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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Olympian Nights, by John Kendrick Bangs
+
+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: Olympian Nights
+
+Author: John Kendrick Bangs
+
+Release Date: March 11, 2006 [EBook #17964]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLYMPIAN NIGHTS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Paul Good, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: Text that was printed in italics in the original
+document is shown between _underscore characters_ and the oe ligature
+is shown as [oe].
+
+
+[Illustration: BRANCH OFFICE OF MAMMON & CO.]
+
+
+
+
+
+ OLYMPIAN NIGHTS
+
+ by
+
+ JOHN KENDRICK BANGS
+
+ Author of "A House-Boat on the Styx"
+ "The Pursuit of the House-Boat"
+ "The Enchanted Type-writer"
+ Etc. Etc.
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ New York and London
+ Harper & Brothers Publishers
+
+ 1902
+
+
+
+
+ HARPER & BROTHERS.
+
+ Published June, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAP. PAGE
+
+I. I REACH MOUNT OLYMPUS 1
+
+II. I SEEK SHELTER AND FIND IT 17
+
+III. THE ELEVATOR BOY 33
+
+IV. I SUMMON A VALET 53
+
+V. THE OLYMPIAN LINKS 70
+
+VI. IN THE DINING-ROOM 88
+
+VII. ĘSCULAPIUS, M.D. 110
+
+VIII. AT THE ZOO 131
+
+IX. SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PALACE OF JUPITER 155
+
+X. AN EXTRAORDINARY INTERVIEW 175
+
+XI. A ROYAL OUTING 192
+
+XII. I AM DISMISSED 212
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+BRANCH OFFICE OF MAMMON & CO. _Frontispiece_
+
+HIPPOPOPOLIS EXPLAINS _Facing p._ 8
+
+A DREAM OF BRIGANDAGE " 22
+
+IN THE ELEVATOR " 30
+
+"'THE GODDESS OF THE MOTHER-IN-LAW'" " 42
+
+"ANYTHING COULD BE GOT FOR THE RINGING" " 60
+
+"JUPITER HURLED A THUNDER-BOLT AT HIM" " 64
+
+THE OLYMPIAN LINKS " 84
+
+CARING FOR THE CALVES " 104
+
+"'THEN YOU MUST DIE'" " 112
+
+I VISIT ĘSCULAPIUS " 118
+
+CALLISTO " 140
+
+I MEET THE PH[OE]NIX " 150
+
+"'THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE UNIVERSE'" " 166
+
+"THE DOOR WAS LOCKED" " 180
+
+"'WHAT?' I CRIED. 'I--THAT OLD MAN--WE'" " 190
+
+
+
+
+OLYMPIAN NIGHTS
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+I Reach Mount Olympus
+
+
+While travelling through the classic realms of Greece some years ago,
+sincerely desirous of discovering the lurking-place of a certain war
+which the newspapers of my own country were describing with some
+vividness, I chanced upon the base of the far-famed Mount Olympus.
+Night was coming on apace and I was tired, having been led during the
+day upon a wild-goose chase by my guide, who had assured me that he
+had definitely located the scene of hostilities between the Greeks
+and the Turks. He had promised that for a consideration I should
+witness a conflict between the contending armies which in its
+sanguinary aspects should surpass anything the world had yet known.
+Whether or not it so happened that the armies had been booked for a
+public exhibition elsewhere, unknown to the talented bandit who was
+acting as my courier, I am not aware, but, as the event transpired,
+the search was futile, and another day was wasted. Most annoying, too,
+was the fact that I dared not manifest the impatience which I
+naturally felt. I am not remarkable as a specimen of the strong man;
+quite the reverse indeed, for, while I am by no means a weakling, I am
+no adept in the fistic art. Hence, when my guide, Hippopopolis by
+name, as the sun sank behind the western hills, informed me that I
+was again to be disappointed, the fact that he stands six feet two in
+his stockings, when he wears them, and has a pleasing way of bending
+crowbars as a pastime, led me to conceal the irritation which I felt.
+
+"It's all right, Hippopopolis," I said, swallowing my wrath. "It's all
+right. We've had a good bit of exercise, anyhow, and that, after all,
+is the chief desideratum to a man of a sedentary occupation. How many
+miles have we walked?"
+
+"Oh, about forty-three," he said, calmly. "A short distance, your
+Excellency."
+
+"Very--very short," said I, rubbing my aching calves. "In my own
+country I make a practice of walking at least a hundred every day.
+It's quite a pleasing stroll from my home in New York over to
+Philadelphia and back. I hope I shall be able to show it you some
+day."
+
+"It will be altogether charming, Excellency," said he. "Shall
+we--ah--walk back to Athens now, or would you prefer to rest here for
+the night?"
+
+"I--I guess I'll stay here, Hippopopolis," I replied. "This seems to
+be a very comfortable sort of a mountain in front of us, and the air
+is soft. Suppose we rest in the soothing shade for the night? It would
+be quite an adventure."
+
+"As your Excellency wishes," he replied, tossing a bowlder into the
+air and catching it with ease as it came down. "It is not often done,
+but it is for you to say."
+
+"What mountain is it, Hippopopolis?" I asked, turning and gazing at
+the eminence before us.
+
+"It is Mount Olympus," he answered.
+
+"What?" I cried. "Not the home of the gods?"
+
+"The very same, your Excellency," he acquiesced. "At least, that is
+the report. It is commonly stated hereabouts that the god-trust has
+its headquarters here. As for myself, I have explored its every nook
+and cranny, but I never saw any gods on it. It's my private opinion
+that they've moved away; though there be those who claim that it is
+still occupied by the former rulers of destiny living incog. like
+other well-born rogues who desire to avoid notoriety."
+
+Hippopopolis is a decided democrat in his views, and has less respect
+for the King than he has for the peasant.
+
+"I shouldn't call them rogues exactly," I ventured. "Some of 'em were
+a pretty respectable lot. There was Apollo and old Jupiter himself,
+and--"
+
+"Oh, you can't tell me anything about them," retorted Hippopopolis. "I
+haven't been born and bred in this country for nothing, your
+Excellency. They were a bad lot all through. Shall I prepare your
+supper?"
+
+"If you please, Hippopopolis," said I, throwing myself down beneath a
+huge tree and giving myself up to the reveries of the moment. I did
+not deem it well to interpose too strongly between Hippopopolis and
+his views of the immortals just then. He had always a glitter in his
+eye when any one ventured to controvert his assertions which made a
+debate with him a thing to be apprehended. Still, I did not exactly
+like to yield, for, to tell the truth, the Olympian folk have always
+interested me hugely, and, while I would not of course endorse any one
+of them for a high public trust in these days, I have admired them for
+their many remarkable qualities.
+
+"Of course," said I, reverting to the question a few moments later, as
+Hippopopolis opened a box of sardines and set the bread a-toasting on
+the fire he had made. "Of course, I should not venture to say that I,
+a stranger, know as much about the private habits of the gods as do
+you, who have been their neighbor; but that they are rogues is news to
+me."
+
+"That may be, too," said Hippopopolis. "People are often thought more
+of by strangers than by their own fellow-townsmen. Even you, sir, I
+might suspect, who are by these simple Greeks supposed to be a sort of
+reigning sovereign in your own country, are not at home, perhaps, so
+large a hill of potatoes. So with Jupiter and Apollo and Mercury, and
+the ladies of the court. I haven't a doubt that in the United States
+you think Jupiter a remarkably great man, and Apollo a musician, and
+Mercury a gentleman of some business capacity, but we Greeks know
+better. And as for the ladies--hum--well, your Excellency, they are
+not received. They are too bold and pushing. They lack the
+refinements, and as for their beauty and accomplishments--"
+
+Hippopopolis here indulged in a gesture which betokened excessive
+scorn of the beauty and accomplishments of the ladies of Olympus.
+
+"You have never seen these people, Hippopopolis?" I asked.
+
+"I have been spared that necessity," said he, "but I know all about
+them, and I assert to you upon my honor as a courier and the best
+guide in the Archipelago that Jupiter is the worst old _roué_ a
+country ever had saddled upon it; Apollo's music would drive you mad
+and make you welcome a xylophone duet; and as for Mercury's business
+capacity, that is merely a capacity for getting away from his
+creditors. Why shouldn't a man wax rich if, after floating a thousand
+bogus corporations, selling the stock at par and putting the money
+into his own pocket, he could unfold his wings and fly off into the
+empyrean, leaving his stock and bond holders to mourn their loss?"
+
+[Illustration: HIPPOPOPOLIS EXPLAINS]
+
+"Excuse me, Hippopopolis," I put in, interrupting him fearlessly for
+the moment, "pray don't try to deceive me by any such statement as
+that. I don't know very much, but I know something about Mercury, and
+when you say he puts other people's money into his pockets, I am in a
+position to prove otherwise. From five years of age up to the present
+time I have been brought up in a home where a bronze statue of
+Mercury, said to be the most perfect resemblance in all the statuary
+of the world, classic or otherwise, has been the most conspicuous
+ornament. At ten I could reproduce on paper with my pencil every line,
+every shade, every curve, every movement of the effigy in so far as
+my artistic talent would permit, and I know that Mercury not only had
+no pocket, but wore no garments in which even so little as a change
+pocket could have been concealed. Wherefore there must be some mistake
+about your charge."
+
+Hippopopolis laughed.
+
+"Humph!" he said. "It is very evident that you people over the sea
+have very superficial notions of things here. When Mercury posed for
+that statue, like most of you people who have your photographs taken,
+he posed in full evening dress. That is why there is so little of it
+in evidence. But in his business suit, Mercury is a very different
+sort of a person. Even in Olympus he'd have been ruled off the stock
+exchange if he'd ventured to appear there as scantily attired as he is
+in most of his statuary appearances. You certainly are not so green as
+to suppose that that suit he wears in his statues is the whole extent
+of his wardrobe?"
+
+"I had supposed so," I confessed. "It's a trifle unconventional; but,
+then, he's one of the gods, and, I presumed, could dress as he
+pleased. Your gods are independent, I should imagine, of the mere
+decrees of fashion."
+
+"The more exalted one's position, the greater the sartorial
+obligation," retorted Hippopopolis, who, for a Greek and a guide, had,
+as will be seen, a vocabulary of most remarkable range. "Just as it
+happens that our King here, like H. R. H. the Prince of Wales, has to
+be provided with seven hundred and sixty-eight suits of clothes so as
+to be properly clad at the variety of functions he is required to
+grace, so does a god have to be provided with a wardrobe of rare
+quality and extent. For drawing-room tables, mantel-pieces, and
+pedestals, otherwise for statuary, Mercury can go about clad in just
+about half as much stuff as it would require to cover a fairly sized
+sofa-cushion and not arouse drastic criticism; but when he goes to
+business he is as well provided with pockets as any other speculator."
+
+"Another idol shattered!" I cried, in mock grief. "But Apollo,
+Hippopopolis--Apollo! Do not tell me he is not a virtuoso of rare
+technique on the lyre!"
+
+"His technique is more than rare," sneered Hippopopolis. "It is
+excessively raw. It has been said by men who have heard both that Nero
+of Hades can do more to move an audience with his fiddle with two
+strings broken and his bow wrist sprained than Apollo can do with the
+aid of his lyre and a special dispensation of divine inspiration from
+Zeus himself."
+
+"There are various ways of moving audiences, Hippopopolis," I
+ventured. "Now Nero, I should say, could move an audience--out of the
+hall--in a very few moments. In fact, I have always believed that that
+is why he fiddled when Rome was burning: so that people would run out
+of the city limits before they perished."
+
+"It's a very droll view," laughed Hippopopolis, "and I dare say holds
+much of the truth; but Nero's faulty execution is not proof of
+Apollo's virtuosity. For a woodland musicale given by the Dryads, say,
+to their friends, the squirrels and moles and wild-cats, and other
+denizens of the forest, Apollo will suffice. The musical taste of a
+kangaroo might find the strumming of his lyre by Apollo to its liking,
+but for cultivated people who know a crescendo andante-arpeggio from
+the staccato tones of a penny whistle, he is inadequate."
+
+"You speak as if you had heard the god," said I.
+
+"I have not," retorted Hippopopolis, "but I have heard playing by
+people, generally beginners, of whom the rural press has said that
+he--or more often she--has the touch of an Apollo, and, if that is
+true, as are all things we read in the newspapers, particularly the
+rural papers, which are not so sophisticated as to lie, then Apollo
+would better not attempt to play at one of our Athenian Courier
+Association Smokers. I venture to assert that if he did he would have
+to be carried home with a bandage about his brow instead of a laurel,
+and his cherished lyre would become but a memory."
+
+I turned sadly to my supper. I had found the mundane things of Greece
+disappointing enough, but my sorrow over Hippopopolis's expert
+testimony as to the shortcoming of the gods was overwhelming. It was
+to be expected that the country would fall into a decadent state
+sooner or later, but that the Olympians themselves were not all that
+they were cracked up to be by the mythologies had never suggested
+itself to me. As a result of my courier's words, I lapsed into a moody
+silence, which by eight o'clock developed into an irresistible desire
+to sleep.
+
+"I'll take a nap, Hippopopolis," said I, rolling my coat into a bundle
+and placing it under my head. "You will, I trust, be good enough to
+stand guard lest some of these gods you have mentioned come and pick
+my pockets?" I added, satirically.
+
+"I will see that the gods do not rob you," he returned, dryly, with a
+slight emphasis on the word "gods," the significance of which I did
+not at the moment take in, but which later developments made all too
+clear.
+
+Three minutes later I slept soundly.
+
+At ten o'clock, about, I awoke with a start. The fire was out and I
+was alone. Hippopopolis had disappeared and with him had gone my
+watch, the contents of my pocket-book, my letter of credit, and
+everything of value I had with me, with the exception of my
+shirt-studs, which, I presume, would have gone also had they not been
+fastened to me in such a way that, in getting them, Hippopopolis would
+have had to wake me up.
+
+To add to my plight, the rain was pouring down in torrents.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+I Seek Shelter and Find It
+
+
+"This is a fine piece of business," I said to myself, springing to my
+feet. And then I called as loudly as my lungs would permit for
+Hippopopolis. It was really exhilarating to do so. The name lends
+itself so readily to a sonorous effect. The hills fairly echoed and
+re-echoed with the name, but no answer came, and finally I gave up in
+disgust, seeking meanwhile the very inadequate shelter of a tree, to
+keep the rain off. A more woe-begone picture never presented itself, I
+am convinced. I was chilled through, shivering in the dampness of the
+night, a steady stream of water pouring upon and drenching my
+clothing, void of property of an available nature, and lost in a
+strange land. To make matters worse, I was familiar only with classic
+Greek, which language is utterly unknown in those parts to-day, being
+spoken only by the professors of the American school at Athens and the
+war correspondents of the New York Sunday newspapers--a fact, by the
+way, which probably accounts for the latter's unfamiliarity with
+classic English. It is too much in these times to expect a man to
+speak or write more than one language at a time. Even if I survived
+the exposure of the night, a horrid death by starvation stared me in
+the face, since I had no means of conveying to any one who might
+appear the idea that I was hungry.
+
+Still, if starvation was to be my lot, I preferred to starve dryly
+and warmly; so, deserting the tree which was now rather worse as a
+refuge than no refuge at all, since the limbs began to trickle forth
+steady streams of water, which, by some accursed miracle of choice,
+seemed to consider the back of my neck their inevitable destination, I
+started in to explore as best I could in the uncanny light of the
+night for some more sheltered nook. Feeling, too, that, having robbed
+me, Hippopopolis would become an extremely unpleasant person to
+encounter in my unarmed and exhausted state, I made my way up the
+mountainside, rather than down into the valley, where my inconsiderate
+guide was probably even then engaged in squandering my hard-earned
+wealth, in company with the peasants of that locality, who see real
+money so seldom that they ask no unpleasant questions as to whence it
+has come when they do see it.
+
+"Under the circumstances," thought I, "I sincerely hope that the paths
+of Hippopopolis and myself may lie as wide as the poles apart. If so
+be we do again tread the same path, I trust I shall see him in time to
+be able to ignore his presence."
+
+With this reflection I made my way with difficulty up the side of
+Olympus. Several times it seemed to me that I had found the spot
+wherein I might lie until the sun should rise, but quite as often an
+inconsiderate leak overhead through the leaves of the trees, or an
+undiscovered crack in the rocks above me, sent me travelling upon my
+way. Physical endurance has its limits, however, and at the end of a
+two hours' climb, wellnigh exhausted, I staggered into an opening
+between two walls of rock, and fell almost fainting to the ground.
+The falling rain revived me, and on my hands and knees I crawled
+farther in, and, to my great delight, shortly found myself in a
+high-ceiled cavern, safe from the storm, a place in which one might
+starve comfortably, if so be one had to pass through that trying
+ordeal.
+
+"He might have left me my flask," I groaned as I thought over the pint
+of warming liquid which Hippopopolis had taken from me. It was of a
+particular sort, and I liked it whether I was thirsty or not. "If he'd
+only left me that, he might have had my letter of credit, and no
+questions asked. These Greeks are apparently not aware that there is
+consideration even among thieves."
+
+Huddling myself together, I tried to get warm after the fashion of the
+small boy when he jumps into his cold-sheeted bed on a winter's night,
+a process which makes his legs warm the upper part of his body, and
+_vice versa_. It was moderately successful. If I could have wrung the
+water out of my clothes, it might have been wholly so. Still, matters
+began to look more cheerful, and I was about to drop off into a doze,
+when at the far end of the cavern, where all had hitherto been black
+as night, there suddenly burst forth a tremendous flood of light.
+
+"Humph!" thought I, as the rays pierced through the blackness of the
+cavern even to where I lay shivering. "I'm in for it now. In all
+probability I have stumbled upon a bandits' cave."
+
+Pleasing visions of the ways of bandits began to flit through my mind.
+
+"In all likelihood," thought I, "there are seventeen of them. As I
+have read my fiction, there are invariably seventeen bandits to a
+band. It's like sixteen ounces to the pound, or three feet to the
+yard, or fifty-three cents to the dollar. It never varies. What hope
+have I to escape unharmed from seventeen bandits, even though five of
+them are discontented--as is always the case in books--and are ready
+to betray their chief to the enemy? I am the enemy, of course, but
+I'll be hanged if I wish the chief betrayed into my hands. He could
+probably thrash me single-handed. My hands are full anyhow, whether I
+get the chief or not."
+
+[Illustration: A DREAM OF BRIGANDAGE]
+
+My heart sank into my boots; but as these were very wet, it promptly
+returned to my throat, where it had rested ever since Hippopopolis had
+deserted me. My heart is a very sane sort of an organ. I gazed towards
+the light intently, expecting to see dark figures of murderous mould
+loom up before me, but in this I was agreeably disappointed. Nothing
+of the sort happened, and I grew easier in my mind, although my
+curiosity was by no means appeased.
+
+"I know what I will do," I said to myself. "I'll make friends with the
+chief himself. That's the best plan. If he is responsive, my family
+will be spared the necessity of receiving one of my ears by mail with
+a delicate request for $20,000 ransom, accompanied by a P. S.
+enclosing the other ear to emphasize the importance of the
+complication."
+
+By way of diversion, let me say here that, while slicing off the
+victim's ear is a staple situation among novelists who write of
+bandits, in all my experience with bandits--and I have known a
+thousand, most of 'em in Wall Street--I have never known it done, and
+I challenge those who write of South European highway-robbers to
+produce any evidence to prove that the habit is prevalent. The idea
+is, on the face of it, invalid. The ears of mankind, despite certain
+differences which are acknowledged, are, after all, very much alike.
+The point that differentiates one ear from another is the angle at
+which it is set from the head. The angle, according to the most
+scientific students of the organ of hearing, is the basis of the
+estimate of the individual. Therefore, to convince the wealthy persons
+at home that large sums of money are expected of them to preserve the
+life of the father of the family, the truly expert bandit must send
+something besides the ear itself, which, when cut off, has no angle
+whatsoever. If I, who am no bandit, and who have not studied the art
+of the banditti, may make a suggestion which may prove valuable to the
+highwaymen of Italy and Greece, the only sure method of identifying
+the individual lies in the cutting off of the head of the victim, by
+which means alone the identity of the person to be ransomed may be
+settled beyond all question. As one who has suffered, I will say that
+I would not send a check for $20,000 to a bandit on the testimony of
+one ear any more than I would lend a man ten dollars on his own
+representation as to the meals he had not had, the drinks he wanted,
+or the date upon which he would pay it back.
+
+All these ideas flashed across my mind as I lay there worn in spirit
+and chilled to the bone. At last, however, after a considerable
+effort, I gathered myself together and resolved to investigate. I rose
+up, stood uncertainly on my feet, and was about to make my way towards
+the sources of the unexpected light, when a dark figure rushed past
+me. I tried to speak to it.
+
+"Hello, there!" said I, hoping to gain its attention and ask its
+advice, since it came into the cavern in that breezy fashion which
+betokens familiarity with surroundings. The being, whatever it really
+was, and I was soon to find this out, turned a scornful and really
+majestic face upon me, as much as to say, "Who are you that should
+thus address a god?" The rushing thing wore a crown and flowing robes.
+Likewise it had a gray beard and an air of power which made me, a mere
+mortal, seem weak even in my own estimation. Furthermore, there was a
+divine atmosphere following in his wake. It suggested the most
+brilliant of brilliantine.
+
+"Here," he cried as he passed. "I haven't time to listen to your
+story, but here is my card. I have no change about me. Call upon me
+to-morrow and I will attend to your needs."
+
+The card fluttered to my side, and, not being a mendicant, I paid
+little attention to it, preferring to watch this fast-disappearing
+figure until I should see whither it was going. Arriving at the far
+end of the cavern, the hurrying figure stopped and apparently pushed a
+button at the side of the wall. Immediately an iron door, which I had
+not before perceived, was pushed aside. The dark figure disappeared
+into what seemed to be a well-lighted elevator, and was promptly
+lifted out of sight. All became dark again, and I was frankly puzzled.
+This was a situation beyond my ken. What it could mean I could not
+surmise, and in the hope of finding a clew to the mystery I groped
+about in the darkness for the card which the hurried individual had
+cast at me with his words of encouragement. Ultimately I found it, but
+was unable to decipher its inscription, if perchance it had one.
+Nevertheless, I managed to keep my spirits up. This, I think, was a
+Herculean task, considering the darkness and my extreme lonesomeness.
+I can be happy under adverse circumstances, if only I have congenial
+company. But to lie alone, in a black cavern, prey only to the
+thoughts of my environment, thoughts suggesting all things apart from
+life, thoughts which send the mind over the past a thousand centuries
+removed--these are not comforting, and these were the only thoughts
+vouchsafed to me.
+
+A half-hour was thus passed in the darkness, and then the light
+appeared again, and I resolved, though little strength was left to me,
+to seek out its source. I stood up and staggered towards it, and as I
+drew nearer observed that the illumination came from nothing more nor
+less than an elevator at the bottom of a shaft, the magnitude of
+which I could not, of course, at the moment determine.
+
+The boy in charge was a pretty little chap, and, if I may so state it,
+was absolutely unclad, but about his shoulders was slung a strap which
+in turn held a leathern bag, which, to my eyes, suggested a golf-bag
+more than anything else, except that it was filled with arrows instead
+of golf-clubs.
+
+"How do you do?" said I, politely. "Whose caddy are you?"
+
+"Very well," said the little lad. "Not much to brag of, however.
+Merely bobbish, pretty bobbish. In answer to your second question, I
+take pleasure in informing you," he added, "that I am everybody's
+caddy."
+
+"You are--the elevator boy?" I queried, with some hesitation.
+
+"That is my present position," said he.
+
+"And, ah, whither do you elevate, my lad?"
+
+[Illustration: IN THE ELEVATOR]
+
+"Up!" said he, after the manner of one who does not wish to commit
+himself, like most elevator boys. "But whom do you wish to see?" he
+demanded, trying hard to frown and succeeding only in making a
+ludicrous exhibition of himself.
+
+Frankly, I did not know, but under the impulse of the moment I handed
+out the card which the stranger had thrown to me.
+
+"I forget the gentleman's name," said I, "but here is his card. He
+asked me to call."
+
+The elevator boy glanced at it, and his manner immediately changed.
+
+"Oh, indeed. Very well, sir," he said. "I'll take you up right away.
+Step lively, please."
+
+I stepped into the elevator, and the lad turned a wheel which set us
+upon our upward journey at once.
+
+"I am sorry to have been so rude to you, sir," said the boy. "I
+didn't really know you were a friend of his."
+
+"Of whom?" I demanded.
+
+"The old man himself," he replied, with which he handed me back the
+card I had given him, upon reading which I ascertained the name of the
+individual who had rushed past me so unceremoniously.
+
+The card was this:
+
++--------------------------------+
+| |
+| |
+| |
+| MR. JUPITER JOVE ZEUS |
+| |
+| MOUNT OLYMPUS |
+| GREECE |
++--------------------------------+
+
+"Top floor, sir," said the elevator boy, obsequiously.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+The Elevator Boy
+
+
+"Known the old man long, sir?" queried the boy as we ascended.
+
+"By reputation," said I.
+
+"Humph!" said the lad. "Can't have a very good opinion of him, then.
+It's a good thing you are going to have a little personal experience
+with him. He's not a bad lot, after all. Rotten things said of him,
+but then--you know, eh?"
+
+"Oh, as for that," said I, "I don't think his reputation is so
+dreadful. To be sure, there have been one or two little indiscretions
+connected with his past, and at times he has seemed a bit vindictive
+in chucking thunder-bolts at his enemies, but, on the whole, I fancy
+he's behaved himself pretty well."
+
+"True," said the boy. "And then you've got to take his bringing-up
+into consideration. Things which would be altogether wrong in the son
+of a Presbyterian clergyman would not be unbecoming in a descendant of
+old Father Time. Jupiter is, after all, a self-made immortal, and the
+fact that his parents, old Mr. and Mrs. Cronos, let him grow up sort
+of wild, naturally left its impress on his character."
+
+"Of course," said I, somewhat amused to hear the Thunderer's character
+analyzed by a mere infant. "But how about yourself, my laddie? Are you
+anybody in particular? You look like a cherub."
+
+"Some folks call me Dan," said the boy, "and I _am_ somebody in
+particular. Fact is, sir, if it hadn't been for me there wouldn't
+have been anybody in particular anywhere. I'm Cupid, sir, God of Love,
+favorite son of Venus, at your service."
+
+"And husband of the delectable Psyche?" I cried, recalling certain
+facts I had learned. "You look awfully young to be married."
+
+"Hum--well, I was, and I am, but we've separated," the boy replied,
+with a note of sadness in his voice. "She was a very nice little
+person, that Psyche--one of the best ever, I assure you--but she was
+too much of a butterfly to be the perpetual confidante of a person
+charged with such important matters as I am. Besides, she didn't get
+on with mother."
+
+"Seems to me that I have heard that Madame Venus did not approve of
+the match," I vouchsafed.
+
+"No. She didn't from the start," said Cupid. "Psyche was too pretty,
+and ma rather wanted to corner all the feminine beauty in our family;
+but I had my way in the end. I generally do," the little chap added,
+with a chuckle.
+
+"But the separation, my dear boy?" I put in. "I am awfully sorry to
+hear of that. I, in common with most mortals, supposed that the
+marriage was idyllic."
+
+"It was," said Cupid, "and therefore not practical enough to be a good
+investment. You see, sir, there was a time when the love affairs of
+the universe were intrusted to my care. Lovers everywhere came to me
+to confide their woes, and I was doing a great business. Everybody was
+pleased with my way of conducting my department. I seemed to have a
+special genius for managing a love affair. Even persons who were
+opposed to the administration conceded that the Under Secretary of
+Home Affairs--myself--was assured of a cabinet office for life,
+whatever party was in power. If Pluto had been able to get elected,
+the force of public opinion would have kept me in office. Then I
+married, myself, and things changed. Like a dutiful husband, I had no
+secrets from my wife. I couldn't have had if I had wanted to. Psyche's
+curiosity was a close second to Pandora's, and, if she wanted to know
+anything, there was never any peace in the family until she found out
+all about it. Still, I didn't wish to have any secrets from her. As a
+scientific expert in Love, I knew that the surest basis of a lasting
+happiness lay in mutual confidence. Hence, I told Psyche all I knew,
+and it got her into trouble right away."
+
+"She--ah--couldn't keep a secret?" I asked.
+
+"At first she could," said Cupid. "That was the cause of the first
+row between her and Venus. Mother got mad as a hatter with her one
+morning after breakfast because Psyche _could_ keep a secret. There
+was a little affair on between Jupiter and a certain person whose name
+I shall not mention, and I had charge of it. Of course, I told Psyche
+all about it, and in some way known only to woman she managed to
+convey to Venus the notion that she knew all about it, but couldn't
+tell, and, still further, wouldn't tell. I'd gone down-town to
+business, leaving everything peaceful and happy, but when I got back
+to luncheon--Great Chaos, it was awful! The two ladies were not on
+speaking terms, and I had to put on a fur overcoat to keep from
+freezing to death in the atmosphere that had arisen between them. It
+was six inches below zero--and the way those two would sniff and sneer
+at each other was a caution."
+
+"I quite understand the situation," I said, sympathetically.
+
+"No doubt," said Cupid. "You can also possibly understand how a
+quarrel between the only two women you ever loved could incapacitate
+you for your duties. For ten days after that I was simply incapable of
+directing the love affairs of the universe properly. Persons I'd
+designed for each other were given to others, and a great deal of
+unhappiness resulted. There were nine thousand six hundred and
+seventy-six divorces as the result of that week's work. It's a
+terrible situation for a well-meaning chap to have to decide between
+his wife and his mother."
+
+"Never had it," said I; "but I can imagine it."
+
+"Don't think you can," sighed Cupid. "There are situations in real
+life, sir, which surpass the wildest flights of the imagination. That
+is why truth is stranger than fiction. However," he added, his face
+brightening, "it was a useful experience to me in my professional
+work. I learned for the first time that when a mother-in-law comes in
+at the door, intending to remain indefinitely, love flies out at the
+window. Or, as Solomon--I believe it was Solomon. He wrote Proverbs,
+did he not?"
+
+"Yes," said I. "He and Josh Billings."
+
+"Well," vouchsafed Cupid, "I can't swear as to the authorship of the
+proverb, but some proverbialist said 'Two is company and three is a
+crowd.' I'd never known that before, but I learned it then, and began
+to stay away from home a little myself, so that we should not be
+crowded."
+
+I commended the young man for his philosophy.
+
+"Nevertheless, my dear Dan," I added, "you ought to be more
+autocratic. Knowing that two is company and three otherwise, you have
+been guilty of allowing many a young couple who have trusted in you to
+begin house-keeping with an inevitable third person. We see it every
+day among the mortals."
+
+"What has been good enough for me, sir," the boy returned, with a
+comical assumption of sternness--he looked so like a fat baby of three
+just ready for his bath--"is good enough for mortals. When I married
+Psyche, I brought her home to my mother's house, and for some nineteen
+thousand years we lived together. If Love can stand it, mortals must."
+
+"Excuse me," said I, apologetically. "I have not suffered. However, in
+all my study of you mythologians, it has never occurred to me before
+this that Venus was the goddess of the mother-in-law."
+
+"You mustn't blame me for that," said Cupid, dryly. "I'm the god of
+Love; wisdom is out of my province. For what you don't know and
+haven't learned you must blame Pallas, who is our Superintendent of
+Public Instruction. She knows it all--and she got it darned easy, too.
+She sprang forth from the head of Jove with a Ph.D. already conferred
+upon her. She looks after the education of the world. I don't--but
+I'll wager you anything you please to put up that man gains more real
+experience under my management than he does from Athena's department,
+useful as her work is."
+
+I could not but admit the truth of all that the boy said, and of
+course I told him so. To change the subject, which, if pursued, might
+lead to an exposure of my own ignorance, I said:
+
+"But, Dan, what interests me most, and pains me most as well, is to
+hear that you are separated from Psyche. I do not wish to seem
+inquisitive on the subject of a--ah--of a man's family affairs"--I
+hesitated in my speech because he seemed such a baby and it was
+difficult to take him seriously, as is always the way with Love,
+unless we are directly involved--"but you have told me of the
+separation, and as a man, a newspaper-man, I am interested. Couldn't
+you reconcile your mother, Madame Venus, to Psyche--or, rather, Mrs.
+Dan?"
+
+[Illustration: "'THE GODDESS OF THE MOTHER-IN-LAW'"]
+
+"Not for a moment," replied the boy. "Not for a millionth part of a
+tenth of a quarter of a second by a stop-watch. Their irreconcilability
+was copper-fastened, and I found myself compelled to choose between
+them. My mother developed a gray hair the day after the first trouble,
+and my wife began to go out to afternoon teas and sewing-circles and
+dances. The teas and dances were all right. You can't talk at either.
+But the sewing-circle was ruin. At this particular time the circle was
+engaged in making winter garments for the children of the mother of
+the Gracchi. I presume that as a student and as a father you realize
+all that this meant. You also know that a sewing-circle needs four
+things: first, an object; second, a needle and thread; third, a
+garment; fourth, a subject for conversation. These things are
+constitutionally required, and Psyche joined what she called 'The
+Immortal Dorcas.' The result was that all Olympus and half of Hades
+were shortly acquainted with the confidential workings of my
+department--all told under the inviolate bond of secrecy, however,
+which requires that each member confided in shall not communicate what
+she has heard to more--or to less--than ten people."
+
+"I know," said I. "The Dorcas habit has followers among my own
+people."
+
+"But see where it placed me!" cried the little creature. "There was
+me, or I--I don't know whether Greek or English is preferable to
+you--charged with the love affairs of the universe. Confiding all I
+knew, like a dutiful husband, to my wife, and having her letting it
+all out to the public through the society. Why, my dear fellow, it
+wasn't long before the immortals began to accuse me of being in the
+pay of the Sunday newspapers, and you must know as well as anybody
+else that Love has nothing to do with them. Even the affairs of my
+sovereign began to creep out, and innuendoes connecting Jupiter with
+people prominent in society were printed in the opposition organs."
+
+"Poor chap!" said I, sympathetically. "I did not realize that you had
+to contend against the Sunday-newspaper nuisance as we mortals have."
+
+"We have," he said, quickly, almost resignedly; "and they are ruining
+even Olympus itself. Still, I made a stand. Told Psyche she talked too
+much, and from that time on confided in her no more."
+
+"And how did she take it?" I asked.
+
+"She declined to take it at all," said Cupid, with a sigh. "She
+demanded that I should tell her everything on penalty of losing
+her--and I lost her. She left me a little over a thousand years ago,
+and my mother for the same reason sent me adrift fifteen hundred or
+more years ago. That is why I am eking out a living running an
+elevator," he added, sadly. "Still, I'm happy here. I go up when I
+feel sad, and go down when I feel glad. On the whole, I am as happy as
+any of the gods."
+
+"However, Dan," I cried, sympathetically, slapping him on the back,
+"you have your official position, and that will keep you in--ah--well,
+you don't seem to need 'em, but it would keep you in clothes if you
+could be persuaded to wear them."
+
+"No," said the little elevator boy, sadly. "I don't want 'em in this
+climate--nor are they necessary in any other. All over the world, my
+dear fellow, _true_ love is ever warm."
+
+There was a decided interval. I felt sorry for the little lad who had
+been a god and who had become an elevator boy, so I said to him:
+
+"Never mind, Danny, you are sure of your office always."
+
+"I wish it were so," said he, sadly. "But really, sir, it isn't. You
+may think that love rules all things nowadays, but that is a fallacy.
+Of late years a rival concern has sprung up. I have found my office
+subjected to a most annoying competition which has attracted away from
+me a large number of my closest followers. In the days when we
+acknowledged ourselves to be purely heathen, love was regarded with
+respect, but now all that is changed. Opposite my office in the
+government building there is a matrimonial corporation doing a very
+large business, by which the fees of my position are greatly reduced.
+Possibly after you have had your audience with Jove to-morrow you will
+take a turn about the city, in which event you will see this trust's
+big brazen sign. You can't miss it if you walk along Mercury Avenue.
+It reads:
+
++----------------------------------+
+| MAMMON & CO. |
+| Matchmakers |
+| |
+| FORTUNES GUARANTEED: |
+| HAPPINESS EXTRA |
+| |
+| GEO. W. MAMMON |
+| President |
+| |
+| HORACE GREED |
+| Gen'l Manager |
+| |
+| BRANCH OFFICE |
+| 67 Gehenna Ave., Hades |
++----------------------------------+
+
+"Dear me!" I cried. "Poor Love!"
+
+"I don't need your sympathy," said the boy, quickly, drawing himself
+up proudly. "It can't last, this competition. Man and god kind will
+soon see the difference in the permanence of our respective output.
+This is only a temporary success they are having, and it often happens
+that the spurious articles put forth by Mammon & Company are brought
+over to me to be repaired. My sun will dawn again. You can't put out
+the fires in my furnaces as long as men and women are made from the
+old receipt."
+
+Here the elevator stopped, and a rather attractive young woman
+appeared at the door.
+
+"Here is where you get out, sir," said the elevator boy.
+
+"You are Mr.----" began the girl.
+
+"I am," I replied.
+
+"I have orders to show you to number 609," she said. "The proprietor
+will see you to-morrow at eleven."
+
+"Thank you very much," I replied, somewhat overcome by the cordiality
+of my reception. It is not often that mere beggars are so hospitably
+received.
+
+"Good-night, Cupid," I added, turning to the little chap in the
+elevator. "I trust we shall meet again."
+
+"Oh, I guess we will," he replied, with a wink at the maid. "I
+generally do meet most men two or three times in their lives. So _au
+revoir_ to you. Treat the gentleman well, Hebe," he concluded, pulling
+the rope to send the elevator back. "He doesn't know much, but he is
+sympathetic."
+
+"I will, Danny, for your sake," said the little maid, archly.
+
+The boy laughed and the car faded from sight. Hebe, even more lovely
+than has been claimed, with a charmingly demure glance at my costume,
+which was wofully bedraggled and wet, said:
+
+"This way, sir. I will have your luggage sent to your room at once."
+
+"But I haven't any luggage, my dear," said I. "I have only what is on
+my back."
+
+"Ah, but you have," she replied, sweetly. "The proprietor has attended
+to that. There are five trunks, a hat-box, and a Gladstone bag already
+on their way up."
+
+And with this she showed me into a magnificent apartment, and, even
+as she had said, within five minutes my luggage arrived, a valet
+appeared, unpacked the trunks and bag, brushed off the hat that had
+lain in the hat-box, and vanished, leaving me to my own reflections.
+
+Surely Olympus was a great place, where one who appeared in the guise
+of a beggar was treated like a regiment of prodigal sons, furnished
+with a gorgeous apartment, and supplied with a wardrobe that would
+have aroused the envy of a reigning sovereign.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+I Summon a Valet
+
+
+The room to which I was assigned was regal in its magnificence, and
+yet comfortable. Few modern hotels afforded anything like it, and,
+tired as I was, I could not venture to rest until I had investigated
+it and its contents thoroughly. It was, I should say, about twenty by
+thirty feet in its dimensions, and lighted by a soft, mellow glow that
+sprang forth from all parts without any visible source of supply. At
+the far end was a huge window, before which were drawn portičres of
+rich material in most graceful folds. Pulling these to one side, so
+that I might see what the outlook from the window might be, I
+staggered back appalled at the infinite grandeur of what lay before my
+eyes. It seemed as if all space were there, and yet within the compass
+of my vision. Planets which to my eye had hitherto been but twinkling
+specks of light in the blackness of the heavens became peopled worlds,
+which I could see in detail and recognize. Mars with its canals,
+Saturn with its rings--all were there before me, seemingly within
+reach of my outstretched hand. The world in which I lived appeared to
+have been removed from the middle distance, and those things which had
+rested beyond the ken of the mortal mind brought to my very feet, to
+be seen and touched and comprehended.
+
+Then I threw the window open, and all was changed. The distant
+objects faded, and a beautiful golden city greeted my eyes--the city
+of Olympus, in which I was to pass so many happy hours. For the
+instant I was puzzled. Why at one moment the treasures of the universe
+of space had greeted my vision, and how all that had faded and the
+immediate surroundings of a celestial city lay before me, were not
+easy to understand. I drew back and closed the window again, and at
+once all became clear; the window-glass held the magic properties of
+the magnifying-lens, developed to an intensity which annihilated all
+space, and I began to see that the development of mortals in
+scientific matters was puny beside that of the gods in whose hands lay
+all the secrets of the universe, although the principles involved were
+in our full possession.
+
+The situation overwhelmed me somewhat, and I drew the portičres
+together again. The feelings that came over me were similar to those
+that come to one standing on the edge of a great precipice gazing
+downward into the vast, black depths yawning at his feet. The
+giddiness that once, many years before, came upon me as I stood on the
+brink of the Niagaran cataract, which seemed irresistibly impelling me
+to join the mad rush of the waters, surged over me again, and I forced
+myself backward into the room, shutting out the sight, lest I should
+cast myself forth into the infinite space beyond. I threw myself down
+upon a couch and covered my eyes with my hands and tried to realize
+the situation. I was drunk with awe at all that was about me, and
+should, I think, have gone mad trying to comprehend its grandeur, had
+not my spirit been soothed by soft strains of music that now fell upon
+my ears.
+
+I opened my eyes to discover whence the sounds had come, and even as
+the light streamed from unknown and unseen sources, so it was with the
+harmonies which followed, harmonies surpassing in beauty and swelling
+glory anything I had ever heard before.
+
+And to these magnificent but soft and soothing strains I yielded
+myself up and slept. How long my sleep continued I have no means of
+knowing. It seemed to last but an instant, but when I opened my eyes
+once more I felt absolutely renewed in body and in spirit. The damp
+garments which I had worn when I fell back upon the couch had in some
+wise been removed, and when I stood up to indulge in the usual
+stretching of my limbs I found myself clad in an immaculate flowing
+robe of white, soft of texture, fastened at the neck with a jewelled
+brooch, and at the waist its fulness restrained by a girdle of gold.
+Furthermore, I had apparently been put through a process of ablution
+which left me with the cockles of my heart as warm as toast, and my
+whole being permeated with a glow of health which I had not known for
+many years. The aches in my bones, which I had feared on waking to
+find intensified, were gone; and if I could have retained permanently
+the aspect of vigor and beauty which was returned to me by the mirror
+when I stood before it, I should be in imminent danger of becoming
+conceited.
+
+"I wonder," said I, as I gazed at myself in the mirror, "if this is
+the correct costume for breakfast. It's a slight drawback to know
+nothing of the customs of the locality in which you find yourself.
+Possibly an investigation of my new wardrobe will help me to decide."
+
+I looked over the rich garments which had been provided, and found
+nothing which, according to my simple bringing up, suggested the idea
+that it was a good thing to wear at the morning meal.
+
+"They ought to send me a valet," I murmured. "Perhaps they will if I
+ring for one. Where the deuce is the bell, I wonder?"
+
+A search of the room soon divulged the resting-place of this desirable
+adjunct to the tourist's comfort. The dial system which has proved so
+successful in American hotels was in vogue here, except that it
+manifested a willingness on the part of the proprietor to provide the
+guest with a range of articles utterly beyond anything to be found in
+the purely mundane caravansary. I found that anything under the canopy
+that the mind of man could conceive of could be had by the mere
+pushing of a button. The disk of the electrical apparatus was divided
+off into many sections, calling respectively for saddle-horses,
+symphony concerts, ocean steamships, bath-towels, stenographers;
+cocktails of all sorts, and some sorts of which I had never before
+heard, and all of which I resolved to try in discreet sequence;
+manicures, chiropodists, astrologers, prophets, clergymen of all
+denominations, plots for novelists--indeed, anything that any person
+in any station of life might chance to desire could be got for the
+ringing.
+
+My immediate need, however, was for a valet. Puzzled as to the manners
+and customs of the gods, I did not wish to make a bad appearance in
+the dining-room in a costume which should not be appropriate. I did
+think of ordering breakfast served in my room, but that seemed a very
+mortal and not a particularly godlike thing to do. Hence, I rang for a
+valet.
+
+[Illustration: "ANYTHING COULD BE GOT FOR THE RINGING"]
+
+"I will tell him to get out my morning-suit, and no doubt he will
+select the thing I ought to wear," I said as I pressed the button.
+
+The response was instant. My fingers had hardly left the button when a
+superb creature stood before me. Whence he sprang I do not know. There
+were no opening of doors, no traps or false panels, that I could see.
+The individual simply materialized.
+
+"At your service, sir," said he, with a graceful obeisance.
+
+"Pardon me," I replied, overcome once more by what was going on.
+"I--ah--think there must be some mistake. I--ah--I didn't ring for a
+god, I rang for a valet."
+
+"I am the valet of Olympus, sir," he replied, gracefully flicking a
+speck of dust from the calf of his leg, the contour of which was
+beautiful to look upon, clad in superbly fitting silken tights.
+"Adonis, at your service. What can I do for you?"
+
+"Well, I declare!" I cried, lost now in admiration of the way the gods
+were ordering things on Olympus. "So they've made you a valet, have
+they?"
+
+"Yes," replied Adonis. "I hold office for the six months that I am
+here. You know that I am a resident of Olympus only half the time. The
+balance I live in Hades."
+
+"It's a common custom," said I. "Even with us, our swellest people go
+south for the winter."
+
+"Hum--yes," said Adonis, somewhat confused. "It's very good of you to
+draw that parallel. Your construction of the situation does credit to
+your sense of what is polite, sir. Unfortunately for me, however, my
+position is more like that of the habitual criminal who is sent to the
+penitentiary periodically. I have to go, whether I want to or not."
+
+"Still, it must be a pleasant variation," I observed, forgetting that
+it is bad form to converse with a servant, and remembering only that I
+was addressing an old flame of Madame Venus. "Hades isn't a bad place
+for a little while, I should fancy."
+
+"True," sighed Adonis. "But the society there is very mixed. It's full
+of self-made immortals, whereas we are all immortals by birth."
+
+"And who, pray," I queried, "takes your place while you are below?"
+
+"Narcissus," he replied; "but there's generally a lot of complaint
+about him. He takes more pains dressing himself than he does in
+looking after guests, the result of which is that after my departure
+things get topsy-turvy, and by the time I get back, with the exception
+of Narcissus, there isn't a well-dressed god in all Olympus."
+
+"I wonder, where such perfection is possible," said I, "that they
+tolerate that."
+
+"They're not going to very much longer," said Adonis, and then he
+laughed. "Narcissus queered himself last season at the palace. Jove
+sent for him to trim his beard, and he nearly cut one of the old man's
+ears off. Investigation showed that instead of keeping his eye on what
+he was doing, he was looking at himself in the glass all the time.
+Jupiter in his anger hurled a thunderbolt at him, but, fortunately for
+Narcissus, he hurled it at the mirrored and not at the real Narcissus,
+and he escaped. The result is the rumor that he will be made
+head-waiter in the dining-room instead of valet next season, in which
+event I shall probably be allowed to remain here all through the year,
+or else they'll put Jason on."
+
+"And which would you prefer?" I asked.
+
+[Illustration: "JUPITER HURLED A THUNDER-BOLT AT HIM"]
+
+"I think I'd rather have Jason put on," said Adonis. "While I don't
+care much for the climate of Hades, I am received there with much
+consideration socially, whereas up here I am only the valet. One
+doesn't mind being a nabob once in a while, you know. Besides--ah--don't
+say anything about it to anybody up here, but I'm getting a trifle
+tired of Venus. She is still beautiful, but you can't get over the
+idea that she's over four thousand years old. Furthermore, I met a
+little Fury down below last season who is simply ravishing." Here
+Adonis gave me a wink which made me rather curious to see the little
+Fury.
+
+"Ah, Adonis, Adonis!" I cried, shaking my finger at him; "still up to
+your old tricks, are you?"
+
+"Why not?" he demanded. "My character is formed. _Noblesse oblige_ is
+a good motto for us all, only when one is born with _faiblesse_
+instead of _noblesse_, it becomes _faiblesse oblige_. Furthermore,
+sir, if I am to have the reputation, I must insist upon the
+perquisites."
+
+What I replied to this bit of moralizing I shall not put down here,
+since I have no wish to commit myself thus publicly. I will say,
+however, that I did not blame the youthful-looking person
+unreservedly.
+
+"Moreover, I have very fine apartments in Hades," he added, "and I
+should hate to give them up. I live at the select home for gods and
+gentlemen, kept by Madame Persephone. When she takes an interest in
+one of her boarders she is a mighty fine landlady, and, like most
+ladies, if I may say it with all due modesty, she has taken an
+interest in me. The result is that I have the best suite in the house,
+overlooking the Styx, and as fine a table as any one could want. But
+I must ask your pardon, sir, for taking up so much of your time with
+my personal affairs. We both seem to have forgotten that I am here to
+wait upon you."
+
+"It has been very interesting, Adonis," I said. "And if it's anybody's
+fault, it is mine. What I wished of you was that you should get out my
+breakfast-suit, so that I might dress and go to the dining-room."
+
+"Certainly, sir," he replied, walking to the clothes-closet. "Pardon
+me, but--ah--what is your profession when at home?"
+
+"Why do you ask?" I queried. "Not that I am unwilling to tell you,
+but--"
+
+"I merely wished to guide my selection of your garments. If you are a
+naval officer, I will put out your admiral's uniform. If you are a
+professional golfer, I'll get out your red coat."
+
+"I am a literary man," I said.
+
+"Ah!" he observed, lifting his eyebrows. "Then, of course, you won't
+mind wearing these."
+
+And he hauled forth a pair of black-and-white trousers with checks as
+large as the squares of a chessboard, a blue cloth vest with white
+polka dots, and a long, gray Prince Albert coat, with mauve satin
+lapels. The shirt was pink and blue, stripes of each alternating,
+running cross-ways, a white collar, and a flaring red four-in-hand
+tie!
+
+"Great Scott, Adonis!" I cried. "Must I wear those?"
+
+"You're under no compulsion to do so," said he. "But I thought you
+said you were a literary man."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Well--literary men never care what they wear so long as they attract
+attention, do they?"
+
+I laughed. "We are not all built that way, Adonis," said I. "Some of
+us are modest and have a little taste."
+
+"Well, it's news to me," said he. "I guess it must be among the minor
+lights."
+
+"It is--generally," said I. "And if you don't mind, I'd rather wear
+the golf clothes."
+
+And I did.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+The Olympian Links
+
+
+"There," said Adonis, as he put the finishing touch to my costume.
+"You look like a champion. Do you play golf, sir?"
+
+"There's a difference of opinion about that, Adonis," I replied, my
+mind reverting to the number of handicap matches I hadn't won. "Some
+people who have observed my game say I don't. Have you links here?"
+
+"Have we links?" he cried. "Well, rather. They're said to be the best
+in the universe."
+
+"And are they handy?"
+
+"Very--in the season."
+
+"I don't quite catch the idea," I said.
+
+"Oh, sometimes the course is nearer than it is at others. Come here a
+minute," he said, "and I'll point it out to you."
+
+He drew me to the wonderful window of which I have already spoken, and
+through the powerful glass pointed in the direction of Mars.
+
+"See that?" he said.
+
+"Yes," I replied. "That is Mars."
+
+"Exactly," said Adonis. "Mars is the Olympian links. His distance from
+here varies, as you are probably aware. When Mars is near aphelion he
+is 61,800,000 miles away, but in his perihelion he gets it down to
+33,800,000. That's why we have our golf season while Mars is in his
+perihelion. It saves us 28,000,000 miles in getting there."
+
+I laughed. "You call that handy, do you?" I said.
+
+"Why not?" he asked. "It's a matter of five minutes on a bike, ten
+minutes in the automobile, and twenty minutes if you walk."
+
+"Of course, Adonis," said I, "I'm not so green as to swallow all that.
+How the dickens can you walk through space?"
+
+"You're vastly greener than you think you are," he retorted, rather
+uncivilly, perhaps, for a valet, but I paid no attention to that,
+preferring to take him, despite his menial capacity, in his godlike
+personality. "I might even say, sir, that your greenness is spacious.
+You judge us from your own mean, limited, mundane point of view. But
+you needn't think because you earth people cannot walk on air we
+Olympians are equally incapacitated. You can walk there in two ways.
+One of these is to fasten a pair of ankle-wings on your legs; the
+other is to purchase a pair of sky-scrapers. These are simple,
+consisting merely of boots with gas soles. You inflate the soles with
+gas and walk along. It's simple and easy, doesn't require any
+practice, and as long as you keep up in the air and don't step on
+church steeples or weather-vanes it's perfectly safe. Of course, if
+you stepped on a sharp-pointed weather-vane, or a lightning-rod, and
+punctured your sole, there's no telling what would happen."
+
+"And how about the wings?" I asked.
+
+"They're much more exhilarating, but a little dangerous if you don't
+know how to use them," Adonis replied. "Flying isn't any easier than
+roller-skating, and if you upset and get your head below your feet
+it's extremely difficult to right yourself again. If you try to go out
+there with ankle-wings, take my advice and wear a pair of small
+balloons about your chest to hold you right-end upward."
+
+"I'll remember," said I, somewhat awed at the prospect of trying to
+walk through space with the aid of ankle-wings. "And how about the
+bicycle?" I added.
+
+"If you can ride a bicycle on an ordinary road you'll have no
+trouble," he replied. "Keep your tires well filled with gas and avoid
+headers. If I were you, though, at first I'd go out on the automobile.
+It makes six round trips a day and it's absolutely safe. Being so high
+up in the air might make you dizzy, and you might find the bicycling
+too much for your nerves. After a little while you'll get used to
+enormous heights, and then, of course, you can go any old way you
+choose. The fare for the round trip is only fifteen hundred dollars."
+
+"The automobile is in competent hands, eh?"
+
+"Yes," said Adonis. "Phaeton has charge of it."
+
+"Humph!" I sneered. "He's your idea of a competent driver, eh? He
+hasn't that reputation on earth. Was it an untruth that credits him
+with a fine smash-up when he tried to drive the chariot of the sun?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," said Adonis. "That's all of it simple truth. I
+happen to know, because I saw the finish of the whole thing myself,
+and was one of the fellows who turned a fire-extinguisher on him and
+saved him from being a total loss to the insurance companies. But he
+learned his lesson. There's nothing like experience to teach caution,
+and that little episode gave Phaeton caution to burn, if I may indulge
+in mundane slang. He was guyed so unmercifully by everybody for his
+carelessness that the first thing he did when he recovered was to
+learn how to drive, and it wasn't six cycles before he was the most
+expert whip in Olympus. He finally made a profession of it and
+established a livery-stable. Then, when the automobile came in and
+horses went out of fashion, he kept up with the times, and is to-day
+in charge of all our rapid transit--he owns the franchises for the
+Jupiter and Dipper Trolley Road, he is the largest stockholder in the
+Metropolitan Traction Company of Neptune, Saturn, and Venus, and is
+said to be the moving spirit back of the new underground electric in
+Hades."
+
+"I guess he'll do," said I, reflecting with admiration upon the
+wonderful self-rehabilitation of one I had previously regarded as a
+foolish incompetent.
+
+"You won't have to guess again in this case," said Adonis, dryly.
+"You've hit it right the very first time."
+
+"Well, tell me about the links, Adonis," said I. "Getting there seems
+to be an easy matter, but after you get there, how about the course?
+Is it eighteen holes?"
+
+"It is," said Adonis, "and of proper length, too, and splendidly
+arranged. You start at the club-house right near the landing-stage and
+play right around the planet, so that when you're through you're back
+at the club-house again. At the ninth hole there is a half-way house,
+where you can get nectar, and ambrosia, and sarsaparilla, and any
+other soft drink you want."
+
+"No hard drinks, eh?" I queried.
+
+"Not at the half-way house," said Adonis. "We gods have too much sense
+to indulge in hard drinks in the middle of a game. If you want hard
+drinks you have to wait till you get back to the club-house."
+
+"That is rather sensible," I said, as I thought of how a Martini
+cocktail taken at the ninth hole had ruined my chances in the
+Noodleport Annual Handicap last autumn. "But I say, Adonis," I added,
+"did I understand you to say that you played all around Mars?"
+
+"Yes--why not?" said he.
+
+"Pretty long holes, I should say," said I. "Mars is four thousand
+miles round, isn't it?"
+
+"You _are_ an earth-worm," he retorted, forgetting his place wholly in
+his scorn for my picayune ideas. "Calling a paltry four thousand miles
+long--why, you can play around that links in two hours and a half."
+
+"Indeed?" said I. "And how long may your hours be? Everything here is
+on such a magnificent scale, I suppose one of your hours is about
+equal to one of our decades."
+
+"Oh no," said Adonis. "It isn't that way at all. Fact is, we make our
+hours to suit ourselves. I am merely reckoning on a basis that you
+would comprehend. I meant two and a half of your hours. Any
+moderately expert player can play the Mars links in that time. Take
+the first hole, for instance--it's only two hundred and fifty miles
+long."
+
+"Really--is that all!" I ejaculated, growing sarcastic. "A drive, two
+brassies, an approach, and forty puts, I presume?"
+
+"For a duffer, perhaps," retorted Adonis. "Willie Ph[oe]bus does it in
+six. A seventy-five-mile drive, a seventy-mile brassie, a loft over
+the canal for twenty-five miles, a forty-five-mile cleak, a
+thirty-mile approach, and--"
+
+"A dead easy put of five miles!" I put in, making a pretence of being
+no longer astonished.
+
+"That's the idea," said Adonis. "Of course, everybody can't do it," he
+added. "And bogie for that hole is really seven. Willie Ph[oe]bus
+played too well for a gentleman, so we made him a professional. He'll
+give you lessons for a thousand dollars an hour, if you want him to."
+
+"Thanks," said I. "I'll think about it. Can he teach me how to drive a
+ball seventy-five miles?"
+
+"That depends on your capacity," said Adonis. "Some of the best
+players frequently drive seventy-five miles--the record is ninety-six
+miles, made by Jove himself. Willie taught him."
+
+"For Heaven's sake!" I cried, losing my self-poise for an instant.
+"What do you drive with? Olympian Gatling guns?"
+
+"Not at all," replied Adonis. "We use one of our regular drivers--the
+best is called the 'celestial catapult.' Ph[oe]bus sells 'em at the
+Caddie House for five hundred dollars apiece. If you strike a ball
+fair and square with the 'celestial catapult,' and neither pull nor
+slice, it can't help going forty miles, anyhow."
+
+"And how, may I ask, do the caddies find a ball that goes seventy-five
+miles?"
+
+"They don't have to. All our balls are self-finding," said Adonis.
+"The ball in use now is a recent invention of Vulcan's. They cost
+twelve hundred dollars a dozen. They are made of liquefied
+electricity. We take the electric current, liquefy it, then solidify
+it, then mould it into the form of a sphere. Inside we place a little
+gong, that begins to ring as soon as the ball lands. The electricity
+in it is what makes it fly so rapidly and so far, and even you mortals
+know the principle of the electric bell."
+
+"Oh, indeed we do," said I, pulling at my mustache nervously. I was
+beginning to get excited over this celestial golf. On earth I have all
+of the essentials of a first-class golf maniac, except the ability to
+play the game. But this so far surpassed anything I had ever seen or
+imagined before that I was growing too keen over it for comfort. I was
+in real need of having my spirits curbed, so I ventured to inquire
+after a phase of the game that has always dampened my ardor in the
+past--the caddie service. I did not expect that this could attain
+perfection even in Olympus, and I was not far wrong.
+
+"You must have pretty lively caddies," I threw out.
+
+Adonis sighed. "You'd think so, but that's where we are always in
+trouble. We've tried various schemes, but they haven't any of 'em
+worked well. At first we took our own Olympian boys. We got the mother
+of the Gracchi to lend us her offspring, but they weren't worth a rap.
+Then we hired forty little devils from Hades, and we had to send them
+back inside of a week. They were regular little imps. They were
+cutting up monkey shines all the time, and waggled their horrid little
+tails so constantly that Jove himself couldn't keep his eye on the
+ball--and the language they used was something frightful. You couldn't
+trust them to clean your clubs, because there wasn't any power
+anywhere that could keep them from running off with 'em; and in the
+matter of balls, they'd steal every blessed one they could lay their
+hands on. We finally had to employ cherubs. We've about sixty of 'em
+on hand now all the time, and they come as near being perfect as you
+could expect. Ever see a cherub?"
+
+"Only in pictures," said I. "They're just heads with wings, aren't
+they?"
+
+"Yes," said Adonis, "and, having no bodies, they're seldom in the way,
+and some of the best of 'em can fly almost as fast as the ball."
+
+"How do they carry the bags?" I asked, much interested.
+
+"They hang 'em about their necks, just above their wings," Adonis
+explained, "but even they are not perfect. They fly very carelessly,
+and often, in swooping about the sky, drop your clubs out of the bag
+and smash 'em; and they all look so infernally alike that you can
+never tell your own caddy from the other fellow's, which is sometimes
+very confusing."
+
+"Still," I put in, "a caddie with no pockets is a very safe person to
+intrust with golf balls."
+
+"That's very true," said Adonis, "and I suppose the cherubs make as
+good caddies as we can expect. Caddies will be caddies, and that's the
+end of it. You can't expect a caddie to do just right any more than
+you can expect water to flow uphill. There are certain immutable laws
+of the universe which are as unchangeable in Olympus as on earth or
+in Hades. Ice is cold, fire is hot, water is wet, and caddies are
+caddies."
+
+[Illustration: THE OLYMPIAN LINKS]
+
+"Very true," said I, reflecting upon the ways of "Some Caddies I have
+Met." "What do you pay them a round?"
+
+"One hundred and twenty-five dollars," said Adonis.
+
+"Cheap enough," said I. "But tell me, Adonis," I continued, "who is
+your amateur champion?"
+
+"Jupiter, of course," said Adonis, with an impatient shake of his
+head. "He's champion of everything. It's one of his prerogatives. We
+don't any of us dare win a cup from him for fear he'll use his power
+to destroy us. That is one of the features of this Olympian life that
+is not pleasant--though, for goodness' sake, don't say I told you!
+He'd send me into perpetual exile if he knew I'd spoken that way.
+He's threatened to make me Governor-General of the Dipper half a
+dozen times already for things I've said, and I have to be very
+careful, or he'll do it."
+
+"An unpleasant post, that?"
+
+"Well," he said, "I don't exactly know how to compare it so that you
+would understand precisely. I should say, however, it would be about
+as agreeable as being United States ambassador to Borneo."
+
+"I'll never tell, Adonis," said I, "and I'm very much obliged to you
+for our pleasant chat. Your description of the links has interested me
+hugely. If I could afford a game at your prices, I think I'd play."
+
+"Oh, as for that," said Adonis, laughing, "don't let that bother you.
+Whenever you want to pay a bill here all you have to do is to press
+the cash button on the teleseme over there, and they'll send the money
+up from the office."
+
+"But how shall I ever repay the office?" I cried.
+
+"Press the button to the left of it, and they'll send you up a receipt
+in full," he replied.
+
+"You mean to say that this hotel is run--" I began.
+
+"On the Olympian plan," interrupted the valet with a low bow. "All
+bills here are of that pleasing variety known as 'Self-paying.'"
+
+With which comforting assurance Adonis left me, and I started for the
+dining-room, my appetite considerably whetted by the idea of a game of
+golf over links four thousand miles in length with balls that could be
+driven fifty or sixty miles, and cherubs for caddies, at no cost to
+myself whatsoever.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+In the Dining-Room
+
+
+As I emerged from the door of my room into the hall, I found a small
+sedan-chair, of highly ornamental make, awaiting my convenience,
+carried upon the shoulders of two diminutive boys, who were as black,
+and shone as lustrously, as a bit of highly polished ebony. I had
+never seen their like before, save in an occasional bit of statuary in
+Italy, wherein marbles of differing hue and shade had been ingeniously
+used by the sculptor to give color to his work. The boys themselves,
+as I have said, were of polished ebony hue, while the breech-cloths
+which formed their sole garment were of purest alabaster white. Upon
+their heads were turbans of pink. They grinned broadly as I came out,
+and opened the door of the chair for me.
+
+"Dis way fo' de dinin'-room, sah," said one of them, showing a set of
+ivory teeth that dazzled my eyes.
+
+I thanked him and entered the chair. When I was seated, I turned to
+the little chap.
+
+"What particular god do you happen to be, Sambo?" I asked. It was
+probably not the most reverent way to put it, but in a community like
+Olympus gods are really at a discount, and the black particle was so
+like a small pickaninny I used to know in Savannah that I could not
+address him as if he were Jupiter himself.
+
+"Massy me, massa," he returned, his smile nearly cutting the top of
+his head off, reaching as it did around to the back of his ears. "I
+ain' no gord. I'se jess one o' dese low-down or'nary toters. Me an'
+him totes folks roun' de hotel."
+
+"A very useful function that, Sambo; and where were you born?" I
+asked. "North Carolina, or Georgia?"
+
+"Me?" he replied, looking at me quizzically. "I guess yo's on'y
+foolin', massa. Me? Why, I 'ain't never been borned at all, sah--"
+
+"Jess growed, eh--like Topsy?" I asked.
+
+"Who dat, Topsy?" he demanded.
+
+"Oh, she was a little nigger girl that became very famous," I
+explained.
+
+"Doan' know nuffin' 'bout no Topsy," he said, shaking his head. "We
+ain' niggers, eider, yo' know, me an' him ain't. We's statulary."
+
+"What?" I cried. The word seemed new.
+
+"Statulary," he continued. "We was carved, we was. There ain't nothin'
+borned 'bout us. Never knowed who pap was. Man jess took a lot o'
+mahble, he did, an' chiselled me an' him out."
+
+I eyed both boys closely and perceived that in all probability he
+spoke the truth. His flesh and dress had all of the texture of marble,
+but now the question came up as to the gift of speech and movement and
+the marvellous and graceful flexibility of their limbs.
+
+"You can't fool me, Sambo," said I. "You're nothing but a very
+good-looking little nigger. You can't make me believe that you are
+another Galatea."
+
+"Doan' no nuffin' 'bout no gal's tears," he returned instantly. "But I
+done tole yo' de truf. Me an' him was chiselled out o' brack marble by
+pap. Ef we'd been borned we'd been niggahs sho' nuff, but bein'
+carvin's, like I tole yuh, we's statulary."
+
+"But how does it come that if you are only statuary, you can move
+about, and talk, and breathe?" I demanded.
+
+"Yo'll have to ask mistah Joop'ter 'bout dat," the boy answered. "He
+done gave us dese gif's, an' we's a-usin' ob 'em. De way it happened
+was like o' dis. Me an' him was a standin' upon a petterstal down in
+one o' dem mahble yards what dey calls gall'ries in Paris. We'd been
+sent dah by de man what done chiselled us, an' Joop'ter he came 'long
+wid Miss' Juno an' when he seed us he said: 'Dare you is, Juno! Dem
+boys'll make mighty good buttonses foh de hotel.' Juno she laffed, an'
+said dat was so, on'y she couldn't see as we had many buttons. 'Would
+you like to have 'em?' Joop'ter ast, and she said 'suttinly.' So he
+tu'ned hisself into a 'Merican millionaire an' bought me an' him off
+'n de manager, an' he had us sent here. All dat time we was nuffin'
+but mahble figgers, but soon's we arrived here, Joop'ter sent us
+up-stairs to de lab'ratory, an' fust ting me an' him knowed we was
+livin' bein's."
+
+I admired Jupiter's taste, not failing either to marvel at the
+wonderful power which only once before, as far as I knew, he had
+exerted to give to a bit of sculpture all the flush and glory of life,
+as in the case set forth in the pathetic tale of Pygmalion and
+Galatea.
+
+"And does he do this sort of thing often?" I inquired.
+
+"Yass indeedy," said Sambo. "He's doin' it all de time. Mos' ob de
+help in dis hotel is statulary, an' ef yo' wants to see a reel lively
+time 'foh yo' goes back home, go to de Zoo an' see 'em feed de Trojan
+Hoss, an' de Cardiff Giant. He brang bofe dem freaks to life, an' now
+he can't get rid ob 'em. Dat Trojan Hoss suttinly am a berry debbil.
+He stans up gentle as a lamb tell he gets about a hundred an' fifty
+people inside o' him, an' den he p'tends like he's gwine to run away,
+an' he cyanters, an' cyanters aroun', tell ebberybody's dat seasick
+dey can't res'."
+
+I resolved then and there to see the Trojan Horse, but not to get
+inside of him. I never before had suspected that the famous beast had
+a sense of humor in his makeup. I was about to make some further
+inquiry when a bell above us began to sound forth sonorously.
+
+"Massy me!" cried little Sambo, springing to his place in front of the
+chair. "Dat's de third an' lass call for breakfas'. We done spent too
+much time talkin'."
+
+With which observation, he and his companion, shouldering their
+burden, trotted along the richly furnished hall to the dining-room. I
+then observed a charming feature of life in the Olympian Hotel, and I
+presume it obtains elsewhere in that favored spot. There are no such
+things as stairs within its walls. From the magnificent office on the
+ground floor to the glorious dining-room on the forty-eighth, the
+broad corridor runs round and round and round again with an upward
+incline that is barely perceptible--indeed, not perceptible at all
+either to the eye or to the muscles of the leg. And while there are
+the most speedy elevators connecting all the various floors, one can,
+if one chooses, walk from cellar to roof of this marvellous place
+without realizing that he is mounting to an unusual elevation. And in
+the evening these corridors form a magnificent parade, brilliantly
+lighted, upon which are to be met all the wealth, beauty, and fashion
+of Olympus--alas! that I have no means of returning there with certain
+of my friends with whom I would share the good things that have come
+into my life!
+
+But to return to the story. Sambo and his brother soon "toted" me to
+the entrance of the dining-room--graceful little beggars they were,
+too.
+
+"Your breakfast is ready, sir," said the head waiter, bowing low.
+
+What impelled me to do so I shall never know, but it was an
+inspiration. I seemed to recognize the man at once, and, as I had
+frequently done on earth to my own advantage, I addressed him by name.
+
+"Having a good season, Memnon?" I said, slipping a silver dollar into
+his hand.
+
+It worked. Whether I should have found the same excellent service had
+I not spoken pleasantly to him I, of course, cannot say, but I have
+never been so well cared for elsewhere. The captious reader may ask
+how anything so essentially worldly as a silver dollar ever crept into
+Olympus. I can only say that one of the magic properties of the
+garment I wore was that whatever I put my hand into my pocket for, I
+got. As a travelled American, realizing the potency under similar
+conditions of that heavy and ugly coin, I instinctively sought for it
+in my pocket and it was there. I do not attempt to explain the process
+of its getting there. It suffices to say that, as the guest of the
+gods, my every wish was met with speedy attainment. I could not help
+but marvel, too, at the appropriateness of everything. What better
+than that the King of the Ethiopians should be head waiter to the
+gods!
+
+"Things are never dull here, sir," said Memnon, pocketing my dollar
+and escorting me to my table. "We do not often have visitors like
+yourself, however, and we are very glad to see you."
+
+I sat down before a magnificent window which seemed to open out upon a
+universe hitherto undreamed of.
+
+"Do you wish the news, sir?" Memnon asked, respectfully.
+
+"Yes," said I. "Ah--news from home, Memnon," I added.
+
+"Political or merely family?" said he.
+
+"Family," said I.
+
+Memnon busied himself about the window and in a moment, gazing through
+it, I had the pleasure of seeing my two boys eating their supper and
+challenging each other to mortal combat over a delinquent strawberry
+resting upon the tablecloth.
+
+"Give me a little politics, Memnon," said I, as the elder boy thrashed
+the younger, not getting the strawberry, however, which in a quick
+moment, between blows, the younger managed to swallow. "They seem to
+be about as usual at home."
+
+And I was immediately made aware of the intentions of the
+administration at Washington merely by looking through a window. There
+were the President and his cabinet and--some others who assist in
+making up the mind of the statesman.
+
+"Now a dash of crime," said I.
+
+"High or low?" asked Memnon, fingering the push-button alongside of
+the window.
+
+"The highest you've got," said I.
+
+I shall not describe what I saw. It was not very horrible. It was
+rather discouraging. It dealt wholly with the errors of what is known
+as Society. It showed the mistakes of persons for whom I had acquired
+a feeling of awe. It showed so much that I summoned Memnon to shut the
+glass off. I was really afraid somebody else might see. And I did not
+wish to lose my respect for people who were leaders in the highest
+walks of social life. Still, a great many things that have happened
+since in high life have not been wholly surprising to me. I have
+furthermore so ordered my own goings and comings since that time that
+I have no fear of what the Peeping Toms of Olympus may see. If mankind
+could only be made to understand that this window of Olympus opens out
+upon every act of their lives, there might be radical reforms in some
+quarters where it would do a deal of good, although to the general
+public there seems to be no need for it.
+
+At this point a waiter put a small wafer about as large as a penny
+upon the table.
+
+"H'm--what's that, Memnon?" I asked.
+
+"Essence of melon," said he.
+
+"Good, is it?" I queried.
+
+"You might taste it and see, sir," he said, with a smile. "It is one
+of a lot especially prepared for Jupiter."
+
+I put the thing in my mouth, and oh, the sensation that followed! I
+have eaten melons, and I have dreamed melons, but never in either
+experience was there to be found such an ecstasy of taste as I now
+got.
+
+"Another, Memnon--another!" I cried.
+
+"If you wish, sir," said he. "But very imprudent, sir. That wafer was
+constructed from six hundred of the choicest--"
+
+"Quite right," said I, realizing the situation; "quite right. Six
+hundred melons _are_ enough for any man. What do you propose to give
+me now?"
+
+"_Oeufs Midas_," said Memnon.
+
+"Sounds rather rich," I observed.
+
+"It would cost you 4,650,000 francs for a half portion at a Paris
+café, if you could get it there--which you can't."
+
+"And what, Memnon," said I, "is the peculiarity of eggs _Midas_?"
+
+"It's nothing but an omelet, sir," he replied; "but it is made of eggs
+laid by the goose of whom you have probably read in the _Personal
+Recollections of Jack the Giant-Killer_. They are solid gold."
+
+"Heavens!" I cried. "Solid gold! Great Scott, Memnon, I can't digest a
+solid gold omelet. What do you think I am--an assay office?"
+
+Memnon grinned until every tooth in his head showed, making his mouth
+look like the keyboard of a grand piano.
+
+"It is perfectly harmless the way it is prepared in the kitchen, sir,"
+he explained. "It isn't an eighteen-karat omelet, as you seem to
+think. The eggs are solid, but the omelet is not. It is, indeed, only
+six karats fine. The alloy consists largely of lactopeptine,
+hydrochloric acid, and various other efficient digestives which render
+it innocuous to the most delicate digestion."
+
+"Very well, Memnon," I replied, making a wry face, "bring it on. I'll
+try a little of it, anyhow." I must confess it did not sound inviting,
+but a guest should never criticise the food that is placed before him.
+My politeness was well repaid, for nothing more delicate in the way of
+an omelet has ever titillated my palate. There was a slight metallic
+taste about it at first, but I soon got over that, just as I have got
+used to English oysters, which, when I eat them, make me feel for a
+moment as if I had bitten off the end of a brass door-knob; and had I
+not calculated the cost, I should have asked for a second helping.
+
+Memnon then brought me a platter containing a small object that
+looked like a Hamburg steak, and a most delicious cup of _café au
+lait_.
+
+"Filet Olympus," he observed, "and coffee direct from the dairy of the
+gods."
+
+Both were a joy.
+
+"Never tasted such a steak!" I said, as the delicate morsel actually
+melted like butter in my mouth.
+
+"No, sir, you never did," Memnon agreed. "It is cut from the steer
+bred for the sole purpose of supplying Jupiter and his family with
+tenderloin. We take the calf when it is very young, sir, and surround
+it with all the luxuries of a bovine existence. It is fed on the most
+delicate fodder, especially prepared by chemists under the direction
+of Ęsculapius. The cattle, instead of toughening their muscles by
+walking to pasture, are waited upon by cow-boys in livery. A gentle
+amount of exercise, just enough to keep them in condition, is taken
+at regular hours every day, and at night they are put to sleep in
+feather beds and covered with eiderdown quilts at seven o'clock."
+
+"Don't they rebel?" I asked. "I should think a moderately active calf
+would be hard to manage that way."
+
+[Illustration: CARING FOR THE CALVES]
+
+"Oh, at first a little, but after a while they come to like it, and by
+the time they are ready for killing they are as tender as humming
+birds' tongues," said Memnon. "If you take him young enough, you can
+do almost anything you like with a calf."
+
+It seemed like a marvellous scheme, and far more humane than that of
+fattening geese for the sale of their livers.
+
+"And this coffee, Memnon? You said it was fresh from the dairy of the
+gods. You get your coffee from the dairy?" I asked.
+
+"The breakfast coffee--yes, sir," replied Memnon. "Fresh every
+morning. You must ask the steward to let you see the _café-au-lait_
+herd--"
+
+"The what?" I demanded.
+
+"The _café-au-lait herd_," repeated Memnon. "A special permit is
+required to go through the coffee pasture where these cows are fed.
+Some one, who had a grudge against Pales, who is in charge of the
+dairymaids, got into the field one night and sowed a lot of chicory in
+with the coffee, and the result was that the next season we got the
+worst coffee from those cows you ever tasted. So they made a rule that
+no one is allowed to go there any more without a card from the
+steward."
+
+"You don't mean to say--" I began.
+
+"Yes, I do," said Memnon. "It is true. We pasture our cows on a coffee
+farm, and, instead of milk, we get this that you are drinking."
+
+"Wonderful idea!" said I.
+
+"It is, indeed," said Memnon; "that is, from your point of view. From
+ours, it does not seem so strange. We are used to marvels here, sir,"
+he continued. "Would you care for anything more, sir?"
+
+"No, Memnon," said I. "I have fared sumptuously--my--ah--my appetite
+is somewhat taken away by all these tremendous things."
+
+"I will have an appetite up for you, if you wish," he replied, simply,
+as if it were the easiest thing in the world.
+
+"No, thank you," said I. "I think I'll wait until I am acclimated. I
+never eat heavily for the first twenty-four hours when I am in a
+strange place."
+
+And with this I went to the door, feeling, I must confess, a trifle
+ill. The steak and coffee were all right, but there was a suggestion
+of pain in my right side. I could not make up my mind if it were the
+six hundred melons or whether a nugget from the omelet had got caught
+in my vermiform appendix.
+
+At any rate, I didn't wish to eat again just then.
+
+At the door the sedan-chair and the two little blackamoors were
+awaiting me.
+
+"We have orders to take you to the Zoo, sah," said Sambo.
+
+"All right, Sambo," said I. "I'm all ready. A little air will do me
+good."
+
+And we moved along.
+
+I forgot to mention that, as he closed the chair door upon me, Memnon
+handed me back the silver dollar I had given him.
+
+"What is this, Memnon?" said I.
+
+"The dollar you wished me to keep for you, sir," he replied.
+
+"But I intended it for you," said I.
+
+His face flushed.
+
+"I am just as much obliged, sir, but, really, I couldn't, you know.
+We don't take tips in Olympus, sir."
+
+"Indeed?" said I. "Well--I'm sorry to have offended you, Memnon. I
+meant it all right. Why didn't you tell me when I gave it you?"
+
+"I should have given you a check for it, sir. I supposed you didn't
+wish to carry anything so heavy about with you."
+
+"Ah!" said I, replacing the dollar in my pocket. "Thank you for your
+care of it, Memnon. No offence, I hope?"
+
+"None at all, sir," he replied, again showing his wonderful ivory
+teeth. "I don't take offence at anything so trifling. Had you handed
+me a billion dollars, I should have declined to wait on you."
+
+And he bowed me away in a fashion which made me feel keenly the
+narrowness of my escape.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+Ęsculapius, M.D.
+
+
+We had not gone very far along when the pain in my side became
+poignant and I called out of the window to Sambo:
+
+"Sammy, is there a doctor anywhere on the way out to the Zoo?" I
+asked.
+
+"Yassir," he replied, slowing down a trifle. "We gotter go right by de
+doh ob Dr. Skilapius."
+
+"Doctor who?" I asked--the name was new to me.
+
+"'Tain't _Skill_-apius," growled the boy behind, who seemed rather
+jealous that I had taken no notice of him. "It's Eee-skill-apius."
+
+"Oh," said I, beginning to catch their drift. "Dr. Ęsculapius. Is that
+what you are trying to say?"
+
+"Yassir," said both boys. "Dass de man."
+
+"Well, stop at his office a moment," said I. "I'm feeling a trifle
+ill."
+
+In a few minutes we drew up before a large door to the right of the
+corridor before which there hung a shingle marked in large gilt
+letters:
+
++-----------------------------------+
+| |
+| ĘSCULAPIUS, M.D. |
+| |
+| Office Hours: 10 to 12. |
+| |
+| Tuesdays. |
+| |
++-----------------------------------+
+
+I knocked at the door and was promptly admitted.
+
+"I wish to see the doctor," said I.
+
+"This is Monday, sir," the maid replied--I couldn't quite place her,
+but she seemed rather above her station and was stunningly beautiful.
+
+"What of that?" I demanded, as fiercely as I could, considering how
+pretty the maid was.
+
+"The doctor can only be seen on Tuesdays," said she. "It's on the
+door."
+
+"But I'm sick," I cried. "Very sick, indeed."
+
+"No doubt," she replied, with a shrug of her shoulders that I found
+very fetching. "Else you would not have come. But you are not so sick
+that you can't wait until to-morrow, or if you are, you might as well
+die, because the doctor won't take a case he can't think over a week."
+
+"Nice arrangement, that," said I, scornfully. "It may do very well for
+immortals, but for a mortal it's pretty poor business."
+
+The maid's manner underwent an immediate change.
+
+[Illustration: "'THEN YOU MUST DIE'"]
+
+"Excuse me, sir," she said, making me a courtesy. "I did not know you
+were a mortal. I presumed you were a minor god. The doctor will see
+you at once."
+
+I was ushered into the consulting-room immediately--in fact, too
+quickly. I wanted to thank the pretty maid for taking me for an
+immortal. There was no time for this, however, for in a moment
+Ęsculapius himself appeared.
+
+"You must pardon Alcestis," he said, after the first greetings were
+over. "She is new to the business and doesn't know a god from a hole
+in the ground. She presumed you were immortal and did not realize the
+emergency."
+
+"That's all right, doctor," said I, glad to learn who the entrancing
+person at the door was. "I've called to see you because--"
+
+"Pray be silent," the doctor interrupted, holding his hand up in
+admonition. "Let me discover your symptoms for myself. It is the surer
+method. Physicians in your world are frequently led astray by placing
+too much reliance upon what their patients tell them. I have devised a
+new system. _Believe nothing the patient says._ See? If a man tells me
+he has a headache, I send him to a chiropodist. If his ankle pains
+him, I send him to an oculist. If he says his chest is oppressed, I
+have him treated for spinal meningitis; and an alleged pain in the
+back my assistants cure by placing a mustard plaster on the throat."
+
+"Then your medical principles are based on what, doctor?" I asked,
+somewhat amused.
+
+"A simple motto which prevails among you mortals: 'All men are
+liars'--'Omnes homines mendaces sunt.' It is safer than your accepted
+methods below. A sick man is the last man in the universe to describe
+his symptoms accurately. The mere fact that he is ill distorts his
+judgment. Therefore, I never allow it. If I can't find out for myself
+what is the matter with a patient, I give up the case."
+
+"And the patient dies?" I suggested.
+
+"Not if he is an immortal," he replied, quietly. "Come over here," he
+added, indicating a spot near the window where there was a strong
+light. I went, and Ęsculapius, taking a pair of eye-glasses from a
+cabinet in one corner of his apartment, placed them on the bridge of
+his nose.
+
+"Now look out of the window," said he. "To the left."
+
+I obeyed at once. What I saw may not be described. I shrank back in
+horror, for I saw so much real suffering that my own trouble grew less
+in intensity.
+
+"Now look me straight in the eye," said Ęsculapius, an amused smile
+playing about his lips.
+
+I turned my vision straight upon his glasses and was abashed. I
+averted my glance.
+
+"Nonsense," said he, taking me by the shoulders. "Look at my
+pupils--straight--don't be afraid--there! That's it. These glasses
+won't hurt you, and, after all, I'm not very terrible," he added,
+genially.
+
+It required an effort, but I made it, although, in so doing, I seemed
+to be turning my soul inside out for his inspection.
+
+"H'm," breathed Ęsculapius. "Rather serious. You think you have
+appendicitis."
+
+"Have I?" I cried.
+
+Ęsculapius laughed. "_Have_ you?" he asked. "What do you think you
+think?"
+
+"I think I have," said I, my heart growing faint at the very thought
+I thought I was thinking.
+
+"You are at least sure of your convictions," said Ęsculapius. "Now, as
+a matter of fact, the thoughts your thoughtful nature has induced you
+to think are utterly valueless. You have a pain in your side?"
+
+"Yes," said I. "And a very painful pain in my side--and I am not
+putting on any side in my pain either," I added.
+
+"No doubt," said Ęsculapius. "But are you sure it is in your side, or
+isn't it your chest that aches a trifle, eh?"
+
+"Not much," said I, growing doubtful on the subject.
+
+"Still it aches," said he.
+
+"Yes," I answered, the pain in my side weakening in favor of one in my
+chest. "It does." And it really did, like the deuce.
+
+"Now about that pain in your chest," said Ęsculapius. "Isn't it
+rather higher up--in your throat, instead of your chest?"
+
+My throat began to hurt, and abominably. Every particle of it throbbed
+with pain, and my chest was immediately relieved.
+
+"I think," said I, weakly, "that the pain _is_ rather in my throat
+than in my chest."
+
+"But your side doesn't ache at all?" suggested Ęsculapius.
+
+I had forgotten my side altogether.
+
+"Not a bit," said I; and it didn't.
+
+"So far, so good," said the doctor. "Now, my friend, about this throat
+trouble of yours. Do you think you have diphtheria, or merely
+toothache?"
+
+I hadn't thought of toothache before, but as soon as the doctor
+mentioned it, a pang went through my lower jaw, and my larynx seemed
+all right again.
+
+"Well, doctor," said I, "as a matter of fact, the pain does seem to
+be in my wisdom teeth."
+
+"So-called," said he, quietly. "More tooth than wisdom, generally. And
+not in your throat?" continued the doctor.
+
+[Illustration: I VISIT ĘSCULAPIUS]
+
+"Not a bit of it," said I. My throat seemed strong enough for a
+political campaign in which I was principal speaker. "It's _all_ in my
+teeth."
+
+"Upper or lower?" he asked, with a laugh, and then he gazed fixedly at
+me.
+
+I had not realized that I had upper teeth until he spoke, and a
+shudder went through me as a semicircle of pain shot through my upper
+jaw.
+
+"Upper," I retorted, with some surliness.
+
+"Verging a trifle on your cheekbones, and thence to the optic nerve,"
+he said, calmly, still gazing into my soul. "I'll try your sight.
+Look at that card over there, and tell me--"
+
+"What nonsense is this, doctor?" I cried, angry at his airy manner and
+manifest control over my symptoms. "There is nothing the matter with
+my eyes. They're as good as any one of the million eyes of your friend
+the Argus."
+
+"Then what, in the name of Jupiter, is the matter with you?" he
+ejaculated, elevating his eyebrows.
+
+"Nothing at all," said I, sulkily.
+
+Ęsculapius threw himself on the sofa and roared with laughter.
+
+"Perfectly splendid!" he said, when he had recovered from his mirth.
+"Perfectly splendid! You are the best example of the value of my
+system I've had in a long time. Now let me show you something," he
+added. "Put these glasses on."
+
+He took the glasses from his nose and put them astride of mine, and
+lead me before a mirror--a cheval-glass arrangement that stood in one
+corner of the room.
+
+"Now look yourself straight in the eye," said he.
+
+I did so, and truly it was as if I looked upon the page of a book
+printed in the largest and clearest type. I hesitate to say what I saw
+written there, since the glass was strong enough to reach not only the
+mind itself, but further into the very depths of my subself-consciousness.
+On the surface, man thinks well of himself; this continues in modified
+intensity to his self-consciousness, but the fool does not live who,
+in his subself-consciousness, the Holy of Holies of Realization, does
+not know that he is a fool.
+
+"Take 'em off," I cried, for they seemed to burn into the very depths
+of my soul.
+
+"That isn't necessary," said Ęsculapius, kindly. "Just turn your eyes
+away from the glass a moment and they won't bother you. I want to cure
+this trouble of yours."
+
+I stopped looking at myself in the mirror and the tense condition of
+my nerves was immediately relieved.
+
+"Feel better right away, eh?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," I admitted.
+
+"So I thought," he said. "You've momentarily given up
+self-contemplation. Now lower your gaze. Look at your chest a moment."
+
+Just what were the properties of the glass I do not know, nor do I
+know how one's chest should look, but, as I looked down, I found that
+just as I could penetrate to the depths of my mind through my eyes, so
+was it possible for me to inspect myself physically.
+
+"Nothing the matter there, eh?" said Ęsculapius.
+
+"Not that I can see," said I.
+
+"Nor I," said he. "Now, if you think there is anything the matter with
+you anywhere else," he added, "you are welcome to use the glasses as
+long as you see fit."
+
+I took a sneaking glance at my right side and was immediately made
+aware of the fact that all was well with me there, and that all my
+trouble had come from my ill-advised "wondering" whether that Midas
+omelet would bother me or not.
+
+"These glasses are wonderful," said I.
+
+"They are a great help," said Ęsculapius.
+
+"And do you always permit your patients to put them on?" I asked.
+
+"Not always," said he. "Sometimes people really have something the
+matter with them. More often, of course, they haven't. It would never
+do to let a really sick man see his condition. If they are ill, I can
+see at once what is the matter by means of these spectacles, and can,
+of course, prescribe. If they are not, there is no surer means of
+effecting a cure than putting these on the patient's nose and letting
+him see for himself that he is all right."
+
+"They have all the quality of the X-ray light," I suggested, turning
+my gaze upon an iron safe in the corner of the room, which immediately
+disclosed its contents.
+
+"They are X-ray glasses," said Ęsculapius. "In a good light you can
+see through anything with 'em on. I have lenses of the same kind in my
+window, and when you came up I looked at you through the window-pane
+and saw at once that there was nothing the matter with you."
+
+"I wish our earthly doctors had glasses like these," I ventured,
+taking them off, for truly I was beginning to fancy a strain.
+
+"They have--or at least they have something quite as good," said
+Ęsculapius. "They are all my disciples, and in the best instances they
+can see through the average patient without them. They have insight.
+You don't believe you deceive your physician, do you?"
+
+"I have sometimes thought so," said I, not realizing the trap the
+doctor was setting.
+
+"How foolish!" he cried. "Why should you wish to?"
+
+I was covered with confusion.
+
+"Never mind," said Ęsculapius, smiling pleasantly. "You are only human
+and cannot help yourself. It is your imagination leads you astray.
+Half the time when you send for your physician there is nothing the
+matter with you."
+
+"He always prescribes," I retorted.
+
+"That is for your comfort, not his," said Ęsculapius, firmly.
+
+"And sometimes they operate when it isn't necessary," I put in,
+persistently.
+
+"True," said Ęsculapius. "Very true. Because if they didn't, the
+patient would die of worry."
+
+"Humph!" said I, incredulous. "I never knew that the operation for
+appendicitis was a mind cure."
+
+"It is--frequently," observed the doctor. "There are more people, my
+friend, who have appendicitis on their minds than there are those who
+have it in their vermiforms. Don't forget that."
+
+It was a revelation, and, to tell the truth, it has been a revelation
+of comfort ever since.
+
+"I fancy, doctor," said I, after a pause, "that you are a Christian
+Scientist. All troubles are fanciful and indicative of a perverse
+soul."
+
+Ęsculapius flushed.
+
+"If one of the gods had said that," he replied, "I should have
+operated upon him. As a mortal, you are privileged to say unpleasant
+things, just as a child may say things to his elders with impunity
+which merit extreme punishment. Christian Science is all right when
+you are truly well--in good physical condition. It is a sure cure for
+imaginary troubles, but when you are really sick, it is not of
+Olympus, but of Hades."
+
+Ęsculapius spoke with all the passion of a mortal, and I was
+embarrassed. "I did not mean to say anything unpleasant, doctor," said
+I.
+
+"That's all right, my lad," said Ęsculapius, patting me on the back.
+"I knew that. If I hadn't known it, you'd have been on the table by
+this time. And now, good-bye. Curb your imagination. Think about
+others. Don't worry about yourself without cause, and never send for a
+doctor unless you know there's something wrong. If I had my way you
+mortals would be deprived of imagination. That is your worst disease,
+and if at any time you wish yours amputated, come to me and I'll fix
+you out."
+
+"Thanks, doctor," I replied; "but I don't think I'll accept your
+offer, because I need my imagination in my business."
+
+And then, realizing that I had received my _congé_, I prepared to
+depart.
+
+"How much do I owe you, doctor?" I asked, putting my hand into the
+pocket of my gown, confident of finding whatever I should need.
+
+"Nothing," said he. "The real physician can never be paid. He either
+restores your health or he does not. If he restores your health, he
+saves your life, and he is entitled to what your life is worth. If he
+does not restore your health--he has failed, and is entitled to
+nothing. All you have will never pay your doctor for what he does for
+you. Therefore, go in peace."
+
+I stood abashed in the presence of this wise man, and, as I went forth
+from his office, I realized the truth of what he had said. In our own
+world we place a value upon the service of the man who carries us over
+the hard and the dark places. Yet who can really repay him for all
+that he does for us when by his skill alone we are rescued from peril?
+
+I re-entered my sedan-chair and set the blackies off again, with
+something potent in my mind--how much I truly owed to the good man who
+has taken at times the health of my children, of my wife, of myself,
+in his hands and has seen us safely through to port. I have not yet
+been able to estimate it, but if ever he reads these lines, he will
+know that I pay him in gratitude that which the world with all its
+wealth cannot give.
+
+"Now for the Zoo, boys," I cried. "Ęsculapius has fixed me up."
+
+And we scampered on.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+At the Zoo
+
+
+We had not travelled far from the office of Ęsculapius when my little
+carriers turned from the broad and beautiful corridor into a narrow
+passage, through which they proceeded with some difficulty until we
+reached the other side of this strangely constructed home of the gods.
+As we emerged into the light of day, the view that presented itself
+was indescribably beautiful. I have looked from our own hills at home
+upon many a scene of grandeur. From the mountain peaks of New
+Hampshire, with the sun streaming down upon me, I have looked upon
+the valleys beneath through rifts in clouds that had not ventured so
+high, and were drenching the glorious green below with refreshing
+rains, and have stood awed in the presence of one of the simplest
+moods of nature. But the sight that greeted my eyes as I passed along
+that exterior road of Olympus, under the genial auspices of those
+wonderful gods, appealed to something in my soul which had never
+before been awakened, and which I shall never be able adequately to
+describe. The mere act of seeing seemed to be uplifting, and, from the
+moment I looked downward upon the beloved earth, I ceased to wonder
+that gods were godlike--indeed, my real wonder was that they were not
+more so. It seemed difficult to believe that there was anything
+earthly about earth. The world was idealized even to myself, who had
+never held it to be a bad sort of place. There were rich pastures,
+green to the most soul-satisfying degree, upon which cattle fed and
+lived their lives of content; here and there were the great cities of
+earth seen through a haze that softened all their roughness; nothing
+sordid appeared; only the fair side of life was visible.
+
+And I began to see how it came about that these Olympian gods had lost
+control over man. If the world, with all its joys and all its
+miseries, presents to the controlling power merely its joyous side,
+what sympathy can one look for in one's deity? There was Paris and
+Notre Dame in the sunlight. But the Morgue at the back of Notre
+Dame--in the shadow of its sunlit towers--that was not visible to the
+eye of the casual god who drove his blackamoors along that entrancing
+roadway. There was London and the inspiring pile of Westminster
+showing up its majestic top, lit by the wondrous light of the sun--but
+still undiscovered of the gods there rolled on its farther side the
+Thames, dark as the Styx, a very grave of ambition, yet the last
+solace of many a despairing soul. London Bridge may tell the gods of
+much that may not be seen from that glorious driveway along the
+exterior of Olympus.
+
+I found myself growing maudlin, and I pulled myself together.
+
+"Magnificent view, Sammy," said I.
+
+"Yassir," he replied, trotting along faithfully. "Dass what dey all
+says. _I_ 'ain't nebber seen it. 'Ain't got time to look at it."
+
+"Well, stop a moment and look," said I. "Isn't it magnificent?"
+
+The blackies stopped and looked.
+
+"Putty good," said Sammy, "but I doan' care fo' views," he added. "Dey
+makes me dizzy."
+
+I gave Sammy up from that moment. He was well carved, a work of art,
+in fact, but he was essentially modern, and I was living in the
+antique.
+
+"Hustle along to the Zoo," I cried, with some impatience, and I was
+truly "hustled."
+
+"Here we is," said Sammy, settling down on his haunches at the end of
+a five-mile trot. "Dis is it."
+
+We had stopped before a gate not entirely unlike those the Japanese
+erect before popular places of amusement they frequent.
+
+I descended from the chair and was greeted by an attendant who
+demanded to know what I wished to see.
+
+"The animals," said I.
+
+He laughed. "Well," he said, "I'll show you what I've got, but truly
+most of them have gone off on vacation."
+
+"Is the Trojan Horse here?" I demanded.
+
+"No," said he. "He's in the repair shop. One of his girders is loose,
+and the hinges on his door rusted and broke last week. His interior
+needs painting, and his left hind-leg has been wobbly for a long time.
+It was really dangerous to keep him longer without repairs."
+
+I was much disappointed. In visiting the Olympian Zoo I was largely
+impelled by a desire to see the Trojan Horse and compare him with the
+Coney Island Elephant, which, with the summer hotels of New Jersey and
+the Statue of Liberty, at that time dominated the minor natural
+glories of the American coast in the eyes of passengers on in-coming
+steamships. I think I should even have ventured a ride in his
+capacious interior despite what Sammy had said of his friskiness and
+the peril of his action to persons susceptible to sea-sickness.
+
+"Too bad," said I, swallowing my disappointment as best I could.
+"Still, you have other attractions. How about the Promethean vulture?
+Is he still living?"
+
+"Unfortunately, no," said the attendant. "He was taken out last year
+and killed. Got too proud to live. He put in a complaint about his
+food. Said Prometheus was a very interesting man, but as a diet he was
+monotonous and demanded a more diversified _menu_. Said he'd like to
+try Apollo and a Muse or two, for a little while, and preferred Cupids
+on toast for Sunday-night tea."
+
+"What a vulturian vulture!" said I.
+
+"Wasn't he?" laughed the attendant. "We replied by wringing his neck,
+and served him up in a chicken salad to a party of tourists from
+Hades."
+
+This struck me as reasonable, and I said so.
+
+"Well, whatever you happen to have on hand will satisfy me," I added.
+"Just let me see what animals you have and I'll be content."
+
+"Very well," replied the attendant. "Step this way."
+
+He took me along a charming pathway bordered with many a beautiful
+tree and adorned with numerous flowers of wondrous fragrance.
+
+"This path is not without interest," he said; "all the trees and
+shrubs have a history. That laurel over there, for instance, used to
+be a Daphne. She and Jupiter had a row and he planted her over there.
+Makes a very pretty tree, eh?"
+
+"Extremely," said I. "Have you many similar ventures?"
+
+"Oh yes. Our botanical gardens are full of them," he replied. "Those
+trees to the right are Baucis and Philemon. That lotos plant on the
+left used to be Dryope, and when Adonis isn't busy valeting at the
+hotel, he comes down here and blooms as an anemone, into which, as you
+are probably aware, he was changed by Venus. That pink thing by the
+fountain is Hyacinthus, and over there by the pond is where Narcissus
+blooms. He's a barber in his off hours."
+
+I had already learned that, so expressed no surprise.
+
+"That's a stunning sunflower you have," I ventured, pointing to a
+perfect specimen thereof directly ahead of us.
+
+"Yes," said the attendant. "That's Clytie. She's only potted. We don't
+set her out permanently, because the royal family like to have her on
+the table at state dinners. And she, poor girl, rather enjoys it.
+Apollo is generally to be found at these dinners either as a guest or
+playing a zither or a banjo behind a screen. Wherever he is, the
+sunflower turns and it affords considerable amusement among Jupiter's
+guests to watch it. Jupiter has christened Clytie the Sherlock Holmes
+of Olympus, because wherever Apollo is she spots him. Sometimes when
+he isn't present, he has to be very careful in his statements about
+where he has been, for long habit has made Clytie unerring in her
+instinct."
+
+This seemed to me to be a rather good revenge on Apollo for his very
+ungodlike treatment of Clytie, and if half the attendant told me that
+day at the Zoo is true, this excessively fickle Olympian is probably
+sorry by this time that he treated her originally with such uncalled
+for disdain.
+
+"Come over here and see the bear-pit," said the guide. I obeyed with
+alacrity, and, leaning over the rail, had the pleasure of seeing the
+most beautiful bruin my eyes had ever rested upon. She was as glossy
+as a new silk hat; her eyes were as soft and timid as those of a
+frightened deer, and, when she moved, she was the perfection of grace.
+
+
+[Illustration: CALLISTO]
+
+"Good-morning, Callisto," said my guide.
+
+"Same to you, my dear Cephalus," the bear returned, in a sweet
+feminine voice that entranced me.
+
+"How are things with you to-day?" asked Cephalus, with a kindly smile.
+
+"Oh, I can't growl," laughed Callisto--it was evident that the
+unfortunate woman was not taking her misfortune too seriously. "Only I
+wish you'd tell people who come here that while I undoubtedly am a
+bear, I have not yet lost my womanly taste, and I don't want to be fed
+all the time on buns. If anybody asks you what you think I'd like,
+tell them that an occasional _omelette soufflée_, or an oyster pāté,
+or a platter of _petits fours_ would please me greatly."
+
+"I shall do it, Callisto," said the keeper, as he started to move
+away. "Meanwhile, here's a stick of chewing-gum for you." Callisto
+received it with a manifestation of delight which moved me greatly,
+and I bethought myself of the magic properties of my coat, and
+plunging my hand into its capacious pockets, I found there an oyster
+pāté that made my mouth water, and an _omelette soufflée_ that looked
+as if it had been made by a Parisian milliner, it was so dainty.
+
+"If madam will permit me," said I, with a bow to Callisto.
+
+"Thank you kindly," the bear replied, in that same thrillingly sweet
+voice, and dancing with joy. "You are a dear, good man, and if you
+ever have an enemy, let me know and I'll hug him to death."
+
+As we again turned to go, Cephalus laughed. "Queer case that!" he
+said. "You'd have thought Juno would let up on that poor woman, but
+she doesn't for a little bit."
+
+"Well--a jealous woman, my dear Cephalus--"
+
+"True," said he. "That's all true enough, but, great Heavens, man,
+Juno ought to be used to it by this time with a husband like Jupiter.
+She's overstocked this Zoo a dozen times already with her jealous
+freaks, and Jupiter hasn't reformed once. What good does it do?"
+
+"Doesn't she ever let 'em off?" I asked. "Doesn't Callisto ever have a
+Sunday out, for instance?"
+
+"Yes, but always as a bear, and the poor creature doesn't dare take
+her chance with the other wild beasts--the real ones. She's just as
+afraid of bears as she ever was, and if she sees a plain, every-day
+cow coming towards her, she runs shrieking back to her pit again."
+
+"Poor Callisto," said I. "And Actęon? How about him?"
+
+"He's here--but he's a holy terror," replied Cephalus, shaking his
+head. "He gets loose once in a while, and then everybody has to look
+out for himself, and frankly," Cephalus added, his voice sinking to a
+whisper, "I don't blame him. Diana treated him horribly."
+
+"I always thought so," said I. "He really wasn't to blame."
+
+"Certainly not," observed Cephalus. "If people will go in swimming
+out-of-doors, it's their own fault if chance wayfarers stumble upon
+them. To turn a man into a stag and then set his own dogs on him for a
+thing he couldn't help strikes me as rank injustice."
+
+"Wonder to me that Jupiter doesn't interfere in this business," said
+I. "He could help Callisto out without much trouble."
+
+"The point about that is that he's afraid," Cephalus explained. "Juno
+has threatened to sue him for divorce if he does, and he doesn't dare
+brave the scandal."
+
+We had by this time reached a long, low building that looked like a
+stable, and, as we entered, Cephalus observed:
+
+"This is our fire-proof building where we keep our inflammable beasts.
+That big, sleeping creature that looks like a mastodon lizard is the
+dragon that your friend St. George, of London, got the best of, and
+sent here with his compliments. I'll give the beast a prod and let you
+see how he works."
+
+Cephalus was as good as his word, and for a moment I wished he wasn't.
+Such a din as that which followed the dragon's awakening I never heard
+before, and every time the horrible beast opened his jaws it was as if
+a fire-works factory had exploded.
+
+"Very dangerous creature that," said Cephalus. "But he is splendid
+for fźtes. Shows off beautifully in the dark. I'll prod him again and
+just you note the prismatic coloring of his flames. Get up there,
+Fido," he added, poking the dragon with his stick a second time. "Wake
+up, and give the gentleman an illumination."
+
+The scene of the moment before was repeated, only with greater
+intensity, and even in the sunlight I could see that the various hues
+his fiery breathings took on were gorgeous beyond description. A
+bonfire built of red, pink, green, and yellow lights, backed up by
+driftwood in a fearful state of combustion, about describes it.
+
+"Superb," said I, nearly overcome by the grandeur of the scene.
+
+"Well, just imagine it on a dark night!" cried Cephalus,
+enthusiastically. "Fido is very popular as a living firework, but he's
+a costly luxury."
+
+I laughed. "Costly?" said I. "I don't see why. Fireworks as grand as
+that must cost a deal more than he does."
+
+"You don't know," said Cephalus, pressing his lips together. "Why,
+that dragon eats ten tons of cannel coal a day, and it takes the
+combined efforts of six stokers, under the supervision of an expert
+engineer, to keep his appetite within bounds. You never saw such an
+eater, and as for drinking--well, he's awful. He drinks sixteen
+gallons of kerosene at luncheon."
+
+I eyed Cephalus narrowly, but beyond a wink at the dragon, I saw no
+reason to believe that he was deceiving me.
+
+"Then he sets fire to things, and altogether he's an expensive beast
+Aren't you, Fido?"
+
+"Yep," barked the dragon.
+
+"Now, over there," continued the guide, patting the dragon on the
+head, whereat the fearful beast wagged his tail and breathed a
+thousand pounds of steam from his nostrils to express his pleasure.
+"Over there are the fire-breathing bulls--all the animals here are
+fire-breathing. The bulls give us a lot of trouble. You can't feed 'em
+on coal, because their teeth are not strong enough to chew it; and you
+can't feed 'em on hay, because they'd set fire to it the minute they
+breathed on it; and you can't put 'em out to pasture because they'd
+wither up a sixty-acre lot in ten minutes. It's an actual fact that we
+have to send for Jason three times a day to come here and feed them.
+He's the only person about who can do it, and how he does it no one
+knows. He pats them on the neck, and they stop breathing fire. That's
+all we know."
+
+"But they must eat something. What does Jason give them?" I demanded.
+
+"We've had to invent a food for them," said Cephalus. "Dr. Ęsculapius
+did it. It's a solution of hay, clover, grass, and paraffine mixed
+with asbestos."
+
+"Paraffine?" I cried. "Why, that's extremely inflammable."
+
+"So are the bulls," was Cephalus's rejoinder. "They counteract each
+other." I gazed at the animals with admiration. They were undoubtedly
+magnificent beasts, and they truly breathed fire. Their nostrils
+suggested the flames that are emitted from the huge naphtha jets that
+are used to light modern circuses in country towns, and as for their
+mouths, any one who can imagine a bull with a pair of gas-logs
+illuminating his reflective smile, instead of teeth, may gain a
+comprehensive idea of the picture that confronted me.
+
+I had hardly finished looking at these, when Cephalus, impatient to
+be through with me, as guides often are with tourists, observed:
+
+"There is the ph[oe]nix."
+
+I turned instantly. I have always wished to see the ph[oe]nix. A bird
+having apparently the attractive physique of a broiler deliberately
+sitting on a bonfire had appealed strongly to my interest as well as
+to my appetite.
+
+"Dear me!" said I. "He's not handsome, is he?"
+
+He was not; resembling an ordinary buzzard with wings outstretched
+sitting upon that kind of emberesque fire that induces a man in a
+library to think mournfully about the past, and convinces
+him--alas!--that if he had the time he could write immortal poetry.
+
+"Not very!" Cephalus acquiesced. "Still, he's all right in a Zoo. He's
+queer. Look at his nest, if you don't believe it."
+
+[Illustration: I MEET THE PH[OE]NIX]
+
+"I never believed otherwise, my dear Cephalus," said I. "He seems to
+me to be a unique thing in poultry. If he were a chicken he would be
+hailed with delight in my country. A self-broiling broiler--!"
+
+The idea was too ecstatic for expression.
+
+"Well, he isn't a chicken, so your rhapsody doesn't go," said
+Cephalus. "He's little short of a buzzard. Useful, but not appetizing.
+If I were a profane mortal, I should call him a condemned nuisance.
+Most birds build their own nests, and a well-built nest lasts them a
+whole season. This infernal bird has to have a furnace-man to make his
+bed for him night and morning, and if, by some mischance, the fire
+goes out, as fires will do in the best-regulated families, he begins
+to squawk, and he squawks, and he squawks, and he squawks until the
+keeper comes and sets his nest a-blazing again. He has a voice like a
+sick fog-horn that drives everybody crazy."
+
+"Why don't you fool him sometimes?" I suggested. "Make a nest out of a
+mustard-plaster and see what he would do."
+
+"He's too old a bird to be caught that way," said Cephalus. "He's a
+confounded old ass, but he's a brainy one."
+
+At this moment a blare of the most heavenly trumpets sounded, and
+Cephalus and I left the building and emerged into the garden to see
+what had caused it. There a dazzling spectacle met my gaze. A regiment
+of Amazons was drawn up on the green of the parade and a superb gilded
+coach, drawn by six milk-white horses, stood before them, while two
+gorgeously apparelled heralds sounded a fanfare. Cephalus immediately
+became deeply agitated.
+
+"It is his Majesty's own carriage and guard," he cried.
+
+"Whose?" said I.
+
+"Jupiter's," said he. "I fancy they have come for you."
+
+And it so transpired. One of the heralds advanced to where I was
+standing, saluted me as though I were an emperor, and, through his
+golden trumpet, informed me that eleven o'clock was approaching; that
+his Majesty deigned to grant me the desired audience, and had sent a
+carriage and guard of honor.
+
+I returned the salute, thanked Cephalus for his attentions, and
+entered the carriage. A brass band of a hundred and twenty pieces
+struck up an inspiring march, and, preceded and followed by the
+Amazons, I was conveyed in state to the palatial quarters of Zeus
+himself.
+
+It suggested comic opera with a large number of pretty chorus girls,
+but I could not help being impressed in spite of this thought with the
+fact that Jupiter knew how to do a thing up in style. I was indeed so
+awed with it all that I did not dare wink at a single Amazon while _en
+route_, although strongly tempted to do so several times.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+Some Account of the Palace of Jupiter
+
+
+So dazzled was I by all that went on about me, by the gorgeousness of
+my equipage and by the extraordinary richness of the costumes worn by
+my escort, that for the moment I forgot that I was not myself clad in
+suitable garments for so ultra-royal a function. The streets, the
+houses, even the throngs that peopled the way, seemed to be of the
+most lustrous gold, and it became necessary for me from time to time
+as we progressed to close my eyes and shut out the too brilliant
+vision. Fancy a bake-shop built of solid gold nuggets, its large plate
+windows composed each of one huge, flashing diamond; imagine an
+exquisitely wrought golden drug-store, whose colored jars in the
+windows are made of rubies, emeralds, and sapphires; conjure up in
+your mind's eye a sequence of city blocks whose sides are lined by
+massive and exquisitely proportioned buildings, every inch of whose
+faēade was fashioned, not by stone-cutters and sculptors, but by
+goldsmiths, whose genius a Cellini might envy; picture to yourself a
+street paved with golden asphalt, and a sidewalk built from huge slabs
+of rolled silver, the curb and gutters being of burnished copper, and
+you'll gain some idea of the thoroughfare along which I passed. And
+oh, the music that the band gave forth to which the populace timed
+their huzzas--I nearly went mad with the seductiveness of it all. If
+it hadn't been for the ache the brilliance of it gave to my eyes, I
+really think I should have swooned.
+
+And then we came to the palace grounds. These, I must confess, I found
+far from pleasing, for even as the avenue along which I had passed was
+all gold and silver and gems, so too was the park, in the heart of
+which stood Jupiter's own apartments made of similar stuff. The trees
+were golden, and the leaves rustling in the breeze, catching and
+reflecting the light of the sun, were blinding. The soft greenness of
+the earthly grass was superseded by the glistening yellow of golden
+spears, and here and there, where a drop of dew would have fallen,
+were diamonds of purest ray. The paths were of silken rugs of richest
+texture, and the palace, as it burst upon my vision, fashioned out of
+undreamed-of blocks of onyx, resembled more a massive opal filled
+with flashing, living, fire, than the mere home of a splendid royalty.
+
+I was glad when the procession stopped before the gorgeous entrance to
+the palace. Another minute of such splendor would have blinded me. A
+fanfare of trumpets sounded, and I descended, so dizzy with what I had
+seen that, as my feet touched the ground, I staggered like a drunken
+man, and then I heard my name sounded and passed from one flunky to
+another up the magnificent staircase into the blue haze of the
+hallway, and gradually sounding fainter and fainter until it was lost
+in the distance of the mysterious corridor. I still staggered as I
+mounted the steps, and the Major Domo approached me.
+
+"I trust you are not ill," he whispered in my ear.
+
+"No--not ill," I replied. "Only somewhat flabbergasted by all this
+magnificence, and my eyes hurt like the very deuce."
+
+"It is perhaps too much for mortal eyes," he said; and then, turning
+to a gilded Ethiopian who stood close at hand, he observed, quietly,
+"Rhadamus, run over to the Argus and ask him if he can spare this
+gentleman a pair of blue goggles for an hour or two."
+
+"Better get me a dozen pairs," I put in. "I don't think one pair will
+be enough. It may strain my nose to hold them, but I'd rather
+sacrifice my nose than my eyes any day."
+
+But the boy was off, and ere I reached the presence of Jupiter I was
+very kindly provided with the very essential article, and I must
+confess that I found great relief in them. They were so densely blue
+that an ordinary bit of splendor could not have been discerned through
+their opaque depths, any more than Thisbe could have been seen by her
+doting lover, Pyramus, through the wall that separated them, but
+nothing known to man could have shut out the supreme gloriousness of
+the interior of Jupiter's palace. Even with the goggles of the Argus
+regulated to protect one thousand eyes upon my nose, it made my
+dazzled optics blink.
+
+I do not know what the proportions of the palace were. I regret to say
+that I forgot to ask, but I am quite confident that I walked at least
+eight miles along that corridor, and never was a mansion designed that
+was better equipped in the matter of luxuries. I suspect I shall be
+charged with exaggerating, but it is none the less true that within
+that spacious building were appliances of every sort known to man. One
+door opened upon an in-door golf-links, upon which the royal family
+played whenever they lacked the energy or the disposition to seek out
+that on Mars. There were high bunkers, the copse of which was covered
+with richest silk plush, stuffed, I was told, with spun silk, while,
+in place of sand, tons of powdered sugar and grated nutmegs filled the
+bunkers themselves. The eighteen holes were laid out so that no two of
+them crossed, and, inasmuch as the turf was constructed of rubber
+instead of grass and soil, neither a bad lie nor a dead ball was
+possible through the vast extent of the fair green. The water hazards,
+four in number, were nothing more nor less than huge tanks of
+Burgundy, champagne, iced tea, and Scotch--which I subsequently
+learned often resulted in a bad caddie service--and an open brook
+along whose dashing descent a constant stream of shandygaff went
+merrily bubbling onward to an in-door sea upon which Jupiter exercised
+his yacht when sailing was the thing to suit his immediate whim.
+
+This sea was a marvel. Since all the water hazards above described
+emptied into it, it was little more than a huge expanse of punch, one
+swallow of which, thanks to these ingredients and the sugar and nutmeg
+from the bunkers, would make a man forget an eternity of troubles
+until he woke up again, if he ever did. Here Jupiter sported every
+variety of pleasure craft, and, by an ingenious system of funnels
+arranged about its sixty-square-mile area, could at a moment's notice
+produce any variety of breeze he chanced to wish; and its submarine
+bottom was so designed that if a heavy sea were wanted to make the
+yacht pitch and toss, a simple mechanical device would cause it to
+hump itself into such corrugations, large or small, as were needed to
+bring about the desired conditions.
+
+"Do they allow bathing in that?" I asked, as the Major Domo explained
+the peculiar feature of this in-door sea to me.
+
+My companion laughed. "Only one person ever tried it with any degree
+of success, and it nearly cost him his reputation. Old Bacchus
+undertook to swim on a wager from Chambertin Inlet to Glenlivet Bay,
+but he had to give up before he got as far as Pommery Point. It took
+him a year to get rid of his headache, and it actually required
+three-quarters of the Treasury Reserve to provide gold enough to cure
+him."
+
+"It must be a terrible place to fall overboard in," I suggested.
+
+"It is, if you fall head first," said the Major Domo, "and my
+observation is that most people do."
+
+"I should admire to sail upon it," I said, gazing back through the
+door that opened upon Jupiter's yachting parlors, and realizing on a
+sudden a powerful sense of thirst.
+
+"I have no doubt you can do so," said the Major Domo. "Indeed, I
+understand that his Majesty contemplates taking you for a sail to the
+lost island of Atlantis before you return to earth."
+
+"What?" I cried. "The lost island of Atlantis here?"
+
+"Of course," said my guide. "Why not? It was too beautiful for earth,
+so Jupiter had it transported to his own private yachting pond, and it
+has been here ever since. It is marvellously beautiful."
+
+Hardly had I recovered from my amazement over the Major Domo's
+announcement when he pointed to another open door.
+
+"The Royal Arena," he said, simply. "That is where we have our
+Olympian Games. There was a football game there yesterday. Too bad you
+were not there. It was the liveliest game of the season. All Hades
+played the Olympian eleven for the championship of the universe. We
+licked 'em four hundred to nothing; but of course we had an
+exceptional team. When Hercules is in shape there isn't a man-jack in
+all Hades that can withstand him. He's rush-line, centre, full-back,
+half-back, and flying wedge, all rolled into one. Then the Hades chaps
+made the bad mistake of sending a star team. When you have an eleven
+made up of Hannibal and Julius Cęsar and Alexander the Great and
+Napoleon Bonaparte and the Duke of Wellington and Achilles and other
+fellows like that you can't expect any team-play. Each man is thinking
+about himself all the time. Hercules could walk right through 'em,
+and, when they begin to pose, it's mere child's play for him. The only
+chap that put up any game against us at all was Samson, and I tell
+you, now that his hair's grown again, he's a demon on the gridiron.
+But we divided up our force to meet that difficulty. Hercules put the
+rest of our eleven on to Samson, while he took care, personally, of
+all the other Hadesians. And you should have seen how he handled them!
+It was beautiful, all through. He nearly got himself ruled off in the
+second half. He became so excited at one time towards the end that he
+mistook Pompey for the ball and kicked him through the goal-posts from
+the forty-yard line. Of course, it didn't count, and Hercules
+apologized so gracefully to the rest of the visitors that they
+withdrew their protest and let him play on."
+
+"I should think he would have apologized to Pompey," said I.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE UNIVERSE'"]
+
+"He will when Pompey recovers consciousness," said my guide, simply.
+
+So interested was I in the Royal Arena and its recent game that I
+forgot all about Jupiter.
+
+"I never thought of Hercules as a football player before," I said,
+"but it is easy to see how he might become the champion of Olympus."
+
+"Oh, is it!" laughed the Major Domo. "Well, you'd better not tell
+Jupiter that. Jupiter'd be pleased, he would. Why, my dear friend,
+he'd pack you back to earth quicker than a wink. He brooks only one
+champion of anything here, and that's himself. Hercules threw him in a
+wrestling-match once, and the next day Jupiter turned him into a
+weeping-willow, and didn't let up on him for five hundred years
+afterwards."
+
+By this time we had reached one of the most superbly vaulted chambers
+it has ever been my pleasure to look upon. Above me the ceiling
+seemed to reach into infinity, and on either side were huge recesses
+and alcoves of almost unfathomable depth, lit by great balls of fire
+that diffused their light softly and yet brilliantly through all parts
+and corners of the apartment.
+
+"The library," said the Major Domo, pointing to tier upon tier of
+teeming shelves, upon which stood a wonderful array of exquisitely
+bound volumes to a number past all counting.
+
+I was speechless with the grandeur of it all.
+
+"It is sublime," said I. "How many volumes?"
+
+"Unnumbered, and unnumberable by mortals, but in round, immortal
+figures just one jovillion."
+
+"One jovillion, eh?" said I. "How many is that in mortal figures?"
+
+"A jovillion is the supreme number," explained the guide. "It is the
+infinity of millions, and therefore cannot be expressed in mortal
+terms."
+
+"Then," said I, "you can have no more books."
+
+"No," said he. "But what of that? We have all there are and all that
+are to be. You see, the library is divided into three parts. On the
+right-hand side are all the books that ever have been written; here to
+the left you see all the books that are being written; and farther
+along, beginning where that staircase rises, are all the books that
+ever will be written."
+
+I gasped. If this were true, this wonderful collection must contain my
+own complete works, some of which I have doubtless not even thought of
+as yet. How easy it would be for me, I thought, to write my future
+books if Jupiter would only let me loose here with a competent
+stenographer to copy off the pages of manuscript as yet undreamed of!
+I suggested this to the Major Domo.
+
+"He wouldn't let you," he said. "It would throw the whole scheme out
+of gear."
+
+"I don't see why," I ventured.
+
+"It is simple," rejoined the Major Domo. "If you were permitted to
+read the books that some day will be identified with your name, as a
+sensible man, observing beforehand how futile and trivial they are to
+be, some of them, you wouldn't write them, and so you would be able to
+avoid a part, at least, of your destiny. If mortals were able to do
+that--well, they'd become immortals, a good many of them."
+
+I realized the justice of this precaution, and we passed on in
+silence.
+
+"Now," said the Major Domo, after we had traversed the length of the
+library, "we are almost there. That gorgeous door directly ahead of
+you is the entrance to Jupiter's reception-room. Before we enter,
+however, we must step into the office of Midas, on the left."
+
+"Midas?" I said. "And what, pray, is his function? Is he the
+registrar?"
+
+"No, indeed," laughed the Major Domo. "I presume down where you live
+he would be called the Court Tailor. The sartorial requirements of
+Jupiter are so regal that none of his guests, invited or otherwise,
+could afford, even with the riches of Cr[oe]sus, to purchase the
+apparel which he demands. Hence he keeps Midas here to supply, at his
+expense, the garments in which his visitors may appear before him. You
+didn't think you were going into Jupiter's presence in those golf
+duds, did you?"
+
+"I never thought anything about it," said I. "But how long will it
+take Midas to fit me out?"
+
+"He touches your garments, that's all," said my guide, "and in that
+instant they are changed to robes of richest gold. We then place a
+necklace of gems about your neck, composed of rubies, emeralds,
+amethysts, and sapphires, alternating with pearls, none smaller than a
+hen's egg; next we place a jewelled staff of ebony in your hand; a
+golden helmet, having at either side the burnished wings of the
+imperial eagles of Jove, and bearing upon its crest an opal that
+glistens like the sun through the slight haze of a translucent cloud,
+will be placed upon your head; richly decorated sandals of cloth of
+gold will adorn your feet, and about your waist a girdle of linked
+diamonds--beside which the far-famed Orloff diamond of the Russian
+treasury is an insignificant bit of glass--will be clasped."
+
+"And--wha--wha--what becomes of all this when I get back home?" I
+gasped, a vision of future ease rising before my tired eyes.
+
+"You take it with you, if you can," laughed the Major Domo, with a sly
+wink at one of the Amazons who accompanied him as a sort of aide.
+
+It was all as he said. In two minutes I had entered the room of Midas;
+in three minutes, my golf-coat having been removed, a flowing gown of
+silk, touched by his magic hand and turned to glittering gold, rested
+upon my shoulders. It was pretty heavy, but I bore up under it; the
+helmet and the necklace, the shoes and the girdle were adjusted; the
+staff was placed in my hand, and with beating heart I emerged once
+more into the corridor and stood before the door leading into the
+audience-chamber.
+
+"Remove the goggles," whispered the Major Domo.
+
+"Never!" I cried. "I shall be blinded."
+
+"Nonsense!" said he, quickly. "Off with them," and he flicked them
+from my nose himself.
+
+A great blare of trumpets sounded, the door was thrown wide, and with
+a cry of amazement I stepped backward, awed and afraid; but one glance
+was reassuring, for truly a wonderful sight confronted me, and one
+that will prove as surprising to him who reads as it was to me upon
+that marvellous day.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+An Extraordinary Interview
+
+
+I had expected to witness a scene of grandeur, and my fancy had
+conjured up, as the central figure thereof, the majestic form of Jove
+himself, clad in imperial splendor. But it was the unexpected that
+happened, for, as the door closed behind me, I found myself in a plain
+sort of workshop, such as an ordinary man would have in his own house,
+at one end of which stood a rolling-top desk, and, instead of the
+dazzling throne I had expected to see, there stood in front of it an
+ordinary office-chair that twirled on a pivot. Books and papers were
+strewn about the floor and upon the tables; the pictures on the walls
+were made up largely of colored sporting prints of some rarity, and in
+a corner stood a commonplace globe such as is to be found in use in
+public schools to teach children geography. As I glanced about me my
+first impression was that by some odd mischance I had got into the
+wrong room, which idea was fortified by the fact that, instead of an
+imperial figure clad in splendid robes, a quiet-looking old gentleman,
+who, except for his dress, might have posed for a cartoon of the
+accepted American Populist, stood before me. He was dressed in a plain
+frock-coat, four-in-hand tie, high collar, dark-gray trousers, and
+patent-leather boots, and was brushing up a silk hat as I entered.
+
+"Excuse me, sir," I said, "but I--I fear I have stumbled into the
+wrong room. I--ah--I have had the wholly unexpected honor to be
+granted an audience with Jupiter, and I was told that this was the
+audience-chamber."
+
+"Don't apologize. Sit down," he replied, taking me by the hand and
+shaking it cordially. "You are all right; I'm glad to see you. How
+goes the world with you?"
+
+"Very well indeed, sir," I replied, rather embarrassed by the old
+fellow's cordiality. "But I really can't sit down, because, you know,
+I--I don't want to keep his Majesty waiting, and if you'll excuse me,
+I'll--"
+
+"Oh, nonsense!" he retorted. "Let the old man wait. Sit down and talk
+to me. I don't get a chance to talk with mortals very often. This is
+your first visit to Olympus?"
+
+"Yes, sir," I said, still standing. "And it is wholly unexpected. I
+stumbled upon the place by the merest chance last night--but you
+_must_ let me go, sir. I'll come back later very gladly and talk with
+you if I get a chance. It will never do for me to keep his Majesty
+waiting, you know."
+
+"Oh, the deuce with his Majesty," said the old gentleman, testily.
+"What do you want to see him for? He's an old fossil."
+
+"Granted," said I. "Still, I'm interested in old fossils."
+
+The old gentleman roared with laughter at this apparently simple
+remark. I didn't see the fun of it myself, and his mirth irritated me.
+
+"Excuse me, my dear sir," I said, trying to control my impatience.
+"But you don't seem to understand my position. I can't stay here and
+talk to you while the ruler of Olympus waits. Can't you see that?"
+
+"No, I can't," he replied. "Can't see it at all, and I'm a pretty good
+seer as a general thing, too. If you didn't wish to see me, you had
+no business to come into my room. Now that you are here, I'm going to
+keep you for a little while. Take off that absurd-looking tile and sit
+down."
+
+At this I grew angry. I wasn't responsible for the helmet I wore, and
+I had felt all along that I looked like an ass in it.
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort, you confounded old meddler," I cried.
+"I've come here on invitation, and, if I've got into the wrong room,
+it isn't my fault. That jackass of a Major Domo told me this was the
+place. Let me out."
+
+I strode to the doorway, and the old gentleman turned to his desk and
+opened a drawer.
+
+"Cigar or cigarette?" he said, calmly.
+
+"Neither, you old fool," I retorted, turning the knob and tugging upon
+it. "I have no time for a smoke."
+
+The door was locked. The old gentleman settled back in his twirling
+chair and regarded me with a twinkle in his eye as I vainly tried to
+pull the door open, and I realized that I was helpless.
+
+"Better sit down and enjoy a quiet smoke with me," he said, calmly.
+"Take off that absurd-looking tile and talk to me."
+
+"I haven't anything to say to you," I replied. "Not a word. Do you
+intend to let me out of this or not?"
+
+"All in good time--all in good time," he said. "Let's talk it over.
+Why do you wish to go? Don't you find me good company?"
+
+"You're a stupid old idiot!" I shouted, almost weeping with rage.
+"Locking me up in your rotten old den here when you must realize what
+you are depriving me of. What earthly good it does you I can't see."
+
+[Illustration: "THE DOOR WAS LOCKED"]
+
+"It does me lots of good," he said, with a chuckle. "Really, sir, it
+gives me a new sensation--first new sensation I have had in a long,
+long time. Let me see now, just how many names have you called me in
+the three minutes I have had the pleasure of your acquaintance?"
+
+"Give me time, and I'll call you a lot more," I retorted, sullenly.
+
+"Good--I'll give you the time," he said. "Go ahead. I'll listen to you
+for a whole hour. What am I besides a meddler, and a stupid old idiot,
+and an old fool?"
+
+"You're a gray-headed maniac, and a--a zinc-fastened Zany. A doddering
+dotard and a chimerical chump," I said.
+
+"Splendid!" roared he, with a spasm of laughter that seemed nearly to
+rend him. "Go on. Keep it up. I am enjoying myself hugely."
+
+"You're a sneak-livered poltroon to treat me this way," I added,
+indignantly.
+
+"That's the best yet," he interrupted, slapping his knee with delight.
+"Sneak-livered poltroon, eh? Well, well, well. Go on. Go on."
+
+"If you'll give me a copy of Roget's _Thesaurus_, I'll tell you what
+else you are," I retorted, with a note of sarcasm in my voice. "It
+will require a reference to that book to do you justice. I can't begin
+to carry all that you are in my mind."
+
+"With pleasure," said he, and reaching over to his bookcase he took
+thence the desired volume and handed it to me. "Proceed," he added. "I
+am all ears."
+
+"Most jackasses are," I returned, savagely.
+
+"Magnificent," he cried, ecstatically. "You are a genius at epithet.
+But there's the book. Let me light a cigar for you and then you can
+begin. Only _do_ take off that absurd tile. You don't know how
+supremely unbecoming it is."
+
+There was nothing for it, so I resolved to make the best of it by
+meeting the disagreeable old pantaloon on his own ground. I lit one of
+his cigars and sat down to tell the curious old freak what I thought
+of him. Ordinarily I would have avoided doing this, but his tyrannical
+exercise of his temporary advantage made me angry to the very core of
+my being.
+
+"Ready?" said I.
+
+"Quite," said he. "Don't stint yourself. Just behave as if you'd known
+me all your life. I sha'n't mind."
+
+And I began: "Well, after referring to the word 'idiot' in the index,
+just to get a lead," I said, "I shall begin by saying that you are
+evidently a hebetudinous imbecile, an indiscriminate stult--"
+
+"Hold on!" he cried. "What's that last? I never heard the term
+before."
+
+"Stult--an indiscriminate stult," I said, scornfully. "I invented the
+word myself. Real words won't describe you. Stult is a new term,
+meaning all kinds of a fool, plus two. And I've got a few more if you
+want them."
+
+"Want them?" he cried. "By Vulcan, I dote upon them! They are nectar
+to my thirsty ears. Go on."
+
+"You are a senseless frivoler, a fugacious gid, an infamous
+hoddydoddy; you are a man with the hoe with the emptiness of ages in
+your face; you are a brother to the ox, with all the dundering
+niziness of a plain, ordinary buzzard added to your shallow-brained
+asininity. Now will you let me go?"
+
+"Not I," said he, shaking his head as if he relished a situation which
+was gradually making a madman of me. "I'd like to oblige you, but I
+really can't. You are giving me too much pleasure. Is there nothing
+more you can call me?"
+
+"You're a dizzard!" I retorted. "And a noodle and a jolt-head; you're
+a jobbernowl and a doodle, a maundering mooncalf and a blockheaded
+numps, a gaby and a loon; you're a _Hatter_!" I shrieked the last
+epithet.
+
+"Heavens!" he cried, "A Hatter! Am I as bad as that?"
+
+"Oh, come now," I said, closing the _Thesaurus_ with a bang. "Have
+some regard for my position, won't you?"
+
+I had resolved to appeal to his better nature. "I don't know who the
+dickens you are. You may be the three wise men of Gotham who went to
+sea in a bowl rolled into one, for all I know. You may be any old
+thing. I don't give a tinker's cuss what you are. Under ordinary
+circumstances I've no doubt I should find you a very pleasant old
+gentleman, but under present conditions you are a blundering old
+bore."
+
+"That's not bad--indeed, a blundering old bore is pretty good. Let me
+see," he continued, looking up the word "bore" in the index of the
+_Thesaurus_, "What else am I? Maybe I'm an unmitigated nuisance, an
+exasperating and egregious glum, a carking care, and a pestiferous
+pill, eh?"
+
+"You are all of that," I said, wearily. "Your meanness surpasseth all
+things. I've met a good many tough characters in my day, but you are
+the first I have ever encountered without a redeeming feature. You
+take advantage of a mistake for which I am not at all responsible, and
+what do you do?"
+
+"Tell me," he replied. "What do I do? I shall be delighted to hear.
+I've been asking myself that question for years. What do I do? Go on,
+I implore you."
+
+"You rub it in, that's what," I retorted. "You take advantage of me.
+You bait me; you incommode me. You--you--"
+
+"Here, take the _Thesaurus_," he said, as I hesitated for the word.
+"It will help you. I provoke you, I irritate you, I make you mad, I
+sour your temper, I sicken, disgust, revolt, nauseate, repel you. I
+rankle your soul. I jar you--is that it?"
+
+"Give me the book," I cried, desperately. "Yes!" I added, referring to
+the page. "You tease, irk, harry, badger, infest, persecute. You gall,
+sting, and convulse me. You are a plain old beast, that's what you
+are. You're a conscienceless sneak and a wherret--you mean-souled blot
+on the face of nature!"
+
+Here I broke down and wept, and the old gentleman's sides shook with
+laughter. He was, without exception, the most extraordinary old person
+I had ever encountered, and in my tears I cursed the English language
+because it was inadequate properly to describe him.
+
+For a time there was silence. I was exhausted and my tormentor was
+given over to his own enjoyment of my discomfiture. Finally, however,
+he spoke.
+
+"I'm a pretty old man, my dear fellow," he said. "I shouldn't like to
+tell you how old, because if I did you'd begin on the _Thesaurus_
+again with the word 'liar' for your lead. Nevertheless, I'm pretty
+old; but I want to say to you that in all my experience I have never
+had so diverting a half-hour as you have given me. You have been so
+outspoken, so frank--"
+
+"Oh, indeed--I've been frank, have I?" I interrupted. "Well, what I
+have said isn't a marker to what I'd like to have said and would have
+said if language hadn't its limitations. You are the infinity of the
+unmitigated, the supreme of the superfluous. In unqualified,
+inexcusable, unsurpassable meanness you are the very IT!"
+
+"Sir," said the old gentleman, rising and bowing, "you are a man of
+unusual penetration, and I like you. I should like to see more of you,
+but your hour has expired. I thank you for your pleasant words, and I
+bid you an affectionate good-morning."
+
+A deep-toned bell struck the hour of twelve. A fanfare of trumpets
+sounded outside, and the huge door flew open, and without a word in
+reply, glad of my deliverance, I turned and fled precipitately through
+it. The sumptuous guard stood outside to receive me, and as the door
+closed behind me the band struck up a swelling measure that I shall
+not soon forget.
+
+"Well," said the Major Domo, as we proceeded back to my quarters, "did
+he receive you nicely?"
+
+"Who?" said I.
+
+"Jupiter, of course," he said.
+
+"I didn't see him," I replied, sadly. "I fell in with a beastly old
+bore who wouldn't let go of me. You showed me into the wrong room. Who
+was that old beggar, anyhow?"
+
+"Beggar?" he cried. "Wrong room? Beggar?"
+
+"Certainly," said I. "Beggar is mild, I admit. But he's all that and
+much more. Who is he?"
+
+"I don't know what you mean," replied the Major Domo. "But you have
+been for the last hour with his Majesty himself."
+
+"What?" I cried. "I--that old man--we--"
+
+"The old gentleman was Jupiter. Didn't he tell you? He made a special
+effort to make you feel at home--put himself on a purely mortal
+basis--"
+
+I fell back, limp and nerveless.
+
+"What will he think of me?" I moaned, as I realized what had
+happened.
+
+[Illustration: "'WHAT?' I CRIED. 'I--THAT OLD MAN--WE'"]
+
+"He thinks you are the best yet," said the Major Domo. "He has sent
+word by his messenger, Mercury, that the honors of Olympus are to be
+showered upon you to their fullest extent. He says you are the only
+frank mortal he ever met."
+
+And with this I was escorted back to my rooms at the hotel, impressed
+with the idea that all is not lead that doesn't glitter, and when I
+thought of my invention of the word "stult," I began to wish I had
+never been born.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+A Royal Outing
+
+
+As may be imagined after my untoward interview with Jupiter, the state
+of my mind was far from easy. It is not pleasant to realize that you
+have applied every known epithet of contempt to a god who has an
+off-hand way of disposing of his enemies by turning them into
+apple-trees, or dumb beasts of one kind or another, and upon retiring
+to my room I sat down and waited in great dread of what should happen
+next. I couldn't really believe that the Major Domo's statement as to
+my having been forgiven was possible. It predicated too great a
+magnanimity to be credible.
+
+"I hope to gracious he won't make a pine-tree of me," I groaned,
+visions of a future in which woodmen armed with axes, and sawmills,
+played a conspicuous part, rising up before me. "I'd hate like time to
+be sawed up into planks and turned into a Georgia pine floor
+somewhere."
+
+It was a painful line of thought and I strove to get away from it, but
+without success, although the variations were interesting when I
+thought of all the things I might be made into, such as kitchen
+tables, imitation oak bookcases, or perhaps--horror of horrors--a
+bundle of toothpicks! I was growing frantic with fear, when on a
+sudden my reveries of dread were interrupted by a knock on the door.
+
+"It has come at last!" I said, and I opened the door, nerving myself
+up to sustain the blow which I believed was impending. Mercury stood
+without, flapping the wings that sprouted from his ankles impatiently.
+
+"The skitomobile is ready, sir," he said.
+
+I gazed at him earnestly.
+
+"The what?"
+
+"The skitomobile, to take you to the links. Jupiter has already gone
+on ahead, and he has commanded me to follow, bringing you along with
+me."
+
+"Oh--I'm to go to the links, eh? What's he going to do with me when he
+gets me there? Turn me into a golf-ball and drive me off into space?"
+I inquired.
+
+My heart sank at the very idea, but I was immediately reassured by
+Mercury's hearty laugh.
+
+"Of course not--why should he? He's going to play you an
+eighteen-hole match. You've made a great impression on the old
+gentleman."
+
+"Thank Heaven!" I said. "I'll hurry along and join him before he
+changes his mind."
+
+In a brief while I was ready, and, escorted by Mercury, I was taken to
+the skitomobile which stood at the exit from the hall to the outer
+roadway nearest my room. Seated in front of this, and acting as
+chauffeur, was a young man whom I recognized at once as Phaeton.
+Alongside of him sat Jason, polishing up the most beautiful set of
+golf-clubs I ever saw. The irons were of wrought gold, and the shafts
+of the most highly polished and exquisite woods.
+
+"To the links," said Mercury, and with a sudden chug-chug, and a jerk
+which nearly threw me out of the conveyance, we were off. And what a
+ride it was! At first the sensation was that of falling, and I
+clutched nervously at the sides of the skitomobile, but by slow
+degrees I got used to it, and enjoyed one of the most exhilarating
+hours that has ever entered into my experience.
+
+Planet after planet was passed as we sped on and on upward, and as my
+delight grew I gave utterance to it.
+
+"Jove! But this is fine!" I said. "I never knew anything like it,
+except looping the loop."
+
+Phaeton grinned broadly and winked at Jason.
+
+"How would you like to loop the loop out here?" the latter asked.
+
+"What? In a machine like this?" I cried.
+
+"Certainly," said Jason. "It's great sport. Give him the twist,
+Phaeton."
+
+I began to grow anxious again, for I recalled the past careless
+methods of Phaeton, and I had no wish to go looping the loop through
+the empyrean with one of his known adventurous disposition, to be
+hurled unceremoniously sooner or later perhaps into the sun itself.
+
+"Perhaps we'd better leave it until some other day," I ventured,
+timidly.
+
+"No time like the present," Jason retorted. "Only hang on to yourself.
+All ready, Phaety!"
+
+The chauffeur grasped the lever, and, turning it swiftly to one side,
+there in the blue vault of heaven, a thousand miles from anywhere,
+that machine began executing the most remarkable flip-flaps the mind
+of man ever conceived. Not once or twice, but a hundred times did we
+go whirling round and round through the skies, until finally I got so
+that I could not tell if I were right side up or upside down. It was
+great sport, however, and but for the fact that on the third trial I
+lost my grip and would have fallen head over heels through space had
+not Mercury, who was flying alongside of the machine, swooped down and
+caught me by the leg as I fell out, I found it as exhilarating as it
+was novel. I could have kept it up forever, had we not shortly hove in
+sight of the links, which, as I have already told you, were located on
+the planet Mars; and such gorgeousness as I there encountered was
+unparalleled on earth. Much that we earth-folk have wondered at became
+clear at once. The great canals, as we call them, for instance, turned
+out to be vast sand-bunkers that glistened like broad rivers of silver
+in the wondrous sheen of the planet, while the dark greenish spots,
+concerning which our astronomers have speculated so variously, were
+nothing more nor less than putting-greens. It is extraordinary that
+until my visit to the planet as the guest of Jupiter, this perfectly
+simple solution of the various Martian problems was not even guessed.
+
+As we drew up at the pretty little club-house, Jupiter emerged from
+the door and greeted me cordially. My eyes fell before his smiling
+gaze, for I must confess I was mighty shamefaced over my experience of
+the morning, but his manner restored my self-possession. It was very
+genial and forgiving.
+
+"Glad to see you again," he said. "If you play golf as well as you do
+synonyms you're a scratch man. You didn't foozle a syllable."
+
+"I should have, had I known as much as I do now," said I.
+
+"Well, I'm glad you didn't know," Jupiter returned majestically, "for
+I can use that word stult in my business. Now suppose we have a bit of
+luncheon and then start out."
+
+After eating sparingly we began our game. I was provided with a caddie
+that looked like one of Raphael's angels, and Jupiter himself handed
+me a driver from his own bag.
+
+"You'll have to be careful how you use it," he said; "it has
+properties which may astonish you."
+
+I teed up my ball, swung back, and then with all the vigor at my
+command whacked the ball square and true. It sprang from the tee like
+a bird let loose and flew beyond my vision, and while I was trying
+with my eye to keep up with it in its flight, I received a stinging
+blow on the back of my head which felled me to the ground.
+
+"Thunderation!" I roared. "What was that?"
+
+Jupiter laughed. "It was your own ball," he said. "You put too much
+muscle into that stroke, and, as a consequence, the ball flew all the
+way round the planet and clipped you from behind."
+
+"You don't mean to say--" I began.
+
+"Yes, I do," said Jupiter. "That is a special long-distance driver
+made for me. Only had it two days. It is not easy to use, because it
+has such wonderful force. Hercules drove a ball three times around the
+planet at one stroke with it yesterday. To use it properly requires
+judgment. Up here you have to play golf with your head, as well as
+with your clubs."
+
+"Well, I played it with mine all right," I put in, rubbing the lump on
+the back of my head ruefully. "Shall I play two?"
+
+"Certainly," said Jupiter. "You've a good brassey lie behind the tee
+there. Play gently now, for this hole isn't more than three hundred
+miles long."
+
+My brassey stroke is one of my best, and I did myself proud. The ball
+flew about one hundred and seventy-nine miles in a straight line, but
+landed in a sand-bunker. Jupiter followed with a good clean drive for
+two hundred miles, breaking all the records previously stated to me by
+Adonis, whereupon we entered the skitomobile and were promptly
+transported to the edge of the bunker, where my ball reposed upon the
+glistening sand. It took three to get out, owing to the height of the
+cop, which rose a trifle higher in the air than Mount Blanc, but the
+niblick Jason had brought along for my use, as soon as I got used to
+the titanic quality of the game I was playing, was finally equal to
+the loft. My ball landed just short of the green, one hundred and
+sixteen miles away. Jupiter foozled his approach, and we both reached
+the edge of the green in four.
+
+"Bully distance for a putt," said Jupiter, taking the line from his
+ball to the hole.
+
+"About how far is it?" I asked, for I couldn't see anything
+resembling a hole within a mile of me.
+
+"Oh, five miles, I imagine," was the answer. "Put on these glasses and
+you'll see the disk."
+
+My courteous host handed me a pair of spectacles which I put upon my
+nose, and there, seemingly two inches away, but in reality five and a
+quarter miles, was the hole. The glasses were a revelation, but I had
+seen too much that was wonderful to express surprise.
+
+"Dead easy," I said, referring to the putt, now that I had the glasses
+on.
+
+"Looks so," said Jupiter, "but be careful. You can't hope to putt
+until you know your ball."
+
+At the moment I did not understand, but a minute after I had a shock.
+Putting perfectly straight, the ball rolled easily along and then made
+a slight hitch backward, as if I had put a cut on it, and struck off
+ahead, straight as an arrow but to the left of the disk. This it
+continued to do in its course, zigzagging more and more out of the
+straight line until it finally stopped, quite two and a half miles
+from the cup.
+
+"Now watch me," said Jupiter. "You'll get an idea of how the ball
+works."
+
+I obeyed, and was surprised to see him aim at a point at least a mile
+aside of the mark, but the results were perfect, for the gutty, acting
+precisely as mine did, zigzagged along until it reached the rim of the
+cup and then dropped gently in.
+
+"One up," said Jupiter, with a broad smile as he watched my
+ill-repressed wonderment.
+
+As we were transported to the next tee by Phaeton and his machine, I
+looked at my ball, and the peculiarity of its make became clear at
+once. It was called "The Vulcan," and in action had precisely the
+same movement as that of a thunder-bolt--thus:
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"Great ball, eh?" said Jupiter. "Adds a lot to the science of the
+game. A straight putt is easy, but the zigzag is no child's play."
+
+"I think I shall like it," I said, "if I ever get used to it."
+
+The second hole reached, I was astonished to see a huge apparatus like
+a cannon on the tee, and in fact that is what it turned out to be.
+
+"We call this the Cannon Hole," said Jupiter. "It lends variety to the
+game. It's a splendid test of your accuracy, and if you don't make it
+in one you lose it. If you will put on those glasses you will see the
+hole, which is in the middle of a target. You've got to go through it
+at one stroke."
+
+"That isn't golf, is it?" I asked. "It's marksmanship."
+
+"I call it so," said Jupiter, calmly. "And what I say goes. Moreover,
+it requires much skill to offset the effect of the wind."
+
+"But there is none," said I.
+
+"There will be," said Jupiter, putting his ball in the cannon's breach
+and making ready to drive. "You see those huge steel affairs on either
+side of the course, that look like the ventilators on an ocean
+steamer?"
+
+"Yes," said I, for as I looked I perceived that this part of the
+course was studded with them.
+
+"Well, they supply the wind," said Jupiter. "I just ring a bell and
+Ęolus sets his bellows going, and I tell you the winds you get are
+cyclonic, and, best of all, they blow in all directions. From the
+first ventilator the wind is northeast by south; from the second it
+is southwest by north-northeast; from the third it is straight north,
+and so on. Winds are blowing at the moment of play from all possible
+points of the compass. Fore!"
+
+A bell rang, and never in a wide experience in noises had I ever
+before heard such a fearful din as followed. A hurricane sprang from
+one point, a gale from another, a cyclone from a third--such an ęolian
+purgatory was never let loose in my sight before, but Jupiter, gauging
+each and all, fired his ball from the cannon, and it sped on, buffeted
+here and there, now up, now down, like a bit of fluff in the chance
+zephyrs of the spring-tide, but ultimately passing through the hole in
+the target, and landing gently in a basket immediately behind the
+bull's-eye. The winds immediately died down, and all was quiet again.
+
+"Perfectly great!" I said, with enthusiasm, for it did seem
+marvellous. "But I don't think I can do it. You win, of course."
+
+"Not at all," said Jupiter. "If you hit the bull's-eye, as I did, you
+win."
+
+"And you lose in spite of that splendid--er--stroke?" I asked.
+
+"Oh no--not at all," said Jupiter. "We both win."
+
+Again the bell rang, and the winds blew, and the cannon shot, but my
+ball, under the excitement of the moment of aiming, was directed not
+towards the bull's-eye--or the hole--but at the skitomobile. It hit it
+fairly and hard, and it smashed the engine by which the machine was
+propelled, much to the consternation of Jason and Phaeton.
+
+"Unfortunate," said Jupiter. "Very. But never mind. We don't have to
+walk home."
+
+"I'm awfully sorry," said I. "I--er--"
+
+"Never mind," said Jupiter. "It is easily repaired, but we cannot go
+on with the game. The next hole is eight thousand miles long. Twice
+around the planet, and we couldn't possibly walk it, so we'll have to
+quit. We've got all we can manage trudging back to the club-house.
+Here, caddies, take our clubs back to the club-house, and tell 'em to
+have two nectar high-balls ready at six-thirty. Phaeton, you and Jason
+will have to get back the best way you can. I've told you a half-dozen
+times to bring two machines with you, but you never seem to
+understand. Come along, Higgins, we'll go back. Shut your eyes."
+
+I closed my optics, as ordered, although my name is not Higgins, and I
+didn't like to have even Jupiter so dub me.
+
+"Now open them again," was the sharp order.
+
+I did so, and lo and behold! by some supernatural power we had been
+transported back to the club-house.
+
+"I am sorry, Jupiter," said I "to have spoiled your game," as we sat,
+later, sipping that delicious concoction, the nectar high-ball, which
+we supplemented with a "Pegasus's neck."
+
+"Nonsense," said he, grandly. "You haven't spoiled my _game_. You have
+merely, without meaning to do so, spoiled your own afternoon. My game
+is all right and will remain so. It would have been a great pleasure
+to me to show you the other sixteen holes, but circumstances were
+against us. Take your nectar and let us trot along. You dine with Juno
+and myself to-night. Let's see, I was two up, wasn't I?"
+
+"Two up, and sixteen to play."
+
+"Then I win," said he. It was an extraordinary score, but then it was
+an extraordinary occasion.
+
+And we entered his chariot, and were whirled back to Olympus. The ride
+home was not as exciting as the ride out, but it was interesting. It
+lasted about a half of a millionth of a second, and for the first time
+in my life I knew how a telegram feels when it travels from New York
+to San Francisco, and gets there apparently three hours before it is
+sent by the clock.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+I am Dismissed
+
+
+It was a very interesting programme for my further entertainment that
+Jupiter mapped out on our way back from the links, and I deeply regret
+that an untoward incident that followed later, for which I was
+unintentionally responsible, prevented its being carried out. I was to
+have been taken off on a cruise on the inland sea, to where the lost
+island of Atlantis was to be found; a special tournament at ping-pong
+was to be held in my honor, in which minor planets were to be used
+instead of balls, and the players were to be drawn from among the
+Titans, who were retained to perform feats of valor, skill, and
+strength for Jupiter. The forge of Vulcan was to be visited, and many
+of the mysteries of the centre of the earth were to be revealed, and,
+best of all, Jupiter himself had promised to give me an exhibition of
+his own skill as a marksman in the hurling of thunder-bolts, and _I
+was to select the objects to be hit!_ Think of it! What a chance lay
+here for a man to be rid of certain things on earth that he did not
+like! What a vast amount of ugly American architecture one could be
+rid of in the twinkling of an eye! What a lot of enemies and eyesores
+it was now in my power to have removed by an electrical process
+availed of in the guise of sport! I spent an hour on that list of
+targets, and if only I had been allowed to prolong my stay in the home
+of the gods, the world itself would have benefited, for I was not
+altogether personal in my selection of things for Jupiter to aim at.
+There was Tammany Hall, for instance, and the Boxers of China--these
+led my list. There were four or five sunlight-destroying, sky-scraping
+office buildings in New York and elsewhere; nuisances of every kind
+that I could think of were put down--the headquarters of the Beef
+Trust and a few of its sponsors; the editorial offices of the peevish
+and bilious newspapers, which deny principles and right motives to all
+save themselves; a regiment of alleged humorists who make jokes about
+the mother-in-law and other sacred relations of life; an opera-box
+full of the people who hum every number of Wagner and Verdi through,
+and keep other people from hearing the singers; row after row of
+theatre-goers who come in late and trample over the virtuous folk who
+have arrived punctually; any number of theatrical managers who mistake
+gloom for amusement; three or four smirking matinée idols, whose
+talents are measured by the fit of their clothes, the length of their
+hair, and their ability to spit supernumeraries with a tin sword;
+cab-drivers who had overcharged me; insolent railway officials; the
+New York Central Tunnel--indeed, the completed list stretches on to
+such proportions that it would require more pages than this book
+contains to present them in detail. I even thought of including
+Hippopopolis in the list, but when I realized that it was entirely
+owing to his villany that I had enjoyed the delightful privilege of
+visiting the gods in their own abode, I spared him. And to think that
+because of an unintentional error this great opportunity to rid the
+world, and incidentally myself, of much that is vexatious was wholly
+lost is a matter of sincere grief to myself.
+
+It happened in this way: Hardly had I returned to my delightful
+apartment at the hotel, when a messenger arrived bearing a superbly
+engraved command from Jupiter to dine with himself and Juno _en
+famille_. It was a kind, courteous, and friendly note, utterly devoid
+of formality, and we were to spend the evening at cards. Jupiter had
+indicated in the afternoon that he would like to learn bridge, and,
+inasmuch as I never travel anywhere without a text-book upon that
+fascinating subject, I had volunteered to teach him. The dinner was
+given largely to enable me to do this, and, moreover, Jupiter was
+quite anxious to have me meet his family, and promised me that before
+the evening was over I should hear some music from the lyre of Apollo,
+meet all the muses, and enjoy a chafing-dish snack prepared by the
+fair hand of Juno herself.
+
+"I'll have Polyphemus up to give us a few coon songs if you like
+them," he added, "and altogether I can promise you a delightful
+evening. We drop all our state at these affairs, and I know you'll
+enjoy yourself."
+
+"I shall feel a trifle embarrassed in the presence of so many gods and
+goddesses, I am afraid," I put in.
+
+"I'll fix you out as to that," Jupiter replied. "I'll change you for
+the time being into a god yourself, if you wish."
+
+I laughed at the idea.
+
+"A high old god I'd make," said I.
+
+"You'd pass," he observed, quietly. "I'll call you Pencillius, god of
+Chirography--or would you rather come as Nonsensius, the newly
+discovered deity of Jocosity?"
+
+"I think I'd rather be Zero, god of Nit," said I, and it was so
+ordained.
+
+Of course, I accepted the invitation and was on hand at the palace,
+as I thought, promptly. As a matter of fact, my watch having in some
+mysterious fashion been affected by the excitement of the adventure,
+got galloping away just as my own heart had done more than once. The
+result was that, instead of arriving at the palace at eight o'clock,
+as I was expected to do, I got there at seven. Of course, my exalted
+hosts were not ready to receive me, and there were no other guests to
+bear me company and keep me out of mischief in the drawing-room, where
+for an hour I was compelled to wait. At first all went well. I found
+much entertainment in the room, and on the centre-table, a beautiful
+bit of furniture, carved out of one huge amethyst, I discovered a
+number of books and magazines, which kept me tolerably busy for a
+half-hour. There was a finely bound copy of _Don'ts for the Gods, or
+Celestial Etiquette_, in which I found many valuable hints on the
+procedure of Olympian society--notably one injunction as to the use of
+finger-bowls, from which I learned that the gods in their lavishness
+have a bowl for each finger; and a little volume by Bacchus on
+_Intemperance_, which I wish I might publish for the benefit of my
+fellow-mortals. All I remember about it at the moment of writing is
+that the author seriously enjoins upon his readers the wickedness of
+drinking more than sixty cocktails a day, and utterly deprecates the
+habit of certain Englishmen of drinking seven bottles of port at a
+sitting. Bacchus seemed to think that, with the other wines incidental
+to a dinner, no one, not even an Englishman, should attempt to absorb
+more than five bottles of port over his coffee. It struck me as being
+rather good advice.
+
+Wearying of the reading at the end of a half-hour, I began a closer
+inspection of the room and its contents. It was full of novelties,
+and, naturally, gorgeous past all description; but what most excited
+my curiosity was a small cabinet, not unlike a stereoscope in shape,
+which stood in one corner of the room. It had a button at one side,
+over which was a gilt tablet marked "Push." On its front was the
+legend, "Drop a Nickel in the Slot, Push the Button, and See the
+Future." I followed the instructions eagerly. The nickel was dropped,
+the button pushed, and, putting my eyes before the lenses, I gazed
+into the remotest days to come. I had come across the Futuroscope,
+otherwise a kinetoscope with the gift of prophecy. The coming year
+passed rapidly, and I saw what fate had in store for the world for the
+twelve months immediately ahead of me; then followed a decade, then a
+century, and then others, until, just as I was approaching the dread
+cataclysm which is to mark the end of all mortal things, I heard a
+quick, startled voice back of me.
+
+It was that of Jupiter, and his tone was a strange mixture of wrath
+and regret.
+
+"What on earth have you done?" he cried.
+
+"Nothing, your Majesty," said I, shaking all over as with the ague at
+the revelations I had just witnessed, "except getting a bird's-eye
+view of what is to come."
+
+"I am sorry," said he, gravely. "It is not well that mortals should
+know the future, and your imprudent act is destructive of all the
+plans I have had for you. You must leave us instantly, for that
+instrument is for the gods alone. Moreover, the knowledge of that
+which you have seen--"
+
+Here his voice positively thundered, and the frown that came upon his
+brow filled me with awe and terror.
+
+"All knowledge of what you have seen must be removed from your brain,"
+he added, grimly.
+
+I was speechless with fear as the ruler of Olympus touched an electric
+button at the side of the room, and the two huge slaves, Gog and
+Magog, appeared.
+
+"Seize him!" Jupiter commanded, sternly.
+
+In an instant I was bound hand and foot.
+
+"To the office of Dr. Ęsculapius!" he commanded, and I was
+unceremoniously removed to the room wherein I had had my interview
+with the great doctor, where I was immediately etherized and my brain
+operated upon. Precisely what was done to me I shall probably never
+know, but what I do know is that from that time to this all that I
+saw in that marvellous Futuroscope is a blank, although on all other
+subjects pertaining to my visit to the gods my recollection is
+perfectly clear. It suffices to say that I lay for a long time in a
+stupor, and when finally I came to my senses again I found myself
+comfortably ensconced in my own bed, in my own home; not in Greece,
+but in America; suffering from a dull headache from which I did not
+escape for at least three hours. Again and again and again have I
+tried to recall that wonderful picture of a marvellous future seen by
+my mortal eyes that night upon Olympus, that I might set it upon paper
+for others to read, but with each effort the dreadful pain in the top
+of my head returns and I find myself compelled to abandon the project.
+
+So was my brief visit to Olympus begun and ended. In its results it
+has perhaps been neither elevating nor remarkably instructive, but it
+has given me a better understanding of, and a better liking for, that
+great company of mythological beings who used to preside over the
+destinies of the Greeks. They appeared more human than godlike to my
+eyes. They were companionable to a degree, and for a time, at least,
+would prove congenial associates for a summer outing, but as a steady
+diet--well, I am not at all surprised that, as men waxed more mature
+in years and in experience, these titanic members of the Olympian four
+hundred lost their power and became no greater factor in the life of
+the large society of mankind than any other group of people, equal in
+number and of seeming importance, whose days and nights are given over
+solely to pleasure and the morbid pursuit of notoriety.
+
+THE END
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: The author refers to a type of golf club
+as a "brassey" and also as a "brassie". Both spellings have
+been maintained in this document.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Olympian Nights, by John Kendrick Bangs
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Olympian Nights, by John Kendrick Bangs
+
+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: Olympian Nights
+
+Author: John Kendrick Bangs
+
+Release Date: March 11, 2006 [EBook #17964]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLYMPIAN NIGHTS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Paul Good, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Cover" id="Cover">[Cover]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 349px;">
+
+<a href="images/image01h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image01.jpg" width="349" height="500" alt="Cover" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 279px;">
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Frontispiece" id="Frontispiece">[Frontispiece]</a></span>
+<a href="images/image02h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image02.jpg" width="279" height="500" alt="BRANCH OFFICE OF MAMMON &amp; CO." title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg i]</a></span></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 281px;">
+<a href="images/image03h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image03.jpg" width="281" height="500" alt="Title Page" title="" /></a>
+<p><br /><br /></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h1>OLYMPIAN NIGHTS</h1>
+
+<h3>by</h3>
+
+<h2>JOHN KENDRICK BANGS</h2>
+
+<p class="center">Author of "A House-Boat on the Styx"<br />
+"The Pursuit of the House-Boat"<br />
+"The Enchanted Type-writer"<br />
+Etc. Etc.<br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 166px;">
+<img src="images/image04.jpg" width="166" height="166" alt="" title="" />
+<p><br />
+<br /></p>
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">New York and London<br />
+Harper &amp; Brothers Publishers</p>
+
+<p class="center">1902</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg ii]</a></span></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Harper &amp; Brothers.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">Published June, 1902.
+</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="TOC" id="TOC"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class="centered">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="4" summary="Table Of Contents">
+<tr><td align='left'><small>CHAP.</small></td><td align='left'></td><td align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>I.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">I Reach Mount Olympus</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#I'>1</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>II.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">I Seek Shelter and Find It</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#II'>17</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>III.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Elevator Boy</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#III'>33</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>IV.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">I Summon a Valet</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#IV'>53</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>V.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Olympian Links</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#V'>70</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>VI.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">In the Dining-Room</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#VI'>88</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>VII.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">&AElig;sculapius, M.D.</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#VII'>110</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>VIII.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">At the Zoo</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#VIII'>131</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>IX.</td> <td align='left'> <span class="smcap">Some Account of the Palace of Jupiter</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#IX'>155</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>X.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">An Extraordinary Interview</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#X'>175</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>XI.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Royal Outing</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#XI'>192</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>XII.</td> <td align='left'><span class="smcap">I am Dismissed</span></td><td align='right'><a href='#XII'>212</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg v]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="ILLUSTRATIONS" id="ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+<div class="centered">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="4" summary="Illustrations">
+
+<tr><td align='left'>BRANCH OFFICE OF MAMMON &amp; CO.</td>
+<td colspan="2" align='right'><a href='#Frontispiece'><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>HIPPOPOPOLIS EXPLAINS</td>
+<td align='left'><i>Facing p.</i></td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_19'>8</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>A DREAM OF BRIGANDAGE</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_35'>22</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>IN THE ELEVATOR</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_44'>30</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>"'THE GODDESS OF THE MOTHER-IN-LAW'"</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_58'>42</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>"ANYTHING COULD BE GOT FOR THE RINGING"</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_78'>60</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>"JUPITER HURLED A THUNDER-BOLT AT HIM"</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_84'>64</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>THE OLYMPIAN LINKS</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_106'>84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>CARING FOR THE CALVES</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_128'>104</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>"'THEN YOU MUST DIE'"</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_138'>112</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>I VISIT &AElig;SCULAPIUS</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_146'>118</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>CALLISTO</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_170'>140</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>I MEET THE PH&#338;NIX</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_182'>150</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>"'THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE UNIVERSE'"</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_200'>166</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>"THE DOOR WAS LOCKED"</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_216'>180</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr><td align='left'>"'WHAT?' I CRIED. 'I&mdash;THAT OLD MAN&mdash;WE'"</td>
+<td align='center'>"</td>
+<td align='right'><a href='#Page_228'>190</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="OLYMPIAN_NIGHTS" id="OLYMPIAN_NIGHTS"></a>OLYMPIAN NIGHTS</h2>
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<h2><a name="I" id="I"></a>I</h2>
+
+<h2>I Reach Mount Olympus</h2>
+
+
+<p>While travelling through
+the classic realms of Greece
+some years ago, sincerely
+desirous of discovering
+the lurking-place of a certain war
+which the newspapers of my own
+country were describing with some
+vividness, I chanced upon the base
+of the far-famed Mount Olympus.
+Night was coming on apace and
+I was tired, having been led during
+the day upon a wild-goose
+chase by my guide, who had assured
+me that he had definitely<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+located the scene of hostilities between
+the Greeks and the Turks.
+He had promised that for a consideration
+I should witness a conflict
+between the contending armies
+which in its sanguinary aspects
+should surpass anything the world
+had yet known. Whether or not
+it so happened that the armies had
+been booked for a public exhibition
+elsewhere, unknown to the talented
+bandit who was acting as my courier,
+I am not aware, but, as the event
+transpired, the search was futile,
+and another day was wasted. Most
+annoying, too, was the fact that I
+dared not manifest the impatience
+which I naturally felt. I am not
+remarkable as a specimen of the
+strong man; quite the reverse indeed,
+for, while I am by no means
+a weakling, I am no adept in the
+fistic art. Hence, when my guide,
+Hippopopolis by name, as the sun
+sank behind the western hills, informed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+me that I was again to be
+disappointed, the fact that he stands
+six feet two in his stockings, when
+he wears them, and has a pleasing
+way of bending crowbars as a
+pastime, led me to conceal the irritation
+which I felt.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all right, Hippopopolis," I
+said, swallowing my wrath. "It's
+all right. We've had a good bit
+of exercise, anyhow, and that, after
+all, is the chief desideratum to
+a man of a sedentary occupation.
+How many miles have we walked?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, about forty-three," he said,
+calmly. "A short distance, your
+Excellency."</p>
+
+<p>"Very&mdash;very short," said I, rubbing
+my aching calves. "In my
+own country I make a practice of
+walking at least a hundred every
+day. It's quite a pleasing stroll
+from my home in New York over to
+Philadelphia and back. I hope I shall
+be able to show it you some day."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It will be altogether charming,
+Excellency," said he. "Shall we&mdash;ah&mdash;walk
+back to Athens now, or
+would you prefer to rest here for
+the night?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I guess I'll stay here, Hippopopolis,"
+I replied. "This seems
+to be a very comfortable sort of a
+mountain in front of us, and the
+air is soft. Suppose we rest in the
+soothing shade for the night? It
+would be quite an adventure."</p>
+
+<p>"As your Excellency wishes," he
+replied, tossing a bowlder into the
+air and catching it with ease as it
+came down. "It is not often done,
+but it is for you to say."</p>
+
+<p>"What mountain is it, Hippopopolis?"
+I asked, turning and gazing
+at the eminence before us.</p>
+
+<p>"It is Mount Olympus," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"What?" I cried. "Not the home
+of the gods?"</p>
+
+<p>"The very same, your Excellency,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+he acquiesced. "At least,
+that is the report. It is commonly
+stated hereabouts that the god-trust
+has its headquarters here. As for
+myself, I have explored its every
+nook and cranny, but I never saw
+any gods on it. It's my private
+opinion that they've moved away;
+though there be those who claim
+that it is still occupied by the former
+rulers of destiny living incog. like
+other well-born rogues who desire
+to avoid notoriety."</p>
+
+<p>Hippopopolis is a decided democrat
+in his views, and has less respect for
+the King than he has for the peasant.</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't call them rogues exactly,"
+I ventured. "Some of 'em
+were a pretty respectable lot. There
+was Apollo and old Jupiter himself,
+and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you can't tell me anything
+about them," retorted Hippopopolis.
+"I haven't been born and bred
+in this country for nothing, your<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+Excellency. They were a bad lot
+all through. Shall I prepare your
+supper?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you please, Hippopopolis,"
+said I, throwing myself down beneath
+a huge tree and giving myself
+up to the reveries of the moment.
+I did not deem it well to interpose
+too strongly between Hippopopolis
+and his views of the immortals just
+then. He had always a glitter in
+his eye when any one ventured to
+controvert his assertions which made
+a debate with him a thing to be apprehended.
+Still, I did not exactly
+like to yield, for, to tell the truth,
+the Olympian folk have always interested
+me hugely, and, while I
+would not of course endorse any one
+of them for a high public trust in
+these days, I have admired them for
+their many remarkable qualities.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said I, reverting to
+the question a few moments later,
+as Hippopopolis opened a box of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+sardines and set the bread a-toasting
+on the fire he had made. "Of
+course, I should not venture to say
+that I, a stranger, know as much
+about the private habits of the gods
+as do you, who have been their neighbor;
+but that they are rogues is
+news to me."</p>
+
+<p>"That may be, too," said Hippopopolis.
+"People are often thought
+more of by strangers than by their
+own fellow-townsmen. Even you,
+sir, I might suspect, who are by
+these simple Greeks supposed to be
+a sort of reigning sovereign in your
+own country, are not at home, perhaps,
+so large a hill of potatoes. So
+with Jupiter and Apollo and Mercury,
+and the ladies of the court. I
+haven't a doubt that in the United
+States you think Jupiter a remarkably
+great man, and Apollo a musician,
+and Mercury a gentleman
+of some business capacity, but we
+Greeks know better. And as for the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+ladies&mdash;hum&mdash;well, your Excellency,
+they are not received. They are too
+bold and pushing. They lack the
+refinements, and as for their beauty
+and accomplishments&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Hippopopolis here indulged in a
+gesture which betokened excessive
+scorn of the beauty and accomplishments
+of the ladies of Olympus.</p>
+
+<p>"You have never seen these people,
+Hippopopolis?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been spared that necessity,"
+said he, "but I know all about
+them, and I assert to you upon my
+honor as a courier and the best
+guide in the Archipelago that Jupiter
+is the worst old <i>rou&eacute;</i> a country ever
+had saddled upon it; Apollo's music
+would drive you mad and make
+you welcome a xylophone duet;
+and as for Mercury's business capacity,
+that is merely a capacity for
+getting away from his creditors.
+Why shouldn't a man wax rich if,
+after floating a thousand bogus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+corporations, selling the stock at
+par and putting the money into
+his own pocket, he could unfold
+his wings and fly off into the empyrean,
+leaving his stock and bond
+holders to mourn their loss?"</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image05h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image05.jpg" width="500" height="324" alt="HIPPOPOPOLIS EXPLAINS" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+<p><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></a></p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, Hippopopolis," I put
+in, interrupting him fearlessly for
+the moment, "pray don't try to deceive
+me by any such statement as
+that. I don't know very much, but
+I know something about Mercury,
+and when you say he puts other
+people's money into his pockets, I
+am in a position to prove otherwise.
+From five years of age up to the
+present time I have been brought
+up in a home where a bronze statue
+of Mercury, said to be the most
+perfect resemblance in all the statuary
+of the world, classic or otherwise,
+has been the most conspicuous ornament.
+At ten I could reproduce
+on paper with my pencil every line,
+every shade, every curve, every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+movement of the effigy in so far
+as my artistic talent would permit,
+and I know that Mercury not only
+had no pocket, but wore no garments
+in which even so little as a change
+pocket could have been concealed.
+Wherefore there must be some mistake
+about your charge."</p>
+
+<p>Hippopopolis laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Humph!" he said. "It is very
+evident that you people over the
+sea have very superficial notions of
+things here. When Mercury posed
+for that statue, like most of you
+people who have your photographs
+taken, he posed in full evening dress.
+That is why there is so little of it
+in evidence. But in his business
+suit, Mercury is a very different
+sort of a person. Even in Olympus
+he'd have been ruled off the stock
+exchange if he'd ventured to appear
+there as scantily attired as he is
+in most of his statuary appearances.
+You certainly are not so green as to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+suppose that that suit he wears in
+his statues is the whole extent of
+his wardrobe?"</p>
+
+<p>"I had supposed so," I confessed.
+"It's a trifle unconventional; but,
+then, he's one of the gods, and, I
+presumed, could dress as he pleased.
+Your gods are independent, I should
+imagine, of the mere decrees of
+fashion."</p>
+
+<p>"The more exalted one's position,
+the greater the sartorial obligation,"
+retorted Hippopopolis, who, for a
+Greek and a guide, had, as will
+be seen, a vocabulary of most remarkable
+range. "Just as it happens
+that our King here, like H. R. H. the
+Prince of Wales, has to
+be provided with seven hundred
+and sixty-eight suits of clothes so
+as to be properly clad at the variety
+of functions he is required to grace,
+so does a god have to be provided
+with a wardrobe of rare quality
+and extent. For drawing-room tables,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+mantel-pieces, and pedestals,
+otherwise for statuary, Mercury can
+go about clad in just about half
+as much stuff as it would require
+to cover a fairly sized sofa-cushion
+and not arouse drastic criticism;
+but when he goes to business he
+is as well provided with pockets as
+any other speculator."</p>
+
+<p>"Another idol shattered!" I cried,
+in mock grief. "But Apollo, Hippopopolis&mdash;Apollo!
+Do not tell me
+he is not a virtuoso of rare technique
+on the lyre!"</p>
+
+<p>"His technique is more than rare,"
+sneered Hippopopolis. "It is excessively
+raw. It has been said by
+men who have heard both that Nero
+of Hades can do more to move an
+audience with his fiddle with two
+strings broken and his bow wrist
+sprained than Apollo can do with
+the aid of his lyre and a special dispensation
+of divine inspiration from
+Zeus himself."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 13]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There are various ways of moving
+audiences, Hippopopolis," I ventured.
+"Now Nero, I should say,
+could move an audience&mdash;out of the
+hall&mdash;in a very few moments. In fact,
+I have always believed that that is
+why he fiddled when Rome was burning:
+so that people would run out of
+the city limits before they perished."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a very droll view," laughed
+Hippopopolis, "and I dare say holds
+much of the truth; but Nero's faulty
+execution is not proof of Apollo's
+virtuosity. For a woodland musicale
+given by the Dryads, say, to their
+friends, the squirrels and moles
+and wild-cats, and other denizens
+of the forest, Apollo will suffice.
+The musical taste of a kangaroo
+might find the strumming of his
+lyre by Apollo to its liking, but for
+cultivated people who know a crescendo
+andante-arpeggio from the
+staccato tones of a penny whistle,
+he is inadequate."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You speak as if you had heard
+the god," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not," retorted Hippopopolis,
+"but I have heard playing
+by people, generally beginners, of
+whom the rural press has said that
+he&mdash;or more often she&mdash;has the touch
+of an Apollo, and, if that is true,
+as are all things we read in the
+newspapers, particularly the rural
+papers, which are not so sophisticated
+as to lie, then Apollo would
+better not attempt to play at one
+of our Athenian Courier Association
+Smokers. I venture to assert that
+if he did he would have to be carried
+home with a bandage about his
+brow instead of a laurel, and his
+cherished lyre would become but a
+memory."</p>
+
+<p>I turned sadly to my supper. I
+had found the mundane things of
+Greece disappointing enough, but
+my sorrow over Hippopopolis's expert
+testimony as to the shortcoming<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+of the gods was overwhelming.
+It was to be expected that the country
+would fall into a decadent state
+sooner or later, but that the Olympians
+themselves were not all that
+they were cracked up to be by the
+mythologies had never suggested
+itself to me. As a result of my
+courier's words, I lapsed into a
+moody silence, which by eight o'clock
+developed into an irresistible desire
+to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll take a nap, Hippopopolis,"
+said I, rolling my coat into a bundle
+and placing it under my head.
+"You will, I trust, be good enough
+to stand guard lest some of these
+gods you have mentioned come and
+pick my pockets?" I added, satirically.</p>
+
+<p>"I will see that the gods do not
+rob you," he returned, dryly, with
+a slight emphasis on the word
+"gods," the significance of which
+I did not at the moment take in,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+but which later developments made
+all too clear.</p>
+
+<p>Three minutes later I slept soundly.</p>
+
+<p>At ten o'clock, about, I awoke
+with a start. The fire was out and
+I was alone. Hippopopolis had disappeared
+and with him had gone my
+watch, the contents of my pocket-book,
+my letter of credit, and everything
+of value I had with me, with
+the exception of my shirt-studs,
+which, I presume, would have gone
+also had they not been fastened to
+me in such a way that, in getting
+them, Hippopopolis would have had
+to wake me up.</p>
+
+<p>To add to my plight, the rain was
+pouring down in torrents.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 17]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="II" id="II"></a>II</h2>
+
+<h2>I Seek Shelter and Find It</h2>
+
+
+<p>"This is a fine piece of business,"
+I said to myself,
+springing to my feet. And
+then I called as loudly as
+my lungs would permit for Hippopopolis.
+It was really exhilarating
+to do so. The name lends itself so
+readily to a sonorous effect. The
+hills fairly echoed and re-echoed
+with the name, but no answer came,
+and finally I gave up in disgust,
+seeking meanwhile the very inadequate
+shelter of a tree, to keep
+the rain off. A more woe-begone
+picture never presented itself, I am
+convinced. I was chilled through,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+shivering in the dampness of the
+night, a steady stream of water
+pouring upon and drenching my
+clothing, void of property of an available
+nature, and lost in a strange
+land. To make matters worse, I
+was familiar only with classic Greek,
+which language is utterly unknown
+in those parts to-day, being spoken
+only by the professors of the American
+school at Athens and the war
+correspondents of the New York
+Sunday newspapers&mdash;a fact, by the
+way, which probably accounts for
+the latter's unfamiliarity with classic
+English. It is too much in these
+times to expect a man to speak or
+write more than one language at
+a time. Even if I survived the exposure
+of the night, a horrid death
+by starvation stared me in the face,
+since I had no means of conveying
+to any one who might appear the
+idea that I was hungry.</p>
+
+<p>Still, if starvation was to be my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+lot, I preferred to starve dryly and
+warmly; so, deserting the tree which
+was now rather worse as a refuge
+than no refuge at all, since the
+limbs began to trickle forth steady
+streams of water, which, by some
+accursed miracle of choice, seemed
+to consider the back of my neck
+their inevitable destination, I started
+in to explore as best I could in the
+uncanny light of the night for some
+more sheltered nook. Feeling, too,
+that, having robbed me, Hippopopolis
+would become an extremely unpleasant
+person to encounter in my
+unarmed and exhausted state, I
+made my way up the mountainside,
+rather than down into the
+valley, where my inconsiderate guide
+was probably even then engaged
+in squandering my hard-earned
+wealth, in company with the peasants
+of that locality, who see real
+money so seldom that they ask
+no unpleasant questions as to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+whence it has come when they do
+see it.</p>
+
+<p>"Under the circumstances,"
+thought I, "I sincerely hope that
+the paths of Hippopopolis and myself
+may lie as wide as the poles
+apart. If so be we do again tread
+the same path, I trust I shall see
+him in time to be able to ignore his
+presence."</p>
+
+<p>With this reflection I made my
+way with difficulty up the side of
+Olympus. Several times it seemed
+to me that I had found the spot
+wherein I might lie until the sun
+should rise, but quite as often an
+inconsiderate leak overhead through
+the leaves of the trees, or an undiscovered
+crack in the rocks above
+me, sent me travelling upon my
+way. Physical endurance has its
+limits, however, and at the end of
+a two hours' climb, wellnigh exhausted,
+I staggered into an opening
+between two walls of rock, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+fell almost fainting to the ground.
+The falling rain revived me, and
+on my hands and knees I crawled
+farther in, and, to my great delight,
+shortly found myself in a high-ceiled
+cavern, safe from the storm,
+a place in which one might starve
+comfortably, if so be one had to
+pass through that trying ordeal.</p>
+
+<p>"He might have left me my flask,"
+I groaned as I thought over the pint
+of warming liquid which Hippopopolis
+had taken from me. It was
+of a particular sort, and I liked it
+whether I was thirsty or not. "If
+he'd only left me that, he might
+have had my letter of credit, and no
+questions asked. These Greeks are
+apparently not aware that there is
+consideration even among thieves."</p>
+
+<p>Huddling myself together, I tried
+to get warm after the fashion of the
+small boy when he jumps into his
+cold-sheeted bed on a winter's night,
+a process which makes his legs<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+warm the upper part of his body,
+and <i>vice versa</i>. It was moderately
+successful. If I could have wrung
+the water out of my clothes, it might
+have been wholly so. Still, matters
+began to look more cheerful, and I
+was about to drop off into a doze,
+when at the far end of the cavern,
+where all had hitherto been black
+as night, there suddenly burst forth
+a tremendous flood of light.</p>
+
+<p>"Humph!" thought I, as the rays
+pierced through the blackness of the
+cavern even to where I lay shivering.
+"I'm in for it now. In all
+probability I have stumbled upon a
+bandits' cave."</p>
+
+<p>Pleasing visions of the ways of
+bandits began to flit through my
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>"In all likelihood," thought I,
+"there are seventeen of them. As
+I have read my fiction, there are
+invariably seventeen bandits to a
+band. It's like sixteen ounces to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+the pound, or three feet to the yard,
+or fifty-three cents to the dollar.
+It never varies. What hope have
+I to escape unharmed from seventeen
+bandits, even though five of
+them are discontented&mdash;as is always
+the case in books&mdash;and are
+ready to betray their chief to the
+enemy? I am the enemy, of course,
+but I'll be hanged if I wish the chief
+betrayed into my hands. He could
+probably thrash me single-handed.
+My hands are full anyhow, whether
+I get the chief or not."</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 289px;">
+<a href="images/image06h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image06.jpg" width="289" height="500" alt="A DREAM OF BRIGANDAGE" title="" /></a>
+</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></a></span></p>
+
+<p>My heart sank into my boots;
+but as these were very wet, it promptly
+returned to my throat, where it
+had rested ever since Hippopopolis
+had deserted me. My heart is a
+very sane sort of an organ. I gazed
+towards the light intently, expecting
+to see dark figures of murderous
+mould loom up before me, but in
+this I was agreeably disappointed.
+Nothing of the sort happened, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+I grew easier in my mind, although
+my curiosity was by no means appeased.</p>
+
+<p>"I know what I will do," I said
+to myself. "I'll make friends with
+the chief himself. That's the best
+plan. If he is responsive, my family
+will be spared the necessity of receiving
+one of my ears by mail with
+a delicate request for $20,000 ransom,
+accompanied by a P. S. enclosing
+the other ear to emphasize the importance
+of the complication."</p>
+
+<p>By way of diversion, let me say
+here that, while slicing off the victim's
+ear is a staple situation among
+novelists who write of bandits, in
+all my experience with bandits&mdash;and
+I have known a thousand, most of
+'em in Wall Street&mdash;I have never
+known it done, and I challenge
+those who write of South European
+highway-robbers to produce any
+evidence to prove that the habit is
+prevalent. The idea is, on the face<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+of it, invalid. The ears of mankind,
+despite certain differences which
+are acknowledged, are, after all,
+very much alike. The point that
+differentiates one ear from another
+is the angle at which it is set from
+the head. The angle, according to
+the most scientific students of the
+organ of hearing, is the basis of
+the estimate of the individual. Therefore,
+to convince the wealthy persons
+at home that large sums of
+money are expected of them to preserve
+the life of the father of the
+family, the truly expert bandit must
+send something besides the ear itself,
+which, when cut off, has no angle
+whatsoever. If I, who am no bandit,
+and who have not studied the art
+of the banditti, may make a suggestion
+which may prove valuable to
+the highwaymen of Italy and Greece,
+the only sure method of identifying
+the individual lies in the cutting
+off of the head of the victim, by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+which means alone the identity of
+the person to be ransomed may
+be settled beyond all question. As
+one who has suffered, I will say
+that I would not send a check for
+$20,000 to a bandit on the testimony
+of one ear any more than I would
+lend a man ten dollars on his own
+representation as to the meals he
+had not had, the drinks he wanted,
+or the date upon which he would
+pay it back.</p>
+
+<p>All these ideas flashed across my
+mind as I lay there worn in spirit
+and chilled to the bone. At last,
+however, after a considerable effort,
+I gathered myself together and resolved
+to investigate. I rose up,
+stood uncertainly on my feet, and
+was about to make my way towards
+the sources of the unexpected
+light, when a dark figure rushed
+past me. I tried to speak to it.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello, there!" said I, hoping
+to gain its attention and ask its<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+advice, since it came into the cavern
+in that breezy fashion which
+betokens familiarity with surroundings.
+The being, whatever it really
+was, and I was soon to find this
+out, turned a scornful and really
+majestic face upon me, as much
+as to say, "Who are you that
+should thus address a god?" The
+rushing thing wore a crown and
+flowing robes. Likewise it had a
+gray beard and an air of power
+which made me, a mere mortal,
+seem weak even in my own estimation.
+Furthermore, there was a divine
+atmosphere following in his wake.
+It suggested the most brilliant of
+brilliantine.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he cried as he passed.
+"I haven't time to listen to your
+story, but here is my card. I have
+no change about me. Call upon
+me to-morrow and I will attend to
+your needs."</p>
+
+<p>The card fluttered to my side, and,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+not being a mendicant, I paid little
+attention to it, preferring to watch
+this fast-disappearing figure until
+I should see whither it was going.
+Arriving at the far end of the cavern,
+the hurrying figure stopped and
+apparently pushed a button at the
+side of the wall. Immediately an
+iron door, which I had not before
+perceived, was pushed aside. The
+dark figure disappeared into what
+seemed to be a well-lighted elevator,
+and was promptly lifted out of sight.
+All became dark again, and I was
+frankly puzzled. This was a situation
+beyond my ken. What it could
+mean I could not surmise, and in
+the hope of finding a clew to the
+mystery I groped about in the
+darkness for the card which the hurried
+individual had cast at me with
+his words of encouragement. Ultimately
+I found it, but was unable
+to decipher its inscription, if perchance
+it had one. Nevertheless,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+I managed to keep my spirits up.
+This, I think, was a Herculean task,
+considering the darkness and my
+extreme lonesomeness. I can be
+happy under adverse circumstances,
+if only I have congenial company.
+But to lie alone, in a black cavern,
+prey only to the thoughts of my
+environment, thoughts suggesting
+all things apart from life, thoughts
+which send the mind over the past
+a thousand centuries removed&mdash;these
+are not comforting, and these were
+the only thoughts vouchsafed to
+me.</p>
+
+<p>A half-hour was thus passed in
+the darkness, and then the light appeared
+again, and I resolved, though
+little strength was left to me, to
+seek out its source. I stood up
+and staggered towards it, and as
+I drew nearer observed that the illumination
+came from nothing more
+nor less than an elevator at the bottom
+of a shaft, the magnitude of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+which I could not, of course, at the
+moment determine.</p>
+
+<p>The boy in charge was a pretty
+little chap, and, if I may so state
+it, was absolutely unclad, but about
+his shoulders was slung a strap
+which in turn held a leathern bag,
+which, to my eyes, suggested a
+golf-bag more than anything else,
+except that it was filled with arrows
+instead of golf-clubs.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do?" said I, politely.
+"Whose caddy are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," said the little lad.
+"Not much to brag of, however.
+Merely bobbish, pretty bobbish. In
+answer to your second question, I take
+pleasure in informing you," he added,
+"that I am everybody's caddy."</p>
+
+<p>"You are&mdash;the elevator boy?" I
+queried, with some hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>"That is my present position,"
+said he.</p>
+
+<p>"And, ah, whither do you elevate,
+my lad?"</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></a></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 288px;">
+<a href="images/image07h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image07.jpg" width="288" height="500" alt="IN THE ELEVATOR" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></a></span></p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+<p>"Up!" said he, after the manner
+of one who does not wish to commit
+himself, like most elevator boys.
+"But whom do you wish to see?"
+he demanded, trying hard to frown
+and succeeding only in making a ludicrous
+exhibition of himself.</p>
+
+<p>Frankly, I did not know, but under
+the impulse of the moment I handed
+out the card which the stranger
+had thrown to me.</p>
+
+<p>"I forget the gentleman's name,"
+said I, "but here is his card. He
+asked me to call."</p>
+
+<p>The elevator boy glanced at it,
+and his manner immediately
+changed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed. Very well, sir," he
+said. "I'll take you up right away.
+Step lively, please."</p>
+
+<p>I stepped into the elevator, and
+the lad turned a wheel which set
+us upon our upward journey at
+once.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to have been so rude<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+to you, sir," said the boy. "I didn't
+really know you were a friend of
+his."</p>
+
+<p>"Of whom?" I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"The old man himself," he replied,
+with which he handed me
+back the card I had given him, upon
+reading which I ascertained the
+name of the individual who had
+rushed past me so unceremoniously.</p>
+
+<p>The card was this:</p>
+
+<div class="bbox" style="width: 20em;">
+<table summary="Zeus's calling card">
+<colgroup span="3" width="200">
+</colgroup>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3" align='center'><big>MR. JUPITER JOVE ZEUS</big></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td></td><td></td><td align='center'><span class="smcap"><small>Mount Olympus</small></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td></td><td></td><td align='center'><span class="smcap"><small>Greece</small></span></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Top floor, sir," said the elevator
+boy, obsequiously.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 33]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="III" id="III"></a>III</h2>
+
+<h2>The Elevator Boy</h2>
+
+
+<p>"Known the old man long,
+sir?" queried the boy as
+we ascended.</p>
+
+<p>"By reputation," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Humph!" said the lad. "Can't
+have a very good opinion of him,
+then. It's a good thing you are
+going to have a little personal experience
+with him. He's not a bad
+lot, after all. Rotten things said of
+him, but then&mdash;you know, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as for that," said I, "I don't
+think his reputation is so dreadful.
+To be sure, there have been one or
+two little indiscretions connected with
+his past, and at times he has seemed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+a bit vindictive in chucking thunder-bolts
+at his enemies, but, on the
+whole, I fancy he's behaved himself
+pretty well."</p>
+
+<p>"True," said the boy. "And then
+you've got to take his bringing-up
+into consideration. Things which
+would be altogether wrong in the
+son of a Presbyterian clergyman
+would not be unbecoming in a descendant
+of old Father Time. Jupiter
+is, after all, a self-made immortal,
+and the fact that his parents, old
+Mr. and Mrs. Cronos, let him grow
+up sort of wild, naturally left its
+impress on his character."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said I, somewhat
+amused to hear the Thunderer's
+character analyzed by a mere infant.
+"But how about yourself, my laddie?
+Are you anybody in particular?
+You look like a cherub."</p>
+
+<p>"Some folks call me Dan," said
+the boy, "and I <i>am</i> somebody in
+particular. Fact is, sir, if it hadn't<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+been for me there wouldn't have
+been anybody in particular anywhere.
+I'm Cupid, sir, God of Love,
+favorite son of Venus, at your service."</p>
+
+<p>"And husband of the delectable
+Psyche?" I cried, recalling certain
+facts I had learned. "You look
+awfully young to be married."</p>
+
+<p>"Hum&mdash;well, I was, and I am,
+but we've separated," the boy replied,
+with a note of sadness in his
+voice. "She was a very nice little
+person, that Psyche&mdash;one of the
+best ever, I assure you&mdash;but she
+was too much of a butterfly to
+be the perpetual confidante of a
+person charged with such important
+matters as I am. Besides, she didn't
+get on with mother."</p>
+
+<p>"Seems to me that I have heard
+that Madame Venus did not approve
+of the match," I vouchsafed.</p>
+
+<p>"No. She didn't from the start,"
+said Cupid. "Psyche was too pretty,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+and ma rather wanted to corner all
+the feminine beauty in our family;
+but I had my way in the end. I
+generally do," the little chap added,
+with a chuckle.</p>
+
+<p>"But the separation, my dear
+boy?" I put in. "I am awfully
+sorry to hear of that. I, in common
+with most mortals, supposed that
+the marriage was idyllic."</p>
+
+<p>"It was," said Cupid, "and therefore
+not practical enough to be a
+good investment. You see, sir, there
+was a time when the love affairs
+of the universe were intrusted to
+my care. Lovers everywhere came
+to me to confide their woes, and I
+was doing a great business. Everybody
+was pleased with my way of
+conducting my department. I seemed
+to have a special genius for managing
+a love affair. Even persons
+who were opposed to the administration
+conceded that the Under Secretary
+of Home Affairs&mdash;myself&mdash;was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+assured of a cabinet office for life,
+whatever party was in power. If
+Pluto had been able to get elected,
+the force of public opinion would
+have kept me in office. Then I married,
+myself, and things changed.
+Like a dutiful husband, I had no
+secrets from my wife. I couldn't
+have had if I had wanted to.
+Psyche's curiosity was a close second
+to Pandora's, and, if she wanted
+to know anything, there was never
+any peace in the family until she
+found out all about it. Still, I didn't
+wish to have any secrets from her.
+As a scientific expert in Love, I knew
+that the surest basis of a lasting
+happiness lay in mutual confidence.
+Hence, I told Psyche all I knew,
+and it got her into trouble right
+away."</p>
+
+<p>"She&mdash;ah&mdash;couldn't keep a secret?"
+I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"At first she could," said Cupid.
+"That was the cause of the first<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+row between her and Venus. Mother
+got mad as a hatter with her one
+morning after breakfast because
+Psyche <i>could</i> keep a secret. There
+was a little affair on between Jupiter
+and a certain person whose name
+I shall not mention, and I had charge
+of it. Of course, I told Psyche all
+about it, and in some way known
+only to woman she managed to
+convey to Venus the notion that
+she knew all about it, but couldn't
+tell, and, still further, wouldn't tell.
+I'd gone down-town to business,
+leaving everything peaceful and
+happy, but when I got back to luncheon&mdash;Great
+Chaos, it was awful!
+The two ladies were not on speaking
+terms, and I had to put on a fur
+overcoat to keep from freezing to
+death in the atmosphere that had
+arisen between them. It was six
+inches below zero&mdash;and the way
+those two would sniff and sneer
+at each other was a caution."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I quite understand the situation,"
+I said, sympathetically.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt," said Cupid. "You
+can also possibly understand how a
+quarrel between the only two women
+you ever loved could incapacitate
+you for your duties. For ten days
+after that I was simply incapable
+of directing the love affairs of the
+universe properly. Persons I'd designed
+for each other were given to
+others, and a great deal of unhappiness
+resulted. There were nine
+thousand six hundred and seventy-six
+divorces as the result of that
+week's work. It's a terrible situation
+for a well-meaning chap to have
+to decide between his wife and his
+mother."</p>
+
+<p>"Never had it," said I; "but I
+can imagine it."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't think you can," sighed
+Cupid. "There are situations in
+real life, sir, which surpass the
+wildest flights of the imagination.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+That is why truth is stranger than
+fiction. However," he added, his
+face brightening, "it was a useful
+experience to me in my professional
+work. I learned for the first time
+that when a mother-in-law comes
+in at the door, intending to remain
+indefinitely, love flies out at the
+window. Or, as Solomon&mdash;I believe
+it was Solomon. He wrote
+Proverbs, did he not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said I. "He and Josh
+Billings."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," vouchsafed Cupid, "I can't
+swear as to the authorship of the
+proverb, but some proverbialist said
+'Two is company and three is a
+crowd.' I'd never known that before,
+but I learned it then, and began
+to stay away from home a little
+myself, so that we should not be
+crowded."</p>
+
+<p>I commended the young man for
+his philosophy.</p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless, my dear Dan," I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+added, "you ought to be more autocratic.
+Knowing that two is company
+and three otherwise, you have
+been guilty of allowing many a
+young couple who have trusted in
+you to begin house-keeping with an
+inevitable third person. We see it
+every day among the mortals."</p>
+
+<p>"What has been good enough
+for me, sir," the boy returned, with
+a comical assumption of sternness&mdash;he
+looked so like a fat baby of three
+just ready for his bath&mdash;"is good
+enough for mortals. When I married
+Psyche, I brought her home to
+my mother's house, and for some
+nineteen thousand years we lived
+together. If Love can stand it, mortals
+must."</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me," said I, apologetically.
+"I have not suffered. However,
+in all my study of you mythologians,
+it has never occurred to me
+before this that Venus was the goddess
+of the mother-in-law."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't blame me for that,"
+said Cupid, dryly. "I'm the god
+of Love; wisdom is out of my province.
+For what you don't know and
+haven't learned you must blame
+Pallas, who is our Superintendent
+of Public Instruction. She knows
+it all&mdash;and she got it darned easy,
+too. She sprang forth from the
+head of Jove with a Ph.D. already
+conferred upon her. She looks after
+the education of the world. I don't&mdash;but
+I'll wager you anything you
+please to put up that man gains
+more real experience under my
+management than he does from
+Athena's department, useful as her
+work is."</p>
+
+<p>I could not but admit the truth
+of all that the boy said, and of course
+I told him so. To change the subject,
+which, if pursued, might lead
+to an exposure of my own ignorance,
+I said:</p>
+
+<p>"But, Dan, what interests me
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 43]</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></a></span>most, and pains me most as well,
+is to hear that you are separated
+from Psyche. I do not wish to
+seem inquisitive on the subject of
+a&mdash;ah&mdash;of a man's family affairs"&mdash;I
+hesitated in my speech because
+he seemed such a baby and it was
+difficult to take him seriously, as
+is always the way with Love, unless
+we are directly involved&mdash;"but
+you have told me of the separation,
+and as a man, a newspaper-man,
+I am interested. Couldn't you reconcile
+your mother, Madame Venus,
+to Psyche&mdash;or, rather, Mrs.
+Dan?"</p>
+<p><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 285px;">
+<a href="images/image08h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image08.jpg" width="285" height="500" alt="&quot;&#39;THE GODDESS OF THE MOTHER-IN-LAW&#39;&quot;" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Not for a moment," replied the
+boy. "Not for a millionth part of
+a tenth of a quarter of a second
+by a stop-watch. Their irreconcilability
+was copper-fastened, and I
+found myself compelled to choose
+between them. My mother developed
+a gray hair the day after the
+first trouble, and my wife began to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+go out to afternoon teas and sewing-circles
+and dances. The teas
+and dances were all right. You can't
+talk at either. But the sewing-circle
+was ruin. At this particular time
+the circle was engaged in making
+winter garments for the children
+of the mother of the Gracchi. I
+presume that as a student and as a
+father you realize all that this meant.
+You also know that a sewing-circle
+needs four things: first, an object;
+second, a needle and thread; third,
+a garment; fourth, a subject for conversation.
+These things are constitutionally
+required, and Psyche
+joined what she called 'The Immortal
+Dorcas.' The result was
+that all Olympus and half of Hades
+were shortly acquainted with the
+confidential workings of my department&mdash;all
+told under the inviolate
+bond of secrecy, however, which
+requires that each member confided
+in shall not communicate what she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+has heard to more&mdash;or to less&mdash;than
+ten people."</p>
+
+<p>"I know," said I. "The Dorcas
+habit has followers among my own
+people."</p>
+
+<p>"But see where it placed me!"
+cried the little creature. "There was
+me, or I&mdash;I don't know whether
+Greek or English is preferable to
+you&mdash;charged with the love affairs
+of the universe. Confiding all I
+knew, like a dutiful husband, to
+my wife, and having her letting it
+all out to the public through the
+society. Why, my dear fellow, it
+wasn't long before the immortals
+began to accuse me of being in the
+pay of the Sunday newspapers, and
+you must know as well as anybody
+else that Love has nothing to do
+with them. Even the affairs of my
+sovereign began to creep out, and
+innuendoes connecting Jupiter with
+people prominent in society were
+printed in the opposition organs."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Poor chap!" said I, sympathetically.
+"I did not realize that you
+had to contend against the Sunday-newspaper
+nuisance as we mortals
+have."</p>
+
+<p>"We have," he said, quickly, almost
+resignedly; "and they are
+ruining even Olympus itself. Still,
+I made a stand. Told Psyche
+she talked too much, and from
+that time on confided in her no
+more."</p>
+
+<p>"And how did she take it?" I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"She declined to take it at all,"
+said Cupid, with a sigh. "She demanded
+that I should tell her everything
+on penalty of losing her&mdash;and
+I lost her. She left me a little
+over a thousand years ago, and my
+mother for the same reason sent me
+adrift fifteen hundred or more years
+ago. That is why I am eking out
+a living running an elevator," he
+added, sadly. "Still, I'm happy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+here. I go up when I feel sad, and
+go down when I feel glad. On the
+whole, I am as happy as any of the
+gods."</p>
+
+<p>"However, Dan," I cried, sympathetically,
+slapping him on the
+back, "you have your official position,
+and that will keep you in&mdash;ah&mdash;well,
+you don't seem to need 'em,
+but it would keep you in clothes
+if you could be persuaded to wear
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the little elevator boy,
+sadly. "I don't want 'em in this
+climate&mdash;nor are they necessary in
+any other. All over the world, my
+dear fellow, <i>true</i> love is ever
+warm."</p>
+
+<p>There was a decided interval.
+I felt sorry for the little lad who
+had been a god and who had become
+an elevator boy, so I said to
+him:</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, Danny, you are
+sure of your office always."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 48]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I wish it were so," said he, sadly.
+"But really, sir, it isn't. You may
+think that love rules all things nowadays,
+but that is a fallacy. Of
+late years a rival concern has sprung
+up. I have found my office subjected
+to a most annoying competition
+which has attracted away from
+me a large number of my closest
+followers. In the days when we
+acknowledged ourselves to be purely
+heathen, love was regarded with respect,
+but now all that is changed.
+Opposite my office in the government
+building there is a matrimonial corporation
+doing a very large business,
+by which the fees of my position
+are greatly reduced. Possibly after
+you have had your audience with
+Jove to-morrow you will take a
+turn about the city, in which event
+you will see this trust's big brazen
+sign. You can't miss it if you
+walk along Mercury Avenue. It
+reads:</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="bbox" style="width: 24em;">
+<table summary="Mammon's sign">
+<colgroup span="3" width="150">
+</colgroup>
+<tr><td colspan="5" align='center'>MAMMON &amp; CO.</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="5" align='center'>Matchmakers</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="5" align='center'><span class="smcap">Fortunes Guaranteed</span>:</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="5" align='center'><span class="smcap">Happiness Extra</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td></td><td></td><td colspan="3" align='left'><span class="smcap">Geo. W. Mammon</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td></td><td></td><td colspan="3" align='center'>President</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td></td><td></td><td colspan="3" align='left'><span class="smcap">Horace Greed</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td></td><td></td><td colspan="3" align='center'>Gen'l Manager</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='center'><span class="smcap"> branch office</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align='left'>67 Gehenna Ave., Hades</td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Dear me!" I cried. "Poor Love!"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't need your sympathy,"
+said the boy, quickly, drawing himself
+up proudly. "It can't last,
+this competition. Man and god
+kind will soon see the difference in
+the permanence of our respective
+output. This is only a temporary
+success they are having, and it often
+happens that the spurious articles
+put forth by Mammon &amp; Company
+are brought over to me to be repaired.
+My sun will dawn again.
+You can't put out the fires in my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+furnaces as long as men and women
+are made from the old receipt."</p>
+
+<p>Here the elevator stopped, and a
+rather attractive young woman appeared
+at the door.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is where you get out, sir,"
+said the elevator boy.</p>
+
+<p>"You are Mr.&mdash;&mdash;" began the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"I am," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"I have orders to show you to
+number 609," she said. "The proprietor
+will see you to-morrow at
+eleven."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you very much," I replied,
+somewhat overcome by the
+cordiality of my reception. It is
+not often that mere beggars are so
+hospitably received.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night, Cupid," I added,
+turning to the little chap in the
+elevator. "I trust we shall meet
+again."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I guess we will," he replied,
+with a wink at the maid. "I generally
+do meet most men two or three<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+times in their lives. So <i>au revoir</i>
+to you. Treat the gentleman well,
+Hebe," he concluded, pulling the
+rope to send the elevator back. "He
+doesn't know much, but he is sympathetic."</p>
+
+<p>"I will, Danny, for your sake,"
+said the little maid, archly.</p>
+
+<p>The boy laughed and the car
+faded from sight. Hebe, even more
+lovely than has been claimed, with
+a charmingly demure glance at my
+costume, which was wofully bedraggled
+and wet, said:</p>
+
+<p>"This way, sir. I will have your
+luggage sent to your room at once."</p>
+
+<p>"But I haven't any luggage, my
+dear," said I. "I have only what
+is on my back."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but you have," she replied,
+sweetly. "The proprietor has attended
+to that. There are five
+trunks, a hat-box, and a Gladstone
+bag already on their way up."</p>
+
+<p>And with this she showed me into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+a magnificent apartment, and, even
+as she had said, within five minutes
+my luggage arrived, a valet appeared,
+unpacked the trunks and
+bag, brushed off the hat that had
+lain in the hat-box, and vanished,
+leaving me to my own reflections.</p>
+
+<p>Surely Olympus was a great place,
+where one who appeared in the
+guise of a beggar was treated like
+a regiment of prodigal sons, furnished
+with a gorgeous apartment, and
+supplied with a wardrobe that would
+have aroused the envy of a reigning
+sovereign.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="IV" id="IV"></a>IV</h2>
+
+<h2>I Summon a Valet</h2>
+
+
+<p>The room to which I was
+assigned was regal in its
+magnificence, and yet comfortable.
+Few modern hotels
+afforded anything like it, and,
+tired as I was, I could not venture
+to rest until I had investigated
+it and its contents thoroughly. It
+was, I should say, about twenty
+by thirty feet in its dimensions, and
+lighted by a soft, mellow glow that
+sprang forth from all parts without
+any visible source of supply. At
+the far end was a huge window, before
+which were drawn porti&egrave;res of
+rich material in most graceful folds.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+Pulling these to one side, so that
+I might see what the outlook from
+the window might be, I staggered
+back appalled at the infinite grandeur
+of what lay before my eyes.
+It seemed as if all space were there,
+and yet within the compass of my
+vision. Planets which to my eye
+had hitherto been but twinkling
+specks of light in the blackness of
+the heavens became peopled worlds,
+which I could see in detail and recognize.
+Mars with its canals, Saturn
+with its rings&mdash;all were there
+before me, seemingly within reach
+of my outstretched hand. The world
+in which I lived appeared to have
+been removed from the middle distance,
+and those things which had
+rested beyond the ken of the mortal
+mind brought to my very feet, to
+be seen and touched and comprehended.</p>
+
+<p>Then I threw the window open,
+and all was changed. The distant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+objects faded, and a beautiful golden
+city greeted my eyes&mdash;the city
+of Olympus, in which I was to pass
+so many happy hours. For the
+instant I was puzzled. Why at
+one moment the treasures of the
+universe of space had greeted my
+vision, and how all that had faded
+and the immediate surroundings of
+a celestial city lay before me, were
+not easy to understand. I drew
+back and closed the window again,
+and at once all became clear; the
+window-glass held the magic properties
+of the magnifying-lens, developed
+to an intensity which annihilated
+all space, and I began to see
+that the development of mortals in
+scientific matters was puny beside
+that of the gods in whose hands
+lay all the secrets of the universe,
+although the principles involved were
+in our full possession.</p>
+
+<p>The situation overwhelmed me
+somewhat, and I drew the porti&egrave;res<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+together again. The feelings that
+came over me were similar to those
+that come to one standing on the
+edge of a great precipice gazing
+downward into the vast, black depths
+yawning at his feet. The giddiness
+that once, many years before, came
+upon me as I stood on the brink
+of the Niagaran cataract, which
+seemed irresistibly impelling me to
+join the mad rush of the waters,
+surged over me again, and I forced
+myself backward into the room,
+shutting out the sight, lest I should
+cast myself forth into the infinite
+space beyond. I threw myself down
+upon a couch and covered my eyes
+with my hands and tried to realize
+the situation. I was drunk with
+awe at all that was about me, and
+should, I think, have gone mad trying
+to comprehend its grandeur,
+had not my spirit been soothed
+by soft strains of music that now
+fell upon my ears.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I opened my eyes to discover
+whence the sounds had come, and
+even as the light streamed from
+unknown and unseen sources, so
+it was with the harmonies which
+followed, harmonies surpassing in
+beauty and swelling glory anything
+I had ever heard before.</p>
+
+<p>And to these magnificent but
+soft and soothing strains I yielded
+myself up and slept. How long
+my sleep continued I have no means
+of knowing. It seemed to last but
+an instant, but when I opened my
+eyes once more I felt absolutely renewed
+in body and in spirit. The
+damp garments which I had worn
+when I fell back upon the couch
+had in some wise been removed,
+and when I stood up to indulge in
+the usual stretching of my limbs I
+found myself clad in an immaculate
+flowing robe of white, soft of texture,
+fastened at the neck with a jewelled
+brooch, and at the waist its fulness<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+restrained by a girdle of gold. Furthermore,
+I had apparently been
+put through a process of ablution
+which left me with the cockles of
+my heart as warm as toast, and my
+whole being permeated with a glow
+of health which I had not known
+for many years. The aches in my
+bones, which I had feared on waking
+to find intensified, were gone; and
+if I could have retained permanently
+the aspect of vigor and beauty which
+was returned to me by the mirror
+when I stood before it, I should be
+in imminent danger of becoming
+conceited.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," said I, as I gazed
+at myself in the mirror, "if this is
+the correct costume for breakfast.
+It's a slight drawback to know
+nothing of the customs of the locality
+in which you find yourself. Possibly
+an investigation of my new
+wardrobe will help me to decide."</p>
+
+<p>I looked over the rich garments<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+which had been provided, and found
+nothing which, according to my
+simple bringing up, suggested the
+idea that it was a good thing to
+wear at the morning meal.</p>
+
+<p>"They ought to send me a valet,"
+I murmured. "Perhaps they will if
+I ring for one. Where the deuce is
+the bell, I wonder?"</p>
+
+<p>A search of the room soon divulged
+the resting-place of this desirable
+adjunct to the tourist's comfort.
+The dial system which has proved
+so successful in American hotels
+was in vogue here, except that it
+manifested a willingness on the
+part of the proprietor to provide
+the guest with a range of articles
+utterly beyond anything to be found
+in the purely mundane caravansary.
+I found that anything under the
+canopy that the mind of man could
+conceive of could be had by the mere
+pushing of a button. The disk of
+the electrical apparatus was divided<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+off into many sections, calling respectively
+for saddle-horses, symphony
+concerts, ocean steamships,
+bath-towels, stenographers; cocktails
+of all sorts, and some sorts
+of which I had never before heard,
+and all of which I resolved to try in
+discreet sequence; manicures, chiropodists,
+astrologers, prophets, clergymen
+of all denominations, plots for
+novelists&mdash;indeed, anything that any
+person in any station of life might
+chance to desire could be got for
+the ringing.</p>
+
+<p>My immediate need, however, was
+for a valet. Puzzled as to the manners
+and customs of the gods, I
+did not wish to make a bad appearance
+in the dining-room in a
+costume which should not be appropriate.
+I did think of ordering
+breakfast served in my room, but
+that seemed a very mortal and not
+a particularly godlike thing to do.
+Hence, I rang for a valet.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image09h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image09.jpg" width="500" height="331" alt="&quot;ANYTHING COULD BE GOT FOR THE RINGING&quot;" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></a></span></p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
+<p>"I will tell him to get out my
+morning-suit, and no doubt he will
+select the thing I ought to wear,"
+I said as I pressed the button.</p>
+
+<p>The response was instant. My
+fingers had hardly left the button
+when a superb creature stood before
+me. Whence he sprang I do
+not know. There were no opening
+of doors, no traps or false panels,
+that I could see. The individual
+simply materialized.</p>
+
+<p>"At your service, sir," said he,
+with a graceful obeisance.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me," I replied, overcome
+once more by what was going
+on. "I&mdash;ah&mdash;think there must
+be some mistake. I&mdash;ah&mdash;I didn't
+ring for a god, I rang for a
+valet."</p>
+
+<p>"I am the valet of Olympus, sir,"
+he replied, gracefully flicking a speck
+of dust from the calf of his leg, the
+contour of which was beautiful to
+look upon, clad in superbly fitting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 62]</a></span>
+silken tights. "Adonis, at your service.
+What can I do for you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I declare!" I cried, lost
+now in admiration of the way the
+gods were ordering things on Olympus.
+"So they've made you a valet,
+have they?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Adonis. "I hold
+office for the six months that I am
+here. You know that I am a resident
+of Olympus only half the time.
+The balance I live in Hades."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a common custom," said I.
+"Even with us, our swellest people
+go south for the winter."</p>
+
+<p>"Hum&mdash;yes," said Adonis, somewhat
+confused. "It's very good of
+you to draw that parallel. Your
+construction of the situation does
+credit to your sense of what is polite,
+sir. Unfortunately for me, however,
+my position is more like that of the
+habitual criminal who is sent to
+the penitentiary periodically. I have
+to go, whether I want to or not."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Still, it must be a pleasant variation,"
+I observed, forgetting that it
+is bad form to converse with a servant,
+and remembering only that
+I was addressing an old flame of
+Madame Venus. "Hades isn't a
+bad place for a little while, I should
+fancy."</p>
+
+<p>"True," sighed Adonis. "But the
+society there is very mixed. It's
+full of self-made immortals, whereas
+we are all immortals by birth."</p>
+
+<p>"And who, pray," I queried, "takes
+your place while you are below?"</p>
+
+<p>"Narcissus," he replied; "but
+there's generally a lot of complaint
+about him. He takes more pains
+dressing himself than he does in
+looking after guests, the result of
+which is that after my departure
+things get topsy-turvy, and by the
+time I get back, with the exception
+of Narcissus, there isn't a well-dressed
+god in all Olympus."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder, where such perfection<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+is possible," said I, "that they
+tolerate that."</p>
+
+<p>"They're not going to very much
+longer," said Adonis, and then he
+laughed. "Narcissus queered himself
+last season at the palace. Jove
+sent for him to trim his beard, and
+he nearly cut one of the old man's
+ears off. Investigation showed that
+instead of keeping his eye on what
+he was doing, he was looking at
+himself in the glass all the time.
+Jupiter in his anger hurled a thunderbolt
+at him, but, fortunately for
+Narcissus, he hurled it at the mirrored
+and not at the real Narcissus, and
+he escaped. The result is the rumor
+that he will be made head-waiter
+in the dining-room instead of valet
+next season, in which event I shall
+probably be allowed to remain here
+all through the year, or else they'll
+put Jason on."</p>
+
+<p>"And which would you prefer?"
+I asked.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image10h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image10.jpg" width="500" height="299" alt="&quot;JUPITER HURLED A THUNDER-BOLT AT HIM&quot;" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85"></a></span></p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+<p>"I think I'd rather have Jason
+put on," said Adonis. "While I
+don't care much for the climate of
+Hades, I am received there with
+much consideration socially, whereas
+up here I am only the valet.
+One doesn't mind being a nabob
+once in a while, you know. Besides&mdash;ah&mdash;don't
+say anything about
+it to anybody up here, but I'm getting
+a trifle tired of Venus. She
+is still beautiful, but you can't get
+over the idea that she's over four
+thousand years old. Furthermore,
+I met a little Fury down below last
+season who is simply ravishing."
+Here Adonis gave me a wink which
+made me rather curious to see the
+little Fury.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Adonis, Adonis!" I cried,
+shaking my finger at him; "still
+up to your old tricks, are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" he demanded. "My
+character is formed. <i>Noblesse oblige</i>
+is a good motto for us all, only when<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+one is born with <i>faiblesse</i> instead of
+<i>noblesse</i>, it becomes <i>faiblesse oblige</i>.
+Furthermore, sir, if I am to have
+the reputation, I must insist upon
+the perquisites."</p>
+
+<p>What I replied to this bit of moralizing
+I shall not put down here, since
+I have no wish to commit myself
+thus publicly. I will say, however,
+that I did not blame the youthful-looking
+person unreservedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Moreover, I have very fine apartments
+in Hades," he added, "and
+I should hate to give them up.
+I live at the select home for gods
+and gentlemen, kept by Madame
+Persephone. When she takes an
+interest in one of her boarders she
+is a mighty fine landlady, and,
+like most ladies, if I may say it
+with all due modesty, she has taken
+an interest in me. The result is
+that I have the best suite in the
+house, overlooking the Styx, and
+as fine a table as any one could<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+want. But I must ask your pardon,
+sir, for taking up so much of your
+time with my personal affairs. We
+both seem to have forgotten that I
+am here to wait upon you."</p>
+
+<p>"It has been very interesting,
+Adonis," I said. "And if it's anybody's
+fault, it is mine. What I
+wished of you was that you should
+get out my breakfast-suit, so that
+I might dress and go to the dining-room."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, sir," he replied, walking
+to the clothes-closet. "Pardon
+me, but&mdash;ah&mdash;what is your profession
+when at home?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you ask?" I queried.
+"Not that I am unwilling to tell
+you, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I merely wished to guide my
+selection of your garments. If you
+are a naval officer, I will put out
+your admiral's uniform. If you are
+a professional golfer, I'll get out
+your red coat."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I am a literary man," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" he observed, lifting his
+eyebrows. "Then, of course, you
+won't mind wearing these."</p>
+
+<p>And he hauled forth a pair of
+black-and-white trousers with checks
+as large as the squares of a chessboard,
+a blue cloth vest with white
+polka dots, and a long, gray Prince
+Albert coat, with mauve satin lapels.
+The shirt was pink and blue, stripes
+of each alternating, running cross-ways,
+a white collar, and a flaring
+red four-in-hand tie!</p>
+
+<p>"Great Scott, Adonis!" I cried.
+"Must I wear those?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're under no compulsion to
+do so," said he. "But I thought
+you said you were a literary man."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;literary men never care
+what they wear so long as they
+attract attention, do they?"</p>
+
+<p>I laughed. "We are not all built
+that way, Adonis," said I. "Some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+of us are modest and have a little
+taste."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's news to me," said he.
+"I guess it must be among the
+minor lights."</p>
+
+<p>"It is&mdash;generally," said I. "And
+if you don't mind, I'd rather wear
+the golf clothes."</p>
+
+<p>And I did.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 70]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="V" id="V"></a>V</h2>
+
+<h2>The Olympian Links</h2>
+
+
+<p>"There," said Adonis, as
+he put the finishing touch
+to my costume. "You look
+like a champion. Do you
+play golf, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"There's a difference of opinion
+about that, Adonis," I replied, my
+mind reverting to the number of
+handicap matches I hadn't won.
+"Some people who have observed
+my game say I don't. Have you
+links here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have we links?" he cried. "Well,
+rather. They're said to be the best
+in the universe."</p>
+
+<p>"And are they handy?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Very&mdash;in the season."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't quite catch the idea,"
+I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sometimes the course is
+nearer than it is at others. Come
+here a minute," he said, "and I'll
+point it out to you."</p>
+
+<p>He drew me to the wonderful
+window of which I have already
+spoken, and through the powerful
+glass pointed in the direction of Mars.</p>
+
+<p>"See that?" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I replied. "That is Mars."</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly," said Adonis. "Mars
+is the Olympian links. His distance
+from here varies, as you are probably
+aware. When Mars is near aphelion
+he is 61,800,000 miles away, but
+in his perihelion he gets it down
+to 33,800,000. That's why we have
+our golf season while Mars is in
+his perihelion. It saves us 28,000,000
+miles in getting there."</p>
+
+<p>I laughed. "You call that handy,
+do you?" I said.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 72]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" he asked. "It's a
+matter of five minutes on a bike,
+ten minutes in the automobile, and
+twenty minutes if you walk."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, Adonis," said I, "I'm
+not so green as to swallow all that.
+How the dickens can you walk
+through space?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're vastly greener than you
+think you are," he retorted, rather
+uncivilly, perhaps, for a valet, but I
+paid no attention to that, preferring
+to take him, despite his menial
+capacity, in his godlike personality.
+"I might even say, sir, that your
+greenness is spacious. You judge
+us from your own mean, limited,
+mundane point of view. But you
+needn't think because you earth
+people cannot walk on air we Olympians
+are equally incapacitated.
+You can walk there in two ways.
+One of these is to fasten a pair of
+ankle-wings on your legs; the other
+is to purchase a pair of sky-scrapers.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+These are simple, consisting merely
+of boots with gas soles. You inflate
+the soles with gas and walk along.
+It's simple and easy, doesn't require
+any practice, and as long as
+you keep up in the air and don't
+step on church steeples or weather-vanes
+it's perfectly safe. Of course,
+if you stepped on a sharp-pointed
+weather-vane, or a lightning-rod,
+and punctured your sole,
+there's no telling what would happen."</p>
+
+<p>"And how about the wings?"
+I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"They're much more exhilarating,
+but a little dangerous if you don't
+know how to use them," Adonis
+replied. "Flying isn't any easier
+than roller-skating, and if you upset
+and get your head below your feet
+it's extremely difficult to right yourself
+again. If you try to go out
+there with ankle-wings, take my
+advice and wear a pair of small<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+balloons about your chest to hold
+you right-end upward."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll remember," said I, somewhat
+awed at the prospect of trying to
+walk through space with the aid
+of ankle-wings. "And how about
+the bicycle?" I added.</p>
+
+<p>"If you can ride a bicycle on
+an ordinary road you'll have no
+trouble," he replied. "Keep your
+tires well filled with gas and avoid
+headers. If I were you, though, at
+first I'd go out on the automobile.
+It makes six round trips a day and
+it's absolutely safe. Being so high
+up in the air might make you dizzy,
+and you might find the bicycling
+too much for your nerves. After a
+little while you'll get used to enormous
+heights, and then, of course,
+you can go any old way you choose.
+The fare for the round trip is only
+fifteen hundred dollars."</p>
+
+<p>"The automobile is in competent
+hands, eh?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Adonis. "Phaeton
+has charge of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph!" I sneered. "He's your
+idea of a competent driver, eh? He
+hasn't that reputation on earth.
+Was it an untruth that credits him
+with a fine smash-up when he tried
+to drive the chariot of the sun?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it," said Adonis.
+"That's all of it simple truth. I
+happen to know, because I saw the
+finish of the whole thing myself, and
+was one of the fellows who turned a
+fire-extinguisher on him and saved
+him from being a total loss to the
+insurance companies. But he learned
+his lesson. There's nothing like
+experience to teach caution, and
+that little episode gave Phaeton
+caution to burn, if I may indulge
+in mundane slang. He was guyed
+so unmercifully by everybody for
+his carelessness that the first thing
+he did when he recovered was to
+learn how to drive, and it wasn't<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+six cycles before he was the most
+expert whip in Olympus. He finally
+made a profession of it and established
+a livery-stable. Then, when the
+automobile came in and horses went
+out of fashion, he kept up with
+the times, and is to-day in charge
+of all our rapid transit&mdash;he owns
+the franchises for the Jupiter and
+Dipper Trolley Road, he is the largest
+stockholder in the Metropolitan
+Traction Company of Neptune, Saturn,
+and Venus, and is said to be
+the moving spirit back of the new
+underground electric in Hades."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess he'll do," said I, reflecting
+with admiration upon the wonderful
+self-rehabilitation of one I had previously
+regarded as a foolish incompetent.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't have to guess again
+in this case," said Adonis, dryly.
+"You've hit it right the very first
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, tell me about the links,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+Adonis," said I. "Getting there
+seems to be an easy matter, but
+after you get there, how about the
+course? Is it eighteen holes?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is," said Adonis, "and of
+proper length, too, and splendidly
+arranged. You start at the club-house
+right near the landing-stage
+and play right around the planet,
+so that when you're through you're
+back at the club-house again. At
+the ninth hole there is a half-way
+house, where you can get nectar,
+and ambrosia, and sarsaparilla, and
+any other soft drink you want."</p>
+
+<p>"No hard drinks, eh?" I queried.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at the half-way house," said
+Adonis. "We gods have too much
+sense to indulge in hard drinks in
+the middle of a game. If you want
+hard drinks you have to wait till
+you get back to the club-house."</p>
+
+<p>"That is rather sensible," I said,
+as I thought of how a Martini cocktail
+taken at the ninth hole had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+ruined my chances in the Noodleport
+Annual Handicap last autumn.
+"But I say, Adonis," I added, "did
+I understand you to say that you
+played all around Mars?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;why not?" said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty long holes, I should say,"
+said I. "Mars is four thousand
+miles round, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>are</i> an earth-worm," he
+retorted, forgetting his place wholly
+in his scorn for my picayune ideas.
+"Calling a paltry four thousand miles
+long&mdash;why, you can play around
+that links in two hours and a half."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed?" said I. "And how long
+may your hours be? Everything
+here is on such a magnificent scale,
+I suppose one of your hours is about
+equal to one of our decades."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no," said Adonis. "It isn't
+that way at all. Fact is, we make
+our hours to suit ourselves. I am
+merely reckoning on a basis that
+you would comprehend. I meant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+two and a half of your hours. Any
+moderately expert player can play
+the Mars links in that time. Take
+the first hole, for instance&mdash;it's only
+two hundred and fifty miles long."</p>
+
+<p>"Really&mdash;is that all!" I ejaculated,
+growing sarcastic. "A drive, two
+brassies, an approach, and forty
+puts, I presume?"</p>
+
+<p>"For a duffer, perhaps," retorted
+Adonis. "Willie Ph&#339;bus does it
+in six. A seventy-five-mile drive,
+a seventy-mile brassie, a loft over
+the canal for twenty-five miles, a
+forty-five-mile cleak, a thirty-mile
+approach, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A dead easy put of five miles!"
+I put in, making a pretence of being
+no longer astonished.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the idea," said Adonis.
+"Of course, everybody can't do it,"
+he added. "And bogie for that
+hole is really seven. Willie Ph&#339;bus
+played too well for a gentleman, so
+we made him a professional. He'll<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+give you lessons for a thousand
+dollars an hour, if you want him
+to."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," said I. "I'll think
+about it. Can he teach me how to
+drive a ball seventy-five miles?"</p>
+
+<p>"That depends on your capacity,"
+said Adonis. "Some of the best
+players frequently drive seventy-five
+miles&mdash;the record is ninety-six
+miles, made by Jove himself.
+Willie taught him."</p>
+
+<p>"For Heaven's sake!" I cried,
+losing my self-poise for an instant.
+"What do you drive with? Olympian
+Gatling guns?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all," replied Adonis. "We
+use one of our regular drivers&mdash;the
+best is called the 'celestial catapult.'
+Ph&#339;bus sells 'em at the Caddie House
+for five hundred dollars apiece. If
+you strike a ball fair and square
+with the 'celestial catapult,' and
+neither pull nor slice, it can't help
+going forty miles, anyhow."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And how, may I ask, do the caddies
+find a ball that goes seventy-five
+miles?"</p>
+
+<p>"They don't have to. All our
+balls are self-finding," said Adonis.
+"The ball in use now is a recent
+invention of Vulcan's. They cost
+twelve hundred dollars a dozen.
+They are made of liquefied electricity.
+We take the electric current,
+liquefy it, then solidify it, then
+mould it into the form of a sphere.
+Inside we place a little gong, that
+begins to ring as soon as the ball
+lands. The electricity in it is what
+makes it fly so rapidly and so far,
+and even you mortals know the principle
+of the electric bell."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed we do," said I, pulling
+at my mustache nervously. I
+was beginning to get excited over
+this celestial golf. On earth I have
+all of the essentials of a first-class
+golf maniac, except the ability to
+play the game. But this so far<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+surpassed anything I had ever seen
+or imagined before that I was growing
+too keen over it for comfort.
+I was in real need of having my
+spirits curbed, so I ventured to inquire
+after a phase of the game
+that has always dampened my ardor
+in the past&mdash;the caddie service. I
+did not expect that this could attain
+perfection even in Olympus, and I
+was not far wrong.</p>
+
+<p>"You must have pretty lively
+caddies," I threw out.</p>
+
+<p>Adonis sighed. "You'd think so,
+but that's where we are always
+in trouble. We've tried various
+schemes, but they haven't any of
+'em worked well. At first we took
+our own Olympian boys. We got
+the mother of the Gracchi to lend
+us her offspring, but they weren't
+worth a rap. Then we hired forty
+little devils from Hades, and we
+had to send them back inside of a
+week. They were regular little imps.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+They were cutting up monkey shines
+all the time, and waggled their
+horrid little tails so constantly that
+Jove himself couldn't keep his eye
+on the ball&mdash;and the language they
+used was something frightful. You
+couldn't trust them to clean your
+clubs, because there wasn't any power
+anywhere that could keep them
+from running off with 'em; and in
+the matter of balls, they'd steal
+every blessed one they could lay
+their hands on. We finally had to
+employ cherubs. We've about sixty
+of 'em on hand now all the time,
+and they come as near being perfect
+as you could expect. Ever see a
+cherub?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only in pictures," said I.
+"They're just heads with wings,
+aren't they?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Adonis, "and, having
+no bodies, they're seldom in the
+way, and some of the best of 'em
+can fly almost as fast as the ball."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 84]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"How do they carry the bags?"
+I asked, much interested.</p>
+
+<p>"They hang 'em about their necks,
+just above their wings," Adonis
+explained, "but even they are not
+perfect. They fly very carelessly,
+and often, in swooping about the
+sky, drop your clubs out of the bag
+and smash 'em; and they all look
+so infernally alike that you can
+never tell your own caddy from
+the other fellow's, which is sometimes
+very confusing."</p>
+
+<p>"Still," I put in, "a caddie with
+no pockets is a very safe person to
+intrust with golf balls."</p>
+
+<p>"That's very true," said Adonis,
+"and I suppose the cherubs make
+as good caddies as we can expect.
+Caddies will be caddies, and that's
+the end of it. You can't expect
+a caddie to do just right any more
+than you can expect water to flow
+uphill. There are certain immutable
+laws of the universe which
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 85]</a></span>are as unchangeable in Olympus
+as on earth or in Hades. Ice is
+cold, fire is hot, water is wet, and
+caddies are caddies."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image11h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image11.jpg" width="500" height="323" alt="THE OLYMPIAN LINKS" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Very true," said I, reflecting
+upon the ways of "Some Caddies
+I have Met." "What do you pay
+them a round?"</p>
+
+<p>"One hundred and twenty-five
+dollars," said Adonis.</p>
+
+<p>"Cheap enough," said I. "But
+tell me, Adonis," I continued, "who
+is your amateur champion?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jupiter, of course," said Adonis,
+with an impatient shake of his
+head. "He's champion of everything.
+It's one of his prerogatives.
+We don't any of us dare win a cup
+from him for fear he'll use his power
+to destroy us. That is one of the
+features of this Olympian life that
+is not pleasant&mdash;though, for goodness'
+sake, don't say I told you!
+He'd send me into perpetual exile if
+he knew I'd spoken that way. He's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+threatened to make me Governor-General
+of the Dipper half a dozen
+times already for things I've said,
+and I have to be very careful, or
+he'll do it."</p>
+
+<p>"An unpleasant post, that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said, "I don't exactly
+know how to compare it so that
+you would understand precisely. I
+should say, however, it would be
+about as agreeable as being United
+States ambassador to Borneo."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll never tell, Adonis," said I,
+"and I'm very much obliged to
+you for our pleasant chat. Your
+description of the links has interested
+me hugely. If I could afford a
+game at your prices, I think I'd play."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as for that," said Adonis,
+laughing, "don't let that bother
+you. Whenever you want to pay
+a bill here all you have to do is to
+press the cash button on the teleseme
+over there, and they'll send the money
+up from the office."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 87]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But how shall I ever repay the
+office?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Press the button to the left of
+it, and they'll send you up a receipt
+in full," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean to say that this hotel
+is run&mdash;" I began.</p>
+
+<p>"On the Olympian plan," interrupted
+the valet with a low bow.
+"All bills here are of that pleasing
+variety known as 'Self-paying.'"</p>
+
+<p>With which comforting assurance
+Adonis left me, and I started for the
+dining-room, my appetite considerably
+whetted by the idea of a game of
+golf over links four thousand miles
+in length with balls that could be
+driven fifty or sixty miles, and cherubs
+for caddies, at no cost to myself
+whatsoever.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="VI" id="VI"></a>VI</h2>
+
+<h2>In the Dining-Room</h2>
+
+
+<p>As I emerged from the door
+of my room into the hall, I
+found a small sedan-chair,
+of highly ornamental make,
+awaiting my convenience, carried
+upon the shoulders of two diminutive
+boys, who were as black, and shone
+as lustrously, as a bit of highly
+polished ebony. I had never seen
+their like before, save in an occasional
+bit of statuary in Italy,
+wherein marbles of differing hue
+and shade had been ingeniously
+used by the sculptor to give color
+to his work. The boys themselves,
+as I have said, were of polished<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+ebony hue, while the breech-cloths
+which formed their sole garment were
+of purest alabaster white. Upon
+their heads were turbans of pink.
+They grinned broadly as I came
+out, and opened the door of the chair
+for me.</p>
+
+<p>"Dis way fo' de dinin'-room,
+sah," said one of them, showing
+a set of ivory teeth that dazzled
+my eyes.</p>
+
+<p>I thanked him and entered the
+chair. When I was seated, I turned
+to the little chap.</p>
+
+<p>"What particular god do you
+happen to be, Sambo?" I asked.
+It was probably not the most reverent
+way to put it, but in a community
+like Olympus gods are really at a
+discount, and the black particle was
+so like a small pickaninny I used
+to know in Savannah that I could
+not address him as if he were Jupiter
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Massy me, massa," he returned,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+his smile nearly cutting the top
+of his head off, reaching as it did
+around to the back of his ears. "I
+ain' no gord. I'se jess one o' dese
+low-down or'nary toters. Me an'
+him totes folks roun' de hotel."</p>
+
+<p>"A very useful function that,
+Sambo; and where were you born?" I
+asked. "North Carolina, or Georgia?"</p>
+
+<p>"Me?" he replied, looking at me
+quizzically. "I guess yo's on'y foolin',
+massa. Me? Why, I 'ain't never
+been borned at all, sah&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Jess growed, eh&mdash;like Topsy?"
+I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Who dat, Topsy?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, she was a little nigger girl
+that became very famous," I explained.</p>
+
+<p>"Doan' know nuffin' 'bout no
+Topsy," he said, shaking his head.
+"We ain' niggers, eider, yo' know,
+me an' him ain't. We's statulary."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" I cried. The word seemed
+new.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 91]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Statulary," he continued. "We
+was carved, we was. There ain't
+nothin' borned 'bout us. Never
+knowed who pap was. Man jess
+took a lot o' mahble, he did, an'
+chiselled me an' him out."</p>
+
+<p>I eyed both boys closely and
+perceived that in all probability he
+spoke the truth. His flesh and dress
+had all of the texture of marble,
+but now the question came up as to
+the gift of speech and movement
+and the marvellous and graceful
+flexibility of their limbs.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't fool me, Sambo,"
+said I. "You're nothing but a
+very good-looking little nigger. You
+can't make me believe that you are
+another Galatea."</p>
+
+<p>"Doan' no nuffin' 'bout no gal's
+tears," he returned instantly. "But
+I done tole yo' de truf. Me an'
+him was chiselled out o' brack marble
+by pap. Ef we'd been borned
+we'd been niggahs sho' nuff, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+bein' carvin's, like I tole yuh, we's
+statulary."</p>
+
+<p>"But how does it come that if
+you are only statuary, you can
+move about, and talk, and breathe?"
+I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Yo'll have to ask mistah Joop'ter
+'bout dat," the boy answered. "He
+done gave us dese gif's, an' we's
+a-usin' ob 'em. De way it happened
+was like o' dis. Me an' him was
+a standin' upon a petterstal down
+in one o' dem mahble yards what
+dey calls gall'ries in Paris. We'd
+been sent dah by de man what done
+chiselled us, an' Joop'ter he came
+'long wid Miss' Juno an' when he
+seed us he said: 'Dare you is, Juno!
+Dem boys'll make mighty good
+buttonses foh de hotel.' Juno she
+laffed, an' said dat was so, on'y
+she couldn't see as we had many
+buttons. 'Would you like to have
+'em?' Joop'ter ast, and she said
+'suttinly.' So he tu'ned hisself into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+a 'Merican millionaire an' bought
+me an' him off 'n de manager, an'
+he had us sent here. All dat time
+we was nuffin' but mahble figgers,
+but soon's we arrived here, Joop'ter
+sent us up-stairs to de lab'ratory,
+an' fust ting me an' him knowed
+we was livin' bein's."</p>
+
+<p>I admired Jupiter's taste, not failing
+either to marvel at the wonderful
+power which only once before,
+as far as I knew, he had exerted to
+give to a bit of sculpture all the
+flush and glory of life, as in the
+case set forth in the pathetic tale
+of Pygmalion and Galatea.</p>
+
+<p>"And does he do this sort of thing
+often?" I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Yass indeedy," said Sambo.
+"He's doin' it all de time. Mos'
+ob de help in dis hotel is statulary,
+an' ef yo' wants to see a reel lively
+time 'foh yo' goes back home, go
+to de Zoo an' see 'em feed de Trojan
+Hoss, an' de Cardiff Giant. He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+brang bofe dem freaks to life, an' now
+he can't get rid ob 'em. Dat Trojan
+Hoss suttinly am a berry debbil.
+He stans up gentle as a lamb tell he
+gets about a hundred an' fifty people
+inside o' him, an' den he p'tends
+like he's gwine to run away, an'
+he cyanters, an' cyanters aroun',
+tell ebberybody's dat seasick dey
+can't res'."</p>
+
+<p>I resolved then and there to see
+the Trojan Horse, but not to get
+inside of him. I never before had
+suspected that the famous beast
+had a sense of humor in his makeup.
+I was about to make some
+further inquiry when a bell above
+us began to sound forth sonorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Massy me!" cried little Sambo,
+springing to his place in front of
+the chair. "Dat's de third an' lass
+call for breakfas'. We done spent
+too much time talkin'."</p>
+
+<p>With which observation, he and
+his companion, shouldering their burden,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+trotted along the richly furnished
+hall to the dining-room. I then
+observed a charming feature of life
+in the Olympian Hotel, and I presume
+it obtains elsewhere in that
+favored spot. There are no such
+things as stairs within its walls.
+From the magnificent office on the
+ground floor to the glorious dining-room
+on the forty-eighth, the broad
+corridor runs round and round and
+round again with an upward incline
+that is barely perceptible&mdash;indeed,
+not perceptible at all either
+to the eye or to the muscles of the
+leg. And while there are the most
+speedy elevators connecting all the
+various floors, one can, if one chooses,
+walk from cellar to roof of this marvellous
+place without realizing that
+he is mounting to an unusual elevation.
+And in the evening these
+corridors form a magnificent parade,
+brilliantly lighted, upon which are
+to be met all the wealth, beauty, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+fashion of Olympus&mdash;alas! that I
+have no means of returning there
+with certain of my friends with
+whom I would share the good things
+that have come into my life!</p>
+
+<p>But to return to the story. Sambo
+and his brother soon "toted" me
+to the entrance of the dining-room&mdash;graceful
+little beggars they were,
+too.</p>
+
+<p>"Your breakfast is ready, sir,"
+said the head waiter, bowing low.</p>
+
+<p>What impelled me to do so I shall
+never know, but it was an inspiration.
+I seemed to recognize the
+man at once, and, as I had frequently
+done on earth to my own advantage,
+I addressed him by name.</p>
+
+<p>"Having a good season, Memnon?"
+I said, slipping a silver dollar into
+his hand.</p>
+
+<p>It worked. Whether I should have
+found the same excellent service
+had I not spoken pleasantly to him
+I, of course, cannot say, but I have<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+never been so well cared for elsewhere.
+The captious reader may
+ask how anything so essentially
+worldly as a silver dollar ever crept
+into Olympus. I can only say that
+one of the magic properties of the
+garment I wore was that whatever
+I put my hand into my pocket for,
+I got. As a travelled American,
+realizing the potency under similar
+conditions of that heavy and ugly
+coin, I instinctively sought for it
+in my pocket and it was there. I
+do not attempt to explain the process
+of its getting there. It suffices
+to say that, as the guest of the gods,
+my every wish was met with speedy
+attainment. I could not help but
+marvel, too, at the appropriateness
+of everything. What better than
+that the King of the Ethiopians
+should be head waiter to the gods!</p>
+
+<p>"Things are never dull here, sir,"
+said Memnon, pocketing my dollar
+and escorting me to my table. "We<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+do not often have visitors like yourself,
+however, and we are very glad
+to see you."</p>
+
+<p>I sat down before a magnificent
+window which seemed to open out
+upon a universe hitherto undreamed
+of.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you wish the news, sir?"
+Memnon asked, respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said I. "Ah&mdash;news from
+home, Memnon," I added.</p>
+
+<p>"Political or merely family?" said
+he.</p>
+
+<p>"Family," said I.</p>
+
+<p>Memnon busied himself about the
+window and in a moment, gazing
+through it, I had the pleasure of
+seeing my two boys eating their
+supper and challenging each other
+to mortal combat over a delinquent
+strawberry resting upon the tablecloth.</p>
+
+<p>"Give me a little politics, Memnon,"
+said I, as the elder boy thrashed
+the younger, not getting the strawberry,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+however, which in a quick
+moment, between blows, the younger
+managed to swallow. "They seem
+to be about as usual at home."</p>
+
+<p>And I was immediately made aware
+of the intentions of the administration
+at Washington merely by looking
+through a window. There were
+the President and his cabinet and&mdash;some
+others who assist in making
+up the mind of the statesman.</p>
+
+<p>"Now a dash of crime," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"High or low?" asked Memnon,
+fingering the push-button alongside
+of the window.</p>
+
+<p>"The highest you've got," said I.</p>
+
+<p>I shall not describe what I saw.
+It was not very horrible. It was
+rather discouraging. It dealt wholly
+with the errors of what is known
+as Society. It showed the mistakes
+of persons for whom I had acquired
+a feeling of awe. It showed so
+much that I summoned Memnon
+to shut the glass off. I was really<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+afraid somebody else might see.
+And I did not wish to lose my respect
+for people who were leaders in the
+highest walks of social life. Still,
+a great many things that have
+happened since in high life have
+not been wholly surprising to me.
+I have furthermore so ordered my
+own goings and comings since that
+time that I have no fear of what
+the Peeping Toms of Olympus may
+see. If mankind could only be made
+to understand that this window of
+Olympus opens out upon every act
+of their lives, there might be radical
+reforms in some quarters where it
+would do a deal of good, although
+to the general public there seems to
+be no need for it.</p>
+
+<p>At this point a waiter put a small
+wafer about as large as a penny
+upon the table.</p>
+
+<p>"H'm&mdash;what's that, Memnon?" I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Essence of melon," said he.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Good, is it?" I queried.</p>
+
+<p>"You might taste it and see, sir,"
+he said, with a smile. "It is one
+of a lot especially prepared for Jupiter."</p>
+
+<p>I put the thing in my mouth, and
+oh, the sensation that followed! I
+have eaten melons, and I have dreamed
+melons, but never in either experience
+was there to be found such
+an ecstasy of taste as I now got.</p>
+
+<p>"Another, Memnon&mdash;another!" I
+cried.</p>
+
+<p>"If you wish, sir," said he. "But
+very imprudent, sir. That wafer was
+constructed from six hundred of
+the choicest&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite right," said I, realizing
+the situation; "quite right. Six hundred
+melons <i>are</i> enough for any
+man. What do you propose to give
+me now?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Oeufs Midas</i>," said Memnon.</p>
+
+<p>"Sounds rather rich," I observed.</p>
+
+<p>"It would cost you 4,650,000 francs<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+for a half portion at a Paris caf&eacute;,
+if you could get it there&mdash;which
+you can't."</p>
+
+<p>"And what, Memnon," said I, "is
+the peculiarity of eggs <i>Midas</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's nothing but an omelet, sir,"
+he replied; "but it is made of eggs
+laid by the goose of whom you have
+probably read in the <i>Personal Recollections
+of Jack the Giant-Killer</i>.
+They are solid gold."</p>
+
+<p>"Heavens!" I cried. "Solid gold!
+Great Scott, Memnon, I can't digest
+a solid gold omelet. What do you
+think I am&mdash;an assay office?"</p>
+
+<p>Memnon grinned until every tooth
+in his head showed, making his
+mouth look like the keyboard of a
+grand piano.</p>
+
+<p>"It is perfectly harmless the way
+it is prepared in the kitchen, sir,"
+he explained. "It isn't an eighteen-karat
+omelet, as you seem to think.
+The eggs are solid, but the omelet
+is not. It is, indeed, only six karats<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+fine. The alloy consists largely of
+lactopeptine, hydrochloric acid, and
+various other efficient digestives
+which render it innocuous to the
+most delicate digestion."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, Memnon," I replied,
+making a wry face, "bring it on.
+I'll try a little of it, anyhow." I
+must confess it did not sound inviting,
+but a guest should never criticise
+the food that is placed before him.
+My politeness was well repaid, for
+nothing more delicate in the way
+of an omelet has ever titillated my
+palate. There was a slight metallic
+taste about it at first, but I
+soon got over that, just as I have
+got used to English oysters, which,
+when I eat them, make me feel for a
+moment as if I had bitten off the
+end of a brass door-knob; and had
+I not calculated the cost, I should
+have asked for a second helping.</p>
+
+<p>Memnon then brought me a platter
+containing a small object that looked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+like a Hamburg steak, and a most
+delicious cup of <i>caf&eacute; au lait</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Filet Olympus," he observed,
+"and coffee direct from the dairy
+of the gods."</p>
+
+<p>Both were a joy.</p>
+
+<p>"Never tasted such a steak!" I
+said, as the delicate morsel actually
+melted like butter in my mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, you never did," Memnon
+agreed. "It is cut from the steer
+bred for the sole purpose of supplying
+Jupiter and his family with
+tenderloin. We take the calf when
+it is very young, sir, and surround
+it with all the luxuries of a bovine
+existence. It is fed on the most
+delicate fodder, especially prepared
+by chemists under the direction of
+&AElig;sculapius. The cattle, instead of
+toughening their muscles by walking
+to pasture, are waited upon
+by cow-boys in livery. A gentle
+amount of exercise, just enough
+to keep them in condition, is taken
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 105]</a></span>at regular hours every day, and
+at night they are put to sleep in
+feather beds and covered with eiderdown
+quilts at seven o'clock."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't they rebel?" I asked. "I
+should think a moderately active
+calf would be hard to manage that
+way."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image12h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image12.jpg" width="500" height="324" alt="CARING FOR THE CALVES" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Oh, at first a little, but after
+a while they come to like it, and
+by the time they are ready for killing
+they are as tender as humming
+birds' tongues," said Memnon. "If
+you take him young enough, you
+can do almost anything you like
+with a calf."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed like a marvellous scheme,
+and far more humane than that of
+fattening geese for the sale of their
+livers.</p>
+
+<p>"And this coffee, Memnon? You
+said it was fresh from the dairy of
+the gods. You get your coffee from
+the dairy?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"The breakfast coffee&mdash;yes, sir,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+replied Memnon. "Fresh every
+morning. You must ask the steward
+to let you see the <i>caf&eacute;-au-lait</i> herd&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The what?" I demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>caf&eacute;-au-lait herd</i>," repeated
+Memnon. "A special permit is required
+to go through the coffee
+pasture where these cows are fed.
+Some one, who had a grudge against
+Pales, who is in charge of the dairymaids,
+got into the field one night
+and sowed a lot of chicory in with
+the coffee, and the result was that
+the next season we got the worst
+coffee from those cows you ever
+tasted. So they made a rule that
+no one is allowed to go there any
+more without a card from the steward."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean to say&mdash;" I
+began.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do," said Memnon. "It
+is true. We pasture our cows on a
+coffee farm, and, instead of milk,
+we get this that you are drinking."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Wonderful idea!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"It is, indeed," said Memnon;
+"that is, from your point of view.
+From ours, it does not seem so
+strange. We are used to marvels
+here, sir," he continued. "Would
+you care for anything more, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Memnon," said I. "I have
+fared sumptuously&mdash;my&mdash;ah&mdash;my
+appetite is somewhat taken away by
+all these tremendous things."</p>
+
+<p>"I will have an appetite up for
+you, if you wish," he replied, simply,
+as if it were the easiest thing in
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>"No, thank you," said I. "I
+think I'll wait until I am acclimated.
+I never eat heavily for the first
+twenty-four hours when I am in a
+strange place."</p>
+
+<p>And with this I went to the door,
+feeling, I must confess, a trifle ill.
+The steak and coffee were all right,
+but there was a suggestion of pain
+in my right side. I could not make<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+up my mind if it were the six hundred
+melons or whether a nugget from
+the omelet had got caught in my
+vermiform appendix.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate, I didn't wish to eat
+again just then.</p>
+
+<p>At the door the sedan-chair and
+the two little blackamoors were awaiting
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"We have orders to take you to
+the Zoo, sah," said Sambo.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, Sambo," said I. "I'm
+all ready. A little air will do me
+good."</p>
+
+<p>And we moved along.</p>
+
+<p>I forgot to mention that, as he
+closed the chair door upon me,
+Memnon handed me back the silver
+dollar I had given him.</p>
+
+<p>"What is this, Memnon?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"The dollar you wished me to
+keep for you, sir," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"But I intended it for you," said I.</p>
+
+<p>His face flushed.</p>
+
+<p>"I am just as much obliged, sir,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+but, really, I couldn't, you know.
+We don't take tips in Olympus, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed?" said I. "Well&mdash;I'm
+sorry to have offended you, Memnon.
+I meant it all right. Why didn't
+you tell me when I gave it you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should have given you a check
+for it, sir. I supposed you didn't
+wish to carry anything so heavy
+about with you."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said I, replacing the dollar
+in my pocket. "Thank you for
+your care of it, Memnon. No offence,
+I hope?"</p>
+
+<p>"None at all, sir," he replied,
+again showing his wonderful ivory
+teeth. "I don't take offence at anything
+so trifling. Had you handed
+me a billion dollars, I should have
+declined to wait on you."</p>
+
+<p>And he bowed me away in a fashion
+which made me feel keenly the
+narrowness of my escape.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="VII" id="VII"></a>VII</h2>
+
+<h2>&AElig;sculapius, M.D.</h2>
+
+
+<p>We had not gone very far
+along when the pain in
+my side became poignant
+and I called out of the
+window to Sambo:</p>
+
+<p>"Sammy, is there a doctor anywhere
+on the way out to the Zoo?"
+I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yassir," he replied, slowing down
+a trifle. "We gotter go right by
+de doh ob Dr. Skilapius."</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor who?" I asked&mdash;the name
+was new to me.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tain't <i>Skill</i>-apius," growled the
+boy behind, who seemed rather jealous
+that I had taken no notice of
+him. "It's Eee-skill-apius."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said I, beginning to catch
+their drift. "Dr. &AElig;sculapius. Is
+that what you are trying to say?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yassir," said both boys. "Dass
+de man."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, stop at his office a moment,"
+said I. "I'm feeling a trifle ill."</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes we drew up before
+a large door to the right of the corridor
+before which there hung a
+shingle marked in large gilt letters:</p>
+
+<div class="bbox" style="width: 20em;">
+<table summary="The doctor's shingle">
+<colgroup span="3" width="300">
+</colgroup>
+<tr><td></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="3" align='center'><big>&AElig;SCULAPIUS, M.D.</big></td></tr>
+<tr><td></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align='right'>Office Hours: 10 to 12.</td></tr>
+<tr><td></td><td></td><td align='center'>Tuesdays.</td></tr>
+<tr><td></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p>I knocked at the door and was
+promptly admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish to see the doctor," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"This is Monday, sir," the maid
+replied&mdash;I couldn't quite place her,
+but she seemed rather above her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+station and was stunningly beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>"What of that?" I demanded, as
+fiercely as I could, considering how
+pretty the maid was.</p>
+
+<p>"The doctor can only be seen on
+Tuesdays," said she. "It's on the
+door."</p>
+
+<p>"But I'm sick," I cried. "Very
+sick, indeed."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt," she replied, with a
+shrug of her shoulders that I found
+very fetching. "Else you would
+not have come. But you are not
+so sick that you can't wait until
+to-morrow, or if you are, you might
+as well die, because the doctor won't
+take a case he can't think over a
+week."</p>
+
+<p>"Nice arrangement, that," said
+I, scornfully. "It may do very well
+for immortals, but for a mortal it's
+pretty poor business."</p>
+
+<p>The maid's manner underwent
+an immediate change.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image13h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image13.jpg" width="285" height="500" alt="&quot;&#39;THEN YOU MUST DIE&#39;&quot;" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></a></span></p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
+<p>"Excuse me, sir," she said, making
+me a courtesy. "I did not know
+you were a mortal. I presumed you
+were a minor god. The doctor will
+see you at once."</p>
+
+<p>I was ushered into the consulting-room
+immediately&mdash;in fact, too quickly.
+I wanted to thank the pretty
+maid for taking me for an immortal.
+There was no time for this, however,
+for in a moment &AElig;sculapius himself
+appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"You must pardon Alcestis," he
+said, after the first greetings were
+over. "She is new to the business
+and doesn't know a god from a hole
+in the ground. She presumed you
+were immortal and did not realize
+the emergency."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, doctor," said I,
+glad to learn who the entrancing
+person at the door was. "I've called
+to see you because&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Pray be silent," the doctor interrupted,
+holding his hand up in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+admonition. "Let me discover your
+symptoms for myself. It is the
+surer method. Physicians in your
+world are frequently led astray
+by placing too much reliance upon
+what their patients tell them. I
+have devised a new system. <i>Believe
+nothing the patient says.</i> See? If
+a man tells me he has a headache,
+I send him to a chiropodist. If his
+ankle pains him, I send him to an
+oculist. If he says his chest is
+oppressed, I have him treated for
+spinal meningitis; and an alleged
+pain in the back my assistants cure
+by placing a mustard plaster on
+the throat."</p>
+
+<p>"Then your medical principles
+are based on what, doctor?" I asked,
+somewhat amused.</p>
+
+<p>"A simple motto which prevails
+among you mortals: 'All men are
+liars'&mdash;'Omnes homines mendaces
+sunt.' It is safer than your accepted
+methods below. A sick man is the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+last man in the universe to describe
+his symptoms accurately. The mere
+fact that he is ill distorts his judgment.
+Therefore, I never allow it.
+If I can't find out for myself what
+is the matter with a patient, I give
+up the case."</p>
+
+<p>"And the patient dies?" I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"Not if he is an immortal," he
+replied, quietly. "Come over here,"
+he added, indicating a spot near
+the window where there was a strong
+light. I went, and &AElig;sculapius, taking
+a pair of eye-glasses from a
+cabinet in one corner of his apartment,
+placed them on the bridge of
+his nose.</p>
+
+<p>"Now look out of the window,"
+said he. "To the left."</p>
+
+<p>I obeyed at once. What I saw
+may not be described. I shrank
+back in horror, for I saw so much
+real suffering that my own trouble
+grew less in intensity.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 116]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Now look me straight in the
+eye," said &AElig;sculapius, an amused
+smile playing about his lips.</p>
+
+<p>I turned my vision straight upon
+his glasses and was abashed. I
+averted my glance.</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense," said he, taking me
+by the shoulders. "Look at my
+pupils&mdash;straight&mdash;don't be afraid&mdash;there!
+That's it. These glasses
+won't hurt you, and, after all, I'm
+not very terrible," he added, genially.</p>
+
+<p>It required an effort, but I made
+it, although, in so doing, I seemed
+to be turning my soul inside out
+for his inspection.</p>
+
+<p>"H'm," breathed &AElig;sculapius.
+"Rather serious. You think you
+have appendicitis."</p>
+
+<p>"Have I?" I cried.</p>
+
+<p>&AElig;sculapius laughed. "<i>Have</i> you?"
+he asked. "What do you think you
+think?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think I have," said I, my heart<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+growing faint at the very thought
+I thought I was thinking.</p>
+
+<p>"You are at least sure of your convictions,"
+said &AElig;sculapius. "Now,
+as a matter of fact, the thoughts your
+thoughtful nature has induced you
+to think are utterly valueless. You
+have a pain in your side?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said I. "And a very
+painful pain in my side&mdash;and I
+am not putting on any side in my
+pain either," I added.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt," said &AElig;sculapius.
+"But are you sure it is in your side,
+or isn't it your chest that aches a
+trifle, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not much," said I, growing
+doubtful on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"Still it aches," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I answered, the pain in
+my side weakening in favor of one
+in my chest. "It does." And it
+really did, like the deuce.</p>
+
+<p>"Now about that pain in your
+chest," said &AElig;sculapius. "Isn't it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+rather higher up&mdash;in your throat,
+instead of your chest?"</p>
+
+<p>My throat began to hurt, and
+abominably. Every particle of it
+throbbed with pain, and my chest
+was immediately relieved.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said I, weakly, "that
+the pain <i>is</i> rather in my throat than
+in my chest."</p>
+
+<p>"But your side doesn't ache at
+all?" suggested &AElig;sculapius.</p>
+
+<p>I had forgotten my side altogether.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit," said I; and it didn't.</p>
+
+<p>"So far, so good," said the doctor.
+"Now, my friend, about this throat
+trouble of yours. Do you think you
+have diphtheria, or merely toothache?"</p>
+
+<p>I hadn't thought of toothache
+before, but as soon as the doctor
+mentioned it, a pang went through
+my lower jaw, and my larynx seemed
+all right again.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, doctor," said I, "as a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+matter of fact, the pain does seem
+to be in my wisdom teeth."</p>
+
+<p>"So-called," said he, quietly.
+"More tooth than wisdom, generally.
+And not in your throat?" continued
+the doctor.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image14h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image14.jpg" width="500" height="315" alt="I VISIT &AElig;SCULAPIUS" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it," said I. My
+throat seemed strong enough for
+a political campaign in which I
+was principal speaker. "It's <i>all</i> in
+my teeth."</p>
+
+<p>"Upper or lower?" he asked, with
+a laugh, and then he gazed fixedly
+at me.</p>
+
+<p>I had not realized that I had upper
+teeth until he spoke, and a shudder
+went through me as a semicircle
+of pain shot through my upper
+jaw.</p>
+
+<p>"Upper," I retorted, with some
+surliness.</p>
+
+<p>"Verging a trifle on your cheekbones,
+and thence to the optic nerve,"
+he said, calmly, still gazing into my
+soul. "I'll try your sight. Look<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+at that card over there, and tell
+me&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What nonsense is this, doctor?"
+I cried, angry at his airy manner
+and manifest control over my symptoms.
+"There is nothing the matter
+with my eyes. They're as good
+as any one of the million eyes of
+your friend the Argus."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what, in the name of Jupiter,
+is the matter with you?" he
+ejaculated, elevating his eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing at all," said I, sulkily.</p>
+
+<p>&AElig;sculapius threw himself on the
+sofa and roared with laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly splendid!" he said,
+when he had recovered from his
+mirth. "Perfectly splendid! You
+are the best example of the value
+of my system I've had in a long
+time. Now let me show you something,"
+he added. "Put these glasses
+on."</p>
+
+<p>He took the glasses from his nose
+and put them astride of mine, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+lead me before a mirror&mdash;a cheval-glass
+arrangement that stood in one
+corner of the room.</p>
+
+<p>"Now look yourself straight in
+the eye," said he.</p>
+
+<p>I did so, and truly it was as if I
+looked upon the page of a book
+printed in the largest and clearest
+type. I hesitate to say what I saw
+written there, since the glass was
+strong enough to reach not only
+the mind itself, but further into
+the very depths of my subself-consciousness.
+On the surface, man
+thinks well of himself; this continues
+in modified intensity to his
+self-consciousness, but the fool does
+not live who, in his subself-consciousness,
+the Holy of Holies of
+Realization, does not know that he
+is a fool.</p>
+
+<p>"Take 'em off," I cried, for they
+seemed to burn into the very depths
+of my soul.</p>
+
+<p>"That isn't necessary," said<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+&AElig;sculapius, kindly. "Just turn
+your eyes away from the glass a
+moment and they won't bother you.
+I want to cure this trouble of yours."</p>
+
+<p>I stopped looking at myself in
+the mirror and the tense condition
+of my nerves was immediately relieved.</p>
+
+<p>"Feel better right away, eh?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"So I thought," he said. "You've
+momentarily given up self-contemplation.
+Now lower your gaze. Look
+at your chest a moment."</p>
+
+<p>Just what were the properties
+of the glass I do not know, nor do
+I know how one's chest should
+look, but, as I looked down, I found
+that just as I could penetrate to
+the depths of my mind through
+my eyes, so was it possible for me
+to inspect myself physically.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing the matter there, eh?"
+said &AElig;sculapius.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 123]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Not that I can see," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I," said he. "Now, if you
+think there is anything the matter
+with you anywhere else," he added,
+"you are welcome to use the glasses
+as long as you see fit."</p>
+
+<p>I took a sneaking glance at my
+right side and was immediately
+made aware of the fact that all was
+well with me there, and that all
+my trouble had come from my ill-advised
+"wondering" whether that
+Midas omelet would bother me or
+not.</p>
+
+<p>"These glasses are wonderful,"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"They are a great help," said
+&AElig;sculapius.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you always permit your
+patients to put them on?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not always," said he. "Sometimes
+people really have something
+the matter with them. More often,
+of course, they haven't. It would
+never do to let a really sick man see<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+his condition. If they are ill, I
+can see at once what is the matter
+by means of these spectacles, and
+can, of course, prescribe. If they
+are not, there is no surer means of
+effecting a cure than putting these
+on the patient's nose and letting
+him see for himself that he is all
+right."</p>
+
+<p>"They have all the quality of the
+X-ray light," I suggested, turning
+my gaze upon an iron safe in the
+corner of the room, which immediately
+disclosed its contents.</p>
+
+<p>"They are X-ray glasses," said
+&AElig;sculapius. "In a good light you
+can see through anything with 'em
+on. I have lenses of the same
+kind in my window, and when you
+came up I looked at you through
+the window-pane and saw at once
+that there was nothing the matter
+with you."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish our earthly doctors had
+glasses like these," I ventured, taking<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+them off, for truly I was beginning
+to fancy a strain.</p>
+
+<p>"They have&mdash;or at least they
+have something quite as good,"
+said &AElig;sculapius. "They are all my
+disciples, and in the best instances
+they can see through the average
+patient without them. They have
+insight. You don't believe you deceive
+your physician, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have sometimes thought so,"
+said I, not realizing the trap the
+doctor was setting.</p>
+
+<p>"How foolish!" he cried. "Why
+should you wish to?"</p>
+
+<p>I was covered with confusion.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," said &AElig;sculapius,
+smiling pleasantly. "You are only
+human and cannot help yourself.
+It is your imagination leads you
+astray. Half the time when you
+send for your physician there is
+nothing the matter with you."</p>
+
+<p>"He always prescribes," I retorted.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 126]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That is for your comfort, not
+his," said &AElig;sculapius, firmly.</p>
+
+<p>"And sometimes they operate when
+it isn't necessary," I put in, persistently.</p>
+
+<p>"True," said &AElig;sculapius. "Very
+true. Because if they didn't, the
+patient would die of worry."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph!" said I, incredulous.
+"I never knew that the operation
+for appendicitis was a mind cure."</p>
+
+<p>"It is&mdash;frequently," observed the
+doctor. "There are more people,
+my friend, who have appendicitis
+on their minds than there are those
+who have it in their vermiforms.
+Don't forget that."</p>
+
+<p>It was a revelation, and, to tell
+the truth, it has been a revelation
+of comfort ever since.</p>
+
+<p>"I fancy, doctor," said I, after
+a pause, "that you are a Christian
+Scientist. All troubles are fanciful
+and indicative of a perverse soul."</p>
+
+<p>&AElig;sculapius flushed.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 127]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If one of the gods had said that,"
+he replied, "I should have operated
+upon him. As a mortal, you are
+privileged to say unpleasant things,
+just as a child may say things to
+his elders with impunity which merit
+extreme punishment. Christian Science
+is all right when you are truly
+well&mdash;in good physical condition. It
+is a sure cure for imaginary troubles,
+but when you are really sick, it
+is not of Olympus, but of Hades."</p>
+
+<p>&AElig;sculapius spoke with all the
+passion of a mortal, and I was embarrassed.
+"I did not mean to say
+anything unpleasant, doctor," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, my lad," said
+&AElig;sculapius, patting me on the back.
+"I knew that. If I hadn't known
+it, you'd have been on the table
+by this time. And now, good-bye.
+Curb your imagination. Think
+about others. Don't worry about
+yourself without cause, and never
+send for a doctor unless you know<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+there's something wrong. If I had
+my way you mortals would be
+deprived of imagination. That is
+your worst disease, and if at any
+time you wish yours amputated,
+come to me and I'll fix you out."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, doctor," I replied; "but
+I don't think I'll accept your offer,
+because I need my imagination in
+my business."</p>
+
+<p>And then, realizing that I had
+received my <i>cong&eacute;</i>, I prepared to
+depart.</p>
+
+<p>"How much do I owe you, doctor?"
+I asked, putting my hand
+into the pocket of my gown, confident
+of finding whatever I should
+need.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," said he. "The real
+physician can never be paid. He
+either restores your health or he
+does not. If he restores your health,
+he saves your life, and he is entitled
+to what your life is worth.
+If he does not restore your health&mdash;he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+has failed, and is entitled to
+nothing. All you have will never
+pay your doctor for what he does
+for you. Therefore, go in peace."</p>
+
+<p>I stood abashed in the presence of
+this wise man, and, as I went forth
+from his office, I realized the truth
+of what he had said. In our own
+world we place a value upon the
+service of the man who carries us
+over the hard and the dark places.
+Yet who can really repay him for
+all that he does for us when by his
+skill alone we are rescued from
+peril?</p>
+
+<p>I re-entered my sedan-chair and
+set the blackies off again, with
+something potent in my mind&mdash;how
+much I truly owed to the good
+man who has taken at times the
+health of my children, of my wife,
+of myself, in his hands and has
+seen us safely through to port. I
+have not yet been able to estimate
+it, but if ever he reads these lines,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+he will know that I pay him in gratitude
+that which the world with all
+its wealth cannot give.</p>
+
+<p>"Now for the Zoo, boys," I cried.
+"&AElig;sculapius has fixed me up."</p>
+
+<p>And we scampered on.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 131]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="VIII" id="VIII"></a>VIII</h2>
+
+<h2>At the Zoo</h2>
+
+
+<p>We had not travelled far
+from the office of &AElig;sculapius
+when my little carriers
+turned from the broad
+and beautiful corridor into a narrow
+passage, through which they proceeded
+with some difficulty until
+we reached the other side of this
+strangely constructed home of the
+gods. As we emerged into the light
+of day, the view that presented
+itself was indescribably beautiful.
+I have looked from our own hills at
+home upon many a scene of grandeur.
+From the mountain peaks of New
+Hampshire, with the sun streaming<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+down upon me, I have looked upon
+the valleys beneath through rifts
+in clouds that had not ventured
+so high, and were drenching the
+glorious green below with refreshing
+rains, and have stood awed in the
+presence of one of the simplest moods
+of nature. But the sight that greeted
+my eyes as I passed along that
+exterior road of Olympus, under
+the genial auspices of those wonderful
+gods, appealed to something
+in my soul which had never before
+been awakened, and which I shall
+never be able adequately to describe.
+The mere act of seeing seemed to
+be uplifting, and, from the moment
+I looked downward upon the beloved
+earth, I ceased to wonder that
+gods were godlike&mdash;indeed, my real
+wonder was that they were not
+more so. It seemed difficult to believe
+that there was anything earthly
+about earth. The world was idealized
+even to myself, who had never<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+held it to be a bad sort of place.
+There were rich pastures, green to
+the most soul-satisfying degree, upon
+which cattle fed and lived their lives
+of content; here and there were the
+great cities of earth seen through a
+haze that softened all their roughness;
+nothing sordid appeared; only
+the fair side of life was visible.</p>
+
+<p>And I began to see how it came
+about that these Olympian gods
+had lost control over man. If the
+world, with all its joys and all its
+miseries, presents to the controlling
+power merely its joyous side, what
+sympathy can one look for in one's
+deity? There was Paris and Notre
+Dame in the sunlight. But the
+Morgue at the back of Notre Dame&mdash;in
+the shadow of its sunlit towers&mdash;that
+was not visible to the eye
+of the casual god who drove his
+blackamoors along that entrancing
+roadway. There was London and
+the inspiring pile of Westminster<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+showing up its majestic top, lit by
+the wondrous light of the sun&mdash;but
+still undiscovered of the gods
+there rolled on its farther side the
+Thames, dark as the Styx, a very
+grave of ambition, yet the last solace
+of many a despairing soul. London
+Bridge may tell the gods of much
+that may not be seen from that
+glorious driveway along the exterior
+of Olympus.</p>
+
+<p>I found myself growing maudlin,
+and I pulled myself together.</p>
+
+<p>"Magnificent view, Sammy," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Yassir," he replied, trotting along
+faithfully. "Dass what dey all says.
+<i>I</i> 'ain't nebber seen it. 'Ain't got
+time to look at it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, stop a moment and look,"
+said I. "Isn't it magnificent?"</p>
+
+<p>The blackies stopped and looked.</p>
+
+<p>"Putty good," said Sammy, "but
+I doan' care fo' views," he added.
+"Dey makes me dizzy."</p>
+
+<p>I gave Sammy up from that moment.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+He was well carved, a work
+of art, in fact, but he was essentially
+modern, and I was living in the
+antique.</p>
+
+<p>"Hustle along to the Zoo," I
+cried, with some impatience, and I
+was truly "hustled."</p>
+
+<p>"Here we is," said Sammy, settling
+down on his haunches at the
+end of a five-mile trot. "Dis is it."</p>
+
+<p>We had stopped before a gate
+not entirely unlike those the Japanese
+erect before popular places of amusement
+they frequent.</p>
+
+<p>I descended from the chair and
+was greeted by an attendant who
+demanded to know what I wished
+to see.</p>
+
+<p>"The animals," said I.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. "Well," he said,
+"I'll show you what I've got, but
+truly most of them have gone off
+on vacation."</p>
+
+<p>"Is the Trojan Horse here?" I
+demanded.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 136]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No," said he. "He's in the
+repair shop. One of his girders
+is loose, and the hinges on his door
+rusted and broke last week. His
+interior needs painting, and his
+left hind-leg has been wobbly for
+a long time. It was really dangerous
+to keep him longer without
+repairs."</p>
+
+<p>I was much disappointed. In visiting
+the Olympian Zoo I was largely
+impelled by a desire to see the Trojan
+Horse and compare him with
+the Coney Island Elephant, which,
+with the summer hotels of New
+Jersey and the Statue of Liberty,
+at that time dominated the minor
+natural glories of the American coast
+in the eyes of passengers on in-coming
+steamships. I think I should
+even have ventured a ride in his
+capacious interior despite what
+Sammy had said of his friskiness
+and the peril of his action to persons
+susceptible to sea-sickness.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Too bad," said I, swallowing
+my disappointment as best I could.
+"Still, you have other attractions.
+How about the Promethean vulture?
+Is he still living?"</p>
+
+<p>"Unfortunately, no," said the attendant.
+"He was taken out last
+year and killed. Got too proud
+to live. He put in a complaint
+about his food. Said Prometheus
+was a very interesting man, but
+as a diet he was monotonous and
+demanded a more diversified <i>menu</i>.
+Said he'd like to try Apollo and a
+Muse or two, for a little while, and
+preferred Cupids on toast for Sunday-night
+tea."</p>
+
+<p>"What a vulturian vulture!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't he?" laughed the attendant.
+"We replied by wringing
+his neck, and served him up in a
+chicken salad to a party of tourists
+from Hades."</p>
+
+<p>This struck me as reasonable,
+and I said so.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, whatever you happen to
+have on hand will satisfy me,"
+I added. "Just let me see what
+animals you have and I'll be content."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," replied the attendant.
+"Step this way."</p>
+
+<p>He took me along a charming
+pathway bordered with many a beautiful
+tree and adorned with numerous
+flowers of wondrous fragrance.</p>
+
+<p>"This path is not without interest,"
+he said; "all the trees and
+shrubs have a history. That laurel
+over there, for instance, used to be
+a Daphne. She and Jupiter had a
+row and he planted her over there.
+Makes a very pretty tree, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Extremely," said I. "Have you
+many similar ventures?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes. Our botanical gardens
+are full of them," he replied. "Those
+trees to the right are Baucis and
+Philemon. That lotos plant on the
+left used to be Dryope, and when<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+Adonis isn't busy valeting at the
+hotel, he comes down here and
+blooms as an anemone, into which,
+as you are probably aware, he was
+changed by Venus. That pink thing
+by the fountain is Hyacinthus, and
+over there by the pond is where Narcissus
+blooms. He's a barber in his
+off hours."</p>
+
+<p>I had already learned that, so
+expressed no surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"That's a stunning sunflower you
+have," I ventured, pointing to a perfect
+specimen thereof directly ahead
+of us.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the attendant.
+"That's Clytie. She's only potted.
+We don't set her out permanently,
+because the royal family like to
+have her on the table at state dinners.
+And she, poor girl, rather enjoys it.
+Apollo is generally to be found at
+these dinners either as a guest or
+playing a zither or a banjo behind
+a screen. Wherever he is, the sunflower<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+turns and it affords considerable
+amusement among Jupiter's
+guests to watch it. Jupiter has
+christened Clytie the Sherlock Holmes
+of Olympus, because wherever Apollo
+is she spots him. Sometimes when
+he isn't present, he has to be very
+careful in his statements about where
+he has been, for long habit has made
+Clytie unerring in her instinct."</p>
+
+<p>This seemed to me to be a rather
+good revenge on Apollo for his
+very ungodlike treatment of Clytie,
+and if half the attendant told me
+that day at the Zoo is true, this
+excessively fickle Olympian is probably
+sorry by this time that he
+treated her originally with such uncalled
+for disdain.</p>
+
+<p>"Come over here and see the bear-pit,"
+said the guide. I obeyed with
+alacrity, and, leaning over the rail,
+had the pleasure of seeing the most
+beautiful bruin my eyes had ever
+rested upon. She was as glossy
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 141]</a></span>as a new silk hat; her eyes were
+as soft and timid as those of a frightened
+deer, and, when she moved,
+she was the perfection of grace.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image15h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image15.jpg" width="500" height="325" alt="CALLISTO" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Good-morning, Callisto," said
+my guide.</p>
+
+<p>"Same to you, my dear Cephalus,"
+the bear returned, in a sweet feminine
+voice that entranced me.</p>
+
+<p>"How are things with you to-day?"
+asked Cephalus, with a kindly smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I can't growl," laughed
+Callisto&mdash;it was evident that the
+unfortunate woman was not taking
+her misfortune too seriously. "Only
+I wish you'd tell people who come
+here that while I undoubtedly am a
+bear, I have not yet lost my womanly
+taste, and I don't want to be fed
+all the time on buns. If anybody
+asks you what you think I'd like,
+tell them that an occasional <i>omelette
+souffl&eacute;e</i>, or an oyster p&acirc;t&eacute;, or a platter
+of <i>petits fours</i> would please me
+greatly."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 142]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I shall do it, Callisto," said
+the keeper, as he started to move
+away. "Meanwhile, here's a stick
+of chewing-gum for you." Callisto
+received it with a manifestation of
+delight which moved me greatly, and
+I bethought myself of the magic
+properties of my coat, and plunging
+my hand into its capacious pockets,
+I found there an oyster p&acirc;t&eacute; that
+made my mouth water, and an
+<i>omelette souffl&eacute;e</i> that looked as if it
+had been made by a Parisian milliner,
+it was so dainty.</p>
+
+<p>"If madam will permit me," said
+I, with a bow to Callisto.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you kindly," the bear replied,
+in that same thrillingly sweet
+voice, and dancing with joy. "You
+are a dear, good man, and if you
+ever have an enemy, let me know
+and I'll hug him to death."</p>
+
+<p>As we again turned to go, Cephalus
+laughed. "Queer case that!" he
+said. "You'd have thought Juno<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+would let up on that poor woman,
+but she doesn't for a little bit."</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;a jealous woman, my dear
+Cephalus&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"True," said he. "That's all true
+enough, but, great Heavens, man,
+Juno ought to be used to it by this
+time with a husband like Jupiter.
+She's overstocked this Zoo a dozen
+times already with her jealous freaks,
+and Jupiter hasn't reformed once.
+What good does it do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't she ever let 'em off?" I
+asked. "Doesn't Callisto ever have
+a Sunday out, for instance?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but always as a bear, and
+the poor creature doesn't dare take
+her chance with the other wild beasts&mdash;the
+real ones. She's just as afraid
+of bears as she ever was, and if she
+sees a plain, every-day cow coming
+towards her, she runs shrieking
+back to her pit again."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Callisto," said I. "And
+Act&aelig;on? How about him?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 144]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He's here&mdash;but he's a holy
+terror," replied Cephalus, shaking
+his head. "He gets loose once in
+a while, and then everybody has to
+look out for himself, and frankly,"
+Cephalus added, his voice sinking
+to a whisper, "I don't blame him.
+Diana treated him horribly."</p>
+
+<p>"I always thought so," said I.
+"He really wasn't to blame."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not," observed Cephalus.
+"If people will go in swimming
+out-of-doors, it's their own fault
+if chance wayfarers stumble upon
+them. To turn a man into a stag
+and then set his own dogs on him
+for a thing he couldn't help strikes
+me as rank injustice."</p>
+
+<p>"Wonder to me that Jupiter doesn't
+interfere in this business," said I.
+"He could help Callisto out without
+much trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"The point about that is that
+he's afraid," Cephalus explained.
+"Juno has threatened to sue him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+for divorce if he does, and he doesn't
+dare brave the scandal."</p>
+
+<p>We had by this time reached a
+long, low building that looked like a
+stable, and, as we entered, Cephalus
+observed:</p>
+
+<p>"This is our fire-proof building
+where we keep our inflammable
+beasts. That big, sleeping creature
+that looks like a mastodon lizard
+is the dragon that your friend St.
+George, of London, got the best of,
+and sent here with his compliments.
+I'll give the beast a prod and let you
+see how he works."</p>
+
+<p>Cephalus was as good as his
+word, and for a moment I wished he
+wasn't. Such a din as that which
+followed the dragon's awakening I
+never heard before, and every time
+the horrible beast opened his jaws
+it was as if a fire-works factory had
+exploded.</p>
+
+<p>"Very dangerous creature that,"
+said Cephalus. "But he is splendid<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+for f&ecirc;tes. Shows off beautifully in
+the dark. I'll prod him again and
+just you note the prismatic coloring
+of his flames. Get up there, Fido,"
+he added, poking the dragon with
+his stick a second time. "Wake
+up, and give the gentleman an
+illumination."</p>
+
+<p>The scene of the moment before
+was repeated, only with greater
+intensity, and even in the sunlight
+I could see that the various hues
+his fiery breathings took on were
+gorgeous beyond description. A
+bonfire built of red, pink, green,
+and yellow lights, backed up by
+driftwood in a fearful state of combustion,
+about describes it.</p>
+
+<p>"Superb," said I, nearly overcome
+by the grandeur of the scene.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, just imagine it on a dark
+night!" cried Cephalus, enthusiastically.
+"Fido is very popular as
+a living firework, but he's a costly
+luxury."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 147]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I laughed. "Costly?" said I. "I
+don't see why. Fireworks as grand
+as that must cost a deal more than
+he does."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't know," said Cephalus,
+pressing his lips together. "Why,
+that dragon eats ten tons of cannel
+coal a day, and it takes the combined
+efforts of six stokers, under
+the supervision of an expert engineer,
+to keep his appetite within
+bounds. You never saw such an
+eater, and as for drinking&mdash;well,
+he's awful. He drinks sixteen gallons
+of kerosene at luncheon."</p>
+
+<p>I eyed Cephalus narrowly, but
+beyond a wink at the dragon, I saw
+no reason to believe that he was
+deceiving me.</p>
+
+<p>"Then he sets fire to things, and
+altogether he's an expensive beast
+Aren't you, Fido?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yep," barked the dragon.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, over there," continued the
+guide, patting the dragon on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+head, whereat the fearful beast wagged
+his tail and breathed a thousand
+pounds of steam from his nostrils to
+express his pleasure. "Over there
+are the fire-breathing bulls&mdash;all the
+animals here are fire-breathing. The
+bulls give us a lot of trouble. You
+can't feed 'em on coal, because
+their teeth are not strong enough
+to chew it; and you can't feed 'em
+on hay, because they'd set fire to
+it the minute they breathed on it;
+and you can't put 'em out to pasture
+because they'd wither up a sixty-acre
+lot in ten minutes. It's an
+actual fact that we have to send for
+Jason three times a day to come
+here and feed them. He's the only
+person about who can do it, and
+how he does it no one knows. He
+pats them on the neck, and they stop
+breathing fire. That's all we know."</p>
+
+<p>"But they must eat something.
+What does Jason give them?" I
+demanded.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 149]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"We've had to invent a food for
+them," said Cephalus. "Dr. &AElig;sculapius
+did it. It's a solution of hay,
+clover, grass, and paraffine mixed
+with asbestos."</p>
+
+<p>"Paraffine?" I cried. "Why,
+that's extremely inflammable."</p>
+
+<p>"So are the bulls," was Cephalus's
+rejoinder. "They counteract each
+other." I gazed at the animals
+with admiration. They were undoubtedly
+magnificent beasts, and
+they truly breathed fire. Their nostrils
+suggested the flames that are
+emitted from the huge naphtha jets
+that are used to light modern circuses
+in country towns, and as for their
+mouths, any one who can imagine
+a bull with a pair of gas-logs illuminating
+his reflective smile, instead
+of teeth, may gain a comprehensive
+idea of the picture that
+confronted me.</p>
+
+<p>I had hardly finished looking at
+these, when Cephalus, impatient to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+be through with me, as guides often
+are with tourists, observed:</p>
+
+<p>"There is the ph&#339;nix."</p>
+
+<p>I turned instantly. I have always
+wished to see the ph&#339;nix. A bird
+having apparently the attractive
+physique of a broiler deliberately
+sitting on a bonfire had appealed
+strongly to my interest as well as
+to my appetite.</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me!" said I. "He's not
+handsome, is he?"</p>
+
+<p>He was not; resembling an ordinary
+buzzard with wings outstretched
+sitting upon that kind of
+emberesque fire that induces a man
+in a library to think mournfully
+about the past, and convinces him&mdash;alas!&mdash;that
+if he had the time he
+could write immortal poetry.</p>
+
+<p>"Not very!" Cephalus acquiesced.
+"Still, he's all right in a Zoo. He's
+queer. Look at his nest, if you
+don't believe it."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image16h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image16.jpg" width="500" height="323" alt="I MEET THE PHOENIX" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I never believed otherwise, my
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 151]</a></span>dear Cephalus," said I. "He seems
+to me to be a unique thing in poultry.
+If he were a chicken he would be
+hailed with delight in my country.
+A self-broiling broiler&mdash;!"</p>
+
+<p>The idea was too ecstatic for
+expression.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he isn't a chicken, so
+your rhapsody doesn't go," said
+Cephalus. "He's little short of a
+buzzard. Useful, but not appetizing.
+If I were a profane mortal, I should
+call him a condemned nuisance.
+Most birds build their own nests,
+and a well-built nest lasts them a
+whole season. This infernal bird
+has to have a furnace-man to make
+his bed for him night and morning,
+and if, by some mischance, the fire
+goes out, as fires will do in the best-regulated
+families, he begins to
+squawk, and he squawks, and he
+squawks, and he squawks until
+the keeper comes and sets his nest
+a-blazing again. He has a voice<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+like a sick fog-horn that drives
+everybody crazy."</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you fool him sometimes?"
+I suggested. "Make a nest
+out of a mustard-plaster and see
+what he would do."</p>
+
+<p>"He's too old a bird to be caught
+that way," said Cephalus. "He's
+a confounded old ass, but he's a
+brainy one."</p>
+
+<p>At this moment a blare of the
+most heavenly trumpets sounded,
+and Cephalus and I left the building
+and emerged into the garden to
+see what had caused it. There a
+dazzling spectacle met my gaze.
+A regiment of Amazons was drawn
+up on the green of the parade and
+a superb gilded coach, drawn by six
+milk-white horses, stood before them,
+while two gorgeously apparelled heralds
+sounded a fanfare. Cephalus
+immediately became deeply agitated.</p>
+
+<p>"It is his Majesty's own carriage
+and guard," he cried.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 153]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Whose?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Jupiter's," said he. "I fancy
+they have come for you."</p>
+
+<p>And it so transpired. One of
+the heralds advanced to where I was
+standing, saluted me as though I
+were an emperor, and, through his
+golden trumpet, informed me that
+eleven o'clock was approaching; that
+his Majesty deigned to grant me the
+desired audience, and had sent a
+carriage and guard of honor.</p>
+
+<p>I returned the salute, thanked
+Cephalus for his attentions, and entered
+the carriage. A brass band
+of a hundred and twenty pieces
+struck up an inspiring march, and,
+preceded and followed by the Amazons,
+I was conveyed in state to the
+palatial quarters of Zeus himself.</p>
+
+<p>It suggested comic opera with a
+large number of pretty chorus girls,
+but I could not help being impressed
+in spite of this thought with the
+fact that Jupiter knew how to do a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+thing up in style. I was indeed
+so awed with it all that I did not
+dare wink at a single Amazon while
+<i>en route</i>, although strongly tempted
+to do so several times.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="IX" id="IX"></a>IX</h2>
+
+<h2>Some Account of the Palace
+of Jupiter</h2>
+
+
+<p>So dazzled was I by all
+that went on about me,
+by the gorgeousness of my
+equipage and by the extraordinary
+richness of the costumes
+worn by my escort, that for the moment
+I forgot that I was not myself
+clad in suitable garments for so
+ultra-royal a function. The streets,
+the houses, even the throngs that
+peopled the way, seemed to be of
+the most lustrous gold, and it became
+necessary for me from time
+to time as we progressed to close
+my eyes and shut out the too brilliant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+vision. Fancy a bake-shop built
+of solid gold nuggets, its large plate
+windows composed each of one huge,
+flashing diamond; imagine an exquisitely
+wrought golden drug-store,
+whose colored jars in the windows
+are made of rubies, emeralds, and
+sapphires; conjure up in your mind's
+eye a sequence of city blocks whose
+sides are lined by massive and
+exquisitely proportioned buildings,
+every inch of whose fa&ccedil;ade was
+fashioned, not by stone-cutters and
+sculptors, but by goldsmiths, whose
+genius a Cellini might envy; picture
+to yourself a street paved with golden
+asphalt, and a sidewalk built from
+huge slabs of rolled silver, the curb
+and gutters being of burnished copper,
+and you'll gain some idea of
+the thoroughfare along which I
+passed. And oh, the music that
+the band gave forth to which the
+populace timed their huzzas&mdash;I nearly
+went mad with the seductiveness<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+of it all. If it hadn't been for the
+ache the brilliance of it gave to my
+eyes, I really think I should have
+swooned.</p>
+
+<p>And then we came to the palace
+grounds. These, I must confess, I
+found far from pleasing, for even
+as the avenue along which I had
+passed was all gold and silver
+and gems, so too was the park, in
+the heart of which stood Jupiter's
+own apartments made of similar
+stuff. The trees were golden, and
+the leaves rustling in the breeze,
+catching and reflecting the light of
+the sun, were blinding. The soft
+greenness of the earthly grass was
+superseded by the glistening yellow
+of golden spears, and here and
+there, where a drop of dew would
+have fallen, were diamonds of purest
+ray. The paths were of silken rugs
+of richest texture, and the palace, as
+it burst upon my vision, fashioned
+out of undreamed-of blocks of onyx,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+resembled more a massive opal filled
+with flashing, living, fire, than the
+mere home of a splendid royalty.</p>
+
+<p>I was glad when the procession
+stopped before the gorgeous entrance
+to the palace. Another minute of
+such splendor would have blinded
+me. A fanfare of trumpets sounded,
+and I descended, so dizzy with what
+I had seen that, as my feet touched
+the ground, I staggered like a
+drunken man, and then I heard my
+name sounded and passed from one
+flunky to another up the magnificent
+staircase into the blue haze of the
+hallway, and gradually sounding
+fainter and fainter until it was lost
+in the distance of the mysterious
+corridor. I still staggered as I
+mounted the steps, and the Major
+Domo approached me.</p>
+
+<p>"I trust you are not ill," he whispered
+in my ear.</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;not ill," I replied. "Only
+somewhat flabbergasted by all this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+magnificence, and my eyes hurt like
+the very deuce."</p>
+
+<p>"It is perhaps too much for mortal
+eyes," he said; and then, turning
+to a gilded Ethiopian who stood
+close at hand, he observed, quietly,
+"Rhadamus, run over to the Argus
+and ask him if he can spare this
+gentleman a pair of blue goggles
+for an hour or two."</p>
+
+<p>"Better get me a dozen pairs,"
+I put in. "I don't think one pair
+will be enough. It may strain my
+nose to hold them, but I'd rather
+sacrifice my nose than my eyes
+any day."</p>
+
+<p>But the boy was off, and ere I
+reached the presence of Jupiter I
+was very kindly provided with the
+very essential article, and I must
+confess that I found great relief
+in them. They were so densely
+blue that an ordinary bit of splendor
+could not have been discerned through
+their opaque depths, any more than<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+Thisbe could have been seen by
+her doting lover, Pyramus, through
+the wall that separated them, but
+nothing known to man could have
+shut out the supreme gloriousness
+of the interior of Jupiter's palace.
+Even with the goggles of the Argus
+regulated to protect one thousand
+eyes upon my nose, it made my
+dazzled optics blink.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know what the proportions
+of the palace were. I regret
+to say that I forgot to ask, but I
+am quite confident that I walked at
+least eight miles along that corridor,
+and never was a mansion designed
+that was better equipped in the matter
+of luxuries. I suspect I shall
+be charged with exaggerating, but
+it is none the less true that within
+that spacious building were appliances
+of every sort known to man.
+One door opened upon an in-door
+golf-links, upon which the royal
+family played whenever they lacked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+the energy or the disposition to
+seek out that on Mars. There were
+high bunkers, the copse of which
+was covered with richest silk plush,
+stuffed, I was told, with spun silk,
+while, in place of sand, tons of powdered
+sugar and grated nutmegs
+filled the bunkers themselves. The
+eighteen holes were laid out so that
+no two of them crossed, and, inasmuch
+as the turf was constructed
+of rubber instead of grass and soil,
+neither a bad lie nor a dead ball
+was possible through the vast extent
+of the fair green. The water
+hazards, four in number, were nothing
+more nor less than huge tanks
+of Burgundy, champagne, iced tea,
+and Scotch&mdash;which I subsequently
+learned often resulted in a bad caddie
+service&mdash;and an open brook along
+whose dashing descent a constant
+stream of shandygaff went merrily
+bubbling onward to an in-door sea
+upon which Jupiter exercised his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+yacht when sailing was the thing
+to suit his immediate whim.</p>
+
+<p>This sea was a marvel. Since all
+the water hazards above described
+emptied into it, it was little more
+than a huge expanse of punch,
+one swallow of which, thanks to
+these ingredients and the sugar
+and nutmeg from the bunkers, would
+make a man forget an eternity of
+troubles until he woke up again,
+if he ever did. Here Jupiter sported
+every variety of pleasure craft, and,
+by an ingenious system of funnels
+arranged about its sixty-square-mile
+area, could at a moment's
+notice produce any variety of breeze
+he chanced to wish; and its submarine
+bottom was so designed that
+if a heavy sea were wanted to make
+the yacht pitch and toss, a simple
+mechanical device would cause it
+to hump itself into such corrugations,
+large or small, as were needed to
+bring about the desired conditions.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 163]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do they allow bathing in that?"
+I asked, as the Major Domo explained
+the peculiar feature of this in-door
+sea to me.</p>
+
+<p>My companion laughed. "Only
+one person ever tried it with any
+degree of success, and it nearly
+cost him his reputation. Old Bacchus
+undertook to swim on a wager
+from Chambertin Inlet to Glenlivet
+Bay, but he had to give up before
+he got as far as Pommery Point.
+It took him a year to get rid of his
+headache, and it actually required
+three-quarters of the Treasury Reserve
+to provide gold enough to cure
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"It must be a terrible place to
+fall overboard in," I suggested.</p>
+
+<p>"It is, if you fall head first," said
+the Major Domo, "and my observation
+is that most people do."</p>
+
+<p>"I should admire to sail upon it,"
+I said, gazing back through the
+door that opened upon Jupiter's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+yachting parlors, and realizing on
+a sudden a powerful sense of thirst.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no doubt you can do
+so," said the Major Domo. "Indeed,
+I understand that his Majesty
+contemplates taking you for a sail
+to the lost island of Atlantis before
+you return to earth."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" I cried. "The lost island
+of Atlantis here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said my guide. "Why
+not? It was too beautiful for earth,
+so Jupiter had it transported to his
+own private yachting pond, and it
+has been here ever since. It is marvellously
+beautiful."</p>
+
+<p>Hardly had I recovered from my
+amazement over the Major Domo's
+announcement when he pointed to
+another open door.</p>
+
+<p>"The Royal Arena," he said, simply.
+"That is where we have our
+Olympian Games. There was a football
+game there yesterday. Too
+bad you were not there. It was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+the liveliest game of the season.
+All Hades played the Olympian
+eleven for the championship of the
+universe. We licked 'em four hundred
+to nothing; but of course we
+had an exceptional team. When
+Hercules is in shape there isn't a
+man-jack in all Hades that can
+withstand him. He's rush-line, centre,
+full-back, half-back, and flying
+wedge, all rolled into one. Then
+the Hades chaps made the bad
+mistake of sending a star team.
+When you have an eleven made up
+of Hannibal and Julius C&aelig;sar and
+Alexander the Great and Napoleon
+Bonaparte and the Duke of Wellington
+and Achilles and other fellows
+like that you can't expect any
+team-play. Each man is thinking
+about himself all the time. Hercules
+could walk right through 'em,
+and, when they begin to pose, it's
+mere child's play for him. The
+only chap that put up any game<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+against us at all was Samson, and
+I tell you, now that his hair's
+grown again, he's a demon on the
+gridiron. But we divided up our
+force to meet that difficulty. Hercules
+put the rest of our eleven
+on to Samson, while he took care,
+personally, of all the other Hadesians.
+And you should have seen
+how he handled them! It was beautiful,
+all through. He nearly got
+himself ruled off in the second half.
+He became so excited at one time
+towards the end that he mistook
+Pompey for the ball and kicked
+him through the goal-posts from
+the forty-yard line. Of course, it
+didn't count, and Hercules apologized
+so gracefully to the rest
+of the visitors that they withdrew
+their protest and let him play
+on."</p>
+
+<p>"I should think he would have
+apologized to Pompey," said I.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image17h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image17.jpg" width="500" height="316" alt="&quot;&#39;THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE UNIVERSE&#39;&quot;" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"He will when Pompey recovers
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 167]</a></span>consciousness," said my guide, simply.</p>
+
+<p>So interested was I in the Royal
+Arena and its recent game that I
+forgot all about Jupiter.</p>
+
+<p>"I never thought of Hercules as
+a football player before," I said,
+"but it is easy to see how he might
+become the champion of Olympus."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, is it!" laughed the Major
+Domo. "Well, you'd better not tell
+Jupiter that. Jupiter'd be pleased,
+he would. Why, my dear friend,
+he'd pack you back to earth quicker
+than a wink. He brooks only one
+champion of anything here, and
+that's himself. Hercules threw him
+in a wrestling-match once, and the
+next day Jupiter turned him into a
+weeping-willow, and didn't let up
+on him for five hundred years afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>By this time we had reached one
+of the most superbly vaulted chambers
+it has ever been my pleasure<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+to look upon. Above me the ceiling
+seemed to reach into infinity, and
+on either side were huge recesses
+and alcoves of almost unfathomable
+depth, lit by great balls of fire that
+diffused their light softly and yet
+brilliantly through all parts and
+corners of the apartment.</p>
+
+<p>"The library," said the Major
+Domo, pointing to tier upon tier of
+teeming shelves, upon which stood a
+wonderful array of exquisitely bound
+volumes to a number past all counting.</p>
+
+<p>I was speechless with the grandeur
+of it all.</p>
+
+<p>"It is sublime," said I. "How
+many volumes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Unnumbered, and unnumberable
+by mortals, but in round, immortal
+figures just one jovillion."</p>
+
+<p>"One jovillion, eh?" said I. "How
+many is that in mortal figures?"</p>
+
+<p>"A jovillion is the supreme number,"
+explained the guide. "It is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+the infinity of millions, and therefore
+cannot be expressed in mortal terms."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said I, "you can have
+no more books."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said he. "But what of
+that? We have all there are and
+all that are to be. You see, the
+library is divided into three parts.
+On the right-hand side are all the
+books that ever have been written;
+here to the left you see all the books
+that are being written; and farther
+along, beginning where that staircase
+rises, are all the books that
+ever will be written."</p>
+
+<p>I gasped. If this were true, this
+wonderful collection must contain
+my own complete works, some of
+which I have doubtless not even
+thought of as yet. How easy it
+would be for me, I thought, to write
+my future books if Jupiter would
+only let me loose here with a competent
+stenographer to copy off the
+pages of manuscript as yet undreamed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+of! I suggested this to the
+Major Domo.</p>
+
+<p>"He wouldn't let you," he said.
+"It would throw the whole scheme
+out of gear."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see why," I ventured.</p>
+
+<p>"It is simple," rejoined the Major
+Domo. "If you were permitted to
+read the books that some day will
+be identified with your name, as
+a sensible man, observing beforehand
+how futile and trivial they
+are to be, some of them, you wouldn't
+write them, and so you would be
+able to avoid a part, at least, of your
+destiny. If mortals were able to do
+that&mdash;well, they'd become immortals,
+a good many of them."</p>
+
+<p>I realized the justice of this precaution,
+and we passed on in silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said the Major Domo,
+after we had traversed the length
+of the library, "we are almost there.
+That gorgeous door directly ahead
+of you is the entrance to Jupiter's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+reception-room. Before we enter,
+however, we must step into the office
+of Midas, on the left."</p>
+
+<p>"Midas?" I said. "And what,
+pray, is his function? Is he the
+registrar?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed," laughed the Major
+Domo. "I presume down where you
+live he would be called the Court
+Tailor. The sartorial requirements
+of Jupiter are so regal that none
+of his guests, invited or otherwise,
+could afford, even with the riches
+of Cr&#339;sus, to purchase the apparel
+which he demands. Hence he keeps
+Midas here to supply, at his expense,
+the garments in which his visitors
+may appear before him. You didn't
+think you were going into Jupiter's
+presence in those golf duds, did you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never thought anything about
+it," said I. "But how long will it
+take Midas to fit me out?"</p>
+
+<p>"He touches your garments, that's
+all," said my guide, "and in that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+instant they are changed to robes of
+richest gold. We then place a necklace
+of gems about your neck, composed
+of rubies, emeralds, amethysts,
+and sapphires, alternating with
+pearls, none smaller than a hen's
+egg; next we place a jewelled staff
+of ebony in your hand; a golden
+helmet, having at either side the
+burnished wings of the imperial
+eagles of Jove, and bearing upon
+its crest an opal that glistens like
+the sun through the slight haze of
+a translucent cloud, will be placed
+upon your head; richly decorated
+sandals of cloth of gold will adorn
+your feet, and about your waist a girdle
+of linked diamonds&mdash;beside which
+the far-famed Orloff diamond of the
+Russian treasury is an insignificant
+bit of glass&mdash;will be clasped."</p>
+
+<p>"And&mdash;wha&mdash;wha&mdash;what becomes
+of all this when I get back home?"
+I gasped, a vision of future ease rising
+before my tired eyes.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 173]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You take it with you, if you can,"
+laughed the Major Domo, with a
+sly wink at one of the Amazons
+who accompanied him as a sort of
+aide.</p>
+
+<p>It was all as he said. In two
+minutes I had entered the room of
+Midas; in three minutes, my golf-coat
+having been removed, a flowing
+gown of silk, touched by his magic
+hand and turned to glittering gold,
+rested upon my shoulders. It was
+pretty heavy, but I bore up under
+it; the helmet and the necklace, the
+shoes and the girdle were adjusted;
+the staff was placed in my hand,
+and with beating heart I emerged
+once more into the corridor and
+stood before the door leading into
+the audience-chamber.</p>
+
+<p>"Remove the goggles," whispered
+the Major Domo.</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" I cried. "I shall be
+blinded."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense!" said he, quickly. "Off<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+with them," and he flicked them from
+my nose himself.</p>
+
+<p>A great blare of trumpets sounded,
+the door was thrown wide, and with
+a cry of amazement I stepped backward,
+awed and afraid; but one
+glance was reassuring, for truly a
+wonderful sight confronted me, and
+one that will prove as surprising to
+him who reads as it was to me upon
+that marvellous day.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 175]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="X" id="X"></a>X</h2>
+
+<h2>An Extraordinary Interview</h2>
+
+
+<p>I had expected to witness
+a scene of grandeur, and
+my fancy had conjured up,
+as the central figure thereof,
+the majestic form of Jove himself,
+clad in imperial splendor. But it
+was the unexpected that happened,
+for, as the door closed behind me,
+I found myself in a plain sort of
+workshop, such as an ordinary man
+would have in his own house, at
+one end of which stood a rolling-top
+desk, and, instead of the dazzling
+throne I had expected to see, there
+stood in front of it an ordinary office-chair
+that twirled on a pivot. Books<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+and papers were strewn about the
+floor and upon the tables; the pictures
+on the walls were made up
+largely of colored sporting prints of
+some rarity, and in a corner stood
+a commonplace globe such as is to
+be found in use in public schools
+to teach children geography. As I
+glanced about me my first impression
+was that by some odd mischance
+I had got into the wrong room, which
+idea was fortified by the fact that,
+instead of an imperial figure clad in
+splendid robes, a quiet-looking old
+gentleman, who, except for his dress,
+might have posed for a cartoon of
+the accepted American Populist, stood
+before me. He was dressed in a
+plain frock-coat, four-in-hand tie,
+high collar, dark-gray trousers, and
+patent-leather boots, and was brushing
+up a silk hat as I entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, sir," I said, "but
+I&mdash;I fear I have stumbled into the
+wrong room. I&mdash;ah&mdash;I have had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+the wholly unexpected honor to be
+granted an audience with Jupiter,
+and I was told that this was the
+audience-chamber."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't apologize. Sit down," he
+replied, taking me by the hand and
+shaking it cordially. "You are all
+right; I'm glad to see you. How
+goes the world with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very well indeed, sir," I replied,
+rather embarrassed by the old fellow's
+cordiality. "But I really can't
+sit down, because, you know, I&mdash;I
+don't want to keep his Majesty
+waiting, and if you'll excuse me,
+I'll&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, nonsense!" he retorted. "Let
+the old man wait. Sit down and
+talk to me. I don't get a chance
+to talk with mortals very often.
+This is your first visit to Olympus?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," I said, still standing.
+"And it is wholly unexpected. I
+stumbled upon the place by the
+merest chance last night&mdash;but you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+<i>must</i> let me go, sir. I'll come back
+later very gladly and talk with you
+if I get a chance. It will never do
+for me to keep his Majesty waiting,
+you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, the deuce with his Majesty,"
+said the old gentleman, testily. "What
+do you want to see him for? He's
+an old fossil."</p>
+
+<p>"Granted," said I. "Still, I'm interested
+in old fossils."</p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman roared with
+laughter at this apparently simple
+remark. I didn't see the fun of it
+myself, and his mirth irritated me.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, my dear sir," I
+said, trying to control my impatience.
+"But you don't seem to understand
+my position. I can't stay here and
+talk to you while the ruler of Olympus
+waits. Can't you see that?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I can't," he replied. "Can't
+see it at all, and I'm a pretty good
+seer as a general thing, too. If
+you didn't wish to see me, you had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+no business to come into my room.
+Now that you are here, I'm going
+to keep you for a little while. Take
+off that absurd-looking tile and sit
+down."</p>
+
+<p>At this I grew angry. I wasn't
+responsible for the helmet I wore,
+and I had felt all along that I looked
+like an ass in it.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do nothing of the sort, you
+confounded old meddler," I cried.
+"I've come here on invitation, and,
+if I've got into the wrong room, it
+isn't my fault. That jackass of a
+Major Domo told me this was the
+place. Let me out."</p>
+
+<p>I strode to the doorway, and the
+old gentleman turned to his desk
+and opened a drawer.</p>
+
+<p>"Cigar or cigarette?" he said,
+calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither, you old fool," I retorted,
+turning the knob and tugging upon
+it. "I have no time for a smoke."</p>
+
+<p>The door was locked. The old<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+gentleman settled back in his twirling
+chair and regarded me with a
+twinkle in his eye as I vainly tried
+to pull the door open, and I realized
+that I was helpless.</p>
+
+<p>"Better sit down and enjoy a quiet
+smoke with me," he said, calmly.
+"Take off that absurd-looking tile
+and talk to me."</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't anything to say to
+you," I replied. "Not a word. Do
+you intend to let me out of this or
+not?"</p>
+
+<p>"All in good time&mdash;all in good
+time," he said. "Let's talk it over.
+Why do you wish to go? Don't
+you find me good company?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're a stupid old idiot!" I
+shouted, almost weeping with rage.
+"Locking me up in your rotten old
+den here when you must realize
+what you are depriving me of. What
+earthly good it does you I can't
+see."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<a href="images/image18h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image18.jpg" width="500" height="327" alt="&quot;THE DOOR WAS LOCKED&quot;" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"It does me lots of good," he said,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 181]</a></span>with a chuckle. "Really, sir, it
+gives me a new sensation&mdash;first
+new sensation I have had in a long,
+long time. Let me see now, just
+how many names have you called
+me in the three minutes I have had
+the pleasure of your acquaintance?"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me time, and I'll call you
+a lot more," I retorted, sullenly.</p>
+
+<p>"Good&mdash;I'll give you the time,"
+he said. "Go ahead. I'll listen to
+you for a whole hour. What am I
+besides a meddler, and a stupid old
+idiot, and an old fool?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're a gray-headed maniac,
+and a&mdash;a zinc-fastened Zany. A
+doddering dotard and a chimerical
+chump," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Splendid!" roared he, with a
+spasm of laughter that seemed nearly
+to rend him. "Go on. Keep it
+up. I am enjoying myself hugely."</p>
+
+<p>"You're a sneak-livered poltroon
+to treat me this way," I added, indignantly.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 182]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That's the best yet," he interrupted,
+slapping his knee with delight.
+"Sneak-livered poltroon, eh?
+Well, well, well. Go on. Go on."</p>
+
+<p>"If you'll give me a copy of Roget's
+<i>Thesaurus</i>, I'll tell you what else
+you are," I retorted, with a note of
+sarcasm in my voice. "It will require
+a reference to that book to do
+you justice. I can't begin to carry
+all that you are in my mind."</p>
+
+<p>"With pleasure," said he, and
+reaching over to his bookcase he
+took thence the desired volume and
+handed it to me. "Proceed," he
+added. "I am all ears."</p>
+
+<p>"Most jackasses are," I returned,
+savagely.</p>
+
+<p>"Magnificent," he cried, ecstatically.
+"You are a genius at epithet.
+But there's the book. Let me light
+a cigar for you and then you can begin.
+Only <i>do</i> take off that absurd
+tile. You don't know how supremely
+unbecoming it is."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 183]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was nothing for it, so I
+resolved to make the best of it by
+meeting the disagreeable old pantaloon
+on his own ground. I lit
+one of his cigars and sat down to
+tell the curious old freak what I
+thought of him. Ordinarily I would
+have avoided doing this, but his
+tyrannical exercise of his temporary
+advantage made me angry to the
+very core of my being.</p>
+
+<p>"Ready?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite," said he. "Don't stint
+yourself. Just behave as if you'd
+known me all your life. I sha'n't
+mind."</p>
+
+<p>And I began: "Well, after referring
+to the word 'idiot' in the index,
+just to get a lead," I said, "I shall
+begin by saying that you are evidently
+a hebetudinous imbecile, an
+indiscriminate stult&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold on!" he cried. "What's
+that last? I never heard the term
+before."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Stult&mdash;an indiscriminate stult,"
+I said, scornfully. "I invented the
+word myself. Real words won't describe
+you. Stult is a new term,
+meaning all kinds of a fool, plus
+two. And I've got a few more if
+you want them."</p>
+
+<p>"Want them?" he cried. "By
+Vulcan, I dote upon them! They
+are nectar to my thirsty ears. Go
+on."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a senseless frivoler, a
+fugacious gid, an infamous hoddydoddy;
+you are a man with the
+hoe with the emptiness of ages
+in your face; you are a brother to
+the ox, with all the dundering niziness
+of a plain, ordinary buzzard
+added to your shallow-brained asininity.
+Now will you let me go?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not I," said he, shaking his
+head as if he relished a situation
+which was gradually making a madman
+of me. "I'd like to oblige you,
+but I really can't. You are giving<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+me too much pleasure. Is there
+nothing more you can call me?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're a dizzard!" I retorted.
+"And a noodle and a jolt-head;
+you're a jobbernowl and a doodle,
+a maundering mooncalf and a blockheaded
+numps, a gaby and a loon;
+you're a <i>Hatter</i>!" I shrieked the
+last epithet.</p>
+
+<p>"Heavens!" he cried, "A Hatter!
+Am I as bad as that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, come now," I said, closing
+the <i>Thesaurus</i> with a bang. "Have
+some regard for my position, won't
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>I had resolved to appeal to his
+better nature. "I don't know who
+the dickens you are. You may be
+the three wise men of Gotham who
+went to sea in a bowl rolled into one,
+for all I know. You may be any
+old thing. I don't give a tinker's
+cuss what you are. Under ordinary
+circumstances I've no doubt I should
+find you a very pleasant old gentleman,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+but under present conditions
+you are a blundering old bore."</p>
+
+<p>"That's not bad&mdash;indeed, a blundering
+old bore is pretty good. Let
+me see," he continued, looking up
+the word "bore" in the index of the
+<i>Thesaurus</i>, "What else am I? Maybe
+I'm an unmitigated nuisance, an
+exasperating and egregious glum,
+a carking care, and a pestiferous
+pill, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are all of that," I said,
+wearily. "Your meanness surpasseth
+all things. I've met a good
+many tough characters in my day,
+but you are the first I have ever
+encountered without a redeeming
+feature. You take advantage of a
+mistake for which I am not at all
+responsible, and what do you do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," he replied. "What
+do I do? I shall be delighted to
+hear. I've been asking myself that
+question for years. What do I do?
+Go on, I implore you."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You rub it in, that's what,"
+I retorted. "You take advantage
+of me. You bait me; you incommode
+me. You&mdash;you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Here, take the <i>Thesaurus</i>," he
+said, as I hesitated for the word.
+"It will help you. I provoke you,
+I irritate you, I make you mad, I
+sour your temper, I sicken, disgust,
+revolt, nauseate, repel you. I rankle
+your soul. I jar you&mdash;is that it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Give me the book," I cried, desperately.
+"Yes!" I added, referring
+to the page. "You tease, irk, harry,
+badger, infest, persecute. You gall,
+sting, and convulse me. You are
+a plain old beast, that's what you
+are. You're a conscienceless sneak
+and a wherret&mdash;you mean-souled blot
+on the face of nature!"</p>
+
+<p>Here I broke down and wept, and
+the old gentleman's sides shook
+with laughter. He was, without exception,
+the most extraordinary old
+person I had ever encountered, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 188]</a></span>
+in my tears I cursed the English
+language because it was inadequate
+properly to describe him.</p>
+
+<p>For a time there was silence. I
+was exhausted and my tormentor
+was given over to his own enjoyment
+of my discomfiture. Finally,
+however, he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a pretty old man, my dear
+fellow," he said. "I shouldn't like
+to tell you how old, because if I did
+you'd begin on the <i>Thesaurus</i> again
+with the word 'liar' for your lead.
+Nevertheless, I'm pretty old; but I
+want to say to you that in all my
+experience I have never had so
+diverting a half-hour as you have
+given me. You have been so outspoken,
+so frank&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed&mdash;I've been frank, have
+I?" I interrupted. "Well, what I
+have said isn't a marker to what
+I'd like to have said and would have
+said if language hadn't its limitations.
+You are the infinity of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+unmitigated, the supreme of the superfluous.
+In unqualified, inexcusable,
+unsurpassable meanness you
+are the very IT!"</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," said the old gentleman,
+rising and bowing, "you are a man
+of unusual penetration, and I like
+you. I should like to see more of you,
+but your hour has expired. I thank
+you for your pleasant words, and I bid
+you an affectionate good-morning."</p>
+
+<p>A deep-toned bell struck the hour
+of twelve. A fanfare of trumpets
+sounded outside, and the huge door
+flew open, and without a word in
+reply, glad of my deliverance, I
+turned and fled precipitately through
+it. The sumptuous guard stood outside
+to receive me, and as the door
+closed behind me the band struck
+up a swelling measure that I shall
+not soon forget.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said the Major Domo, as
+we proceeded back to my quarters,
+"did he receive you nicely?"</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 190]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Who?" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Jupiter, of course," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't see him," I replied, sadly.
+"I fell in with a beastly old bore
+who wouldn't let go of me. You
+showed me into the wrong room.
+Who was that old beggar, anyhow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Beggar?" he cried. "Wrong
+room? Beggar?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said I. "Beggar is
+mild, I admit. But he's all that and
+much more. Who is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what you mean,"
+replied the Major Domo. "But you
+have been for the last hour with his
+Majesty himself."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" I cried. "I&mdash;that old
+man&mdash;we&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The old gentleman was Jupiter.
+Didn't he tell you? He made a
+special effort to make you feel at
+home&mdash;put himself on a purely mortal
+basis&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>I fell back, limp and nerveless.</p>
+
+<p>"What will he think of me?" I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 191]</a></span>moaned, as I realized what had happened.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></a></p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 291px;">
+<a href="images/image19h.jpg">
+<img src="images/image19.jpg" width="291" height="500" alt="&quot;&#39;WHAT?&#39; I CRIED. &#39;I&mdash;THAT OLD MAN&mdash;WE&#39;&quot;" title="" /></a>
+</div>
+
+<p>"He thinks you are the best yet,"
+said the Major Domo. "He has
+sent word by his messenger, Mercury,
+that the honors of Olympus are to
+be showered upon you to their fullest
+extent. He says you are the only
+frank mortal he ever met."</p>
+
+<p>And with this I was escorted back
+to my rooms at the hotel, impressed
+with the idea that all is not lead
+that doesn't glitter, and when I
+thought of my invention of the word
+"stult," I began to wish I had never
+been born.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="XI" id="XI"></a>XI</h2>
+
+<h2>A Royal Outing</h2>
+
+
+<p>As may be imagined after
+my untoward interview
+with Jupiter, the state of
+my mind was far from
+easy. It is not pleasant to realize
+that you have applied every known
+epithet of contempt to a god who
+has an off-hand way of disposing
+of his enemies by turning them
+into apple-trees, or dumb beasts
+of one kind or another, and upon
+retiring to my room I sat down
+and waited in great dread of what
+should happen next. I couldn't
+really believe that the Major Domo's
+statement as to my having been forgiven<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+was possible. It predicated
+too great a magnanimity to be
+credible.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope to gracious he won't
+make a pine-tree of me," I groaned,
+visions of a future in which woodmen
+armed with axes, and sawmills,
+played a conspicuous part,
+rising up before me. "I'd hate like
+time to be sawed up into planks
+and turned into a Georgia pine floor
+somewhere."</p>
+
+<p>It was a painful line of thought
+and I strove to get away from it,
+but without success, although the
+variations were interesting when I
+thought of all the things I might be
+made into, such as kitchen tables,
+imitation oak bookcases, or perhaps&mdash;horror
+of horrors&mdash;a bundle of
+toothpicks! I was growing frantic
+with fear, when on a sudden my
+reveries of dread were interrupted
+by a knock on the door.</p>
+
+<p>"It has come at last!" I said,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+and I opened the door, nerving myself
+up to sustain the blow which
+I believed was impending. Mercury
+stood without, flapping the wings
+that sprouted from his ankles impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"The skitomobile is ready, sir,"
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>I gazed at him earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"The what?"</p>
+
+<p>"The skitomobile, to take you to
+the links. Jupiter has already gone
+on ahead, and he has commanded
+me to follow, bringing you along
+with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh&mdash;I'm to go to the links,
+eh? What's he going to do with
+me when he gets me there? Turn
+me into a golf-ball and drive me
+off into space?" I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>My heart sank at the very idea,
+but I was immediately reassured by
+Mercury's hearty laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not&mdash;why should he?
+He's going to play you an eighteen-hole<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+match. You've made a great
+impression on the old gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank Heaven!" I said. "I'll
+hurry along and join him before
+he changes his mind."</p>
+
+<p>In a brief while I was ready, and,
+escorted by Mercury, I was taken
+to the skitomobile which stood at
+the exit from the hall to the outer
+roadway nearest my room. Seated
+in front of this, and acting as
+chauffeur, was a young man whom
+I recognized at once as Phaeton.
+Alongside of him sat Jason, polishing
+up the most beautiful set of
+golf-clubs I ever saw. The irons
+were of wrought gold, and the shafts
+of the most highly polished and exquisite
+woods.</p>
+
+<p>"To the links," said Mercury,
+and with a sudden chug-chug, and
+a jerk which nearly threw me out of
+the conveyance, we were off. And
+what a ride it was! At first the sensation
+was that of falling, and I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+clutched nervously at the sides of
+the skitomobile, but by slow degrees
+I got used to it, and enjoyed one
+of the most exhilarating hours that
+has ever entered into my experience.</p>
+
+<p>Planet after planet was passed as
+we sped on and on upward, and
+as my delight grew I gave utterance
+to it.</p>
+
+<p>"Jove! But this is fine!" I said.
+"I never knew anything like it,
+except looping the loop."</p>
+
+<p>Phaeton grinned broadly and
+winked at Jason.</p>
+
+<p>"How would you like to loop the
+loop out here?" the latter asked.</p>
+
+<p>"What? In a machine like this?"
+I cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said Jason. "It's
+great sport. Give him the twist,
+Phaeton."</p>
+
+<p>I began to grow anxious again,
+for I recalled the past careless methods
+of Phaeton, and I had no wish
+to go looping the loop through the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+empyrean with one of his known
+adventurous disposition, to be hurled
+unceremoniously sooner or later perhaps
+into the sun itself.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps we'd better leave it until
+some other day," I ventured, timidly.</p>
+
+<p>"No time like the present," Jason
+retorted. "Only hang on to yourself.
+All ready, Phaety!"</p>
+
+<p>The chauffeur grasped the lever,
+and, turning it swiftly to one side,
+there in the blue vault of heaven,
+a thousand miles from anywhere,
+that machine began executing the
+most remarkable flip-flaps the mind
+of man ever conceived. Not once
+or twice, but a hundred times did
+we go whirling round and round
+through the skies, until finally I
+got so that I could not tell if I were
+right side up or upside down. It
+was great sport, however, and but
+for the fact that on the third trial
+I lost my grip and would have fallen
+head over heels through space had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+not Mercury, who was flying alongside
+of the machine, swooped down
+and caught me by the leg as I fell
+out, I found it as exhilarating as
+it was novel. I could have kept
+it up forever, had we not shortly
+hove in sight of the links, which,
+as I have already told you, were
+located on the planet Mars; and
+such gorgeousness as I there encountered
+was unparalleled on earth.
+Much that we earth-folk have wondered
+at became clear at once. The
+great canals, as we call them, for
+instance, turned out to be vast sand-bunkers
+that glistened like broad
+rivers of silver in the wondrous
+sheen of the planet, while the dark
+greenish spots, concerning which
+our astronomers have speculated so
+variously, were nothing more nor
+less than putting-greens. It is extraordinary
+that until my visit to
+the planet as the guest of Jupiter,
+this perfectly simple solution of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+various Martian problems was not
+even guessed.</p>
+
+<p>As we drew up at the pretty little
+club-house, Jupiter emerged from
+the door and greeted me cordially.
+My eyes fell before his smiling gaze,
+for I must confess I was mighty
+shamefaced over my experience of
+the morning, but his manner restored
+my self-possession. It was
+very genial and forgiving.</p>
+
+<p>"Glad to see you again," he said.
+"If you play golf as well as you do
+synonyms you're a scratch man.
+You didn't foozle a syllable."</p>
+
+<p>"I should have, had I known as
+much as I do now," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm glad you didn't know,"
+Jupiter returned majestically, "for I
+can use that word stult in my business.
+Now suppose we have a bit
+of luncheon and then start out."</p>
+
+<p>After eating sparingly we began
+our game. I was provided with
+a caddie that looked like one of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+Raphael's angels, and Jupiter himself
+handed me a driver from his
+own bag.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have to be careful how
+you use it," he said; "it has properties
+which may astonish you."</p>
+
+<p>I teed up my ball, swung back,
+and then with all the vigor at my
+command whacked the ball square
+and true. It sprang from the tee
+like a bird let loose and flew beyond
+my vision, and while I was trying
+with my eye to keep up with it in its
+flight, I received a stinging blow on
+the back of my head which felled me
+to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Thunderation!" I roared. "What
+was that?"</p>
+
+<p>Jupiter laughed. "It was your
+own ball," he said. "You put too
+much muscle into that stroke, and,
+as a consequence, the ball flew all
+the way round the planet and clipped
+you from behind."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean to say&mdash;" I began.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 201]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do," said Jupiter. "That
+is a special long-distance driver
+made for me. Only had it two
+days. It is not easy to use, because
+it has such wonderful force.
+Hercules drove a ball three times
+around the planet at one stroke with
+it yesterday. To use it properly requires
+judgment. Up here you have
+to play golf with your head, as well
+as with your clubs."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I played it with mine all
+right," I put in, rubbing the lump
+on the back of my head ruefully.
+"Shall I play two?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said Jupiter. "You've
+a good brassey lie behind the tee
+there. Play gently now, for this
+hole isn't more than three hundred
+miles long."</p>
+
+<p>My brassey stroke is one of my
+best, and I did myself proud. The
+ball flew about one hundred and
+seventy-nine miles in a straight
+line, but landed in a sand-bunker.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+Jupiter followed with a good clean
+drive for two hundred miles, breaking
+all the records previously stated to
+me by Adonis, whereupon we entered
+the skitomobile and were promptly
+transported to the edge of the bunker,
+where my ball reposed upon the glistening
+sand. It took three to get out,
+owing to the height of the cop, which
+rose a trifle higher in the air than
+Mount Blanc, but the niblick Jason
+had brought along for my use, as
+soon as I got used to the titanic quality
+of the game I was playing, was
+finally equal to the loft. My ball
+landed just short of the green, one
+hundred and sixteen miles away.
+Jupiter foozled his approach, and we
+both reached the edge of the green
+in four.</p>
+
+<p>"Bully distance for a putt," said
+Jupiter, taking the line from his
+ball to the hole.</p>
+
+<p>"About how far is it?" I asked,
+for I couldn't see anything resembling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+a hole within a mile of
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, five miles, I imagine," was
+the answer. "Put on these glasses
+and you'll see the disk."</p>
+
+<p>My courteous host handed me a
+pair of spectacles which I put upon
+my nose, and there, seemingly two
+inches away, but in reality five
+and a quarter miles, was the hole.
+The glasses were a revelation, but
+I had seen too much that was wonderful
+to express surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead easy," I said, referring to
+the putt, now that I had the glasses on.</p>
+
+<p>"Looks so," said Jupiter, "but
+be careful. You can't hope to putt
+until you know your ball."</p>
+
+<p>At the moment I did not understand,
+but a minute after I had a
+shock. Putting perfectly straight,
+the ball rolled easily along and
+then made a slight hitch backward,
+as if I had put a cut on it, and struck
+off ahead, straight as an arrow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+but to the left of the disk. This
+it continued to do in its course,
+zigzagging more and more out of the
+straight line until it finally stopped,
+quite two and a half miles from the
+cup.</p>
+
+<p>"Now watch me," said Jupiter.
+"You'll get an idea of how the ball
+works."</p>
+
+<p>I obeyed, and was surprised to
+see him aim at a point at least a
+mile aside of the mark, but the
+results were perfect, for the gutty,
+acting precisely as mine did, zigzagged
+along until it reached the
+rim of the cup and then dropped
+gently in.</p>
+
+<p>"One up," said Jupiter, with a
+broad smile as he watched my ill-repressed
+wonderment.</p>
+
+<p>As we were transported to the
+next tee by Phaeton and his machine,
+I looked at my ball, and the
+peculiarity of its make became clear
+at once. It was called "The Vulcan,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+and in action had precisely the same
+movement as that of a thunder-bolt&mdash;thus:</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/image20.jpg" width="500" height="68" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>"Great ball, eh?" said Jupiter.
+"Adds a lot to the science of the
+game. A straight putt is easy, but
+the zigzag is no child's play."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I shall like it," I said,
+"if I ever get used to it."</p>
+
+<p>The second hole reached, I was
+astonished to see a huge apparatus
+like a cannon on the tee, and in
+fact that is what it turned out to be.</p>
+
+<p>"We call this the Cannon Hole,"
+said Jupiter. "It lends variety to
+the game. It's a splendid test of
+your accuracy, and if you don't
+make it in one you lose it. If you
+will put on those glasses you will
+see the hole, which is in the middle
+of a target. You've got to go
+through it at one stroke."</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 206]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That isn't golf, is it?" I asked.
+"It's marksmanship."</p>
+
+<p>"I call it so," said Jupiter, calmly.
+"And what I say goes. Moreover,
+it requires much skill to offset the
+effect of the wind."</p>
+
+<p>"But there is none," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be," said Jupiter,
+putting his ball in the cannon's
+breach and making ready to drive.
+"You see those huge steel affairs
+on either side of the course, that
+look like the ventilators on an ocean
+steamer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said I, for as I looked I
+perceived that this part of the course
+was studded with them.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, they supply the wind,"
+said Jupiter. "I just ring a bell
+and &AElig;olus sets his bellows going,
+and I tell you the winds you get
+are cyclonic, and, best of all, they
+blow in all directions. From the
+first ventilator the wind is northeast
+by south; from the second it is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+southwest by north-northeast; from
+the third it is straight north, and so
+on. Winds are blowing at the moment
+of play from all possible points
+of the compass. Fore!"</p>
+
+<p>A bell rang, and never in a wide
+experience in noises had I ever before
+heard such a fearful din as followed.
+A hurricane sprang from one point,
+a gale from another, a cyclone from
+a third&mdash;such an &aelig;olian purgatory
+was never let loose in my sight before,
+but Jupiter, gauging each and
+all, fired his ball from the cannon,
+and it sped on, buffeted here and
+there, now up, now down, like a
+bit of fluff in the chance zephyrs
+of the spring-tide, but ultimately
+passing through the hole in the
+target, and landing gently in a
+basket immediately behind the bull's-eye.
+The winds immediately died
+down, and all was quiet again.</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly great!" I said, with
+enthusiasm, for it did seem marvellous.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+"But I don't think I can
+do it. You win, of course."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all," said Jupiter. "If
+you hit the bull's-eye, as I did,
+you win."</p>
+
+<p>"And you lose in spite of that
+splendid&mdash;er&mdash;stroke?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no&mdash;not at all," said Jupiter.
+"We both win."</p>
+
+<p>Again the bell rang, and the
+winds blew, and the cannon shot,
+but my ball, under the excitement of
+the moment of aiming, was directed
+not towards the bull's-eye&mdash;or the
+hole&mdash;but at the skitomobile. It hit
+it fairly and hard, and it smashed
+the engine by which the machine
+was propelled, much to the consternation
+of Jason and Phaeton.</p>
+
+<p>"Unfortunate," said Jupiter.
+"Very. But never mind. We don't
+have to walk home."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm awfully sorry," said I. "I&mdash;er&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind," said Jupiter. "It<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+is easily repaired, but we cannot go
+on with the game. The next hole
+is eight thousand miles long. Twice
+around the planet, and we couldn't
+possibly walk it, so we'll have to
+quit. We've got all we can manage
+trudging back to the club-house.
+Here, caddies, take our clubs back
+to the club-house, and tell 'em to
+have two nectar high-balls ready
+at six-thirty. Phaeton, you and
+Jason will have to get back the
+best way you can. I've told you
+a half-dozen times to bring two
+machines with you, but you never
+seem to understand. Come along,
+Higgins, we'll go back. Shut your
+eyes."</p>
+
+<p>I closed my optics, as ordered,
+although my name is not Higgins,
+and I didn't like to have even Jupiter
+so dub me.</p>
+
+<p>"Now open them again," was
+the sharp order.</p>
+
+<p>I did so, and lo and behold! by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+some supernatural power we had
+been transported back to the club-house.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry, Jupiter," said I
+"to have spoiled your game," as
+we sat, later, sipping that delicious
+concoction, the nectar high-ball,
+which we supplemented with a
+"Pegasus's neck."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense," said he, grandly.
+"You haven't spoiled my <i>game</i>.
+You have merely, without meaning
+to do so, spoiled your own afternoon.
+My game is all right and will remain
+so. It would have been a
+great pleasure to me to show you
+the other sixteen holes, but circumstances
+were against us. Take your
+nectar and let us trot along. You
+dine with Juno and myself to-night.
+Let's see, I was two up, wasn't I?"</p>
+
+<p>"Two up, and sixteen to play."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I win," said he. It was
+an extraordinary score, but then it
+was an extraordinary occasion.</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 211]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And we entered his chariot, and
+were whirled back to Olympus. The
+ride home was not as exciting as
+the ride out, but it was interesting.
+It lasted about a half of a millionth
+of a second, and for the first time
+in my life I knew how a telegram
+feels when it travels from New York
+to San Francisco, and gets there
+apparently three hours before it is
+sent by the clock.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 112]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="XII" id="XII"></a>XII</h2>
+
+<h2>I am Dismissed</h2>
+
+
+<p>It was a very interesting
+programme for my further
+entertainment that Jupiter
+mapped out on our way
+back from the links, and I deeply regret
+that an untoward incident that
+followed later, for which I was unintentionally
+responsible, prevented
+its being carried out. I was to
+have been taken off on a cruise on
+the inland sea, to where the lost
+island of Atlantis was to be found;
+a special tournament at ping-pong
+was to be held in my honor, in which
+minor planets were to be used instead
+of balls, and the players were
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 213]</a></span>to be drawn from among the Titans,
+who were retained to perform feats
+of valor, skill, and strength for Jupiter.
+The forge of Vulcan was to
+be visited, and many of the mysteries
+of the centre of the earth were
+to be revealed, and, best of all, Jupiter
+himself had promised to give me
+an exhibition of his own skill as a
+marksman in the hurling of thunder-bolts,
+and <i>I was to select the objects
+to be hit!</i> Think of it! What a
+chance lay here for a man to be
+rid of certain things on earth that
+he did not like! What a vast amount
+of ugly American architecture one
+could be rid of in the twinkling
+of an eye! What a lot of enemies
+and eyesores it was now in my
+power to have removed by an
+electrical process availed of in the
+guise of sport! I spent an hour
+on that list of targets, and if only
+I had been allowed to prolong my
+stay in the home of the gods, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+world itself would have benefited,
+for I was not altogether personal
+in my selection of things for Jupiter
+to aim at. There was Tammany
+Hall, for instance, and the Boxers
+of China&mdash;these led my list. There
+were four or five sunlight-destroying,
+sky-scraping office buildings in New
+York and elsewhere; nuisances of
+every kind that I could think of
+were put down&mdash;the headquarters
+of the Beef Trust and a few of its
+sponsors; the editorial offices of the
+peevish and bilious newspapers,
+which deny principles and right
+motives to all save themselves; a
+regiment of alleged humorists who
+make jokes about the mother-in-law
+and other sacred relations of
+life; an opera-box full of the people
+who hum every number of Wagner
+and Verdi through, and keep other
+people from hearing the singers;
+row after row of theatre-goers who
+come in late and trample over the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+virtuous folk who have arrived
+punctually; any number of theatrical
+managers who mistake gloom for
+amusement; three or four smirking
+matin&eacute;e idols, whose talents are
+measured by the fit of their clothes,
+the length of their hair, and their
+ability to spit supernumeraries with
+a tin sword; cab-drivers who had
+overcharged me; insolent railway
+officials; the New York Central Tunnel&mdash;indeed,
+the completed list
+stretches on to such proportions
+that it would require more pages
+than this book contains to present
+them in detail. I even thought of
+including Hippopopolis in the list,
+but when I realized that it was entirely
+owing to his villany that I had
+enjoyed the delightful privilege of
+visiting the gods in their own abode,
+I spared him. And to think that because
+of an unintentional error this
+great opportunity to rid the world,
+and incidentally myself, of much that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+is vexatious was wholly lost is a matter
+of sincere grief to myself.</p>
+
+<p>It happened in this way: Hardly
+had I returned to my delightful
+apartment at the hotel, when a
+messenger arrived bearing a superbly
+engraved command from Jupiter to
+dine with himself and Juno <i>en
+famille</i>. It was a kind, courteous,
+and friendly note, utterly devoid of
+formality, and we were to spend
+the evening at cards. Jupiter had
+indicated in the afternoon that he
+would like to learn bridge, and, inasmuch
+as I never travel anywhere
+without a text-book upon that fascinating
+subject, I had volunteered
+to teach him. The dinner was given
+largely to enable me to do this, and,
+moreover, Jupiter was quite anxious
+to have me meet his family, and
+promised me that before the evening
+was over I should hear some music
+from the lyre of Apollo, meet all
+the muses, and enjoy a chafing-dish<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+snack prepared by the fair
+hand of Juno herself.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll have Polyphemus up to give
+us a few coon songs if you like them,"
+he added, "and altogether I can
+promise you a delightful evening.
+We drop all our state at these affairs,
+and I know you'll enjoy yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall feel a trifle embarrassed
+in the presence of so many gods and
+goddesses, I am afraid," I put in.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll fix you out as to that," Jupiter
+replied. "I'll change you for
+the time being into a god yourself,
+if you wish."</p>
+
+<p>I laughed at the idea.</p>
+
+<p>"A high old god I'd make," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You'd pass," he observed, quietly.
+"I'll call you Pencillius, god
+of Chirography&mdash;or would you rather
+come as Nonsensius, the newly discovered
+deity of Jocosity?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think I'd rather be Zero, god of
+Nit," said I, and it was so ordained.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I accepted the invitation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+and was on hand at the palace,
+as I thought, promptly. As a matter
+of fact, my watch having in some
+mysterious fashion been affected by
+the excitement of the adventure,
+got galloping away just as my
+own heart had done more than
+once. The result was that, instead
+of arriving at the palace at eight
+o'clock, as I was expected to do,
+I got there at seven. Of course, my
+exalted hosts were not ready to
+receive me, and there were no other
+guests to bear me company and
+keep me out of mischief in the drawing-room,
+where for an hour I was
+compelled to wait. At first all went
+well. I found much entertainment
+in the room, and on the centre-table,
+a beautiful bit of furniture, carved
+out of one huge amethyst, I discovered
+a number of books and
+magazines, which kept me tolerably
+busy for a half-hour. There was
+a finely bound copy of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 219]</a></span><i>Don'ts for
+the Gods, or Celestial Etiquette</i>, in
+which I found many valuable hints
+on the procedure of Olympian society&mdash;notably
+one injunction as
+to the use of finger-bowls, from
+which I learned that the gods in
+their lavishness have a bowl for
+each finger; and a little volume
+by Bacchus on <i>Intemperance</i>, which
+I wish I might publish for the
+benefit of my fellow-mortals. All
+I remember about it at the moment
+of writing is that the author seriously
+enjoins upon his readers the
+wickedness of drinking more than
+sixty cocktails a day, and utterly
+deprecates the habit of certain Englishmen
+of drinking seven bottles of
+port at a sitting. Bacchus seemed
+to think that, with the other wines incidental
+to a dinner, no one, not even
+an Englishman, should attempt to
+absorb more than five bottles of
+port over his coffee. It struck me
+as being rather good advice.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 220]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Wearying of the reading at the
+end of a half-hour, I began a closer
+inspection of the room and its contents.
+It was full of novelties, and,
+naturally, gorgeous past all description;
+but what most excited my
+curiosity was a small cabinet, not
+unlike a stereoscope in shape, which
+stood in one corner of the room.
+It had a button at one side, over
+which was a gilt tablet marked
+"Push." On its front was the
+legend, "Drop a Nickel in the Slot,
+Push the Button, and See the
+Future." I followed the instructions
+eagerly. The nickel was dropped,
+the button pushed, and, putting
+my eyes before the lenses, I gazed
+into the remotest days to come.
+I had come across the Futuroscope,
+otherwise a kinetoscope with the gift
+of prophecy. The coming year passed
+rapidly, and I saw what fate had
+in store for the world for the twelve
+months immediately ahead of me;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+then followed a decade, then a
+century, and then others, until, just
+as I was approaching the dread
+cataclysm which is to mark the
+end of all mortal things, I heard a
+quick, startled voice back of me.</p>
+
+<p>It was that of Jupiter, and his
+tone was a strange mixture of wrath
+and regret.</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth have you done?"
+he cried.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, your Majesty," said I,
+shaking all over as with the ague at
+the revelations I had just witnessed,
+"except getting a bird's-eye view
+of what is to come."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," said he, gravely.
+"It is not well that mortals should
+know the future, and your imprudent
+act is destructive of all the plans
+I have had for you. You must
+leave us instantly, for that instrument
+is for the gods alone. Moreover,
+the knowledge of that which
+you have seen&mdash;"</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 222]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Here his voice positively thundered,
+and the frown that came
+upon his brow filled me with awe
+and terror.</p>
+
+<p>"All knowledge of what you have
+seen must be removed from your
+brain," he added, grimly.</p>
+
+<p>I was speechless with fear as the
+ruler of Olympus touched an electric
+button at the side of the room, and
+the two huge slaves, Gog and Magog,
+appeared.</p>
+
+<p>"Seize him!" Jupiter commanded,
+sternly.</p>
+
+<p>In an instant I was bound hand
+and foot.</p>
+
+<p>"To the office of Dr. &AElig;sculapius!"
+he commanded, and I was unceremoniously
+removed to the room wherein
+I had had my interview with
+the great doctor, where I was immediately
+etherized and my brain
+operated upon. Precisely what was
+done to me I shall probably never
+know, but what I do know is that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+from that time to this all that I saw
+in that marvellous Futuroscope is a
+blank, although on all other subjects
+pertaining to my visit to the gods my
+recollection is perfectly clear. It suffices
+to say that I lay for a long time
+in a stupor, and when finally I came
+to my senses again I found myself
+comfortably ensconced in my own
+bed, in my own home; not in Greece,
+but in America; suffering from a
+dull headache from which I did not
+escape for at least three hours.
+Again and again and again have
+I tried to recall that wonderful picture
+of a marvellous future seen by
+my mortal eyes that night upon
+Olympus, that I might set it upon
+paper for others to read, but with each
+effort the dreadful pain in the top of
+my head returns and I find myself
+compelled to abandon the project.</p>
+
+<p>So was my brief visit to Olympus
+begun and ended. In its results it
+has perhaps been neither elevating<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+nor remarkably instructive, but it has
+given me a better understanding of,
+and a better liking for, that great
+company of mythological beings who
+used to preside over the destinies of
+the Greeks. They appeared more human
+than godlike to my eyes. They
+were companionable to a degree,
+and for a time, at least, would prove
+congenial associates for a summer
+outing, but as a steady diet&mdash;well, I
+am not at all surprised that, as men
+waxed more mature in years and in
+experience, these titanic members of
+the Olympian four hundred lost their
+power and became no greater factor
+in the life of the large society of mankind
+than any other group of people,
+equal in number and of seeming importance,
+whose days and nights are
+given over solely to pleasure and the
+morbid pursuit of notoriety.</p>
+
+<p>THE END</p><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br />
+Transcriber's Note: The author refers to a type of golf club
+as a "brassey" and also as a "brassie". Both spellings have
+been maintained in this document.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Olympian Nights, by John Kendrick Bangs
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Olympian Nights, by John Kendrick Bangs
+
+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: Olympian Nights
+
+Author: John Kendrick Bangs
+
+Release Date: March 11, 2006 [EBook #17964]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OLYMPIAN NIGHTS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Paul Good, Suzanne Shell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: Text that was printed in italics in the original
+document is shown between _underscore characters_ and the oe ligature
+is shown as [oe].
+
+
+[Illustration: BRANCH OFFICE OF MAMMON & CO.]
+
+
+
+
+
+ OLYMPIAN NIGHTS
+
+ by
+
+ JOHN KENDRICK BANGS
+
+ Author of "A House-Boat on the Styx"
+ "The Pursuit of the House-Boat"
+ "The Enchanted Type-writer"
+ Etc. Etc.
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ New York and London
+ Harper & Brothers Publishers
+
+ 1902
+
+
+
+
+ HARPER & BROTHERS.
+
+ Published June, 1902.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAP. PAGE
+
+I. I REACH MOUNT OLYMPUS 1
+
+II. I SEEK SHELTER AND FIND IT 17
+
+III. THE ELEVATOR BOY 33
+
+IV. I SUMMON A VALET 53
+
+V. THE OLYMPIAN LINKS 70
+
+VI. IN THE DINING-ROOM 88
+
+VII. AESCULAPIUS, M.D. 110
+
+VIII. AT THE ZOO 131
+
+IX. SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PALACE OF JUPITER 155
+
+X. AN EXTRAORDINARY INTERVIEW 175
+
+XI. A ROYAL OUTING 192
+
+XII. I AM DISMISSED 212
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+BRANCH OFFICE OF MAMMON & CO. _Frontispiece_
+
+HIPPOPOPOLIS EXPLAINS _Facing p._ 8
+
+A DREAM OF BRIGANDAGE " 22
+
+IN THE ELEVATOR " 30
+
+"'THE GODDESS OF THE MOTHER-IN-LAW'" " 42
+
+"ANYTHING COULD BE GOT FOR THE RINGING" " 60
+
+"JUPITER HURLED A THUNDER-BOLT AT HIM" " 64
+
+THE OLYMPIAN LINKS " 84
+
+CARING FOR THE CALVES " 104
+
+"'THEN YOU MUST DIE'" " 112
+
+I VISIT AESCULAPIUS " 118
+
+CALLISTO " 140
+
+I MEET THE PH[OE]NIX " 150
+
+"'THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE UNIVERSE'" " 166
+
+"THE DOOR WAS LOCKED" " 180
+
+"'WHAT?' I CRIED. 'I--THAT OLD MAN--WE'" " 190
+
+
+
+
+OLYMPIAN NIGHTS
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+I Reach Mount Olympus
+
+
+While travelling through the classic realms of Greece some years ago,
+sincerely desirous of discovering the lurking-place of a certain war
+which the newspapers of my own country were describing with some
+vividness, I chanced upon the base of the far-famed Mount Olympus.
+Night was coming on apace and I was tired, having been led during the
+day upon a wild-goose chase by my guide, who had assured me that he
+had definitely located the scene of hostilities between the Greeks
+and the Turks. He had promised that for a consideration I should
+witness a conflict between the contending armies which in its
+sanguinary aspects should surpass anything the world had yet known.
+Whether or not it so happened that the armies had been booked for a
+public exhibition elsewhere, unknown to the talented bandit who was
+acting as my courier, I am not aware, but, as the event transpired,
+the search was futile, and another day was wasted. Most annoying, too,
+was the fact that I dared not manifest the impatience which I
+naturally felt. I am not remarkable as a specimen of the strong man;
+quite the reverse indeed, for, while I am by no means a weakling, I am
+no adept in the fistic art. Hence, when my guide, Hippopopolis by
+name, as the sun sank behind the western hills, informed me that I
+was again to be disappointed, the fact that he stands six feet two in
+his stockings, when he wears them, and has a pleasing way of bending
+crowbars as a pastime, led me to conceal the irritation which I felt.
+
+"It's all right, Hippopopolis," I said, swallowing my wrath. "It's all
+right. We've had a good bit of exercise, anyhow, and that, after all,
+is the chief desideratum to a man of a sedentary occupation. How many
+miles have we walked?"
+
+"Oh, about forty-three," he said, calmly. "A short distance, your
+Excellency."
+
+"Very--very short," said I, rubbing my aching calves. "In my own
+country I make a practice of walking at least a hundred every day.
+It's quite a pleasing stroll from my home in New York over to
+Philadelphia and back. I hope I shall be able to show it you some
+day."
+
+"It will be altogether charming, Excellency," said he. "Shall
+we--ah--walk back to Athens now, or would you prefer to rest here for
+the night?"
+
+"I--I guess I'll stay here, Hippopopolis," I replied. "This seems to
+be a very comfortable sort of a mountain in front of us, and the air
+is soft. Suppose we rest in the soothing shade for the night? It would
+be quite an adventure."
+
+"As your Excellency wishes," he replied, tossing a bowlder into the
+air and catching it with ease as it came down. "It is not often done,
+but it is for you to say."
+
+"What mountain is it, Hippopopolis?" I asked, turning and gazing at
+the eminence before us.
+
+"It is Mount Olympus," he answered.
+
+"What?" I cried. "Not the home of the gods?"
+
+"The very same, your Excellency," he acquiesced. "At least, that is
+the report. It is commonly stated hereabouts that the god-trust has
+its headquarters here. As for myself, I have explored its every nook
+and cranny, but I never saw any gods on it. It's my private opinion
+that they've moved away; though there be those who claim that it is
+still occupied by the former rulers of destiny living incog. like
+other well-born rogues who desire to avoid notoriety."
+
+Hippopopolis is a decided democrat in his views, and has less respect
+for the King than he has for the peasant.
+
+"I shouldn't call them rogues exactly," I ventured. "Some of 'em were
+a pretty respectable lot. There was Apollo and old Jupiter himself,
+and--"
+
+"Oh, you can't tell me anything about them," retorted Hippopopolis. "I
+haven't been born and bred in this country for nothing, your
+Excellency. They were a bad lot all through. Shall I prepare your
+supper?"
+
+"If you please, Hippopopolis," said I, throwing myself down beneath a
+huge tree and giving myself up to the reveries of the moment. I did
+not deem it well to interpose too strongly between Hippopopolis and
+his views of the immortals just then. He had always a glitter in his
+eye when any one ventured to controvert his assertions which made a
+debate with him a thing to be apprehended. Still, I did not exactly
+like to yield, for, to tell the truth, the Olympian folk have always
+interested me hugely, and, while I would not of course endorse any one
+of them for a high public trust in these days, I have admired them for
+their many remarkable qualities.
+
+"Of course," said I, reverting to the question a few moments later, as
+Hippopopolis opened a box of sardines and set the bread a-toasting on
+the fire he had made. "Of course, I should not venture to say that I,
+a stranger, know as much about the private habits of the gods as do
+you, who have been their neighbor; but that they are rogues is news to
+me."
+
+"That may be, too," said Hippopopolis. "People are often thought more
+of by strangers than by their own fellow-townsmen. Even you, sir, I
+might suspect, who are by these simple Greeks supposed to be a sort of
+reigning sovereign in your own country, are not at home, perhaps, so
+large a hill of potatoes. So with Jupiter and Apollo and Mercury, and
+the ladies of the court. I haven't a doubt that in the United States
+you think Jupiter a remarkably great man, and Apollo a musician, and
+Mercury a gentleman of some business capacity, but we Greeks know
+better. And as for the ladies--hum--well, your Excellency, they are
+not received. They are too bold and pushing. They lack the
+refinements, and as for their beauty and accomplishments--"
+
+Hippopopolis here indulged in a gesture which betokened excessive
+scorn of the beauty and accomplishments of the ladies of Olympus.
+
+"You have never seen these people, Hippopopolis?" I asked.
+
+"I have been spared that necessity," said he, "but I know all about
+them, and I assert to you upon my honor as a courier and the best
+guide in the Archipelago that Jupiter is the worst old _roue_ a
+country ever had saddled upon it; Apollo's music would drive you mad
+and make you welcome a xylophone duet; and as for Mercury's business
+capacity, that is merely a capacity for getting away from his
+creditors. Why shouldn't a man wax rich if, after floating a thousand
+bogus corporations, selling the stock at par and putting the money
+into his own pocket, he could unfold his wings and fly off into the
+empyrean, leaving his stock and bond holders to mourn their loss?"
+
+[Illustration: HIPPOPOPOLIS EXPLAINS]
+
+"Excuse me, Hippopopolis," I put in, interrupting him fearlessly for
+the moment, "pray don't try to deceive me by any such statement as
+that. I don't know very much, but I know something about Mercury, and
+when you say he puts other people's money into his pockets, I am in a
+position to prove otherwise. From five years of age up to the present
+time I have been brought up in a home where a bronze statue of
+Mercury, said to be the most perfect resemblance in all the statuary
+of the world, classic or otherwise, has been the most conspicuous
+ornament. At ten I could reproduce on paper with my pencil every line,
+every shade, every curve, every movement of the effigy in so far as
+my artistic talent would permit, and I know that Mercury not only had
+no pocket, but wore no garments in which even so little as a change
+pocket could have been concealed. Wherefore there must be some mistake
+about your charge."
+
+Hippopopolis laughed.
+
+"Humph!" he said. "It is very evident that you people over the sea
+have very superficial notions of things here. When Mercury posed for
+that statue, like most of you people who have your photographs taken,
+he posed in full evening dress. That is why there is so little of it
+in evidence. But in his business suit, Mercury is a very different
+sort of a person. Even in Olympus he'd have been ruled off the stock
+exchange if he'd ventured to appear there as scantily attired as he is
+in most of his statuary appearances. You certainly are not so green as
+to suppose that that suit he wears in his statues is the whole extent
+of his wardrobe?"
+
+"I had supposed so," I confessed. "It's a trifle unconventional; but,
+then, he's one of the gods, and, I presumed, could dress as he
+pleased. Your gods are independent, I should imagine, of the mere
+decrees of fashion."
+
+"The more exalted one's position, the greater the sartorial
+obligation," retorted Hippopopolis, who, for a Greek and a guide, had,
+as will be seen, a vocabulary of most remarkable range. "Just as it
+happens that our King here, like H. R. H. the Prince of Wales, has to
+be provided with seven hundred and sixty-eight suits of clothes so as
+to be properly clad at the variety of functions he is required to
+grace, so does a god have to be provided with a wardrobe of rare
+quality and extent. For drawing-room tables, mantel-pieces, and
+pedestals, otherwise for statuary, Mercury can go about clad in just
+about half as much stuff as it would require to cover a fairly sized
+sofa-cushion and not arouse drastic criticism; but when he goes to
+business he is as well provided with pockets as any other speculator."
+
+"Another idol shattered!" I cried, in mock grief. "But Apollo,
+Hippopopolis--Apollo! Do not tell me he is not a virtuoso of rare
+technique on the lyre!"
+
+"His technique is more than rare," sneered Hippopopolis. "It is
+excessively raw. It has been said by men who have heard both that Nero
+of Hades can do more to move an audience with his fiddle with two
+strings broken and his bow wrist sprained than Apollo can do with the
+aid of his lyre and a special dispensation of divine inspiration from
+Zeus himself."
+
+"There are various ways of moving audiences, Hippopopolis," I
+ventured. "Now Nero, I should say, could move an audience--out of the
+hall--in a very few moments. In fact, I have always believed that that
+is why he fiddled when Rome was burning: so that people would run out
+of the city limits before they perished."
+
+"It's a very droll view," laughed Hippopopolis, "and I dare say holds
+much of the truth; but Nero's faulty execution is not proof of
+Apollo's virtuosity. For a woodland musicale given by the Dryads, say,
+to their friends, the squirrels and moles and wild-cats, and other
+denizens of the forest, Apollo will suffice. The musical taste of a
+kangaroo might find the strumming of his lyre by Apollo to its liking,
+but for cultivated people who know a crescendo andante-arpeggio from
+the staccato tones of a penny whistle, he is inadequate."
+
+"You speak as if you had heard the god," said I.
+
+"I have not," retorted Hippopopolis, "but I have heard playing by
+people, generally beginners, of whom the rural press has said that
+he--or more often she--has the touch of an Apollo, and, if that is
+true, as are all things we read in the newspapers, particularly the
+rural papers, which are not so sophisticated as to lie, then Apollo
+would better not attempt to play at one of our Athenian Courier
+Association Smokers. I venture to assert that if he did he would have
+to be carried home with a bandage about his brow instead of a laurel,
+and his cherished lyre would become but a memory."
+
+I turned sadly to my supper. I had found the mundane things of Greece
+disappointing enough, but my sorrow over Hippopopolis's expert
+testimony as to the shortcoming of the gods was overwhelming. It was
+to be expected that the country would fall into a decadent state
+sooner or later, but that the Olympians themselves were not all that
+they were cracked up to be by the mythologies had never suggested
+itself to me. As a result of my courier's words, I lapsed into a moody
+silence, which by eight o'clock developed into an irresistible desire
+to sleep.
+
+"I'll take a nap, Hippopopolis," said I, rolling my coat into a bundle
+and placing it under my head. "You will, I trust, be good enough to
+stand guard lest some of these gods you have mentioned come and pick
+my pockets?" I added, satirically.
+
+"I will see that the gods do not rob you," he returned, dryly, with a
+slight emphasis on the word "gods," the significance of which I did
+not at the moment take in, but which later developments made all too
+clear.
+
+Three minutes later I slept soundly.
+
+At ten o'clock, about, I awoke with a start. The fire was out and I
+was alone. Hippopopolis had disappeared and with him had gone my
+watch, the contents of my pocket-book, my letter of credit, and
+everything of value I had with me, with the exception of my
+shirt-studs, which, I presume, would have gone also had they not been
+fastened to me in such a way that, in getting them, Hippopopolis would
+have had to wake me up.
+
+To add to my plight, the rain was pouring down in torrents.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+I Seek Shelter and Find It
+
+
+"This is a fine piece of business," I said to myself, springing to my
+feet. And then I called as loudly as my lungs would permit for
+Hippopopolis. It was really exhilarating to do so. The name lends
+itself so readily to a sonorous effect. The hills fairly echoed and
+re-echoed with the name, but no answer came, and finally I gave up in
+disgust, seeking meanwhile the very inadequate shelter of a tree, to
+keep the rain off. A more woe-begone picture never presented itself, I
+am convinced. I was chilled through, shivering in the dampness of the
+night, a steady stream of water pouring upon and drenching my
+clothing, void of property of an available nature, and lost in a
+strange land. To make matters worse, I was familiar only with classic
+Greek, which language is utterly unknown in those parts to-day, being
+spoken only by the professors of the American school at Athens and the
+war correspondents of the New York Sunday newspapers--a fact, by the
+way, which probably accounts for the latter's unfamiliarity with
+classic English. It is too much in these times to expect a man to
+speak or write more than one language at a time. Even if I survived
+the exposure of the night, a horrid death by starvation stared me in
+the face, since I had no means of conveying to any one who might
+appear the idea that I was hungry.
+
+Still, if starvation was to be my lot, I preferred to starve dryly
+and warmly; so, deserting the tree which was now rather worse as a
+refuge than no refuge at all, since the limbs began to trickle forth
+steady streams of water, which, by some accursed miracle of choice,
+seemed to consider the back of my neck their inevitable destination, I
+started in to explore as best I could in the uncanny light of the
+night for some more sheltered nook. Feeling, too, that, having robbed
+me, Hippopopolis would become an extremely unpleasant person to
+encounter in my unarmed and exhausted state, I made my way up the
+mountainside, rather than down into the valley, where my inconsiderate
+guide was probably even then engaged in squandering my hard-earned
+wealth, in company with the peasants of that locality, who see real
+money so seldom that they ask no unpleasant questions as to whence it
+has come when they do see it.
+
+"Under the circumstances," thought I, "I sincerely hope that the paths
+of Hippopopolis and myself may lie as wide as the poles apart. If so
+be we do again tread the same path, I trust I shall see him in time to
+be able to ignore his presence."
+
+With this reflection I made my way with difficulty up the side of
+Olympus. Several times it seemed to me that I had found the spot
+wherein I might lie until the sun should rise, but quite as often an
+inconsiderate leak overhead through the leaves of the trees, or an
+undiscovered crack in the rocks above me, sent me travelling upon my
+way. Physical endurance has its limits, however, and at the end of a
+two hours' climb, wellnigh exhausted, I staggered into an opening
+between two walls of rock, and fell almost fainting to the ground.
+The falling rain revived me, and on my hands and knees I crawled
+farther in, and, to my great delight, shortly found myself in a
+high-ceiled cavern, safe from the storm, a place in which one might
+starve comfortably, if so be one had to pass through that trying
+ordeal.
+
+"He might have left me my flask," I groaned as I thought over the pint
+of warming liquid which Hippopopolis had taken from me. It was of a
+particular sort, and I liked it whether I was thirsty or not. "If he'd
+only left me that, he might have had my letter of credit, and no
+questions asked. These Greeks are apparently not aware that there is
+consideration even among thieves."
+
+Huddling myself together, I tried to get warm after the fashion of the
+small boy when he jumps into his cold-sheeted bed on a winter's night,
+a process which makes his legs warm the upper part of his body, and
+_vice versa_. It was moderately successful. If I could have wrung the
+water out of my clothes, it might have been wholly so. Still, matters
+began to look more cheerful, and I was about to drop off into a doze,
+when at the far end of the cavern, where all had hitherto been black
+as night, there suddenly burst forth a tremendous flood of light.
+
+"Humph!" thought I, as the rays pierced through the blackness of the
+cavern even to where I lay shivering. "I'm in for it now. In all
+probability I have stumbled upon a bandits' cave."
+
+Pleasing visions of the ways of bandits began to flit through my mind.
+
+"In all likelihood," thought I, "there are seventeen of them. As I
+have read my fiction, there are invariably seventeen bandits to a
+band. It's like sixteen ounces to the pound, or three feet to the
+yard, or fifty-three cents to the dollar. It never varies. What hope
+have I to escape unharmed from seventeen bandits, even though five of
+them are discontented--as is always the case in books--and are ready
+to betray their chief to the enemy? I am the enemy, of course, but
+I'll be hanged if I wish the chief betrayed into my hands. He could
+probably thrash me single-handed. My hands are full anyhow, whether I
+get the chief or not."
+
+[Illustration: A DREAM OF BRIGANDAGE]
+
+My heart sank into my boots; but as these were very wet, it promptly
+returned to my throat, where it had rested ever since Hippopopolis had
+deserted me. My heart is a very sane sort of an organ. I gazed towards
+the light intently, expecting to see dark figures of murderous mould
+loom up before me, but in this I was agreeably disappointed. Nothing
+of the sort happened, and I grew easier in my mind, although my
+curiosity was by no means appeased.
+
+"I know what I will do," I said to myself. "I'll make friends with the
+chief himself. That's the best plan. If he is responsive, my family
+will be spared the necessity of receiving one of my ears by mail with
+a delicate request for $20,000 ransom, accompanied by a P. S.
+enclosing the other ear to emphasize the importance of the
+complication."
+
+By way of diversion, let me say here that, while slicing off the
+victim's ear is a staple situation among novelists who write of
+bandits, in all my experience with bandits--and I have known a
+thousand, most of 'em in Wall Street--I have never known it done, and
+I challenge those who write of South European highway-robbers to
+produce any evidence to prove that the habit is prevalent. The idea
+is, on the face of it, invalid. The ears of mankind, despite certain
+differences which are acknowledged, are, after all, very much alike.
+The point that differentiates one ear from another is the angle at
+which it is set from the head. The angle, according to the most
+scientific students of the organ of hearing, is the basis of the
+estimate of the individual. Therefore, to convince the wealthy persons
+at home that large sums of money are expected of them to preserve the
+life of the father of the family, the truly expert bandit must send
+something besides the ear itself, which, when cut off, has no angle
+whatsoever. If I, who am no bandit, and who have not studied the art
+of the banditti, may make a suggestion which may prove valuable to the
+highwaymen of Italy and Greece, the only sure method of identifying
+the individual lies in the cutting off of the head of the victim, by
+which means alone the identity of the person to be ransomed may be
+settled beyond all question. As one who has suffered, I will say that
+I would not send a check for $20,000 to a bandit on the testimony of
+one ear any more than I would lend a man ten dollars on his own
+representation as to the meals he had not had, the drinks he wanted,
+or the date upon which he would pay it back.
+
+All these ideas flashed across my mind as I lay there worn in spirit
+and chilled to the bone. At last, however, after a considerable
+effort, I gathered myself together and resolved to investigate. I rose
+up, stood uncertainly on my feet, and was about to make my way towards
+the sources of the unexpected light, when a dark figure rushed past
+me. I tried to speak to it.
+
+"Hello, there!" said I, hoping to gain its attention and ask its
+advice, since it came into the cavern in that breezy fashion which
+betokens familiarity with surroundings. The being, whatever it really
+was, and I was soon to find this out, turned a scornful and really
+majestic face upon me, as much as to say, "Who are you that should
+thus address a god?" The rushing thing wore a crown and flowing robes.
+Likewise it had a gray beard and an air of power which made me, a mere
+mortal, seem weak even in my own estimation. Furthermore, there was a
+divine atmosphere following in his wake. It suggested the most
+brilliant of brilliantine.
+
+"Here," he cried as he passed. "I haven't time to listen to your
+story, but here is my card. I have no change about me. Call upon me
+to-morrow and I will attend to your needs."
+
+The card fluttered to my side, and, not being a mendicant, I paid
+little attention to it, preferring to watch this fast-disappearing
+figure until I should see whither it was going. Arriving at the far
+end of the cavern, the hurrying figure stopped and apparently pushed a
+button at the side of the wall. Immediately an iron door, which I had
+not before perceived, was pushed aside. The dark figure disappeared
+into what seemed to be a well-lighted elevator, and was promptly
+lifted out of sight. All became dark again, and I was frankly puzzled.
+This was a situation beyond my ken. What it could mean I could not
+surmise, and in the hope of finding a clew to the mystery I groped
+about in the darkness for the card which the hurried individual had
+cast at me with his words of encouragement. Ultimately I found it, but
+was unable to decipher its inscription, if perchance it had one.
+Nevertheless, I managed to keep my spirits up. This, I think, was a
+Herculean task, considering the darkness and my extreme lonesomeness.
+I can be happy under adverse circumstances, if only I have congenial
+company. But to lie alone, in a black cavern, prey only to the
+thoughts of my environment, thoughts suggesting all things apart from
+life, thoughts which send the mind over the past a thousand centuries
+removed--these are not comforting, and these were the only thoughts
+vouchsafed to me.
+
+A half-hour was thus passed in the darkness, and then the light
+appeared again, and I resolved, though little strength was left to me,
+to seek out its source. I stood up and staggered towards it, and as I
+drew nearer observed that the illumination came from nothing more nor
+less than an elevator at the bottom of a shaft, the magnitude of
+which I could not, of course, at the moment determine.
+
+The boy in charge was a pretty little chap, and, if I may so state it,
+was absolutely unclad, but about his shoulders was slung a strap which
+in turn held a leathern bag, which, to my eyes, suggested a golf-bag
+more than anything else, except that it was filled with arrows instead
+of golf-clubs.
+
+"How do you do?" said I, politely. "Whose caddy are you?"
+
+"Very well," said the little lad. "Not much to brag of, however.
+Merely bobbish, pretty bobbish. In answer to your second question, I
+take pleasure in informing you," he added, "that I am everybody's
+caddy."
+
+"You are--the elevator boy?" I queried, with some hesitation.
+
+"That is my present position," said he.
+
+"And, ah, whither do you elevate, my lad?"
+
+[Illustration: IN THE ELEVATOR]
+
+"Up!" said he, after the manner of one who does not wish to commit
+himself, like most elevator boys. "But whom do you wish to see?" he
+demanded, trying hard to frown and succeeding only in making a
+ludicrous exhibition of himself.
+
+Frankly, I did not know, but under the impulse of the moment I handed
+out the card which the stranger had thrown to me.
+
+"I forget the gentleman's name," said I, "but here is his card. He
+asked me to call."
+
+The elevator boy glanced at it, and his manner immediately changed.
+
+"Oh, indeed. Very well, sir," he said. "I'll take you up right away.
+Step lively, please."
+
+I stepped into the elevator, and the lad turned a wheel which set us
+upon our upward journey at once.
+
+"I am sorry to have been so rude to you, sir," said the boy. "I
+didn't really know you were a friend of his."
+
+"Of whom?" I demanded.
+
+"The old man himself," he replied, with which he handed me back the
+card I had given him, upon reading which I ascertained the name of the
+individual who had rushed past me so unceremoniously.
+
+The card was this:
+
++--------------------------------+
+| |
+| |
+| |
+| MR. JUPITER JOVE ZEUS |
+| |
+| MOUNT OLYMPUS |
+| GREECE |
++--------------------------------+
+
+"Top floor, sir," said the elevator boy, obsequiously.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+The Elevator Boy
+
+
+"Known the old man long, sir?" queried the boy as we ascended.
+
+"By reputation," said I.
+
+"Humph!" said the lad. "Can't have a very good opinion of him, then.
+It's a good thing you are going to have a little personal experience
+with him. He's not a bad lot, after all. Rotten things said of him,
+but then--you know, eh?"
+
+"Oh, as for that," said I, "I don't think his reputation is so
+dreadful. To be sure, there have been one or two little indiscretions
+connected with his past, and at times he has seemed a bit vindictive
+in chucking thunder-bolts at his enemies, but, on the whole, I fancy
+he's behaved himself pretty well."
+
+"True," said the boy. "And then you've got to take his bringing-up
+into consideration. Things which would be altogether wrong in the son
+of a Presbyterian clergyman would not be unbecoming in a descendant of
+old Father Time. Jupiter is, after all, a self-made immortal, and the
+fact that his parents, old Mr. and Mrs. Cronos, let him grow up sort
+of wild, naturally left its impress on his character."
+
+"Of course," said I, somewhat amused to hear the Thunderer's character
+analyzed by a mere infant. "But how about yourself, my laddie? Are you
+anybody in particular? You look like a cherub."
+
+"Some folks call me Dan," said the boy, "and I _am_ somebody in
+particular. Fact is, sir, if it hadn't been for me there wouldn't
+have been anybody in particular anywhere. I'm Cupid, sir, God of Love,
+favorite son of Venus, at your service."
+
+"And husband of the delectable Psyche?" I cried, recalling certain
+facts I had learned. "You look awfully young to be married."
+
+"Hum--well, I was, and I am, but we've separated," the boy replied,
+with a note of sadness in his voice. "She was a very nice little
+person, that Psyche--one of the best ever, I assure you--but she was
+too much of a butterfly to be the perpetual confidante of a person
+charged with such important matters as I am. Besides, she didn't get
+on with mother."
+
+"Seems to me that I have heard that Madame Venus did not approve of
+the match," I vouchsafed.
+
+"No. She didn't from the start," said Cupid. "Psyche was too pretty,
+and ma rather wanted to corner all the feminine beauty in our family;
+but I had my way in the end. I generally do," the little chap added,
+with a chuckle.
+
+"But the separation, my dear boy?" I put in. "I am awfully sorry to
+hear of that. I, in common with most mortals, supposed that the
+marriage was idyllic."
+
+"It was," said Cupid, "and therefore not practical enough to be a good
+investment. You see, sir, there was a time when the love affairs of
+the universe were intrusted to my care. Lovers everywhere came to me
+to confide their woes, and I was doing a great business. Everybody was
+pleased with my way of conducting my department. I seemed to have a
+special genius for managing a love affair. Even persons who were
+opposed to the administration conceded that the Under Secretary of
+Home Affairs--myself--was assured of a cabinet office for life,
+whatever party was in power. If Pluto had been able to get elected,
+the force of public opinion would have kept me in office. Then I
+married, myself, and things changed. Like a dutiful husband, I had no
+secrets from my wife. I couldn't have had if I had wanted to. Psyche's
+curiosity was a close second to Pandora's, and, if she wanted to know
+anything, there was never any peace in the family until she found out
+all about it. Still, I didn't wish to have any secrets from her. As a
+scientific expert in Love, I knew that the surest basis of a lasting
+happiness lay in mutual confidence. Hence, I told Psyche all I knew,
+and it got her into trouble right away."
+
+"She--ah--couldn't keep a secret?" I asked.
+
+"At first she could," said Cupid. "That was the cause of the first
+row between her and Venus. Mother got mad as a hatter with her one
+morning after breakfast because Psyche _could_ keep a secret. There
+was a little affair on between Jupiter and a certain person whose name
+I shall not mention, and I had charge of it. Of course, I told Psyche
+all about it, and in some way known only to woman she managed to
+convey to Venus the notion that she knew all about it, but couldn't
+tell, and, still further, wouldn't tell. I'd gone down-town to
+business, leaving everything peaceful and happy, but when I got back
+to luncheon--Great Chaos, it was awful! The two ladies were not on
+speaking terms, and I had to put on a fur overcoat to keep from
+freezing to death in the atmosphere that had arisen between them. It
+was six inches below zero--and the way those two would sniff and sneer
+at each other was a caution."
+
+"I quite understand the situation," I said, sympathetically.
+
+"No doubt," said Cupid. "You can also possibly understand how a
+quarrel between the only two women you ever loved could incapacitate
+you for your duties. For ten days after that I was simply incapable of
+directing the love affairs of the universe properly. Persons I'd
+designed for each other were given to others, and a great deal of
+unhappiness resulted. There were nine thousand six hundred and
+seventy-six divorces as the result of that week's work. It's a
+terrible situation for a well-meaning chap to have to decide between
+his wife and his mother."
+
+"Never had it," said I; "but I can imagine it."
+
+"Don't think you can," sighed Cupid. "There are situations in real
+life, sir, which surpass the wildest flights of the imagination. That
+is why truth is stranger than fiction. However," he added, his face
+brightening, "it was a useful experience to me in my professional
+work. I learned for the first time that when a mother-in-law comes in
+at the door, intending to remain indefinitely, love flies out at the
+window. Or, as Solomon--I believe it was Solomon. He wrote Proverbs,
+did he not?"
+
+"Yes," said I. "He and Josh Billings."
+
+"Well," vouchsafed Cupid, "I can't swear as to the authorship of the
+proverb, but some proverbialist said 'Two is company and three is a
+crowd.' I'd never known that before, but I learned it then, and began
+to stay away from home a little myself, so that we should not be
+crowded."
+
+I commended the young man for his philosophy.
+
+"Nevertheless, my dear Dan," I added, "you ought to be more
+autocratic. Knowing that two is company and three otherwise, you have
+been guilty of allowing many a young couple who have trusted in you to
+begin house-keeping with an inevitable third person. We see it every
+day among the mortals."
+
+"What has been good enough for me, sir," the boy returned, with a
+comical assumption of sternness--he looked so like a fat baby of three
+just ready for his bath--"is good enough for mortals. When I married
+Psyche, I brought her home to my mother's house, and for some nineteen
+thousand years we lived together. If Love can stand it, mortals must."
+
+"Excuse me," said I, apologetically. "I have not suffered. However, in
+all my study of you mythologians, it has never occurred to me before
+this that Venus was the goddess of the mother-in-law."
+
+"You mustn't blame me for that," said Cupid, dryly. "I'm the god of
+Love; wisdom is out of my province. For what you don't know and
+haven't learned you must blame Pallas, who is our Superintendent of
+Public Instruction. She knows it all--and she got it darned easy, too.
+She sprang forth from the head of Jove with a Ph.D. already conferred
+upon her. She looks after the education of the world. I don't--but
+I'll wager you anything you please to put up that man gains more real
+experience under my management than he does from Athena's department,
+useful as her work is."
+
+I could not but admit the truth of all that the boy said, and of
+course I told him so. To change the subject, which, if pursued, might
+lead to an exposure of my own ignorance, I said:
+
+"But, Dan, what interests me most, and pains me most as well, is to
+hear that you are separated from Psyche. I do not wish to seem
+inquisitive on the subject of a--ah--of a man's family affairs"--I
+hesitated in my speech because he seemed such a baby and it was
+difficult to take him seriously, as is always the way with Love,
+unless we are directly involved--"but you have told me of the
+separation, and as a man, a newspaper-man, I am interested. Couldn't
+you reconcile your mother, Madame Venus, to Psyche--or, rather, Mrs.
+Dan?"
+
+[Illustration: "'THE GODDESS OF THE MOTHER-IN-LAW'"]
+
+"Not for a moment," replied the boy. "Not for a millionth part of a
+tenth of a quarter of a second by a stop-watch. Their irreconcilability
+was copper-fastened, and I found myself compelled to choose between
+them. My mother developed a gray hair the day after the first trouble,
+and my wife began to go out to afternoon teas and sewing-circles and
+dances. The teas and dances were all right. You can't talk at either.
+But the sewing-circle was ruin. At this particular time the circle was
+engaged in making winter garments for the children of the mother of
+the Gracchi. I presume that as a student and as a father you realize
+all that this meant. You also know that a sewing-circle needs four
+things: first, an object; second, a needle and thread; third, a
+garment; fourth, a subject for conversation. These things are
+constitutionally required, and Psyche joined what she called 'The
+Immortal Dorcas.' The result was that all Olympus and half of Hades
+were shortly acquainted with the confidential workings of my
+department--all told under the inviolate bond of secrecy, however,
+which requires that each member confided in shall not communicate what
+she has heard to more--or to less--than ten people."
+
+"I know," said I. "The Dorcas habit has followers among my own
+people."
+
+"But see where it placed me!" cried the little creature. "There was
+me, or I--I don't know whether Greek or English is preferable to
+you--charged with the love affairs of the universe. Confiding all I
+knew, like a dutiful husband, to my wife, and having her letting it
+all out to the public through the society. Why, my dear fellow, it
+wasn't long before the immortals began to accuse me of being in the
+pay of the Sunday newspapers, and you must know as well as anybody
+else that Love has nothing to do with them. Even the affairs of my
+sovereign began to creep out, and innuendoes connecting Jupiter with
+people prominent in society were printed in the opposition organs."
+
+"Poor chap!" said I, sympathetically. "I did not realize that you had
+to contend against the Sunday-newspaper nuisance as we mortals have."
+
+"We have," he said, quickly, almost resignedly; "and they are ruining
+even Olympus itself. Still, I made a stand. Told Psyche she talked too
+much, and from that time on confided in her no more."
+
+"And how did she take it?" I asked.
+
+"She declined to take it at all," said Cupid, with a sigh. "She
+demanded that I should tell her everything on penalty of losing
+her--and I lost her. She left me a little over a thousand years ago,
+and my mother for the same reason sent me adrift fifteen hundred or
+more years ago. That is why I am eking out a living running an
+elevator," he added, sadly. "Still, I'm happy here. I go up when I
+feel sad, and go down when I feel glad. On the whole, I am as happy as
+any of the gods."
+
+"However, Dan," I cried, sympathetically, slapping him on the back,
+"you have your official position, and that will keep you in--ah--well,
+you don't seem to need 'em, but it would keep you in clothes if you
+could be persuaded to wear them."
+
+"No," said the little elevator boy, sadly. "I don't want 'em in this
+climate--nor are they necessary in any other. All over the world, my
+dear fellow, _true_ love is ever warm."
+
+There was a decided interval. I felt sorry for the little lad who had
+been a god and who had become an elevator boy, so I said to him:
+
+"Never mind, Danny, you are sure of your office always."
+
+"I wish it were so," said he, sadly. "But really, sir, it isn't. You
+may think that love rules all things nowadays, but that is a fallacy.
+Of late years a rival concern has sprung up. I have found my office
+subjected to a most annoying competition which has attracted away from
+me a large number of my closest followers. In the days when we
+acknowledged ourselves to be purely heathen, love was regarded with
+respect, but now all that is changed. Opposite my office in the
+government building there is a matrimonial corporation doing a very
+large business, by which the fees of my position are greatly reduced.
+Possibly after you have had your audience with Jove to-morrow you will
+take a turn about the city, in which event you will see this trust's
+big brazen sign. You can't miss it if you walk along Mercury Avenue.
+It reads:
+
++----------------------------------+
+| MAMMON & CO. |
+| Matchmakers |
+| |
+| FORTUNES GUARANTEED: |
+| HAPPINESS EXTRA |
+| |
+| GEO. W. MAMMON |
+| President |
+| |
+| HORACE GREED |
+| Gen'l Manager |
+| |
+| BRANCH OFFICE |
+| 67 Gehenna Ave., Hades |
++----------------------------------+
+
+"Dear me!" I cried. "Poor Love!"
+
+"I don't need your sympathy," said the boy, quickly, drawing himself
+up proudly. "It can't last, this competition. Man and god kind will
+soon see the difference in the permanence of our respective output.
+This is only a temporary success they are having, and it often happens
+that the spurious articles put forth by Mammon & Company are brought
+over to me to be repaired. My sun will dawn again. You can't put out
+the fires in my furnaces as long as men and women are made from the
+old receipt."
+
+Here the elevator stopped, and a rather attractive young woman
+appeared at the door.
+
+"Here is where you get out, sir," said the elevator boy.
+
+"You are Mr.----" began the girl.
+
+"I am," I replied.
+
+"I have orders to show you to number 609," she said. "The proprietor
+will see you to-morrow at eleven."
+
+"Thank you very much," I replied, somewhat overcome by the cordiality
+of my reception. It is not often that mere beggars are so hospitably
+received.
+
+"Good-night, Cupid," I added, turning to the little chap in the
+elevator. "I trust we shall meet again."
+
+"Oh, I guess we will," he replied, with a wink at the maid. "I
+generally do meet most men two or three times in their lives. So _au
+revoir_ to you. Treat the gentleman well, Hebe," he concluded, pulling
+the rope to send the elevator back. "He doesn't know much, but he is
+sympathetic."
+
+"I will, Danny, for your sake," said the little maid, archly.
+
+The boy laughed and the car faded from sight. Hebe, even more lovely
+than has been claimed, with a charmingly demure glance at my costume,
+which was wofully bedraggled and wet, said:
+
+"This way, sir. I will have your luggage sent to your room at once."
+
+"But I haven't any luggage, my dear," said I. "I have only what is on
+my back."
+
+"Ah, but you have," she replied, sweetly. "The proprietor has attended
+to that. There are five trunks, a hat-box, and a Gladstone bag already
+on their way up."
+
+And with this she showed me into a magnificent apartment, and, even
+as she had said, within five minutes my luggage arrived, a valet
+appeared, unpacked the trunks and bag, brushed off the hat that had
+lain in the hat-box, and vanished, leaving me to my own reflections.
+
+Surely Olympus was a great place, where one who appeared in the guise
+of a beggar was treated like a regiment of prodigal sons, furnished
+with a gorgeous apartment, and supplied with a wardrobe that would
+have aroused the envy of a reigning sovereign.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+I Summon a Valet
+
+
+The room to which I was assigned was regal in its magnificence, and
+yet comfortable. Few modern hotels afforded anything like it, and,
+tired as I was, I could not venture to rest until I had investigated
+it and its contents thoroughly. It was, I should say, about twenty by
+thirty feet in its dimensions, and lighted by a soft, mellow glow that
+sprang forth from all parts without any visible source of supply. At
+the far end was a huge window, before which were drawn portieres of
+rich material in most graceful folds. Pulling these to one side, so
+that I might see what the outlook from the window might be, I
+staggered back appalled at the infinite grandeur of what lay before my
+eyes. It seemed as if all space were there, and yet within the compass
+of my vision. Planets which to my eye had hitherto been but twinkling
+specks of light in the blackness of the heavens became peopled worlds,
+which I could see in detail and recognize. Mars with its canals,
+Saturn with its rings--all were there before me, seemingly within
+reach of my outstretched hand. The world in which I lived appeared to
+have been removed from the middle distance, and those things which had
+rested beyond the ken of the mortal mind brought to my very feet, to
+be seen and touched and comprehended.
+
+Then I threw the window open, and all was changed. The distant
+objects faded, and a beautiful golden city greeted my eyes--the city
+of Olympus, in which I was to pass so many happy hours. For the
+instant I was puzzled. Why at one moment the treasures of the universe
+of space had greeted my vision, and how all that had faded and the
+immediate surroundings of a celestial city lay before me, were not
+easy to understand. I drew back and closed the window again, and at
+once all became clear; the window-glass held the magic properties of
+the magnifying-lens, developed to an intensity which annihilated all
+space, and I began to see that the development of mortals in
+scientific matters was puny beside that of the gods in whose hands lay
+all the secrets of the universe, although the principles involved were
+in our full possession.
+
+The situation overwhelmed me somewhat, and I drew the portieres
+together again. The feelings that came over me were similar to those
+that come to one standing on the edge of a great precipice gazing
+downward into the vast, black depths yawning at his feet. The
+giddiness that once, many years before, came upon me as I stood on the
+brink of the Niagaran cataract, which seemed irresistibly impelling me
+to join the mad rush of the waters, surged over me again, and I forced
+myself backward into the room, shutting out the sight, lest I should
+cast myself forth into the infinite space beyond. I threw myself down
+upon a couch and covered my eyes with my hands and tried to realize
+the situation. I was drunk with awe at all that was about me, and
+should, I think, have gone mad trying to comprehend its grandeur, had
+not my spirit been soothed by soft strains of music that now fell upon
+my ears.
+
+I opened my eyes to discover whence the sounds had come, and even as
+the light streamed from unknown and unseen sources, so it was with the
+harmonies which followed, harmonies surpassing in beauty and swelling
+glory anything I had ever heard before.
+
+And to these magnificent but soft and soothing strains I yielded
+myself up and slept. How long my sleep continued I have no means of
+knowing. It seemed to last but an instant, but when I opened my eyes
+once more I felt absolutely renewed in body and in spirit. The damp
+garments which I had worn when I fell back upon the couch had in some
+wise been removed, and when I stood up to indulge in the usual
+stretching of my limbs I found myself clad in an immaculate flowing
+robe of white, soft of texture, fastened at the neck with a jewelled
+brooch, and at the waist its fulness restrained by a girdle of gold.
+Furthermore, I had apparently been put through a process of ablution
+which left me with the cockles of my heart as warm as toast, and my
+whole being permeated with a glow of health which I had not known for
+many years. The aches in my bones, which I had feared on waking to
+find intensified, were gone; and if I could have retained permanently
+the aspect of vigor and beauty which was returned to me by the mirror
+when I stood before it, I should be in imminent danger of becoming
+conceited.
+
+"I wonder," said I, as I gazed at myself in the mirror, "if this is
+the correct costume for breakfast. It's a slight drawback to know
+nothing of the customs of the locality in which you find yourself.
+Possibly an investigation of my new wardrobe will help me to decide."
+
+I looked over the rich garments which had been provided, and found
+nothing which, according to my simple bringing up, suggested the idea
+that it was a good thing to wear at the morning meal.
+
+"They ought to send me a valet," I murmured. "Perhaps they will if I
+ring for one. Where the deuce is the bell, I wonder?"
+
+A search of the room soon divulged the resting-place of this desirable
+adjunct to the tourist's comfort. The dial system which has proved so
+successful in American hotels was in vogue here, except that it
+manifested a willingness on the part of the proprietor to provide the
+guest with a range of articles utterly beyond anything to be found in
+the purely mundane caravansary. I found that anything under the canopy
+that the mind of man could conceive of could be had by the mere
+pushing of a button. The disk of the electrical apparatus was divided
+off into many sections, calling respectively for saddle-horses,
+symphony concerts, ocean steamships, bath-towels, stenographers;
+cocktails of all sorts, and some sorts of which I had never before
+heard, and all of which I resolved to try in discreet sequence;
+manicures, chiropodists, astrologers, prophets, clergymen of all
+denominations, plots for novelists--indeed, anything that any person
+in any station of life might chance to desire could be got for the
+ringing.
+
+My immediate need, however, was for a valet. Puzzled as to the manners
+and customs of the gods, I did not wish to make a bad appearance in
+the dining-room in a costume which should not be appropriate. I did
+think of ordering breakfast served in my room, but that seemed a very
+mortal and not a particularly godlike thing to do. Hence, I rang for a
+valet.
+
+[Illustration: "ANYTHING COULD BE GOT FOR THE RINGING"]
+
+"I will tell him to get out my morning-suit, and no doubt he will
+select the thing I ought to wear," I said as I pressed the button.
+
+The response was instant. My fingers had hardly left the button when a
+superb creature stood before me. Whence he sprang I do not know. There
+were no opening of doors, no traps or false panels, that I could see.
+The individual simply materialized.
+
+"At your service, sir," said he, with a graceful obeisance.
+
+"Pardon me," I replied, overcome once more by what was going on.
+"I--ah--think there must be some mistake. I--ah--I didn't ring for a
+god, I rang for a valet."
+
+"I am the valet of Olympus, sir," he replied, gracefully flicking a
+speck of dust from the calf of his leg, the contour of which was
+beautiful to look upon, clad in superbly fitting silken tights.
+"Adonis, at your service. What can I do for you?"
+
+"Well, I declare!" I cried, lost now in admiration of the way the gods
+were ordering things on Olympus. "So they've made you a valet, have
+they?"
+
+"Yes," replied Adonis. "I hold office for the six months that I am
+here. You know that I am a resident of Olympus only half the time. The
+balance I live in Hades."
+
+"It's a common custom," said I. "Even with us, our swellest people go
+south for the winter."
+
+"Hum--yes," said Adonis, somewhat confused. "It's very good of you to
+draw that parallel. Your construction of the situation does credit to
+your sense of what is polite, sir. Unfortunately for me, however, my
+position is more like that of the habitual criminal who is sent to the
+penitentiary periodically. I have to go, whether I want to or not."
+
+"Still, it must be a pleasant variation," I observed, forgetting that
+it is bad form to converse with a servant, and remembering only that I
+was addressing an old flame of Madame Venus. "Hades isn't a bad place
+for a little while, I should fancy."
+
+"True," sighed Adonis. "But the society there is very mixed. It's full
+of self-made immortals, whereas we are all immortals by birth."
+
+"And who, pray," I queried, "takes your place while you are below?"
+
+"Narcissus," he replied; "but there's generally a lot of complaint
+about him. He takes more pains dressing himself than he does in
+looking after guests, the result of which is that after my departure
+things get topsy-turvy, and by the time I get back, with the exception
+of Narcissus, there isn't a well-dressed god in all Olympus."
+
+"I wonder, where such perfection is possible," said I, "that they
+tolerate that."
+
+"They're not going to very much longer," said Adonis, and then he
+laughed. "Narcissus queered himself last season at the palace. Jove
+sent for him to trim his beard, and he nearly cut one of the old man's
+ears off. Investigation showed that instead of keeping his eye on what
+he was doing, he was looking at himself in the glass all the time.
+Jupiter in his anger hurled a thunderbolt at him, but, fortunately for
+Narcissus, he hurled it at the mirrored and not at the real Narcissus,
+and he escaped. The result is the rumor that he will be made
+head-waiter in the dining-room instead of valet next season, in which
+event I shall probably be allowed to remain here all through the year,
+or else they'll put Jason on."
+
+"And which would you prefer?" I asked.
+
+[Illustration: "JUPITER HURLED A THUNDER-BOLT AT HIM"]
+
+"I think I'd rather have Jason put on," said Adonis. "While I don't
+care much for the climate of Hades, I am received there with much
+consideration socially, whereas up here I am only the valet. One
+doesn't mind being a nabob once in a while, you know. Besides--ah--don't
+say anything about it to anybody up here, but I'm getting a trifle
+tired of Venus. She is still beautiful, but you can't get over the
+idea that she's over four thousand years old. Furthermore, I met a
+little Fury down below last season who is simply ravishing." Here
+Adonis gave me a wink which made me rather curious to see the little
+Fury.
+
+"Ah, Adonis, Adonis!" I cried, shaking my finger at him; "still up to
+your old tricks, are you?"
+
+"Why not?" he demanded. "My character is formed. _Noblesse oblige_ is
+a good motto for us all, only when one is born with _faiblesse_
+instead of _noblesse_, it becomes _faiblesse oblige_. Furthermore,
+sir, if I am to have the reputation, I must insist upon the
+perquisites."
+
+What I replied to this bit of moralizing I shall not put down here,
+since I have no wish to commit myself thus publicly. I will say,
+however, that I did not blame the youthful-looking person
+unreservedly.
+
+"Moreover, I have very fine apartments in Hades," he added, "and I
+should hate to give them up. I live at the select home for gods and
+gentlemen, kept by Madame Persephone. When she takes an interest in
+one of her boarders she is a mighty fine landlady, and, like most
+ladies, if I may say it with all due modesty, she has taken an
+interest in me. The result is that I have the best suite in the house,
+overlooking the Styx, and as fine a table as any one could want. But
+I must ask your pardon, sir, for taking up so much of your time with
+my personal affairs. We both seem to have forgotten that I am here to
+wait upon you."
+
+"It has been very interesting, Adonis," I said. "And if it's anybody's
+fault, it is mine. What I wished of you was that you should get out my
+breakfast-suit, so that I might dress and go to the dining-room."
+
+"Certainly, sir," he replied, walking to the clothes-closet. "Pardon
+me, but--ah--what is your profession when at home?"
+
+"Why do you ask?" I queried. "Not that I am unwilling to tell you,
+but--"
+
+"I merely wished to guide my selection of your garments. If you are a
+naval officer, I will put out your admiral's uniform. If you are a
+professional golfer, I'll get out your red coat."
+
+"I am a literary man," I said.
+
+"Ah!" he observed, lifting his eyebrows. "Then, of course, you won't
+mind wearing these."
+
+And he hauled forth a pair of black-and-white trousers with checks as
+large as the squares of a chessboard, a blue cloth vest with white
+polka dots, and a long, gray Prince Albert coat, with mauve satin
+lapels. The shirt was pink and blue, stripes of each alternating,
+running cross-ways, a white collar, and a flaring red four-in-hand
+tie!
+
+"Great Scott, Adonis!" I cried. "Must I wear those?"
+
+"You're under no compulsion to do so," said he. "But I thought you
+said you were a literary man."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Well--literary men never care what they wear so long as they attract
+attention, do they?"
+
+I laughed. "We are not all built that way, Adonis," said I. "Some of
+us are modest and have a little taste."
+
+"Well, it's news to me," said he. "I guess it must be among the minor
+lights."
+
+"It is--generally," said I. "And if you don't mind, I'd rather wear
+the golf clothes."
+
+And I did.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+The Olympian Links
+
+
+"There," said Adonis, as he put the finishing touch to my costume.
+"You look like a champion. Do you play golf, sir?"
+
+"There's a difference of opinion about that, Adonis," I replied, my
+mind reverting to the number of handicap matches I hadn't won. "Some
+people who have observed my game say I don't. Have you links here?"
+
+"Have we links?" he cried. "Well, rather. They're said to be the best
+in the universe."
+
+"And are they handy?"
+
+"Very--in the season."
+
+"I don't quite catch the idea," I said.
+
+"Oh, sometimes the course is nearer than it is at others. Come here a
+minute," he said, "and I'll point it out to you."
+
+He drew me to the wonderful window of which I have already spoken, and
+through the powerful glass pointed in the direction of Mars.
+
+"See that?" he said.
+
+"Yes," I replied. "That is Mars."
+
+"Exactly," said Adonis. "Mars is the Olympian links. His distance from
+here varies, as you are probably aware. When Mars is near aphelion he
+is 61,800,000 miles away, but in his perihelion he gets it down to
+33,800,000. That's why we have our golf season while Mars is in his
+perihelion. It saves us 28,000,000 miles in getting there."
+
+I laughed. "You call that handy, do you?" I said.
+
+"Why not?" he asked. "It's a matter of five minutes on a bike, ten
+minutes in the automobile, and twenty minutes if you walk."
+
+"Of course, Adonis," said I, "I'm not so green as to swallow all that.
+How the dickens can you walk through space?"
+
+"You're vastly greener than you think you are," he retorted, rather
+uncivilly, perhaps, for a valet, but I paid no attention to that,
+preferring to take him, despite his menial capacity, in his godlike
+personality. "I might even say, sir, that your greenness is spacious.
+You judge us from your own mean, limited, mundane point of view. But
+you needn't think because you earth people cannot walk on air we
+Olympians are equally incapacitated. You can walk there in two ways.
+One of these is to fasten a pair of ankle-wings on your legs; the
+other is to purchase a pair of sky-scrapers. These are simple,
+consisting merely of boots with gas soles. You inflate the soles with
+gas and walk along. It's simple and easy, doesn't require any
+practice, and as long as you keep up in the air and don't step on
+church steeples or weather-vanes it's perfectly safe. Of course, if
+you stepped on a sharp-pointed weather-vane, or a lightning-rod, and
+punctured your sole, there's no telling what would happen."
+
+"And how about the wings?" I asked.
+
+"They're much more exhilarating, but a little dangerous if you don't
+know how to use them," Adonis replied. "Flying isn't any easier than
+roller-skating, and if you upset and get your head below your feet
+it's extremely difficult to right yourself again. If you try to go out
+there with ankle-wings, take my advice and wear a pair of small
+balloons about your chest to hold you right-end upward."
+
+"I'll remember," said I, somewhat awed at the prospect of trying to
+walk through space with the aid of ankle-wings. "And how about the
+bicycle?" I added.
+
+"If you can ride a bicycle on an ordinary road you'll have no
+trouble," he replied. "Keep your tires well filled with gas and avoid
+headers. If I were you, though, at first I'd go out on the automobile.
+It makes six round trips a day and it's absolutely safe. Being so high
+up in the air might make you dizzy, and you might find the bicycling
+too much for your nerves. After a little while you'll get used to
+enormous heights, and then, of course, you can go any old way you
+choose. The fare for the round trip is only fifteen hundred dollars."
+
+"The automobile is in competent hands, eh?"
+
+"Yes," said Adonis. "Phaeton has charge of it."
+
+"Humph!" I sneered. "He's your idea of a competent driver, eh? He
+hasn't that reputation on earth. Was it an untruth that credits him
+with a fine smash-up when he tried to drive the chariot of the sun?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," said Adonis. "That's all of it simple truth. I
+happen to know, because I saw the finish of the whole thing myself,
+and was one of the fellows who turned a fire-extinguisher on him and
+saved him from being a total loss to the insurance companies. But he
+learned his lesson. There's nothing like experience to teach caution,
+and that little episode gave Phaeton caution to burn, if I may indulge
+in mundane slang. He was guyed so unmercifully by everybody for his
+carelessness that the first thing he did when he recovered was to
+learn how to drive, and it wasn't six cycles before he was the most
+expert whip in Olympus. He finally made a profession of it and
+established a livery-stable. Then, when the automobile came in and
+horses went out of fashion, he kept up with the times, and is to-day
+in charge of all our rapid transit--he owns the franchises for the
+Jupiter and Dipper Trolley Road, he is the largest stockholder in the
+Metropolitan Traction Company of Neptune, Saturn, and Venus, and is
+said to be the moving spirit back of the new underground electric in
+Hades."
+
+"I guess he'll do," said I, reflecting with admiration upon the
+wonderful self-rehabilitation of one I had previously regarded as a
+foolish incompetent.
+
+"You won't have to guess again in this case," said Adonis, dryly.
+"You've hit it right the very first time."
+
+"Well, tell me about the links, Adonis," said I. "Getting there seems
+to be an easy matter, but after you get there, how about the course?
+Is it eighteen holes?"
+
+"It is," said Adonis, "and of proper length, too, and splendidly
+arranged. You start at the club-house right near the landing-stage and
+play right around the planet, so that when you're through you're back
+at the club-house again. At the ninth hole there is a half-way house,
+where you can get nectar, and ambrosia, and sarsaparilla, and any
+other soft drink you want."
+
+"No hard drinks, eh?" I queried.
+
+"Not at the half-way house," said Adonis. "We gods have too much sense
+to indulge in hard drinks in the middle of a game. If you want hard
+drinks you have to wait till you get back to the club-house."
+
+"That is rather sensible," I said, as I thought of how a Martini
+cocktail taken at the ninth hole had ruined my chances in the
+Noodleport Annual Handicap last autumn. "But I say, Adonis," I added,
+"did I understand you to say that you played all around Mars?"
+
+"Yes--why not?" said he.
+
+"Pretty long holes, I should say," said I. "Mars is four thousand
+miles round, isn't it?"
+
+"You _are_ an earth-worm," he retorted, forgetting his place wholly in
+his scorn for my picayune ideas. "Calling a paltry four thousand miles
+long--why, you can play around that links in two hours and a half."
+
+"Indeed?" said I. "And how long may your hours be? Everything here is
+on such a magnificent scale, I suppose one of your hours is about
+equal to one of our decades."
+
+"Oh no," said Adonis. "It isn't that way at all. Fact is, we make our
+hours to suit ourselves. I am merely reckoning on a basis that you
+would comprehend. I meant two and a half of your hours. Any
+moderately expert player can play the Mars links in that time. Take
+the first hole, for instance--it's only two hundred and fifty miles
+long."
+
+"Really--is that all!" I ejaculated, growing sarcastic. "A drive, two
+brassies, an approach, and forty puts, I presume?"
+
+"For a duffer, perhaps," retorted Adonis. "Willie Ph[oe]bus does it in
+six. A seventy-five-mile drive, a seventy-mile brassie, a loft over
+the canal for twenty-five miles, a forty-five-mile cleak, a
+thirty-mile approach, and--"
+
+"A dead easy put of five miles!" I put in, making a pretence of being
+no longer astonished.
+
+"That's the idea," said Adonis. "Of course, everybody can't do it," he
+added. "And bogie for that hole is really seven. Willie Ph[oe]bus
+played too well for a gentleman, so we made him a professional. He'll
+give you lessons for a thousand dollars an hour, if you want him to."
+
+"Thanks," said I. "I'll think about it. Can he teach me how to drive a
+ball seventy-five miles?"
+
+"That depends on your capacity," said Adonis. "Some of the best
+players frequently drive seventy-five miles--the record is ninety-six
+miles, made by Jove himself. Willie taught him."
+
+"For Heaven's sake!" I cried, losing my self-poise for an instant.
+"What do you drive with? Olympian Gatling guns?"
+
+"Not at all," replied Adonis. "We use one of our regular drivers--the
+best is called the 'celestial catapult.' Ph[oe]bus sells 'em at the
+Caddie House for five hundred dollars apiece. If you strike a ball
+fair and square with the 'celestial catapult,' and neither pull nor
+slice, it can't help going forty miles, anyhow."
+
+"And how, may I ask, do the caddies find a ball that goes seventy-five
+miles?"
+
+"They don't have to. All our balls are self-finding," said Adonis.
+"The ball in use now is a recent invention of Vulcan's. They cost
+twelve hundred dollars a dozen. They are made of liquefied
+electricity. We take the electric current, liquefy it, then solidify
+it, then mould it into the form of a sphere. Inside we place a little
+gong, that begins to ring as soon as the ball lands. The electricity
+in it is what makes it fly so rapidly and so far, and even you mortals
+know the principle of the electric bell."
+
+"Oh, indeed we do," said I, pulling at my mustache nervously. I was
+beginning to get excited over this celestial golf. On earth I have all
+of the essentials of a first-class golf maniac, except the ability to
+play the game. But this so far surpassed anything I had ever seen or
+imagined before that I was growing too keen over it for comfort. I was
+in real need of having my spirits curbed, so I ventured to inquire
+after a phase of the game that has always dampened my ardor in the
+past--the caddie service. I did not expect that this could attain
+perfection even in Olympus, and I was not far wrong.
+
+"You must have pretty lively caddies," I threw out.
+
+Adonis sighed. "You'd think so, but that's where we are always in
+trouble. We've tried various schemes, but they haven't any of 'em
+worked well. At first we took our own Olympian boys. We got the mother
+of the Gracchi to lend us her offspring, but they weren't worth a rap.
+Then we hired forty little devils from Hades, and we had to send them
+back inside of a week. They were regular little imps. They were
+cutting up monkey shines all the time, and waggled their horrid little
+tails so constantly that Jove himself couldn't keep his eye on the
+ball--and the language they used was something frightful. You couldn't
+trust them to clean your clubs, because there wasn't any power
+anywhere that could keep them from running off with 'em; and in the
+matter of balls, they'd steal every blessed one they could lay their
+hands on. We finally had to employ cherubs. We've about sixty of 'em
+on hand now all the time, and they come as near being perfect as you
+could expect. Ever see a cherub?"
+
+"Only in pictures," said I. "They're just heads with wings, aren't
+they?"
+
+"Yes," said Adonis, "and, having no bodies, they're seldom in the way,
+and some of the best of 'em can fly almost as fast as the ball."
+
+"How do they carry the bags?" I asked, much interested.
+
+"They hang 'em about their necks, just above their wings," Adonis
+explained, "but even they are not perfect. They fly very carelessly,
+and often, in swooping about the sky, drop your clubs out of the bag
+and smash 'em; and they all look so infernally alike that you can
+never tell your own caddy from the other fellow's, which is sometimes
+very confusing."
+
+"Still," I put in, "a caddie with no pockets is a very safe person to
+intrust with golf balls."
+
+"That's very true," said Adonis, "and I suppose the cherubs make as
+good caddies as we can expect. Caddies will be caddies, and that's the
+end of it. You can't expect a caddie to do just right any more than
+you can expect water to flow uphill. There are certain immutable laws
+of the universe which are as unchangeable in Olympus as on earth or
+in Hades. Ice is cold, fire is hot, water is wet, and caddies are
+caddies."
+
+[Illustration: THE OLYMPIAN LINKS]
+
+"Very true," said I, reflecting upon the ways of "Some Caddies I have
+Met." "What do you pay them a round?"
+
+"One hundred and twenty-five dollars," said Adonis.
+
+"Cheap enough," said I. "But tell me, Adonis," I continued, "who is
+your amateur champion?"
+
+"Jupiter, of course," said Adonis, with an impatient shake of his
+head. "He's champion of everything. It's one of his prerogatives. We
+don't any of us dare win a cup from him for fear he'll use his power
+to destroy us. That is one of the features of this Olympian life that
+is not pleasant--though, for goodness' sake, don't say I told you!
+He'd send me into perpetual exile if he knew I'd spoken that way.
+He's threatened to make me Governor-General of the Dipper half a
+dozen times already for things I've said, and I have to be very
+careful, or he'll do it."
+
+"An unpleasant post, that?"
+
+"Well," he said, "I don't exactly know how to compare it so that you
+would understand precisely. I should say, however, it would be about
+as agreeable as being United States ambassador to Borneo."
+
+"I'll never tell, Adonis," said I, "and I'm very much obliged to you
+for our pleasant chat. Your description of the links has interested me
+hugely. If I could afford a game at your prices, I think I'd play."
+
+"Oh, as for that," said Adonis, laughing, "don't let that bother you.
+Whenever you want to pay a bill here all you have to do is to press
+the cash button on the teleseme over there, and they'll send the money
+up from the office."
+
+"But how shall I ever repay the office?" I cried.
+
+"Press the button to the left of it, and they'll send you up a receipt
+in full," he replied.
+
+"You mean to say that this hotel is run--" I began.
+
+"On the Olympian plan," interrupted the valet with a low bow. "All
+bills here are of that pleasing variety known as 'Self-paying.'"
+
+With which comforting assurance Adonis left me, and I started for the
+dining-room, my appetite considerably whetted by the idea of a game of
+golf over links four thousand miles in length with balls that could be
+driven fifty or sixty miles, and cherubs for caddies, at no cost to
+myself whatsoever.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+In the Dining-Room
+
+
+As I emerged from the door of my room into the hall, I found a small
+sedan-chair, of highly ornamental make, awaiting my convenience,
+carried upon the shoulders of two diminutive boys, who were as black,
+and shone as lustrously, as a bit of highly polished ebony. I had
+never seen their like before, save in an occasional bit of statuary in
+Italy, wherein marbles of differing hue and shade had been ingeniously
+used by the sculptor to give color to his work. The boys themselves,
+as I have said, were of polished ebony hue, while the breech-cloths
+which formed their sole garment were of purest alabaster white. Upon
+their heads were turbans of pink. They grinned broadly as I came out,
+and opened the door of the chair for me.
+
+"Dis way fo' de dinin'-room, sah," said one of them, showing a set of
+ivory teeth that dazzled my eyes.
+
+I thanked him and entered the chair. When I was seated, I turned to
+the little chap.
+
+"What particular god do you happen to be, Sambo?" I asked. It was
+probably not the most reverent way to put it, but in a community like
+Olympus gods are really at a discount, and the black particle was so
+like a small pickaninny I used to know in Savannah that I could not
+address him as if he were Jupiter himself.
+
+"Massy me, massa," he returned, his smile nearly cutting the top of
+his head off, reaching as it did around to the back of his ears. "I
+ain' no gord. I'se jess one o' dese low-down or'nary toters. Me an'
+him totes folks roun' de hotel."
+
+"A very useful function that, Sambo; and where were you born?" I
+asked. "North Carolina, or Georgia?"
+
+"Me?" he replied, looking at me quizzically. "I guess yo's on'y
+foolin', massa. Me? Why, I 'ain't never been borned at all, sah--"
+
+"Jess growed, eh--like Topsy?" I asked.
+
+"Who dat, Topsy?" he demanded.
+
+"Oh, she was a little nigger girl that became very famous," I
+explained.
+
+"Doan' know nuffin' 'bout no Topsy," he said, shaking his head. "We
+ain' niggers, eider, yo' know, me an' him ain't. We's statulary."
+
+"What?" I cried. The word seemed new.
+
+"Statulary," he continued. "We was carved, we was. There ain't nothin'
+borned 'bout us. Never knowed who pap was. Man jess took a lot o'
+mahble, he did, an' chiselled me an' him out."
+
+I eyed both boys closely and perceived that in all probability he
+spoke the truth. His flesh and dress had all of the texture of marble,
+but now the question came up as to the gift of speech and movement and
+the marvellous and graceful flexibility of their limbs.
+
+"You can't fool me, Sambo," said I. "You're nothing but a very
+good-looking little nigger. You can't make me believe that you are
+another Galatea."
+
+"Doan' no nuffin' 'bout no gal's tears," he returned instantly. "But I
+done tole yo' de truf. Me an' him was chiselled out o' brack marble by
+pap. Ef we'd been borned we'd been niggahs sho' nuff, but bein'
+carvin's, like I tole yuh, we's statulary."
+
+"But how does it come that if you are only statuary, you can move
+about, and talk, and breathe?" I demanded.
+
+"Yo'll have to ask mistah Joop'ter 'bout dat," the boy answered. "He
+done gave us dese gif's, an' we's a-usin' ob 'em. De way it happened
+was like o' dis. Me an' him was a standin' upon a petterstal down in
+one o' dem mahble yards what dey calls gall'ries in Paris. We'd been
+sent dah by de man what done chiselled us, an' Joop'ter he came 'long
+wid Miss' Juno an' when he seed us he said: 'Dare you is, Juno! Dem
+boys'll make mighty good buttonses foh de hotel.' Juno she laffed, an'
+said dat was so, on'y she couldn't see as we had many buttons. 'Would
+you like to have 'em?' Joop'ter ast, and she said 'suttinly.' So he
+tu'ned hisself into a 'Merican millionaire an' bought me an' him off
+'n de manager, an' he had us sent here. All dat time we was nuffin'
+but mahble figgers, but soon's we arrived here, Joop'ter sent us
+up-stairs to de lab'ratory, an' fust ting me an' him knowed we was
+livin' bein's."
+
+I admired Jupiter's taste, not failing either to marvel at the
+wonderful power which only once before, as far as I knew, he had
+exerted to give to a bit of sculpture all the flush and glory of life,
+as in the case set forth in the pathetic tale of Pygmalion and
+Galatea.
+
+"And does he do this sort of thing often?" I inquired.
+
+"Yass indeedy," said Sambo. "He's doin' it all de time. Mos' ob de
+help in dis hotel is statulary, an' ef yo' wants to see a reel lively
+time 'foh yo' goes back home, go to de Zoo an' see 'em feed de Trojan
+Hoss, an' de Cardiff Giant. He brang bofe dem freaks to life, an' now
+he can't get rid ob 'em. Dat Trojan Hoss suttinly am a berry debbil.
+He stans up gentle as a lamb tell he gets about a hundred an' fifty
+people inside o' him, an' den he p'tends like he's gwine to run away,
+an' he cyanters, an' cyanters aroun', tell ebberybody's dat seasick
+dey can't res'."
+
+I resolved then and there to see the Trojan Horse, but not to get
+inside of him. I never before had suspected that the famous beast had
+a sense of humor in his makeup. I was about to make some further
+inquiry when a bell above us began to sound forth sonorously.
+
+"Massy me!" cried little Sambo, springing to his place in front of the
+chair. "Dat's de third an' lass call for breakfas'. We done spent too
+much time talkin'."
+
+With which observation, he and his companion, shouldering their
+burden, trotted along the richly furnished hall to the dining-room. I
+then observed a charming feature of life in the Olympian Hotel, and I
+presume it obtains elsewhere in that favored spot. There are no such
+things as stairs within its walls. From the magnificent office on the
+ground floor to the glorious dining-room on the forty-eighth, the
+broad corridor runs round and round and round again with an upward
+incline that is barely perceptible--indeed, not perceptible at all
+either to the eye or to the muscles of the leg. And while there are
+the most speedy elevators connecting all the various floors, one can,
+if one chooses, walk from cellar to roof of this marvellous place
+without realizing that he is mounting to an unusual elevation. And in
+the evening these corridors form a magnificent parade, brilliantly
+lighted, upon which are to be met all the wealth, beauty, and fashion
+of Olympus--alas! that I have no means of returning there with certain
+of my friends with whom I would share the good things that have come
+into my life!
+
+But to return to the story. Sambo and his brother soon "toted" me to
+the entrance of the dining-room--graceful little beggars they were,
+too.
+
+"Your breakfast is ready, sir," said the head waiter, bowing low.
+
+What impelled me to do so I shall never know, but it was an
+inspiration. I seemed to recognize the man at once, and, as I had
+frequently done on earth to my own advantage, I addressed him by name.
+
+"Having a good season, Memnon?" I said, slipping a silver dollar into
+his hand.
+
+It worked. Whether I should have found the same excellent service had
+I not spoken pleasantly to him I, of course, cannot say, but I have
+never been so well cared for elsewhere. The captious reader may ask
+how anything so essentially worldly as a silver dollar ever crept into
+Olympus. I can only say that one of the magic properties of the
+garment I wore was that whatever I put my hand into my pocket for, I
+got. As a travelled American, realizing the potency under similar
+conditions of that heavy and ugly coin, I instinctively sought for it
+in my pocket and it was there. I do not attempt to explain the process
+of its getting there. It suffices to say that, as the guest of the
+gods, my every wish was met with speedy attainment. I could not help
+but marvel, too, at the appropriateness of everything. What better
+than that the King of the Ethiopians should be head waiter to the
+gods!
+
+"Things are never dull here, sir," said Memnon, pocketing my dollar
+and escorting me to my table. "We do not often have visitors like
+yourself, however, and we are very glad to see you."
+
+I sat down before a magnificent window which seemed to open out upon a
+universe hitherto undreamed of.
+
+"Do you wish the news, sir?" Memnon asked, respectfully.
+
+"Yes," said I. "Ah--news from home, Memnon," I added.
+
+"Political or merely family?" said he.
+
+"Family," said I.
+
+Memnon busied himself about the window and in a moment, gazing through
+it, I had the pleasure of seeing my two boys eating their supper and
+challenging each other to mortal combat over a delinquent strawberry
+resting upon the tablecloth.
+
+"Give me a little politics, Memnon," said I, as the elder boy thrashed
+the younger, not getting the strawberry, however, which in a quick
+moment, between blows, the younger managed to swallow. "They seem to
+be about as usual at home."
+
+And I was immediately made aware of the intentions of the
+administration at Washington merely by looking through a window. There
+were the President and his cabinet and--some others who assist in
+making up the mind of the statesman.
+
+"Now a dash of crime," said I.
+
+"High or low?" asked Memnon, fingering the push-button alongside of
+the window.
+
+"The highest you've got," said I.
+
+I shall not describe what I saw. It was not very horrible. It was
+rather discouraging. It dealt wholly with the errors of what is known
+as Society. It showed the mistakes of persons for whom I had acquired
+a feeling of awe. It showed so much that I summoned Memnon to shut the
+glass off. I was really afraid somebody else might see. And I did not
+wish to lose my respect for people who were leaders in the highest
+walks of social life. Still, a great many things that have happened
+since in high life have not been wholly surprising to me. I have
+furthermore so ordered my own goings and comings since that time that
+I have no fear of what the Peeping Toms of Olympus may see. If mankind
+could only be made to understand that this window of Olympus opens out
+upon every act of their lives, there might be radical reforms in some
+quarters where it would do a deal of good, although to the general
+public there seems to be no need for it.
+
+At this point a waiter put a small wafer about as large as a penny
+upon the table.
+
+"H'm--what's that, Memnon?" I asked.
+
+"Essence of melon," said he.
+
+"Good, is it?" I queried.
+
+"You might taste it and see, sir," he said, with a smile. "It is one
+of a lot especially prepared for Jupiter."
+
+I put the thing in my mouth, and oh, the sensation that followed! I
+have eaten melons, and I have dreamed melons, but never in either
+experience was there to be found such an ecstasy of taste as I now
+got.
+
+"Another, Memnon--another!" I cried.
+
+"If you wish, sir," said he. "But very imprudent, sir. That wafer was
+constructed from six hundred of the choicest--"
+
+"Quite right," said I, realizing the situation; "quite right. Six
+hundred melons _are_ enough for any man. What do you propose to give
+me now?"
+
+"_Oeufs Midas_," said Memnon.
+
+"Sounds rather rich," I observed.
+
+"It would cost you 4,650,000 francs for a half portion at a Paris
+cafe, if you could get it there--which you can't."
+
+"And what, Memnon," said I, "is the peculiarity of eggs _Midas_?"
+
+"It's nothing but an omelet, sir," he replied; "but it is made of eggs
+laid by the goose of whom you have probably read in the _Personal
+Recollections of Jack the Giant-Killer_. They are solid gold."
+
+"Heavens!" I cried. "Solid gold! Great Scott, Memnon, I can't digest a
+solid gold omelet. What do you think I am--an assay office?"
+
+Memnon grinned until every tooth in his head showed, making his mouth
+look like the keyboard of a grand piano.
+
+"It is perfectly harmless the way it is prepared in the kitchen, sir,"
+he explained. "It isn't an eighteen-karat omelet, as you seem to
+think. The eggs are solid, but the omelet is not. It is, indeed, only
+six karats fine. The alloy consists largely of lactopeptine,
+hydrochloric acid, and various other efficient digestives which render
+it innocuous to the most delicate digestion."
+
+"Very well, Memnon," I replied, making a wry face, "bring it on. I'll
+try a little of it, anyhow." I must confess it did not sound inviting,
+but a guest should never criticise the food that is placed before him.
+My politeness was well repaid, for nothing more delicate in the way of
+an omelet has ever titillated my palate. There was a slight metallic
+taste about it at first, but I soon got over that, just as I have got
+used to English oysters, which, when I eat them, make me feel for a
+moment as if I had bitten off the end of a brass door-knob; and had I
+not calculated the cost, I should have asked for a second helping.
+
+Memnon then brought me a platter containing a small object that
+looked like a Hamburg steak, and a most delicious cup of _cafe au
+lait_.
+
+"Filet Olympus," he observed, "and coffee direct from the dairy of the
+gods."
+
+Both were a joy.
+
+"Never tasted such a steak!" I said, as the delicate morsel actually
+melted like butter in my mouth.
+
+"No, sir, you never did," Memnon agreed. "It is cut from the steer
+bred for the sole purpose of supplying Jupiter and his family with
+tenderloin. We take the calf when it is very young, sir, and surround
+it with all the luxuries of a bovine existence. It is fed on the most
+delicate fodder, especially prepared by chemists under the direction
+of AEsculapius. The cattle, instead of toughening their muscles by
+walking to pasture, are waited upon by cow-boys in livery. A gentle
+amount of exercise, just enough to keep them in condition, is taken
+at regular hours every day, and at night they are put to sleep in
+feather beds and covered with eiderdown quilts at seven o'clock."
+
+"Don't they rebel?" I asked. "I should think a moderately active calf
+would be hard to manage that way."
+
+[Illustration: CARING FOR THE CALVES]
+
+"Oh, at first a little, but after a while they come to like it, and by
+the time they are ready for killing they are as tender as humming
+birds' tongues," said Memnon. "If you take him young enough, you can
+do almost anything you like with a calf."
+
+It seemed like a marvellous scheme, and far more humane than that of
+fattening geese for the sale of their livers.
+
+"And this coffee, Memnon? You said it was fresh from the dairy of the
+gods. You get your coffee from the dairy?" I asked.
+
+"The breakfast coffee--yes, sir," replied Memnon. "Fresh every
+morning. You must ask the steward to let you see the _cafe-au-lait_
+herd--"
+
+"The what?" I demanded.
+
+"The _cafe-au-lait herd_," repeated Memnon. "A special permit is
+required to go through the coffee pasture where these cows are fed.
+Some one, who had a grudge against Pales, who is in charge of the
+dairymaids, got into the field one night and sowed a lot of chicory in
+with the coffee, and the result was that the next season we got the
+worst coffee from those cows you ever tasted. So they made a rule that
+no one is allowed to go there any more without a card from the
+steward."
+
+"You don't mean to say--" I began.
+
+"Yes, I do," said Memnon. "It is true. We pasture our cows on a coffee
+farm, and, instead of milk, we get this that you are drinking."
+
+"Wonderful idea!" said I.
+
+"It is, indeed," said Memnon; "that is, from your point of view. From
+ours, it does not seem so strange. We are used to marvels here, sir,"
+he continued. "Would you care for anything more, sir?"
+
+"No, Memnon," said I. "I have fared sumptuously--my--ah--my appetite
+is somewhat taken away by all these tremendous things."
+
+"I will have an appetite up for you, if you wish," he replied, simply,
+as if it were the easiest thing in the world.
+
+"No, thank you," said I. "I think I'll wait until I am acclimated. I
+never eat heavily for the first twenty-four hours when I am in a
+strange place."
+
+And with this I went to the door, feeling, I must confess, a trifle
+ill. The steak and coffee were all right, but there was a suggestion
+of pain in my right side. I could not make up my mind if it were the
+six hundred melons or whether a nugget from the omelet had got caught
+in my vermiform appendix.
+
+At any rate, I didn't wish to eat again just then.
+
+At the door the sedan-chair and the two little blackamoors were
+awaiting me.
+
+"We have orders to take you to the Zoo, sah," said Sambo.
+
+"All right, Sambo," said I. "I'm all ready. A little air will do me
+good."
+
+And we moved along.
+
+I forgot to mention that, as he closed the chair door upon me, Memnon
+handed me back the silver dollar I had given him.
+
+"What is this, Memnon?" said I.
+
+"The dollar you wished me to keep for you, sir," he replied.
+
+"But I intended it for you," said I.
+
+His face flushed.
+
+"I am just as much obliged, sir, but, really, I couldn't, you know.
+We don't take tips in Olympus, sir."
+
+"Indeed?" said I. "Well--I'm sorry to have offended you, Memnon. I
+meant it all right. Why didn't you tell me when I gave it you?"
+
+"I should have given you a check for it, sir. I supposed you didn't
+wish to carry anything so heavy about with you."
+
+"Ah!" said I, replacing the dollar in my pocket. "Thank you for your
+care of it, Memnon. No offence, I hope?"
+
+"None at all, sir," he replied, again showing his wonderful ivory
+teeth. "I don't take offence at anything so trifling. Had you handed
+me a billion dollars, I should have declined to wait on you."
+
+And he bowed me away in a fashion which made me feel keenly the
+narrowness of my escape.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+AEsculapius, M.D.
+
+
+We had not gone very far along when the pain in my side became
+poignant and I called out of the window to Sambo:
+
+"Sammy, is there a doctor anywhere on the way out to the Zoo?" I
+asked.
+
+"Yassir," he replied, slowing down a trifle. "We gotter go right by de
+doh ob Dr. Skilapius."
+
+"Doctor who?" I asked--the name was new to me.
+
+"'Tain't _Skill_-apius," growled the boy behind, who seemed rather
+jealous that I had taken no notice of him. "It's Eee-skill-apius."
+
+"Oh," said I, beginning to catch their drift. "Dr. AEsculapius. Is that
+what you are trying to say?"
+
+"Yassir," said both boys. "Dass de man."
+
+"Well, stop at his office a moment," said I. "I'm feeling a trifle
+ill."
+
+In a few minutes we drew up before a large door to the right of the
+corridor before which there hung a shingle marked in large gilt
+letters:
+
++-----------------------------------+
+| |
+| AESCULAPIUS, M.D. |
+| |
+| Office Hours: 10 to 12. |
+| |
+| Tuesdays. |
+| |
++-----------------------------------+
+
+I knocked at the door and was promptly admitted.
+
+"I wish to see the doctor," said I.
+
+"This is Monday, sir," the maid replied--I couldn't quite place her,
+but she seemed rather above her station and was stunningly beautiful.
+
+"What of that?" I demanded, as fiercely as I could, considering how
+pretty the maid was.
+
+"The doctor can only be seen on Tuesdays," said she. "It's on the
+door."
+
+"But I'm sick," I cried. "Very sick, indeed."
+
+"No doubt," she replied, with a shrug of her shoulders that I found
+very fetching. "Else you would not have come. But you are not so sick
+that you can't wait until to-morrow, or if you are, you might as well
+die, because the doctor won't take a case he can't think over a week."
+
+"Nice arrangement, that," said I, scornfully. "It may do very well for
+immortals, but for a mortal it's pretty poor business."
+
+The maid's manner underwent an immediate change.
+
+[Illustration: "'THEN YOU MUST DIE'"]
+
+"Excuse me, sir," she said, making me a courtesy. "I did not know you
+were a mortal. I presumed you were a minor god. The doctor will see
+you at once."
+
+I was ushered into the consulting-room immediately--in fact, too
+quickly. I wanted to thank the pretty maid for taking me for an
+immortal. There was no time for this, however, for in a moment
+AEsculapius himself appeared.
+
+"You must pardon Alcestis," he said, after the first greetings were
+over. "She is new to the business and doesn't know a god from a hole
+in the ground. She presumed you were immortal and did not realize the
+emergency."
+
+"That's all right, doctor," said I, glad to learn who the entrancing
+person at the door was. "I've called to see you because--"
+
+"Pray be silent," the doctor interrupted, holding his hand up in
+admonition. "Let me discover your symptoms for myself. It is the surer
+method. Physicians in your world are frequently led astray by placing
+too much reliance upon what their patients tell them. I have devised a
+new system. _Believe nothing the patient says._ See? If a man tells me
+he has a headache, I send him to a chiropodist. If his ankle pains
+him, I send him to an oculist. If he says his chest is oppressed, I
+have him treated for spinal meningitis; and an alleged pain in the
+back my assistants cure by placing a mustard plaster on the throat."
+
+"Then your medical principles are based on what, doctor?" I asked,
+somewhat amused.
+
+"A simple motto which prevails among you mortals: 'All men are
+liars'--'Omnes homines mendaces sunt.' It is safer than your accepted
+methods below. A sick man is the last man in the universe to describe
+his symptoms accurately. The mere fact that he is ill distorts his
+judgment. Therefore, I never allow it. If I can't find out for myself
+what is the matter with a patient, I give up the case."
+
+"And the patient dies?" I suggested.
+
+"Not if he is an immortal," he replied, quietly. "Come over here," he
+added, indicating a spot near the window where there was a strong
+light. I went, and AEsculapius, taking a pair of eye-glasses from a
+cabinet in one corner of his apartment, placed them on the bridge of
+his nose.
+
+"Now look out of the window," said he. "To the left."
+
+I obeyed at once. What I saw may not be described. I shrank back in
+horror, for I saw so much real suffering that my own trouble grew less
+in intensity.
+
+"Now look me straight in the eye," said AEsculapius, an amused smile
+playing about his lips.
+
+I turned my vision straight upon his glasses and was abashed. I
+averted my glance.
+
+"Nonsense," said he, taking me by the shoulders. "Look at my
+pupils--straight--don't be afraid--there! That's it. These glasses
+won't hurt you, and, after all, I'm not very terrible," he added,
+genially.
+
+It required an effort, but I made it, although, in so doing, I seemed
+to be turning my soul inside out for his inspection.
+
+"H'm," breathed AEsculapius. "Rather serious. You think you have
+appendicitis."
+
+"Have I?" I cried.
+
+AEsculapius laughed. "_Have_ you?" he asked. "What do you think you
+think?"
+
+"I think I have," said I, my heart growing faint at the very thought
+I thought I was thinking.
+
+"You are at least sure of your convictions," said AEsculapius. "Now, as
+a matter of fact, the thoughts your thoughtful nature has induced you
+to think are utterly valueless. You have a pain in your side?"
+
+"Yes," said I. "And a very painful pain in my side--and I am not
+putting on any side in my pain either," I added.
+
+"No doubt," said AEsculapius. "But are you sure it is in your side, or
+isn't it your chest that aches a trifle, eh?"
+
+"Not much," said I, growing doubtful on the subject.
+
+"Still it aches," said he.
+
+"Yes," I answered, the pain in my side weakening in favor of one in my
+chest. "It does." And it really did, like the deuce.
+
+"Now about that pain in your chest," said AEsculapius. "Isn't it
+rather higher up--in your throat, instead of your chest?"
+
+My throat began to hurt, and abominably. Every particle of it throbbed
+with pain, and my chest was immediately relieved.
+
+"I think," said I, weakly, "that the pain _is_ rather in my throat
+than in my chest."
+
+"But your side doesn't ache at all?" suggested AEsculapius.
+
+I had forgotten my side altogether.
+
+"Not a bit," said I; and it didn't.
+
+"So far, so good," said the doctor. "Now, my friend, about this throat
+trouble of yours. Do you think you have diphtheria, or merely
+toothache?"
+
+I hadn't thought of toothache before, but as soon as the doctor
+mentioned it, a pang went through my lower jaw, and my larynx seemed
+all right again.
+
+"Well, doctor," said I, "as a matter of fact, the pain does seem to
+be in my wisdom teeth."
+
+"So-called," said he, quietly. "More tooth than wisdom, generally. And
+not in your throat?" continued the doctor.
+
+[Illustration: I VISIT AESCULAPIUS]
+
+"Not a bit of it," said I. My throat seemed strong enough for a
+political campaign in which I was principal speaker. "It's _all_ in my
+teeth."
+
+"Upper or lower?" he asked, with a laugh, and then he gazed fixedly at
+me.
+
+I had not realized that I had upper teeth until he spoke, and a
+shudder went through me as a semicircle of pain shot through my upper
+jaw.
+
+"Upper," I retorted, with some surliness.
+
+"Verging a trifle on your cheekbones, and thence to the optic nerve,"
+he said, calmly, still gazing into my soul. "I'll try your sight.
+Look at that card over there, and tell me--"
+
+"What nonsense is this, doctor?" I cried, angry at his airy manner and
+manifest control over my symptoms. "There is nothing the matter with
+my eyes. They're as good as any one of the million eyes of your friend
+the Argus."
+
+"Then what, in the name of Jupiter, is the matter with you?" he
+ejaculated, elevating his eyebrows.
+
+"Nothing at all," said I, sulkily.
+
+AEsculapius threw himself on the sofa and roared with laughter.
+
+"Perfectly splendid!" he said, when he had recovered from his mirth.
+"Perfectly splendid! You are the best example of the value of my
+system I've had in a long time. Now let me show you something," he
+added. "Put these glasses on."
+
+He took the glasses from his nose and put them astride of mine, and
+lead me before a mirror--a cheval-glass arrangement that stood in one
+corner of the room.
+
+"Now look yourself straight in the eye," said he.
+
+I did so, and truly it was as if I looked upon the page of a book
+printed in the largest and clearest type. I hesitate to say what I saw
+written there, since the glass was strong enough to reach not only the
+mind itself, but further into the very depths of my subself-consciousness.
+On the surface, man thinks well of himself; this continues in modified
+intensity to his self-consciousness, but the fool does not live who,
+in his subself-consciousness, the Holy of Holies of Realization, does
+not know that he is a fool.
+
+"Take 'em off," I cried, for they seemed to burn into the very depths
+of my soul.
+
+"That isn't necessary," said AEsculapius, kindly. "Just turn your eyes
+away from the glass a moment and they won't bother you. I want to cure
+this trouble of yours."
+
+I stopped looking at myself in the mirror and the tense condition of
+my nerves was immediately relieved.
+
+"Feel better right away, eh?" he asked.
+
+"Yes," I admitted.
+
+"So I thought," he said. "You've momentarily given up
+self-contemplation. Now lower your gaze. Look at your chest a moment."
+
+Just what were the properties of the glass I do not know, nor do I
+know how one's chest should look, but, as I looked down, I found that
+just as I could penetrate to the depths of my mind through my eyes, so
+was it possible for me to inspect myself physically.
+
+"Nothing the matter there, eh?" said AEsculapius.
+
+"Not that I can see," said I.
+
+"Nor I," said he. "Now, if you think there is anything the matter with
+you anywhere else," he added, "you are welcome to use the glasses as
+long as you see fit."
+
+I took a sneaking glance at my right side and was immediately made
+aware of the fact that all was well with me there, and that all my
+trouble had come from my ill-advised "wondering" whether that Midas
+omelet would bother me or not.
+
+"These glasses are wonderful," said I.
+
+"They are a great help," said AEsculapius.
+
+"And do you always permit your patients to put them on?" I asked.
+
+"Not always," said he. "Sometimes people really have something the
+matter with them. More often, of course, they haven't. It would never
+do to let a really sick man see his condition. If they are ill, I can
+see at once what is the matter by means of these spectacles, and can,
+of course, prescribe. If they are not, there is no surer means of
+effecting a cure than putting these on the patient's nose and letting
+him see for himself that he is all right."
+
+"They have all the quality of the X-ray light," I suggested, turning
+my gaze upon an iron safe in the corner of the room, which immediately
+disclosed its contents.
+
+"They are X-ray glasses," said AEsculapius. "In a good light you can
+see through anything with 'em on. I have lenses of the same kind in my
+window, and when you came up I looked at you through the window-pane
+and saw at once that there was nothing the matter with you."
+
+"I wish our earthly doctors had glasses like these," I ventured,
+taking them off, for truly I was beginning to fancy a strain.
+
+"They have--or at least they have something quite as good," said
+AEsculapius. "They are all my disciples, and in the best instances they
+can see through the average patient without them. They have insight.
+You don't believe you deceive your physician, do you?"
+
+"I have sometimes thought so," said I, not realizing the trap the
+doctor was setting.
+
+"How foolish!" he cried. "Why should you wish to?"
+
+I was covered with confusion.
+
+"Never mind," said AEsculapius, smiling pleasantly. "You are only human
+and cannot help yourself. It is your imagination leads you astray.
+Half the time when you send for your physician there is nothing the
+matter with you."
+
+"He always prescribes," I retorted.
+
+"That is for your comfort, not his," said AEsculapius, firmly.
+
+"And sometimes they operate when it isn't necessary," I put in,
+persistently.
+
+"True," said AEsculapius. "Very true. Because if they didn't, the
+patient would die of worry."
+
+"Humph!" said I, incredulous. "I never knew that the operation for
+appendicitis was a mind cure."
+
+"It is--frequently," observed the doctor. "There are more people, my
+friend, who have appendicitis on their minds than there are those who
+have it in their vermiforms. Don't forget that."
+
+It was a revelation, and, to tell the truth, it has been a revelation
+of comfort ever since.
+
+"I fancy, doctor," said I, after a pause, "that you are a Christian
+Scientist. All troubles are fanciful and indicative of a perverse
+soul."
+
+AEsculapius flushed.
+
+"If one of the gods had said that," he replied, "I should have
+operated upon him. As a mortal, you are privileged to say unpleasant
+things, just as a child may say things to his elders with impunity
+which merit extreme punishment. Christian Science is all right when
+you are truly well--in good physical condition. It is a sure cure for
+imaginary troubles, but when you are really sick, it is not of
+Olympus, but of Hades."
+
+AEsculapius spoke with all the passion of a mortal, and I was
+embarrassed. "I did not mean to say anything unpleasant, doctor," said
+I.
+
+"That's all right, my lad," said AEsculapius, patting me on the back.
+"I knew that. If I hadn't known it, you'd have been on the table by
+this time. And now, good-bye. Curb your imagination. Think about
+others. Don't worry about yourself without cause, and never send for a
+doctor unless you know there's something wrong. If I had my way you
+mortals would be deprived of imagination. That is your worst disease,
+and if at any time you wish yours amputated, come to me and I'll fix
+you out."
+
+"Thanks, doctor," I replied; "but I don't think I'll accept your
+offer, because I need my imagination in my business."
+
+And then, realizing that I had received my _conge_, I prepared to
+depart.
+
+"How much do I owe you, doctor?" I asked, putting my hand into the
+pocket of my gown, confident of finding whatever I should need.
+
+"Nothing," said he. "The real physician can never be paid. He either
+restores your health or he does not. If he restores your health, he
+saves your life, and he is entitled to what your life is worth. If he
+does not restore your health--he has failed, and is entitled to
+nothing. All you have will never pay your doctor for what he does for
+you. Therefore, go in peace."
+
+I stood abashed in the presence of this wise man, and, as I went forth
+from his office, I realized the truth of what he had said. In our own
+world we place a value upon the service of the man who carries us over
+the hard and the dark places. Yet who can really repay him for all
+that he does for us when by his skill alone we are rescued from peril?
+
+I re-entered my sedan-chair and set the blackies off again, with
+something potent in my mind--how much I truly owed to the good man who
+has taken at times the health of my children, of my wife, of myself,
+in his hands and has seen us safely through to port. I have not yet
+been able to estimate it, but if ever he reads these lines, he will
+know that I pay him in gratitude that which the world with all its
+wealth cannot give.
+
+"Now for the Zoo, boys," I cried. "AEsculapius has fixed me up."
+
+And we scampered on.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+At the Zoo
+
+
+We had not travelled far from the office of AEsculapius when my little
+carriers turned from the broad and beautiful corridor into a narrow
+passage, through which they proceeded with some difficulty until we
+reached the other side of this strangely constructed home of the gods.
+As we emerged into the light of day, the view that presented itself
+was indescribably beautiful. I have looked from our own hills at home
+upon many a scene of grandeur. From the mountain peaks of New
+Hampshire, with the sun streaming down upon me, I have looked upon
+the valleys beneath through rifts in clouds that had not ventured so
+high, and were drenching the glorious green below with refreshing
+rains, and have stood awed in the presence of one of the simplest
+moods of nature. But the sight that greeted my eyes as I passed along
+that exterior road of Olympus, under the genial auspices of those
+wonderful gods, appealed to something in my soul which had never
+before been awakened, and which I shall never be able adequately to
+describe. The mere act of seeing seemed to be uplifting, and, from the
+moment I looked downward upon the beloved earth, I ceased to wonder
+that gods were godlike--indeed, my real wonder was that they were not
+more so. It seemed difficult to believe that there was anything
+earthly about earth. The world was idealized even to myself, who had
+never held it to be a bad sort of place. There were rich pastures,
+green to the most soul-satisfying degree, upon which cattle fed and
+lived their lives of content; here and there were the great cities of
+earth seen through a haze that softened all their roughness; nothing
+sordid appeared; only the fair side of life was visible.
+
+And I began to see how it came about that these Olympian gods had lost
+control over man. If the world, with all its joys and all its
+miseries, presents to the controlling power merely its joyous side,
+what sympathy can one look for in one's deity? There was Paris and
+Notre Dame in the sunlight. But the Morgue at the back of Notre
+Dame--in the shadow of its sunlit towers--that was not visible to the
+eye of the casual god who drove his blackamoors along that entrancing
+roadway. There was London and the inspiring pile of Westminster
+showing up its majestic top, lit by the wondrous light of the sun--but
+still undiscovered of the gods there rolled on its farther side the
+Thames, dark as the Styx, a very grave of ambition, yet the last
+solace of many a despairing soul. London Bridge may tell the gods of
+much that may not be seen from that glorious driveway along the
+exterior of Olympus.
+
+I found myself growing maudlin, and I pulled myself together.
+
+"Magnificent view, Sammy," said I.
+
+"Yassir," he replied, trotting along faithfully. "Dass what dey all
+says. _I_ 'ain't nebber seen it. 'Ain't got time to look at it."
+
+"Well, stop a moment and look," said I. "Isn't it magnificent?"
+
+The blackies stopped and looked.
+
+"Putty good," said Sammy, "but I doan' care fo' views," he added. "Dey
+makes me dizzy."
+
+I gave Sammy up from that moment. He was well carved, a work of art,
+in fact, but he was essentially modern, and I was living in the
+antique.
+
+"Hustle along to the Zoo," I cried, with some impatience, and I was
+truly "hustled."
+
+"Here we is," said Sammy, settling down on his haunches at the end of
+a five-mile trot. "Dis is it."
+
+We had stopped before a gate not entirely unlike those the Japanese
+erect before popular places of amusement they frequent.
+
+I descended from the chair and was greeted by an attendant who
+demanded to know what I wished to see.
+
+"The animals," said I.
+
+He laughed. "Well," he said, "I'll show you what I've got, but truly
+most of them have gone off on vacation."
+
+"Is the Trojan Horse here?" I demanded.
+
+"No," said he. "He's in the repair shop. One of his girders is loose,
+and the hinges on his door rusted and broke last week. His interior
+needs painting, and his left hind-leg has been wobbly for a long time.
+It was really dangerous to keep him longer without repairs."
+
+I was much disappointed. In visiting the Olympian Zoo I was largely
+impelled by a desire to see the Trojan Horse and compare him with the
+Coney Island Elephant, which, with the summer hotels of New Jersey and
+the Statue of Liberty, at that time dominated the minor natural
+glories of the American coast in the eyes of passengers on in-coming
+steamships. I think I should even have ventured a ride in his
+capacious interior despite what Sammy had said of his friskiness and
+the peril of his action to persons susceptible to sea-sickness.
+
+"Too bad," said I, swallowing my disappointment as best I could.
+"Still, you have other attractions. How about the Promethean vulture?
+Is he still living?"
+
+"Unfortunately, no," said the attendant. "He was taken out last year
+and killed. Got too proud to live. He put in a complaint about his
+food. Said Prometheus was a very interesting man, but as a diet he was
+monotonous and demanded a more diversified _menu_. Said he'd like to
+try Apollo and a Muse or two, for a little while, and preferred Cupids
+on toast for Sunday-night tea."
+
+"What a vulturian vulture!" said I.
+
+"Wasn't he?" laughed the attendant. "We replied by wringing his neck,
+and served him up in a chicken salad to a party of tourists from
+Hades."
+
+This struck me as reasonable, and I said so.
+
+"Well, whatever you happen to have on hand will satisfy me," I added.
+"Just let me see what animals you have and I'll be content."
+
+"Very well," replied the attendant. "Step this way."
+
+He took me along a charming pathway bordered with many a beautiful
+tree and adorned with numerous flowers of wondrous fragrance.
+
+"This path is not without interest," he said; "all the trees and
+shrubs have a history. That laurel over there, for instance, used to
+be a Daphne. She and Jupiter had a row and he planted her over there.
+Makes a very pretty tree, eh?"
+
+"Extremely," said I. "Have you many similar ventures?"
+
+"Oh yes. Our botanical gardens are full of them," he replied. "Those
+trees to the right are Baucis and Philemon. That lotos plant on the
+left used to be Dryope, and when Adonis isn't busy valeting at the
+hotel, he comes down here and blooms as an anemone, into which, as you
+are probably aware, he was changed by Venus. That pink thing by the
+fountain is Hyacinthus, and over there by the pond is where Narcissus
+blooms. He's a barber in his off hours."
+
+I had already learned that, so expressed no surprise.
+
+"That's a stunning sunflower you have," I ventured, pointing to a
+perfect specimen thereof directly ahead of us.
+
+"Yes," said the attendant. "That's Clytie. She's only potted. We don't
+set her out permanently, because the royal family like to have her on
+the table at state dinners. And she, poor girl, rather enjoys it.
+Apollo is generally to be found at these dinners either as a guest or
+playing a zither or a banjo behind a screen. Wherever he is, the
+sunflower turns and it affords considerable amusement among Jupiter's
+guests to watch it. Jupiter has christened Clytie the Sherlock Holmes
+of Olympus, because wherever Apollo is she spots him. Sometimes when
+he isn't present, he has to be very careful in his statements about
+where he has been, for long habit has made Clytie unerring in her
+instinct."
+
+This seemed to me to be a rather good revenge on Apollo for his very
+ungodlike treatment of Clytie, and if half the attendant told me that
+day at the Zoo is true, this excessively fickle Olympian is probably
+sorry by this time that he treated her originally with such uncalled
+for disdain.
+
+"Come over here and see the bear-pit," said the guide. I obeyed with
+alacrity, and, leaning over the rail, had the pleasure of seeing the
+most beautiful bruin my eyes had ever rested upon. She was as glossy
+as a new silk hat; her eyes were as soft and timid as those of a
+frightened deer, and, when she moved, she was the perfection of grace.
+
+
+[Illustration: CALLISTO]
+
+"Good-morning, Callisto," said my guide.
+
+"Same to you, my dear Cephalus," the bear returned, in a sweet
+feminine voice that entranced me.
+
+"How are things with you to-day?" asked Cephalus, with a kindly smile.
+
+"Oh, I can't growl," laughed Callisto--it was evident that the
+unfortunate woman was not taking her misfortune too seriously. "Only I
+wish you'd tell people who come here that while I undoubtedly am a
+bear, I have not yet lost my womanly taste, and I don't want to be fed
+all the time on buns. If anybody asks you what you think I'd like,
+tell them that an occasional _omelette soufflee_, or an oyster pate,
+or a platter of _petits fours_ would please me greatly."
+
+"I shall do it, Callisto," said the keeper, as he started to move
+away. "Meanwhile, here's a stick of chewing-gum for you." Callisto
+received it with a manifestation of delight which moved me greatly,
+and I bethought myself of the magic properties of my coat, and
+plunging my hand into its capacious pockets, I found there an oyster
+pate that made my mouth water, and an _omelette soufflee_ that looked
+as if it had been made by a Parisian milliner, it was so dainty.
+
+"If madam will permit me," said I, with a bow to Callisto.
+
+"Thank you kindly," the bear replied, in that same thrillingly sweet
+voice, and dancing with joy. "You are a dear, good man, and if you
+ever have an enemy, let me know and I'll hug him to death."
+
+As we again turned to go, Cephalus laughed. "Queer case that!" he
+said. "You'd have thought Juno would let up on that poor woman, but
+she doesn't for a little bit."
+
+"Well--a jealous woman, my dear Cephalus--"
+
+"True," said he. "That's all true enough, but, great Heavens, man,
+Juno ought to be used to it by this time with a husband like Jupiter.
+She's overstocked this Zoo a dozen times already with her jealous
+freaks, and Jupiter hasn't reformed once. What good does it do?"
+
+"Doesn't she ever let 'em off?" I asked. "Doesn't Callisto ever have a
+Sunday out, for instance?"
+
+"Yes, but always as a bear, and the poor creature doesn't dare take
+her chance with the other wild beasts--the real ones. She's just as
+afraid of bears as she ever was, and if she sees a plain, every-day
+cow coming towards her, she runs shrieking back to her pit again."
+
+"Poor Callisto," said I. "And Actaeon? How about him?"
+
+"He's here--but he's a holy terror," replied Cephalus, shaking his
+head. "He gets loose once in a while, and then everybody has to look
+out for himself, and frankly," Cephalus added, his voice sinking to a
+whisper, "I don't blame him. Diana treated him horribly."
+
+"I always thought so," said I. "He really wasn't to blame."
+
+"Certainly not," observed Cephalus. "If people will go in swimming
+out-of-doors, it's their own fault if chance wayfarers stumble upon
+them. To turn a man into a stag and then set his own dogs on him for a
+thing he couldn't help strikes me as rank injustice."
+
+"Wonder to me that Jupiter doesn't interfere in this business," said
+I. "He could help Callisto out without much trouble."
+
+"The point about that is that he's afraid," Cephalus explained. "Juno
+has threatened to sue him for divorce if he does, and he doesn't dare
+brave the scandal."
+
+We had by this time reached a long, low building that looked like a
+stable, and, as we entered, Cephalus observed:
+
+"This is our fire-proof building where we keep our inflammable beasts.
+That big, sleeping creature that looks like a mastodon lizard is the
+dragon that your friend St. George, of London, got the best of, and
+sent here with his compliments. I'll give the beast a prod and let you
+see how he works."
+
+Cephalus was as good as his word, and for a moment I wished he wasn't.
+Such a din as that which followed the dragon's awakening I never heard
+before, and every time the horrible beast opened his jaws it was as if
+a fire-works factory had exploded.
+
+"Very dangerous creature that," said Cephalus. "But he is splendid
+for fetes. Shows off beautifully in the dark. I'll prod him again and
+just you note the prismatic coloring of his flames. Get up there,
+Fido," he added, poking the dragon with his stick a second time. "Wake
+up, and give the gentleman an illumination."
+
+The scene of the moment before was repeated, only with greater
+intensity, and even in the sunlight I could see that the various hues
+his fiery breathings took on were gorgeous beyond description. A
+bonfire built of red, pink, green, and yellow lights, backed up by
+driftwood in a fearful state of combustion, about describes it.
+
+"Superb," said I, nearly overcome by the grandeur of the scene.
+
+"Well, just imagine it on a dark night!" cried Cephalus,
+enthusiastically. "Fido is very popular as a living firework, but he's
+a costly luxury."
+
+I laughed. "Costly?" said I. "I don't see why. Fireworks as grand as
+that must cost a deal more than he does."
+
+"You don't know," said Cephalus, pressing his lips together. "Why,
+that dragon eats ten tons of cannel coal a day, and it takes the
+combined efforts of six stokers, under the supervision of an expert
+engineer, to keep his appetite within bounds. You never saw such an
+eater, and as for drinking--well, he's awful. He drinks sixteen
+gallons of kerosene at luncheon."
+
+I eyed Cephalus narrowly, but beyond a wink at the dragon, I saw no
+reason to believe that he was deceiving me.
+
+"Then he sets fire to things, and altogether he's an expensive beast
+Aren't you, Fido?"
+
+"Yep," barked the dragon.
+
+"Now, over there," continued the guide, patting the dragon on the
+head, whereat the fearful beast wagged his tail and breathed a
+thousand pounds of steam from his nostrils to express his pleasure.
+"Over there are the fire-breathing bulls--all the animals here are
+fire-breathing. The bulls give us a lot of trouble. You can't feed 'em
+on coal, because their teeth are not strong enough to chew it; and you
+can't feed 'em on hay, because they'd set fire to it the minute they
+breathed on it; and you can't put 'em out to pasture because they'd
+wither up a sixty-acre lot in ten minutes. It's an actual fact that we
+have to send for Jason three times a day to come here and feed them.
+He's the only person about who can do it, and how he does it no one
+knows. He pats them on the neck, and they stop breathing fire. That's
+all we know."
+
+"But they must eat something. What does Jason give them?" I demanded.
+
+"We've had to invent a food for them," said Cephalus. "Dr. AEsculapius
+did it. It's a solution of hay, clover, grass, and paraffine mixed
+with asbestos."
+
+"Paraffine?" I cried. "Why, that's extremely inflammable."
+
+"So are the bulls," was Cephalus's rejoinder. "They counteract each
+other." I gazed at the animals with admiration. They were undoubtedly
+magnificent beasts, and they truly breathed fire. Their nostrils
+suggested the flames that are emitted from the huge naphtha jets that
+are used to light modern circuses in country towns, and as for their
+mouths, any one who can imagine a bull with a pair of gas-logs
+illuminating his reflective smile, instead of teeth, may gain a
+comprehensive idea of the picture that confronted me.
+
+I had hardly finished looking at these, when Cephalus, impatient to
+be through with me, as guides often are with tourists, observed:
+
+"There is the ph[oe]nix."
+
+I turned instantly. I have always wished to see the ph[oe]nix. A bird
+having apparently the attractive physique of a broiler deliberately
+sitting on a bonfire had appealed strongly to my interest as well as
+to my appetite.
+
+"Dear me!" said I. "He's not handsome, is he?"
+
+He was not; resembling an ordinary buzzard with wings outstretched
+sitting upon that kind of emberesque fire that induces a man in a
+library to think mournfully about the past, and convinces
+him--alas!--that if he had the time he could write immortal poetry.
+
+"Not very!" Cephalus acquiesced. "Still, he's all right in a Zoo. He's
+queer. Look at his nest, if you don't believe it."
+
+[Illustration: I MEET THE PH[OE]NIX]
+
+"I never believed otherwise, my dear Cephalus," said I. "He seems to
+me to be a unique thing in poultry. If he were a chicken he would be
+hailed with delight in my country. A self-broiling broiler--!"
+
+The idea was too ecstatic for expression.
+
+"Well, he isn't a chicken, so your rhapsody doesn't go," said
+Cephalus. "He's little short of a buzzard. Useful, but not appetizing.
+If I were a profane mortal, I should call him a condemned nuisance.
+Most birds build their own nests, and a well-built nest lasts them a
+whole season. This infernal bird has to have a furnace-man to make his
+bed for him night and morning, and if, by some mischance, the fire
+goes out, as fires will do in the best-regulated families, he begins
+to squawk, and he squawks, and he squawks, and he squawks until the
+keeper comes and sets his nest a-blazing again. He has a voice like a
+sick fog-horn that drives everybody crazy."
+
+"Why don't you fool him sometimes?" I suggested. "Make a nest out of a
+mustard-plaster and see what he would do."
+
+"He's too old a bird to be caught that way," said Cephalus. "He's a
+confounded old ass, but he's a brainy one."
+
+At this moment a blare of the most heavenly trumpets sounded, and
+Cephalus and I left the building and emerged into the garden to see
+what had caused it. There a dazzling spectacle met my gaze. A regiment
+of Amazons was drawn up on the green of the parade and a superb gilded
+coach, drawn by six milk-white horses, stood before them, while two
+gorgeously apparelled heralds sounded a fanfare. Cephalus immediately
+became deeply agitated.
+
+"It is his Majesty's own carriage and guard," he cried.
+
+"Whose?" said I.
+
+"Jupiter's," said he. "I fancy they have come for you."
+
+And it so transpired. One of the heralds advanced to where I was
+standing, saluted me as though I were an emperor, and, through his
+golden trumpet, informed me that eleven o'clock was approaching; that
+his Majesty deigned to grant me the desired audience, and had sent a
+carriage and guard of honor.
+
+I returned the salute, thanked Cephalus for his attentions, and
+entered the carriage. A brass band of a hundred and twenty pieces
+struck up an inspiring march, and, preceded and followed by the
+Amazons, I was conveyed in state to the palatial quarters of Zeus
+himself.
+
+It suggested comic opera with a large number of pretty chorus girls,
+but I could not help being impressed in spite of this thought with the
+fact that Jupiter knew how to do a thing up in style. I was indeed so
+awed with it all that I did not dare wink at a single Amazon while _en
+route_, although strongly tempted to do so several times.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+Some Account of the Palace of Jupiter
+
+
+So dazzled was I by all that went on about me, by the gorgeousness of
+my equipage and by the extraordinary richness of the costumes worn by
+my escort, that for the moment I forgot that I was not myself clad in
+suitable garments for so ultra-royal a function. The streets, the
+houses, even the throngs that peopled the way, seemed to be of the
+most lustrous gold, and it became necessary for me from time to time
+as we progressed to close my eyes and shut out the too brilliant
+vision. Fancy a bake-shop built of solid gold nuggets, its large plate
+windows composed each of one huge, flashing diamond; imagine an
+exquisitely wrought golden drug-store, whose colored jars in the
+windows are made of rubies, emeralds, and sapphires; conjure up in
+your mind's eye a sequence of city blocks whose sides are lined by
+massive and exquisitely proportioned buildings, every inch of whose
+facade was fashioned, not by stone-cutters and sculptors, but by
+goldsmiths, whose genius a Cellini might envy; picture to yourself a
+street paved with golden asphalt, and a sidewalk built from huge slabs
+of rolled silver, the curb and gutters being of burnished copper, and
+you'll gain some idea of the thoroughfare along which I passed. And
+oh, the music that the band gave forth to which the populace timed
+their huzzas--I nearly went mad with the seductiveness of it all. If
+it hadn't been for the ache the brilliance of it gave to my eyes, I
+really think I should have swooned.
+
+And then we came to the palace grounds. These, I must confess, I found
+far from pleasing, for even as the avenue along which I had passed was
+all gold and silver and gems, so too was the park, in the heart of
+which stood Jupiter's own apartments made of similar stuff. The trees
+were golden, and the leaves rustling in the breeze, catching and
+reflecting the light of the sun, were blinding. The soft greenness of
+the earthly grass was superseded by the glistening yellow of golden
+spears, and here and there, where a drop of dew would have fallen,
+were diamonds of purest ray. The paths were of silken rugs of richest
+texture, and the palace, as it burst upon my vision, fashioned out of
+undreamed-of blocks of onyx, resembled more a massive opal filled
+with flashing, living, fire, than the mere home of a splendid royalty.
+
+I was glad when the procession stopped before the gorgeous entrance to
+the palace. Another minute of such splendor would have blinded me. A
+fanfare of trumpets sounded, and I descended, so dizzy with what I had
+seen that, as my feet touched the ground, I staggered like a drunken
+man, and then I heard my name sounded and passed from one flunky to
+another up the magnificent staircase into the blue haze of the
+hallway, and gradually sounding fainter and fainter until it was lost
+in the distance of the mysterious corridor. I still staggered as I
+mounted the steps, and the Major Domo approached me.
+
+"I trust you are not ill," he whispered in my ear.
+
+"No--not ill," I replied. "Only somewhat flabbergasted by all this
+magnificence, and my eyes hurt like the very deuce."
+
+"It is perhaps too much for mortal eyes," he said; and then, turning
+to a gilded Ethiopian who stood close at hand, he observed, quietly,
+"Rhadamus, run over to the Argus and ask him if he can spare this
+gentleman a pair of blue goggles for an hour or two."
+
+"Better get me a dozen pairs," I put in. "I don't think one pair will
+be enough. It may strain my nose to hold them, but I'd rather
+sacrifice my nose than my eyes any day."
+
+But the boy was off, and ere I reached the presence of Jupiter I was
+very kindly provided with the very essential article, and I must
+confess that I found great relief in them. They were so densely blue
+that an ordinary bit of splendor could not have been discerned through
+their opaque depths, any more than Thisbe could have been seen by her
+doting lover, Pyramus, through the wall that separated them, but
+nothing known to man could have shut out the supreme gloriousness of
+the interior of Jupiter's palace. Even with the goggles of the Argus
+regulated to protect one thousand eyes upon my nose, it made my
+dazzled optics blink.
+
+I do not know what the proportions of the palace were. I regret to say
+that I forgot to ask, but I am quite confident that I walked at least
+eight miles along that corridor, and never was a mansion designed that
+was better equipped in the matter of luxuries. I suspect I shall be
+charged with exaggerating, but it is none the less true that within
+that spacious building were appliances of every sort known to man. One
+door opened upon an in-door golf-links, upon which the royal family
+played whenever they lacked the energy or the disposition to seek out
+that on Mars. There were high bunkers, the copse of which was covered
+with richest silk plush, stuffed, I was told, with spun silk, while,
+in place of sand, tons of powdered sugar and grated nutmegs filled the
+bunkers themselves. The eighteen holes were laid out so that no two of
+them crossed, and, inasmuch as the turf was constructed of rubber
+instead of grass and soil, neither a bad lie nor a dead ball was
+possible through the vast extent of the fair green. The water hazards,
+four in number, were nothing more nor less than huge tanks of
+Burgundy, champagne, iced tea, and Scotch--which I subsequently
+learned often resulted in a bad caddie service--and an open brook
+along whose dashing descent a constant stream of shandygaff went
+merrily bubbling onward to an in-door sea upon which Jupiter exercised
+his yacht when sailing was the thing to suit his immediate whim.
+
+This sea was a marvel. Since all the water hazards above described
+emptied into it, it was little more than a huge expanse of punch, one
+swallow of which, thanks to these ingredients and the sugar and nutmeg
+from the bunkers, would make a man forget an eternity of troubles
+until he woke up again, if he ever did. Here Jupiter sported every
+variety of pleasure craft, and, by an ingenious system of funnels
+arranged about its sixty-square-mile area, could at a moment's notice
+produce any variety of breeze he chanced to wish; and its submarine
+bottom was so designed that if a heavy sea were wanted to make the
+yacht pitch and toss, a simple mechanical device would cause it to
+hump itself into such corrugations, large or small, as were needed to
+bring about the desired conditions.
+
+"Do they allow bathing in that?" I asked, as the Major Domo explained
+the peculiar feature of this in-door sea to me.
+
+My companion laughed. "Only one person ever tried it with any degree
+of success, and it nearly cost him his reputation. Old Bacchus
+undertook to swim on a wager from Chambertin Inlet to Glenlivet Bay,
+but he had to give up before he got as far as Pommery Point. It took
+him a year to get rid of his headache, and it actually required
+three-quarters of the Treasury Reserve to provide gold enough to cure
+him."
+
+"It must be a terrible place to fall overboard in," I suggested.
+
+"It is, if you fall head first," said the Major Domo, "and my
+observation is that most people do."
+
+"I should admire to sail upon it," I said, gazing back through the
+door that opened upon Jupiter's yachting parlors, and realizing on a
+sudden a powerful sense of thirst.
+
+"I have no doubt you can do so," said the Major Domo. "Indeed, I
+understand that his Majesty contemplates taking you for a sail to the
+lost island of Atlantis before you return to earth."
+
+"What?" I cried. "The lost island of Atlantis here?"
+
+"Of course," said my guide. "Why not? It was too beautiful for earth,
+so Jupiter had it transported to his own private yachting pond, and it
+has been here ever since. It is marvellously beautiful."
+
+Hardly had I recovered from my amazement over the Major Domo's
+announcement when he pointed to another open door.
+
+"The Royal Arena," he said, simply. "That is where we have our
+Olympian Games. There was a football game there yesterday. Too bad you
+were not there. It was the liveliest game of the season. All Hades
+played the Olympian eleven for the championship of the universe. We
+licked 'em four hundred to nothing; but of course we had an
+exceptional team. When Hercules is in shape there isn't a man-jack in
+all Hades that can withstand him. He's rush-line, centre, full-back,
+half-back, and flying wedge, all rolled into one. Then the Hades chaps
+made the bad mistake of sending a star team. When you have an eleven
+made up of Hannibal and Julius Caesar and Alexander the Great and
+Napoleon Bonaparte and the Duke of Wellington and Achilles and other
+fellows like that you can't expect any team-play. Each man is thinking
+about himself all the time. Hercules could walk right through 'em,
+and, when they begin to pose, it's mere child's play for him. The only
+chap that put up any game against us at all was Samson, and I tell
+you, now that his hair's grown again, he's a demon on the gridiron.
+But we divided up our force to meet that difficulty. Hercules put the
+rest of our eleven on to Samson, while he took care, personally, of
+all the other Hadesians. And you should have seen how he handled them!
+It was beautiful, all through. He nearly got himself ruled off in the
+second half. He became so excited at one time towards the end that he
+mistook Pompey for the ball and kicked him through the goal-posts from
+the forty-yard line. Of course, it didn't count, and Hercules
+apologized so gracefully to the rest of the visitors that they
+withdrew their protest and let him play on."
+
+"I should think he would have apologized to Pompey," said I.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE UNIVERSE'"]
+
+"He will when Pompey recovers consciousness," said my guide, simply.
+
+So interested was I in the Royal Arena and its recent game that I
+forgot all about Jupiter.
+
+"I never thought of Hercules as a football player before," I said,
+"but it is easy to see how he might become the champion of Olympus."
+
+"Oh, is it!" laughed the Major Domo. "Well, you'd better not tell
+Jupiter that. Jupiter'd be pleased, he would. Why, my dear friend,
+he'd pack you back to earth quicker than a wink. He brooks only one
+champion of anything here, and that's himself. Hercules threw him in a
+wrestling-match once, and the next day Jupiter turned him into a
+weeping-willow, and didn't let up on him for five hundred years
+afterwards."
+
+By this time we had reached one of the most superbly vaulted chambers
+it has ever been my pleasure to look upon. Above me the ceiling
+seemed to reach into infinity, and on either side were huge recesses
+and alcoves of almost unfathomable depth, lit by great balls of fire
+that diffused their light softly and yet brilliantly through all parts
+and corners of the apartment.
+
+"The library," said the Major Domo, pointing to tier upon tier of
+teeming shelves, upon which stood a wonderful array of exquisitely
+bound volumes to a number past all counting.
+
+I was speechless with the grandeur of it all.
+
+"It is sublime," said I. "How many volumes?"
+
+"Unnumbered, and unnumberable by mortals, but in round, immortal
+figures just one jovillion."
+
+"One jovillion, eh?" said I. "How many is that in mortal figures?"
+
+"A jovillion is the supreme number," explained the guide. "It is the
+infinity of millions, and therefore cannot be expressed in mortal
+terms."
+
+"Then," said I, "you can have no more books."
+
+"No," said he. "But what of that? We have all there are and all that
+are to be. You see, the library is divided into three parts. On the
+right-hand side are all the books that ever have been written; here to
+the left you see all the books that are being written; and farther
+along, beginning where that staircase rises, are all the books that
+ever will be written."
+
+I gasped. If this were true, this wonderful collection must contain my
+own complete works, some of which I have doubtless not even thought of
+as yet. How easy it would be for me, I thought, to write my future
+books if Jupiter would only let me loose here with a competent
+stenographer to copy off the pages of manuscript as yet undreamed of!
+I suggested this to the Major Domo.
+
+"He wouldn't let you," he said. "It would throw the whole scheme out
+of gear."
+
+"I don't see why," I ventured.
+
+"It is simple," rejoined the Major Domo. "If you were permitted to
+read the books that some day will be identified with your name, as a
+sensible man, observing beforehand how futile and trivial they are to
+be, some of them, you wouldn't write them, and so you would be able to
+avoid a part, at least, of your destiny. If mortals were able to do
+that--well, they'd become immortals, a good many of them."
+
+I realized the justice of this precaution, and we passed on in
+silence.
+
+"Now," said the Major Domo, after we had traversed the length of the
+library, "we are almost there. That gorgeous door directly ahead of
+you is the entrance to Jupiter's reception-room. Before we enter,
+however, we must step into the office of Midas, on the left."
+
+"Midas?" I said. "And what, pray, is his function? Is he the
+registrar?"
+
+"No, indeed," laughed the Major Domo. "I presume down where you live
+he would be called the Court Tailor. The sartorial requirements of
+Jupiter are so regal that none of his guests, invited or otherwise,
+could afford, even with the riches of Cr[oe]sus, to purchase the
+apparel which he demands. Hence he keeps Midas here to supply, at his
+expense, the garments in which his visitors may appear before him. You
+didn't think you were going into Jupiter's presence in those golf
+duds, did you?"
+
+"I never thought anything about it," said I. "But how long will it
+take Midas to fit me out?"
+
+"He touches your garments, that's all," said my guide, "and in that
+instant they are changed to robes of richest gold. We then place a
+necklace of gems about your neck, composed of rubies, emeralds,
+amethysts, and sapphires, alternating with pearls, none smaller than a
+hen's egg; next we place a jewelled staff of ebony in your hand; a
+golden helmet, having at either side the burnished wings of the
+imperial eagles of Jove, and bearing upon its crest an opal that
+glistens like the sun through the slight haze of a translucent cloud,
+will be placed upon your head; richly decorated sandals of cloth of
+gold will adorn your feet, and about your waist a girdle of linked
+diamonds--beside which the far-famed Orloff diamond of the Russian
+treasury is an insignificant bit of glass--will be clasped."
+
+"And--wha--wha--what becomes of all this when I get back home?" I
+gasped, a vision of future ease rising before my tired eyes.
+
+"You take it with you, if you can," laughed the Major Domo, with a sly
+wink at one of the Amazons who accompanied him as a sort of aide.
+
+It was all as he said. In two minutes I had entered the room of Midas;
+in three minutes, my golf-coat having been removed, a flowing gown of
+silk, touched by his magic hand and turned to glittering gold, rested
+upon my shoulders. It was pretty heavy, but I bore up under it; the
+helmet and the necklace, the shoes and the girdle were adjusted; the
+staff was placed in my hand, and with beating heart I emerged once
+more into the corridor and stood before the door leading into the
+audience-chamber.
+
+"Remove the goggles," whispered the Major Domo.
+
+"Never!" I cried. "I shall be blinded."
+
+"Nonsense!" said he, quickly. "Off with them," and he flicked them
+from my nose himself.
+
+A great blare of trumpets sounded, the door was thrown wide, and with
+a cry of amazement I stepped backward, awed and afraid; but one glance
+was reassuring, for truly a wonderful sight confronted me, and one
+that will prove as surprising to him who reads as it was to me upon
+that marvellous day.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+An Extraordinary Interview
+
+
+I had expected to witness a scene of grandeur, and my fancy had
+conjured up, as the central figure thereof, the majestic form of Jove
+himself, clad in imperial splendor. But it was the unexpected that
+happened, for, as the door closed behind me, I found myself in a plain
+sort of workshop, such as an ordinary man would have in his own house,
+at one end of which stood a rolling-top desk, and, instead of the
+dazzling throne I had expected to see, there stood in front of it an
+ordinary office-chair that twirled on a pivot. Books and papers were
+strewn about the floor and upon the tables; the pictures on the walls
+were made up largely of colored sporting prints of some rarity, and in
+a corner stood a commonplace globe such as is to be found in use in
+public schools to teach children geography. As I glanced about me my
+first impression was that by some odd mischance I had got into the
+wrong room, which idea was fortified by the fact that, instead of an
+imperial figure clad in splendid robes, a quiet-looking old gentleman,
+who, except for his dress, might have posed for a cartoon of the
+accepted American Populist, stood before me. He was dressed in a plain
+frock-coat, four-in-hand tie, high collar, dark-gray trousers, and
+patent-leather boots, and was brushing up a silk hat as I entered.
+
+"Excuse me, sir," I said, "but I--I fear I have stumbled into the
+wrong room. I--ah--I have had the wholly unexpected honor to be
+granted an audience with Jupiter, and I was told that this was the
+audience-chamber."
+
+"Don't apologize. Sit down," he replied, taking me by the hand and
+shaking it cordially. "You are all right; I'm glad to see you. How
+goes the world with you?"
+
+"Very well indeed, sir," I replied, rather embarrassed by the old
+fellow's cordiality. "But I really can't sit down, because, you know,
+I--I don't want to keep his Majesty waiting, and if you'll excuse me,
+I'll--"
+
+"Oh, nonsense!" he retorted. "Let the old man wait. Sit down and talk
+to me. I don't get a chance to talk with mortals very often. This is
+your first visit to Olympus?"
+
+"Yes, sir," I said, still standing. "And it is wholly unexpected. I
+stumbled upon the place by the merest chance last night--but you
+_must_ let me go, sir. I'll come back later very gladly and talk with
+you if I get a chance. It will never do for me to keep his Majesty
+waiting, you know."
+
+"Oh, the deuce with his Majesty," said the old gentleman, testily.
+"What do you want to see him for? He's an old fossil."
+
+"Granted," said I. "Still, I'm interested in old fossils."
+
+The old gentleman roared with laughter at this apparently simple
+remark. I didn't see the fun of it myself, and his mirth irritated me.
+
+"Excuse me, my dear sir," I said, trying to control my impatience.
+"But you don't seem to understand my position. I can't stay here and
+talk to you while the ruler of Olympus waits. Can't you see that?"
+
+"No, I can't," he replied. "Can't see it at all, and I'm a pretty good
+seer as a general thing, too. If you didn't wish to see me, you had
+no business to come into my room. Now that you are here, I'm going to
+keep you for a little while. Take off that absurd-looking tile and sit
+down."
+
+At this I grew angry. I wasn't responsible for the helmet I wore, and
+I had felt all along that I looked like an ass in it.
+
+"I'll do nothing of the sort, you confounded old meddler," I cried.
+"I've come here on invitation, and, if I've got into the wrong room,
+it isn't my fault. That jackass of a Major Domo told me this was the
+place. Let me out."
+
+I strode to the doorway, and the old gentleman turned to his desk and
+opened a drawer.
+
+"Cigar or cigarette?" he said, calmly.
+
+"Neither, you old fool," I retorted, turning the knob and tugging upon
+it. "I have no time for a smoke."
+
+The door was locked. The old gentleman settled back in his twirling
+chair and regarded me with a twinkle in his eye as I vainly tried to
+pull the door open, and I realized that I was helpless.
+
+"Better sit down and enjoy a quiet smoke with me," he said, calmly.
+"Take off that absurd-looking tile and talk to me."
+
+"I haven't anything to say to you," I replied. "Not a word. Do you
+intend to let me out of this or not?"
+
+"All in good time--all in good time," he said. "Let's talk it over.
+Why do you wish to go? Don't you find me good company?"
+
+"You're a stupid old idiot!" I shouted, almost weeping with rage.
+"Locking me up in your rotten old den here when you must realize what
+you are depriving me of. What earthly good it does you I can't see."
+
+[Illustration: "THE DOOR WAS LOCKED"]
+
+"It does me lots of good," he said, with a chuckle. "Really, sir, it
+gives me a new sensation--first new sensation I have had in a long,
+long time. Let me see now, just how many names have you called me in
+the three minutes I have had the pleasure of your acquaintance?"
+
+"Give me time, and I'll call you a lot more," I retorted, sullenly.
+
+"Good--I'll give you the time," he said. "Go ahead. I'll listen to you
+for a whole hour. What am I besides a meddler, and a stupid old idiot,
+and an old fool?"
+
+"You're a gray-headed maniac, and a--a zinc-fastened Zany. A doddering
+dotard and a chimerical chump," I said.
+
+"Splendid!" roared he, with a spasm of laughter that seemed nearly to
+rend him. "Go on. Keep it up. I am enjoying myself hugely."
+
+"You're a sneak-livered poltroon to treat me this way," I added,
+indignantly.
+
+"That's the best yet," he interrupted, slapping his knee with delight.
+"Sneak-livered poltroon, eh? Well, well, well. Go on. Go on."
+
+"If you'll give me a copy of Roget's _Thesaurus_, I'll tell you what
+else you are," I retorted, with a note of sarcasm in my voice. "It
+will require a reference to that book to do you justice. I can't begin
+to carry all that you are in my mind."
+
+"With pleasure," said he, and reaching over to his bookcase he took
+thence the desired volume and handed it to me. "Proceed," he added. "I
+am all ears."
+
+"Most jackasses are," I returned, savagely.
+
+"Magnificent," he cried, ecstatically. "You are a genius at epithet.
+But there's the book. Let me light a cigar for you and then you can
+begin. Only _do_ take off that absurd tile. You don't know how
+supremely unbecoming it is."
+
+There was nothing for it, so I resolved to make the best of it by
+meeting the disagreeable old pantaloon on his own ground. I lit one of
+his cigars and sat down to tell the curious old freak what I thought
+of him. Ordinarily I would have avoided doing this, but his tyrannical
+exercise of his temporary advantage made me angry to the very core of
+my being.
+
+"Ready?" said I.
+
+"Quite," said he. "Don't stint yourself. Just behave as if you'd known
+me all your life. I sha'n't mind."
+
+And I began: "Well, after referring to the word 'idiot' in the index,
+just to get a lead," I said, "I shall begin by saying that you are
+evidently a hebetudinous imbecile, an indiscriminate stult--"
+
+"Hold on!" he cried. "What's that last? I never heard the term
+before."
+
+"Stult--an indiscriminate stult," I said, scornfully. "I invented the
+word myself. Real words won't describe you. Stult is a new term,
+meaning all kinds of a fool, plus two. And I've got a few more if you
+want them."
+
+"Want them?" he cried. "By Vulcan, I dote upon them! They are nectar
+to my thirsty ears. Go on."
+
+"You are a senseless frivoler, a fugacious gid, an infamous
+hoddydoddy; you are a man with the hoe with the emptiness of ages in
+your face; you are a brother to the ox, with all the dundering
+niziness of a plain, ordinary buzzard added to your shallow-brained
+asininity. Now will you let me go?"
+
+"Not I," said he, shaking his head as if he relished a situation which
+was gradually making a madman of me. "I'd like to oblige you, but I
+really can't. You are giving me too much pleasure. Is there nothing
+more you can call me?"
+
+"You're a dizzard!" I retorted. "And a noodle and a jolt-head; you're
+a jobbernowl and a doodle, a maundering mooncalf and a blockheaded
+numps, a gaby and a loon; you're a _Hatter_!" I shrieked the last
+epithet.
+
+"Heavens!" he cried, "A Hatter! Am I as bad as that?"
+
+"Oh, come now," I said, closing the _Thesaurus_ with a bang. "Have
+some regard for my position, won't you?"
+
+I had resolved to appeal to his better nature. "I don't know who the
+dickens you are. You may be the three wise men of Gotham who went to
+sea in a bowl rolled into one, for all I know. You may be any old
+thing. I don't give a tinker's cuss what you are. Under ordinary
+circumstances I've no doubt I should find you a very pleasant old
+gentleman, but under present conditions you are a blundering old
+bore."
+
+"That's not bad--indeed, a blundering old bore is pretty good. Let me
+see," he continued, looking up the word "bore" in the index of the
+_Thesaurus_, "What else am I? Maybe I'm an unmitigated nuisance, an
+exasperating and egregious glum, a carking care, and a pestiferous
+pill, eh?"
+
+"You are all of that," I said, wearily. "Your meanness surpasseth all
+things. I've met a good many tough characters in my day, but you are
+the first I have ever encountered without a redeeming feature. You
+take advantage of a mistake for which I am not at all responsible, and
+what do you do?"
+
+"Tell me," he replied. "What do I do? I shall be delighted to hear.
+I've been asking myself that question for years. What do I do? Go on,
+I implore you."
+
+"You rub it in, that's what," I retorted. "You take advantage of me.
+You bait me; you incommode me. You--you--"
+
+"Here, take the _Thesaurus_," he said, as I hesitated for the word.
+"It will help you. I provoke you, I irritate you, I make you mad, I
+sour your temper, I sicken, disgust, revolt, nauseate, repel you. I
+rankle your soul. I jar you--is that it?"
+
+"Give me the book," I cried, desperately. "Yes!" I added, referring to
+the page. "You tease, irk, harry, badger, infest, persecute. You gall,
+sting, and convulse me. You are a plain old beast, that's what you
+are. You're a conscienceless sneak and a wherret--you mean-souled blot
+on the face of nature!"
+
+Here I broke down and wept, and the old gentleman's sides shook with
+laughter. He was, without exception, the most extraordinary old person
+I had ever encountered, and in my tears I cursed the English language
+because it was inadequate properly to describe him.
+
+For a time there was silence. I was exhausted and my tormentor was
+given over to his own enjoyment of my discomfiture. Finally, however,
+he spoke.
+
+"I'm a pretty old man, my dear fellow," he said. "I shouldn't like to
+tell you how old, because if I did you'd begin on the _Thesaurus_
+again with the word 'liar' for your lead. Nevertheless, I'm pretty
+old; but I want to say to you that in all my experience I have never
+had so diverting a half-hour as you have given me. You have been so
+outspoken, so frank--"
+
+"Oh, indeed--I've been frank, have I?" I interrupted. "Well, what I
+have said isn't a marker to what I'd like to have said and would have
+said if language hadn't its limitations. You are the infinity of the
+unmitigated, the supreme of the superfluous. In unqualified,
+inexcusable, unsurpassable meanness you are the very IT!"
+
+"Sir," said the old gentleman, rising and bowing, "you are a man of
+unusual penetration, and I like you. I should like to see more of you,
+but your hour has expired. I thank you for your pleasant words, and I
+bid you an affectionate good-morning."
+
+A deep-toned bell struck the hour of twelve. A fanfare of trumpets
+sounded outside, and the huge door flew open, and without a word in
+reply, glad of my deliverance, I turned and fled precipitately through
+it. The sumptuous guard stood outside to receive me, and as the door
+closed behind me the band struck up a swelling measure that I shall
+not soon forget.
+
+"Well," said the Major Domo, as we proceeded back to my quarters, "did
+he receive you nicely?"
+
+"Who?" said I.
+
+"Jupiter, of course," he said.
+
+"I didn't see him," I replied, sadly. "I fell in with a beastly old
+bore who wouldn't let go of me. You showed me into the wrong room. Who
+was that old beggar, anyhow?"
+
+"Beggar?" he cried. "Wrong room? Beggar?"
+
+"Certainly," said I. "Beggar is mild, I admit. But he's all that and
+much more. Who is he?"
+
+"I don't know what you mean," replied the Major Domo. "But you have
+been for the last hour with his Majesty himself."
+
+"What?" I cried. "I--that old man--we--"
+
+"The old gentleman was Jupiter. Didn't he tell you? He made a special
+effort to make you feel at home--put himself on a purely mortal
+basis--"
+
+I fell back, limp and nerveless.
+
+"What will he think of me?" I moaned, as I realized what had
+happened.
+
+[Illustration: "'WHAT?' I CRIED. 'I--THAT OLD MAN--WE'"]
+
+"He thinks you are the best yet," said the Major Domo. "He has sent
+word by his messenger, Mercury, that the honors of Olympus are to be
+showered upon you to their fullest extent. He says you are the only
+frank mortal he ever met."
+
+And with this I was escorted back to my rooms at the hotel, impressed
+with the idea that all is not lead that doesn't glitter, and when I
+thought of my invention of the word "stult," I began to wish I had
+never been born.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+A Royal Outing
+
+
+As may be imagined after my untoward interview with Jupiter, the state
+of my mind was far from easy. It is not pleasant to realize that you
+have applied every known epithet of contempt to a god who has an
+off-hand way of disposing of his enemies by turning them into
+apple-trees, or dumb beasts of one kind or another, and upon retiring
+to my room I sat down and waited in great dread of what should happen
+next. I couldn't really believe that the Major Domo's statement as to
+my having been forgiven was possible. It predicated too great a
+magnanimity to be credible.
+
+"I hope to gracious he won't make a pine-tree of me," I groaned,
+visions of a future in which woodmen armed with axes, and sawmills,
+played a conspicuous part, rising up before me. "I'd hate like time to
+be sawed up into planks and turned into a Georgia pine floor
+somewhere."
+
+It was a painful line of thought and I strove to get away from it, but
+without success, although the variations were interesting when I
+thought of all the things I might be made into, such as kitchen
+tables, imitation oak bookcases, or perhaps--horror of horrors--a
+bundle of toothpicks! I was growing frantic with fear, when on a
+sudden my reveries of dread were interrupted by a knock on the door.
+
+"It has come at last!" I said, and I opened the door, nerving myself
+up to sustain the blow which I believed was impending. Mercury stood
+without, flapping the wings that sprouted from his ankles impatiently.
+
+"The skitomobile is ready, sir," he said.
+
+I gazed at him earnestly.
+
+"The what?"
+
+"The skitomobile, to take you to the links. Jupiter has already gone
+on ahead, and he has commanded me to follow, bringing you along with
+me."
+
+"Oh--I'm to go to the links, eh? What's he going to do with me when he
+gets me there? Turn me into a golf-ball and drive me off into space?"
+I inquired.
+
+My heart sank at the very idea, but I was immediately reassured by
+Mercury's hearty laugh.
+
+"Of course not--why should he? He's going to play you an
+eighteen-hole match. You've made a great impression on the old
+gentleman."
+
+"Thank Heaven!" I said. "I'll hurry along and join him before he
+changes his mind."
+
+In a brief while I was ready, and, escorted by Mercury, I was taken to
+the skitomobile which stood at the exit from the hall to the outer
+roadway nearest my room. Seated in front of this, and acting as
+chauffeur, was a young man whom I recognized at once as Phaeton.
+Alongside of him sat Jason, polishing up the most beautiful set of
+golf-clubs I ever saw. The irons were of wrought gold, and the shafts
+of the most highly polished and exquisite woods.
+
+"To the links," said Mercury, and with a sudden chug-chug, and a jerk
+which nearly threw me out of the conveyance, we were off. And what a
+ride it was! At first the sensation was that of falling, and I
+clutched nervously at the sides of the skitomobile, but by slow
+degrees I got used to it, and enjoyed one of the most exhilarating
+hours that has ever entered into my experience.
+
+Planet after planet was passed as we sped on and on upward, and as my
+delight grew I gave utterance to it.
+
+"Jove! But this is fine!" I said. "I never knew anything like it,
+except looping the loop."
+
+Phaeton grinned broadly and winked at Jason.
+
+"How would you like to loop the loop out here?" the latter asked.
+
+"What? In a machine like this?" I cried.
+
+"Certainly," said Jason. "It's great sport. Give him the twist,
+Phaeton."
+
+I began to grow anxious again, for I recalled the past careless
+methods of Phaeton, and I had no wish to go looping the loop through
+the empyrean with one of his known adventurous disposition, to be
+hurled unceremoniously sooner or later perhaps into the sun itself.
+
+"Perhaps we'd better leave it until some other day," I ventured,
+timidly.
+
+"No time like the present," Jason retorted. "Only hang on to yourself.
+All ready, Phaety!"
+
+The chauffeur grasped the lever, and, turning it swiftly to one side,
+there in the blue vault of heaven, a thousand miles from anywhere,
+that machine began executing the most remarkable flip-flaps the mind
+of man ever conceived. Not once or twice, but a hundred times did we
+go whirling round and round through the skies, until finally I got so
+that I could not tell if I were right side up or upside down. It was
+great sport, however, and but for the fact that on the third trial I
+lost my grip and would have fallen head over heels through space had
+not Mercury, who was flying alongside of the machine, swooped down and
+caught me by the leg as I fell out, I found it as exhilarating as it
+was novel. I could have kept it up forever, had we not shortly hove in
+sight of the links, which, as I have already told you, were located on
+the planet Mars; and such gorgeousness as I there encountered was
+unparalleled on earth. Much that we earth-folk have wondered at became
+clear at once. The great canals, as we call them, for instance, turned
+out to be vast sand-bunkers that glistened like broad rivers of silver
+in the wondrous sheen of the planet, while the dark greenish spots,
+concerning which our astronomers have speculated so variously, were
+nothing more nor less than putting-greens. It is extraordinary that
+until my visit to the planet as the guest of Jupiter, this perfectly
+simple solution of the various Martian problems was not even guessed.
+
+As we drew up at the pretty little club-house, Jupiter emerged from
+the door and greeted me cordially. My eyes fell before his smiling
+gaze, for I must confess I was mighty shamefaced over my experience of
+the morning, but his manner restored my self-possession. It was very
+genial and forgiving.
+
+"Glad to see you again," he said. "If you play golf as well as you do
+synonyms you're a scratch man. You didn't foozle a syllable."
+
+"I should have, had I known as much as I do now," said I.
+
+"Well, I'm glad you didn't know," Jupiter returned majestically, "for
+I can use that word stult in my business. Now suppose we have a bit of
+luncheon and then start out."
+
+After eating sparingly we began our game. I was provided with a caddie
+that looked like one of Raphael's angels, and Jupiter himself handed
+me a driver from his own bag.
+
+"You'll have to be careful how you use it," he said; "it has
+properties which may astonish you."
+
+I teed up my ball, swung back, and then with all the vigor at my
+command whacked the ball square and true. It sprang from the tee like
+a bird let loose and flew beyond my vision, and while I was trying
+with my eye to keep up with it in its flight, I received a stinging
+blow on the back of my head which felled me to the ground.
+
+"Thunderation!" I roared. "What was that?"
+
+Jupiter laughed. "It was your own ball," he said. "You put too much
+muscle into that stroke, and, as a consequence, the ball flew all the
+way round the planet and clipped you from behind."
+
+"You don't mean to say--" I began.
+
+"Yes, I do," said Jupiter. "That is a special long-distance driver
+made for me. Only had it two days. It is not easy to use, because it
+has such wonderful force. Hercules drove a ball three times around the
+planet at one stroke with it yesterday. To use it properly requires
+judgment. Up here you have to play golf with your head, as well as
+with your clubs."
+
+"Well, I played it with mine all right," I put in, rubbing the lump on
+the back of my head ruefully. "Shall I play two?"
+
+"Certainly," said Jupiter. "You've a good brassey lie behind the tee
+there. Play gently now, for this hole isn't more than three hundred
+miles long."
+
+My brassey stroke is one of my best, and I did myself proud. The ball
+flew about one hundred and seventy-nine miles in a straight line, but
+landed in a sand-bunker. Jupiter followed with a good clean drive for
+two hundred miles, breaking all the records previously stated to me by
+Adonis, whereupon we entered the skitomobile and were promptly
+transported to the edge of the bunker, where my ball reposed upon the
+glistening sand. It took three to get out, owing to the height of the
+cop, which rose a trifle higher in the air than Mount Blanc, but the
+niblick Jason had brought along for my use, as soon as I got used to
+the titanic quality of the game I was playing, was finally equal to
+the loft. My ball landed just short of the green, one hundred and
+sixteen miles away. Jupiter foozled his approach, and we both reached
+the edge of the green in four.
+
+"Bully distance for a putt," said Jupiter, taking the line from his
+ball to the hole.
+
+"About how far is it?" I asked, for I couldn't see anything
+resembling a hole within a mile of me.
+
+"Oh, five miles, I imagine," was the answer. "Put on these glasses and
+you'll see the disk."
+
+My courteous host handed me a pair of spectacles which I put upon my
+nose, and there, seemingly two inches away, but in reality five and a
+quarter miles, was the hole. The glasses were a revelation, but I had
+seen too much that was wonderful to express surprise.
+
+"Dead easy," I said, referring to the putt, now that I had the glasses
+on.
+
+"Looks so," said Jupiter, "but be careful. You can't hope to putt
+until you know your ball."
+
+At the moment I did not understand, but a minute after I had a shock.
+Putting perfectly straight, the ball rolled easily along and then made
+a slight hitch backward, as if I had put a cut on it, and struck off
+ahead, straight as an arrow but to the left of the disk. This it
+continued to do in its course, zigzagging more and more out of the
+straight line until it finally stopped, quite two and a half miles
+from the cup.
+
+"Now watch me," said Jupiter. "You'll get an idea of how the ball
+works."
+
+I obeyed, and was surprised to see him aim at a point at least a mile
+aside of the mark, but the results were perfect, for the gutty, acting
+precisely as mine did, zigzagged along until it reached the rim of the
+cup and then dropped gently in.
+
+"One up," said Jupiter, with a broad smile as he watched my
+ill-repressed wonderment.
+
+As we were transported to the next tee by Phaeton and his machine, I
+looked at my ball, and the peculiarity of its make became clear at
+once. It was called "The Vulcan," and in action had precisely the
+same movement as that of a thunder-bolt--thus:
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"Great ball, eh?" said Jupiter. "Adds a lot to the science of the
+game. A straight putt is easy, but the zigzag is no child's play."
+
+"I think I shall like it," I said, "if I ever get used to it."
+
+The second hole reached, I was astonished to see a huge apparatus like
+a cannon on the tee, and in fact that is what it turned out to be.
+
+"We call this the Cannon Hole," said Jupiter. "It lends variety to the
+game. It's a splendid test of your accuracy, and if you don't make it
+in one you lose it. If you will put on those glasses you will see the
+hole, which is in the middle of a target. You've got to go through it
+at one stroke."
+
+"That isn't golf, is it?" I asked. "It's marksmanship."
+
+"I call it so," said Jupiter, calmly. "And what I say goes. Moreover,
+it requires much skill to offset the effect of the wind."
+
+"But there is none," said I.
+
+"There will be," said Jupiter, putting his ball in the cannon's breach
+and making ready to drive. "You see those huge steel affairs on either
+side of the course, that look like the ventilators on an ocean
+steamer?"
+
+"Yes," said I, for as I looked I perceived that this part of the
+course was studded with them.
+
+"Well, they supply the wind," said Jupiter. "I just ring a bell and
+AEolus sets his bellows going, and I tell you the winds you get are
+cyclonic, and, best of all, they blow in all directions. From the
+first ventilator the wind is northeast by south; from the second it
+is southwest by north-northeast; from the third it is straight north,
+and so on. Winds are blowing at the moment of play from all possible
+points of the compass. Fore!"
+
+A bell rang, and never in a wide experience in noises had I ever
+before heard such a fearful din as followed. A hurricane sprang from
+one point, a gale from another, a cyclone from a third--such an aeolian
+purgatory was never let loose in my sight before, but Jupiter, gauging
+each and all, fired his ball from the cannon, and it sped on, buffeted
+here and there, now up, now down, like a bit of fluff in the chance
+zephyrs of the spring-tide, but ultimately passing through the hole in
+the target, and landing gently in a basket immediately behind the
+bull's-eye. The winds immediately died down, and all was quiet again.
+
+"Perfectly great!" I said, with enthusiasm, for it did seem
+marvellous. "But I don't think I can do it. You win, of course."
+
+"Not at all," said Jupiter. "If you hit the bull's-eye, as I did, you
+win."
+
+"And you lose in spite of that splendid--er--stroke?" I asked.
+
+"Oh no--not at all," said Jupiter. "We both win."
+
+Again the bell rang, and the winds blew, and the cannon shot, but my
+ball, under the excitement of the moment of aiming, was directed not
+towards the bull's-eye--or the hole--but at the skitomobile. It hit it
+fairly and hard, and it smashed the engine by which the machine was
+propelled, much to the consternation of Jason and Phaeton.
+
+"Unfortunate," said Jupiter. "Very. But never mind. We don't have to
+walk home."
+
+"I'm awfully sorry," said I. "I--er--"
+
+"Never mind," said Jupiter. "It is easily repaired, but we cannot go
+on with the game. The next hole is eight thousand miles long. Twice
+around the planet, and we couldn't possibly walk it, so we'll have to
+quit. We've got all we can manage trudging back to the club-house.
+Here, caddies, take our clubs back to the club-house, and tell 'em to
+have two nectar high-balls ready at six-thirty. Phaeton, you and Jason
+will have to get back the best way you can. I've told you a half-dozen
+times to bring two machines with you, but you never seem to
+understand. Come along, Higgins, we'll go back. Shut your eyes."
+
+I closed my optics, as ordered, although my name is not Higgins, and I
+didn't like to have even Jupiter so dub me.
+
+"Now open them again," was the sharp order.
+
+I did so, and lo and behold! by some supernatural power we had been
+transported back to the club-house.
+
+"I am sorry, Jupiter," said I "to have spoiled your game," as we sat,
+later, sipping that delicious concoction, the nectar high-ball, which
+we supplemented with a "Pegasus's neck."
+
+"Nonsense," said he, grandly. "You haven't spoiled my _game_. You have
+merely, without meaning to do so, spoiled your own afternoon. My game
+is all right and will remain so. It would have been a great pleasure
+to me to show you the other sixteen holes, but circumstances were
+against us. Take your nectar and let us trot along. You dine with Juno
+and myself to-night. Let's see, I was two up, wasn't I?"
+
+"Two up, and sixteen to play."
+
+"Then I win," said he. It was an extraordinary score, but then it was
+an extraordinary occasion.
+
+And we entered his chariot, and were whirled back to Olympus. The ride
+home was not as exciting as the ride out, but it was interesting. It
+lasted about a half of a millionth of a second, and for the first time
+in my life I knew how a telegram feels when it travels from New York
+to San Francisco, and gets there apparently three hours before it is
+sent by the clock.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+I am Dismissed
+
+
+It was a very interesting programme for my further entertainment that
+Jupiter mapped out on our way back from the links, and I deeply regret
+that an untoward incident that followed later, for which I was
+unintentionally responsible, prevented its being carried out. I was to
+have been taken off on a cruise on the inland sea, to where the lost
+island of Atlantis was to be found; a special tournament at ping-pong
+was to be held in my honor, in which minor planets were to be used
+instead of balls, and the players were to be drawn from among the
+Titans, who were retained to perform feats of valor, skill, and
+strength for Jupiter. The forge of Vulcan was to be visited, and many
+of the mysteries of the centre of the earth were to be revealed, and,
+best of all, Jupiter himself had promised to give me an exhibition of
+his own skill as a marksman in the hurling of thunder-bolts, and _I
+was to select the objects to be hit!_ Think of it! What a chance lay
+here for a man to be rid of certain things on earth that he did not
+like! What a vast amount of ugly American architecture one could be
+rid of in the twinkling of an eye! What a lot of enemies and eyesores
+it was now in my power to have removed by an electrical process
+availed of in the guise of sport! I spent an hour on that list of
+targets, and if only I had been allowed to prolong my stay in the home
+of the gods, the world itself would have benefited, for I was not
+altogether personal in my selection of things for Jupiter to aim at.
+There was Tammany Hall, for instance, and the Boxers of China--these
+led my list. There were four or five sunlight-destroying, sky-scraping
+office buildings in New York and elsewhere; nuisances of every kind
+that I could think of were put down--the headquarters of the Beef
+Trust and a few of its sponsors; the editorial offices of the peevish
+and bilious newspapers, which deny principles and right motives to all
+save themselves; a regiment of alleged humorists who make jokes about
+the mother-in-law and other sacred relations of life; an opera-box
+full of the people who hum every number of Wagner and Verdi through,
+and keep other people from hearing the singers; row after row of
+theatre-goers who come in late and trample over the virtuous folk who
+have arrived punctually; any number of theatrical managers who mistake
+gloom for amusement; three or four smirking matinee idols, whose
+talents are measured by the fit of their clothes, the length of their
+hair, and their ability to spit supernumeraries with a tin sword;
+cab-drivers who had overcharged me; insolent railway officials; the
+New York Central Tunnel--indeed, the completed list stretches on to
+such proportions that it would require more pages than this book
+contains to present them in detail. I even thought of including
+Hippopopolis in the list, but when I realized that it was entirely
+owing to his villany that I had enjoyed the delightful privilege of
+visiting the gods in their own abode, I spared him. And to think that
+because of an unintentional error this great opportunity to rid the
+world, and incidentally myself, of much that is vexatious was wholly
+lost is a matter of sincere grief to myself.
+
+It happened in this way: Hardly had I returned to my delightful
+apartment at the hotel, when a messenger arrived bearing a superbly
+engraved command from Jupiter to dine with himself and Juno _en
+famille_. It was a kind, courteous, and friendly note, utterly devoid
+of formality, and we were to spend the evening at cards. Jupiter had
+indicated in the afternoon that he would like to learn bridge, and,
+inasmuch as I never travel anywhere without a text-book upon that
+fascinating subject, I had volunteered to teach him. The dinner was
+given largely to enable me to do this, and, moreover, Jupiter was
+quite anxious to have me meet his family, and promised me that before
+the evening was over I should hear some music from the lyre of Apollo,
+meet all the muses, and enjoy a chafing-dish snack prepared by the
+fair hand of Juno herself.
+
+"I'll have Polyphemus up to give us a few coon songs if you like
+them," he added, "and altogether I can promise you a delightful
+evening. We drop all our state at these affairs, and I know you'll
+enjoy yourself."
+
+"I shall feel a trifle embarrassed in the presence of so many gods and
+goddesses, I am afraid," I put in.
+
+"I'll fix you out as to that," Jupiter replied. "I'll change you for
+the time being into a god yourself, if you wish."
+
+I laughed at the idea.
+
+"A high old god I'd make," said I.
+
+"You'd pass," he observed, quietly. "I'll call you Pencillius, god of
+Chirography--or would you rather come as Nonsensius, the newly
+discovered deity of Jocosity?"
+
+"I think I'd rather be Zero, god of Nit," said I, and it was so
+ordained.
+
+Of course, I accepted the invitation and was on hand at the palace,
+as I thought, promptly. As a matter of fact, my watch having in some
+mysterious fashion been affected by the excitement of the adventure,
+got galloping away just as my own heart had done more than once. The
+result was that, instead of arriving at the palace at eight o'clock,
+as I was expected to do, I got there at seven. Of course, my exalted
+hosts were not ready to receive me, and there were no other guests to
+bear me company and keep me out of mischief in the drawing-room, where
+for an hour I was compelled to wait. At first all went well. I found
+much entertainment in the room, and on the centre-table, a beautiful
+bit of furniture, carved out of one huge amethyst, I discovered a
+number of books and magazines, which kept me tolerably busy for a
+half-hour. There was a finely bound copy of _Don'ts for the Gods, or
+Celestial Etiquette_, in which I found many valuable hints on the
+procedure of Olympian society--notably one injunction as to the use of
+finger-bowls, from which I learned that the gods in their lavishness
+have a bowl for each finger; and a little volume by Bacchus on
+_Intemperance_, which I wish I might publish for the benefit of my
+fellow-mortals. All I remember about it at the moment of writing is
+that the author seriously enjoins upon his readers the wickedness of
+drinking more than sixty cocktails a day, and utterly deprecates the
+habit of certain Englishmen of drinking seven bottles of port at a
+sitting. Bacchus seemed to think that, with the other wines incidental
+to a dinner, no one, not even an Englishman, should attempt to absorb
+more than five bottles of port over his coffee. It struck me as being
+rather good advice.
+
+Wearying of the reading at the end of a half-hour, I began a closer
+inspection of the room and its contents. It was full of novelties,
+and, naturally, gorgeous past all description; but what most excited
+my curiosity was a small cabinet, not unlike a stereoscope in shape,
+which stood in one corner of the room. It had a button at one side,
+over which was a gilt tablet marked "Push." On its front was the
+legend, "Drop a Nickel in the Slot, Push the Button, and See the
+Future." I followed the instructions eagerly. The nickel was dropped,
+the button pushed, and, putting my eyes before the lenses, I gazed
+into the remotest days to come. I had come across the Futuroscope,
+otherwise a kinetoscope with the gift of prophecy. The coming year
+passed rapidly, and I saw what fate had in store for the world for the
+twelve months immediately ahead of me; then followed a decade, then a
+century, and then others, until, just as I was approaching the dread
+cataclysm which is to mark the end of all mortal things, I heard a
+quick, startled voice back of me.
+
+It was that of Jupiter, and his tone was a strange mixture of wrath
+and regret.
+
+"What on earth have you done?" he cried.
+
+"Nothing, your Majesty," said I, shaking all over as with the ague at
+the revelations I had just witnessed, "except getting a bird's-eye
+view of what is to come."
+
+"I am sorry," said he, gravely. "It is not well that mortals should
+know the future, and your imprudent act is destructive of all the
+plans I have had for you. You must leave us instantly, for that
+instrument is for the gods alone. Moreover, the knowledge of that
+which you have seen--"
+
+Here his voice positively thundered, and the frown that came upon his
+brow filled me with awe and terror.
+
+"All knowledge of what you have seen must be removed from your brain,"
+he added, grimly.
+
+I was speechless with fear as the ruler of Olympus touched an electric
+button at the side of the room, and the two huge slaves, Gog and
+Magog, appeared.
+
+"Seize him!" Jupiter commanded, sternly.
+
+In an instant I was bound hand and foot.
+
+"To the office of Dr. AEsculapius!" he commanded, and I was
+unceremoniously removed to the room wherein I had had my interview
+with the great doctor, where I was immediately etherized and my brain
+operated upon. Precisely what was done to me I shall probably never
+know, but what I do know is that from that time to this all that I
+saw in that marvellous Futuroscope is a blank, although on all other
+subjects pertaining to my visit to the gods my recollection is
+perfectly clear. It suffices to say that I lay for a long time in a
+stupor, and when finally I came to my senses again I found myself
+comfortably ensconced in my own bed, in my own home; not in Greece,
+but in America; suffering from a dull headache from which I did not
+escape for at least three hours. Again and again and again have I
+tried to recall that wonderful picture of a marvellous future seen by
+my mortal eyes that night upon Olympus, that I might set it upon paper
+for others to read, but with each effort the dreadful pain in the top
+of my head returns and I find myself compelled to abandon the project.
+
+So was my brief visit to Olympus begun and ended. In its results it
+has perhaps been neither elevating nor remarkably instructive, but it
+has given me a better understanding of, and a better liking for, that
+great company of mythological beings who used to preside over the
+destinies of the Greeks. They appeared more human than godlike to my
+eyes. They were companionable to a degree, and for a time, at least,
+would prove congenial associates for a summer outing, but as a steady
+diet--well, I am not at all surprised that, as men waxed more mature
+in years and in experience, these titanic members of the Olympian four
+hundred lost their power and became no greater factor in the life of
+the large society of mankind than any other group of people, equal in
+number and of seeming importance, whose days and nights are given over
+solely to pleasure and the morbid pursuit of notoriety.
+
+THE END
+
+
+Transcriber's Note: The author refers to a type of golf club
+as a "brassey" and also as a "brassie". Both spellings have
+been maintained in this document.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Olympian Nights, by John Kendrick Bangs
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