to a young woman and presented my sample, with the
+usual question.
+
+"Back room, counter on the left," she said.
+
+I went there.
+
+"Have you any red calico like this?" I asked of the lady behind the
+counter.
+
+"No, sir," she said, "but we have it in Turkey-red."
+
+Turkey-red again! I surrendered.
+
+"All right," I said, "give me Turkey-red."
+
+"How much, sir?" she asked.
+
+"I don't know--say five yards."
+
+The lady looked at me rather strangely, but measured off five yards of
+Turkey-red calico. Then she rapped on the counter and called out "cash!"
+A little girl, with yellow hair in two long plaits, came slowly up. The
+lady wrote the number of yards, the name of the goods, her own number,
+the price, the amount of the bank-note I handed her, and some other
+matters, probably the color of my eyes, and the direction and velocity
+of the wind, on a slip of paper. She then copied all this in a little
+book which she kept by her. Then she handed the slip of paper, the
+money, and the Turkey-red to the yellow-haired girl. This young girl
+copied the slip in a little book she carried, and then she went away
+with the calico, the paper slip, and the money.
+
+After a very long time,--during which the little girl probably took the
+goods, the money, and the slip to some central desk, where the note was
+received, its amount and number entered in a book, change given to the
+girl, a copy of the slip made and entered, girl's entry examined and
+approved, goods wrapped up, girl registered, plaits counted and entered
+on a slip of paper and copied by the girl in her book, girl taken to a
+hydrant and washed, number of towel entered on a paper slip and copied
+by the girl in her book, value of my note and amount of change branded
+somewhere on the child, and said process noted on a slip of paper and
+copied in her book,--the girl came to me, bringing my change and the
+package of Turkey-red calico.
+
+I had time for but very little work at the office that afternoon, and
+when I reached home, I handed the package of calico to my wife She
+unrolled it and exclaimed:
+
+"Why, this don't match the piece I gave you!"
+
+"Match it!" I cried. "Oh, no! it don't match it. You didn't want that
+matched. You were mistaken. What you wanted was Turkey-red--third
+counter to the left. I mean, Turkey-red is what they use."
+
+My wife looked at me in amazement, and then I detailed to her my
+troubles.
+
+"Well," said she, "this Turkey-red is a great deal prettier than what I
+had, and you've got so much of it that I needn't use the other at all. I
+wish I had thought of Turkey-red before."
+
+"I wish from my heart you had," said I.
+
+ANDREW SCOGGIN.
+
+--_The Lady or the Tiger, and other stories._
+
+
+
+
+HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD.
+
+(BORN, 1835.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AUNT PEN'S FUNERAL.
+
+
+Poor Aunt Pen! I am sorry to say it, but for a person alive and
+well--tolerably well and very much alive, that is--she did use to make
+the greatest business of dying! Alive! why, when she was stretched out
+on the sofa, after an agony of asthma, or indigestion, or whatever, and
+had called us all about her with faltering and tears, and was apparently
+at her last gasp, she would suddenly rise, like her own ghost, at the
+sound of a second ringing of the door-bell, which our little renegade
+Israel had failed to answer, and declare if she could only once lay
+hands on Israel she would box his ears till they heard!
+
+For the door-bell was, perhaps, among many, one of Aunt Pen's weakest
+points. She knew everybody in town, as you might say. She was
+exceedingly entertaining to everybody outside the family. She was a
+great favorite with everybody. Countless gossips came to see her,
+tinkling at the door-bell, and hated individually by Israel, brought her
+all the news, heard all the previous ones had brought, admired her,
+praised her, pitied her, listened to her, and went away leaving her in
+such satisfied mood that she did not die any more that day. And as they
+went away they always paused at the door to say to some one of us what a
+cheerful invalid Aunt Pen had made herself, and what a nest of sunbeams
+her room always was, and what a lesson her patience and endurance ought
+to be. But, oh dear me, how very little they knew about it all!
+
+We all lived together, as it happened; for when we children were left
+alone with but a small income, Aunt Pen--who was also alone, and only
+five years my senior--wrote word that we might as well come to her house
+in the city, for it wouldn't make expenses more, and might make them
+less if we divided them; and then, too, she said she would always be
+sure of one out of three bright and reasonable nurses. Poor Aunt Pen!
+perhaps she didn't find us either so bright or so reasonable as she had
+expected; for we used to think that in her less degree she went on the
+same principle with the crazy man who declared all the rest of the world
+except himself insane.
+
+In honest truth, as doctor after doctor was turned away by the impatient
+and distempered woman up-stairs, each one took occasion to say to us
+down-stairs that our aunt's illness was of that nature that all the
+physic it required was to have her fancies humored, and that we never
+need give ourselves any uneasiness, for she would doubtless live to a
+good old age, unless some acute disease should intervene, as there was
+nothing at all the matter with her except a slight nervous
+sensitiveness, that never destroyed anybody. I suppose we were a set of
+young heathen, for really there were times, if you will believe it, when
+that was not the most reassuring statement in the world.
+
+However. Sometimes Aunt Pen found a doctor, or a medicine, or a course
+of diet, or something, that gave her great sensations of relief, and
+then she would come down, and go about the house, and praise our
+administration, and say every thing went twice as far as it used to go
+before we came, and tell us delightful stories, of our mother's
+housewifely skill, and be quite herself again; and she would make the
+table ring with laughing, and give charming little tea-parties; and then
+we all did wish that Aunt Pen would live forever--and be down-stairs.
+But probably the next day, after one of the tea-parties, oysters, or
+claret punch, or hot cakes, or all together, had wrought their
+diablerie, and the doctor was sent for, and the warming-pan was brought
+out, and there was another six weeks' siege, in which, obeyed by every
+one, and physicked by herself, and sympathized with to her heart's
+content by callers, and shut up in a hot room with the windows full of
+flowering plants, and somebody reading endless novels to her with the
+lights burning all night long--if she wasn't ill she had every
+inducement to be, and nothing but an indomitable constitution hindered
+it. It was perfectly idle for us to tell her she was hurting herself; it
+only made her very indignant with us, and more determined than ever to
+persist in doing so.
+
+Of course, then, the longer Aunt Pen staid in her own room the worse she
+really did get, and her nerves, with confinement and worry and
+relaxation, would by-and-by be in a condition for any sort of an
+outburst if we attempted the least reasoning with her. She would
+become, for one thing, as sleepless as an owl; then she was thoroughly
+sure she was going to be insane, and down would go the hydrate of
+chloral till the doctor forbade it on pain of death. After the chloral,
+too, such horrid eyes as she had! the eyes, you know, that chloral
+always leaves--inflamed, purple, swollen, heavy, crying, and good for
+any thing but seeing. Immediately then Aunt Pen went into a new tantrum;
+she was going to be stone-blind, and dependent on three heartless
+hussies for all her mercies in this life; but no, thank goodness! she
+had friends that would see she did not go absolutely to the wall, and
+would never suffer her to be imposed on by a parcel of girls who didn't
+care whether she lived or died--who perhaps would rather she did
+die--who stood open-handed for her bequests; she would leave her money
+to the almshouse, and if we wanted it we could go and get it there! And
+after that, to be sure, Aunt Pen would have a fit of remorse for her
+words, and confess her sin chokingly, and have us all come separately
+and forgive her, and would say she was the wretchedest woman on the face
+of the earth, that she should live undesired until her friends were all
+tired, and then die unlamented; and would burst into tears and cry
+herself into a tearing headache, and have ice on her head and a blister
+on the back of her neck, and be quite confident that now she was really
+going off with congestion of the brain.
+
+After that, for a day or two, she would be in a heavenly frame of mind
+with the blister and cabbage leaves and simple cerate, and a couple of
+mirrors by which to examine the rise and fall of the blister; and,
+having had a hint of real illness, she would consent quite smilingly to
+the act of convalescence, and a descent to the healthy region of the
+parlors once more.
+
+But no sooner were we all gay and happy in the house again, running out
+as we pleased, beginning to think of parties and drives and theatres and
+all enjoyment--and rather unobservant, as young folks are apt to be
+unobservant of Aunt Pen's slight habitual pensiveness in the absence of
+guests or excitement, and of her ways generally--than Aunt Pen would
+challenge some lobster-salad to mortal combat, and, of course, come out
+floored by the colic. A little whiskey then; and as a little gave so
+much ease, she would try a great deal. The result always was a
+precipitate retreat up-stairs, a howling hysteric, bilious cramps, the
+doctor, a subcutaneous injection of morphine in her arm; then chattering
+like a magpie, relapsed into awful silence, and, convinced that the
+morphine had been carried straight to her heart, a composing of her
+hands and feet, an injured dismissal of every soul from the room, with
+the assurance that we should find her straight and stiff and stone-dead
+in the morning.
+
+We never did. For, as we seldom had opportunity of an undisturbed
+night's rest, we usually took her at her word if any access of ill
+temper, or despair, or drowsiness occasioned banishment from the
+presence. Not that we had always been so calm about it; there was a time
+when we were excited with every alarm, thrown into flurries and panics
+quite to Aunt Pen's mind, running after the doctor at two o'clock of the
+morning, building a fire in the range ourselves at midnight to make
+gruel for her, rubbing her till we rubbed the skin off our hands,
+combing her hair till we went to sleep standing; but Aunt Pen had cried
+wolf so long, and the doctors had all declared so stoutly that there was
+no wolf, that our once soft hearts had become quite hard and concrete.
+
+When at last Aunt Pen had had an alarm from nearly every illness for
+which the pharmacopoeia prescribes, and she knew that neither we nor
+the doctors would listen to the probability of their recurrence; she had
+an attack of "sinking." No, there was no particular disease, she used to
+say, only sinking; she had been pulled down to an extent from which she
+had no strength to recuperate; she was only sinking, a little weaker
+to-day than she was yesterday--only sinking. But Aunt Pen ate a very
+good breakfast of broiled birds and toast and coffee; a very good lunch
+of cold meats and dainties, and a great goblet of thick cream; a very
+good dinner of soup and roast and vegetables and dessert, and perhaps a
+chicken bone at eleven o'clock in the evening. And when the saucy little
+Israel, who carried up her tray, heard her say she was sinking, he
+remarked that it was because of the load on her stomach.
+
+One day, I remember, Aunt Pen was very much worse than usual. We were
+all in her room, a sunshiny place which she had connected with the
+adjoining one by sliding-doors, so that it might be big enough for us
+all to bring our work on occasion, and make it lively for her. She had
+on a white-cashmere dressing-gown trimmed with swan's-down, and she lay
+among the luxurious cushions of a blue lounge, with a paler blue
+blanket, which she had had one of us tricot for her, lying over her
+feet, and altogether she looked very ideal and ethereal; for Aunt Pen
+always did have such an eye to picturesque effect that I don't know how
+she could ever consent to the idea of mouldering away into dust like
+common clay.
+
+She had sent Maria down for Mel and me to come up-stairs with whatever
+occupied us, for she was convinced that she was failing fast, and knew
+we should regret it if we did not have the last of her. As we had
+received the same message nearly every other day during the last three
+or four weeks, we did not feel extraordinarily alarmed, but composedly
+took our baskets and scissors, and trudged along after Maria.
+
+"I am sure I ought to be glad that I've succeeded in training my nieces
+into such industrious habits," said Aunt Pen, after a little while,
+looking at Mel; "but I should think that when a near relative approached
+the point of death, the fact might throw needle and thread into the
+background for a time." Then she paused for Maria to fan a little more
+breath into her. "It's different with Helen," soon she said; "the white
+silk shawl she is netting for me may be needed at any moment to lay me
+out in."
+
+"Dear me, Aunt Pen!" cried Mel; "what a picture you'd be, laid out in a
+white net shawl!" For the doctor had told us to laugh at these whims all
+we might.
+
+"Oh, you heartless girl!" said Aunt Pen. "To think of pictures at such a
+time!" And she closed her eyes as if weary of the world.
+
+"I never saw anybody who liked to revel in the ghastly the way you do,
+Aunt Pen."
+
+"Mel!" said Aunt Pen, with quite a show of color in her cheek; "I shall
+send you down stairs."
+
+"Do," said Mel; "where I can cut out my gown in peace."
+
+"Cutting a gown at the bedside of the dying! Are you cold-blooded, or
+are you insensible?"
+
+"Aunt Pen," said Mel, leaning on the point of her scissors, "you know
+very well that I have to make my own dresses or go without them. And you
+have kept me running your idle errands, up and down two flights of
+stairs, to the doctor's and the druggist's, and goodness knows where
+and all, till I haven't a thread of any thing that is fit to be seen.
+You've been posturing this grand finale of yours, too, all the last
+three weeks, and it's time you had it perfect now; and you must let me
+alone till I get my gown done."
+
+"It will do to wear at my funeral," said Aunt Pen bitterly, as she
+concluded.
+
+"No, it won't," said Mel, doggedly; "it's red."
+
+"Red!" cried Aunt Pen, suddenly opening her eyes, and half raising on
+one hand. "What in wonder have you bought a red dress for? You are quite
+aware that I can't bear the least intimation of the color. My nerves are
+in such a state that a shred of red makes me--"
+
+"You won't see it, you know," said Mel in what did seem to me an
+unfeeling manner.
+
+"No," said Aunt Pen. "Very true. I sha'n't see it. But what," added she
+presently snapping open her eyes, "considered as a mere piece of
+economy, you bought a red dress for when you are immediately going into
+black, passes common-sense to conjecture! You had better send it down
+and have it dyed at once before you cut it, for the shrinkage will spoil
+it forever if you don't."
+
+"Much black I shall go into," said Mel.
+
+Maria laughed. Aunt Pen cried.
+
+"Aunt Pen," said the cruel Mel, "if you were going to die you wouldn't
+be crying. Dying people have no tears to shed, the doctors say."
+
+"Somebody ought to cry," said poor Aunt Pen, witheringly. "Don't talk to
+me about doctors," she continued, after a silence interrupted only by
+the snipping of the scissors. "They are a set of quacks. They know
+nothing. I will have all the doctors in town at my funeral for
+pall-bearers. It will be a satire too delicate for them to appreciate,
+though. Speaking of that occasion, Helen," she went on, turning to me as
+a possible ally, "I have so many friends that I suppose the house will
+be full."
+
+"Wouldn't you enjoy it more from church, auntie?" said I.
+
+"Oh, you hard and wicked girls!" she cried. "You're all alike. Listen to
+me! If you won't hear my wishes, you must take my commands. Now, in the
+first place, I want the parlors to be overflowing with flowers,
+literally lined with flowers. I don't care how much money it takes;
+there'll be enough left for you--more than you deserve. And I want you
+to be very sure that I'm not to be exposed unless I look exactly as I'd
+like to look. You're to put on my white silk that I was to have been
+married in, and my veil, and the false orange blossoms. They're all in
+the third drawer of the press, and the key's on my chatelaine. And
+if--if--well," said Aunt Pen, more to herself than us, "if he comes,
+he'll understand. The Bride of Death."
+
+After that she did not say any more for some minutes, and we were all
+silent and sorry, and Mel was fidgeting in a riot of repentance; we had
+never, either of us, heard a word of any romance of Aunt Pen's before.
+We began to imagine that there might be some excuse for the overthrow of
+Aunt Pen's nervous system, some reality in the overthrow. "You will
+leave this ring on my finger;" said she; by-and-by. "If Chauncey Read
+comes, and wants it, he will take it off. It will fit his finger as well
+now, I suppose, as it did when he wore it before he gave it to me." Then
+Aunt Pen bit her lip and shut her eyes, and seemed to be slipping off
+into a gentle sleep.
+
+"By-the-way!" said she, suddenly, sitting upright on the lounge, "I
+won't have the horses from Brown's livery--
+
+"The what, auntie?"
+
+"The horses for the cortege. You know Brown puts that magnificent span
+of his in the hearse on account of their handsome action. I'm sure Mrs.
+Gaylard would have been frightened to death if she could only have seen
+the way they pranced at her funeral last fall. I was determined then
+that they should never draw me;" and Aunt Pen shivered for herself
+beforehand. "And I can't have them from Timlin's, for the same reason,"
+said she. "All his animals are skittish; and you remember when a pair of
+them took fright and dashed away from the procession and ran straight to
+the river, and there'd have been four other funerals if the schooner at
+the wharf hadn't stopped the runaways. And Timlins has a way, too, of
+letting white horses follow the hearse with the first mourning-coach,
+and it's very bad luck, very--an ill omen; a prophecy of Death and the
+Pale Horse again, you know. And I won't have them from Shust's, either,"
+said Aunt Pen, "for he is simply the greatest extortioner since old
+Isaac the Jew."
+
+"Well, auntie," said Mel, forgetful of her late repentance, "I don't see
+but you'll have to go with Shank's mare."
+
+Even Aunt Pen laughed then. "Don't you really think you are going to
+lose me, girls?" asked she.
+
+"No, auntie," replied Maria. "We all think you are a hypo."
+
+"A hypo?"
+
+"Not a hypocrite," said Mel, "but a hypochondriac."
+
+"I wish I were," sighed Aunt Pen; "I wish I were. I should have some
+hope of myself then," said the poor inconsistent innocent. "Oh no, no; I
+feel it only too well; I am going fast. You will all regret your
+disbelief when I am gone;" and she lay back among her pillows. "That
+reminds me," she murmured, presently. "About my monument."
+
+"Oh, Aunt Pen, do be still," said Mel.
+
+"No," said Aunt Pen, firmly; "it may be a disagreeable duty, but that is
+all the better reason for me to bring my mind to it. And if I don't
+attend to it now, it never will be attended to. I know what relatives
+are. They put down a slab of slate with a skull and cross-bones
+scratched on it, and think they've done their duty. Not that I mean any
+reflections on you; you're all well-meaning, but you're giddy. I shall
+haunt you if you do any thing of the kind! No; you may send Mr. Mason up
+here this afternoon, and I will go over his designs with him. I am
+going to have carved Carrara marble, set in a base of polished Scotch
+granite, and the inscription is--Girls!" cried Aunt Pen, rising and
+clasping her knees with unexpected energy, "I expressly forbid my age
+being printed in the paper, or on the lid, or on the stone! I won't
+gratify every gossip in town, that I won't! I shall take real pleasure
+in baffling their curiosity. And another thing, while I am about it,
+don't you ask Tom Maltby to my funeral, or let him come in, if he comes
+himself, on any account whatever. I should rise in my shroud if he
+approached me. Yes, I should! Tom Maltby may be all very well; I dare
+say he is; and I hope I die at peace with him and all mankind, as a good
+Christian should. I forgive him; yes, certainly, I forgive him; but it
+doesn't follow that I need forget him; and, so long as I remember him,
+the way he conducted in buying the pew over my head I can't get over,
+dead or alive. And if I only do get well we shall have a reckoning that
+will make his hair stand on end--that he may rely on!" And here Aunt Pen
+took the fan from Maria, and moved it actively, till she remembered
+herself, when she resigned it. "One thing more," she said. "Whatever
+happens, Helen, don't let me be kept over Sunday. There'll certainly be
+another death in the family within the year if you do. If I die on
+Saturday, there's no help for it. Common decency won't let you shove me
+into the ground at once, and so you will have to make up your minds for
+a second summons." And Aunt Pen, contemplating the suttee of some one of
+us with great philosophy, lay down and closed her eyes again. "You might
+have it by torchlight on Sunday night, though," said she, half opening
+them. "That would be very pretty." And then she dropped off to sleep
+with such a satisfied expression of countenance that we judged her to be
+welcoming in imagination the guests at her last rites herself.
+
+Whatever the dream was, she was rudely roused from it by the wreched
+little Israel, who came bounding up the stairs, and, without word or
+warning, burst into the room, almost white with horror. Why Israel was
+afraid I can't conjecture, but, at any rate, a permanent fright would
+have been of great personal advantage to him. "Oh, ma'am! oh, miss!
+dere's a pusson down stairs, a cullud woman, wid der small-pox!" he
+almost whistled in his alarm.
+
+"With the small-pox!" cried Aunt Pen, springing into the middle of the
+floor, regardless of her late repose _in articulo mortis_. "Go away,
+Israel! Have you been near her? Put her out immediately! How on earth
+did she get there?"
+
+"You allus telled me to let everybody in," chattered Israel.
+
+"Put her out! put her out!" cried Aunt Pen, half dancing with
+impatience.
+
+"We can't get her out. She's right acrost der door-step. We's feared ter
+tech her."
+
+But Aunt Pen's head was out of the window, and she was shouting:
+"Police! fire! murder! thieves!" possibly in the order of importance of
+the four calamities, but quite as if she had a plenty of breath left;
+and, for a wonder, the police came to the rescue, and directly afterward
+an ambulance took the poor victim of the frightful epidemic to the
+hospital. I believe it turned out to be only measles after all, though.
+
+"Run, Israel!" screamed Aunt Pen then; "run instantly and bring home a
+couple of pounds of roll-brimstone, and tell the maids to riddle the
+furnace fire and make it as bright and hot as possible, and to light
+fires in the parlor grates, and in the old Latrobe, and in every room
+in the house, without losing a minute. We'll make this house too warm
+for it!"
+
+And, to our amazement, as soon as Israel came darting back with the
+impish material, Aunt Pen took a piece in each hand, directed us to do
+the same, and wrapping the blue afghan round her shoulders, descended to
+the lower rooms three steps at a time, sent for the doctor to come and
+vaccinate us, and having set a chair precisely over the register where a
+red-hot stream of air was pouring up, she placed herself upon it and
+issued her orders.
+
+Every window was closed, every grate from basement to attic had a fire
+lighted in it, and little pans of brimstone were burning in every room
+and hall in the house, while we, astonished, indignant, frightened, and
+amused, sat enduring the torments of vapor and sulphur baths to the
+point of suffocation.
+
+"I can't bear this another moment," wheezed Mel.
+
+"It's the only way," replied Aunt Pen, serenely, with a rivulet
+trickling down her nose. "You kill the germs by heat, and since we can't
+bake ourselves quite to death, we make sure of the work by the fumes."
+
+And as she sat there, her face rubicund, her swan's-down straight,
+drops on her cheeks, her chin, her forehead, and wherever drops could
+cling, her eyes watering, her curls limp, and an atmosphere of
+unbearable odor enveloping her in its cloud, the front door opened, and
+a footstep rung on the tiles.
+
+"Jess you keep out o' yer!" yelled Israel to the intruder, seeing it
+wasn't the doctor. "We's got der small-pox, and am a-killing de
+gemmens--"
+
+"Pen!" cried a man's voice through the smoke--a deep, melodious voice.
+
+"What!" exclaimed Aunt Pen, starting up, and then pausing as if she
+fancied the horrid fumes might have befogged her brain.
+
+"Pen!" the voice cried again.
+
+"Chauncey! Chauncey Read!" she shrieked. "Where do you come from? Am I
+dreaming?"
+
+"From the North Pacific," answered the voice; and we dimly discerned its
+owner groping his way forward. "From the five years' whaling voyage into
+which I was gagged and dragged--shanghaied, they call it. O, Pen, I
+didn't dare to hope I should find--"
+
+"Oh, Chauncey, is it you?" she cried, and fell fainting at his feet.
+
+The draught from the open door after him was blowing away the smoke,
+and we saw what a great, sunburned, handsome fellow it was that had
+caught her in his arms, and was bearing her out to the back balcony and
+the fresh air there, used in the course of his whaling voyage, perhaps,
+to odors no more belonging to Araby the Blest than those of burning
+brimstone do; and, seeing the movement, we divined that he knew as much
+about the resources of the house as we did, and so we discreetly
+withdrew, Israel's head being twisted behind him as he went to such
+extent that you might have supposed he had had his neck wrung.
+
+Well, we put the white silk and the tulle on Aunt Pen after all; yellow
+as it was, she would have no other--only fresh, natural orange blossoms
+in place of the false wreath. And if we had not so often had her word
+for it in past times, we never should have taken her for any thing but
+the gayest bride, the most alive and happy woman in the world. They
+returned to the old house from their wedding journey, and we all live
+together in great peace and pleasantness. But though three years are
+passed and gone since Chauncey Read came home and brought a new
+atmosphere with him into our lives, Aunt Pen has never had a sick day
+yet; and we find that any allusion to her funeral gives her such a
+superstitious trembling that we are pleased to believe it indefinitely
+postponed, and by tacit and mutual consent we never say any thing about
+it.--_Harper's Magazine_, June, 1872.
+
+
+
+
+SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS.
+
+("MARK TWAIN.")
+
+(BORN, 1835.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE CELEBRATED JUMPING FROG OF CALAVERAS COUNTY.
+
+
+In compliance with the request of a friend of mine, who wrote me from
+the East, I called on good-natured, garrulous old Simon Wheeler, and
+inquired after my friend's friend, _Leonidas W._ Smiley, as requested to
+do, and I hereunto append the result. I have a lurking suspicion that
+_Leonidas W._ Smiley is a myth; that my friend never knew such a
+personage; and that he only conjectured that, if I asked old Wheeler
+about him, it would remind him of his infamous _Jim_ Smiley, and he
+would go to work and bore me nearly to death with some infernal
+reminiscence of him as long and tedious as it should be useless for me.
+If that was the design, it certainly succeeded.
+
+I found Simon Wheeler dozing comfortably by the bar-room stove of the
+old, dilapidated tavern in the ancient mining camp of Angel's, and I
+noticed that he was fat and bald-headed, and had an expression of
+winning gentleness and simplicity upon his tranquil countenance. He
+roused up and gave me good-day. I told him a friend of mine had
+commissioned me to make some inquiries about a cherished companion of
+his boyhood named _Leonidas W._ Smiley--_Rev. Leonidas W._ Smiley--a
+young minister of the Gospel, who he had heard was at one time a
+resident of Angel's Camp. I added that, if Mr. Wheeler could tell me any
+thing about this Rev. Leonidas W. Smiley, I would feel under many
+obligations to him.
+
+Simon Wheeler backed me into a corner and blockaded me there with his
+chair, and then sat me down and reeled off the monotonous narrative
+which follows this paragraph. He never smiled, he never frowned, he
+never changed his voice from the gentle-flowing key to which he tuned
+the initial sentence, he never betrayed the slightest suspicion of
+enthusiasm; but all through the interminable narrative there ran a vein
+of impressive earnestness and sincerity, which showed me plainly that,
+so far from his imagining that there was any thing ridiculous or funny
+about his story, he regarded it as a really important matter, and
+admired its two heroes as men of transcendent genius in _finesse_. To
+me, the spectacle of a man drifting serenely along through such a queer
+yarn without ever smiling, was exquisitely absurd. As I said before, I
+asked him to tell me what he knew of Rev. Leonidas W. Smiley, and he
+replied as follows. I let him go on in his own way, and never
+interrupted him once:
+
+There was a feller here once by the name of _Jim_ Smiley, in the winter
+of '49--or may be it was the spring of '50--I don't recollect exactly,
+somehow, though what makes me think it was one or the other is because I
+remember the big flume wasn't finished when he first came to the camp;
+but any way he was the curiosest man about always betting on any thing
+that turned up you ever see, if he could get anybody to bet on the other
+side; and if he couldn't, he'd change sides. Any way that suited the
+other man would suit him--any way just so's he got a bet, _he_ was
+satisfied. But still he was lucky, uncommon lucky; he most always come
+out winner. He was always ready and laying for a chance; there couldn't
+be no solitry thing mentioned but that feller'd offer to bet on it, and
+take any side you please, as I was just telling you. If there was a
+horse-race, you'd find him flush, or you'd find him busted at the end of
+it; if there was a dog-fight, he'd bet on it; if there was a cat-fight,
+he'd bet on it; if there was a chicken-fight, he'd bet on it; why, if
+there was two birds sitting on a fence, he would bet you which one would
+fly first; or if there was a camp-meeting, he would be there reg'lar, to
+bet on Parson Walker, which he judged to be the best exhorter about
+here, and so he was, too, and a good man. If he even seen a straddle-bug
+start to go anywheres, he would bet you how long it would take him to
+get wherever he was going to, and if you took him up, he would foller
+that straddle-bug to Mexico but what he would find out where he was
+bound for and how long he was on the road. Lots of the boys here has
+seen that Smiley, and can tell you about him. Why, it never made no
+difference to _him_--he would bet on _any_ thing--the dangdest feller.
+Parson Walker's wife laid very sick once, for a good while, and it
+seemed as if they warn't going to save her; but one morning he come in,
+and Smiley asked how she was, and he said she was considerable
+better--thank the Lord for his inf'nit mercy--and coming on so smart
+that, with the blessing of Prov'dence, she'd get well yet; and Smiley,
+before he thought, says, "Well, I'll risk two-and-a-half that she don't,
+any way."
+
+This-yer Smiley had a mare--the boys called her the fifteen-minute nag,
+but that was only in fun, you know, because, of course, she was faster
+than that--and he used to win money on that horse, for all she was so
+slow and always had the asthma, or the distemper, or the consumption, or
+something of that kind. They used to give her two or three hundred yards
+start, and then pass her under way; but always at the fag-end of the
+race she'd get excited and desperate-like, and come cavorting and
+straddling up, and scattering her legs around limber, sometimes in the
+air, and sometimes out to one side amongst the fences, and kicking up
+m-o-r-e dust, and raising m-o-r-e racket with her coughing and sneezing
+and blowing her nose--and always fetch up at the stand just about a neck
+ahead, as near as you could cipher it down.
+
+And he had a little small bull pup, that to look at him you'd think he
+wan't worth a cent, but to set around and look ornery, and lay for a
+chance to steal something. But as soon as the money was up on him, he
+was a different dog; his under-jaw'd begin to stick out like the
+fo'castle of a steamboat, and his teeth would uncover, and shine savage
+like the furnaces. And a dog might tackle him, and bully-rag him, and
+bite him, and throw him over his shoulder two or three times, and Andrew
+Jackson--which was the name of the pup--Andrew Jackson would never let
+on but what _he_ was satisfied, and hadn't expected nothing else--and
+the bets being doubled and doubled on the other side all the time, till
+the money was all up; and then all of a sudden he would grab that other
+dog jest by the j'int of his hind leg and freeze to it--not chaw, you
+understand, but only jest grip and hang on till they throwed up the
+sponge, if it was a year. Smiley always come out winner on that pup,
+till he harnessed a dog once that didn't have no hind legs, because
+they'd been sawed off by a circular saw, and when the thing had gone
+along far enough, and the money was all up, and he come to make a snatch
+for his pet holt, he saw in a minute how he'd been imposed on, and how
+the other dog had him in the door, so to speak, and he 'peared
+surprised, and then he looked sorter discouraged-like, and didn't try no
+more to win the fight, and so he got shucked out bad. He give Smiley a
+look, as much as to say his heart was broke, and it was _his_ fault, for
+putting up a dog that hadn't no hind legs for him to take holt of, which
+was his main dependence in a fight, and then he limped off a piece and
+laid down and died. It was a good pup, was that Andrew Jackson, and
+would have made a name for hisself if he'd lived, for the stuff was in
+him, and he had genius--I know it, because he hadn't had no
+opportunities to speak of, and it don't stand to reason that a dog could
+make such a fight as he could under them circumstances, if he hadn't no
+talent. It always makes me feel sorry when I think of that last fight of
+his'n, and the way it turned out.
+
+Well, this-yer Smiley had rat-tarriers, and chicken cocks, and tom-cats,
+and all them kind of things, till you couldn't rest, and you couldn't
+fetch nothing for him to bet on but he'd match you. He ketched a frog
+one day, and took him home, and said he cal'klated to edercate him; and
+so he never done nothing for three months but set in his back yard and
+learn that frog to jump. And you bet you he _did_ learn him, too. He'd
+give him a little punch behind, and the next minute you'd see that frog
+whirling in the air like a doughnut--see him turn one summerset, or may
+be a couple, if he got a good start, and come down flat-footed and all
+right, like a cat. He got him up so in the matter of catching flies, and
+kept him in practice so constant, that he'd nail a fly every time as far
+as he could see him. Smiley said all a frog wanted was education, and he
+could do most any thing--and I believe him. Why, I've seen him set Dan'l
+Webster down here on this floor--Dan'l Webster was the name of the
+frog--and sing out, "Flies, Dan'l, flies!" and quicker'n you could wink,
+he'd spring straight up, and snake a fly off'n the counter there, and
+flop down on the floor again as solid as a gob of mud, and fall to
+scratching the side of his head with his hind foot as indifferent as if
+he hadn't no idea he'd been doin' any more'n any frog might do. You
+never see a frog so modest and straight-for'ard as he was, for all he
+was so gifted. And when it come to fair and square jumping on a dead
+level, he could get over more ground at one straddle than any animal of
+his breed you ever see. Jumping on a dead level was his strong suit, you
+understand; and when it come to that, Smiley would ante up money on him
+as long as he had a red. Smiley was monstrous proud of his frog, and
+well he might be, for fellers that had travelled and been everywheres,
+all said he laid over any frog that ever _they_ see.
+
+Well, Smiley kept the beast in a little lattice box, and he used to
+fetch him down town sometimes and lay for a bet. One day a feller--a
+stranger in the camp, he was--come across him with his box, and says,
+
+"What might it be that you've got in the box?"
+
+And Smiley says, sorter indifferent like, "It might be a parrot, or it
+might be a canary, may be, but it ain't--it's only just a frog."
+
+And the feller took it, and looked at it careful, and turned it round
+this way and that, and says, "H'm--so't is. Well, what's _he_ good for?"
+
+"Well," Smiley says, easy and careless, "he's good enough for _one_
+thing, I should judge--he can out-jump ary frog in Calaveras county."
+
+The feller took the box again, and took another long, particular look,
+and give it back to Smiley, and says, very deliberate, "Well, I don't
+see no p'ints about that frog that's any better'n any other frog."
+
+"May be you don't," Smiley says. "May be you understand frogs, and may
+be you don't understand 'em; may be you've had experience, and may be
+you ain't, only a amature, as it were. Any ways, I've got _my_ opinion,
+and I'll risk forty dollars that he can out-jump any frog in Calaveras
+county."
+
+And the feller studied a minute, and then says, kinder sad like, "Well,
+I'm only a stranger here, and I ain't got no frog; but if I had a frog,
+I'd bet you."
+
+And then Smiley says, "That's all right--that's all right--if you'll
+hold my box a minute, I'll go and get you a frog." And so the feller
+took the box, and put up his forty dollars along with Smiley's, and set
+down to wait.
+
+So he set there a good while thinking and thinking to hisself, and then
+he got the frog out and prized his mouth open and took a teaspoon and
+filled him full of quail shot--filled him pretty near up to his
+chin--and set him on the floor. Smiley he went to the swamp and slopped
+around in the mud for a long time, and finally he ketched a frog, and
+fetched him in, and give him to this feller, and says:
+
+"Now, if you're ready, set him alongside of Dan'l, with his fore-paws
+just even with Dan'l, and I'll give the word." Then he says,
+"One--two--three--jump!" and him and the feller touched up the frogs
+from behind, and the new frog hopped off, but Dan'l give a heave, and
+hysted up his shoulders--so--like a Frenchman, but it wan't no use--he
+couldn't budge; he was planted as solid as an anvil, and he couldn't no
+more stir than if he was anchored out. Smiley was a good deal surprised,
+and he was disgusted too, but he didn't have no idea what the matter
+was, of course.
+
+The feller took the money and started away; and when he was going out at
+the door, he sorter jerked his thumb over his shoulders--this way--at
+Dan'l, and says again, very deliberate, "Well, I don't see no pints
+about that frog that's any better'n any other frog."
+
+Smiley he stood scratching his head and looking down at Dan'l a long
+time, and at last he says, "I do wonder what in the nation that frog
+throw'd off for--I wonder if there ain't some thing the matter with
+him--he 'pears to look mighty baggy, somehow." And he ketched Dan'l by
+the nap of the neck, and lifted him up and says, "Why, blame my cats, if
+he don't weigh five pound!" and turned him upside down, and he belched
+out a double handful of shot. And then he see how it was, and he was
+the maddest man--he set the frog down and took out after that feller,
+but he never ketched him. And--
+
+(Here Simon Wheeler heard his name called from the front yard, and got
+up to see what was wanted.) And turning to me as he moved away, he said:
+"Just set where you are, stranger, and rest easy--I an't going to be
+gone a second."
+
+But, by your leave, I did not think that a continuation of the history
+of the enterprising vagabond _Jim_ Smiley would be likely to afford me
+much information concerning the Rev. _Leonidas W._ Smiley, and so I
+started away.
+
+At the door I met the sociable Wheeler returning, and he buttonholed me
+and recommenced:
+
+"Well, this-yer Smiley had a yaller one-eyed cow that didn't have no
+tail, only just a short stump like a bannanner, and--"
+
+"Oh, hang Smiley and his afflicted cow!" I muttered, good-naturedly, and
+bidding the old gentleman good-day, I departed.
+
+
+
+
+FITZ HUGH LUDLOW. (BORN, 1836--DIED, 1870.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BEN THIRLWALL'S SCHOOLDAYS.
+
+
+My name is Ben Thirlwall, and I am the son of rich but honest parents. I
+never had a wish ungratified until I was twelve years of age. My wish
+then was to stay on a two-year-old colt which had never been broken. He
+did not coincide with me, and a vast revelation of the resistances to
+individual will of which the universe is capable, also of a terrestrial
+horizon, bottom upward, burst upon me during the brief space which I
+spent in flying over his head. Picked up senseless, I was carried to the
+bosom of my family on a wheelbarrow, and awoke to the consciousness that
+my parents had decided on sending me to a boarding-school,--a remedy to
+this day sovereign in the opinion of all well-regulated parents for all
+tangential aberrations from the back of a colt or the laws of society.
+
+The principal's name was Barker; and my only clue to his character
+consisted in overhearing that he was an excellent disciplinarian. I was
+afraid to ask what that meant, but on reflection concluded it to be a
+geographical distinction, and, associating him with Mesopotamia or
+Beloochistan, expected to find him a person of mild manners, who shaved
+his head, wore a tall hat of dyed sheep's wool, and did a large business
+in spices with people who visited him on camels in a front-yard
+surrounded by sheds, and having a fountain that played in the middle.
+
+Having read several books of travels, I was corroborated in my view when
+I learned that Mr. Barker lived at the east, and still further, when on
+going around point Judith on the steamboat with my father, I became very
+sick at the stomach, as all the travellers had done in their first
+chapter.
+
+I need not say that the reality of Mr. Barker was a very terrible
+awakening, which contained no lineament of my purple dream, save the
+bastinado. Without distinction of age or season the youths who, as per
+circular, enjoyed the softening influence of his refined Christian home,
+rose to the sound of the gong at five A.M., which may have been very
+nice in a home for the early Christians, but was reported among the boys
+to have entirely stopped the growth of Little Briggs. This was a child,
+whose mother had married again, and whose step-father had felt his duty
+to his future too keenly to deprive him of the benign influences of
+Barker at any time in the last six years. After rising, we had ten
+minutes to wash our faces and hands,--a period by the experience of
+mankind demonstrably insufficient, where the soap is of that kind very
+properly denominated cast-steel (though purists have a different
+spelling), and you have to break an inch of ice to get into the
+available region of your water-pitcher. Chunks, who has since made a
+large fortune on war-contracts, kept himself in peanuts and four-cent
+pies for an entire winter session, by selling an invention of his own,
+which consisted of soap, dissolved in water on the stove during the
+day-time, put in bottles hooked from the lamp-room by means of a false
+key, to be carried to bed and kept warm by boys, whose pocket-money and
+desire for a prompt detergent in the morning were adequate to the
+disbursement of half a dime a package. I myself took several violent
+colds from having the glass next my skin during severe nights; but that
+was nothing so bad as the case of Little Briggs, who from lack of the
+half-dime, often came down to prayers with a stripe of yesterday's
+pencil black on one side of his nose, and a shaving of soap, which, in
+the frenzy of despair he had gouged out of his stony cake, on the other.
+The state of mind consistent with such a condition of countenance did
+not favor correct recitation of the tougher names in Deuteronomy; so, it
+can be a cause of surprise to no one, that, when called on at prayers,
+and prompted by a ridiculous neighbor, little Briggs sometimes asserted
+Joshua to have driven out the Hivites and the Amorites, and the
+Canaanites and the Jebusites, and the Hittites and the Perizzites, and
+the Moabites and the Musquito-bites, for which he was regularly sent to
+bed on Saturday afternoon, as he had no pocket-money to stop, his papa
+desiring him to learn self-denial young, as he was intended for a
+missionary; though goodness knows that there wasn't enough of him to go
+round among many heathen.
+
+From this specimen of discipline may be learned the entire Barkerian
+system of training. I was about to say, "_ex uno disce omnes_," but, as
+it's the only Latin I remember from the lot which got rubbed into--or
+rather over--me at Barker's, I'm rather sparing of it, not knowing but I
+can bring it in somewhere else with better effect. As with the Word of
+God, so with that of man,--the grand Barkerian idea of how to fix it in
+a boy's memory was to send him to bed, or excoriate his palm. If
+religion and polite learning could have been communicated by sheets,
+like chicken-pox, or blistered into one like the stern but curative
+cantharides, Mr. Barker's boys would have become the envy of mankind and
+the beloved of the gods; but not even Little Briggs died young from the
+latter or any other cause, which speaks volumes for his constitution....
+
+The two Misses Moodle came to establish a young ladies' seminary in the
+village of Mungerville, on whose outskirts our own school was situated,
+bringing along with them, as the county paper stated, "that charming
+atmosphere of refinement and intellectuality in which they ever moved";
+and, what was of more consequence, a capital of twenty girls to start
+with. Professional politeness inspired Mr. Barker to make a call on the
+fair strangers, which the personal fascinations of the younger Miss
+Moodle induced him to repeat. The atmosphere of refinement and
+intellectuality gradually acted on him in the nature of an intoxicating
+gas, until at length, after twenty-five years of successfully intrenched
+widowhood, he laid his heart in the mits of the younger Miss Moodle, and
+the two became one Barker.
+
+As a consequence of this union, social relations began to be established
+between the two schools. Mrs. Barker, of an occasional evening, wished
+to run down and visit her sister. If Mr. Barker was engaged in quarrying
+a page of Cicero out of some stony boy in whom nature had never made any
+Latin deposit, or had just put a fresh batch of offenders into the penal
+oven of untimely bed, and felt compelled to run up now and then to keep
+up the fire under them, by a harrowing description of the way their
+parents would feel if they knew of their behavior--an instrument dear to
+Mr. Barker as a favorite poker to a boss-baker in love with his
+profession--then, after a clucking noise, indicative of how much he
+would like to chuck her under the chin, but for the presence of company,
+Mr. Barker would coo to Mrs. Barker, "Lovey, your pick, sweet!" waving
+his hand comprehensively over the whole school-room; or "Dear, suppose
+we say Briggs, or Chunks, or Thirlwall," as the case might be. The only
+difficulty about Briggs was clothes. That used to be obviated by a
+selection from the trunks of intimate friends; and Briggs was such a
+nice boy, that it was a real gratification to see him with your best
+jacket on. Many's the time the old fellow has said to Chunks or me,
+"What a blessing that I grew! If I hadn't, how could I ever wear your
+trousers?" In process of time these occasional visits, as escort to Mrs.
+Barker, expanded into an attendance of all the older boys (when not in
+bed for moral baking purposes) upon a series of bi-monthly soirees,
+given by the remaining Miss Moodle, with a superficial view to her
+pupils' attainment of ease in society; and a material substratum of
+sandwiches, which Miss Moodle preferred to see, through the atmosphere
+of refinement and intellectuality, as "a simple repast." To this was
+occasionally added a refreshment, which I have seen elsewhere only at
+Sunday-school picnics,--a mild tap of slightly sweetened water, which
+tasted as if lemons had formerly been kept in the pail it was made
+in;--only for Sunday-schools they make it strong at the outset, and add
+water during the hymns, with a vague but praiseworthy expectation that,
+in view of the sacredness of the occasion, there will be some miraculous
+interposition, as in the case of the widow's cruse, to keep the beverage
+up to proof; while Miss Moodle's liquor preserved throughout the evening
+a weakness of which generous natures scorned to take advantage beyond
+the first tumbler.
+
+At this portion of my career I was dawned upon by Miss Tucker. From
+mature years I look back with a shudder upon the number of parchmenty
+sandwiches which I ate, the reservoirs of lemony water which I drank, in
+order to be in that lovely creature's society. I experienced agonies in
+thinking how much longer it might be before I could get a coat with
+tails, when I calculated how soon she would be putting up her back hair.
+Her eyes were as blue as I was when I thought she liked Briggs; and she
+had a complexion compared with which strawberries and cream were
+nowhere. When she was sent to the piano, to show people what the Moodle
+system could do in the way of a musical education, I fell into a
+cataleptic state and floated off upon a flood of harmony. Miss Moodle
+and her mits, self and lemon kids, even the sleepless eye of Barker,
+watching for an indiscretion, upon the strength of which he might
+defensibly send somebody to bed the next Saturday afternoon, all
+vanished from before me, swallowed up in a mild glory, which contained
+but two objects,--an angel with low neck and short sleeves, and an
+insensate hippopotamus of a piano, which did not wriggle all over with
+ecstasy when her white fingers tickled him.
+
+At such moments I would gladly have gone down on all fours, and had a
+key-board mortised into my side at any expense of personal torture, if
+Miss Tucker could only have played a piece on me, and herself been
+conscious of the chords she was awakening inside my jacket. I loved her
+to that degree that my hair never seemed brushed enough when I beheld
+her; and I quite spoiled the shape of my best boots through an elevation
+of the instep, caused by putting a rolled-up pair of stockings inside
+each heel, to approximate the manly stature, at our bi-monthly meetings.
+Even her friend, Miss Crickey, a mealy-faced little girl, with saffron
+hair, who had been pushed by Miss Moodle so far into the higher
+branches, that she had a look of being perpetually frightened to death
+with the expectation of hearing them crack and let her down from a
+great height,--seemed beautiful to me from the mere fact of daily
+breathing the same air with such an angel, sharing her liquorice-stick,
+and borrowing her sweet little thimble.
+
+I had other reasons for prejudice in Miss Crickey's favor. She was the
+only person to whom I could talk freely regarding the depth of my
+passion for Miss Tucker. Not even to the object of that tremendous
+feeling could I utter a syllable which seemed in any way adequate. With
+an overpowering consciousness how ridiculous it was, and not only so,
+but how far from original, I could give her papers of lemon
+Jackson-balls, hinting simultaneously that, though plump as her cheeks,
+they were not half so sweet; and through a figure, whose correct name I
+have since learned to be periphrasis, I could suggest how much my soul
+yearned to expire on her ruby lips, by asking if she had ever played
+doorkeeper; regretting that the atmosphere of refinement and
+intellectuality did not admit of that healthful recreation at Moodle's,
+and begging her to guess whom I would call out if I were doorkeeper
+myself. When she opened her blue eyes innocently, and said, "Miss
+Crickey?" the intimation was rejected with a melancholy
+dissatisfaction, which would have been disdain but for the character of
+my feelings to its source. And when, on my pressing her for the name of
+the favored mortal whom she would call out if she were doorkeeper, she
+slyly dropped her eyes and asked if Briggs sounded any thing like it, I
+savagely refused to consider the proposition at all, and for the rest of
+the evening ate sandwiches to that degree I wonder my life was not
+despaired of, and fled for relief to the lemony bowl. The result of this
+mad vortex having been colic and calomel, after my return to Barker's on
+that evening, I foreswore such dangerous excesses at the next
+bi-monthly; but putting a larger pair of stockings in each boot-heel, to
+impress Miss Tucker with a sense of what she had lost, I devoted myself
+during the earlier part of the evening to a growing young woman, of the
+name of Wagstaff, considerably older than myself and runing straight up
+and down from whatever side one might contemplate her. Her conversation
+was not entertaining, unless from the Chinese point of view, which, I
+understand, distinctly favors monosyllables, and she giggled at me so
+persistently that I feared Miss Tucker would think I must be making
+myself ridiculous; but, on her being sent to the piano, I stood and
+turned over her music with a consciousness that if I ever looked
+impressive it was then. All this I did in the effort to seem gay,
+although my heart was breaking. I had no comfort on earth save the
+thought that I had been brutal to Briggs, and that he sat in an obscure
+corner of the room among some little girls in Long Division, hiding,
+behind an assistant teacher's skirts, the whitey-brown toe which my
+blacking-brush refused to refresh, while I bore my grief upon a pair of
+new boots plentifully provided with squeak-leather. When Miss Tucker
+slipped a little piece of paper into my hand, as I made a hollow show of
+passing her the sandwiches, I came very near dropping the plate; and
+when I had a chance to open it unobserved, and read the words, "Are you
+mad with me?" I could not occupy my cold and dreary pinnacle a moment
+longer, but sought an early opportunity of squeezing her hand two seats
+behind the voluminous asylum of Briggs's toes, and whispering, slightly
+confused by intensity of feeling, that if I had done any thing I was
+sorry for, I was willing to be forgiven. From that moment I was Miss
+Tucker's slave. Oh, woman, woman! The string on which you play us is as
+long as life; it ties your baby-bib; it laces your queenly bodice; and
+on its slenderest tag we dangle everywhere!--_Little Briggs and I._
+(_From Little Brother and Other Genre Pictures_.)
+
+
+SELECTIONS FROM A BRACE OF BOYS.
+
+I am a bachelor uncle. That, as a mere fact, might happen to anybody;
+but I am a bachelor uncle by internal fitness. I am one essentially,
+just as I am an individual of the Caucasian division of the human race;
+and if, through untoward circumstances,--which Heaven forbid,--I should
+lose my present position, I shouldn't be surprised if you saw me out in
+the _Herald_ under "Situations Wanted--Males." Thanks to a marrying
+tendency in the rest of my family, I have now little need to advertise,
+all the business being thrown into my way which a single member of my
+profession can attend to....
+
+I meander, like a desultory, placid river of an old bachelor as I am,
+through the flowery mead of several nurseries. I am detained by all the
+little roots that run down into me to drink happiness, but I linger
+longest among the children of my sister Lu.
+
+Lu married Mr. Lovegrove. He is a merchant, retired with a fortune
+amassed by the old-fashioned, slow processes of trade, and regards the
+mercantile life of the present day only as so much greed and gambling
+Christianly baptized.... Lu is my favorite sister; Lovegrove an
+unusually good article of brother-in-law and I cannot say that any of my
+nieces and nephews interest me more than their two children, Daniel and
+Billy, who are more unlike than words can paint them. They are far apart
+in point of years; Daniel is twenty-two, Billy eleven. I was reminded of
+this fact the other day by Billy, as he stood between my legs, scowling
+at his book of sums.
+
+"'A boy has eighty-five turnips, and gives his sister thirty,'--pretty
+present for a girl, isn't it?" said Billy, with an air of supreme
+contempt. "Could _you_ stand such stuff,--say?"
+
+I put on my instructive face and answered,--
+
+"Well, my dear Billy, you know that arithmetic is necessary to you if
+you mean to be an industrious man and succeed in business. Suppose your
+parents were to lose all their property, what would become of them
+without a little son who could make money and keep accounts?"
+
+"Oh," said Billy, with surprise. "Hasn't father got enough stamps to
+see him through?"
+
+"He has now, I hope; but people don't always keep them. Suppose they
+should go by some accident, when your father was too old to make any
+more stamps for himself?"
+
+"You haven't thought of brother Daniel--"
+
+True; for nobody ever had, in connection with the active employments of
+life.
+
+"No, Billy," I replied, "I forgot him; but then, you know, Daniel is
+more of a student than a business man, and--"
+
+"O Uncle Teddy! you don't think I mean he'd support them? I meant I'd
+have to take care of father and mother, and him too, when they'd all got
+to be old people together. Just think! I'm eleven, and he's twenty-two
+so he is just twice as old as I am. How old are you?"
+
+"Forty, Billy, last August."
+
+"Well, you aren't so awful old, and when I get to be as old as you,
+Daniel will be eighty. Seth Kendall's grandfather isn't more than that,
+and he has to be fed with a spoon, and a nurse puts him to bed, and
+wheels him round in a chair like a baby. That takes the stamps, I bet!
+Well, I'll tell you how I'll keep my accounts; I'll have a stick, like
+Robinson Crusoe, and every time I make a toadskin I'll gouge a piece out
+of one side of the stick, and every time I spend one I'll gouge a piece
+out of the other."
+
+"Spend a _what_?" said the gentle and astonished voice of my sister Lu,
+who, unperceived, had slipped into the room.
+
+"A toadskin, ma," replied Billy, shutting up Colburn with a farewell
+glance of contempt.
+
+"Dear, dear! Where does the boy learn such horrid words?"
+
+"Why, ma, don't you know what a toadskin is? Here's one," said Billy,
+drawing a dingy five-cent stamp from his pocket. "And don't I wish I had
+lots of 'em!"
+
+"Oh!" sighed his mother, "to think I should have a child so addicted to
+slang! How I wish he were like Daniel!"
+
+"Well, mother," replied Billy, "if you wanted two boys just alike you'd
+oughter had twins. There ain't any use of my trying to be like Daniel
+now, when he's got eleven years the start. Whoop! There's a dog-fight;
+hear 'em! It's Joe Casey's dog,--I know his bark!"
+
+With these words my nephew snatched his Glengarry bonnet from the table
+and bolted downstairs to see the fun.
+
+"What will become of him?" said Lu, hopelessly; "he has no taste for any
+thing but rough play; and then such language as he uses! Why _isn't_ he
+like Daniel?"
+
+"I suppose because his Maker never repeats himself. Even twins often
+possess strongly marked individualities. Don't you think it would be a
+good plan to learn Billy better before you try to teach him? If you do,
+you'll make something as good of him as Daniel though it will be rather
+different from that model."
+
+"Remember, Ned, that you never did like Daniel as well as you do Billy.
+But we all know the proverb about old maid's daughters and old
+bachelor's sons. I wish you had Billy for a month,--then you'd see."
+
+"I'm not sure that I'd do any better than you. I might err as much in
+other directions But I'd try to start right by acknowledging that he was
+a new problem, not to be worked without finding out the value of X in
+his particular instance. The formula which solves one boy will no more
+solve the next one than the rule-of-three will solve a question in
+calculus,--or, to rise into your sphere, than the receipt for
+one-two-three-four cake will conduct you to a successful issue through
+plum-pudding."
+
+I excel in metaphysical discussion, and was about giving further
+elaboration to my favorite idea, when the door burst open. Master Billy
+came tumbling in with a torn jacket, a bloody nose, the trace of a few
+tears in his eyes, and the mangiest of cur dogs in his hands.
+
+"Oh my! my!! my!!!" exclaimed his mother.
+
+"Don't you get scared, ma!" cried Billy, smiling a stern smile of
+triumph; "I smashed the nose off him! He wont sass me again for nothing
+_this_ while! Uncle Teddy, d'ye know it wasn't a dog-fight, after all?
+There was that nasty, good-for-nothing Joe Casey, 'n Patsy Grogan, and a
+lot of bad boys from Mackerelville; and they'd caught this poor little
+ki-oodle and tied a tin pot to his tail, and were trying to set Joe's
+dog on him, though he's ten times littler."
+
+"You naughty, naughty boy! How did you suppose your mother'd feel to see
+you playing with those ragamuffins?"
+
+"Yes, I _played_ 'em! I polished 'em,--that's the play I did! Says I,
+'Put down that poor little pup; ain't you ashamed of yourself, Patsy
+Grogan?' 'I guess you don't know who I am,' says he. That's the way they
+always say, Uncle Teddy, to make a fellow think they're some awful great
+fighters. So says I again, 'Well, you put down that dog, or I'll show
+you who I am'; and when he held on, I let him have. Then he dropped the
+pup, and as I stooped to pick it up he gave me one on the bugle."
+
+"_Bugle_! Oh! oh! oh!"
+
+"The rest pitched in to help him; but I grabbed the pup, and while I was
+trying to give as good as I got,--only a fellow can't do it well with
+only one hand, Uncle Teddy,--up came a policeman, and the whole crowd
+ran away. So I got the dog safe, and here he is!"
+
+With that Billy set down his "ki-oodle," bid farewell to every fear, and
+wiped his bleeding nose. The unhappy beast slunk back between the legs
+of his preserver and followed him out of the room, as Lu, with an
+expression of maternal despair, bore him away for the correction of his
+dilapidated raiment and depraved associations. I felt such sincere pride
+in this young Mazzini of the dog-nation, that I was vexed at Lu for
+bestowing on him reproof instead of congratulation; but she was not the
+only conservative who fails to see a good cause and a heroic heart
+under a bloody nose and torn jacket. I resolved that if Billy was
+punished he should have his recompense before long in an extra holiday
+at Barnum's or the Hippotheatron.
+
+You already have some idea of my other nephew, if you have noticed that
+none of us, not even that habitual disrespecter of dignities, Billy,
+ever called him Dan. It would have seemed as incongruous as to call
+Billy William. He was one of those youths who never gave their parents a
+moment's uneasiness; who never had to have their wills broken, and never
+forget to put on their rubbers or take an umbrella. In boyhood he was
+intended for a missionary. Had it been possible for him to go to
+Greenland's icy mountains without catching cold, or India's coral
+strand, without getting bilious, his parents would have carried out
+their pleasing dream of contributing him to the world's evangelization.
+Lu and Mr. Lovegrove had no doubt that he would have been greatly
+blessed if he could have stood it....
+
+Both she and his father always encouraged old manners in him. I think
+they took such pride in raising a peculiarly pale boy as a gardener
+does in getting a nice blanch on his celery, and so long as he was not
+absolutely sick, the graver he was the better. He was a sensitive plant,
+a violet by a mossy stone, and all that sort of thing....
+
+At the time I introduce Billy, both Lu and her husband were much
+changed. They had gained a great deal in width of view and liberality of
+judgment. They read Dickens, and Thackeray with avidity; went now and
+then to the opera; proposed to let Billy take a quarter at Dodworth's;
+had statues in their parlor without any thought of shame at their lack
+of petticoats, and did multitudes of things which, in their early
+married life, they would have considered shocking.... They would greatly
+have liked to see Daniel shine in society. Of his erudition they were
+proud even to worship. The young man never had any business, and his
+father never seemed to think of giving him any, knowing, as Billy would
+say, that he had stamps enough to "see him through." If Daniel liked,
+his father would have endowed a professorship in some college and given
+him the chair; but that would have taken him away from his own room and
+the family physician.
+
+Daniel knew how much his parents wished him to make a figure in the
+world, and only blamed himself for his failure, magnanimously forgetting
+that they had crushed out the faculties which enable a man to mint the
+small change of every-day society, in the exclusive cultivation of such
+as fit him for smelting its ponderous ingots. With that merciful
+blindness which alone prevents all our lives from becoming a horror of
+nerveless self-reproach, his parents were equally unaware of their share
+in the harm done him, when they ascribed to a delicate organization the
+fact that, at an age when love runs riot in all healthy blood, he could
+not see a Balmoral without his cheeks rivalling the most vivid stripe in
+it. They flattered themselves that he would outgrow his bashfulness; but
+Daniel had no such hope, and frequently confided in me that he thought
+he should never marry at all.
+
+About two hours after Billy's disappearance under his mother's convoy,
+the defender of the oppressed returned to my room bearing the dog under
+his arm. His cheeks shone with washing like a pair of waxy spitzenbergs,
+and other indignities had been offered him to the extent of the brush
+and comb. He also had a whole jacket on....
+
+Billy and I also obtained permission to go out together and be gone the
+entire afternoon. We put Crab on a comfortable bed of rags in an old
+shoe-box, and then strolled hand-in-hand across that most delightful of
+New York breathing-places--Stuyvesant Square.
+
+"Uncle Teddy," exclaimed Billy, with ardor, "I wish I could do something
+to show you how much I think of you for being so good to me. I don't
+know how. Would it make you happy if I was to learn a hymn for you,--a
+smashing big hymn--six verses, long metre, and no grumbling?"
+
+"No, Billy; you make me happy enough just by being a good boy."
+
+"Oh, Uncle Teddy!" replied Billy, decidedly, "I'm afraid I can't do it.
+I've tried so often, and I always make such an awful mess of it." ...
+
+We now got into a Broadway stage going down, and being unable, on
+account of the noise, to converse further upon those spiritual conflicts
+of Billy's which so much interested me, amused ourselves with looking
+out until just as we reached the Astor House, when he asked me where we
+were going.
+
+"Where do you guess?" said I.
+
+He cast a glance through the front window, and his face became
+irradiated. Oh, there's nothing like the simple, cheap luxury of
+pleasing a child, to create sunshine enough for the chasing away of the
+bluest adult devils.
+
+"We're going to Barnum's!" said Billy, involuntarily clapping his hands.
+
+So we were; and, much as stuck-up people pretend to look down on the
+place, I frequently am. Not only so, but I always see that class largely
+represented there when I do go. To be sure, they always make believe
+that they only come to amuse the children, or because they've country
+cousins visiting them, and never fail to refer to the vulgar set one
+finds there, and the fact of the animals smelling like any thing but
+Jockey Club; yet I notice that after they've been in the hall three
+minutes they're as much interested as any of the people they come to
+pooh-pooh, and only put on the high-bred air when they fancy some of
+their own class are looking at them. I boldly acknowledge that I go
+because I like it. I am especially happy, to be sure, if I have a child
+along to go into ecstasies, and give me a chance, by asking questions,
+for the exhibition of that fund of information which is said to be one
+of my chief charms in the social circle, and on several occasions has
+led that portion of the public immediately about the Happy Family into
+the erroneous impression that I was Mr. Barnum, explaining his five
+hundred thousand curiosities.
+
+On the present occasion, we found several visitors of the better class
+in the room devoted to the aquarium. Among these was a young lady,
+apparently about nineteen, in a tight-fitting basque of black velvet,
+which showed her elegant figure to fine advantage, a skirt of garnet
+silk, looped up over a pretty Balmoral, and the daintiest imaginable
+pair of kid walking-boots. Her height was a trifle over the medium; her
+eyes a soft, expressive brown, shaded by masses of hair which exactly
+matched their color, and, at that rat-and-miceless day fell in such
+graceful abandon as to show at once that nature was the only maid who
+crimped their waves into them. Her complexion was rosy with health and
+sympathetic enjoyment; her mouth was faultless, her nose sensitive, her
+manners full of refinement, and her voice musical as a wood-robin's,
+when she spoke to the little boy of six at her side, to whom she was
+revealing the palace of the great show-king. Billy and I were
+flattening our noses against the abode of the balloon-fish, and
+determining whether he looked most like a horse-chestnut burr or a ripe
+cucumber, when his eyes and my own simultaneously fell on the child and
+lady, In a moment, to Billy, the balloon-fish was as though he had not
+been.
+
+"That's a pretty little boy!" said I. And then I asked Billy one of
+those senseless routine questions which must make children look at us,
+regarding the scope of our intellects very much as we look at Bushmen.
+
+"How would you like to play with him?"
+
+"Him!" replied Billy, scornfully, "that's his first pair of boots; see
+him pull up his little breeches to show the red tops to 'em! But,
+crackey! isn't _she_ a smasher!"
+
+After that we visited the wax figures and the sleepy snakes, the learned
+seal and the glass-blowers. Whenever we passed from one room into
+another, Billy could be caught looking anxiously to see if the pretty
+girl and child were coming, too.
+
+Time fails me to describe how Billy was lost in astonishment at the
+Lightning Calculator,--wanted me to beg the secret of that prodigy for
+him to do his sums by,--finally thought he had discovered it, and
+resolved to keep his arm whirling all the time he studied his arithmetic
+lesson the next morning. Equally inadequate is it to relate in full how
+he became so confused among the wax-works that he pinched the solemnest
+showman's legs to see if he was real, and perplexed the beautiful
+Circassian to the verge of idiocy by telling her he had read all about
+the way they sold girls like her in his geography.
+
+We had reached the stairs to that subterranean chamber in which the
+Behemoth of Holy Writ was wallowing about without a thought of the
+dignity which one expects from a canonical character. Billy had always
+languished upon his memories of this diverting beast, and I stood ready
+to see him plunge headlong the moment that he read the sign-board at the
+head of the stairs. When he paused and hesitated there, not seeming at
+all anxious to go down till he saw the pretty girl and the child
+following after,--a sudden intuition flashed across me. Could it be
+possible that Billy was caught in that vortex which whirled me down at
+ten years,--a little boy's first love?
+
+We were lingering about the elliptical basin, and catching occasional
+glimpses between bubbles of a vivified hair trunk of monstrous compass,
+whose knobby lid opened at one end and showed a red morocco lining, when
+the pretty girl, in leaning over to point out the rising monster,
+dropped into the water one of her little gloves, and the swash made by
+the hippopotamus drifted it close under Billy's hand. Either in play or
+as a mere coincidence the animal followed it. The other children about
+the tank screamed and started back as he bumped his nose against the
+side; but Billy manfully bent down and grabbed the glove not an inch
+from one of his big tusks, then marched around the tank and presented it
+to the lady with a chivalry of manner in one of his years quite
+surprising.
+
+"That's a real nice boy,--you said so, didn't you, Lottie?--and I wish
+he'd come and play with me," said the little fellow by the young lady's
+side, as Billy turned away, gracefully thanked, to come back to me with
+his cheeks roseate with blushes.
+
+As he heard this, Billy idled along the edge of the tank for a moment,
+then faced about and said,--
+
+"P'raps I will some day,--where do you live?"
+
+"I live on East Seventeenth street with papa,--and Lottie stays there,
+too, now,--she's my cousin. Where d' you live?"
+
+"Oh, I live close by,--right on that big green square, where I guess the
+nurse takes you once in a while," said Billy, patronizingly. Then,
+looking up pluckily at the young lady, he added, "I never saw you out
+there."
+
+"No; Jimmy's papa has only been in his new house a little while, and
+I've just come to visit him."
+
+"Say, will you come and play with me some time?" chimed in the
+inextinguishable Jimmy. "I've got a cooking-stove,--for real fire,--and
+blocks and a ball with a string."
+
+Billy, who belonged to a club for the practice of the great American
+game, and was what A. Ward would call the most superior battist among
+the I.G.B.B.C., or "Infant Giants," smiled from that altitude upon
+Jimmy, but promised to go and play with him the next Saturday afternoon.
+
+Late that evening, after we had got home and dined, as I sat in my room
+over Pickwick with a sedative cigar, a gentle knock at the door told of
+Daniel. I called "Come in!" and entering with a slow, dejected air, he
+sat down by my fire. For ten minutes he remained silent, though
+occasionally looking up as if about to speak, then dropping his head
+again to ponder on the coals. Finally I laid down Dickens, and spoke
+myself.
+
+"You don't seem well to-night, Daniel?"
+
+"I don't feel very well, uncle."
+
+"What's the matter, my boy?"
+
+"Oh-ah, I don't know. That is, I wish I knew how to tell you."
+
+I studied him for a few moments with kindly curiosity, then answered,--
+
+"Perhaps I can save you the trouble by cross-examining it out of you.
+Let's try the method of elimination. I know that you're not harassed by
+any economical considerations, for you've all the money you want; and I
+know that ambition doesn't trouble you, for your tastes are scholarly.
+This narrows down the investigation of your symptoms--listlessness,
+general dejection, and all--to three causes,--dyspepsia, religious
+conflicts, love. Now, is your digestion awry?"
+
+"No, sir; good as usual. I'm not melanancholy on religion, and"--
+
+"You don't tell me you're in love?"
+
+"Well--yes--I suppose that's about it, Uncle Teddy."
+
+I took a long breath to recover from my astonishment at this
+unimaginable revelation, then said:
+
+"Is your feeling returned?"
+
+"I really don't know, uncle; I don't believe it is. I don't see how it
+can be. I never did any thing to make her love me. What is there in me
+to love? I've borne nothing for her,--that is, nothing that could do her
+any good,--though I've endured on her account, I may say, anguish. So,
+look at it any way you please, I neither am, do, nor suffer any thing
+that can get a woman's love."
+
+"Oh, you man of learning! Even in love you tote your grammar along with
+you, and arrange a divine passion under the active, passive, and
+neuter!"
+
+Daniel smiled faintly.
+
+"You've no idea, Uncle Teddy, that you are twitting on facts; but you
+hit the truth there; indeed you do. If she were a Greek or Latin woman,
+I could talk Anacreon or Horace to her. If women only understood the
+philosophy of the flowers as well as they do the poetry"--
+
+"Thank God they don't, Daniel!" sighed I, devoutly.
+
+"Never mind,--in that case I could entrance her for hours, talking
+about the grounds of difference between Linnaeus and Jussieu. Women like
+the star business, they say,--and I could tell her where all the
+constellations are; but sure as I tried to get off any sentiment about
+them, I'd break down and make myself ridiculous. But what earthly chance
+would the greatest philosopher that ever lived have with the woman he
+loved, if he depended for her favor on his ability to analyze her
+bouquet or tell her when she might look out for the next occultation of
+Orion? I can't talk bread-and-butter talk. I can't do any thing that
+makes a man even tolerable to a woman!"
+
+"I hope you don't mean that nothing but bread-and-butter talk is
+tolerable to a woman!"
+
+"No; but it's necessary to some extent,--at any rate the ability is,--in
+order to succeed in society; and it's in society men first meet and
+strike women. And oh, Uncle Teddy! I'm such a fish out of water in
+society!--such a dreadful floundering fish! When I see her dancing
+gracefully as a swan swims, and feel that fellows, like little Jack
+Mankyn, who 'don't know twelve times,' can dance to her perfect
+admiration; when I see that she likes ease of manners,--and all sorts
+of men without an idea in their heads have that,--while I turn all
+colors when I speak to her, and am clumsy, and abrupt, and abstracted,
+and bad at repartee,--Uncle Teddy! sometimes (though it seems so
+ungrateful to father and mother, who have spent such pains for
+me)--sometimes, do you know, it seems to me as if I'd exchange all I've
+ever learned for the power to make a good appearance before her!"
+
+"Daniel, my boy, it's too much a matter of reflection with you! A woman
+is not to be taken by laying plans. If you love the lady (whose name I
+don't ask you, because I know you'll tell me as soon as you think best),
+you must seek her companionship until you're well enough acquainted with
+her to have her regard you as something different from the men whom she
+meets merely in society, and judge your qualities by another standard
+than that she applies to them. If she's a sensible girl (and God forbid
+you should marry her otherwise), she knows that people can't always be
+dancing, or holding fans, or running after orange-ice. If she's a girl
+capable of appreciating your best points (and woe to you if you marry a
+girl who can't!), she'll find them out upon closer intimacy, and, once
+found, they'll a hundred times outweigh all brilliant advantages kept in
+the show-case of fellows who have nothing on the shelves. When this
+comes about, you will pop the question unconsciously, and, to adapt
+Milton, she'll drop into your lap 'gathered--not harshly plucked.'"
+
+"I know that's sensible, Uncle Teddy, and I'll try. Let me tell you the
+sacredest of secrets,--regularly every day of my life I send her a
+little poem fastened round the prettiest bouquet I can get at Hanft's."
+
+"Does she know who sends them?'"
+
+"She can't have any idea. The German boy that takes them knows not a
+word of English except her name and address. You'll forgive me, uncle,
+for not mentioning her name yet? You see she may despise or hate me some
+day when she knows who it is that has paid her these attentions; and
+then I'd like to be able to feel that at least I've never hurt her by
+any absurd connection with myself."
+
+"Forgive you? Nonsense! The feeling does your heart infinite credit,
+though a little counsel with your head would show you that your only
+absurdity is self-depreciation."
+
+Daniel bid me good-night. As I put out my cigar and went to bed, my
+mind reverted to the dauntless little Hotspur who had spent the
+afternoon with me and reversed his mother's wish, thinking,--
+
+"Oh, if Daniel were more like Billy!"
+
+It was always Billy's habit to come and sit with me while I smoked my
+after-breakfast cigar, but the next morning did not see him enter my
+room till St. George's hands pointed to a quarter of nine.
+
+"Well, Billy Boy Blue, come blow your horn; what haystack have you been
+under till this time of day? We sha'n't have a minute to look over our
+spelling together, and I know a boy who's going in for promotion next
+week. Have you had your breakfast, and taken care of Crab?"
+
+"Yes, sir; but I didn't feel like getting up this morning."
+
+"Are you sick?"
+
+"No-o-o--it isn't that; but you'll laugh at me if I tell you."
+
+"Indeed I won't, Billy!"
+
+"Well,"--his voice dropped to a whisper, and he stole close to my
+side,--"I had such a nice dream about _her_ just the last thing before
+the bell rang; and when I woke up I felt so queer,--so kinder good and
+kinder bad,--and I wanted to see her so much, that if I hadn't been a
+big boy I believe I should have blubbered. I tried ever so much to go to
+sleep and see her again; but the more I tried the more I couldn't. After
+all, I had to get up without it, though I didn't want any breakfast, and
+only ate two buckwheat cakes, when I always eat six, you know, Uncle
+Teddy. Can you keep a secret?"
+
+"Yes, dear, so you couldn't get it out of me if you were to shake me
+upside-down like a savings-bank."
+
+"Oh, ain't you mean! That was when I was small I did that. I'll tell you
+the secret, though,--that girl and I are going to get married. I mean to
+ask her the first chance I get. Oh, isn't she a smasher!"
+
+"My dear Billy, sha'n't you wait a little while to see if you always
+like her as well as you do now? Then, too, you'll be older."
+
+"I'm old enough, Uncle Teddy, and I love her dearly! I'm as old as the
+kings of France used to be when they got married,--I read it in Abbott's
+histories. But there's the clock striking nine! I must run or I shall
+get a tardy mark, and, perhaps, she'll want to see my certificate
+sometimes."
+
+So saying, he kissed me on the cheek and set off for school as fast as
+his legs could carry him. O Love, omnivorous Love, that sparest neither
+the dotard leaning on his staff nor the boy with pantaloons buttoning on
+his jacket,--omnipotent Love, that, after parents and teachers have
+failed, in one instant can make Billy try to become a good boy!
+
+With both of my nephews hopelessly enamored, and myself the confidant of
+both, I had my hands full. Daniel was generally dejected and
+distrustful; Billy buoyant and jolly. Daniel found it impossible to
+overcome his bashfulness; was spontaneous only in sonnets, brilliant
+only in bouquets. Billy was always coming to me with pleasant news, told
+in his slangy New-York boy vernacular. One day he would exclaim,--"Oh,
+I'm getting on prime! I got such a smile off her this morning as I went
+by the window!" Another day he wanted counsel how to get a valentine to
+her,--because it was too big to shove in a lamp-post, and she might
+catch him if he left it on the steps, rang the bell, and ran away.
+Daniel wrote his own valentine; but, despite its originality, that
+document gave him no such comfort as Billy got from twenty-five cents'
+worth of embossed paper, pink cupids, and doggerel. Finally, Billy
+announced to me that he had been to play with Jimmy, and got introduced
+to his girl.
+
+Shortly after this Lu gave what they call "a little company,"--not a
+party, but a reunion of forty or fifty people with whom the family were
+well acquainted, several of them living in our immediate neighborhood.
+There was a goodly proportion of young folk, and there was to be dancing
+but the music was limited to a single piano played by the German exile
+usual on such occasions, and the refreshments did not rise to the
+splendor of a costly supper. This kind of compromise with fashionable
+gayety was wisely deemed by Lu the best method of introducing Daniel to
+the _beau monde_,--a push given the timid eaglet by the maternal bird,
+with a soft tree-top between him and the vast expanse of society. How
+simple was the entertainment may be inferred from the fact that Lu felt
+somewhat discomposed when she got a note from one of her guests asking
+leave to bring along her niece, who was making her a few weeks' visit.
+As a matter of course, however, she returned answer to bring the young
+lady and welcome.
+
+Daniel's dressing-room having been given up to the gentlemen I invited
+him to make his toilet in mine, and, indeed, wanting him to create a
+favorable impression, became his valet _pro tem._, tying his cravat, and
+teasing the divinity-student look out of his side-hair. My little dandy
+Billy came in for another share of attention, and when I managed to
+button his jacket for him so that it showed his shirt-studs "like a
+man's," Count d'Orsay could not have felt a more pleasing sense of his
+sufficiency for all the demands of the gay world.
+
+When we reached the parlor we found Pa and Ma Lovegrove already
+receiving. About a score of guests had arrived. Most of them were old
+married couples, which, after paying their devoirs, fell in two like
+unriveted scissors,--the gentlemen finding a new pivot in pa and the
+ladies in ma, where they mildly opened and shut upon such questions as
+severally concerned them, such as "the way gold closed," and "how the
+children were."
+
+Besides the old married people there were several old young men of
+distinctly hopeless and unmarried aspect, who, having nothing in common
+with the other class, nor sufficient energy of character to band
+themselves for mutual protection, hovered dejectedly about the arch
+pillars, or appeared to be considering whether, on the whole, it would
+not be feasible and best to sit down on the centre-table. These
+subsisted upon such crumbs of comfort as Lu could get an occasional
+chance to throw them by rapid sorties of conversation,--became
+galvanically active the moment they were punched up, and fell flat the
+moment the punching was remitted. I did all I could for them, but,
+having Daniel in tow, dared not sail too near the edge of the Doldrums,
+lest he should drop into sympathetic stagnation and be taken
+preternaturally bashful, with his sails all aback, just as I wanted to
+carry him gallantly into action with some clipper-built cruiser of a
+nice young lady. Finally, Lu bethought herself of that last plank of
+drowning conversationists, the photograph album. All the dejected young
+men made for it at once, some reaching it just as they were about to
+sink for the last time, but all getting a grip on it somehow, and
+staying there in company with other people's babies whom they didn't
+know, and celebrities whom they knew to death, until, one by one, they
+either stranded upon a motherly dowager by the Fire-place Shoals, or
+were rescued from the Sofa Reef by some gallant wrecker of a
+strong-minded young lady, with a view to taking salvage out of them in
+the German.
+
+Besides these, were already arrived a dozen nice little boys and girls,
+who had been invited to make it pleasant for Billy. I had to remind him
+of the fact that they were his guests, for, in comparison with the queen
+of his affections, they were in danger of being despised by him as small
+fry.
+
+The younger ladies and gentlemen,--those who had fascinations to
+disport, or were in the habit of disporting what they considered such,
+were probably still at home consulting the looking-glass until that
+oracle should announce the auspicious moment for their setting forth.
+
+Daniel was in conversation with a perfect godsend of a girl, who
+understood Latin and had begun Greek. Billy was taking a moment's
+vacation from his boys and girls, busy with "Old Maid" in the
+extension-room, and whispering with his hand in mine, "Oh, don't I wish
+_she_ were here!" when a fresh invoice of ladies, just unpacked from the
+dressing-room in all the airy elegance of evening costume, floated
+through the door. I heard Lu say,--
+
+"Ah, Mrs. Rumbullion! Happy to see your niece, too. How d'ye do, Miss
+Pilgrim?"
+
+At this last word Billy jumped as if he had been shot, and the bevy of
+ladies opening about sister Lu disclosed the charming face and figure of
+the pretty girl we had met at Barnum's.
+
+Billy's countenance rapidly changed from astonishment to joy.
+
+"Isn't that splendid, Uncle Teddy? Just as I was wishing it! It's just
+like the fairy books!" and, rushing up to the party of new-comers, "My
+dear Lottie!" cried he, "if I'd only known you were coming I'd have gone
+after you!"
+
+As he caught her by the hand I was pleased to see her soft eyes brighten
+with gratification at his enthusiasm, but my sister Lu looked on
+naturally with astonishment in every feature.
+
+"Why, Billy!" said she, "you ought not to call a strange young lady'
+_Lottie_!' Miss Pilgrim, you must excuse my wild boy."
+
+"And you must excuse my mother, Lottie," said Billy, affectionately
+patting Miss Pilgrim's rose kid, "for calling you a strange young lady.
+You are not strange at all,--you're just as nice a girl as there is."
+
+"There are no excuses necessary," said Miss Pilgrim, with a bewitching
+little laugh. "Billy and I know each other intimately well, Mrs.
+Lovegrove; and I confess that when I heard the lady aunt had been
+invited to visit was his mother, I felt all the more willing to infringe
+etiquette this evening by coming where I had no previous introduction."
+
+"Don't you care!" said Billy, encouragingly. "I'll introduce you to
+every one of our family; I know 'em if you don't."
+
+At this moment I came up as Billy's reinforcement, and fearing lest in
+his enthusiasm he might forget the canon of society which introduces a
+gentleman to a lady, not the lady to him, I ventured to suggest it
+delicately by saying,--
+
+"Billy, will you grant me the favor of a presentation to Miss Pilgrim?"
+
+"In a minute, Uncle Teddy," answered Billy, considerably lowering his
+voice. "The older people first"; and after this reproof I was left to
+wait in the cold until he had gone through the ceremony of introducing
+to the young lady his father and his mother.
+
+Billy, who had now assumed entire guardianship of Miss Pilgrim, with an
+air of great dignity intrusted her to my care and left us promenading
+while he went in search of Daniel. I myself looked in vain for that
+youth, whom I had not seen since the entrance of the last comers. Miss
+Pilgrim and I found a congenial common ground in Billy, whom she spoke
+of as one of the most delightfully original boys she had ever met; in
+fact, altogether the most fascinating young gentleman she had seen in
+New York society. You may be sure it wasn't Billy's left ear which
+burned when I made my responses.
+
+In five minutes he reappeared to announce, in a tone of disappointment,
+that he could find Daniel nowhere. He could see a light through his
+keyhole, but the door was locked and he could get no admittance. Just
+then Lu came up to present a certain--no, an uncertain--young man of the
+fleet stranded on parlor furniture earlier in the evening. To Lu's great
+astonishment Miss Pilgrim asked Billy's permission to leave him. It was
+granted with all the courtesy of a _preux chevalier_, on the condition,
+readily assented to by the lady, that she should dance one Lancers with
+him during the evening.
+
+"Dear me!" exclaimed Lu, after Billy had gone back like a superior being
+to assist at the childish amusement of his contemporaries, "Would any
+body ever suppose that was our Billy?"
+
+"I should, my dear sister," said I, with proud satisfaction; "but you
+remember I always was just to Billy."
+
+Left free, I went myself to hunt up Daniel. I found his door locked and
+a light shining through the keyhole, as Billy had stated. I made no
+attempt to enter by knocking; but going to my room and opening the
+window next his, leaned out as far as I could, shoved up his sash with
+my cane, and pushed aside his curtain. Such an unusual method of
+communication could not fail to bring him to the window with a rush.
+When he saw me he trembled like a guilty thing, his countenance fell,
+and, no longer able to feign absence, he unlocked his door and let me
+enter by the normal mode.
+
+"Why, Daniel Lovegrove, my nephew, what does this mean? Are you sick?"
+
+"Uncle Edward, I am not sick,--and this means that I am a fool. Even a
+little boy like Billy puts me to shame. I feel humbled to the very dust.
+I wish I'd been a missionary and got massacred by savages. Oh that I'd
+been permitted to wear damp stockings in childhood, or that my mother
+hadn't carried me through the measles! If it weren't wrong to take my
+life into my own hands, I'd open that window, and--and--sit in a draught
+this very evening! Oh, yes! I'm just that bitter! Oh, oh, oh!"
+
+And Daniel paced the floor with strides of frenzy.
+
+"Well, my dear fellow, let's look at the matter calmly a minute. What
+brought on this sudden attack? You seemed doing well enough the first
+ten minutes after we came down. I was only out of your sight long enough
+to speak to the Rumbullion party who had just come in, and when I turned
+around you were gone. Now you are in this fearful condition. What is
+there in the Rumbullions to start you off on such a bender of
+bashfulness as this which I here behold?"
+
+"Rumbullion indeed!" said Daniel. "A hundred Rumbullions could not make
+me feel as I do. But _she_ can shake me into a whirlwind with her little
+finger; and _she_ came with the Rumbullions!"
+
+"What! D'you--Miss Pilgrim?"
+
+"Miss Pilgrim!"
+
+I labored with Daniel for ten minutes, using every encouragement and
+argument I could think of, and finally threatened him that I would
+bring up the whole Rumbullion party, Miss Pilgrim included, telling them
+that he had invited them to look at his conchological cabinet, unless he
+instantly shook the ice out of his manner and accompanied me down
+stairs. This dreadful menace had the desired effect. He knew that I
+would not scruple to fulfil it; and at the same time that it made him
+surrender, it also provoked him with me to a degree which gave his eyes
+and cheeks as fine a glow as I could have wished for the purpose of a
+favorable impression. The stimulus of wrath was good for him, and there
+was little tremor in his knees when he descended the stairs. Well-a-day!
+So Daniel and Billy were rivals!
+
+The latter gentleman met us at the foot of the staircase.
+
+"Oh, there you are, Daniel!" said he, cheerily. "I was just going to
+look after you and Uncle Teddy. We've wanted you for the dances. We've
+had the Lancers twice and three round dances; and I danced the second
+Lancers with Lottie. Now we're going to play some games,--to amuse the
+children, you know," he added, loftily, with the adult gesture of
+pointing his thumb over his shoulder at the extension-room. "Lottie's
+going to play, too; so will you and Daniel, won't you, uncle? Oh, here
+comes Lottie now! This is my brother, Miss Pilgrim,--let me introduce
+him to you. I'm sure you'll like him. There's nothing he don't know."
+
+Miss Pilgrim had just come to the newel-post of the staircase, and, when
+she looked into Daniel's face, blushed like the red, red rose, losing
+her self-possession perceptibly more than Daniel.
+
+The courage of weak warriors and timid gallants mounts as the opposite
+party's falls, and Daniel made out to say, in a firm tone, that it was
+long since he had enjoyed the pleasure of meeting Miss Pilgrim.
+
+"Not since Mrs. Cramcroud's last sociable, I think," replied Miss
+Pilgrim, her cheeks and eyes still playing the tell-tale.
+
+"Oho! so you don't want any introduction!" exclaimed Master Billy. "I
+didn't know you knew each other, Lottie?"
+
+"I have met Mr. Lovegrove in society. Shall we go and join the plays?"
+
+"To be sure we shall!" cried Billy. "You needn't mind,--all the grown
+people are going too."
+
+On entering the parlor we found it as he had said. The guests being
+almost all well acquainted with each other, at the solicitation of jolly
+little Mrs. Bloomingal, sister Lu had consented to make a pleasant
+Christmas kind of time of it, in which everybody was permitted to be
+young again, and romp with the rompiest. We played Blindman's-buff till
+we were tired of that,--Daniel, to Lu's great delight, coming out
+splendidly as Blindman, and evincing such "cheek" in the style he hunted
+down and caught the ladies, as satisfied me that nothing but his
+eyesight stood in the way of his making an audacious figure in the
+world. Then a pretty little girl, Tilly Turtelle, who seemed quite a
+premature flirt, proposed "Door-keeper,"--a suggestion accepted with
+great _eclat_ by all the children, several grown people assenting.
+
+To Billy--quite as much on account of his shining prominence in the
+executive faculties as of his character as host--was committed the duty
+of counting out the first person to be sent into the hall. There were so
+many of us that "Aina-maina-mona-mike" would not go quite round; but,
+with that promptness of expedience which belongs to genius, Billy
+instantly added on, "Intery-mintery-cutery-corn," and the last word of
+the cabalistic formula fell upon me--Edward Balbus. I disappeared into
+the entry amidst peals of happy laughter from both old and young,
+calling, when the door opened again to ask me whom I wanted, for the
+pretty lisping flirt who had proposed the game. After giving me a
+coquettish little chirrup of a kiss, and telling me my beard scratched,
+she bade me, on my return, send out to her "Mithter Billy Lovegrove." I
+obeyed her; my youngest nephew retired; and after a couple of seconds,
+during which Tilly undoubtedly got what she proposed the game for, Billy
+being a great favorite with the little girls, she came back, pouting and
+blushing, to announce that he wanted Miss Pilgrim. That young lady
+showed no mock-modesty, but arose at once, and laughingly went out to
+her youthful admirer, who, as I afterward learned, embraced her
+ardently, and told her he loved her better than any girl in the world.
+As he turned to go back, she told him that he might send to her one of
+her juvenile cousins, Reginald Rumbullion. Now, whether because on this
+youthful Rumbullion's account Billy had suffered the pangs of that most
+terrible passion, jealousy, or from his natural enjoyment of playing
+practical jokes destructive of all dignity in his elders, Billy marched
+into the room, and, having shut the door behind him, paralyzed the
+crowded parlor by an announcement that Mr. Daniel Lovegrove was wanted.
+
+I was standing at his side, and could feel him tremble,--see him turn
+pale.
+
+"Dear me!" he whispered, in a choking voice; "can she mean me?"
+
+"Of course she does," said I. "Who else? Do you hesitate? Surely you
+can't refuse such an invitation from a lady."
+
+"No, I suppose not," said he, mechanically. And amidst much laughter
+from the disinterested, while the faces of Mrs. Rumbullion and his
+mother were spectacles of crimson astonishment, he made his exit
+from the room. Never in my life did I so much long for that
+instrument described by Mr. Samuel Weller,--a pair of patent
+double-million-magnifying microscopes of hextry power, to see
+through a deal door. Instead of this, I had to learn what happened
+only by report.
+
+Lottie Pilgrim was standing under the hall burners with her elbow on the
+newel-post, looking more vividly charming than he had ever seen her
+before at Mrs. Cramcroud's sociable or elsewhere. When startled by the
+apparition of Mr. Daniel Lovegrove instead of the little Rumbullion
+whom she was expecting,--she had no time to exclaim or hide her mounting
+color, none at all to explain to her own mind the mistake that had
+occurred, before his arm was clasped around her waist, and his lips so
+closely pressed to hers, that through her soft thick hair she could feel
+the throbbing of his temples. As for Daniel, he seemed in a walking
+dream, from which he waked to see Miss Pilgrim looking into his eyes
+with utter though not incensed stupefaction,--to stammer,--
+
+"Forgive me! Do forgive me! I thought you were in earnest."
+
+"So I was," she said, tremulously, as soon as she could catch her voice,
+"in sending for my cousin Reginald."
+
+"Oh, dear, what shall I do! Believe me, I was told you wanted me,--let
+me go and explain it to mother,--she'll tell the rest,--I couldn't do
+it,--I'd die of mortification. Oh, that wretched boy Billy!"
+
+On the principle already mentioned, his agitation reassured her.
+
+"Don't try to explain it now,--it may get Billy a scolding. Are there
+any but intimate family friends here this evening?"
+
+"No--I believe--no--I'm sure," replied Daniel, collecting his
+faculties.
+
+"Then I don't mind what they think. Perhaps they'll suppose we've known
+each other long; but we'll arrange it by-and-by. They'll think the more
+of it the longer we stay out here,--hear them laugh! I must run back
+now. I'll send you somebody."
+
+A round of juvenile applause greeted her as she hurried into the parlor,
+and a number of grown people smiled quite musically. Her quick woman-wit
+showed her how to retaliate and divide the embarrassment of the
+occasion. As she passed me she said in an undertone,--"Answer quick!
+Who's that fat lady on the sofa, that laughs so loud?"
+
+"Mrs. Cromwell Craggs," said I, as quietly.
+
+Miss Pilgrim made a satirically low courtesy, and spoke in a modest but
+distinct voice,--"I really must be excused for asking. I'm a stranger,
+you know; but is there such a lady here as Mrs. Craggs,--Mrs. _Cromwell_
+Craggs? For if so, the present doorkeeper would like to see Mrs.
+Cromwell Craggs."
+
+Then came the turn of the fat lady to be laughed at; but out she had to
+go and get kissed like the rest of us.
+
+Before the close of the evening, Billy was made as jealous as his
+parents and I were surprised to see Daniel in close conversation with
+Miss Pilgrim among the geraniums and fuschias of the conservatory. "A
+regular flirtation," said Billy, somewhat indignantly. The conclusion
+they arrived at was, that after all no great harm had been done, and
+that the dear little fellow ought not to be peached on for his fun. If I
+had known at the time how easily they forgave him, I should have
+suspected that the offence Billy had led Daniel into committing was not
+unlikely to be repeated on the offender's own account; but so much as I
+could see showed me that the ice was broken....
+
+--_Little Brother, and Other Genre Pictures_.
+
+
+
+
+THOMAS BAILEY ALDRICH.
+
+(BORN, 1836.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A RIVERMOUTH ROMANCE.
+
+
+I.
+
+At five o'clock in the morning of the tenth of July, 1860, the front
+door of a certain house on Anchor Street, in the ancient seaport town of
+Rivermouth, might have been observed to open with great caution. This
+door, as the least imaginative reader may easily conjecture, did not
+open itself. It was opened by Miss Margaret Callaghan, who immediately
+closed it softly behind her, paused for a few seconds with an
+embarrassed air on the stone step, and then, throwing a furtive glance
+up at the second-story windows, passed hastily down the street towards
+the river, keeping close to the fences and garden walls on her left.
+
+There was a ghost-like stealthiness to Miss Margaret's movements, though
+there was nothing whatever of the ghost about Miss Margaret herself.
+She was a plump, short person, no longer young, with coal-black hair
+growing low on the forehead, and a round face that would have been
+nearly meaningless if the features had not been emphasized--italicized,
+so to speak--by the small-pox. Moreover, the brilliancy of her toilet
+would have rendered any ghostly hypothesis untenable. Mrs. Solomon (we
+refer to the dressiest Mrs. Solomon, which ever one that was) in all her
+glory was not arrayed like Miss Margaret on that eventful summer
+morning. She wore a light-green, shot-silk frock, a blazing red shawl,
+and a yellow crape bonnet profusely decorated with azure, orange, and
+magenta artificial flowers. In her hand she carried a white parasol. The
+newly risen sun, ricocheting from the bosom of the river and striking
+point-blank on the top-knot of Miss Margaret's gorgeousness, made her an
+imposing spectacle in the quiet street of that Puritan village. But, in
+spite of the bravery of her apparel, she stole guiltily along by garden
+walls and fences until she reached a small, dingy frame-house near the
+wharves, in the darkened doorway of which she quenched her burning
+splendor, if so bold a figure is permissible.
+
+Three quarters of an hour passed. The sunshine moved slowly up Anchor
+Street, fingered noiselessly the well-kept brass knockers on either
+side, and drained the heeltaps of dew which had been left from the
+revels of the fairies overnight in the cups of the morning-glories. Not
+a soul was stirring yet in this part of the town, though the
+Rivermouthians are such early birds that not a worm may be said to
+escape them. By and by one of the brown Holland shades at one of the
+upper windows of the Bilkins Mansion--the house from which Miss Margaret
+had emerged--was drawn up, and old Mr. Bilkins in spiral nightcap looked
+out on the sunny street. Not a living creature was to be seen, save the
+dissipated family cat--a very Lovelace of a cat that was not allowed a
+night-key--who was sitting on the curbstone opposite, waiting for the
+hall door to be opened. Three quarters of an hour, we repeat, had
+passed, when Mrs. Margaret O'Rourke, _nee_ Callaghan, issued from the
+small, dingy house by the river, and regained the door-step of the
+Bilkins mansion in the same stealthy fashion in which she had left it.
+
+Not to prolong a mystery that must already oppress the reader, Mr.
+Bilkins's cook had, after the manner of her kind, stolen out
+of the premises before the family were up, and got herself
+married--surreptitiously and artfully married, as if matrimony were an
+indictable offence.
+
+And something of an offence it was in this instance. In the first place
+Margaret Callaghan had lived nearly twenty years with the Bilkins
+family, and the old people--there were no children now--had rewarded
+this long service by taking Margaret into their affections. It was a
+piece of subtle ingratitude for her to marry without admitting the
+worthy couple to her confidence. In the next place, Margaret had married
+a man some eighteen years younger than herself. That was the young man's
+lookout, you say. We hold it was Margaret that was to blame. What does a
+young blade of twenty-two know? Not half so much as he thinks he does.
+His exhaustless ignorance at that age is a discovery which is left for
+him to make in his prime.
+
+ "Curly gold locks cover foolish brains,
+ Billing and cooing is all your cheer;
+ Sighing and singing of midnight strains,
+ Under Bonnybells window panes,--
+ Wait till you come to Forty Year!"
+
+In one sense Margaret's husband _had_ come to forty year--she was forty
+to a day.
+
+Mrs. Margaret O'Rourke, with the baddish cat following closely at her
+heels, entered the Bilkins mansion, reached her chamber in the attic
+without being intercepted, and there laid aside her finery. Two or three
+times, while arranging her more humble attire, she paused to take a look
+at the marriage certificate, which she had deposited between the leaves
+of her Prayer-Book, and on each occasion held that potent document
+upside down; for Margaret's literary culture was of the severest order,
+and excluded the art of reading.
+
+The breakfast was late that morning. As Mrs. O'Rourke set the coffee-urn
+in front of Mrs. Bilkins and flanked Mr. Bilkins with the broiled
+mackerel and buttered toast, Mrs. O'Rourke's conscience smote her. She
+afterwards declared that when she saw the two sitting there so
+innocent-like, not dreaming of the _comether_ she had put upon them, she
+secretly and unbeknownt let a few tears fall into the cream-pitcher.
+Whether or not it was this material expression of Margaret's penitence
+that spoiled the coffee does not admit of inquiry; but the coffee was
+bad. In fact, the whole breakfast was a comedy of errors.
+
+It was a blessed relief to Margaret when the meal was ended. She retired
+in a cold perspiration to the penetralia of the kitchen, and it was
+remarked by both Mr. and Mrs. Bilkins that those short flights of
+vocalism--apropos of the personal charms of one Kate Kearney, who lived
+on the banks of Killarney--which ordinarily issued from the direction of
+the scullery we're unheard that forenoon.
+
+The town clock was striking eleven, and the antiquated time-piece on the
+staircase (which never spoke but it dropped pearls and crystals, like
+the fairy in the story) was lisping the hour, when there came three
+tremendous knocks at the street door. Mrs. Bilkins, who was dusting the
+brass-mounted chronometer in the hall, stood transfixed, with arm
+uplifted. The admirable old lady had for years been carrying on a
+guerilla warfare with itinerant venders of furniture polish, and
+pain-killer, and crockery cement and the like. The effrontery of the
+triple knock convinced her the enemy was at her gates--possibly that
+dissolute creature with twenty-four sheets of note-paper and twenty-four
+envelopes for fifteen cents.
+
+Mrs. Bilkins swept across the hall, and opened the door with a jerk.
+The suddenness of the movement was apparently not anticipated by the
+person outside, who, with one arm stretched feebly towards the receding
+knocker, tilted gently forward, and rested both hands on the threshold
+in an attitude which was probably common enough with our ancestors of
+the Simian period, but could never have been considered graceful. By an
+effort that testified to the excellent condition of his muscles, the
+person instantly righted himself, and stood swaying unsteadily on his
+toes and heels, and smiling rather vaguely on Mrs. Bilkins.
+
+It was a slightly-built but well-knitted young fellow, in the not
+unpicturesque garb of our marine service. His woollen cap, pitched
+forward at an acute angle with his nose, showed the back part of a head
+thatched with short yellow hair, which had broken into innumerable curls
+of painful tightness. On his ruddy cheeks a sparse, sandy beard was
+making a timid _debut_. Add to this a weak, good-natured mouth, a pair
+of devil-may-care blue eyes, and the fact that the man was very drunk,
+and you have a pre-Raphaelite portrait--we may as well say at once--of
+Mr. Larry O'Rourke of Mullingar, County Westmeath, and late of the
+United States sloop-of-war Santee.
+
+The man was a total stranger to Mrs. Bilkins but the instant she caught
+sight of the double white anchors embroidered on the lapels of his
+jacket, she unhesitatingly threw back the door, which with great
+presence of mind she had partly closed.
+
+A drunken sailor standing on the step of the Bilkins mansion was no
+novelty. The street, as we have stated, led down to the wharves, and
+sailors were constantly passing. The house abutted directly on the
+street; the granite door-step was almost flush with the sidewalk, and
+the huge, old-fashioned brass knocker--seemingly a brazen hand that had
+been cut off at the wrist, and nailed against the oak as a warning to
+malefactors--extended itself in a kind of grim appeal to everybody. It
+seemed to possess strange fascinations for all seafaring folk; and when
+there was a man-of-war in port the rat-tat-tat of that knocker would
+frequently startle the quiet neighborhood long after midnight. There
+appeared to be an occult understanding between it and the blue-jackets.
+Years ago there was a young Bilkins, one Pendexter Bilkins--a sad
+losel, we fear--who ran away to try his fortunes before the mast, and
+fell overboard in a gale off Hatteras. "Lost at sea," says the chubby
+marble slab in the Old South Burying-Ground, "_aetat._ 18." Perhaps that
+is why no blue-jacket, sober or drunk, was ever repulsed from the door
+of the Bilkins mansion.
+
+Of course Mrs. Bilkins had her taste in the matter, and preferred them
+sober. But as this could not always be, she tempered her wind, so to
+speak, to the shorn lamb. The flushed, prematurely-old face that now
+looked up at her moved the good lady's pity.
+
+"What do you want?" she asked, kindly.
+
+"Me wife."
+
+"There's no wife for you here," said Mrs. Bilkins, somewhat taken aback.
+"His wife!" she thought; "it's a mother the poor boy stands in need of."
+
+"Me wife," repeated Mr. O'Rourke, "for betther or for worse."
+
+"You had better go away," said Mrs. Bilkins, bridling up, "or it will be
+the worse for you."
+
+"To have and to howld," continued Mr. O'Rourke, wandering
+retrospectively in the mazes of the marriage service, "to have and to
+howld till death--bad luck to him!--takes one or the ither of us."
+
+"You're a blasphemous creature," said Mrs. Bilkins, severely.
+
+"Thim's the words his riverince spake this mornin', standin' foreninst
+us," explained Mr. O'Rourke. "I stood here, see, and me jew'l stood
+there, and the howly chaplain beyont."
+
+And Mr. O'Rourke with a wavering forefinger drew a diagram of the
+interesting situation on the door-step.
+
+"Well," returned Mrs. Bilkins, "if you're a married man, all I have to
+say is, there's a pair of fools instead of one. You had better be off;
+the person you want doesn't live here."
+
+"Bedad, thin, but she does."
+
+"Lives here?"
+
+"Sorra a place else."
+
+"The man's crazy," said Mrs. Bilkins to herself.
+
+While she thought him simply drunk, she was not in the least afraid; but
+the idea that she was conversing with a madman sent a chill over her.
+She reached back her hand preparatory to shutting the door, when Mr.
+O'Rourke, with an agility that might have been expected from his
+previous gymnastics, set one foot on the threshold and frustrated the
+design.
+
+"I want me wife," he said sternly.
+
+Unfortunately, Mr. Bilkins had gone uptown, and there was no one in the
+house except Margaret, whose pluck was not to be depended on. The case
+was urgent. With the energy of despair Mrs. Bilkins suddenly placed the
+toe of her boot against Mr. O'Rourke's invading foot, and pushed it
+away. The effect of this attack was to cause Mr. O'Rourke to describe a
+complete circle on one leg, and then sit down heavily on the threshold.
+The lady retreated to the hat-stand, and rested her hand mechanically on
+the handle of a blue cotton umbrella. Mr. O'Rourke partly turned his
+head and smiled upon her with conscious superiority. At this juncture a
+third actor appeared on the scene, evidently a friend of Mr. O'Rourke,
+for he addressed that gentleman as "a spalpeen," and told him to go
+home.
+
+"Divil an inch," replied the spalpeen; but he got himself off the
+threshold, and resumed his position on the step.
+
+"It's only Larry, mum," said the man, touching his forelock politely;
+"as dacent a lad as ever lived, when he's not in liquor; an' I've known
+him to be sober for days togither," he added, reflectively. "He don't
+mane a ha'p'orth o' harum, but jist now he's not quite in his right
+moind."
+
+"I should think not," said Mrs. Bilkins, turning from the speaker to Mr.
+O'Rourke, who had seated himself gravely on the scraper, and was
+weeping. "Hasn't the man any friends?"
+
+"Too many of 'em, mum, an' it's along wid dhrinkin' toasts wid 'em that
+Larry got throwed. The punch that spalpeen has dhrunk this day would
+amaze ye. He give us the slip awhiles ago, bad 'cess to him, an' come up
+here. Didn't I tell ye, Larry, not to be afther ringin' at the owle
+gintleman's knocker? Ain't ye got no sinse at all?"
+
+"Misther Donnehugh," responded Mr. O'Rourke with great dignity, "ye're
+dhrunk again."
+
+Mr. Donnehugh, who had not taken more than thirteen ladles of rum-punch,
+disdained to reply directly.
+
+"He's a dacent lad enough"--this to Mrs. Bilkins--"but his head is wake.
+Whin he's had two sups o' whiskey he belaves he's dhrunk a bar'l full. A
+gill o' wather out of a jimmy-john'd fuddle him, mum."
+
+"Isn't there anybody to look after him?"
+
+"No, mum, he's an orphan; his father and mother live in the owld
+counthry, an' a fine hale owld couple they are."
+
+"Hasn't he any family in the town?"
+
+"Sure, mum, he has a family; wasn't he married this blessed mornin'?"
+
+"He said so."
+
+"Indade, thin, he was--the pore divil!"
+
+"And the--the person?" inquired Mrs. Bilkins.
+
+"Is it the wife, ye mane?"
+
+"Yes, the wife; where is she?"
+
+"Well, thin, mum," said Mr. Donnehugh, "it's yerself can answer that."
+
+"I?" exclaimed Mrs. Bilkins. "Good heavens this man's as crazy as the
+other!"
+
+"Begorra, if anybody's crazy, it's Larry, for it's Larry has married
+Margaret."
+
+"What Margaret?" cried Mrs. Bilkins, with a start.
+
+"Margaret Callaghan, sure."
+
+"_Our_ Margaret? Do you mean to say that Our Margaret has married
+that--that good-for-nothing, inebriated wretch!"
+
+"It's a civil tongue the owld lady has, any way," remarked Mr. O'Rourke,
+critically, from the scraper.
+
+Mrs. Bilkins's voice during the latter part of the colloquy had been
+pitched in a high key; it rung through the hall and penetrated to the
+kitchen, where Margaret was thoughtfully wiping the breakfast things.
+She paused with a half-dried saucer in her hand, and listened. In a
+moment more she stood, with bloodless face and limp figure, leaning
+against the banister, behind Mrs. Bilkins.
+
+"Is it there ye are, me jew'l!" cried Mr. O'Rourke, discovering her.
+
+Mrs. Bilkins wheeled upon Margaret.
+
+"Margaret Callaghan, _is_ that thing your husband?"
+
+"Ye--yes, mum," faltered Mrs. O'Rourke, with a woful lack of spirit.
+
+"Then take it away!" cried Mrs. Bilkins.
+
+Margaret, with a slight flush on either cheek, glided past Mrs. Bilkins,
+and the heavy oak door closed with a bang, as the gates of Paradise must
+have closed of old upon Adam and Eve.
+
+"Come!" said Margaret, taking Mr. O'Rourke by the hand; and the two
+wandered forth upon their wedding journey down Anchor Street, with all
+the world before them where to choose. They chose to halt at the small,
+shabby tenement-house by the river, through the doorway of which the
+bridal pair disappeared with a reeling, eccentric gait; for Mr.
+O'Rourke's intoxication seemed to have run down his elbow, and
+communicated itself to Margaret.
+
+O Hymen! who burnest precious gums and scented woods in thy torch at the
+melting of aristocratic hearts, with what a pitiful penny-dip thou hast
+lighted up our little back-street romance.--_Marjorie Daw, and Other
+Stories_.
+
+
+END OF VOL. II.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Humorous Masterpieces from American
+Literature, by Various
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