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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Idiot at Home, 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/license
+
+
+Title: The Idiot at Home
+
+Author: John Kendrick Bangs
+
+Illustrator: F. T. Richards
+
+Release Date: May 12, 2012 [EBook #39682]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IDIOT AT HOME ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Annie McGuire. This book was produced from
+scanned images of public domain material from the Internet
+Archive.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Book Cover]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: JOHN KENDRICK BANGS]
+
+
+
+
+The Idiot at Home
+
+
+By
+John Kendrick Bangs
+
+
+Illustrated by
+F. T. Richards
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+NEW YORK AND LONDON
+HARPER & BROTHERS _Publishers_
+1900
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BOOMING OF ACRE HILL. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth, $1.25.
+
+THE ENCHANTED TYPEWRITER. Illustrated by PETER NEWELL. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+COFFEE AND REPARTEE and THE IDIOT. 1 vol. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+THE DREAMERS: A CLUB. Illustrated by EDWARD PENFIELD. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+A REBELLIOUS HEROINE, A Story. Illustrated by W. T. SMEDLEY. 16mo,
+Cloth, Ornamental, Uncut Edges, $1.25.
+
+A HOUSE-BOAT ON THE STYX. Illustrated by PETER NEWELL. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+THE PURSUIT OF THE HOUSE-BOAT. Illustrated by PETER NEWELL. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+PASTE JEWELS. Being Seven Tales of Domestic Woe. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.00.
+
+GHOSTS I HAVE MET, AND SOME OTHERS. With Illustrations by NEWELL, FROST,
+and RICHARDS. 16mo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+THE BICYCLERS, AND THREE OTHER FARCES. Illustrated, 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+PEEPS AT PEOPLE. Illustrated by EDWARD PENFIELD. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+MR. BONAPARTE OF CORSICA. Illustrated by H. W. MCVICKAR. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+THE WATER GHOST, AND OTHERS. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth, Ornamental $1.25.
+
+THREE WEEKS IN POLITICS. Illustrated. 32mo, Cloth, Ornamental, 50 cents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEW YORK AND LONDON:
+HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Copyright, 1900, by JOHN KENDRICK BANGS.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+"MISS BANGS OF LONDON"
+
+FROM
+"MR. BARNES OF NEW YORK"
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+ I. BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION 1
+ II. A LITTLE DINNER TO SOME OLD FRIENDS 21
+ III. IN THE LIBRARY 43
+ IV. AS TO A SMALL DINNER 63
+ V. ON THE MAINTENANCE OF AN ATTIC 84
+ VI. THE IDIOT'S GARDEN 105
+ VII. HOUSEHOLD POETRY 125
+ VIII. SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE HIRED MAN 145
+ IX. ON SOCIAL ACCOUNTS 165
+ X. AS TO SANTA CLAUS 185
+ XI. AS TO NEW-YEAR'S DAY 205
+ XII. SOME DOMESTIC INTENTIONS 228
+ XIII. A SUBURBAN COMPLICATION 249
+ XIV. SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE MOTH 269
+ XV. SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE BURGLAR 288
+ XVI. CONCLUSION 301
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ PAGE
+ JOHN KENDRICK BANGS _Frontispiece_
+ "POSSESSED A LIBRARY OF FIRST EDITIONS" 5
+ "'THEY NEVER HAD THE FUN OF BUYING THEM'" 9
+ "'GUARANTEED TO HANG ONTO A GARMENT IN A GALE'" 13
+ "'AND SOME PEOPLE SAY WAGNER IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN THAT'" 17
+ "TOMMY AND MOLLIE GAVE THE COOK A GREAT DEAL OF TROUBLE" 23
+ "'LET THE FATHERS LOOK AFTER THE CHILDREN AT NIGHT'" 29
+ "A LITTLE FIGURE CLAD IN WHITE" 35
+ "'I'D RATHER BE SPANKED THAN NOT NOTICED AT ALL'" 39
+ "'I DID NOT SMOKE UNTIL I WAS FIFTY'" 45
+ "'SMOKING KEEPS INSECTS FROM THE PLANTS'" 49
+ "THE BIBLIOMANIAC WAS INVESTIGATING THE CONTENTS OF THE LOWER
+ SHELVES" 53
+ "'I PREFERRED TO PAY THE $49.50'" 57
+ "THE COOK HAD TAKEN WINGS ONTO HERSELF" 65
+ "'TWO BIG BOXES OF POTATOES, A CAN OF FRENCH PEASE, AND A BOTTLE
+ OF SARSAPARILLA'" 69
+ "'THE PEOPLE DOWN-STAIRS BORROWED OUR DINING-ROOM CHAIRS'" 75
+ "'WHO WAS IT?' ASKED MRS. IDIOT" 79
+ "'I SET OFF A GIANT CRACKER UNDER HIS CHAIR'" 87
+ "'WOULD HANG THAT PORTRAIT UPON THE WALL OF MY BEDROOM'" 91
+ "'STARTED TO PREACH WITH THE RECIPE FOR A WASHINGTON PIE'" 95
+ "'A LITTLE BUNDLE OF MY OWN LETTERS'" 101
+ "'WE SPRINKLED IT IN PERSON'" 107
+ "'HE DISCOVERED THE ONE PERFECT STALK'" 111
+ "'IT WOULD DE DEUCEDLY AWKWARD ... IF THEY WOULD EXPLODE IN THE
+ MOUTH OF THE PERSON WHO WAS EATING THEM'" 115
+ "SHE COULD SLAM THEM DOWN ON THE HEARTH-STONES LIKE TORPEDOES'" 119
+ "'THE JOYS AND WOES OF THE TOILERS WHO MINED IT'" 127
+ "'FOR THOUGH I'M BUT A CARPET-TACK,'" ETC. 131
+ "'I SHOULD HESITATE TO TRY TO DRIVE A CANAL-BOAT'" 137
+ "'I HAVEN'T EVER HAD A HOME; I'VE ALWAYS BOARDED'" 141
+ "'I FEEL THAT I COULD GO OUT AND MOW THREE ACRES OF GRASS'" 147
+ "'HE WOULD GO OUT DAY AFTER DAY AND SIT DOWN BESIDE IT'" 151
+ "'HE SHOVELS OFF A FOOT-PATH'" 155
+ "'SPEND A WHOLE DAY ON ONE WINDOW'" 161
+ "'WELL, I'M FOND OF GOLF'" 167
+ "'AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL TEA'" 171
+ "'THE BABY IS ROCKED TO SLEEP EVERY NIGHT'" 175
+ "'POOR DICK DAWKINS ISN'T TAKEN CARE OF AT ALL'" 179
+ "'DR. PREACHLY ONLY GOT EIGHT PAIRS LAST XMAS'" 189
+ "'A CHINA DOLL TO THE DAUGHTER OF A CARPENTER'" 193
+ "'HULLO, SONNY! HAD A GOOD TIME?'" 197
+ "'I GAVE MY DOLLY AWAY TO-DAY'" 201
+ "'I DON'T QUITE CATCH YOUR DRIFT'" 207
+ "'I FELT AS IF I HAD SWALLOWED AN OVERSHOE'" 213
+ "'I FOUND EIGHT SANDWICHES AND A PINT OF SALTED ALMONDS'" 219
+ "'THEY WERE FOUND SOME DAYS LATER WHEN THE ROOM WAS PUT IN
+ ORDER'" 223
+ "'THERE'S NOT MUCH MONEY IN STOCKS'" 231
+ "'A NICE LITTLE BASKET-HAT ON HER HEAD TO HOLD THE PINS IN'" 235
+ "'AN ELECTRIC NOTICE TO QUIT'" 239
+ FINDING OUT WHAT IS BEING COOKED FOR DINNER 245
+ "'COURTING HIS BEST GIRL ON SOME OTHER FELLOW'S STONE WALL'" 251
+ "'HOLDING UP A GREAT OSAGE ORANGE'" 255
+ "'THE PICTURE OF A HEART WITH AN ARROW DRAWN THROUGH IT'" 259
+ "'IT TOOK MY HIRED MAN TWO WEEKS TO SCRUB IT OUT'" 265
+ "'AN UNPAID GROCER'S BILL BECOMES AN ABSOLUTE PLEASURE'" 271
+ "'THE LION, THE ELEPHANT, THE TIGER, ALL HAVE THEIR WORK TO DO'" 275
+ "'THEY EAT UP MY NEW CLOTHES'" 279
+ "'WASTED MY ENERGY UPON THE UNRESPONSIVE AIR'" 283
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION
+
+
+"My dear," said the Idiot one morning, as he and his good wife and the
+two little ones, Mollie and Tommy, sat down at the breakfast-table, "now
+that we are finally settled in our new house I move we celebrate. Let's
+give a dinner to my old friends of Mrs. Smithers's; they were nice old
+people, and I should like to get them together again. I saw Dr. Pedagog
+in the city yesterday, and he inquired most affectionately, not to say
+anxiously, about the children."
+
+"Why should he be anxious about the children?" asked Mrs. Idiot,
+placidly, as she sweetened her husband's coffee. "Does he suspect them
+of lacking completeness or variety?"
+
+The Idiot tapped his forehead significantly.
+
+"He didn't know whether they take after you or after me, but I relieved
+his mind on that score," he said. "I told him that they didn't take
+after anybody that either of us ever knew. They have started in on a
+line of Idiocy that is entirely their own. He seemed very much pleased
+when I said that, and observed that he was glad to hear it."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed.
+
+"It was very nice of the Doctor to ask about them, but I am a little
+afraid he wants to take a hand in their bringing up," she said.
+
+"No doubt of it," said the Idiot. "Pedagog always was anxious to
+experiment. Many a time I have suspected him of having designs even on
+me."
+
+"Mrs. Pedagog told me last year that he had devised an entirely new
+system of home training," observed Mrs. Idiot, "and they both regretted
+that they had no children of their own to try it on."
+
+"And of course you offered to lend Tommy to them?" said the Idiot, with
+a sly glance at his son, who was stowing away his oatmeal at a rate that
+bade fair to create a famine.
+
+"Of course," said Mrs. Idiot. "He's got to get raw material somewhere,
+and I thought Tommy would be just the thing."
+
+"Well, I ain't a-goin'," said Tommy, helping himself liberally and for
+the third time to the oatmeal.
+
+"My son," said the Idiot, with a mock show of sternness, "if your mother
+chooses to lend you to any one it is not for you to say that you 'ain't
+a-goin'. It may be that I shall interfere to the extent of demanding to
+know what security for your safe return is offered, but otherwise
+neither you nor I shall intervene. What your mother says is law for you
+as well as for me. Please understand that, Thomas."
+
+"All right, pa," said Tommy; and then he added in an undertone,
+presumably to the butter, "But I ain't a-goin', just the same."
+
+"I'll go," said Mollie, who rather liked the idea of being lent to
+somebody, since it involved a visit to some strange and therefore
+fascinating spot away from home. "Lend me to somebody, will you, mamma?"
+
+"Yes, ma, lend Mollie to 'em," said Tommy, with, a certain dry
+enthusiasm, "and then maybe you can borrow a boy from somebody else for
+me to play with. I don't see why you don't swap her off for a boy,
+anyhow. I like her well enough, but what you ever wanted to buy her for
+in the beginning I don't know. Girls isn't any good."
+
+"Thomas," said the Idiot, "you talk too much, and, what is more, you say
+vain things which some day you will regret. When you get older you will
+recall this dictum of yours, that 'girls isn't any good,' with a blush
+of shame, and remember that your mother was once a girl."
+
+"Well, she's outgrown it," said Tommy; and then reverting to his
+father's choice of words, he added, "What is dictums, anyhow?"
+
+"Pooh!" cried the little girl. "Smarty don't know what dictums is!"
+
+"Suppose you two young persons subside for a few minutes!" interrupted
+the Idiot. "I wish to talk to your mother, and I haven't got all day.
+You'll be wanting some bread and butter to-morrow, and I must go to town
+and earn it."
+
+"All right, pa," said Tommy. "I ain't got anything to say that I can't
+say to myself. I'd rather talk to myself, anyhow. You can be as sassy--"
+
+"Thomas!" said the Idiot, severely.
+
+"All right, pa," said Tommy; and with a side remark to the cream-jug,
+that he still thought Mollie ought to be swapped off for something, it
+didn't matter what as long as it wasn't another girl, the boy lapsed
+into a deep though merely temporary silence.
+
+"You said you'd like to give a dinner to Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog and the
+others," said Mrs. Idiot. "I quite approve."
+
+"I think it would be nice," returned the Idiot. "It has been more than
+six years since we were all together."
+
+"You wouldn't prefer having them at breakfast, would you?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot, with a smile. "I remember hearing you say once that breakfast was
+your best time."
+
+"How long is six years, pa?" asked Tommy.
+
+"Really, Thomas," replied the Idiot, severely, "you are the most absurd
+creature. How long is six years!"
+
+"I meant in inches," said Tommy, unabashed. "You always told me to ask
+you when I wanted to know things. Of course, if you don't know--"
+
+"It's more'n a mile, I guess," observed Mollie, with some superiority of
+manner. "Ain't it, pa?"
+
+The Idiot glanced at his wife in despair.
+
+"I don't think, my dear, that I am as strong at breakfast as I used to
+be," said he. "There was a time when I could hold my own, but things
+seem to have changed. Make it dinner; and, Tommy, when you have deep
+problems to solve, like how long is six years in inches, try to work
+them out for yourself. It will fix the results more firmly in your
+mind."
+
+"All right, pa," replied Tommy; "I thought maybe you knew. I thought you
+said you knew everything."
+
+[Illustration: "POSSESSED A LIBRARY OF FIRST EDITIONS"]
+
+In accordance with the Idiot's suggestion the invitations were sent out.
+It was a most agreeable proposition as far as his wife was concerned,
+for the Idiot's old associates, his fellow-boarders at Mrs.
+Smithers-Pedagog's "High-Class Home for Single Gentlemen," had proved
+to be the stanchest of his friends. They had, as time passed on, gone
+their several ways. The Poet had made himself so famous that even his
+bad things got into print; the Bibliomaniac, by an unexpected stroke of
+fortune, had come into possession of his own again, and now possessed a
+library of first editions that auctioneers looked upon with envious
+eyes, and which aroused the hatred of many another collector. The Doctor
+had prospered equally, and was now one of the most successful operators
+for appendicitis; in fact, could now afford to refuse all other practice
+than that involved in that delicate and popular line of work. The genial
+gentleman who occasionally imbibed had not wholly reformed, but, as the
+Idiot put it, had developed into one who occasionally did _not_ imbibe.
+Mr. Brief had become an assistant district attorney, and was prominently
+mentioned for a judgeship, and Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog lived placidly along
+together, never for an instant regretting the inspiration which led them
+to economize by making two into one. In short, time and fortune had
+dealt kindly with all, even with Mary, the housemaid, who was now
+general manager of the nursery in the Idiot's household.
+
+The home life of "Mr. and Mrs. Idiot" had been all that either of the
+young people could have wished for, and prosperity had waited upon them
+in all things. The Idiot had become a partner in the business of his
+father-in-law, and even in bad times had managed to save something,
+until now, with two children, aged five and six, he found himself the
+possessor of his own home in a suburban city. It had been finished only
+a month when the proposed dinner was first mentioned, and the natural
+pride of its master and mistress was delightful to look upon.
+
+"Why, do you know, my dear," said the Idiot one evening, on his return
+from town, "they are talking of asking me to resign from the club
+because they say I am offensive about this place, and Watson says my
+conversation has become a bore to everybody because the burden of my
+song yesterday was pots and pans and kettles and things like that?"
+
+"I suppose clubmen are not interested in pots and pans and kettles and
+things," Mrs. Idiot observed. "Some people aren't, you know."
+
+"Not interested?" echoed the Idiot. "What kind of people can they be not
+to be interested in pots and pans and kettles and things? I guess it's
+because of their dense ignorance."
+
+[Illustration: "'THEY NEVER HAD THE FUN OF BUYING THEM'"]
+
+"They never had the fun of buying them, perhaps," suggested Mrs. Idiot.
+
+[Illustration: "'GUARANTEED TO HANG ONTO A GARMENT IN A GALE'"]
+
+"Possibly," assented the Idiot. "And I'll tell you one thing, Pollie,
+dear," he added, "if they had had that fun just once, instead of
+squandering their savings on clothes and the theatre, and on horses,
+you'd find every blessed one of those chaps thronging the hardware shops
+all day and spending their money there. Why, do you know I even enjoyed
+getting the clothes-pins, and what is more, it was instructive. I never
+knew before what countless varieties of clothes-pins there were. There's
+the plain kind of commerce that look like a pair of legs with a polo-cap
+on. I was brought up on those, and I used to steal them when I was a
+small boy, to act as understudies for Noah and Shem and Ham and Japheth
+in my Noah's ark. Then there's the patent kind with a spring to it that
+is guaranteed to hang onto a garment in a gale if it has to let go of
+the rope. Very few people realize the infinite variety of the
+clothes-pin, and when I try to tell these chaps at the club about it
+they yawn and try to change the subject to things like German opera and
+impressionism and international complications."
+
+"How foolish of them!" laughed Mrs. Idiot. "The idea of preferring to
+talk of Wagner when one can discourse upon clothes-pins!"
+
+"I am afraid you are sarcastic," rejoined the Idiot. "But you needn't
+be; if you'd only reason it out you'd see at once that my view is
+correct. Anybody can talk about Wagner. Any person who knows a picture
+from a cable-car can talk with seeming intelligence on art, and even a
+member of Congress can talk about international complications off-hand
+for hours; but how many of these people know about clothes-pins?"
+
+"Very few," said Mrs. Idiot, meekly.
+
+"Very few, indeed," observed the Idiot. "And the same way with
+egg-beaters. I'll bet you a laundry-stove that if I should write to the
+_Recorder_ to-morrow morning, and ask a question about Wagner, the
+musical editor would give me an answer within twenty-four hours; but
+with reference to egg-beaters it would take 'em a week to find out. And
+that's just the trouble. The newspapers are filled up with stuff that
+everybody knows about, but they don't know a thing about other things on
+the subject of which the public is ignorant."
+
+"I think," said Mrs. Idiot, reflectively, "that that is probably due to
+the fact that they consider Wagner more important than an egg-beater."
+
+[Illustration: "'AND SOME PEOPLE SAY WAGNER IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN
+THAT'"]
+
+"Well, then, they don't know, that's all," rejoined the Idiot, rising
+and walking out into the kitchen and taking the fascinating object over
+which he was waxing so enthusiastic from the dresser drawer. "Just look
+at that!" he cried, turning the cog-wheel which set the three
+intersecting metal loops whizzing like a squirrel in its wheel-cage.
+"Just look at that! It's beautiful, and some people say Wagner is more
+important than that."
+
+"Well, I must say, my dear," said Mrs. Idiot, "that I have a leaning
+that way myself. Of course, I admit the charm of the egg-beater, but--"
+
+"Tell me one thing," demanded the Idiot. "Can you get along without
+Wagner?"
+
+"Why, yes," Mrs. Idiot replied, "if I have to."
+
+"And can you get along without an egg-beater?" he cried, triumphantly.
+
+The evidence was overwhelming, and Mrs. Idiot, with an appreciative
+ebullition of mirth, acknowledged herself defeated, and so charmingly
+withal, that the next day when her husband returned home he brought her
+two tickets for the opera of Siegfried as a reward for her graceful
+submission.
+
+"I could have bought ten dozen muffin-rings for the same money," said
+he, as he gave them to her, "but people who know when to give in, and do
+give in as amiably as you do, my dear, deserve to be rewarded; and, on
+the whole, when you use these tickets, if you'll ask me, I think I'll
+escort you to Siegfried myself."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+A LITTLE DINNER TO SOME OLD FRIENDS
+
+
+[Illustration: "TOMMY AND MOLLIE GAVE THE COOK A GREAT DEAL OF TROUBLE"]
+
+Ten days later all was excitement at the Idiot's new home. Tommy and
+Mollie were in a state bordering upon frenzy, and gave the cook a great
+deal of trouble, requesting a taste of this, that, and the other thing,
+which she was preparing for the dinner to Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog, the
+Bibliomaniac, and the others. Inwardly, too, they were somewhat
+wrathful, for they could not understand why they were not permitted to
+dine with their parents as usual.
+
+"I guess maybe it's your manners that keeps you away, Tommy," said
+Mollie.
+
+"Hoh!" said Tommy. "It can't be that, because pa says I ain't got any.
+It's because you're too young to be introdoosed into society, and I've
+got to stay up-stairs and look after you. If you weren't a girl!"
+
+Here Tommy clenched his fists and looked unutterable things. Mollie
+shuddered and was glad she was a girl as she imagined the awful things
+Tommy would do to her had she been a boy.
+
+"Neither of 'em's it, Tommy," she said, in a conciliatory manner. "It's
+because they ain't got enough dining-room chairs, that's why. I know,
+because I counted 'em, and there's only eight, and there's nine people
+comin'."
+
+"I guess maybe that's it," said Tommy, pacified somewhat. "And anyhow, I
+don't care. I saw that piece of paper ma gave Jennie, and she wrote down
+all the things they're goin' to have, and it's goin' to be two hours
+between the soup and the ice-cream. I couldn't ever wait that long for
+the ice-cream. I don't see why they don't begin with ice-cream."
+
+"I guess maybe we're better off as it is," said Mollie. "Popper and
+mommer ain't likely to forget us, and, besides, we can talk."
+
+And with this comforting reflection the little ones retired to their
+nursery contented in mind and spirit--and they didn't suffer a bit.
+Their "popper and mommer" didn't forget them. The ice-cream was
+excellent, and they had their share of it almost before the guests began
+with their oysters.
+
+At seven o'clock Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog had arrived, and at seven-ten all
+the invited guests were present.
+
+"If it hadn't been for my wife," Mr. Pedagog whispered in his host's
+ear, "I should have been late, too."
+
+"Don't apologize, old man," replied the Idiot, gripping the
+Schoolmaster's hand warmly. "I sometimes go to dinners on time myself."
+
+In a few moments dinner was announced, and shortly after all were
+seated, and in memory of old times the guests naturally waited for the
+Idiot to begin.
+
+"Do you know," he said, as he squeezed the juice from a luscious lemon
+over an unprotesting oyster, at the same time glancing affectionately
+over the company, "I haven't felt so much at home for years as I do
+now."
+
+"Not very complimentary to your wife," said Mr. Brief.
+
+"Oh, I know what he means," observed Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"And I have so many other opportunities to compliment her," said the
+Idiot.
+
+"But really, Mrs. Pedagog," he added, addressing the good lady who sat
+at his right, "I feel absolutely contented to-night. All the good things
+of the past and of the present seem to be concentrated about this
+board--except the three up-stairs, who can't very well be here."
+
+"Three?" asked Mr. Pedagog. "I thought there were only two--"
+
+"Certainly," said the Idiot. "Tommy and Mollie, but there is Mary, your
+old housemaid. We can't very well ask them to dine with us, you know."
+
+"I don't see why Tommy and Mollie can't be invited," said Mr. Pedagog,
+much to the Idiot's surprise, it seemed so like a violation of his
+system, as it might be presumed to be.
+
+"You believe in having children at table, then, Mr. Pedagog?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot.
+
+"Most certainly," said the Schoolmaster. Mrs. Pedagog glanced smilingly
+at Mrs. Idiot, as much as to say, "Oh, these men!"
+
+"I certainly do approve of having children at table on all occasions,"
+he continued. "How else are they to learn how to conduct themselves? The
+discipline of the nursery is apt to be lax, and it is my belief that
+many of the bad table manners of the present-day child are due to the
+sense of freedom which eating dinner in the nursery naturally
+inculcates."
+
+"There is something in what you say," said the Idiot. "Tommy, for
+instance, never learned to throw a French pancake across the table at
+his sister by watching his mother and myself here in the dining-room,
+yet in the freedom of the nursery I have known it done."
+
+"Precisely," said Mr. Pedagog. "That very little incident illustrates my
+point exactly. And I have no doubt that in the nursery the offence
+seemed less heinous than it would had it occurred in the dining-room,
+and hence did not meet with the full measure of punishment that it
+deserved."
+
+"I have forgotten exactly what was done on that occasion," said the
+Idiot, calmly. "It is my impression that I compelled Thomas to eat the
+pancake."
+
+"I am sure I never heard of the incident before," said Mrs. Idiot, her
+cheeks growing very red. "He didn't really, did he, dear?"
+
+"By jove!" cried the Idiot, snapping his forefinger against his thumb,
+"what a traitor I am, to be sure. I promised Thomas never to tell, and
+here I've given the poor little chap away; but the boy was excusable, I
+assure you all--that is, he was excusable in a sense. Mollie had
+previously hit him in the eye with a salted almond, and--"
+
+"It is quite evident," put in Mrs. Pedagog, her womanly sympathy leading
+her to rush to the aid of Mrs. Idiot, who seemed somewhat mortified over
+the Idiot's confidences, "that you were not at home, my dear. I have
+myself observed that extraordinary episodes of this nature generally
+happen when it is the father who is left in charge of the children."
+
+"Quite right, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Doctor, nodding his head gravely.
+"I have noticed the same thing in my professional practice. As long as
+the mother is about discipline is maintained, but once leave the father
+in charge and riot is the order of the day."
+
+"That's exactly what I was going to say," said the Idiot. "Many a time
+when Mrs. Idiot has gone out shopping, as she did on the day in
+question, and I have remained at home for a rest, I have wished
+before evening came that I had gone shopping and let my wife have the
+rest. As a matter of fact, the bringing up of children should be left to
+the mother--"
+
+"Oh, but the father should have something to do with it," interrupted
+Mrs. Idiot. "It is too great a responsibility to place on a woman's
+shoulders."
+
+"You didn't let me finish, my dear," said the Idiot, amiably. "I was
+going to say that the mother should bring the children up, and the
+father should take 'em down when they get up too high."
+
+"My views to a dot," said Mr. Pedagog, with more enthusiasm than he had
+ever yet shown over the Idiot's dicta. "Just as in ordinary colonial
+government, the home authorities should govern, and when necessary a
+stronger power should intervene."
+
+"Ideal--is it not?" laughed Mrs. Idiot, addressing Mrs. Pedagog. "The
+mother, Spain. The children, Cuba. Papa, the great and glorious United
+States!"
+
+"Ahem! Well," said Mr. Pedagog, "I didn't mean that exactly, you know--"
+
+"But it's what you said, John," said Mrs. Pedagog, somewhat severely.
+
+[Illustration: "'LET THE FATHERS LOOK AFTER THE CHILDREN AT NIGHT'"]
+
+"Well, I don't see why there can't be a division of responsibility,"
+said the Poet, who had never married, and who knew children only as a
+theory. "Let the mothers look after them in the daytime, and the fathers
+at night."
+
+This sally was greeted with an outburst of applause, it was so
+practical.
+
+"Excuse me!" said the Idiot. "I'm not selfish, but I don't want to have
+charge of the children at night. Why, when Tommy was cutting his teeth I
+suffered agonies when night came on. I was down-town all day, and so
+wasn't very much bothered then, but at night it was something awful. Not
+only Tommy's tooth, but the fear that his mother would tread on a tack."
+
+"That was unselfish," said Mr. Pedagog, dryly. "You weren't afraid of
+treading on one yourself."
+
+"How could I?" said the Idiot. "I had all I could do trying to keep my
+wife from knowing that I was disturbed. It is bad enough to be worried
+over a crying babe, without being bothered by an irritated husband, so I
+simply lay there pretending to be asleep and snoring away for dear
+life."
+
+"You are the most considerate man I ever heard of," said Mrs. Pedagog,
+smiling broadly.
+
+"You don't mean to say," said the Poet, with a frown, "that you made
+your wife get up and take all the trouble and bother--"
+
+"I'd only have been in the way," said the Idiot, meekly.
+
+"So he kept quiet and pretended to snore like the good old Idiot that he
+is," put in the Doctor. "And he did the right thing, too," he added. "If
+all fathers would obliterate themselves on occasions of that sort, and
+let the mothers rule, the Tommys and Dickies and Harrys would go to
+sleep a great deal more quickly."
+
+"We are rambling," said Mr. Pedagog. "The question of a father's duty
+towards a teething son has nothing to do with the question of a child's
+right to dine with his parents."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," said the Idiot. "If we are to consider this matter
+scientifically we must start right. Teething is a natural first step,
+for if a child hath no teeth, wherewithal shall he eat dinners with his
+parents or without them?"
+
+"That is all very well," retorted Mr. Pedagog, "but to discuss
+fire-engines intelligently it is not necessary to go back to the times
+of Elisha to begin it."
+
+Mr. Whitechoker--now the Rev. Theophilus Whitechoker, D.D., for he, too,
+had prospered--smiled deprecatingly. There is no man in the world who
+more thoroughly appreciates a biblical joke than the prosperous
+clergyman.
+
+"Well," said the Idiot, reflectively, "I quite agree with your
+proposition that children should dine in the dining-room with their
+parents and not up-stairs in the nursery, with a lot of tin soldiers and
+golliwogs. The manners of parents are no better than those of tin
+soldiers and golliwogs, but their conversation is apt to prove more
+instructive; and as for the stern father who says his children must dine
+in the kitchen until they learn better manners, I never had much
+confidence in him or in his manners, either."
+
+"I don't see," said the genial old gentleman who occasionally imbibed,
+"how you can discipline children in the nursery. If they misbehave in
+the dining-room you can send them up-stairs to the nursery, but if they
+misbehave in the nursery, where the deuce can you send them?"
+
+"To bed," said Mr. Brief.
+
+"Never!" cried the Idiot. "Children, Mr. Brief, as I understand
+them--and I have known three very well; myself as a boy, and Tommy and
+Mollie--children, as I understand them, are never naughty for the mere
+fun of being so. Their wickedness grows out of their wonderful stores of
+unexpended and unexpendable energy. Take my son Thomas on last Saturday
+afternoon, for instance. It was a rainy Saturday, and Tommy, instead of
+being out-of-doors all morning and afternoon getting rid of his
+superfluous vitality, had been cooped up in the house all day doing
+nothing. Shortly before dinner we had a difference of opinion which
+lasted for more time than I like to think about. I was tired and
+irritable. Tommy wasn't tired, but he _was_ irritable, and, from his
+point of view, was as right as I was. He had the best of me to the
+extent that I was tired and he wasn't. I had the best of him to the
+extent that I had authority and he hadn't--"
+
+"And who came out ahead?" asked Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I did," said the Idiot, "because I was bigger than he was; but what I
+was going to say was this: Mr. Brief would have sent him to bed,
+thereby adding to the boy's stock of energy, already too great for his
+little mind to control."
+
+"And what did you do?" asked Mr. Brief.
+
+"Nothin'," said a small but unmistakably masculine voice from behind the
+portieres.
+
+"Thomas!" said the Idiot, severely, as all turned to see who had spoken.
+
+[Illustration: "A LITTLE FIGURE CLAD IN WHITE"]
+
+A little figure clad in white, ably supported by a still smaller figure,
+also clad in white, but with an additional ruffle about the neck, both
+of them barefooted, appeared in the doorway.
+
+"Why, Mollie!" said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"We comed down to thee how you wath gettin' along," said the little
+girl.
+
+"Yes, we did," said the boy. "But he didn't do a thing to me that day,"
+he added, climbing on his father's knee and snuggling down against his
+vest-pocket with a sweet little sigh of satisfaction. "Did you, pa?"
+
+"Yes, Thomas," said the Idiot. "Don't you remember that I ignored you
+utterly?"
+
+[Illustration: "'I'D RATHER BE SPANKED THAN NOT NOTICED AT ALL'"]
+
+"Yes, I do," said Tommy. "But I'd rather be spanked than not noticed at
+all."
+
+"I am afraid," said Mr. Pedagog a few hours later, as he and Mrs.
+Pedagog were returning home, "I am very much afraid that the Idiot's
+children are being spoiled."
+
+"I hope they are!" returned the good lady, "for really, John, I never
+knew a boy or a girl to grow into man or womanhood and amount to
+anything who hadn't been spoiled in childhood. Spoiling is another name
+for the attitude of parents who make comrades of their children and who
+do not set themselves up as tyrants--"
+
+"But the veneration of a child for his father and mother--" Mr. Pedagog
+began.
+
+"Should not degenerate into the awe which one feels for an unrelenting
+despot!" interrupted Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+The old gentleman discreetly retired from the field.
+
+As for Mrs. and Mr. Idiot, they retired that night satisfied with the
+evening's diversion, and just before he turned out the light the Idiot
+walked into the nursery to say good-night to the children.
+
+"You're a good old pop!" said Tommy, with an affectionate hug. "_The
+best I ever had!_"
+
+As for Mollie, she was sleeping soundly, with a smile on her placid
+little face which showed that, "spoiled" as she was, she was happy; and
+what should the Idiot or any one else seek to bring into a child's life
+but happiness?
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+IN THE LIBRARY
+
+
+The Bibliomaniac had come off into the country to spend Sunday with the
+Idiot, and, as fortune would have it, Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog also appeared
+on the scene. After the mid-day dinner the little party withdrew to the
+library, where the Bibliomaniac began to discourse somewhat learnedly
+upon his hobby.
+
+"I am glad to see, my dear Idiot," he observed, as he glanced about the
+room at the well-filled shelves, "that as you grow older you are
+cultivating a love of good literature."
+
+"I heartily echo the sentiment," said Mr. Pedagog, as he noted the
+titles of some of the volumes. "I may add that I am pleasurably
+surprised at some of your selections. I never knew, for instance, that
+you cared for Dryden, and yet I see here on the top shelf a voluminous
+edition of that poet."
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "I have found Dryden very useful indeed.
+Particularly in that binding and in so many volumes. The color goes very
+well with the hangings, and the space the books occupy, eked out by a
+dozen others of the same color, gives to that top shelf all the esthetic
+effect of an attractive and tasteful frieze. Then, too, it is always
+well," he added, with a sly wink at Mrs. Idiot, "to have a lot of books
+for a top shelf that is difficult to reach that nothing under the canopy
+could induce you to read. It is not healthful to be stretching upward,
+and with Dryden upon the top shelf my wife and I are never tempted to
+undermine our constitutions by taking him down."
+
+The Bibliomaniac laughed.
+
+"Your view is at least characteristic," said he, "and to tell you the
+absolute truth, I do not know that your judgment of the literary value
+of Dryden is at variance with my own. Somebody called him the Greatest
+Poet of a Little Age. Perhaps if the age had been bigger he'd not have
+shone so brilliantly."
+
+"Lowell," observed Mr. Pedagog, "was responsible for that remark, if I
+remember rightly, and I have no doubt it is a just one, and yet I do not
+hold it up against Dryden. Man does not make the age. The age makes the
+man. Had there been any inspiring influences at work to give him a
+motive, an incentive, Dryden might have been a greater poet. To excel
+his fellows was all that could rightly be expected of him, and that he
+did."
+
+"Assuredly," said the Idiot. "That has always been my view, and to-day
+we benefit by it. If he had gone directly to oblivion, Mrs. Idiot and I
+should have been utterly at a loss to know what to put on that top
+shelf."
+
+The Idiot offered his visitors a cigar.
+
+"Thank you," said the Bibliomaniac, taking his and sniffing at it with
+all the airs and graces of a connoisseur.
+
+[Illustration: "'I DID NOT SMOKE UNTIL I WAS FIFTY'"]
+
+"I don't know but that I will join you," said Mr. Pedagog. "I did not
+smoke until I was fifty, and I suppose I ought not to have taken it up
+then, but I did, and I have taken a great deal of comfort out of it. My
+allowance is fifty-two cigars a year, one for each Sunday afternoon," he
+added, with a kindly smile.
+
+"Well, you want to look out you don't get smoker's heart," said the
+Idiot. "When a man plunges into a bad habit as rashly as that, he wants
+to pull up before it is too late."
+
+"I have felt no ill effects since the first one," rejoined Mr. Pedagog.
+"But you, my dear Idiot, how about your allowance? Is it still as great
+as ever? As I remember you in the old days you were something of a
+cigarette fiend."
+
+[Illustration: "'SMOKING KEEPS INSECTS FROM THE PLANTS'"]
+
+"I smoke just as much, but with this difference: I do not smoke for
+pleasure any more, Mr. Pedagog," the Idiot replied. "As a householder I
+smoke from a sense of duty. It keeps moths out of the house, and insects
+from the plants."
+
+[Illustration: "THE BIBLIOMANIAC WAS INVESTIGATING THE CONTENTS OF THE
+LOWER SHELVES"]
+
+The Bibliomaniac meanwhile had been investigating the contents of the
+lower shelves.
+
+"You've got a few rare things here, I see," he observed, taking up a
+volume of short sketches illustrated by Leech, in color. "This small
+tome is worth its weight in gold. Where did you pick it up?"
+
+"Auction," said the Idiot. "I didn't buy it by weight, either. I bought
+it by mistake. The colored pictures fascinated me, and when it was
+put up I bawled out 'fifteen.' Another fellow said 'sixteen.' I wasn't
+going to split nickels so I bid 'twenty.' So we kept at it until it was
+run up to 'thirty-six.' Then I thought I'd break the other fellow's
+heart by bidding fifty, and it was knocked down to me."
+
+"That's a stiff price, but on the whole it's worth it," said the
+Bibliomaniac, stroking the back of the book caressingly.
+
+"But," said Mr. Pedagog, "if you bid on it consciously where did the
+mistake come in?"
+
+The Idiot sighed. "I meant cents," he said, "but the other chap and the
+auctioneer meant dollars. I went up and planked down a half-dollar and
+was immediately made aware of my error."
+
+"But you could have explained," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+[Illustration: "'I PREFERRED TO PAY THE $49.50'"]
+
+"Oh, yes," said the Idiot, "I _could_, but after all I preferred to pay
+the extra $49.50 rather than make a public confession of such infernal
+innocence before some sixty or seventy _habitues_ of a book-auction
+room."
+
+"And you were perfectly right!" said the Bibliomaniac. "You never would
+have dared set your foot in that place again if you had explained. They
+would have made life a burden to you. Furthermore, you have not paid too
+dearly for the experience. The book is worth forty dollars; and to learn
+better than to despise the man who makes his bid cautiously, and who
+advances by small bids rather than by antelopian jumps, is worth many
+times ten dollars to the man who collects rare books seriously. In the
+early days I scorned to break a five-dollar bill when I was bidding,
+just as you refused, as you put it, to split nickels, and many a time I
+have paid as high as twenty-five dollars for books that could have been
+had for twenty-one, because of that foolish sentiment."
+
+"I have often wondered," Mr. Pedagog put in at this point, holding his
+cigar in a gingerly and awed fashion, taking a puff at it between words,
+by which symptoms the man who seldom smokes may always be identified, "I
+have often wondered what was the mission of a private library, anyhow.
+And now that I find you two gentlemen interested in a phase of
+book-collecting with which I have had little sympathy myself, possibly I
+may, without being offensive, ask a question. Do you, for instance,
+Mr. Idiot, collect books because you wish to have something nobody else
+has got, or do you buy your books to read?"
+
+"That is a deep question," said the Idiot, "and I do not know that I can
+answer it off-hand. I have already confessed that I bought Dryden for
+his decorative quality. I purchased my Thackeray to read. I bought my
+Pepys Diary because I find it better reading than a Sunday newspaper,
+quite as gossipy, and with weather reports that are fully as reliable.
+But that particular Leech I bought because of my youthful love for
+colored pictures."
+
+"But you admit that it is valuable because of its rarity, and that
+compared to fifty dollars' worth of books that are not rare it is not to
+be compared with them from a literary point of view?" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I presume," said the Idiot, "that the fifty dollars I expended on that
+book would have provided me with a complete Shakespeare in one volume;
+all of Byron in green cloth and gold top; all of Dickens, Thackeray,
+Bulwer, and Austen in six volumes, with a margin of forty-five dollars
+left with which for nine years I could have paid for a subscription to
+the Mercantile Library, containing all the good reading of the present
+day and all the standard works of the past. But I rather like to have
+the books, and to feel that they are my own, even if it is only for the
+pleasure of lending them."
+
+"Still, if a man collects books merely for their contents--" persisted
+Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"He is a wild, extravagant person," said the Idiot. "He might save
+himself hundreds of dollars, not to say thousands. The library on that
+plan need not occupy an honored place among the rooms of the house. A
+mere pigeon-hole with a subscriber's card to a circulating library filed
+away in it will do as well, or if the city or town in which he lives
+maintains a public library he may spare himself even that expense."
+
+"Good for you!" exclaimed the Bibliomaniac. "That's the best answer to
+the critics of book-collectors I have heard yet."
+
+"I agree with you," said Mr. Pedagog. "It is a very comprehensive reply.
+As for you, my dear Bibliomaniac, why do you collect books?"
+
+"Because I love 'em as books," replied the Bibliomaniac. "Because of
+their associations, and because when I get a treasure I have the bliss
+of knowing I have something that others haven't."
+
+"Then it is selfishness?" asked Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Just as everything else is," returned the Bibliomaniac. "You, sir, if I
+may be personal without wishing to be offensive, are wedded to Mrs.
+Pedagog. You take pleasure in knowing that she belongs to you and not to
+any one else. The Idiot here is proud of his children, and is glad they
+are his children and nobody else's. _I_ am wedded to my rare books, and
+it rejoices my soul to pick up a volume that is unique, and to know that
+it belongs to me and to no one else. If that is selfishness, then all
+possession is selfish."
+
+"That's about it," said the Idiot. "You collect books just as Mormons
+and Solomon used to collect wives. You are called a Bibliomaniac. I
+suppose Brigham Young and Solomon would have been known as
+Gamyomaniacs--though I don't suppose that age in women as in books is a
+requisite of value to marrying men--and they are both of them supposed
+to be rather canny persons."
+
+Mr. Pedagog puffed away in silence. It was evident that the _argumentum
+ad hominem_ did not please him.
+
+"Well," he said, after awhile, "possibly you are right. If a man wants a
+library to be a small British Museum--"
+
+"He will take better care of his rarities than the Idiot does," said the
+Bibliomaniac, putting the rare Leech back into its place. "If that were
+mine I'd put it out of the reach of my children."
+
+"I didn't know you had any," said the Idiot, eagerly.
+
+"Oh, you know what I mean," retorted the Bibliomaniac. "You place Dryden
+on the top shelf where Tommy and Mollie cannot get at him. But this
+book, which is worth ten larger paper editions of Dryden, you keep
+below, where the children can easily reach it. It's a wonder to me
+you've been able to keep it in its present superb condition."
+
+"The mind of a child," said Mr. Pedagog, sententiously, "is above
+values, above all conceits. It is the mind of sincerity, and a rare book
+has no greater attraction to the boy or girl than one not so favored."
+
+"That is not my reason," said the Idiot. "I know children pretty well,
+and I have observed that they are ambitious, and in a sense rebellious.
+They want to do what they cannot do. That is why, when mothers place jam
+on the top shelf of the pantry, the children always climb up to get it.
+If they would leave it on the dining-room table, within easy reach, the
+children would soon cease to regard it as a thing to be sought for. Make
+jam a required article of diet and the little ones will soon cease to
+want it. So with that book. If I should put that out of Tommy's reach,
+Tommy would lie awake nights to plan his campaign to get it. Leaving it
+where it is he doesn't think about it, doesn't want it, is not forbidden
+to have it, and so it escapes his notice."
+
+"You have the right idea, the human idea," said Mr. Pedagog, and even
+the Bibliomaniac was inclined to agree. But just then Tommy happened in,
+with Mollie close after. The boy walked straight to the bookcase, and
+Mollie gathered up the large shears from the Idiot's table, and together
+they approached their father.
+
+"Pa," said Mollie, holding up the scissors, "can I borrow these?"
+
+"What for?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"We want to cut the pictures out o' this," said Tommy, holding up the
+fifty-dollar Leech.
+
+After all, it is difficult to lay down a cast-iron rule as to how a
+private library should be constructed or arranged, particularly when
+one's loyalty is divided between one's children and one's merely bookish
+treasures.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+AS TO A SMALL DINNER
+
+
+[Illustration: "THE COOK HAD TAKEN WINGS UNTO HERSELF"]
+
+It was sad but true. Mr. and Mrs. Idiot had invited Mr. Whitechoker and
+Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog and the Poet to dinner, and for some reason or
+another the cook had taken wings unto herself and flown, and the guests
+were expected within two hours.
+
+"I see now," said the Idiot, "why they call it taking French leave.
+Nobody who doesn't understand French understands it. If it wasn't
+French, or if somebody would translate it for us, we might be able to
+comprehend it; as it is, it is one of the mysteries, and, as usual, we
+must make the best of it. Life, after all, my dear, consists largely of
+making the best of things."
+
+"Well, I'm sure I don't know what to do," said Mrs. Idiot, despairfully,
+"unless you telegraph them all not to come, and tell them why."
+
+"It is too late to do that," said the Idiot, looking at his watch.
+"They've probably all left home by this time. Poets and clergymen and
+old people like Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog always do start an hour too early,
+for fear of missing their train."
+
+"I wouldn't care so much about the Poet," said Mrs. Idiot; "he doesn't
+know enough about housekeeping, anyhow, to make it matter. But Mr.
+Whitechoker and Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog--I simply can't ask them to camp
+out, as it were. The very fact that Mrs. Pedagog would become
+sympathetic immediately she learned what had happened would in itself be
+unbearable."
+
+"I thought women liked sympathy?" said the Idiot, with a proper
+manifestation of surprise.
+
+"So they do; but you might just as well talk about claret as meaning one
+thing as of sympathy being all of the same brand," Mrs. Idiot answered.
+"Certain kinds of claret are insufferable--sour and heady. I suppose
+there are sixty different kinds."
+
+"Sixty-two," said the Idiot, blandly. "The sixty you mean and two more
+whose names I have forgotten."
+
+"I wish you would be serious for a moment," Mrs. Idiot retorted, with as
+near an approach to irritation as was possible to one of her amiable
+disposition. "And it's just the same way with sympathy," she continued;
+"Mrs. Pedagog will lay this whole trouble to my inexperience. Probably
+she never had a servant take French leave in her life on the eve of a
+dinner-party."
+
+"I'll bet she didn't," said the Idiot. "And for why? Because she never
+gave a dinner-party in all her life. The habits of early life cling unto
+old age, and even as in her early days as a boarding-house keeper she
+never gave anything, so now she doubtless considers giving a dinner as a
+reckless waste of opportunity. And she is quite right. Does a lawyer
+invite his friends to join him in an opinion? Never. Does Mr. Tiffany
+request Mr. and Mrs. Idiot to accept a diamond tiara given in their
+honor? Not. Does a true poet, with three names on his autograph, give a
+poem to anybody when he can sell it? Not if he knows it. Why, then,
+expect a landlady, by birth and previous training, to _give_ a dinner?"
+
+"I notice," said Mrs. Idiot, severely, "that you are always willing to
+give your views!"
+
+[Illustration: "'TWO BIG BOXES OF POTATOES, A CAN OF FRENCH PEASE, AND A
+BOTTLE OF SARSAPARILLA'"]
+
+"Precisely, my dear, and that proves my point," replied the Idiot,
+amiably. "I am not a professional viewer, and I am not a photographer by
+trade. Therefore, why should I not _give_ my views? But really," he
+added, "I wouldn't bother; it'll all come out right. I don't know just
+how, but I am confident we shall have the most glorious dinner of our
+lives. When I was down cellar this morning looking at the gas-meter I
+saw two big boxes full of potatoes, a can of French pease, and a bottle
+of sarsaparilla, and if they don't like what they get it will be because
+they are exacting. And I'll wager you from what I know of their manners
+that if you gave them dried apples, cold tongue, and milk they'd say it
+was the most delightful repast they ever sat down to."
+
+"But _I'd_ know they didn't mean it," said Mrs. Idiot, smiling in spite
+of her woe.
+
+"And that brings up the question, why should your conscience be
+troubled by the insincerity of others?" said he. "Now, I'll tell you
+what we'll do. You fry the potatoes and I'll boil the can of pease; I
+think four minutes will boil them hard, like an egg, and together we'll
+put the sarsaparilla on ice, and bluff the whole thing through. Bluffing
+was always my strong point, and I have noticed, my dear, that in
+whatever I have tried to do since we were married you have contributed
+at least ninety per cent. to success. My bluff plus your efforts to make
+the thing a go will send our dinner to a premium."
+
+Mrs. Idiot remained properly silent. As a matter of fact, she was not
+even listening. She was considering. What on earth to do was the
+question in her mind, and it so entirely absorbed it that she
+fortunately had little left for the rather easy views of the Idiot
+himself.
+
+"What is a dinner, anyhow?" the Idiot added, after the silence had to
+his mind become oppressive. "Is it a mere meal? Do the Poet and Mr. and
+Mrs. Pedagog and Mr. Whitechoker come here merely to get something to
+eat? Or do they come for the pleasure of our society, or for the
+pleasure of leaving home, or what? As I understand it, people go out to
+dine not because they have not a sufficiency of food at home, but
+because they wish to meet other people. That's what I do. I can always
+have something better to eat at home than I can get at somebody else's
+house; and furthermore, it is a more natural meal. Dinners generally are
+made up of pretty little things that nobody likes, and have no
+sustenance in them. A successful dinner lies not in successful cooking,
+but in pleasing conversation. Wherefore, it is not the cook, but the
+host and hostess who make a failure or a success of a dinner."
+
+"Then I presume if we simply spread the table and let you talk our
+guests will be satisfied?" said Mrs. Idiot, blandly.
+
+"Precisely," the Idiot replied. "It will be delightful. Just think of
+the menu! Instead of oysters I will indulge in a few opinions as to the
+intellectual qualities of bivalves generally, finishing up with a
+glowing tribute to the man who is content to be a clam and not talk too
+much. In the place of _purée_ we will tackle some such subject as the
+future of Spain. I think I could ladle out a few sound ideas on that
+subject that would be as clear as the purest _consommé_. Then for fish,
+that would be easy. A good trout story, with imagination sauce, would do
+very well. For the _entrée_ I will give you one of my most recent poems,
+and the roast will be--"
+
+"And the rest of us are to sit and twiddle our thumbs while you
+soliloquize?" demanded Mrs. Idiot. "I rather think not. I will provide
+the roast, my dear John, and it will consist largely of remarks upon the
+ways of cooks."
+
+"A very proper subject for a roast," observed the Idiot, complacently,
+"and in your present frame of mind I think it will be not only well
+done, but rare as well, with plenty of crisp. And so we can simply talk
+this dinner through. It will be novel, certainly, and if you provide
+plenty of bread and butter no one need go away hungry."
+
+"Very true," Mrs. Idiot answered. "And now that you have had your fun,
+suppose we put our minds on the serious aspect of the case. Two hours
+from now four people are coming here hungry--"
+
+"I have it!" cried the Idiot, delightedly. "Let's _borrow_ a cook! I
+don't believe it's ever been done before. It would be splendid, not
+only in getting us out of our troubles, but in establishing an entirely
+new principle in domestic science. What is the use of neighbors who will
+not be neighborly and lend you their most cherished possession?"
+
+"None at all," sighed Mrs. Idiot, despairingly.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE PEOPLE DOWN-STAIRS BORROWED OUR DINING-ROOM
+CHAIRS'"]
+
+"Now, when we lived in our flat in New York the people up-stairs
+borrowed our ice," said the Idiot; "the people down-stairs borrowed our
+dining-room chairs; the people across the hall borrowed butter and milk
+and eggs, and I think we once borrowed a lemon from the people on the
+top floor."
+
+"Never!" cried Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Yes, we did, my dear," insisted the Idiot. "At least I did. You and the
+children were off in the country, and one hot summer's night, two years
+ago, I was consumed with a desire for a glass of lemonade, and as there
+were no lemons in the house, or the flat, I sent out to borrow. I began
+at the basement and worked up towards the roof, and ultimately got what
+I wanted, although, as I have said, it was the top-flat people I got it
+from."
+
+"And did you ever return it?" demanded Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"I regret to say that I didn't," said the Idiot. "But I will, and with
+interest. I wonder what two years' interest on a lemon is!" he added. "I
+suppose that a borrowed lemon compounded at the rate of six per cent.
+could be paid off by a lemon and one small Bermuda potato. I will send
+my check for both to those people to-morrow. What was their name?"
+
+"I never knew," said Mrs. Idiot. "I never liked them, and I never
+called. I am sorry you are under obligations to them."
+
+"Only for a lemon, though, dear," said the Idiot, "at six per cent."
+
+"But what does all this prove?" demanded the poor little housekeeper.
+
+"That the principle of lending is recognized among neighbors," the Idiot
+explained. "If a neighbor will lend a lemon, surely a neighbor will lend
+a cook. The principle involved is the same in both cases. Particularly
+so in this case, for my experience with cooks has been that they are,
+after all, for the most part nothing but human lemons. If the departed
+Bridget had been anything but full of sourness she would not have left
+us so unexpectedly."
+
+"You don't really think for a moment, do you, that the Jimpsonberrys
+would lend us their cook, or that she would come, or that I would ask
+them?" said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Well, I suppose not," said the Idiot. "I suppose not. _But I don't see
+why!_ First, the Jimpsonberrys, as our neighbors, ought to be willing to
+get us out of our trouble. Second, we don't ask their cook to come for
+nothing. By coming she will receive an addition to her wages which will
+help her to endow a policeman with a moderate fortune some day when she
+marries him. As for your asking Mrs. Jimpsonberry to lend us her cook
+for a few hours, that is the main objection. When one borrows one must
+give collateral, and it may be that it would embarrass you to offer Mike
+as security for the safe return of the Jimpsonberrys' cook. Anyhow, I
+see weak points in my plan, and we'd better abandon it. If the
+Jimpsonberrys' cook is the only available incendiary in the
+neighborhood, we'd better stop where we are. When we dined at
+Jimpsonberrys' last week I went away feeling that Jimpsonberry ought to
+collect fire insurance on that dinner. It wasn't cooked; it was a plain
+case of arson."
+
+It was at this precise moment, when poor Mrs. Idiot was beginning to
+despair of getting any advice of value from her husband, that the
+telephone-bell rang, and the Idiot rose up to answer the call.
+
+"Hello!" he said.
+
+"Oh! Hello, old man!" he added. "That you? Glad to see you."
+
+"Yes," he continued, after a pause. "Of course we expect you."
+
+"Seven o'clock sharp," he remarked, a moment later. "You'll surely be
+here?" Then after a second pause, he added:
+
+"Good! You can stay all night if you wish; we've plenty of room.
+Good-bye."
+
+[Illustration: "'WHO WAS IT?' ASKED MRS. IDIOT"]
+
+"Who was it?" asked Mrs. Idiot, as the Idiot hung up the receiver of the
+telephone.
+
+"The Poet," replied the Idiot. "He wanted to know at what hour dinner
+was."
+
+"Oh, dear!" cried Mrs. Idiot. "Why didn't you tell him the dinner isn't
+for to-night, but to-morrow night?"
+
+"Didn't need to, my dear," said the Idiot, lighting a cigarette. "We've
+made a slight mistake. You invited these people, it now appears, for the
+twenty-ninth."
+
+"Certainly," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Well, my love," said the Idiot, with an affectionate glance, "to-day is
+the--ah--the twenty-eighth."
+
+Mrs. Idiot drew a sigh of relief.
+
+"My!" she cried, "what a blessing! I wonder how I got so mixed!"
+
+"It's economy, perhaps," suggested the Idiot. "If you will insist on
+buying out-of-date diaries and last year's calendars at bargain-counters
+because they are cheap, I don't really see how you can expect to keep up
+with the times."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed heartily. Her relief of mind was unmistakable.
+
+"What would you have done, John, if this had really been the night?" she
+asked later.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," said the Idiot. "I think I should have taken you to
+New York to dinner, and bluffed our guests into believing they had come
+up on the wrong night. It is very easy for a host to put his guests in
+the wrong if he wants to. I don't, but if I must, I must."
+
+As it was, the family dinner that night was a great success in spite of
+the absence of the cook, because Mrs. Idiot, who is an expert with the
+chafing-dish, found several odds and ends in the late cook's domains,
+which, under her expert manipulation, became dishes which the Idiot said
+afterwards "remained long in the memory without proving too permanent a
+tax upon the digestion."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+ON THE MAINTENANCE OF AN ATTIC
+
+
+The Idiot had been laid up for a week. That is to say, he was too
+indisposed to attend to business at his office, and the family physician
+thought it would be a good idea if his patient would be content to
+remain quietly indoors for a little while. To this the Idiot cheerfully
+consented.
+
+"If there is one thing that I can do to perfection," he said, "it is
+resting. Some men are born leisurely, some achieve leisure, and some are
+discharged by their employers. I belong to the first two classes. I can
+never become one of the third class, because, being my own employer, I
+am naturally pleased with myself, and am not likely to dispense with my
+own services."
+
+And so he stayed at home, and for a week pottered about the house, as he
+put it, and he had a glorious time.
+
+"What are you going to do with yourself this morning, dear?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot on the morning of the first day. "I've got to go to market, and
+there are one or two other little things to be attended to which will
+keep me out for some hours. Do you think you can amuse yourself while I
+am out?"
+
+"Well, I don't know," said the Idiot. "I can try. Of course, you know,
+my dear, that I am a good deal of a baby yet. However, if you can trust
+me to stay all by my lonesome for two or three hours I'll try to behave.
+I promise not to take the piano apart, and I vow I won't steal any jam,
+and I sha'n't float hair-brushes in the bath-tub pretending that they
+are armored cruisers looking for Spaniards, and I'll try to be good, but
+I can't make any promises."
+
+Mrs. Idiot smiled, as an indulgent guardian should, and went forth. The
+Idiot stayed at home and enjoyed himself. What he did is perhaps best
+indicated by his remarks some time later at a Sunday-night tea at which
+Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog, and Mr. Brief, the lawyer, were present.
+
+"Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "did you ever have an attic?"
+
+"A what?" demanded the Schoolmaster, naturally somewhat nonplussed.
+
+"An attic," said the Idiot. "A favored spot wherein to potter, to root,
+to rummage."
+
+"Why, yes," said Mrs. Pedagog, after a moment of deliberation. "I have
+had an attic, but it never seemed to me to be a particularly interesting
+spot. I've used it as a sort of store-room for things I didn't know what
+to do with."
+
+"Useless things," suggested Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Entirely so," acquiesced the good lady.
+
+"Then if they are useless, why keep them?" queried the Idiot. "Useless
+things might better be thrown away than stored away even in an attic."
+
+"Oh, as for that," rejoined Mrs. Pedagog, "they were useless in the
+sense that there was nothing I could do with them, and yet there was
+generally some quality of association or something about them that so
+appealed to me that I couldn't quite throw them away, or even bring
+myself to give them away."
+
+"That is the idea," said the Idiot. "One's cherished possessions are
+often stored away up-stairs and forgotten, and then sometimes years
+after you'll go rummaging about the house for lack of some other
+employment; an old trunk, a wooden box, will be unearthed in the attic,
+and then what a flood of memories will come rushing back over you as the
+long-forgotten objects come to light, one by one."
+
+"I have had much the same experience," said Mr. Brief, "in what I might
+term my professional attic. We keep a room for the storage of old
+papers, and strange exhibits in litigation turn up there frequently that
+bring back old-time lawsuits in a most interesting fashion."
+
+"I suppose, then," observed Mr. Pedagog, with a shrug of tolerant
+contempt, "that the attic is, in your estimation, a sort of repository
+for family archives."
+
+[Illustration: "'I SET OFF A GIANT CRACKER UNDER HIS CHAIR'"]
+
+"That's about it," said the Idiot. "You ought to see mine. There are
+archives from the Ark in mine. I've got all the portraits of my
+unpopular relatives up there, and such a gallery of smug-looking
+individuals you never saw. There's Uncle Jedediah, who hated me because
+I set off a giant cracker under his chair one Fourth of July, and who
+from that day vowed I was born to be hanged; and who sent me a crayon
+portrait of himself the following Christmas--"
+
+"That seems to me to show a kindly feeling, not one of hatred, towards
+you," suggested Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+[Illustration: "'WOULD HANG THAT PORTRAIT UPON THE WALL OF MY BEDROOM'"]
+
+"Oh no," said the Idiot, with a laugh. "You never knew my dear old Uncle
+Jed. He sent it in a pure spirit of revenge. He had to send something,
+and he picked out the one thing he had reason to know I didn't want; and
+he was likewise aware that my mother had a sense of the proprieties and
+would hang that portrait upon the wall of my bedroom, whence it could
+stare at me, disapprovingly, forevermore. Still, when I became the head
+of my own house, I did not take a mean-spirited revenge on Uncle
+Jedediah's portrait by selling it to one of the comic papers with a joke
+under it; I gave it the nicest, warmest, most comfortable spot I could
+find for it under a pile of old magazines in the attic, and the other
+day when it came to light again I greeted it with an affectionate smile;
+and the picture of the old gentleman rising hurriedly from over the
+giant cracker on that long-forgotten Fourth, brought vividly to mind by
+the portrait, brought tears to my eyes, I laughed so heartily. It
+really was very affecting."
+
+Mr. Pedagog gazed at the Idiot fondly.
+
+"You are a great boy," he said. "You'd never suspect it, but I had a
+similar case of Uncle Jed, but the years I have lived since have
+softened my feelings so that I remember my old relative with a certain
+degree of affection."
+
+"I shall never believe, my dear John," said Mrs. Pedagog, "that in your
+day boys ever placed giant crackers under their uncles' chairs."
+
+"We never did, my love," Mr. Pedagog responded, quickly.
+
+"Why, of course not," laughed the Idiot. "They couldn't, you know. They
+hadn't been invented. What was your trouble with Uncle Jed, Mr.
+Pedagog?"
+
+"Oh, our difference of opinion was rather of an ethical import," replied
+Mr. Pedagog, genially. "My Uncle Jed was a preacher, and he used to
+speak entirely from notes which he would make out the night before and
+place in the pocket of his black coat. All I did was to take the notes
+of his next day's sermon out of his pocket one Saturday evening, and put
+in their stead a--ah--a recipe for what we called Washington pie--and a
+very good pie it was."
+
+"John!" ejaculated Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+[Illustration: "'STARTED TO PREACH WITH THE RECIPE FOR A WASHINGTON
+PIE'"]
+
+"I _did_, my dear," confessed the Schoolmaster, "and really I have never
+regretted it, although my particular uncle gave me a distressingly acrid
+and dreary lecture on my certain future when he found out what had
+happened. Yet what did happen, though mischievously intended, resulted
+in great good, for when the dear old gentleman stood up in the pulpit
+and started to preach the next morning, with the recipe for a Washington
+pie as the only available note at hand, he pulled himself together and
+preached off-hand the finest sermon of his life, and he discovered then
+the secret of his after-success. He became known ultimately as one of
+the most brilliant preachers of his time, and from that moment never
+went into the pulpit with any factitious aids to his memory."
+
+"You mean cribs, don't you?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"That is what college-boys call them, I believe," said Mr. Pedagog. "I
+will say further that a year before he died _my_ Uncle Jed told me that
+it was my mischievous act that had given him the hint which became
+the keynote of his eloquence," he added, complacently. "I shall always
+remember him affectionately."
+
+"Of course," said the Idiot. "No doubt we all remember our Uncle Jeds
+affectionately. I certainly do. He was my mother's brother, and he meant
+well. I never really blamed him for not knowing how to sympathize with a
+boyish prank, because there has never been a school of instructions for
+uncles. Unclehood is about the hardest hood man has to wear, and as I
+have observed uncles and their habits, they either spoil or repel the
+small chaps and chappesses who happen to be made their nephews and
+nieces by an accident of birth. Uncles are either intensely genial or
+intensely irritable, and as far as I am concerned it is my belief that
+our colleges should include in their curriculum a chair of 'Uncleism.'
+Unclehood is a relationship that man has to accept. It is thrust upon
+him. He can't help himself. To be a father or a mother is a matter of
+volition. But even in a free country like our own, if a man has a
+brother or a sister he is liable to find himself an uncle at any time
+whether he wishes to be one or not. Then when it happens he's got to
+reason out a course of procedure without any basis in previous
+experience."
+
+"Why don't you write a book on 'Hints to Uncles,' or 'The Complete
+Aunt,'" suggested Mr. Brief. "I have no doubt it would make good
+reading."
+
+"Thanks for the idea," said the Idiot. "I think I'll do it. Not in the
+hope of profit, but for the benefit of the race."
+
+"What has all this to do with attics?" asked Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"The natural resting-place of the bad uncle," explained the Idiot.
+"Still, I maintain that it is every man's duty to keep an attic for the
+useless things, as Mrs. Pedagog calls them, which some day, when he
+least expects it, will carry his mind back to other days. The word
+itself, attic, carries the mind back to the splendors of Athens and
+other things that are out of date. When I was ill I found sincerest
+pleasure in rummaging. You can't rummage in a library if your library is
+properly looked after. You can't rummage in a bedroom in a well-kept
+house. You all know what parlors are--designed largely for the
+reception of people who come out to call upon you in their best Sunday
+clothes, and who would never think of calling upon you intimately, as a
+friend might, in his knickerbockers. You can't rummage there. The only
+place where one may rummage with any degree of success is in the attic,
+and my experience has been such that I believe my recent illness has
+contributed to my health. My mind has been carried back to conditions
+that used to be. Conditions which existed then and which were inferior
+to conditions which now prevail make me satisfied with the present.
+Where old-time conditions were better than the existing one I have
+naturally discovered how to improve. Rummaging, therefore, is improving
+to the mind and contributes to one's contentment."
+
+[Illustration: "'A LITTLE BUNDLE OF MY OWN LETTERS'"]
+
+"Then there are good economical reasons for the maintenance of an
+attic," the Idiot continued. "I found enough old boyhood collections of
+various things there to keep Tommy and Mollie happy for years without my
+having to pay out a penny for birthday presents--old stamps, old coins,
+old picture papers, and, I assure you, a lot of old newspapers, too,
+with better and more readable news in them than is now to be found in
+any of our modern bilious journals. Then the bundles of letters that
+came out of that place--my mother's letters to me, written while I was
+away at school; my father's letters in the old days at your house, Mrs.
+Pedagog, which did much to keep me straight then and re-reading of which
+doesn't hurt now; and, best of all," he added, with an affectionate
+glance at Mrs. Idiot, "a little bundle of my own letters to a certain
+person tied up with a blue ribbon, and full of pressed roses and autumn
+leaves and promises--"
+
+"In the attic?" asked Mr. Brief, with a dry smile. "Is that where Mrs.
+Idiot keeps your promises?"
+
+Mrs. Idiot blushed. "I have a cedar chest full of treasures up there,"
+she said. "I thought it was locked."
+
+"Well, anyhow, I found them," said the Idiot, cheerfully; "and while
+they were not especially good reading, they were good reminders of other
+days. It wouldn't be a bad idea if every married man were to read over
+the letters of his days of courtship once a year. I think it would bring
+back more forcibly than anything else the conditions of the contract
+which he was inviting the young partner of his joys to sign. If an attic
+never held anything but bundles of one's old love-letters it would
+demonstrate its right to become an institution."
+
+"Very true," said the lawyer; "but," he added, prompted by that cautious
+spirit which goes always with the professional giver of advice, "suppose
+that side by side with that little bundle of pressed flowers and autumn
+leaves and promises one should chance to find another little bundle of
+pressed flowers and autumn leaves and promises--the promises written by
+some other hand than the hand that is rummaging in the cedar chest? What
+then? Would that prove a pleasing find?"
+
+"Oh, as for that," the Idiot remarked, "when I advocate the maintenance
+of an attic as one of the first duties of mankind, I mean its
+intelligent maintenance. The thing which makes of the British Museum,
+the National Attic of Great Britain, a positive educational force is its
+intelligent direction. It is the storehouse of the useless possessions
+of the British Empire which have an inspiring quality. There is nothing
+in it which makes a Briton think less of himself or which in any way
+unpleasantly disturbs his equanimity. So with the attic of the humble
+citizen. It must be intelligently directed if it is to become an
+institution, and should not be made the repository of useless things
+which ought to be destroyed, among which I class that other possible
+bundle to which you refer."
+
+And inasmuch as the whole party agreed to the validity of this
+proposition, the subject was dropped, and the Idiot and his guests
+wandered on to other things.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+THE IDIOT'S GARDEN
+
+
+"I should think, my dear Idiot," Mr. Pedagog observed one summer
+evening, as his host stood upon the back piazza of "Castle Idiot," as
+they had come to call the dwelling-place of their friend, "that with all
+this space you have about you, you would devote some of it to a garden."
+
+"Why, I do," said the Idiot. "I've got a small patch down there behind
+the tennis-court, fifty by one hundred feet, under cultivation. The
+stuff we get is almost as good as the average canned goods, too. We had
+a stalk of asparagus the other night that was magnificent as far as it
+went. It was edible for quite a sixteenth of an inch, or at least I was
+told so. That portion of it had already been nibbled off by my son
+Thomas while it was resting in the pantry waiting to be served.
+However, the inedible end which arrived was quite sturdy, and might have
+stood between my family and starvation if the necessity had arisen."
+
+"One stalk of asparagus is a pretty poor crop, I should say," observed
+the lawyer, with a laugh.
+
+"You might think so," said the Idiot. "But everything in the world is
+comparative, after all. Ants build ant-hills which are several feet
+lower than the Alps, and yet they are monumental, considering that they
+were made by ants. All things considered, Mrs. Idiot and I were proud of
+our asparagus crop, and distinctly regretted that it did not survive to
+be served in proper state at dinner. If I remember rightly, Thomas was
+severely reprimanded for his privateering act in biting off the green
+end of it before I had a chance to see it."
+
+"'Twasn't specially good," said Tommy, loftily.
+
+"I am very glad it was not, my son," said the Idiot. "I should be very
+sorry to hear that you had derived the slightest sensation of pleasure
+from your piratical and utterly inexcusable act."
+
+"Do you usually serve so small a portion of the product of your
+garden?" asked Mr. Brief.
+
+[Illustration: "'WE SPRINKLED IT IN PERSON'"]
+
+[Illustration: "'HE DISCOVERED THE ONE PERFECT STALK'"]
+
+"Sometimes we don't serve anything at all from it," said the Idiot,
+"which you will observe is smaller yet. In this instance Mrs. Idiot
+intended a little surprise for me. We had struggled with that
+asparagus-bed for some time. The madame had studied up asparagus in her
+botany. I had looked it up in the cyclopedia and the Century dictionary.
+We had ordered it in various styles when we dined out at the New York
+hotels, and we had frequently bought cans of it in order to familiarize
+ourselves more intimately with its general personal appearance. Then we
+consulted people we thought would be likely to know how to obtain the
+best results, and what they told us to do we did, but somehow it didn't
+work. Our asparagus crop languished. We sprinkled it in person. We put
+all sorts of garden cosmetics on it to improve its complexion, but it
+seemed hopeless, and finally when I footed up the asparagus item in my
+account-book, and discovered that we had paid out enough money without
+results of a satisfactory nature to have kept us in canned asparagus for
+four years, we got discouraged, and resolved to give it up. It was
+while Michael, our gardener, was removing the evidences of our failure
+that he discovered the one perfect stalk, and like the honest old
+gardener that he is, he immediately brought it into the house and
+presented it to my wife. She naturally rejoiced that our efforts had not
+been entirely vain, and in her usual spirit of self-sacrifice had the
+stalk cooked as a surprise for me. As I have told you, that small
+circumstance Thomas, over which we seem to have no control, got ahead of
+us--"
+
+"You was surprised, wasn't you, pa?" demanded the boy.
+
+"Somewhat, my son," said the Idiot, "but not in the way your mother had
+designed, exactly."
+
+"Is asparagus the extent of your gardening?" queried Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Oh no, indeed!" replied Mrs. Idiot. "We've had peas and beets and beans
+and egg-plant and corn--almost everything, in fact, including potatoes."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said the Idiot, "almost everything, including potatoes.
+Our pea crop was lovely. We had five podfuls for dinner on the Fourth of
+July, and the children celebrated the day by podding them for the
+cook. They popped open almost as noisily as a torpedo. It was really
+very enjoyable. Indeed, one of the results of that pea crop has been to
+give me an idea by which I may some day redeem my losses on the
+asparagus-bed. An explosive pea which should be edible, and yet would
+pop open with the noise of a small fire-cracker, would be a delight to
+the children and serviceable for the table. I don't exactly know how to
+bring about the desired results, but it seems to me if I were to mix a
+little saltpetre in the water with which we irrigate our pea-trees the
+required snap would be obtained. Then on the Fourth of July the
+children, instead of burning their fingers and filling their parents
+with nervous dread setting off fire-crackers, could sit out on the back
+piazza and shell the peas for the cook--"
+
+"I'd rather shell Spangyards," said Mollie.
+
+"I am surprised at you, my child," said the Idiot. "A little girl like
+you should be an advocate of peace, not of war."
+
+"You can't eat Spaniards, either, can you, pa?" said Tommy, who, while
+he shared Mollie's views as to the comparative value for shelling
+purposes of peas and Spaniards, was nevertheless quite interested in the
+development of a pea-pod that would open with a bang.
+
+"No, Tommy," said the Idiot, "you can't eat Spaniards, and they'd be
+sure to disagree with you if you could."
+
+"That is a very interesting proposition of yours," said Mr. Brief, "but
+it has its dangers. A dynamite pea would prove very attractive so long
+as its explosive qualities were confined to the pod and its opening. But
+how are you going to keep the saltpetre out of the peas themselves?"
+
+"That is where the difficulty comes in," said the Idiot. "I frankly
+don't know how we could insulate the peas from the effects of the
+saltpetre."
+
+[Illustration: "'IT WOULD BE DEUCEDLY AWKWARD ... IF THEY WOULD EXPLODE
+IN THE MOUTH OF THE PERSON WHO WAS EATING THEM'"]
+
+"It would be deucedly awkward," observed the Bibliomaniac, "if, as might
+very well happen, one or two of the peas should become so thoroughly
+impregnated with the stuff that they would explode in the mouth of the
+person who was eating them, like bombs in miniature."
+
+[Illustration: "'SHE COULD SLAM THEM DOWN ON THE HEARTH-STONES LIKE
+TORPEDOES'"]
+
+"True," said the Idiot. "The only safeguard against that would be to
+compel the cook to test every pea before she cooked it. She could
+slam them down on the hearth-stone like torpedoes, and every one that
+didn't go off could be cooked and served with safety. Still, there would
+be danger even then. A careless cook might forever ruin the tooth of a
+favored guest. I guess I'd better give up the idea."
+
+"Oh, don't, pa!" cried Tommy, his interest in explosive vegetables
+worked up to a high pitch. "I'll test 'em all for you, and if they work
+I don't see why you couldn't raise dynamite punkins!"
+
+"It would be a strong temptation, my son," said the Idiot, "which is all
+the more reason why I should abandon the plan. A dynamite punkin, as you
+call it, would wreck the whole neighborhood if one should set it off
+properly. No, we will, after all, confine our attention to vegetables of
+a more pacific nature. The others might prove more profitable at first,
+but when the novelty of them wore off, and one realized only their
+danger, a great deal of the pleasure one derives from eating fresh
+vegetables would be utterly destroyed."
+
+Tommy looked out over the railing of the piazza, deep regret and
+disappointment depicted in his brown little face; but if the glitter of
+his eyes meant anything it meant that the idea of putting vegetables on
+a war footing was not going to be allowed to drop into oblivion; and if
+the small youth progresses in inventive genius in a fair ratio to his
+past achievements in that line, I have no doubt that if a Vesuvian
+pumpkin _can_ be produced at all, the day will dawn when Thomas is
+hailed as its inventor.
+
+"Is it true," asked Mr. Brief, "that home-raised peas are sweeter than
+any other?"
+
+"We think so," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"We know so," amended the Idiot. "That Fourth-of-July night when we ate
+those five podfuls we discovered that fact. Five podfuls of peas are not
+enough to feed a family of four on, so we mixed them in with a few more
+that we bought at the grocer's, and we could tell ours from the others
+every time, they were so much sweeter."
+
+The Bibliomaniac laughed scornfully.
+
+"Pooh!" said he. "How did you know that they were yours that were sweet,
+and not the grocery-bought peas?"
+
+"How does a father know his own children?" said the Idiot. "If you'd
+labored over those five pods as hard and assiduously as we did, nursing
+them through their infant troubles, guarding them against locusts and
+potato-bugs, carefully watching their development from infancy into the
+full vigor of a mature peahood, I guess you'd know your own from those
+of others. It's instinct, my dear Bibliomaniac."
+
+"Tell about the strawberry, pa," said Tommy, who liked to hear his
+father talk, in which respect I fear he takes strongly after his parent.
+
+"Well," said the Idiot, "it's not much of a story. There was one. We had
+a strawberry patch twenty feet by ten. We had plenty of straw and plenty
+of patch, but the berries were timid about appearing. The results were
+similar to those in our asparagus venture. One berry was discovered
+trying to hide itself under half a bale of straw one morning, and while
+I was looking for Mrs. Idiot, to ask her to come down to the garden and
+see it grow, a miserable robin came along and bit its whole interior
+out. I hope the bird enjoyed it, because on a bed-rock estimate that
+berry cost twenty dollars. That is one of the things about gardening
+that make me especially weary. One doesn't mind spending forty-four
+dollars on a stalk of asparagus that is eaten, even surreptitiously, by
+a member of one's own family; but to pay twenty dollars for a strawberry
+to be wasted on a fifteen-cent robin is, to say the least, irritating."
+
+"You forget, John," said Mrs. Idiot, with a somewhat mirthful look in
+her eyes, "that we got fifteen boxes out of the strawberry-patch later."
+
+"No, I don't," said the Idiot. "I was coming to that, and it involves a
+confession. You were so blue about the loss of our one beautiful berry
+that I entered into a conspiracy with Michael to make that patch yield.
+The fifteen boxes of berries that we took out subsequently were bought
+at a New York fruit-store and judiciously scattered about the patch
+where you would find them. I had hoped you would never find it out, but
+when you spoke the other day of expending thirty-eight dollars on that
+strawberry-patch next year, I resolved then to undeceive you. This is
+the first favorable opportunity I have had."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed heartily. "I knew it all along," she said. "Michael
+came to me with them and asked for instructions as to where to put them.
+Really, I--ah--I arranged them under the straw myself."
+
+"What an ass a hired man can be!" ejaculated the Idiot. "I shall
+discharge Michael to-morrow."
+
+"I wish you would," said Mrs. Idiot. "Ever since the conspiracy he has
+been entirely too independent."
+
+"Don't discharge Michael, papa," said Mollie. "He's awful nice. He's
+always willin' to stop anything he's doing to play with Tommy and me."
+
+"You bet he is!" cried Tommy. "He's a dandy, Mike is. He never says a
+word when I sit under the sprinkler, and he told me the other day that
+his grandfather would have been king of Ireland if Queen Victoria hadn't
+come in. He said the Queen was a lady, and his grandfather gave up his
+seat to her because he was a gentleman and couldn't do anything else."
+
+"Very well," said the Idiot, suavely. "Then I won't discharge Michael.
+One feels a better American, a better Republican, if he has a royal
+personage in his employ. I always wondered where Michael got his
+imperious manner; now I know. As a descendant of a long line of kings it
+could not be otherwise. I will give him another chance. But let me give
+you all fair warning. If next summer Michael does not succeed in
+producing from my garden four beets, ten pods of peas, three
+string-beans, and less than ten thousand onions, he goes. I shall not
+pay a gardener forty dollars a month unless he can raise three dollars'
+worth of vegetables a year."
+
+"But really," said Mr. Pedagog, "haven't you raised anything in your
+garden?"
+
+"Oh yes," said the Idiot. "I've raised my water bill in the garden. I
+used to pay twelve dollars a quarter for water, but now the bills come
+to at least twenty-five dollars. Truly, a garden is not without profit
+to some one."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+HOUSEHOLD POETRY
+
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot, in response to an inquiry from the Poet, who was
+passing a Sunday with him at Castle Idiot, "I have found that there is a
+great deal of poetry in the apparently uninspiring little things of a
+household. There is to me as much poetry in a poker as there is in a
+snow-clad Alp, if you only have an eye to find it; and I am sure that to
+thousands of housewives the whole land over a sonnet to a clothes-pin,
+written by one who knows the clothes-pin's nature intimately, would be
+far more appealing than a similar number of lines trying to prove that
+we are all miserable phantoms flitting across a morass of woe."
+
+The Poet pulled away thoughtfully at his pipe. He was a broad-minded
+poet, and while he had never owned a poker of his own, he was ready to
+admit its possibilities; but he could not follow his friend closely
+enough to admit that it contained as much that was inspiring as did Mont
+Blanc, for instance, a bright particular Alp of which he was very fond.
+
+The Idiot continued:
+
+[Illustration: "'THE JOYS AND WOES OF THE TOILERS WHO MINED IT'"]
+
+"A ton of coal contains far more warmth than a woman's eyebrow; sends
+the mind of a thoughtful person chasing backward to the time when it lay
+snugly hid in the fair breast of nature; to the joys and woes of the
+toilers who mined it; through a variety of complexities of life, every
+one of them fraught with noble thoughts. Yet who ever wrote dainty
+verses to a ton of coal, and who hasn't at one time or another in his
+life written about the eyebrows of some woman?"
+
+The Poet laughed this time. "A triolet to a ton of coal would be a
+glorious thing now, wouldn't it?" he observed.
+
+"No," said the Idiot. "A triolet could never be a glorious thing under
+any circumstances; but to the extent that a ton of coal contains a
+certain amount of grandeur in the service it renders to mankind, I think
+the form would be ennobled somewhat by the substance. Let's try it and
+see."
+
+"You do it," said the Poet; "I really don't think I could do the
+subject justice."
+
+The Idiot got out a pencil and a pad of paper and began.
+
+"I don't think I'll make it a triolet," he said, after biting the end of
+his pencil for a few moments. "A whole ton is a good deal to cram into a
+triolet. I'll just make it a plain poem of the go-as-you-please variety
+instead, eh?"
+
+"In the manner of Whitman, perhaps?" suggested the Poet, dryly.
+
+"Just so," said the Idiot. "In the manner of Whitman; in fact, I think
+the manner of Whitman is the only manner for the poetic description of a
+ton of coal."
+
+He began to scribble on the pad.
+
+"I'm going to call this 'Content,'" he said in a few moments.
+"Contentment strikes me as the main lesson a ton of coal teaches."
+
+He scribbled on, and in four or five minutes he put down his pencil and
+read the following lines:
+
+ "I'm glad I'm not as men are--
+ Always worrying about something, and often about nothing;
+ About what was and what wasn't;
+ Fretting about what may be and what might have been;
+ Wondering whether when they are called upon to do their duty
+ They'll be able to do it,
+ And generally deciding they won't,
+ To their own discomfort.
+ And if so be they're women,
+ Cogitating from morn till night,
+ From night till morn,
+ Wherewithal shall they be clothed,
+ And if their hats are on straight!
+ Yea!
+ I am glad I am not like one of these,
+ But am myself--
+ A ton of coal--jetty in my blackness and luminous in my bituminosity.
+ Lying here in the cellar content and not bothering a bit.
+ Not needing income or clothes, and wearing no hat, and with no
+ complexion to bother about.
+ Happy and serene about my duty,
+ Certain that I shall succeed when the time for action comes;
+ Knowing that I shall burn,
+ And in the burning glow like the polar star.
+ Cackling and crackling,
+ Hissing and smoking,
+ Full of heat,
+ A satisfaction to mankind,
+ And never worth less than $5.65, delivered!
+ Ah, me! What bliss to be a ton of coal!
+ I am content."
+
+The Poet nodded his pleasure at the effort. "It is charmingly put," he
+said. "I must confess, my dear Idiot, that the idea of contentment is
+the last one that I should ever have extracted from contemplation of
+a binful of anthracite, and yet when I consider how you put it I wonder
+it has not occurred to every one. You have the manner of the Whitman
+parodist down fine, too."
+
+"Thank you," said the Idiot. "It is entirely natural to me. I think,
+too, that using the Whitman lack of form carries with it the notion of
+the coal sliding down the chute, don't you? Coal runs into the cellar in
+such an irresponsible, formless way, eh?"
+
+"Precisely," smiled the Poet. "You have the right notion about that. The
+form of a poem should really be adapted to the substance. It should be
+descriptive, always. Tennyson's 'Charge of the Light Brigade' has in its
+rhythm nothing more or less than the clatter of the horses' hoofs as
+they and their riders dashed through the valley of death at Balaklava.
+And how vividly Southey's brook comes before the mind in its mad rush
+downward as one reads that wonderfully lyrical poem. Why don't you write
+a book of household poetry? You seem to me to be eminently well
+qualified to undertake it."
+
+"I intend to," said the Idiot. "In fact, I've begun it already. Written
+five or six. Like to see 'em?"
+
+"Indeed I should," said the Poet. "Anything you do interests me."
+
+The Idiot went to his desk and took from it a few pages of manuscript.
+
+"Here is a thing on pokers I did the other night. I called it 'The Song
+of the Poker Bold.'" And then he read these lines:
+
+ "Warder of the grate am I,
+ Ever standing near;
+ Poking, poking all day long,
+ Knowing naught of fear.
+
+ "Keeping coals up to their work,
+ Setting them aglow,
+ Minding not the scorching heat,
+ Rather like it so.
+
+ "Knocking ashes right and left,
+ Flirting with the tiles;
+ Bossing tongs and seeing that
+ The brazen kettle biles.
+
+ "And the little girls and boys
+ As they watch me pause,
+ Wishing that I'd talk and tell
+ 'Bout old Santa Claus!
+
+ "Cracking jokes with crickets on
+ The merry hearth, elate;
+ Happy lot indeed is mine--
+ Warder of the grate!"
+
+"Splendid!" cried the Poet, clapping his hands with enthusiasm.
+"Splendid! A good stiff pokeresque lyric, and your characterization of
+the poker as the 'Warder of the Grate' gives it a flavor of romance. You
+could almost imagine the implement going out into a mediæval world in
+search of knightly adventure--a sort of hearth-stone Quixote. Have you
+tackled the clothes-pin yet?"
+
+"Yes," replied the Idiot. "Indeed, my first effort was a lyric on the
+clothes-pin. I started one night to do the contents of the
+kitchen-dresser drawer in French forms, but the first thing I took out
+was an egg-beater, and it wouldn't go, so I did the clothes-pin lyric. I
+call it
+
+"FIDELITY
+
+ "Blow, ye winds,
+ I fear ye not;
+ Blast, ye simoon,
+ Sere and hot!
+
+ "Hurricane,
+ And cyclone, too,
+ Blow, I have no
+ Fear of you.
+
+ "Lacking beauty,
+ Lacking grace,
+ Lacking handsome
+ Form and face;
+
+ "Lacking soul
+ And intellect,
+ Still I stand up,
+ Proud, erect.
+
+ "For the Fates
+ Have given me
+ Wondrous great
+ Tenacity.
+
+ "And success,
+ Both fair and fine,
+ Comes to him
+ Who holds his line.
+
+ "Burrs can stick
+ And so can glue--
+ Mucilage,
+ Stratena, too;
+
+ "But there's nothing
+ Holds so fast
+ As the clothes-pin
+ To the last."
+
+"And you gave up the egg-beater altogether?" asked the Poet, restraining
+a natural inclination to find flaws in the construction of the
+clothes-pin poem.
+
+"Oh no," said the Idiot, "I knocked off a little quatrain on that. I
+called it 'The Speedy Egg-Beater,' and it goes like this:
+
+ "Great Maude S. can beat all steeds,
+ However speedy be their legs;
+ But I distance her with ease
+ When it comes to beating eggs."
+
+"I really think that you would have done better to give up the
+egg-beater," said the Poet, grown critical. "I've no patience with
+one-rhymed quatrains. Now if you had written:
+
+ "Great Maude S. can beat all steeds,
+ However speedy be their legs;
+ But despite her doughty deeds;
+ I can beat her beating eggs,
+
+"I should not have objected."
+
+"I accept the amendment," replied the Idiot, meekly. "I realized the
+weakness of the thing myself, and thought of changing it into a couplet,
+where you only need one rhyme. How's this on a 'Carpet-Tack'?"
+
+[Illustration: "'FOR THOUGH I'M BUT A CARPET-TACK
+
+AFAR FROM MOIL AND STRIFE,
+
+NO ONE CAN EVER TRULY SAY
+
+THAT MINE'S A POINTLESS LIFE'"]
+
+ "However dull the day,
+ However dull the skies,
+ However dark the night may be,
+ My spirits ever rise.
+
+ "For though I'm but a carpet-tack,
+ Afar from moil and strife,
+ No one can ever truly say
+ That mine's a pointless life."
+
+"That is very good," said the Poet. "I think almost any editor of any
+comic paper would be willing to pay you three dollars for that. It is as
+good as your poem on a ton of coal--simple in its expression and sweet
+in sentiment."
+
+"I thought you'd think so," said the Idiot. "It struck me so. I've got
+one on a screw-driver, too, that is very much of the same order, and
+conveys a moral lesson to the reader who is always reaching out after
+the unattainable. It reads as follows:
+
+ "I cannot tool a tally-ho,
+ I cannot drive a nag;
+ I dare not hold the ribbons
+ On a hack or rumbling drag.
+
+ "I could not guide the reins upon
+ A simple billy-goat,
+ And I should hesitate to try
+ To drive a can-al boat.
+
+ "But I don't mind these things at all,
+ For I can drive a screw,
+ And I am happy, for that's just
+ What I was meant to do."
+
+[Illustration: "'I SHOULD HESITATE TO TRY TO WRITE A CAN-AL BOAT'"]
+
+"The fourth line of the second verse is weak, but otherwise it's good,"
+commented the Poet. "It's not a _can_-al boat; it's a can-_al_ boat, and
+all the poetic license in the world wouldn't excuse your taking such
+a liberty with language."
+
+"I appreciate that," said the Idiot. "But I don't see how I could get
+around it."
+
+"There's only one way," said the Poet. "I think if you omitted that
+verse altogether you'd improve the poem."
+
+"Then I should have to eliminate the billy-goat," said the Idiot. "That
+takes a great deal of humor out of it. I always laugh when I encounter a
+beast like that in poetry; he seems so helpless when incarcerated in a
+poem."
+
+"That may be," observed the Poet. "But it is my belief that the goat, of
+all animals in the kingdom, was the last one designed to be used in
+poetry, anyhow. He is bad enough in prose, and in this case will butt
+your poem to oblivion if you insist on keeping him in it. Any more?"
+
+"No," said the Idiot; "that's the last."
+
+"Well, you've got a good start," said the Poet, rising to light his
+pipe, which had gone out. "And if I were you I'd go on and finish the
+book. 'The Idiot's Book of Household Poetry' would have a great sale.
+It has but one drawback that I can see. You harp on one string too much.
+Every one of your poems preaches contentment, satisfaction--nothing
+else."
+
+"That," said the Idiot, "is not an objection, but a virtue; for what
+other lesson," he added, with a glance of pride at his surroundings,
+"what other lesson, my dear Poet, should a home try to teach, and what
+other sentiment can mean so much to mankind?"
+
+[Illustration: "'I HAVEN'T EVER HAD A HOME; I'VE ALWAYS BOARDED'"]
+
+"I don't know," said the Poet, with a little sigh. "I haven't ever had a
+home; I've always boarded."
+
+Whereupon the Idiot rose up from his chair, and putting his arm about
+his friend's shoulder, said:
+
+"How you do talk! Never had a home? Why, my dear fellow, what's this?
+It's yours as long as it's mine!"
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE HIRED MAN
+
+
+"Who is that sitting down on your tennis-court, Mr. Idiot?" asked Mr.
+Brief, the lawyer. "Or is it anybody? I've been trying for the last
+half-hour to make out whether it's a man or one of those iron figures
+with which some people decorate their lawns."
+
+"That," replied the Idiot, calmly, "is my hired man. I pay him forty
+dollars a month to sit down there and let the grass grow under his feet.
+I heard you and Mr. Pedagog discussing the wonderful grassiness of my
+lawn after dinner last night, and I meant to have told you then that the
+credit thereof belongs entirely to the restful nature of that man's
+soul. He will stand for hours rooted to one spot and looking with
+apparent aimlessness out over the river. To most people this would seem
+to be prompted by a sheer indisposition to work, but this would do him a
+rank injustice, for his immovability is due entirely to his system. He
+is letting the grass grow beneath him, and the fact that our grass is so
+nourishing everywhere is due to his having stood for hours at various
+times over every square inch of territory to which I hold the
+title-deeds."
+
+The Idiot gazed out of the window at his retainer with affectionate
+admiration.
+
+"He certainly clings closely to his system," said the lawyer.
+
+[Illustration: "'I FEEL THAT I COULD GO OUT AND MOW THREE ACRES OF
+GRASS'"]
+
+"He is a model," said the Idiot. "He has done more to make my life here
+easy than any one in my service. For instance, you know the hurly-burly
+of existence in town. I go to my office in the morning, and whether I
+have much work or little to do, I come home in the afternoon absolutely
+worn out. The constant hustling and bustling of others in the city wears
+upon my mind, and consequently upon my body. The rush and roar of cables
+and electric-cars; the activity of messengers running to and fro in the
+streets; the weary horses dragging great lumbering wagons up and down
+the crowded thoroughfares, all affect my nature and impair my energy;
+and then, the day's work done, I return here, where all is quiet and
+still, and the very contrast between that man, standing silently on his
+appointed spot, or leaning against the house, or lying off in sheer
+content under some tree, and the mad scramble for lucre in the city,
+invigorates my tired body until I feel that I could go out and mow three
+acres of grass before dinner; in fact, I generally do."
+
+"I did not know that a restful nature was a requisite of a successful
+career as a hired man," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"It is evident, then, that you have never had a hired man," rejoined the
+Idiot. "Nor can you ever have studied the species at close range.
+Ceaseless activity would be his ruin. If he did to-day all there is to
+do, he would be out of employment to-morrow, consequently he never does
+to-day's work to-day, and cultivates that leisurely attitude towards
+life upon which you have commented. Do you see that small beech-tree
+over there?" he added, pointing to a scrawny little sapling whose sole
+virtue appeared to be its rigid uprightness.
+
+"Is that a beech-tree?" asked Mr. Brief. "I thought it was a garden
+stake."
+
+[Illustration: "'He WOULD GO OUT DAY AFTER DAY AND SIT DOWN BESIDE IT'"]
+
+"It is a beech-tree," said the Idiot. "I planted it myself last autumn,
+and while it has as yet borne no beeches, I think if we give it time,
+and it withstands the rigors of the climate, it will produce its fruit.
+But it was not of its possibilities as a beech-bearing tree that I
+intended to speak. I wanted to indicate to you by a material object the
+value of having a hired man who likes to lean against things. At the
+close of this last winter that tree, instead of being as erect as a
+grenadier, as it now is, was all askew. The strong westerly winds which
+are constantly blowing across that open stretch bent the thing until it
+seemed that the tree was bound to be deformed; but Mike overcame the
+difficulty. He would go out day after day and sit down beside it and
+lean against it for two and three hours at a time, with the result that
+the tendency to curve was overcome, and a tree that I feared was doomed
+to fail now bids fair to resemble a successful telegraph-pole in its
+uprightness. And, of course, the added warmth of his body pressing down
+upon the earth which covers its roots gave it an added impulse to
+grow."
+
+"It is a wonderful system," smiled Mr. Brief. "I wonder it is not
+adopted everywhere."
+
+"It is, pretty much," said the Idiot. "Most hired men do the same thing.
+I don't think Mike differs radically from others of his kind. Of course,
+there are exceptions. My neighbor Jimpsonberry, for instance, has a man
+who is so infernally unrestful that he makes everybody tired. He is up
+every morning mowing Jimpsonberry's lawn at five o'clock, waking up
+every sleepy soul within ear-shot with the incessant and disturbing
+clicking of his machine. Mike would never think of making such a
+nuisance of himself. Furthermore, Jimpsonberry's lawn is kept so
+close-cropped that the grass doesn't get any chance, and in the heat of
+midsummer turns to a dull brick-red."
+
+After a pause, during which the company seemed to be deeply cogitating
+the philosophical bearing of the subject under discussion, the Idiot
+resumed:
+
+"There is another aspect of this matter," he said, "which Jimpsonberry's
+man brings to my mind. You know as well as I do that heat is
+contagious. If you feel as cool as a cucumber, and then all of a sudden
+see somebody who is dripping with perspiration and looking for all the
+world like a human kettle simmering on a kitchen-range, you begin to
+simmer yourself. It is mere sympathy, of course, but you simmer just the
+same, get uncomfortable and hot in the collar, and are shortly as badly
+off as the other fellow. So it is with Jimpsonberry's man. Time and time
+again he has spoiled all my pleasure by making me realize by a glance at
+his red face and sweating arms how beastly hot it is, when before I had
+seen him I felt tolerably comfortable. Mike, on the other hand, is not
+so inconsiderate, and I am confident would let the grass grow a mile
+high before he would consent to interfere with my temperature by pushing
+the mower up and down the lawn on a humid day."
+
+"Do you keep this interesting specimen of still life all through the
+year?" asked Mr. Brief, "or do you give him a much-needed vacation in
+winter? I should think he would be worn out with all this standing
+around, for nothing that I know of is more tiresome than doing
+nothing."
+
+"No," said the Idiot. "Mike never seems to need a vacation. Sitting down
+and leaning against things and standing around don't seem to tire him in
+the least. It might tire you or me, but you see he's used to it. The
+only effect it has on him, as I view the matter, is that it wears out
+his clothes. It doesn't impair his lack of vigor at all. So by the
+simple act of occasionally renewing his wardrobe, which I do every time
+I discard a suit of my own, I revive his wasted vitality, and he does
+not require to be sent to Europe, or to take an extended tour in the
+White Mountains to recuperate. I keep him all through the winter, and
+his system is quite the same then as in summer, except that he does his
+sitting around and leaning indoors instead of in the open."
+
+"I suppose he looks after the furnace and keeps the walks clear of snow
+in winter time?" suggested Mr. Pedagog, who was beginning to take an
+interest in this marvellously restful personage.
+
+[Illustration: "'HE SHOVELS OFF A FOOT-PATH'"]
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot; "and he attends to the windows as well. As a
+minder of the furnace he is invaluable. My house is as cool as a
+roof-garden all through the winter, and thanks to his unwillingness to
+over-exert himself shovelling coal into the furnace, I burn only about
+half as much as my neighbors, and my house is never overheated. This in
+itself is an indication of the virtue of Mike's method. One-half of the
+colds contracted by children nowadays are the result of overheated
+houses. Mike's method gives me a cool house at very moderate expense,
+owing to the great saving of coal, the children do not get colds because
+of overheating, and the expense of having a doctor every other day is
+averted. Then his snow-shovelling scheme goes back to the first
+principles of nature. Mike is not overawed by convention, and instead of
+following the steps of other men who shovel the snow entirely off, he
+shovels off a footpath to enable me to go to business, and then sits
+down and oversees the sun while it melts the balance. Sometimes, if the
+sun does not do the work promptly enough to suit him, he gets up little
+contests for the children. He divides up certain portions of the walk
+into equal parts, and starts the small boys on a race to see which one
+will get the portion assigned to him cleaned off first, the prize being
+something in the nature of an apple, which the cook orders from the
+market. I believe my son Thomas won ten apples last winter, although I
+am told that the Jimpsonberry boy, whose father's man is cross, and
+insists on doing all the work himself, is the champion snow-shoveller of
+the street."
+
+"Yes, he is, pa," put in Tommy. "Mike owes him 'leven apples. I only won
+eight."
+
+"Well, that is a very good record, Thomas," said the Idiot, "and I will
+see to it that next winter you have a brand-new snow-shovel with which
+to enter the contest."
+
+"Mike lets us chop the kindling-wood, too," said Tommy, suddenly
+perceiving a chance to put in a good word for the genial Mike. "I think
+he's the nicest hired man as ever was."
+
+"He'll stop anything he's doing to talk to me," ventured Mollie, not
+wishing to be backward in laying wreaths upon the brow of their friend.
+
+"Yes, I have noticed that," said the Idiot. "Indeed, next to his extreme
+restfulness there is no quality that I know of in Mike that shines out
+so conspicuously as his intense love for children. He will neglect his
+own interests, as Mollie has suggested, to talk to the little ones, and
+I rather like him for it. No boy dares go near the Jimpsonberry man, who
+has exerted himself into a perpetual state of nervous exhaustion."
+
+"Well, if he cleans your windows, that is something," observed Mrs.
+Pedagog, whose experience in keeping a boarding-house years before
+entitled her to speak as one having authority.
+
+"Unless his system is the same in that work as in the other branches
+committed to his care," said Mr. Brief.
+
+[Illustration: "'SPEND A WHOLE DAY ON ONE WINDOW'"]
+
+"It isn't quite," said the Idiot. "He really does exert himself in
+window-cleaning. I have frequently seen him spend a whole day on one
+window. His window-washing system is a very ingenious one,
+nevertheless."
+
+"It is, indeed," said Mrs. Idiot, with a show of feeling.
+
+"A new window-washing system?" grinned Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "It is his own invention. He washes them on the
+outside in summer and on the inside in winter. The result is this
+opalescent glass which you see. You would hardly guess that these
+windows are of French plate. Still, we don't mind so much. I couldn't
+ask him to wash them on the outside in winter, it is so dreadfully cold,
+and in the summer, of course, they are always open, and no one, unless
+he were disagreeable enough to go snooping about after unpleasant
+details, would notice that they are not immaculate."
+
+"And you pay this man forty dollars for this?" demanded Mr. Brief.
+
+"Oh, for this and other things. I pay him two dollars a month for the
+work he does. I pay him ten dollars a month because he's good to the
+children. I pay him ten dollars more for his civility, which is
+unvarying--he always puts his hat on when he comes into the house,
+having noticed, perhaps, that only those who are my social equals are
+entitled to appear bareheaded in my presence."
+
+"And the other eighteen?" persisted the lawyer, by nature a
+cross-examiner.
+
+"Well, I don't grudge him that because--" a sort of a fond light lit up
+the Idiot's eyes as he gazed down upon Mike, still sitting on the
+tennis-court--"I don't grudge him that other eighteen dollars because it
+costs Mike twenty dollars a month to live; and he uses the rest of it to
+put his boy through college, so that when he grows up to be a man he
+will be something more than a hired man."
+
+"Ah!" said Mr. Brief.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot; "I found that out from a third party some time
+ago, and I thought after all I'd keep him, for I know nobody else would
+have him, and then what would become of the boy in college?"
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+ON SOCIAL ACCOUNTS
+
+
+"It's rather strange, I think," observed Mrs. Idiot one evening, as she
+and the Idiot sat down to dine, "that the Dawkinses haven't been here
+for three or four months."
+
+"I've noticed it myself," said the Idiot. "We used to see 'em every day
+about. What's up? You and Polly Dawkins had a fight?"
+
+"Not that I know of," said Mrs. Idiot. "The last time we met she was
+very cordial, and asked most affectionately after you and the children.
+I presumed that possibly you and Dick had had some kind of a falling
+out."
+
+"Not a bit of it. Dick and I couldn't quarrel any more than you and
+Polly could. Perhaps as we grow older our ideals differ. Polly's rather
+anthropological in her talks, isn't she?"
+
+"A trifle," said Mrs. Idiot. "And musical and literary and scientific."
+
+"While you?" queried the Idiot.
+
+[Illustration: "'WELL, I'M FOND OF GOLF'"]
+
+"Well, I'm fond of golf and--ah--well--"
+
+"Golf again," laughed the Idiot. "I guess that's it, Bess. When a woman
+wants to talk about the origin of the species and has to hear about a
+splendid putt, and her observations upon the sonata are invariably
+interrupted by animadversions upon the morals of caddies, and her
+criticisms of Browning end in a discussion of the St. Andrew's Rules,
+she's apt to shy off into a more congenial atmosphere, don't you think?"
+
+"I am sure," retorted Mrs. Idiot, "that while I admit I am more
+interested in golf than in anything else outside of you and the
+children, I can and do talk sometimes of other things than caddies, and
+beautiful drives, and stymies. You are very much mistaken if you think
+otherwise."
+
+"That is very true, my dear," said the Idiot. "And nobody knows it
+better than I do. I've heard you talk charmingly about lots of things
+besides stymies, and foozles, and putts, and drives, but you don't know
+anything about the men of the Stone Age, and you couldn't tell the
+difference between a sonata and a fugue any more than I. Furthermore,
+you have no patience with Browning, so that when Polly Dawkins asks if
+you like _Sordello_, you are more likely than not to say that you never
+ate any, but on the whole for small fish prefer whitebait."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed.
+
+"No, indeed," she replied. "I'd fall back on golf if Polly mentioned
+_Sordello_ to me. You may remember that you sent it to me when we were
+engaged, and I loved you so much--then--that I read it. If I hadn't
+loved you I couldn't have done it."
+
+"Well," smiled the Idiot, "what did you think of it?"
+
+"I think Browning had a good lie, but he foozled," said Mrs. Idiot, with
+her eyes atwinkle, and the Idiot subsided for at least ten seconds.
+
+"I wish you'd say that to Polly some time," he observed. "It's so very
+true, and put with an originality which cannot but appeal to the most
+hardened of literary women."
+
+"I will if I ever get the chance," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Suppose we make the chance?" suggested the Idiot. "Let's go down there
+and call to-night. I'll work the conversation up so that you can get
+that off as an impromptu."
+
+[Illustration: "AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL TEA"]
+
+"No," said Mrs. Idiot. "I don't think we'd better. In the first place,
+Mrs. Whalker told me yesterday that Polly is to read a paper on Balzac
+before the S. F. M. E. to-morrow evening, and on Friday morning she is
+to discuss the 'Influence of Mozart on De Koven' before the Musical
+Mothers' Meeting, and on Saturday afternoon she is going to have an
+anthropological tea at her house, which she is to open with some
+speculations as to whether in the Glacial Period dudes were addicted to
+the use of cigarettes."
+
+"Great Scott!" said the Idiot. "This is her busy week."
+
+"Tolerably so," said Mrs. Idiot. "She has probably reserved this evening
+to read up on Balzac for to-morrow's essay, so I think, my dear, we'd
+better not go."
+
+"Right as usual," said the Idiot. And then he added, "Poor Dawkins, who
+is taking care of him now?"
+
+"I think," said Mrs. Idiot, "that possibly Mrs. Dawkins has sublet the
+contract for looking after her husband and children to the United
+States Housekeeping Company Limited."
+
+The Idiot gazed blankly at his wife, and awaited an explanation.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE BABY IS ROCKED TO SLEEP EVERY NIGHT'"]
+
+"An organization, my dear," she continued, "formed by a number of
+well-meaning and remorseful widows who, having lost their husbands,
+begin to appreciate their virtues, and who, finding themselves
+sympathetic when it is too late, are devoting themselves to the husbands
+of others who are neglected. A subscription of five hundred dollars will
+secure the supervision of all the domestic arrangements of a
+home--marketing, engagement and discharge of domestics, house-cleaning,
+buttons sewed on, darning done, care of flowers, wifely duties
+generally; for one thousand dollars they will bring up the children, and
+see that the baby is rocked to sleep every night, and suitably
+interested in elevating narratives and poems like Joseph's coat of many
+colors, and Tom, Tom the Piper's Son. This enables an advanced woman
+like Mrs. Dawkins to devote her mornings to the encyclopedias, her
+afternoons to the public libraries, and her evenings to the functions
+whereat she may read the papers which her devotion to the encyclopedias
+and the libraries has brought forth."
+
+"Excuse me, my dear Bess," said the Idiot, rising. "I wish to telephone
+Dr. Simmons."
+
+"For what--for whom?" demanded the lady.
+
+"You, of course," returned the Idiot. "You are developing alarming
+symptoms. You give every indication of a bad attack of professional
+humor. Your 'International Widows Company for the Protection and
+Amelioration of Neglected Husbandry' proves that!"
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed again.
+
+[Illustration: "POOR DICK DAWKINS ISN'T TAKEN CARE OF AT ALL'"]
+
+"Oh, I didn't say that there really is such an institution!" she cried.
+"I said that I supposed there was, for if there isn't, poor Dick Dawkins
+isn't taken care of at all."
+
+"Well, I'm sorry for it all, anyhow," said the Idiot, seriously.
+"They're both of 'em good friends of ours, and I hate to see two
+families that have been so close drawing apart."
+
+Just then Mollie and Tommy came in.
+
+"Mamma, Willie Dawkins says he can't come to our party because his ma
+won't let him," said Mollie. "She says we don't never go down there."
+
+"That's it," said the Idiot. "Mrs. Dawkins has got so many irons in the
+fire she's begun to keep social books. I'll bet you she's got a ledger
+and a full set of double-entry account-books charging up calls payable
+and calls receivable."
+
+"I don't see how she can get along unless she has," replied Mrs. Idiot.
+"With all her clubs and church societies and varied social obligations
+she needs an expert accountant to keep track of them all."
+
+"I suppose a promise to read a paper on Balzac," put in the Idiot, "is
+something like a three-months' note. It's easy to promise to pay, with
+three months in which to prepare, but you've got to keep track of the
+date and meet the obligation when it falls due. As for me, I'd rather
+meet the note."
+
+"That is about it," said Mrs. Idiot. "If a woman goes into society
+properly she's got to make a business of it. For instance, there are
+about ten dances given at the club here every year. Polly is patroness
+for every one of 'em. There are twenty-five teas during the spring and
+summer months. Polly assists at half of them, and gives a fifth of
+them. She's president of the King's Daughters, corresponding secretary
+of the Dorcas, treasurer of the Red Cross Society, and goodness knows
+what all!"
+
+"I can quite understand why she needs to keep accounts--social
+accounts," said the Idiot. "But it's rather queer, don't you think, that
+she has the children on her books? The idea of saying that Jimmie and
+Gladys can't come to Mollie's party because Mollie hasn't been down
+there--why, it's nonsense!"
+
+"No," said Mrs. Idiot, "it is merely logical. Whatever Polly Dawkins
+does she tries to do thoroughly. I've no doubt she'll do Balzac up
+completely. If she keeps social books showing call balances in her favor
+or against herself she might as well go the whole thing and write the
+children in--only she's made a mistake, as far as we are concerned,
+unless she means to write us off without squaring up."
+
+"You talk like a financier," said the Idiot, admiringly. "What do you
+know about writing off?"
+
+"I used to help my father with his accounts, occasionally," said Mrs.
+Idiot. "Polly Dawkins's books ought to show a balance of one call in
+our favor. That's really the reason I'm not willing to call there
+to-night. She's so queer about it all, and, as a matter of fact, she
+owes me a call. I'm not going to overwhelm her with an added
+obligation."
+
+"Ho!" smiled the Idiot. "You keep books yourself, eh?"
+
+"I keep score," said Mrs. Idiot. "I learned that playing golf."
+
+"It's a bad thing to keep score in golf," said the Idiot.
+
+"So they say, but I find it amusing," she replied.
+
+"And how many calls does Mrs. Wilkins owe you?" demanded the Idiot.
+
+"I don't know," returned the wife. "And I don't care. When I want to see
+Mrs. Wilkins I call on her whether she owes me a call or not, but with
+Polly Dawkins it's different. She began the book-keeping, and as long as
+she likes it I must try to live up to her ideas. If social intercourse
+develops into a business, business requirements must be observed."
+
+"It's a good idea in a way," said the Idiot, reflectively. "But if you
+make a business of society, why don't you carry it to a logical
+conclusion? Balance your books, if you mean business, every month, and
+send your debtors a statement of their account."
+
+"Well, I will if you wish me to," said Mrs. Idiot. "Suppose they don't
+pay?"
+
+"Dun 'em," said the Idiot. And then the matter dropped.
+
+On the fifth of the following month Mr. and Mrs. Idiot were seated
+comfortably in their library. The children had gone to bed, and they
+were enjoying the bliss of a quiet evening at home, when the door-bell
+rang, and in a moment or two the maid ushered in Mr. and Mrs. Richard
+Dawkins, preceded, of course, by their cards. The young householders
+were delighted, and Polly Dawkins was never more charming. She looked
+well, and she talked well, and there was not a symptom of any diminution
+of the old-time friendship perceptible--only she did appear to be tired
+and care-worn.
+
+The evening wore away pleasantly. The chat reverted to old times, and by
+degrees Mrs. Dawkins seemed to grow less tired.
+
+About ten o'clock the Idiot invited his neighbor to adjourn to the
+smoking-room, where they each lit a cigar and indulged in a
+companionable glass.
+
+"Idiot," said Dawkins, when his wife called out to him that it was time
+to go home, "your wife is a wonder. I've been trying for three months to
+make Polly come up here and she wouldn't. Keeps books, you know--now.
+Has to--so much to do. Thought you owed us a call, but received your
+bill Wednesday--looked it up--questioned servants--found you were
+right."
+
+"Bill," cried the Idiot. "What bill?"
+
+"Why, the one Mrs. Idiot sent--this," said Dawkins, taking a piece of
+paper out of his pocket. "Confoundedly good joke."
+
+The Idiot took up the piece of paper. It was type-written--on Tommy's
+machine--and read as follows:
+
+ November 1 1898
+ MR. AND MRS. RICHARD DAWKINS
+ _To Mr. and Mrs. Idiot Dr._
+
+ September 20 Evening call 1
+ Account overdue.
+ Please remit.
+
+"Great Scott!" laughed the Idiot.
+
+"My dear," said the Idiot after the Dawkinses had gone, "that bill of
+yours was a great idea."
+
+"It wasn't my idea at all--it was yours," said Mrs. Idiot, laughing.
+"You said we ought to be business-like to the last and send out a
+statement on the first of the month. I sent it. And they paid up."
+
+"Richard," said Mrs. Dawkins, as they drove home, "did you get a
+receipt?"
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+AS TO SANTA CLAUS
+
+
+"I am very glad I didn't take Tommy and Mollie to church with me this
+morning," said Mrs. Idiot, on her return from service. "It would have
+broken their hearts to have heard the sermon. I don't know what gets
+into Dr. Preachly sometimes. He gave us a blast about Santa Claus."
+
+"A blast about Santa Claus, eh!" said the Idiot. "And how did he blast
+the good old saint?"
+
+"He said he was a lie," rejoined Mrs. Idiot, indignantly, "and that it
+was the duty of every Christian in the land to see that the lie was
+exposed."
+
+"Great heavens!" cried the Idiot, in astonishment. "Doesn't Dr. Preachly
+believe in Santa Claus? Poor old Preachly! How much he has lost! Did he
+say anything about Hop o' My Thumb and Cinderella?"
+
+"No, of course not. Why should he?" returned Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Oh, because; I suppose that a man who doesn't believe in Santa Claus is
+a skeptic on the subject of Hop o' My Thumb, and Rumpelstiltzken, and
+Cinderella, and Jack the Giant-Killer, and all the rest of that noble
+army of childhood friends," explained the Idiot.
+
+"He didn't mention them," said Mrs. Idiot. "He--"
+
+"He's going to preach a series of sermons on lies, I presume," said the
+Idiot. "He's tackled Santa Claus first, as being the most seasonable of
+the lot, eh? Jack the Giant-Killer ought to be a good subject for a
+ministerial attack."
+
+"Well, he pulled poor old Santa Claus to pieces," said Mrs. Idiot, with
+a sigh.
+
+"Why didn't you bring me a piece of him as a souvenir?" demanded the
+Idiot. "Just a lock of his hair for my collection of curios? What was
+done with the remains?"
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed as she pulled over her gloves and smoothed them upon
+her lap.
+
+"There weren't any remains," she answered. "When Dr. Preachly got
+through with him there wasn't a vestige of the old chap left. To begin
+with, he was a lie, the doctor said. Then he went on and showed that he
+was a wickedly partial old fellow--a very snob, he called him--because
+he gives fine things to the children of the rich and little or nothing
+to the children of the poor. He filled the little folk with hope and
+brought them disappointment, and so on. It was a powerful sermon,
+although I wanted to weep over it."
+
+"Go ahead and weep," said the Idiot; "it's the appropriate thing to do.
+I don't wonder you wanted to cry; you've always liked Dr. Preachly."
+
+"Of course," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"And you hate to see him make a--ah--a--well, you know--of himself in
+the pulpit; and I quite agree with you. I rather like Preachly myself.
+It is too bad to see a well-meaning man like that batting his brains out
+against the rock of Gibraltar, whether suicide is sin or not. What has
+put him in this despondent mood? Do you suppose he has heard?"
+
+"Heard what?" demanded Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"About the slippers," said the Idiot.
+
+"What slippers?" asked his wife.
+
+"Oh, the same old slippers," said the Idiot. "You know the ones I
+mean--the ones he's going to get from Santa Claus. Really, I'm not
+surprised, after all. If I were a minister, and realized that truckloads
+of embroidered slippers of every size and color, covered with stags of
+red worsted jumping over rivulets of yellow floss, with split agates for
+eyes set in over the toe, were to be dumped in my front yard every
+Christmas Eve by that old reprobate, Santa Claus, I think I, too, would
+set him down as a fraud, or an overworked cobbler, anyhow."
+
+[Illustration: "'DR. PREACHLY ONLY GOT EIGHT PAIRS LAST XMAS'"]
+
+"That's exaggerated--a comic-paper idea," said Mrs. Idiot. "I don't
+believe the average clergyman gets so many slippers. Dr. Preachly only
+got eight pairs last Christmas."
+
+"Is that all?" cried the Idiot. "Mercy, what a small income of slippers!
+Dear me! how can he live with only eight pairs of slippers? But, after
+all, slippers are an appropriate gift for a clergyman," he added, "and
+Santa Claus should be credited with that fact. Slippers have soles, and
+the more slippers he gets the easier it is to save their soles, and
+therefore--"
+
+"Really, my dear, you are flippant," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Not at all," rejoined the Idiot. "I am merely trying to sit on two
+stools at once--to retain my respect for Dr. Preachly without giving up
+my everlasting regard for Santa Claus. If I can't do both I am very much
+afraid it will be Dr. Preachly, and not Santa Claus, who will go to the
+wall in this establishment, and that would be sad. I can't say I think
+much of the doctor's logic. Do you?"
+
+"I didn't notice his logic," Mrs. Idiot replied.
+
+"Very likely," said the Idiot; "from what you tell me of his discourse I
+imagine he must have left it at home, which is a bad thing to do in an
+argument. To begin, he called Santa a lie, did he?"
+
+"Yes; said he didn't exist at all."
+
+"Good! Then how could he have been a snob?"
+
+"Why, while of course I have no sympathy with his conclusions, Dr.
+Preachly handled that point pretty well. It certainly is true that in
+the homes of the rich there is a lavishness of gifts that you don't
+find in the homes of the poor, and therefore Santa Claus treats the rich
+better than he does the poor. We all know that."
+
+"Hum!" said the Idiot. "And so it is Santa Claus who is the snob, eh,
+and not Fortune?"
+
+"Well, Dr. Preachly did not touch upon that. All he said was that Santa
+Claus was a snob for favoring 'high society' and in many cases
+absolutely ignoring the submerged."
+
+"But I don't see how," said the Idiot.
+
+"Suppose he brings a diamond necklace to the daughter of a Croesus?"
+
+"Precisely," said the Idiot.
+
+[Illustration: "'A CHINA DOLL TO THE DAUGHTER OF A CARPENTER'"]
+
+"And a china doll to the daughter of a carpenter?" said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"That's tact, not snobbishness," said the Idiot. "What would the
+daughter of a carpenter do with a diamond necklace? The china doll is
+not only more appropriate, but a better plaything."
+
+"Well, anyhow, he gives richly to those that have, and sparsely, if at
+all, to those that haven't, Dr. Preachly said," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"There is scriptural authority for that," observed the Idiot. "I wonder
+if Dr. Preachly reads his Bible! Perhaps I'd better send him one for
+Christmas instead of a pair of galoshes. He'll find in the Bible that
+'to him that hath shall be given,' and so forth. But to return to the
+logic--"
+
+"I told you I didn't notice it," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Nor did Dr. Preachly, my dear; passed it by as if it were a poor
+relation, apparently. But this is true, a lie is an untruth. Truth alone
+lives, therefore an untruth does not live. Santa Claus is a lie and does
+not live, and is a snob, according to our reverend logician. Now, how
+can one who does not live be a snob or anything else? Truly, I wish Dr.
+Preachly would be more careful in his statements. As a pew-holder in his
+church I do not like to hear him denounce something that does not exist
+as having unworthy qualities. It's like shaking a sword at nothing and
+patting yourself on the back afterwards for your courage; still more in
+this instance is it like batting your poor mortal head against the hard
+surface of an everlasting rock, and our clergy should be in better
+business.
+
+"Let 'em fight the harmful lies--the lies of false social ideas as
+propagated by distinctions of pew-holding, for instance. The man who
+sits in the front of the church is no better than the man who sits at
+the back, and is frequently his inferior; but has he more or has he less
+influence? The man who hands in his check for ten thousand dollars,
+having that and more to spare, is not more the friend of religion and
+Christianity than the poor beggar who stumbles in and puts his penny in
+the plate, thus diminishing by one-fifth his capital. Suppose Santa
+Claus is in a material sense a fancy or a lie; Heaven help Dr. Preachly
+if he can't see the beauty and the ethical value of the deception. Is he
+not the embodiment of the golden rule, and is he not, after all--God
+bless him and them!--something beautiful in the eyes of the children?"
+
+"I'm flippant, and I know it, but there are some things I cling to," he
+added, after a pause. "Santa Claus is one of them, and Dr. Preachly can
+preach through all eternity, and, with all due respect to him, he can't
+remove from my mind the beauty of an idea that was planted there by two
+people who were practical enough, my father and my mother. I've
+inherited Santa Claus, and I'm not going to give him up, and no
+preacher in our church or in the church of others can take him away from
+me by one sermon, or by an infinite number of sermons, however sincere
+they may be. Is dinner ready?"
+
+Dinner was ready. It was eaten reflectively, and after it the children
+went to Sunday-school. From this Tommy returned with a swollen eye,
+which later became dark.
+
+"Hullo, pop!" he said, addressing the Idiot as he entered the house.
+
+[Illustration: "'HULLO, SONNY! HAD A GOOD TIME?'"]
+
+"Hullo, sonny!" replied the Idiot, observing the swollen eye. "Had a
+good time?"
+
+"Yep," said the boy; "pretty good."
+
+"Been fighting?" suggested the Idiot.
+
+"Not so very much," said the boy; "only a little." And he began to sing
+a popular air, as if he didn't care much about life in general, and
+didn't mind an aching eye, which was rapidly, by its inflammation,
+giving away the fact that he had met with trouble.
+
+"What did you learn at Sunday-school?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"More blessed to give than to receive," said Tommy.
+
+"Good!" said the Idiot. "I hope you will remember that, sonny. There is
+no satisfaction in all the world like that of giving if you can afford
+it."
+
+[Illustration: "'I GAVE MY DOLLY AWAY TO-DAY'"]
+
+"I think tho, too," said Mollie, sitting down on her father's lap with
+the contented sigh of a little girl who has discovered that life is not
+all an illusion. "I gave my dollie away to-day, papa," she added. "She
+wath only thawdust, and Pollie Harrington hath her now. She was a
+drefful care, and I'm glad to be ridden of her."
+
+But the Idiot's mind was not on dolls, and he showed it. His boy's eye
+proved a greater care.
+
+"Come here, my boy," he said.
+
+The boy approached inquiringly.
+
+"How did this happen?" the Idiot asked. "Your eye is swollen."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," cried Tommy, exultantly. "Jimmie Roberts said there
+wasn't no Santy Claus."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I said there was, an' then I gave him one on the end of his nose."
+
+Here the boy struggled away from his father, as if he had done something
+he was willing to stand by.
+
+"Let me understand this," said the Idiot. "Jimmie said--"
+
+"There wasn't any Santy Claus," interrupted Tommy.
+
+"Then what did you say?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"I told him he didn't know what he was talking about," said Tommy.
+
+"Why did you say that?"
+
+"Because he was wrong, papa," said Tommy. "I've seen Santy Claus; I saw
+him last year."
+
+"Ah! You did, eh? I was not aware of that fact."
+
+Tommy began to laugh.
+
+"You can't fool me, daddy," he said, climbing onto his father's knee.
+"Of course I've seen him, and he's the bulliest feller in all the world.
+_You're him!_"
+
+And a hug followed.
+
+Later on Mrs. Idiot and the Idiot sat together. The latter was deep in
+thought.
+
+"Children have queer notions," said he, after a while.
+
+"They are generally pretty right, though," observed Mrs. Idiot. "You are
+a pretty good Santa Claus, after all," she added.
+
+"Pollie," said the Idiot, rising, "I believe in Santa Claus because he
+represents the spirit of the hour, and whoever tries to turn him down
+tries to turn down that spirit--the most blessed thing we have. Let's
+keep the children believing in Santa Claus, eh?"
+
+"I agree," said Mrs. Idiot. "For the secret is out. You are Santa Claus
+to them."
+
+"Heaven grant I may always be as much," said the Idiot. "For if a father
+is Santa Claus, and a boy or a girl believes in Santa Claus as a friend,
+as a companion, as something that brings them only sincerity and love
+and sympathy, then may we feel that Tiny Tim's prayer has been answered,
+and that God has blessed us all."
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+AS TO NEW-YEAR'S DAY
+
+
+It was New-Year's eve, and Mr. and Mrs. Idiot with their old friends
+were watching the old year die. The old year had been a fairly
+successful one for them all, and they were properly mournful over its
+prospective demise, but the promise of the new was sufficiently bright
+to mitigate their sorrow.
+
+"What a sandwich life is, after all!" ejaculated the Idiot.
+
+Mr. Pedagog started nervously. The remark was so idiotic that even its
+source seemed to make it inexcusable.
+
+[Illustration: "'I DON'T QUITE CATCH YOUR DRIFT'"]
+
+"I don't quite catch your drift," said he.
+
+"As the man said when an avalanche of snow fell off his neighbor's roof
+and missed him by an inch," said the Idiot. "Why, just think a moment,
+Doctor, and my drift will overwhelm you. Look about you and consider
+what we have ourselves demonstrated to-night. If that does not prove
+life a series of emotional sandwiches, then I don't know what a sandwich
+is. Twenty minutes ago we were all gladness over the prosperity of the
+year gone by. Five minutes ago we were all on the verge of tears because
+the good old year is going the way of all years. An hour from now we
+will be joyously acclaiming the new. Two thick slices of joy with a thin
+slice of grief between."
+
+"Ah!" said Mr. Pedagog. "I see. There is something in the analogy, after
+all. The bread of joy and the ham of sorrow, as you might put it; do
+make up the sum of human existence; but in some cases, my lad, I am
+afraid you will find there is only one slice of bread to two of ham."
+
+"No doubt," replied the Idiot, "but that does not affect my proposition
+that life is a sandwich. If one slice of ham between two slices of bread
+is a ham sandwich, why is not one slice of bread between two slices of
+ham a bread sandwich? What is a sandwich, anyhow? The dictionary says
+that a sandwich is something placed between two other things; hence,
+all things are sandwiches, because there is nothing in the world, the
+world being round, that is not between two other things. Therefore, all
+things being sandwiches, life is a sandwich, Q. E. D."
+
+"Is life a thing?" demanded Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Certainly," said the Idiot. "And a mighty good thing, too. If you don't
+believe it look the word thing up in the dictionary. All things are
+things."
+
+"But," continued the Schoolmaster, his old spirit of antagonism rising
+up in his breast, "granted that life is a thing, what is it between so
+that it becomes a sandwich?"
+
+"The past and the future," said the Idiot. "It is a slice of the
+immediate between a slice of past and one of future."
+
+Mr. Pedagog laughed.
+
+"You are still the same old Idiot," he said.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "Gibraltar and I and Truth are the three
+unchangeable things in this life, and that's why I am so happy. I'm in
+such good company. Gibraltar and Truth are good enough companions for
+anybody."
+
+Meanwhile Mollie and Tommy, who had been allowed to sit up upon this
+rare occasion, stirred uneasily.
+
+"Ith I a thandwich, popper?" said the little girl, sleepily, raising her
+head from her father's shoulder and gazing into his eyes.
+
+"Yes, indeed, you are," said her father, giving her an affectionate
+squeeze. "A sugar sandwich, Mollie. You're really good enough to eat."
+
+"Well, I'd rather be a pie," put in Tommy; "an apple pie."
+
+"Very well, my son," returned the Idiot. "Have your own way. Henceforth
+be a pie if you prefer--an apple pie. But may I ask why you express this
+preference?"
+
+"Oh, because," said Tommy, "if I'm to be an apple pie somebody's got to
+fill me chock-full of apple sauce."
+
+"The son of his father," observed Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"I think it is a pity," Mrs. Pedagog put in at this point, "that some of
+the good old customs of the New Year have gone out."
+
+"As to which, Mrs. Pedagog?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"Well, New-Year's calling particularly," explained the lady. "It is no
+longer the thing for people to make New-Year's calls, and I must confess
+I regret it. It used to be a great pleasure to me in the old days to
+receive the gentlemen--my old friends, and relatives, and boarders."
+
+"Why distinguish between your old friends and your boarders, Mrs.
+Pedagog?" interrupted the Idiot. "They are synonymous terms."
+
+"They are now," said the good lady, "but--ah--they weren't always. I
+used sometimes to think you, for instance, didn't like me as much as you
+might."
+
+"I didn't dare," explained the Idiot. "If I'd liked you as much as I
+might I'd have told you so, and then Mr. Pedagog would have got jealous
+and there'd have been a horrid affair."
+
+The lady smiled graciously, and Mr. Pedagog threw a small paper pellet
+at the Idiot.
+
+"I'm much obliged to you for holding off, Idiot," he said. "I don't know
+where I'd have been to-day if you'd got in ahead of me. Mrs. Pedagog has
+always had a soft spot in her heart for you."
+
+"I've got the other spot," said the Idiot, "and a pair of aces are hard
+to beat in pairs; but I think I voice Mrs. Pedagog's sentiments in the
+matter, Mr. Pedagog, when I say that she and I would always have been
+glad to see you every other New-Year's day if I had been the fortunate
+winner of her hand."
+
+"And Mr. Pedagog and I would have been glad to see you and Mrs. Pedagog
+in the sandwich years," said Mrs. Idiot to her husband; and then,
+turning to the Schoolmaster, added, "Wouldn't we, Mr. Pedagog?"
+
+"No, madame," returned Mr. Pedagog, courteously. "You might have been,
+but I would not. If I had married you I could never have seen any one
+else with pleasure. I should have kept my eyes solely for you."
+
+"John!" cried Mrs. Pedagog, arching her eyebrows.
+
+"Pleasantry, my dear--mere pleasantry," returned the Schoolmaster,
+tapping his fingers together and smiling sweetly upon Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"You didn't finish, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot. "You were telling us
+how you used to enjoy New-Year's calling before it went out."
+
+"Yes," replied Mrs. Pedagog. "It was charming. I used positively to
+look forward to its coming with delight. We women, Mr. Idiot, found the
+old custom very delightful."
+
+"But the men, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "did you ever think of
+them?"
+
+"What else did we think of? What else is there for a woman to think
+about?" replied Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Jane!" cried Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"_Pleasantry, my dear--mere pleasantry_," returned Mrs. Pedagog,
+frigidly. And Mr. Pedagog lit a cigar. It is not always pleasant to be
+quoted.
+
+"Still," said the Idiot, "you thought of men only as creatures of the
+moment--"
+
+"Entirely," said Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"And not as creatures of the week following," said the Idiot.
+
+"What has that to do with it?" asked Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Much--from the man's stand-point," returned the Idiot. "His digestion
+was butchered to make a woman's holiday. Take myself as an example. I
+used to make New-Year's calls; and to get through with my list by
+midnight, I had to start in at nine o'clock in the morning."
+
+"Nine o'clock is not so early," said Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"It's early for cake and pickled oysters," said the Idiot. "And for
+chicken salad and wedding-cake, and for lemonade and punch, and for
+lobster and egg-nog, and for ice-cream and _pâté-de-foie-gras_."
+
+"H'm!" said Mr. Pedagog, reflectively. "That's true."
+
+"Quite so," observed Mr. Whitechoker, brushing off his vest, upon which
+the ashes of his cigar had rested. "Especially for the punch."
+
+"There was no punch in my house," said Mrs. Pedagog. "Indeed, I always
+served a very simple luncheon. We did have chicken salad, of course, but
+the chicken was good and the salad was crisp--"
+
+"I'd swear to it," said the Idiot.
+
+"And we had egg-nog, but there was more egg than nog in it--"
+
+"Again I'd swear to it," said the Idiot, smacking his lips.
+
+"And as for the lobsters, nobody ever complained--"
+
+"He'd have been a lobster himself who would," said the Idiot. "But that
+does not prove that no one ever suffered."
+
+"And as for the pickled oysters, no one ever suffered from them that I
+knew of," continued the good lady. "They are harmless eaten in
+moderation."
+
+[Illustration: "'I FELT AS IF I HAD SWALLOWED AS OVERSHOE'"]
+
+"Exactly right," cried the Idiot. "No gentleman would ever complain of
+pickled oysters, even if they were made of inferior rubber, eaten in
+moderation. Yet I recall in my own experience a pickled oyster of most
+impressive quality. He was not a pickled oyster of the moment. He was
+the Admiral Dewey of pickled oysters. In appearance he resembled every
+other pickled oyster I ever met, but--well, he kept me in a state of
+worry for a month. Just eating him alone was eating pickled oysters in
+immoderation. I felt as if I had swallowed an overshoe. He was a
+charming pickled oyster, Mrs. Pedagog, and he was devoted to me, but he
+involved me in complications alongside of which the Philippine question
+is child's play. If a New-Year's caller could have confined his
+attentions to the ladies he met no harm would have come to him, but he
+couldn't, you know. The day was one continuous round of effort and
+indigestibles. What a man got at your house and had to eat merely to
+show his appreciation of your hospitality was all right and wholesome.
+Your lobster and egg-nog could do him no harm, but he couldn't stop with
+yours; he had to continue, and consume lobsters and egg-nog everywhere
+else and all day long. The day resolved itself into a magnificent gorge
+alongside of which that of Niagara seems like a wagon-rut. It finally
+came down to the point where either man or the custom had to die, and
+man being selfish, the custom went. Did you ever consider exactly how
+much indigestible food an amiable, well-meaning person had to consume in
+a round of, say, three dozen calls, Mrs. Pedagog?"
+
+Mr. Brief nodded his approval. "Now you've struck it," he said. "I've
+been there, Idiot."
+
+"I must confess," said Mrs. Pedagog, "that I never looked into that
+question."
+
+"Well, I'll tell you," the Idiot resumed. "The last time I made
+New-Year's calls I figured it out for the doctor the next morning, and
+as I recall the statistics, in the course of that day I ate one hundred
+and twenty-nine pickled oysters, thirteen plates of chicken salad, seven
+plates of lobster salad, five plates of mulled sardines, twenty-three
+plates of ice-cream, four hundred and sixty-three macaroons,
+eighty-seven sandwiches ranging from lettuce and ham to chicken and
+potted goose-liver, enough angel-cake to feed all the angels there are
+and two more, sixteen Welsh rarebits that were being made just as I
+happened in, and crystallized ginger and salted almonds and marrons to
+the extent of about eighteen pounds."
+
+"Mercy!" cried Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Say, pa, where was I then?" asked Tommy, his eyes glittering with
+delight.
+
+"You were eating green cheese on the moon, Tommy," said the Idiot.
+
+"Wisht I'd been with you," said Tommy. "Must o' been better than bein' a
+pie."
+
+"And all of these things," continued the Idiot, with a wink at his son,
+"I washed down with six gallons of lemonade, nineteen cups of coffee,
+eighteen cups of tea, and a taste of claret punch."
+
+"And how about the egg-nog?" asked the Bibliomaniac, slyly.
+
+"I judge there were about six crates of eggs in it," said the Idiot. "I
+never had the nerve to estimate the nog-end of it."
+
+"What did the doctor say when you told him all that?" asked Mrs.
+Pedagog.
+
+The Idiot chuckled. "What did he say?" he cried. "Why, I should think
+you could guess. He blamed it all on the Welsh rarebits, but he thought
+he could get me into shape again in time for the next New Year. I've
+never been the same man since."
+
+"Well, the way I look at it," said Mrs. Pedagog, "is that it is a great
+pity that women must be deprived of a function that gives them pleasure
+because the men make pigs of themselves."
+
+"But you don't understand, Mrs. Pedagog," the Idiot persisted. "I grant
+you that the man who eats all that makes a pig of himself, but he has no
+choice. He can't help himself. When a charming hostess insists, he'd be
+a greater pig if he refused to partake of her hospitality. The custom
+involved an inevitable sacrifice of man's digestion upon the altar of
+woman. That's all there was about it. If it could have been arranged so
+that a man could take a hamper about with him and stow all the cakes and
+salads and other good things away in that, and eat them later as he
+happened to need or want them, instead of in his own inner self, the
+good old custom might have been preserved, but that is impossible in
+these conventional days."
+
+"You needn't have eaten it all," put in Mrs. Idiot. "You could have
+pretended to eat it and put it down somewhere."
+
+[Illustration: "'I FOUND EIGHT SANDWICHES AND A PINT OF SALTED
+ALMONDS'"]
+
+[Illustration: "'THEY WERE FOUND SOME DAYS LATER WHEN THE ROOM WAS PUT
+IN ORDER'"]
+
+"I know that, my dear. I didn't even on that occasion eat it all--I only
+ate what I told you. I found eight sandwiches and a pint of salted
+almonds in my coat-tail pocket the next morning, which I managed
+surreptitiously to hide away while my hostesses were getting me
+something else, and in one place, while nobody was watching me, I hid a
+half-dozen pickled oysters under a sofa, where I suppose they were found
+some days later when the room was put in order."
+
+As the Idiot spoke the clock struck twelve, and the guests all rose up.
+
+"Here's to the New Year!" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Not yet," interposed the Idiot. "That's only a signal for the Welsh
+rarebits to be brought in. I've sworn them off for the New Year, but I
+haven't for the old. The clock is a half-hour fast."
+
+"No, my dear," said Mrs. Idiot. "It was, but I put it back. It's exactly
+right now."
+
+"Then," said the Idiot, "I join you in the toast, Mr. Pedagog. Here's to
+the New Year: may it bring joy to everybody. Meanwhile may it bring also
+the Welsh rarebits."
+
+"I thought you'd sworn off," suggested Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"So I had," replied the Idiot, "but circumstances over which I have no
+control force me to postpone my reformation for another twelve months.
+If they had been served at half-past eleven I should have stuck to my
+resolve; as they have been delayed until twelve-one I cannot do less
+than eat them. I do not believe in wilful waste; and besides, it is
+quite as much the duty of the host to consume the good things he places
+before his guests as it is for the guests to partake. I can wait a year,
+I think, without wholly ruining what little digestion my former devotion
+to New-Year's calling has left me. Gentlemen, I propose the ladies: May
+their future be as golden as this rarebit; and for the men, may they
+always be worthy to be the toast upon which that golden future may rest
+with the certainty born of confidence."
+
+And the guests fell to and ate each a golden buck to the New Year--all
+save Mollie and Tommy. These two important members of the household went
+up to their little beds, but just before going to sleep Tommy called
+through the door to his little sister:
+
+"Mollie!"
+
+"Yeth!"
+
+"Want to play a game with me to-morrow?"
+
+"Yeth!"
+
+"Well, you get a cake and a pie and some gingersnaps and a lot of apples
+and some candy and we'll play New-Year's calls."
+
+"Splendid!" lisped Mollie. "You'll call on me?"
+
+"Yes," said Tommy; "and all you'll have to do will be to force food on
+me."
+
+And they soon passed into the land of dreams.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+SOME DOMESTIC INVENTIONS
+
+
+[Illustration: "'THERE'S NOT MUCH MONEY IN STOCKS'"]
+
+"I think I'll give up the business of broking and go into inventing,"
+said the Idiot one Sunday morning, as he and Mrs. Idiot and their
+friends sat down at breakfast. "There's not much money in stocks, but
+the successful inventor of a patent clothes-pin makes a fortune."
+
+"I'd think twice about that before acting," observed Mr. Brief. "There
+may not be much money in stocks, but you can work eight hours a day, and
+get good pay in a broker's office, while the inventor has to wait upon
+inspiration."
+
+"True enough," said the Idiot; "but waiting on inspiration isn't a bad
+business in itself. You can play golf or read a rattling good novel, or
+go to a yacht-race while you wait."
+
+"But where does the money come in?" asked Mr. Pedagog, his usual
+caution coming to the fore.
+
+"Inspiration brings it with her," said the Idiot, "and by the barrel,
+too. What's the use of toiling eight hours a day for fifty weeks in a
+year for three thousand dollars when by waiting on inspiration in a
+pleasant way you make a million all of a sudden?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. Pedagog, indulgently, "if you have the inspiration
+lassoed, as you might say, your argument is all right; but if you are
+merely going to sit down and wait for it to ring you up on the
+telephone, and ask you when and where you wish your barrels of gold
+delivered, I think it will be your creditors, and not fortune, who will
+be found knocking at your door. How are you going about this business,
+provided you do retire from Wall Street?"
+
+"Choose my field and work it," replied the Idiot. "For the present I
+should choose the home. That is the field I am most interested in just
+now. I should study its necessities, and endeavor to meet whatever these
+might demand with an adequate supply. Any man who stays around home all
+day will find lots of room for the employment of his talents along
+inventive lines."
+
+"You've tried it, have you?" asked Mr. Brief.
+
+"Certainly I have," said the Idiot, "though I haven't invented anything
+yet. Why, only last week I stayed home on Monday--wash-day--and a
+thousand things that might be invented suggested themselves to me."
+
+"As, for instance?" asked Mrs. Idiot, who was anxious to know of any
+possible thing that could mitigate the horrors of wash-day.
+
+[Illustration: "'A NICE LITTLE BASKET-HAT ON HER HEAD TO HOLD THE PINS
+IN'"]
+
+"Well, it wouldn't help _you_ much, my dear," said the Idiot, "but the
+wash-lady would hail with unmixed delight a substitute for her mouth to
+hold clothes-pins in while she is hanging out the clothes. I watched
+Ellen in the yard for ten minutes that day, and it was pathetic. There
+she was, standing on her tiptoes, hanging innumerable garments on the
+line, her mouth full of clothes-pins, and Jimpsonberry's hired man
+leaning over the fence trying to shout sweet nothings in her ear. If she
+had had a nice little basket-hat on her head to hold the pins in she
+could have answered back without stopping her work every other minute
+to take them out of her mouth in order to retort to his honeyed
+sentiments."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed. "Ellen finds time enough to talk and do the washing,
+too," she said. "I sometimes think she does more talking than washing."
+
+"No doubt of it; she's only human, like the rest of us," said the Idiot.
+"But she might save time to do something else for us if she could do the
+washing and the talking at the same time. She may give up the washing,
+but she'll never give up the talking. Therefore, why not make the
+talking easier?"
+
+"What you need most, I think," put in Mr. Brief, "is an instrument to
+keep hired men from leaning over the fence and distracting the attention
+of the laundress from her work. That would be a great boon."
+
+"Not unless idleness is a great boon," retorted the Idiot. "Half the
+hired men I know would be utterly out of employment if they couldn't
+lean over a fence and talk to somebody. Leaning over a fence and talking
+to somebody forms seventy-five per cent. of the hired man's daily labor.
+He seems to think that is what he is paid for. Still, any one who
+objects could very easily remedy the conversational detail in so far as
+it goes on over the fence."
+
+"By the use of barbed wire, I presume," suggested Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"By something far more subtle and delicately suggestive," rejoined the
+Idiot. "Hired men do not mind barbed-wire fences. They rather like them
+when they annoy other people. When they annoy themselves they know how
+to treat them. My own man Mike, for instance, minds them not at all.
+Indeed, he has taken my pruning-shears and clipped all the barbs off the
+small stretch of it we had at the rear end of our lot to keep him from
+climbing over for a short cut home."
+
+"With what result?" asked Mr. Brief.
+
+[Illustration: "'AN ELECTRIC NOTICE TO QUIT'"]
+
+"With the result that I had to buy a new pair of pruning-shears," said
+the Idiot. "My Anti-Over-the-Fence-Gabber," he continued, "would involve
+certain complex details, but it would work. I should have an electric
+battery connected with the upper cable of the fence, and an operator
+stationed inside of the house, close to a key which would send some
+six hundred or seven hundred volts through the cable whenever needed.
+Then if I felt that Jimpsonberry's man was interfering with my
+laundress, as soon as he leaned over the fence I'd have the operator
+send him an electric notice to quit."
+
+"A message?" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"No, a plain shock. Two hundred volts as a starter, three hundred as a
+reminder, and the full seven hundred if necessary to make the hint
+plainer."
+
+"That would be cruel," observed Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Not wholly," said the Idiot. "It would be an advantage to the man
+himself in one way. Hired men have too little electricity in their
+systems, Mrs. Pedagog. If Jimpsonberry's man, for instance, would take
+all the electricity I'd give him and apply it to his work,
+Jimpsonberry's unpulled dandelions would not be such a constant menace
+to my lawn. I compel Mike to weed out my lawn every spring and autumn,
+but Jimpsonberry doesn't attend to his at all. He doesn't sleep on it,
+and so doesn't bother about it. Consequently, when his dandelions go to
+seed the seed is blown over into my grass, and every year I get an
+uninvited crop, which at a dollar a thousand would make me a
+millionaire."
+
+"Why don't you apply your inventive genius to the discovery of a
+seedless dandelion?" asked the Lawyer. "It seems to me that would be the
+best solution of the dandelion problem."
+
+"Because Jimpsonberry wouldn't have 'em if I discovered 'em," said the
+Idiot. "I judge from the millions he raises every year that he is
+satisfied with dandelions as they are. He's got enough for himself, and
+never makes any charge for those he gives to his neighbors."
+
+"I think a furnace-feeder would be a good thing, too," the Idiot
+continued, in a moment. "My furnace is a chronic sufferer from
+indigestion because on some days it is gorged with coal and on others
+with ashes. Seems to me if I could get a month's time in which to
+concentrate my attention upon a furnace-feeder, I could devise some kind
+of a contraption that would invoke the enthusiastic love of the suburban
+resident in Arctic latitudes the world over."
+
+"I have often thought of that possibility myself," observed Mr. Pedagog,
+his eyes fondly resting upon a steaming plate of griddle-cakes that
+had just been brought in. "But coal is a rebellious quantity. A
+furnace-feeder would need to be delicately adjusted, and coal cannot be
+handled with delicacy. It requires a chute rather than a tube. It must
+be manipulated with the shovel, not the sugar-tongs."
+
+"Correct," said the Idiot. "Therefore, _you_ would experiment on a chute
+or a shovel, abandoning all idea of refining the coal. I, on the other
+hand, would experiment with the coal itself, Mr. Pedagog. Why not
+liquefy it, and let it drop automatically into the furnace through a
+self-acting spigot?"
+
+"Liquefy coal?" asked Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Certainly," replied the Idiot. "We liquefy pretty nearly everything
+else. If liquid air, why not liquid coal? Everything we have in nature
+in these days apparently can be liquefied, and while I am not familiar
+with the process, I see no reason why a ton of coal should not be
+reduced to such a shape that it can be bottled. Once bottled and
+provided with an automatic dropper, it could easily be adjusted so as to
+flow in proper quantities into the furnace at proper intervals."
+
+"It would be very expensive. Do you know what a pint of liquid air
+costs?" demanded the Doctor.
+
+"No," said the Idiot. "I neither breathe nor drink it. The plain old
+stuff is good enough for me, and cheap if you don't have to go to the
+mountains or the sea-shore to get your supply."
+
+"Granting coal could be liquefied," the Doctor assented, "I venture to
+say that a ton of it would cost as much as five hundred dollars."
+
+"I've no doubt it would," said the Idiot; "but I could afford a ton of
+coal at five hundred dollars if my scheme worked. A successful invention
+would make bread seem cheap at ten dollars a loaf. There's another thing
+I should put my mind on, and that is a method of cooking a cauliflower
+so that everybody in the house, as well as the neighbors, should not
+know that you are doing so," he continued. "I am particularly fond of
+cauliflower, but it is undeniable that in the process of cooking it
+becomes obtrusive, almost to the point of ostentation. I've spoken about
+it many times. Mike, the gardener, to whom I've spoken on the subject,
+thinks the cauliflower itself, if sprinkled with _eau de Cologne_ while
+growing, would cease to be obnoxious in the cooking; but that is too
+expensive a process. It would take a dozen cases of _eau de Cologne_ to
+bring a single cauliflower to maturity. My son, Tommy, has stated that
+he thinks it might be boiled in Florida-water instead of in the simple
+variety that comes from the pipes. A good suggestion for a small boy,
+but also expensive. Hired men and small boys do not think of the
+exchequer of the principal in their plans. They don't have to. Their
+allowance and wages are usually all velvet--an elegant vulgarism for
+surplus--and for my own part I have constantly to veto their little
+schemes for the betterment of my condition in order to have any
+condition at all left. But as far as the arrangement of an odorless
+cauliflower-cooker is concerned, it is as simple as A B C, barring one
+or two complications."
+
+"I wish you'd hurry up and invent it," cried Mrs. Idiot, with
+enthusiasm. "What are the main features of this simple contrivance?"
+
+"I'd have a boiler, in the first place, in which to boil the animal,"
+said the Idiot. "When the water was ready I'd clap the creature into it,
+and before it had time to remonstrate I'd fasten a hermetically sealed
+cover over the top."
+
+"But when you took it off the results would still be overpowering," said
+Mr. Pedagog.
+
+[Illustration: "'FINDING OUT WHAT IS BEING COOKED FOR DINNER'"]
+
+"No, my dear sir," said the Idiot, "for the simple reason that I should
+affix a cold-air box and a flue to the hermetically sealed boiler.
+Through the cold-air box fresh air would constantly flow into the
+boiler. Through the flue all the aromatic drawbacks of the cauliflower
+would be carried off through the chimney into the upper air. Anybody who
+wished to know whether we were going to have cauliflower for dinner or
+not would have to climb up to the roof and sniff at the chimney-top to
+find out."
+
+"It _is_ simple, isn't it, Mrs. Idiot?" Mrs. Pedagog said.
+
+"Very," replied Mrs. Idiot. "Indeed, it seems so extremely simple that I
+should like to know where the complications lie."
+
+"Where all the complications in cooking lie, my dear," said the
+Idiot, "in the cook. The chief complication would lie in getting a cook
+who could, or if she could, would, use the thing intelligently."
+
+"I don't see," said Mr. Brief, dryly--"I don't see but that what you
+ought to devote your time to, my dear Idiot, is the invention of an
+intelligent cook."
+
+"Humph!" laughed the Idiot. "I may be an idiot, Mr. Brief, but I'm not
+an ass. There are some things that man may reasonably hope to
+accomplish--such as setting fire to the Hudson River, or growing
+butternuts on the summit of Mont Blanc--but as for trying to invent an
+intelligent cook who would stay in the country for more than two weeks
+for less than ten thousand dollars a year, that, sir, is beyond all the
+conceptions of the human mind."
+
+"Ain't Bridget intelligent, pa?" asked Tommy.
+
+Here was a complication, for Tommy liked to retail to Bridget the gossip
+of the day, and especially what "pa said."
+
+"H'm--ah--oh yes, indeed, she is, Tommy," the Idiot replied, with some
+embarrassment. "Very; she's been with us three months."
+
+"How much do you pay her, pa?" asked the boy.
+
+"Well," said the Idiot, "not more than fifteen hundred dollars a month.
+Just take another griddle-cake, my son, and remember that there are some
+things little boys should not talk about."
+
+"Like tumpany's bald heads?" lisped Mollie, complacently, her eye fixed
+upon Mr. Pedagog's shining dome.
+
+"Precisely," observed Mr. Pedagog, appreciating the situation.
+
+And while everybody else laughed the Idiot looked upon his children with
+a sternly affectionate face.
+
+"My dear," said he to Mrs. Idiot, "I think it is time the babies got
+ready for Sunday-school."
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+A SUBURBAN COMPLICATION
+
+
+"Well, old chap," said the Poet some weeks later, when he happened to be
+spending the night off in the suburbs with his old friend, "how goes the
+noble art of inventing? Has your horseless cauliflower bloomed as yet?"
+
+"Horseless cauliflower is good, but tautological," said the Idiot. "The
+cauliflower is an automobile in itself, without the intervention of man.
+Who told you I was inventing instead of broking these days?"
+
+"Mr. Pedagog said something about it the last time I met him," said the
+Poet. "He's a mighty good friend of yours. He says you are the most
+perfect Idiot he ever met."
+
+"He's a bully good fellow," said the Idiot, affectionately. "You know I
+used to think Pedagog wasn't of any earthly use except to teach people
+things, but as I look back upon my experience with him he has never
+taught me anything that was worth forgetting. So he told you I was going
+into invention, did he?"
+
+"Yes; and he said he thought you were going about it in the right way,"
+rejoined the Poet. "You weren't spending ten thousand dollars to get a
+four-dollar invention on the market, he said, but were inventing things
+that you knew at the outset weren't worth risking your money on."
+
+The Idiot smiled broadly.
+
+"He said that, did he? Well, he doesn't know what he is talking about,"
+he retorted. "I am spending money on my inventions. I have already
+invested fifty cents in my patent Clothes-Pin-Holding Laundry-Bonnet,
+and I have strung the wires along my fence to be used in my electric
+Hired-Man-Discourager; and when I have managed to save up a few dollars
+more I'm going to get a battery to attach to it, when woe betide that
+man of Jimpsonberry's if he tries to talk to Maria while she is at work!
+Furthermore, I have extended the operations of that same useful
+invention so that it will meet a long-felt want in all suburban
+communities as a discourager of promiscuous wooing. You never lived
+in the country, did you?"
+
+"Not permanently," said the Poet.
+
+[Illustration: "'COURTING HIS BEST GIRL ON SOME OTHER FELLOW'S STONE
+WALL'"]
+
+"Then you are not aware of a singular habit the young country swain has
+of courting his best girl on some other fellow's stone wall after the
+sun goes down," said the Idiot. "Some balmy evening next spring, if
+you'll come up here I'll show you one of the features of suburban life
+that will give you an idea for a poem. That stone wall that runs along
+the front of my place has been the scene of more engagements than I can
+tell you of. Many a time when I have come home late at night I have
+counted as many as ten couples sitting on the cold coping of that wall
+telling each other how beautiful the world is, and holding each other on
+with loving arms."
+
+"Rather an affecting scene, that," said the Poet.
+
+"It was at first," rejoined the Idiot, "and I rather liked to see it.
+Indeed, I once suggested to Mrs. Idiot that we should have the coping
+upholstered, so that they might sit more comfortably. I even wanted to
+put a back along the inner side of it for them to lean against, but
+after a while it palled. We couldn't sit out on our own front porch on
+a summer evening and talk without sentimental interruptions that were
+demoralizing to a sustained conversation. We'd try to talk, for
+instance, about Browning, or Tennyson, or Le Gallienne, or some other
+poet of their class, when we'd be interrupted by such sentiments as,
+'Ess I is,' and 'I's oo ducky,' and 'Ain't de moon boofer?' Then when we
+had guests we never dared to take them out-of-doors, but remained cooped
+up inside the house, because Mrs. Idiot feared to intrude upon the
+sacred right of those ten couples to do their courting comparatively
+unobserved."
+
+"It must have been a nuisance," said the Poet.
+
+"It grew to be so; but I hadn't the heart to stop it, even if I could
+have done so, so I put up a hedge to hide them from view and soften the
+sound of their voices; but it didn't work very long. They didn't seem to
+appreciate my motive, and it so happened that the hedge which I put up
+with the most innocent of intentions was a Japanese quince that blossoms
+out in thorns half an inch long, to an extent which suggests the fretful
+porcupine. These, for some reason or other, excited the animosity of
+my twenty young friends on the wall, and at the end of the season there
+were not two consecutive feet of the hedge that had not been hacked and
+cut to pieces by my indignant but uninvited guests."
+
+"What impudence!" cried the Poet.
+
+"Only the ardor of youth," observed the Idiot, calmly. "Put yourself in
+the same place. Suppose that you, just as you were about to declare your
+undying love for the girl of your choice, and while gently stealing your
+arm about her waist, were to have the back of your hand ripped off by a
+brutal hedge?"
+
+"I see," laughed the Poet. "I dare say I should be indignant."
+
+"They were properly so," said the Idiot, "properly so; and neither Mrs.
+Idiot nor I really blamed them."
+
+[Illustration: "'HOLDING UP A GREAT OSAGE ORANGE'"]
+
+"We let the matter rest, and made no complaint," he continued. "Time
+went on, and the courters became a trifle more assertive. One of them
+came into the house one evening and demanded to know what I meant by
+assaulting him and his lady friend, holding up a great Osage orange
+which he alleged to have been the murderous weapon I had used; and I
+really had to apologize, for I was guilty. It happened that while
+walking about my small preserves I had picked up this orange, which had
+fallen onto my lawn from a tree on Jimpsonberry's place, and had
+unthinkingly tried to see how far I could throw it. It went just over
+the hedge, and had unceremoniously knocked Strephon's hat into the
+middle of next week and frightened Phyllis into hysterics. I was placed
+on the defensive, but for the life of me I couldn't help laughing, with
+the result that Strephon stalked angrily away, alleging that I should
+hear from him further in the matter."
+
+"And did you?" asked the Poet.
+
+"No," said the Idiot, "I never did; but the incident rather soured me
+towards the people who seemed to regard my stone wall as their property.
+I even came to feel like purchasing a gatling-gun and loading it with
+Osage oranges for the purpose of repelling them, but even under this
+provocation I still continued to ignore the matter."
+
+"You are too easy-going," suggested the Poet.
+
+"I was," said the Idiot, "until they began to use the sidewalk that runs
+parallel with the wall as a tablet upon which to inscribe in letters
+of flame their undying affection. One Sunday morning, as Mrs. Idiot and
+I started for church, we were horrified to find our flagstones scribbled
+all over with poetry, done in chalk, after the order of
+
+ "Roses is pink, and violets is blue,
+ Sugar is sweet, and so be you.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE PICTURE OF A HEART WITH AN ARROW DRAWN THROUGH
+IT'"]
+
+"Further along was the picture of a heart with an arrow drawn through
+it, and the two names 'Larry' and 'Mame' written on either side. And one
+unusually affectionate youth had actually cut the initials of his young
+lady and himself in the top of the coping, with a cold-chisel, I
+suspect. It's there yet. It was then my spirit rose up into fierce
+denunciation. That night, when the clans had gathered and were going
+through the initial stages I marched out in front of them, cleared my
+throat ostentatiously, and made a speech. It was the most nervous speech
+I ever made; worse than after-dinner speaking by a good deal. I called
+their attention to how I had suffered: referred pathetically to the
+destruction of the hedge; inveighed sarcastically against the
+Osage-orange man; told them in highly original fashion that worms, if
+taken at the ebb that leads on to fortune, would surely turn and rend
+their persecutors, and that I'd had enough. I forgave them the hedge; I
+forgave them the annoyance they had cost me, but I asserted that I'd see
+them all condemned to eternal celibacy before I would permit my sidewalk
+to be turned into an anthology of love, and my coping into an intaglio
+of eternal blessedness. I requested them if they wished to write poetry
+to write it upon their own hearths, and if they had any inscriptions to
+cut to chip in and buy an obelisk of their own and hieroglyph to their
+hearts' content. I even offered to buy them each a slate and pencil,
+which they might bring with them when they came, upon which to send
+their sentiments down to posterity, and I finished with what I consider
+to be a pleasing perversion of Longfellow's poem on the Woodman, with a
+few lines beginning:
+
+ "Scribbler, spare that sidewalk.
+
+"Then I departed, threatening to have them all arrested."
+
+"Good!" said the Poet. "I didn't think you'd ever do it. You have nerve
+enough, but you are too good-natured."
+
+"I wasn't good-natured then," said the Idiot, regretfully; "and when I
+got through I stalked back into the house, scolded Mollie, sent Tommy to
+bed, and behaved like a bear for the rest of the evening."
+
+"And the people on the wall? They slunk away in despair, I suppose,"
+said the Poet.
+
+[Illustration: "'IT TOOK MY HIRED MAN TWO WEEKS TO SCRUB IT OUT'"]
+
+"Not they," said the Idiot; "not by a long shot. They combined against
+me, and next morning when I started for town I found my sidewalk in
+worse shape than ever. One flag had written upon it the pleasing mandate
+'Go drown yourself.' Another bore the mystic word 'Chump' in great
+capital letters, and at the end of my walk was a pastel portrait of
+myself, of rough and awkward composition, labelled with my name in full.
+It took my hired man two weeks to scrub it out. And on the following
+Hallowe'en they strung a huge banner on my telephone wires, inscribed
+'The Idiot Asylum,' and every blessed gate I have to my name had been
+removed from the premises."
+
+"What an outrage!" cried the Poet.
+
+"Not a bit of it. Merely a suburban ebullition," said the Idiot. "They
+don't mean anything by it. They are mere children, after all, and from
+their point of view I have interfered with their rights."
+
+"And you propose to stand all this?" asked the Poet. "If I were you I'd
+get a pile of broken bottles, as they do in England, and place them
+along the top of that wall so that they couldn't possibly use it."
+
+"Brutal custom, that," said the Idiot. "May do for Englishmen; won't do
+here at all. In the first place, it spoils the appearance of the wall;
+in the second place, it is not efficacious; in the third place, it would
+place me in a false position. Everybody'd soon be asking where I got all
+those bottles. An Englishman drinks enough beer in the course of a week
+to keep his walls covered with broken bottles for a century. I don't,
+and I'm not going to buy bottles. I've got a better scheme."
+
+"Ah!" cried the Poet. "Now we are coming to the invention."
+
+"Merely an extension of my 'Hired-Man-Discourager,'" said the Idiot.
+"Simple, and I trust efficacious. I am going to put a live wire along
+the coping of my wall. Broken bottles are cheap, my dear Poet, but
+they don't work. If I put broken bottles on my wall the Amalgamated
+Brotherhood of Wooers would meet on my lawn and pass resolutions against
+me, and ultimately they would demand the use of my parlor, unless I
+misunderstand their nature.
+
+"The lovers' rights must be respected always, and I'm truly thankful
+that they have stopped short at my frontage. When they operate along my
+frontier-line they are harmless, interesting, even amusing. If they
+carry their principles through and penetrate beyond the edge, why, then
+Mrs. Idiot and I will have to give it up.
+
+"My scheme is to make them feel that they are welcome to the wall, but
+to make the wall--well, to give an element of surprise to the wall. Just
+as Jimpsonberry's man is soon to be surprised electrically, which is
+legitimately, so do I propose to surprise these inconsiderate persons
+who cut down my hedges, who scribble up my sidewalk with their poems,
+and who hang Hallowe'en banners on my telephone wires. I wish them all
+well, but next spring when they attempt to revive the customs of the
+past they will find that even I am resentful."
+
+"But how?"
+
+"I shall have a wire running along the coping, as I have already said,
+that between the hours of eight and twelve p.m. will be so full of
+shocking things that my uninvited guests will cease to bother me. Can
+you imagine the effect of a live wire upon ten loving couples engaged in
+looking at the moon while sitting on it?"
+
+"Yet you claim to insist upon their rights as lovers," said the Poet,
+deprecatingly.
+
+"Certainly I do," said the Idiot. "Man has a right to make love wherever
+he can. If he can't make love on my wall, let him make love somewhere
+else."
+
+"But where?" cried the Poet. "Your swains up here have no home,
+apparently."
+
+"Or Jimpsonberry's wall," said the Idiot. "By the way, do you know
+anything about moths?"
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE MOTH
+
+
+"Do you know anything about the habits of moths?" repeated the Idiot.
+
+"Moths?" echoed the Poet, eying the Idiot closely, the transition from
+live wires to moths proving rather too sudden for his comprehension.
+"No, I don't know anything about moths except that I have heard that
+they are an unmitigated nuisance."
+
+"They are worse than a nuisance," said the Idiot. "They are a devouring
+element, and they are worse than fire. If your house catches fire you
+can summon an engine and have it put out, and what damage it does you
+can collect for if you are careful enough to keep your possessions
+insured; but with the moth it is different. There isn't any moth
+department in town that you can ring up, nor is there a
+moth-extinguisher that you can keep close at hand to fight them with.
+Furthermore, there is no moth-insurance company here or elsewhere to
+protect the man who suffers damage at their teeth, that I know of.
+
+"He is a mean, sneaking, underhanded element, the moth is. Fire has a
+decent sense of the proprieties. Moths have none at all. When fire
+attacks you it smokes, and crackles, and hisses, and roars, and lets you
+know in clarion tones that it has come. The moth steals upon you in the
+dead of night, and chews up your best trousers, gorges himself upon your
+wife's furs, tickles his palate with your swellest flannel golf-shirt,
+munches away upon your handsomest rug, punches holes in your best
+sofa-cushions with his tusks, and then silently folds his tent and
+steals away without so much as a thank-you for his meal. For unmitigated
+meanness commend me to the moth!"
+
+"You seem to speak with feeling," said the Poet, with a smile. "Have you
+suffered?"
+
+[Illustration: "'AN UNPAID GROCER'S BILL BECOMES AN ABSOLUTE PLEASURE'"]
+
+"Suffered?" cried the Idiot. "Suffered is not the word. They have
+tortured me. Alongside of the moth and his nefarious work even a
+book-agent pales into insignificance, and an unpaid grocer's bill
+becomes an absolute pleasure. You can meet a book-agent on his own
+ground, for you know his limitations. I have done so myself. Only
+yesterday one of them called upon me to sell me a Cyclopedia of Cookery,
+and before he got away I had actually sold him a copy of your poems."
+
+"Ah," said the Poet, shaking his head. "You sold my gift, did you?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," laughed the Idiot. "When your book came out I bought
+a copy, and two days later you sent me another with an inscription,
+which I treasure affectionately. I sold him the one I bought."
+
+"You are a beautiful Idiot," said the Poet, slapping his knee
+enthusiastically.
+
+"I don't lay claim so much to beauty as to sublimity," said the Idiot,
+lighting a cigar. "And even that is not to my credit. Beauty and
+sublimity are gifts. No amount of cultivation can produce genius when it
+does not exist. When I see a beautiful woman it is not she that I
+admire. I admire the gracious Hand that made her."
+
+"Give me that idea, old man!" cried the Poet.
+
+"It is yours from this on," said the Idiot, with a sigh. "I am not equal
+to it. I may be able to think thoughts, but thoughts are of no more use
+to me than a piano is to a man who can't read music. But we are becoming
+discursive. We were talking about moths, not thoughts. You said that I
+must have suffered, and I said that I had been tortured, and I have. My
+evening clothes have been ruined by them; my best shirts have been eaten
+by them; my silk hat, in which I have taken much pride, has four bald
+spots on its side because of their insatiable appetite, and as far as I
+can find out, I have no redress. You can't sue a moth for damages, you
+know, with any degree of satisfaction."
+
+"Why should you expect to sue a moth for damages any more than to have a
+mosquito indicted for assault?" suggested the Poet.
+
+"Oh, as for that," said the Idiot, "you can treat the mosquito without
+much difficulty. He merits capital punishment, and if you are yourself
+alert you can squash him at the moment of his crime. But the moth is
+different. You are absolutely helpless in the face of him. He works
+in secret."
+
+"I am told that there are such things as camphor-balls," observed the
+Poet.
+
+"There are," said the Idiot. "And I truly think the moth enjoys them as
+much as a young girl enjoys a military ball. Whenever we give a
+camphor-ball the moths attend, and as far as I can find out dance all
+through it. They seem to enjoy functions of that nature. Furthermore, I
+have yet to meet the man who likes to go about in a suit of clothes that
+smells like a drug-store. I don't. I hate the odor of camphor, and if I
+have my choice of going to a dinner in a perforated dress-suit or in one
+that is redolent of the camphor-ball, I prefer the one with holes in it.
+What I can't understand is why a race as proud as the one to which you
+and I belong should have to knuckle under to an inferior lot of insects
+such as the moth represents."
+
+[Illustration: "'THE LION, THE ELEPHANT, THE TIGER, ALL HAVE THEIR WORK
+TO DO'"]
+
+"I suppose there is something about it that we cannot understand," said
+the Poet, dreamily. "All created things have their uses. The lion, the
+elephant, the tiger, the boa-constrictor, all have their work to do in
+life. Even the mosquito has his mission, whatever it may be. You must
+admit this. Why not, therefore, admit that the moth serves a purpose in
+the great scheme of life?"
+
+"My dear Poet," said the Idiot, "far be it from me to deny the truth of
+what you say. There is hardly a living creature that I have ever
+encountered in all my life that has not had some truly utilitarian
+quality in its make-up. The lion is a splendid creature, and with the
+bear and the fox and the rhinoceros and the tapir he serves a purpose.
+They at least teach boys geography, and teach it interestingly. The boy
+who knows where the tapir hath its lair knows more geography than I do.
+My son Tommy has learned more of geography from a visit to the circus
+where those animals are shown than he ever learned from books. I can
+quite see likewise the utilitarian value of the mosquito. He keeps the
+sea-shore from being overcrowded, and he prevents some people from
+sleeping too much. He is an accomplished vocalist, and from my own point
+of view is superior to a Wagner opera, since Wagner opera puts me to
+sleep, while the magnificent discords of the mosquito keep me awake. But
+the moth is beyond me. What his contribution to the public welfare
+may be I cannot reason out, although I have tried."
+
+"And you find nothing in his favor?" asked the Poet.
+
+"Much," replied the Idiot, "but he has no system. His mission is to eat
+old clothes, but he is such a very disgusting glutton that he does not
+discriminate between old and new, and I have no use for him. If in his
+search for a meal he would choose the garments of three years ago, which
+I ought not to wear because they are so old-fashioned as to make me
+conspicuous when I do wear them, it would be all right. But the moth is
+no such discriminating person. He is not a lover of old vintages. When
+he calls in a number of his brother moths to dine at his expense he does
+not treat them to an overcoat of '89, or to a dress-suit of '93, or to a
+silk hat laid down in '95. He wants the latest thing, and as far as I
+can find out he gets it. I have just been compelled to lay in a new
+stock of under and over clothes because the ones I had have been served
+upon his table."
+
+"The moth must live," observed the Poet.
+
+[Illustration: "'THEY EAT UP MY NEW CLOTHES'"]
+
+[Illustration: "'WASTED MY ENERGY UPON THE UNRESPONSIVE AIR'"]
+
+"I'm perfectly willing he should if he'll only discriminate," retorted
+the Idiot. "We have enough old clothes in this house, my dear Poet, to
+give a banquet of seventeen courses to six hundred moths every night for
+the next six months. If they would content themselves with that I should
+be satisfied. But they won't. They eat up my new clothes; they destroy
+my new hats; they munch away upon my most treasured golf-vests. That is
+why I asked you if you knew anything about moths. I am anxious to reform
+them. As you have said, I have gone into inventing, and my inventions
+are wholly designed to meet long-felt wants in all households. The man
+who invents a scheme to circumvent or properly to satisfy the appetite
+of the moth will find his name indissolubly linked with fame. I have
+thought, and thought, and thought about it. The moth must either be
+domesticated or extinguished. I have tried to extinguish him, but
+without avail. When he has flown forth I have endeavored to punch him in
+the head, and I have wasted my energy upon the unresponsive air. Did you
+ever undertake to punch a moth in the head?"
+
+"Never," said the Poet. "I am not a fighter."
+
+"My dear boy," rejoined the Idiot, "I don't know a hero in real life or
+in fiction who could meet a moth on his own ground. I read about Mr.
+Willie B. Travers, of New York, who can drive four horses about the
+arena at the horse show without turning a hair. I read about Emerson
+McJones, of Boston, putting up his face against the administration on a
+question of national import. I have read of the prowess of Alexander, of
+Cæsar, of D'Artagnan, of Bonaparte, and of Teddy Roosevelt, but there
+isn't a man among 'em who can fight the moth. You can bombard him with a
+gatling-gun loaded to the muzzle with camphor-balls, and he still waves
+his banner defiantly in your face. You may lunge at him with a rapier,
+and he jumps lightly aside, and to express his contempt bites a hole in
+your parlor hangings. You can turn the hose on him, and he soars
+buoyantly away out of reach. You can't kill him, because you can't catch
+him. You can't drive him away, and until we go back to the dress of the
+knights of old and wear nickel-plated steel clothing, and live in rooms
+of solid masonry, we can't starve him out. There is, therefore, only one
+thing to do, and that is to domesticate him. If you in the course of
+your investigations into nature have ever discovered any trait in the
+moth that science can lay hold upon, something through which we can
+appeal to his better nature, if he has such a thing, you will be
+conferring a great boon upon the whole domestic world. What I want to
+find out is if he possesses some particularly well-defined taste; if
+there is any one kind of texture or fabric that he likes better than
+another. If there is such a thing I'll have a brand-new suit made of
+that same material especially for him, furnish a nice comfortable, warm
+spot in the attic as a dining-room, and let him feed there forevermore,
+when and how he pleases. The manners and customs of moths are an open
+book to most of us. His tastes are as mysterious as the ocean's depths."
+
+The Poet shook his head dubiously. "I am afraid, my dear Idiot, that you
+have at last tackled a problem that will prove too much for you. How to
+get at the point you desire is, I fear, impossible of discovery," he
+said.
+
+"It would seem so," replied the Idiot. "But I shall not despair. If the
+ordinary cook of commerce can be made humanly intelligent I do not see
+any reason why we should abandon so comparatively simple a proposition
+as the domesticization of the moth."
+
+Tommy and Mollie had been listening with great interest, and as the
+Idiot finished Mollie observed that she thought the best way to do was
+to ask the moth what he liked most, but Tommy had a less conciliatory
+plan.
+
+"Best thing's to get rid of 'em altogether, pa," he said. "Mollie and
+I'll squash 'em for you for fi' cents apiece."
+
+Which struck the Poet as the most practical idea that had been advanced
+during the discussion.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE BURGLAR
+
+
+"Are you ever bothered much by burglars off here in the country?" asked
+Mr. Pedagog one spring afternoon, as he and the Idiot and the youngsters
+strolled about the Idiot's small farm.
+
+"No," said the Idiot. "They've only visited me twice."
+
+"Only twice, eh?" observed the Schoolmaster. "Well, I should think that
+was often enough, considering that you haven't lived here more than a
+year and a half."
+
+"It was," said the Idiot. "I didn't say I wanted them to come again, did
+I?"
+
+"Of course not," returned Mr. Pedagog. "But you said 'only twice,' as if
+two visits of that nature were less than might have been expected."
+
+"Well, aren't they?" asked the Idiot. "Just make a little calculation.
+I've lived on this place precisely five hundred and ninety-four days,
+and, of course, an equal number of nights. It seems to me that in
+breaking into my house only twice when they might have come every night
+shows a degree of restraint upon our Suburban Burglary Company that is
+worthy of the highest commendation. You, of course, refer to
+professional burglars, don't you?"
+
+Mr. Pedagog laughed. "Are there any amateur burglars?"
+
+"Are there!" ejaculated the Idiot. "Well, rather. There is the Gasman,
+and man who inspects the water-meter, and the Iceman, and the Plumber.
+If you refer to that class, why, I have them with me always."
+
+"Which of the two classes do you prefer?" asked Mr. Pedagog, with a
+chuckle.
+
+"Well, I'm not quite sure as to that," returned the Idiot. "I've often
+wondered myself whether I preferred the straight-out honest pirate, who
+does his work surreptitiously by night, and who doesn't pretend to be
+anything but a pirate, or the sleek, insinuating chap, who comes into
+our house by day, and runs up a bill against you which in his heart of
+hearts he knows is not a proper one. There are burglars and burglars in
+this world, Mr. Pedagog, and the one who lands in the penitentiary is
+not always a bigger rascal than the fellow who holds the respect of the
+community and sets himself up as a prominent citizen. Highwaymen may be
+divided into classes, some of them respectable, others not. There was
+Dick Turpin, who ran honest risks to obtain a living; there are men in
+Wall Street who work greater ruin, and are held in higher esteem. There
+is the footpad who takes your watch, and pawns it to buy bread for his
+starving family, and there is the very charming young person who sits
+behind a table at a church fair, and charges you seven dollars for a
+fifty-cent sofa-cushion. So it goes. Socially I prefer the esteemed
+citizen who makes me pay twenty-eight dollars for ten dollars' worth of
+gas; but when it comes down to a strict business basis I must say I have
+lost less money through the operations of the professional thief than
+through those of the amateur highwayman. Take a recent case in my own
+experience, for instance. Only last week I sent anonymously a small
+clock which cost me twenty dollars to a guild fair here in town, and
+Mrs. Idiot bought it for a birthday present for me for forty dollars. In
+other words, I have a twenty-dollar clock on my hands that has cost me
+sixty dollars."
+
+"But you have the satisfaction of knowing that you have contributed to
+the good work of the guild," suggested Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"That is true enough," said the Idiot; "but the guild is only forty
+dollars to the good. They'd have been better off if I had given them
+fifty dollars in cash, and I'd have saved ten."
+
+"But you have the clock," insisted Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I certainly have," replied the Idiot; "and if time is money I shall
+soon be rich, for that clock makes time to beat the band. If it keeps on
+as it has started and we stand by it, we shall soon be about a month
+ahead of the sun. It gains a week every forty-eight hours. If that clock
+were truthful, I should be a centenarian at forty."
+
+"But you're not sorry you gave it?" said Mr. Pedagog, deprecatingly.
+
+"Not at all," said the Idiot. "My only regret is that Mrs. I. bought it.
+But," he added, hastily, "she needn't know that."
+
+"I won't say a word," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I won't, neither, pa," said Tommy, with a degree of complacency which
+showed that the temptation to tell was great.
+
+"Well, I won't say mor'n two or three words about it, anyhow," put in
+Mollie, not anxious to commit herself to perpetual silence on the
+subject.
+
+"It is the most beautiful clock I ever saw," said the Idiot, quickly,
+realizing the possibilities of Mollie's two or three words.
+
+"That's what I fink," said Mollie, "and I'm goin' to tell mamma that you
+said so."
+
+"All right," said the Idiot. "Suppose you and Tommy run right up and
+tell her now."
+
+"I'd rather hear you talk, pa," said Tommy.
+
+"He does take after you, doesn't he?" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot, "he does. He likes to hear me talk as much as I
+do, bless him!"
+
+"It is a commendable sign in a son," observed Mr. Pedagog. "But tell
+about the two professionals. Did they get anything?"
+
+"They did," said the Idiot. "And at the same time I lost nothing. The
+first chap came on the scene, along about two o'clock in the morning. He
+was a very industrious mechanic, and I regret to say he was not
+adequately paid for his services. He tackled the safe." At this point
+the Idiot threw back his head and laughed heartily.
+
+"I have seen the safe," said Mr. Pedagog, "and to tell you the truth, my
+dear Idiot, I have wondered at your choosing so obvious a receptacle for
+your valuables. It does not, to my mind, deny itself as a safe should.
+It advertises the fact that your silver, your wife's jewels perhaps, are
+within. I have spoken once or twice to our friend Mr. Brief about it."
+
+"No doubt," replied the Idiot. "However, I can't see why a safe has any
+disadvantages."
+
+"It lies in this," said Mr. Pedagog, impressively. "You confess at once
+to the burglar the exact location of the things he's after. Without a
+safe your silver, or Mrs. Idiot's jewels, such as they are, might be
+found anywhere in the house. But when you take the trouble to buy a
+safe, any burglar in creation who has ordinary common-sense must know
+that your valuables are concentrated in that one spot."
+
+"That, I rejoice to say," said the Idiot, "is the burglar's view."
+
+"You should not rejoice," said Mr. Pedagog, with some of his old-time
+severity. "You make his work so comparatively easy that he is content to
+follow a base profession, as you have termed it. Truly, I wonder at you.
+You place on your first floor a bald safe--"
+
+"I haven't seen any advertised as having a full head of hair," observed
+the Idiot, complacently.
+
+"You misunderstand me," said Mr. Pedagog. "When I say bald I mean
+evident, plain, obvious. You practically say: Here are the things which
+I value. What is to be found within this safe, Mr. Burglar, _are the
+very things you are after_. Therefore, say you to the burglar: Attack
+this safe. Break it open, rifle it of its contents; in other words, here
+is the swag, as I believe it is called."
+
+"You are wholly right," said the Idiot. "I bought that safe for that
+precise reason, and I bought a big one and a strong one. But you don't
+know the story of that safe, do you, Mr. Pedagog?"
+
+"I do not," said the Schoolmaster.
+
+"Then let me tell you," said the Idiot. "That safe has been broken open,
+and by a professional burglar. The burglar had his tools, and he had
+his expert knowledge of their use. He arrived at my house, as I recall
+the situation, somewhere about--ah--two o'clock at night. He bored at
+the lock until three. He fooled about the combination. He did everything
+that a respectable burglar might be expected to do, and--"
+
+"He failed, of course, since you say you have lost nothing," said Mr.
+Pedagog.
+
+"Not at all," said the Idiot. "After two hours and fifty-five minutes'
+work on that safe he got it open. And--"
+
+"And?" queried Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"He found it empty," said the Idiot; "absolutely empty. There was not a
+spoon, a fork, a tea-pot, or a diamond necklace, or even a scrap of
+paper in it."
+
+"Then why do you have it," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Merely to keep the burglar busy while he is in my house, and to make
+him expert in honest work. An ordinary mechanic, intelligent enough to
+get that safe open by night or by day, would be entitled to at least two
+dollars for his services. The individual involved got it open; and when
+he opened it--"
+
+"Found nothing!" cried Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Exactly," said the Idiot, pulling away on his cigar. "I suppose I
+should have left a check inside payable to bearer for a dollar and a
+half to compensate him for his trouble, but I am so neglectful that I
+really didn't."
+
+"And you bought a safe--"
+
+"Merely to provide employment for the unemployed burglar," said the
+Idiot. "That is all a safe is good for, Mr. Pedagog. Experience has
+shown that the house-safe isn't worth the paint it is covered with in
+the matter of protection. But as a decoy it works to a charm. A safe, in
+other words, is a splendid thing to keep things out of, as well as to
+keep the burglar busy while he is your guest. If our particular visitor
+had not spent all his time breaking the safe open he might have been
+able to locate our spoons."
+
+"It is a pity," said Mr. Pedagog, dryly, "that you did not add to the
+impression the futility of his work made upon his mind a short note of
+admonition indicating to him that he might be in better business."
+
+"My dear Mr. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "that would have been rude.
+Invited or otherwise, the man was a guest in my house, and a note of
+that kind would have savored of sarcasm, or, if not, would have placed
+me in the position of having taken advantage of my guest's weakness to
+be facetious at his expense."
+
+"You take an original view of it," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Not a bit of it," returned the Idiot. "I got the idea from a Boston
+girl. Once when she and her sister-in-law found themselves alone at
+night in a huge country-house they were suddenly overcome with fear of
+burglars, and rather than run any personal risk from the midnight
+marauder they left a big card on top of the safe inscribed with these
+words: 'Dear Sir,--The combination of this safe is 11-16-91. There is
+nothing in it. If you must have our silver, call at the Shawmut Safe
+Deposit Company, where it is now stored.' The two girls were cousins of
+mine."
+
+The Schoolmaster smiled again. "There must be a streak of your
+particular kind of genius running all through your family," said he.
+
+"True--there is," said the Idiot. "I'm not the only Idiot in my tribe."
+
+"And the second burglar. How about him?" asked Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Oh, he was easy," said the Idiot. "I compromised with him. You see, I
+met him on his way out. I was coming home late, and just as I arrived he
+was leaving. I invited him back, lit the gas in the dining-room, and
+asked him to join me in a bit of cold tongue and a bottle of beer. He
+tried to shuffle out of it, but when I said I preferred to reason with
+him rather than have him arrested he sat down, and we talked the
+situation over. I discovered that for about three hundred dollars' worth
+of my stuff that he had in a bag slung over his shoulder he might get as
+much as fifty dollars, and at great risk. I showed him how foolish that
+was, and offered to give him forty dollars if he'd leave the stuff, so
+saving me two hundred and sixty dollars, and avoiding all trouble for
+himself. He didn't like it at first, but under the genial influence of
+the beer and the cold tongue and my conversation he finally yielded, and
+walked out of my house with a check drawn to bearer for forty dollars in
+his pocket."
+
+"I am astonished at you!" cried Mr. Pedagog. "You compounded a felony."
+
+"Not exactly," said the Idiot. "I should have done so if I hadn't
+stopped payment on the check the next day."
+
+"Oh," said Mr. Pedagog, "I see!"
+
+"All I lost was the revenue-stamp on the check," said the Idiot.
+
+"And did you ever hear from the man again?"
+
+"Yes," observed the Idiot. "I met him on the train a day or two
+later--sat next to him in the smoking-car, in fact."
+
+"And did he know you?"
+
+"Yes. We had a very pleasant chat going to town. He said he was moving
+away from here. He couldn't stand it, he said. He was going to work in
+some new field where a man could get living pay for his work. Said he'd
+been robbed by some of our best people; what's the use of working for
+nothing? he asked. The poor man was kept down, and all that sort of
+talk."
+
+"And you parted friends?"
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "I felt rather sorry for him, and when he said
+good-bye I gave him a cigar and a five-dollar bill, and that was the end
+of him. I have since received a letter from him in which he said that my
+kindness was appreciated, and that I could leave my valuables out on the
+lawn all night hereafter with perfect impunity. 'There isn't a thief in
+our whole suburban gang would be mean enough to touch it after your
+kindness to me,' he wrote."
+
+"Extraordinary!" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Very," said the Idiot. "Nevertheless, I have not taken his hint about
+leaving my silver out-of-doors, and have worked as hard as ever on my
+patent burglar-alarm."
+
+"Oh, indeed! Have you a new idea in that line?" asked the Schoolmaster.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "It is wholly novel. It is designed to alarm the
+burglar, and not scare the people in the house. Did you ever hear of
+anything like that before?"
+
+"Never!" ejaculated Mr. Pedagog, with enthusiasm. "How is it to work?"
+
+"That," said the Idiot, "is what I am trying to find out. When I do I'll
+let you know, Doctor."
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+ MR. AND MRS. IDIOT
+ REQUEST THE PLEASURE OF YOUR COMPANY
+ AT DINNER
+ ON THURSDAY EVENING, May 31, 1900
+ AT HALF-AFTER SEVEN O'CLOCK
+ R.S.V.P. LAST CALL
+
+Handsomely engraved, a card bearing the above inscription was sent about
+the middle of May to all the Idiot's old friends of Mrs.
+Smithers-Pedagog's select home for gentlemen, and it is needless to say
+that they all accepted.
+
+"I wonder what the dickens he means by 'Last Call,'" said Mr. Brief to
+the Genial Old Gentleman who occasionally imbibed. "Sounds like the
+warning of the dining-car porter on a Pullman train."
+
+"I'm sure I can't imagine," said the other; "and what's more, I'm
+content to wait and find out. Of course you are going?"
+
+"I am, indeed," said Mr. Brief. "I'd travel farther than that for the
+pleasure of an hour with the dear old boy, and particularly now that he
+has so good a cook. Dined there lately?"
+
+"Yes," said the Genial Old Gentleman.
+
+"Had any of those mulled sardines he gives you Sunday nights?"
+
+"More than was good for me. Ain't they fine?" said the Genial Old
+Gentleman, smacking his lips ecstatically.
+
+"Immense!" said Mr. Brief. "A cook that can mull sardines like that is
+worth her weight in gold. Where do you suppose he got her?"
+
+"Why, he married her!" cried the Genial Old Gentleman, promptly. "Mrs.
+Idiot cooks those herself, on the chafing-dish. Didn't you know that?"
+
+"No," said Mr. Brief. "I happened in late Sunday night, and we had 'em.
+They were so awfully good I didn't do a thing but eat, and forgot to
+ask who cooked 'em."
+
+"It's the way of the world," sighed the Genial Old Gentleman. "We old
+bachelors have to get along on what comes to us, but the energetic chap
+who goes out into the world and marries the right sort of a woman--Jove,
+what a lucky chap he is!"
+
+"There's some truth in that," agreed Mr. Brief; "but, on the whole, just
+think what a terrible thing it would be to marry a bad cook, and to have
+to eat everything she prepared with an outward show of delight just to
+keep peace in the family."
+
+"That's your cautious lawyer's view of it," said the Genial Old
+Gentleman.
+
+"Why the deuce don't you get married yourself, then," said Mr. Brief.
+"If you feel that way--"
+
+"I don't want to," said the Genial Old Gentleman. "Fact is, Brief, old
+man, all I should ever marry for would be the comfort of a home, and I
+can always get that by going up to the Idiot's."
+
+The other invited guests were no less perplexed by the final words of
+the Idiot's invitation, and with the pleasure of accepting was mingled
+an agreeable curiosity to know what was meant by "Last Call." The
+evening came, and all were present. It was a goodly company, and by
+special favor the children were allowed to sit up and partake; and, what
+was more, Mary, the housemaid of the old days, assisted in the serving
+of the dinner.
+
+"Seems like old times," said Mr. Whitechoker, beaming at Mrs. Pedagog
+and smiling pleasantly at Mary. "I shall almost expect our host to be
+sarcastic."
+
+"Sarcasm, Mr. Whitechoker," said the Idiot, unfolding his napkin, "is
+all right in its place, but as I have grown older I haven't found that
+having given rein to it I was happier afterwards. Sometimes, no doubt,
+Mrs. Pedagog has thought me rude--"
+
+"Never!" said the ancient landlady.
+
+"Well, there's something worse than having others think you rude," said
+the Idiot. "That's realizing yourself that you have been so, and I hope
+Mrs. Pedagog will accept here and now an apology--a blanket
+apology--which shall cover a multitude of past sins."
+
+"My dear Idiot," said Mrs. Pedagog, "do you know how I have always
+thought of you?"
+
+"As a son," said Mr. Pedagog. "And I have felt towards you as a father."
+
+"I wonder you didn't give me a thrashing once in a while, then," said
+the Idiot.
+
+"We have often wished to," observed Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"John!" cried Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Well, _I_ have," said Mr. Pedagog. "Mrs. Pedagog has all the amiable
+weakness of a woman towards her naughty boy. Spank him next time, not
+this."
+
+Everybody laughed, and the Idiot rose from his place and walked to Mrs.
+Pedagog's side and kissed her.
+
+"You're a nice old mommie," he said, "and the naughty boy loves you.
+He'll be hanged if he'll kiss his daddy, though!" he added, with a
+glance at Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I will," said Mollie; and she did so.
+
+The old Schoolmaster returned the little girl's salute with emphasis.
+
+"Bless you, little one!" he said, huskily. "I love you even as I loved
+your papa."
+
+"I'm a-goin' to kiss everybody," said Tommy; and he started in with Mary
+and put his little scheme through to the bitter end. "What are we going
+to have for dessert?" he added, complacently, as he resumed his seat.
+
+"Idiot," said Mr. Brief, when the third course had been served, "what do
+you mean by 'Last Call?'"
+
+"We are going to give up housekeeping," said the Idiot.
+
+"No trouble, I hope," said Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"Lots!" ejaculated the Idiot. "But not very troublesome troubles. The
+fact is we intend to travel."
+
+"To travel, eh?" said the Genial Old Gentleman. "Where?"
+
+"Abroad," replied the Idiot. "We have never been abroad, you know. I've
+been abroad, and Mrs. Idiot has been abroad, but _we_ have never been
+abroad. We are going together this time, and we are going to take the
+children, and for a year we propose to see Europe under the most
+favorable conditions. I think that abroad will seem a little different
+if we go together."
+
+"Undoubtedly," said Mr. Whitechoker. "But London is a cold, godless
+place."
+
+"It is if you go alone," said the Idiot.
+
+"And Paris is vile," suggested Mr. Brief.
+
+"To the man who has only himself to think of," said the Idiot.
+
+"And Italy is dirty," said the Bibliomaniac.
+
+"There's water in Venice," observed the Idiot. "Not very clean water, to
+be sure, but wet enough to wash the edges of the sidewalks."
+
+"And travel is uncomfortable," observed the Poet.
+
+"Admitted," said the Idiot. "Travel is about the hardest work and the
+worst-paid work I know of, but we cannot help ourselves. Now that we are
+rich we must accept the penalties imposed by modern society upon the
+wealthy. You never knew a rich man to lead a comfortable life, did you,
+Mr. Pedagog?"
+
+"There are few of them who seem to know how," admitted the Schoolmaster.
+"But--you do."
+
+"No doubt," said the Idiot. "But you see I do not wish to be
+ostentatiously different from my kind, so having made a fortune I am
+going to live as people of fortune do and be as uncomfortable as I know
+how."
+
+"I don't understand about this fortune," said Mr. Brief. "Have you run
+up against a rich uncle somewhere, or is this sudden wealth the result
+of your inventions, concerning which we have heard so much lately?"
+
+"Neither," replied the Idiot. "The fact is, I made an investment some
+years ago in a certain stock, for which I paid twenty-three. I sold it
+three weeks ago for one hundred and sixty-three, clearing one hundred
+and forty dollars each on a thousand shares."
+
+The Poet gasped.
+
+"One hundred and forty thousand dollars profit!" cried Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot, calmly, "that's about the size of it. Terrible,
+isn't it? Here I was a happy man; content to stay at home and toil eight
+hours a day for a small stipend; living in tolerable comfort, and
+nothing to worry over. All of a sudden this thing happens, and like all
+other men of wealth I must become a wanderer. I shudder to think of what
+might have happened if I'd made a million; I shouldn't have had a home
+at all then."
+
+The guests looked at their host with amazement. To most of them he had
+reached the supreme moment of his idiocy.
+
+"Ahem!" said the Poet. "I fail to see why."
+
+"Look at the ways of the millionaire and you'll see," observed the
+Idiot, suavely. "Given his million he gives up his house and builds
+himself a small, first-class hotel in some big city, which for the
+greater part of the year is occupied by servants. He next erects a
+country palace at Lenox or at Newport. This he calls a cottage, though
+it usually looks more like a public library or a hospital or a
+club-house. Then he builds himself a camp, with stained-glass windows,
+in the Adirondacks, and has to float a small railroad in order to get
+himself and his wife's trunks into camp. Shortly after these follows a
+bungalow modelled after a French château, somewhere in the South, and
+then a yacht warranted to cross the ocean in ten days, and to produce
+sea-sickness twelve hours sooner than the regular ocean-steamer, becomes
+one of the necessities of life. Result, he never lives anywhere. To
+occupy all his residences, camps, and bungalows he has to keep eternally
+on the move, and when he thinks he needs a trip to Europe he has his
+yacht got ready and sends it over, going himself on a fast steamer. He
+meets his yacht at Southampton, and orders the captain to proceed
+directly to some Mediterranean port, going himself, meanwhile, to
+London. After a month of London he goes to Paris, and thence to the
+Mediterranean port, where, after steaming aboard of the yacht for three
+or four days, he sends the boat back to New York and returns himself by
+the regular liner. Oh, it's a terrible thing to be a millionaire and
+have nowhere to lay one's head, with every poorer man envying you, many
+hating you, and hands raised against you everywhere."
+
+There was a pause, and the assembled company properly expressed their
+appreciation of the millionaire's hard lot by silence.
+
+"The scheme has its advantages," observed Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Some," said the Idiot. "But think, my dear, of the town house with
+thirty-nine servants; the Newport house with thirty-four; the camp with
+sixty, including gamekeepers and guides; the bungalow with thirty more,
+and the yacht with a captain, a crew, stewards, stewardesses, and a cook
+you can't get away from without jumping overboard. Just think how that
+would multiply your troubles. You would come to me from time to time and
+ask me how I could expect you to discharge seven butlers and four cooks
+in one morning, and no doubt you'd request me sometimes to stop in at
+the intelligence office on my way home and employ a dozen housemaids for
+you."
+
+"But you would have a manager for all this," suggested Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"That's the point," observed the Idiot. "We'd have to have a manager,
+and for my part I shouldn't relish being managed. What chance would Mrs.
+Idiot have against a manager ahead of an army of servants of such
+magnitude? We have more than we can keep in subjection as we stand now,
+with this one small house. If it wasn't for Mary, who keeps an eye on
+things, I don't know what we should do."
+
+"Well, I am glad you're rich, pa," said Tommy; "you can increase my
+allowance."
+
+"And I can have a pony," lisped Mollie.
+
+"Alas! Poor children!" cried the Idiot. "That is the saddest part of
+wealth. Instead of bringing the little ones up ourselves, to be wholly
+fashionable it will be necessary to sublet the contract to a committee
+of tutors and governesses. The obligations of social life hereafter will
+require that we meet our children by appointment only, and that when
+they dine they shall eat in solitary grandeur until they become so
+polished in manners that their parents may once more formally welcome
+them at table. All the good old democratic ways of the domestic republic
+are now to be set aside. Tommy, instead of yelling for a buckwheat-cake
+at the top of his lungs, upon our return will request a butler in
+choicest French to hand him a _pâté de foie gras_; and dear little
+Mollie will have to give up attracting the waitress' attention by shying
+an olive-pit at her and imperiously summon her by means of an electric
+buzzer set to buzzing with her toe."
+
+"Mercy! What a picture of woe!" cried Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Not altogether true, is it?" suggested the Doctor.
+
+"Have you ever visited Newport?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"No," said the Doctor, "never."
+
+"Well, don't," said the Idiot, "unless you wish to look upon that
+picture--a picture of life whence childhood is abolished; where _blasé_
+little swells take the place of lively small boys, and diminutive grand
+duchesses, clad in regal garb, have supplanted the little daughters who
+bring smiles and sunshine into the life of the common people. Ah, my
+friends," the Idiot continued, with a shake of his head, "there are sad
+sights to be seen in this world, but I know of none sadder than those
+rich little scions of the American aristocracy in whose veins the good
+red blood of a not very remote ancestry has turned blue through too much
+high living and too little real living."
+
+"I should think you'd take that hundred and forty thousand dollars and
+throw it into the sea," said Mr. Brief.
+
+"That would be wicked waste," observed the Idiot. "I propose to use it
+to win back the good old home-life, and the best way to perpetuate that
+is to leave it for a time and travel. When you have travelled and seen
+how uncomfortable others are, and discovered how uncomfortable you are
+while travelling, nothing can exceed the bliss of getting back to the
+first simple principles of the real home."
+
+"As a sensible man, why don't you stay here, then?" queried the Poet.
+
+"Because," said the Idiot, "if I stayed here with that hundred and forty
+thousand dollars on my mind I should nurse it, and in a short while I'd
+become a millionaire, and such a misfortune as that I shall never
+invite. We shall go abroad and spend--"
+
+"Not all of it, I hope?" said Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"No," replied the Idiot. "But enough of it to mitigate the horrors of
+our condition while absent."
+
+And so it was that Castle Idiot was closed, and that for a time at least
+"The Idiot at Home" became a thing of the past. Wherever he and his
+small family may be, may I not bespeak for him the kindly, even
+affectionate, esteem of those who have followed him with me through
+these pages? He has his faults; they are many and manifest, for he has
+never shown the slightest disposition to conceal them, but, as Mrs.
+Pedagog remarked to me the other night, "He has a large heart, and it is
+in the right place. If he only wouldn't talk so much!"
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+By MARK TWAIN
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MAN THAT CORRUPTED HADLEYBURG, AND OTHER STORIES AND ESSAYS.
+Illustrated by LUCIUS HITCHCOCK and Others.
+
+THE AMERICAN CLAIMANT, AND OTHER STORIES AND SKETCHES.
+
+THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN. With Photogravure Portrait of the
+Author.
+
+A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT.
+
+THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER.
+
+LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI.
+
+TOM SAWYER ABROAD; TOM SAWYER, DETECTIVE; AND OTHER STORIES, ETC., ETC.
+
+ _New Library Edition from New Electrotype Plates. Illustrated.
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+
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+Cloth, Ornamental, $2.50.
+
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+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Idiot at Home, 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/license
+
+
+Title: The Idiot at Home
+
+Author: John Kendrick Bangs
+
+Illustrator: F. T. Richards
+
+Release Date: May 12, 2012 [EBook #39682]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IDIOT AT HOME ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Annie McGuire. This book was produced from
+scanned images of public domain material from the Internet
+Archive.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 386px;">
+<img src="images/ill_001.jpg" width="386" height="600" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 268px;">
+<img src="images/ill_002.jpg" width="268" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">JOHN KENDRICK BANGS</span>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>The Idiot at Home</h2>
+
+<h3>By</h3>
+
+<h2>John Kendrick Bangs</h2>
+
+<h3>Illustrated by</h3>
+
+<h2>F.&nbsp;T. Richards</h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 83px;">
+<img src="images/ill_003.jpg" width="83" height="100" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<h4>NEW YORK AND LONDON</h4>
+
+<h4>HARPER &amp; BROTHERS <i>Publishers</i></h4>
+
+<h4>1900</h4>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h2>BY THE SAME AUTHOR.</h2>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Booming of Acre Hill</span>. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Enchanted Typewriter</span>. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Peter Newell</span>. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Coffee and Repartee</span> and <span class="smcap">The Idiot</span>. 1 vol. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Dreamers: A Club</span>. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Edward Penfield</span>. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A Rebellious Heroine</span>, A Story. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">W.&nbsp;T. Smedley</span>. 16mo,
+Cloth, Ornamental, Uncut Edges, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">A House-Boat on the Styx</span>. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Peter Newell</span>. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Pursuit of the House-Boat</span>. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Peter Newell</span>. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Paste Jewels</span>. Being Seven Tales of Domestic Woe. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.00.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Ghosts I Have Met, and Some Others</span>. With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Newell</span>, <span class="smcap">Frost</span>,
+and <span class="smcap">Richards</span>. 16mo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Bicyclers, and Three Other Farces</span>. Illustrated, 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Peeps at People</span>. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Edward Penfield</span>. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Bonaparte of Corsica</span>. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">H.&nbsp;W. McVickar</span>. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The Water Ghost, and Others</span>. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth, Ornamental $1.25.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Three Weeks in Politics</span>. Illustrated. 32mo, Cloth, Ornamental, 50 cents.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h4>NEW YORK AND LONDON:</h4>
+
+<h4>HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS.</h4>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p class="center">Copyright, 1900, by <span class="smcap">John Kendrick Bangs</span>.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h4>TO</h4>
+
+<h4>"MISS BANGS OF LONDON"</h4>
+
+<h4>FROM</h4>
+
+<h4>"MR. BARNES OF NEW YORK"</h4>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="right">I.</td><td align="left"><a href="#I"><span class="smcap">By Way of Introduction</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">II.</td><td align="left"><a href="#II"><span class="smcap">A Little Dinner to Some Old Friends</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">III.</td><td align="left"><a href="#III"><span class="smcap">In the Library</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#IV"><span class="smcap">As to a Small Dinner</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">V.</td><td align="left"><a href="#V"><span class="smcap">On the Maintenance of An Attic</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#VI"><span class="smcap">The Idiot's Garden</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#VII"><span class="smcap">Household Poetry</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">VIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#VIII"><span class="smcap">Some Consideration of the Hired Man</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">IX.</td><td align="left"><a href="#IX"><span class="smcap">On Social Accounts</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">X.</td><td align="left"><a href="#X"><span class="smcap">As to Santa Claus</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#XI"><span class="smcap">As to New-Year's Day</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#XII"><span class="smcap">Some Domestic Intentions</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#XIII"><span class="smcap">A Suburban Complication</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XIV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#XIV"><span class="smcap">Some Consideration of the Moth</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#XV"><span class="smcap">Some Consideration of the Burglar</span></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">XVI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#XVI"><span class="smcap">Conclusion</span></a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="ILLUSTRATIONS" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</a></h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_004">"POSSESSED A LIBRARY OF FIRST EDITIONS"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_005">"'THEY NEVER HAD THE FUN OF BUYING THEM'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_006">"'GUARANTEED TO HANG ONTO A GARMENT IN A GALE'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_007">"'AND SOME PEOPLE SAY WAGNER IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN THAT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_008">"TOMMY AND MOLLIE GAVE THE COOK A GREAT DEAL OF TROUBLE"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_009">"'LET THE FATHERS LOOK AFTER THE CHILDREN AT NIGHT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_010">"A LITTLE FIGURE CLAD IN WHITE"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_011">"'I'D RATHER BE SPANKED THAN NOT NOTICED AT ALL'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_012">"'I DID NOT SMOKE UNTIL I WAS FIFTY'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_013">"'SMOKING KEEPS INSECTS FROM THE PLANTS'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_014">"THE BIBLIOMANIAC WAS INVESTIGATING THE CONTENTS OF THE LOWER SHELVES"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_015">"'I PREFERRED TO PAY THE $49.50'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_016">"THE COOK HAD TAKEN WINGS ONTO HERSELF"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_017">"'TWO BIG BOXES OF POTATOES, A CAN OF FRENCH PEASE, AND A BOTTLE OF SARSAPARILLA'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_018">"'THE PEOPLE DOWN-STAIRS BORROWED OUR DINING-ROOM CHAIRS'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_019">"'WHO WAS IT?' ASKED MRS. IDIOT"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_020">"'I SET OFF A GIANT CRACKER UNDER HIS CHAIR'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_021">"'WOULD HANG THAT PORTRAIT UPON THE WALL OF MY BEDROOM'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_022">"'STARTED TO PREACH WITH THE RECIPE FOR A WASHINGTON PIE'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_023">"'A LITTLE BUNDLE OF MY OWN LETTERS'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_024">"'WE SPRINKLED IT IN PERSON'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_025">"'HE DISCOVERED THE ONE PERFECT STALK'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_026">"'IT WOULD DE DEUCEDLY AWKWARD ... IF THEY WOULD EXPLODE IN THE MOUTH OF THE PERSON WHO WAS EATING THEM'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_027">"SHE COULD SLAM THEM DOWN ON THE HEARTH-STONES LIKE TORPEDOES'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_028">"'THE JOYS AND WOES OF THE TOILERS WHO MINED IT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_029">"'FOR THOUGH I'M BUT A CARPET-TACK,'" ETC.</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_030">"'I SHOULD HESITATE TO TRY TO DRIVE A CANAL-BOAT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_031">"'I HAVEN'T EVER HAD A HOME; I'VE ALWAYS BOARDED'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_032">"'I FEEL THAT I COULD GO OUT AND MOW THREE ACRES OF GRASS'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_033">"'HE WOULD GO OUT DAY AFTER DAY AND SIT DOWN BESIDE IT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_034">"'HE SHOVELS OFF A FOOT-PATH'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_035">"'SPEND A WHOLE DAY ON ONE WINDOW'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_036">"'WELL, I'M FOND OF GOLF'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_037">"'AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL TEA'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_038">"'THE BABY IS ROCKED TO SLEEP EVERY NIGHT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_039">"'POOR DICK DAWKINS ISN'T TAKEN CARE OF AT ALL'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_040">"'DR. PREACHLY ONLY GOT EIGHT PAIRS LAST XMAS'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_041">"'A CHINA DOLL TO THE DAUGHTER OF A CARPENTER'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_042">"'HULLO, SONNY! HAD A GOOD TIME?'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_043">"'I GAVE MY DOLLY AWAY TO-DAY'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_044">"'I DON'T QUITE CATCH YOUR DRIFT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_045">"'I FELT AS IF I HAD SWALLOWED AN OVERSHOE'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_046">"'I FOUND EIGHT SANDWICHES AND A PINT OF SALTED ALMONDS'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_047">"'THEY WERE FOUND SOME DAYS LATER WHEN THE ROOM WAS PUT IN ORDER'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_048">"'THERE'S NOT MUCH MONEY IN STOCKS'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_049">"'A NICE LITTLE BASKET-HAT ON HER HEAD TO HOLD THE PINS IN'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_050">"'AN ELECTRIC NOTICE TO QUIT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_051">FINDING OUT WHAT IS BEING COOKED FOR DINNER</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_052">"'COURTING HIS BEST GIRL ON SOME OTHER FELLOW'S STONE WALL'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_053">"'HOLDING UP A GREAT OSAGE ORANGE'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_054">"'THE PICTURE OF A HEART WITH AN ARROW DRAWN THROUGH IT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_055">"'IT TOOK MY HIRED MAN TWO WEEKS TO SCRUB IT OUT'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_056">"'AN UNPAID GROCER'S BILL BECOMES AN ABSOLUTE PLEASURE'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_057">"'THE LION, THE ELEPHANT, THE TIGER, ALL HAVE THEIR WORK TO DO'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_058">"'THEY EAT UP MY NEW CLOTHES'"</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><a href="#ILL_059">"'WASTED MY ENERGY UPON THE UNRESPONSIVE AIR'"</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2><a name="I" id="I">I</a></h2>
+
+<h3>BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION</h3>
+
+<p>"My dear," said the Idiot one morning, as he and his good wife and the
+two little ones, Mollie and Tommy, sat down at the breakfast-table, "now
+that we are finally settled in our new house I move we celebrate. Let's
+give a dinner to my old friends of Mrs. Smithers's; they were nice old
+people, and I should like to get them together again. I saw Dr. Pedagog
+in the city yesterday, and he inquired most affectionately, not to say
+anxiously, about the children."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should he be anxious about the children?" asked Mrs. Idiot,
+placidly, as she sweetened her husband's coffee. "Does he suspect them
+of lacking completeness or variety?"</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot tapped his forehead significantly.</p>
+
+<p>"He didn't know whether they take after you or after me, but I relieved
+his mind on that score," he said. "I told him that they didn't take
+after anybody that either of us ever knew. They have started in on a
+line of Idiocy that is entirely their own. He seemed very much pleased
+when I said that, and observed that he was glad to hear it."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"It was very nice of the Doctor to ask about them, but I am a little
+afraid he wants to take a hand in their bringing up," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt of it," said the Idiot. "Pedagog always was anxious to
+experiment. Many a time I have suspected him of having designs even on
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Pedagog told me last year that he had devised an entirely new
+system of home training," observed Mrs. Idiot, "and they both regretted
+that they had no children of their own to try it on."</p>
+
+<p>"And of course you offered to lend Tommy to them?" said the Idiot, with
+a sly glance at his son, who was stowing away his oatmeal at a rate that
+bade fair to create a famine.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Mrs. Idiot. "He's got to get raw material somewhere,
+and I thought Tommy would be just the thing."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I ain't a-goin'," said Tommy, helping himself liberally and for
+the third time to the oatmeal.</p>
+
+<p>"My son," said the Idiot, with a mock show of sternness, "if your mother
+chooses to lend you to any one it is not for you to say that you 'ain't
+a-goin'. It may be that I shall interfere to the extent of demanding to
+know what security for your safe return is offered, but otherwise
+neither you nor I shall intervene. What your mother says is law for you
+as well as for me. Please understand that, Thomas."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, pa," said Tommy; and then he added in an undertone,
+presumably to the butter, "But I ain't a-goin', just the same."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll go," said Mollie, who rather liked the idea of being lent to
+somebody, since it involved a visit to some strange and therefore
+fascinating spot away from home. "Lend me to somebody, will you, mamma?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, ma, lend Mollie to 'em," said Tommy, with, a certain dry
+enthusiasm, "and then maybe you can borrow a boy from somebody else for
+me to play with. I don't see why you don't swap her off for a boy,
+anyhow. I like her well enough, but what you ever wanted to buy her for
+in the beginning I don't know. Girls isn't any good."</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas," said the Idiot, "you talk too much, and, what is more, you say
+vain things which some day you will regret. When you get older you will
+recall this dictum of yours, that 'girls isn't any good,' with a blush
+of shame, and remember that your mother was once a girl."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, she's outgrown it," said Tommy; and then reverting to his
+father's choice of words, he added, "What is dictums, anyhow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh!" cried the little girl. "Smarty don't know what dictums is!"</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose you two young persons subside for a few minutes!" interrupted
+the Idiot. "I wish to talk to your mother, and I haven't got all day.
+You'll be wanting some bread and butter to-morrow, and I must go to town
+and earn it."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, pa," said Tommy. "I ain't got anything to say that I can't
+say to myself. I'd rather talk to myself, anyhow. You can be as sassy&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas!" said the Idiot, severely.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, pa," said Tommy; and with a side remark to the cream-jug,
+that he still thought Mollie ought to be swapped off for something, it
+didn't matter what as long as it wasn't another girl, the boy lapsed
+into a deep though merely temporary silence.</p>
+
+<p>"You said you'd like to give a dinner to Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog and the
+others," said Mrs. Idiot. "I quite approve."</p>
+
+<p>"I think it would be nice," returned the Idiot. "It has been more than
+six years since we were all together."</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't prefer having them at breakfast, would you?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot, with a smile. "I remember hearing you say once that breakfast was
+your best time."</p>
+
+<p>"How long is six years, pa?" asked Tommy.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Thomas," replied the Idiot, severely, "you are the most absurd
+creature. How long is six years!"</p>
+
+<p>"I meant in inches," said Tommy, unabashed. "You always told me to ask
+you when I wanted to know things. Of course, if you don't know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It's more'n a mile, I guess," observed Mollie, with some superiority of
+manner. "Ain't it, pa?"</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot glanced at his wife in despair.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think, my dear, that I am as strong at breakfast as I used to
+be," said he. "There was a time when I could hold my own, but things
+seem to have changed. Make it dinner; and, Tommy, when you have deep
+problems to solve, like how long is six years in inches, try to work
+them out for yourself. It will fix the results more firmly in your
+mind."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, pa," replied Tommy; "I thought maybe you knew. I thought you
+said you knew everything."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 271px;"><a name="ILL_004" id="ILL_004"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_004.jpg" width="271" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;POSSESSED A LIBRARY OF FIRST EDITIONS&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>In accordance with the Idiot's suggestion the invitations were sent out.
+It was a most agreeable proposition as far as his wife was concerned,
+for the Idiot's old associates, his fellow-boarders at Mrs.
+Smithers-Pedagog's "High-Class Home for Single Gentlemen," had proved
+to be the stanchest of his friends. They had, as time passed on, gone
+their several ways. The Poet had made himself so famous that even his
+bad things got into print; the Bibliomaniac, by an unexpected stroke of
+fortune, had come into possession of his own again, and now possessed a
+library of first editions that auctioneers looked upon with envious
+eyes, and which aroused the hatred of many another collector. The Doctor
+had prospered equally, and was now one of the most successful operators
+for appendicitis; in fact, could now afford to refuse all other practice
+than that involved in that delicate and popular line of work. The genial
+gentleman who occasionally imbibed had not wholly reformed, but, as the
+Idiot put it, had developed into one who occasionally did <i>not</i> imbibe.
+Mr. Brief had become an assistant district attorney, and was prominently
+mentioned for a judgeship, and Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog lived placidly along
+together, never for an instant regretting the inspiration which led them
+to economize by making two into one. In short, time and fortune had
+dealt kindly with all, even with Mary, the housemaid, who was now
+general manager of the nursery in the Idiot's household.</p>
+
+<p>The home life of "Mr. and Mrs. Idiot" had been all that either of the
+young people could have wished for, and prosperity had waited upon them
+in all things. The Idiot had become a partner in the business of his
+father-in-law, and even in bad times had managed to save something,
+until now, with two children, aged five and six, he found himself the
+possessor of his own home in a suburban city. It had been finished only
+a month when the proposed dinner was first mentioned, and the natural
+pride of its master and mistress was delightful to look upon.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, do you know, my dear," said the Idiot one evening, on his return
+from town, "they are talking of asking me to resign from the club
+because they say I am offensive about this place, and Watson says my
+conversation has become a bore to everybody because the burden of my
+song yesterday was pots and pans and kettles and things like that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose clubmen are not interested in pots and pans and kettles and
+things," Mrs. Idiot observed. "Some people aren't, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Not interested?" echoed the Idiot. "What kind of people can they be not
+to be interested in pots and pans and kettles and things? I guess it's
+because of their dense ignorance."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 217px;"><a name="ILL_005" id="ILL_005"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_005.jpg" width="217" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THEY NEVER HAD THE FUN OF BUYING THEM&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"They never had the fun of buying them, perhaps," suggested Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly," assented the Idiot. "And I'll tell you one thing, Pollie,
+dear," he added, "if they had had that fun just once, instead of
+squandering their savings on clothes and the theatre, and on horses,
+you'd find every blessed one of those chaps thronging the hardware shops
+all day and spending their money there. Why, do you know I even enjoyed
+getting the clothes-pins, and what is more, it was instructive. I never
+knew before what countless varieties of clothes-pins there were. There's
+the plain kind of commerce that look like a pair of legs with a polo-cap
+on. I was brought up on those, and I used to steal them when I was a
+small boy, to act as understudies for Noah and Shem and Ham and Japheth
+in my Noah's ark. Then there's the patent kind with a spring to it that
+is guaranteed to hang onto a garment in a gale if it has to let go of
+the rope. Very few people realize the infinite variety of the
+clothes-pin, and when I try to tell these chaps at the club about it
+they yawn and try to change the subject to things like German opera and
+impressionism and international complications."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 298px;"><a name="ILL_006" id="ILL_006"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_006.jpg" width="298" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;GUARANTEED TO HANG ONTO A GARMENT IN A GALE&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"How foolish of them!" laughed Mrs. Idiot. "The idea of preferring to
+talk of Wagner when one can discourse upon clothes-pins!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid you are sarcastic," rejoined the Idiot. "But you needn't
+be; if you'd only reason it out you'd see at once that my view is
+correct. Anybody can talk about Wagner. Any person who knows a picture
+from a cable-car can talk with seeming intelligence on art, and even a
+member of Congress can talk about international complications off-hand
+for hours; but how many of these people know about clothes-pins?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very few," said Mrs. Idiot, meekly.</p>
+
+<p>"Very few, indeed," observed the Idiot. "And the same way with
+egg-beaters. I'll bet you a laundry-stove that if I should write to the
+<i>Recorder</i> to-morrow morning, and ask a question about Wagner, the
+musical editor would give me an answer within twenty-four hours; but
+with reference to egg-beaters it would take 'em a week to find out. And
+that's just the trouble. The newspapers are filled up with stuff that
+everybody knows about, but they don't know a thing about other things on
+the subject of which the public is ignorant."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said Mrs. Idiot, reflectively, "that that is probably due to
+the fact that they consider Wagner more important than an egg-beater."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 354px;"><a name="ILL_007" id="ILL_007"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_007.jpg" width="354" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;AND SOME PEOPLE SAY WAGNER IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN
+THAT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Well, then, they don't know, that's all," rejoined the Idiot, rising
+and walking out into the kitchen and taking the fascinating object over
+which he was waxing so enthusiastic from the dresser drawer. "Just look
+at that!" he cried, turning the cog-wheel which set the three
+intersecting metal loops whizzing like a squirrel in its wheel-cage.
+"Just look at that! It's beautiful, and some people say Wagner is more
+important than that."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I must say, my dear," said Mrs. Idiot, "that I have a leaning
+that way myself. Of course, I admit the charm of the egg-beater, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me one thing," demanded the Idiot. "Can you get along without
+Wagner?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes," Mrs. Idiot replied, "if I have to."</p>
+
+<p>"And can you get along without an egg-beater?" he cried, triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>The evidence was overwhelming, and Mrs. Idiot, with an appreciative
+ebullition of mirth, acknowledged herself defeated, and so charmingly
+withal, that the next day when her husband returned home he brought her
+two tickets for the opera of Siegfried as a reward for her graceful
+submission.</p>
+
+<p>"I could have bought ten dozen muffin-rings for the same money," said
+he, as he gave them to her, "but people who know when to give in, and do
+give in as amiably as you do, my dear, deserve to be rewarded; and, on
+the whole, when you use these tickets, if you'll ask me, I think I'll
+escort you to Siegfried myself."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="II" id="II">II</a></h2>
+
+<h3>A LITTLE DINNER TO SOME OLD FRIENDS</h3>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 455px;"><a name="ILL_008" id="ILL_008"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_008.jpg" width="455" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;TOMMY AND MOLLIE GAVE THE COOK A GREAT DEAL OF TROUBLE&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Ten days later all was excitement at the Idiot's new home. Tommy and
+Mollie were in a state bordering upon frenzy, and gave the cook a great
+deal of trouble, requesting a taste of this, that, and the other thing,
+which she was preparing for the dinner to Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog, the
+Bibliomaniac, and the others. Inwardly, too, they were somewhat
+wrathful, for they could not understand why they were not permitted to
+dine with their parents as usual.</p>
+
+<p>"I guess maybe it's your manners that keeps you away, Tommy," said
+Mollie.</p>
+
+<p>"Hoh!" said Tommy. "It can't be that, because pa says I ain't got any.
+It's because you're too young to be introdoosed into society, and I've
+got to stay up-stairs and look after you. If you weren't a girl!"</p>
+
+<p>Here Tommy clenched his fists and looked unutterable things. Mollie
+shuddered and was glad she was a girl as she imagined the awful things
+Tommy would do to her had she been a boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Neither of 'em's it, Tommy," she said, in a conciliatory manner. "It's
+because they ain't got enough dining-room chairs, that's why. I know,
+because I counted 'em, and there's only eight, and there's nine people
+comin'."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess maybe that's it," said Tommy, pacified somewhat. "And anyhow, I
+don't care. I saw that piece of paper ma gave Jennie, and she wrote down
+all the things they're goin' to have, and it's goin' to be two hours
+between the soup and the ice-cream. I couldn't ever wait that long for
+the ice-cream. I don't see why they don't begin with ice-cream."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess maybe we're better off as it is," said Mollie. "Popper and
+mommer ain't likely to forget us, and, besides, we can talk."</p>
+
+<p>And with this comforting reflection the little ones retired to their
+nursery contented in mind and spirit&mdash;and they didn't suffer a bit.
+Their "popper and mommer" didn't forget them. The ice-cream was
+excellent, and they had their share of it almost before the guests began
+with their oysters.</p>
+
+<p>At seven o'clock Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog had arrived, and at seven-ten all
+the invited guests were present.</p>
+
+<p>"If it hadn't been for my wife," Mr. Pedagog whispered in his host's
+ear, "I should have been late, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't apologize, old man," replied the Idiot, gripping the
+Schoolmaster's hand warmly. "I sometimes go to dinners on time myself."</p>
+
+<p>In a few moments dinner was announced, and shortly after all were
+seated, and in memory of old times the guests naturally waited for the
+Idiot to begin.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know," he said, as he squeezed the juice from a luscious lemon
+over an unprotesting oyster, at the same time glancing affectionately
+over the company, "I haven't felt so much at home for years as I do
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"Not very complimentary to your wife," said Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I know what he means," observed Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"And I have so many other opportunities to compliment her," said the
+Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"But really, Mrs. Pedagog," he added, addressing the good lady who sat
+at his right, "I feel absolutely contented to-night. All the good things
+of the past and of the present seem to be concentrated about this
+board&mdash;except the three up-stairs, who can't very well be here."</p>
+
+<p>"Three?" asked Mr. Pedagog. "I thought there were only two&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said the Idiot. "Tommy and Mollie, but there is Mary, your
+old housemaid. We can't very well ask them to dine with us, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see why Tommy and Mollie can't be invited," said Mr. Pedagog,
+much to the Idiot's surprise, it seemed so like a violation of his
+system, as it might be presumed to be.</p>
+
+<p>"You believe in having children at table, then, Mr. Pedagog?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Most certainly," said the Schoolmaster. Mrs. Pedagog glanced smilingly
+at Mrs. Idiot, as much as to say, "Oh, these men!"</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly do approve of having children at table on all occasions,"
+he continued. "How else are they to learn how to conduct themselves? The
+discipline of the nursery is apt to be lax, and it is my belief that
+many of the bad table manners of the present-day child are due to the
+sense of freedom which eating dinner in the nursery naturally
+inculcates."</p>
+
+<p>"There is something in what you say," said the Idiot. "Tommy, for
+instance, never learned to throw a French pancake across the table at
+his sister by watching his mother and myself here in the dining-room,
+yet in the freedom of the nursery I have known it done."</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely," said Mr. Pedagog. "That very little incident illustrates my
+point exactly. And I have no doubt that in the nursery the offence
+seemed less heinous than it would had it occurred in the dining-room,
+and hence did not meet with the full measure of punishment that it
+deserved."</p>
+
+<p>"I have forgotten exactly what was done on that occasion," said the
+Idiot, calmly. "It is my impression that I compelled Thomas to eat the
+pancake."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure I never heard of the incident before," said Mrs. Idiot, her
+cheeks growing very red. "He didn't really, did he, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"By jove!" cried the Idiot, snapping his forefinger against his thumb,
+"what a traitor I am, to be sure. I promised Thomas never to tell, and
+here I've given the poor little chap away; but the boy was excusable, I
+assure you all&mdash;that is, he was excusable in a sense. Mollie had
+previously hit him in the eye with a salted almond, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite evident," put in Mrs. Pedagog, her womanly sympathy leading
+her to rush to the aid of Mrs. Idiot, who seemed somewhat mortified over
+the Idiot's confidences, "that you were not at home, my dear. I have
+myself observed that extraordinary episodes of this nature generally
+happen when it is the father who is left in charge of the children."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite right, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Doctor, nodding his head gravely.
+"I have noticed the same thing in my professional practice. As long as
+the mother is about discipline is maintained, but once leave the father
+in charge and riot is the order of the day."</p>
+
+<p>"That's exactly what I was going to say," said the Idiot. "Many a time
+when Mrs. Idiot has gone out shopping, as she did on the day in
+question, and I have remained at home for a rest, I have wished
+before evening came that I had gone shopping and let my wife have the
+rest. As a matter of fact, the bringing up of children should be left to
+the mother&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, but the father should have something to do with it," interrupted
+Mrs. Idiot. "It is too great a responsibility to place on a woman's
+shoulders."</p>
+
+<p>"You didn't let me finish, my dear," said the Idiot, amiably. "I was
+going to say that the mother should bring the children up, and the
+father should take 'em down when they get up too high."</p>
+
+<p>"My views to a dot," said Mr. Pedagog, with more enthusiasm than he had
+ever yet shown over the Idiot's dicta. "Just as in ordinary colonial
+government, the home authorities should govern, and when necessary a
+stronger power should intervene."</p>
+
+<p>"Ideal&mdash;is it not?" laughed Mrs. Idiot, addressing Mrs. Pedagog. "The
+mother, Spain. The children, Cuba. Papa, the great and glorious United
+States!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ahem! Well," said Mr. Pedagog, "I didn't mean that exactly, you know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But it's what you said, John," said Mrs. Pedagog, somewhat severely.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 216px;"><a name="ILL_009" id="ILL_009"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_009.jpg" width="216" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;LET THE FATHERS LOOK AFTER THE CHILDREN AT NIGHT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't see why there can't be a division of responsibility,"
+said the Poet, who had never married, and who knew children only as a
+theory. "Let the mothers look after them in the daytime, and the fathers
+at night."</p>
+
+<p>This sally was greeted with an outburst of applause, it was so
+practical.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me!" said the Idiot. "I'm not selfish, but I don't want to have
+charge of the children at night. Why, when Tommy was cutting his teeth I
+suffered agonies when night came on. I was down-town all day, and so
+wasn't very much bothered then, but at night it was something awful. Not
+only Tommy's tooth, but the fear that his mother would tread on a tack."</p>
+
+<p>"That was unselfish," said Mr. Pedagog, dryly. "You weren't afraid of
+treading on one yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"How could I?" said the Idiot. "I had all I could do trying to keep my
+wife from knowing that I was disturbed. It is bad enough to be worried
+over a crying babe, without being bothered by an irritated husband, so I
+simply lay there pretending to be asleep and snoring away for dear
+life."</p>
+
+<p>"You are the most considerate man I ever heard of," said Mrs. Pedagog,
+smiling broadly.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean to say," said the Poet, with a frown, "that you made
+your wife get up and take all the trouble and bother&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'd only have been in the way," said the Idiot, meekly.</p>
+
+<p>"So he kept quiet and pretended to snore like the good old Idiot that he
+is," put in the Doctor. "And he did the right thing, too," he added. "If
+all fathers would obliterate themselves on occasions of that sort, and
+let the mothers rule, the Tommys and Dickies and Harrys would go to
+sleep a great deal more quickly."</p>
+
+<p>"We are rambling," said Mr. Pedagog. "The question of a father's duty
+towards a teething son has nothing to do with the question of a child's
+right to dine with his parents."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know," said the Idiot. "If we are to consider this matter
+scientifically we must start right. Teething is a natural first step,
+for if a child hath no teeth, wherewithal shall he eat dinners with his
+parents or without them?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is all very well," retorted Mr. Pedagog, "but to discuss
+fire-engines intelligently it is not necessary to go back to the times
+of Elisha to begin it."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Whitechoker&mdash;now the Rev. Theophilus Whitechoker, D.D., for he, too,
+had prospered&mdash;smiled deprecatingly. There is no man in the world who
+more thoroughly appreciates a biblical joke than the prosperous
+clergyman.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said the Idiot, reflectively, "I quite agree with your
+proposition that children should dine in the dining-room with their
+parents and not up-stairs in the nursery, with a lot of tin soldiers and
+golliwogs. The manners of parents are no better than those of tin
+soldiers and golliwogs, but their conversation is apt to prove more
+instructive; and as for the stern father who says his children must dine
+in the kitchen until they learn better manners, I never had much
+confidence in him or in his manners, either."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see," said the genial old gentleman who occasionally imbibed,
+"how you can discipline children in the nursery. If they misbehave in
+the dining-room you can send them up-stairs to the nursery, but if they
+misbehave in the nursery, where the deuce can you send them?"</p>
+
+<p>"To bed," said Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" cried the Idiot. "Children, Mr. Brief, as I understand
+them&mdash;and I have known three very well; myself as a boy, and Tommy and
+Mollie&mdash;children, as I understand them, are never naughty for the mere
+fun of being so. Their wickedness grows out of their wonderful stores of
+unexpended and unexpendable energy. Take my son Thomas on last Saturday
+afternoon, for instance. It was a rainy Saturday, and Tommy, instead of
+being out-of-doors all morning and afternoon getting rid of his
+superfluous vitality, had been cooped up in the house all day doing
+nothing. Shortly before dinner we had a difference of opinion which
+lasted for more time than I like to think about. I was tired and
+irritable. Tommy wasn't tired, but he <i>was</i> irritable, and, from his
+point of view, was as right as I was. He had the best of me to the
+extent that I was tired and he wasn't. I had the best of him to the
+extent that I had authority and he hadn't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And who came out ahead?" asked Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"I did," said the Idiot, "because I was bigger than he was; but what I
+was going to say was this: Mr. Brief would have sent him to bed,
+thereby adding to the boy's stock of energy, already too great for his
+little mind to control."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 292px;"><a name="ILL_010" id="ILL_010"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_010.jpg" width="292" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;A LITTLE FIGURE CLAD IN WHITE&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"And what did you do?" asked Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothin'," said a small but unmistakably masculine voice from behind the
+portieres.</p>
+
+<p>"Thomas!" said the Idiot, severely, as all turned to see who had spoken.</p>
+
+<p>A little figure clad in white, ably supported by a still smaller figure,
+also clad in white, but with an additional ruffle about the neck, both
+of them barefooted, appeared in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Mollie!" said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"We comed down to thee how you wath gettin' along," said the little
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we did," said the boy. "But he didn't do a thing to me that day,"
+he added, climbing on his father's knee and snuggling down against his
+vest-pocket with a sweet little sigh of satisfaction. "Did you, pa?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Thomas," said the Idiot. "Don't you remember that I ignored you
+utterly?"</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 321px;"><a name="ILL_011" id="ILL_011"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_011.jpg" width="321" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I&#39;D RATHER BE SPANKED THAN NOT NOTICED AT ALL&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do," said Tommy. "But I'd rather be spanked than not noticed at
+all."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid," said Mr. Pedagog a few hours later, as he and Mrs.
+Pedagog were returning home, "I am very much afraid that the Idiot's
+children are being spoiled."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope they are!" returned the good lady, "for really, John, I never
+knew a boy or a girl to grow into man or womanhood and amount to
+anything who hadn't been spoiled in childhood. Spoiling is another name
+for the attitude of parents who make comrades of their children and who
+do not set themselves up as tyrants&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But the veneration of a child for his father and mother&mdash;" Mr. Pedagog
+began.</p>
+
+<p>"Should not degenerate into the awe which one feels for an unrelenting
+despot!" interrupted Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>The old gentleman discreetly retired from the field.</p>
+
+<p>As for Mrs. and Mr. Idiot, they retired that night satisfied with the
+evening's diversion, and just before he turned out the light the Idiot
+walked into the nursery to say good-night to the children.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a good old pop!" said Tommy, with an affectionate hug. "<i>The
+best I ever had!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>As for Mollie, she was sleeping soundly, with a smile on her placid
+little face which showed that, "spoiled" as she was, she was happy; and
+what should the Idiot or any one else seek to bring into a child's life
+but happiness?</p>
+
+<h2><a name="III" id="III">III</a></h2>
+
+<h3>IN THE LIBRARY</h3>
+
+<p>The Bibliomaniac had come off into the country to spend Sunday with the
+Idiot, and, as fortune would have it, Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog also appeared
+on the scene. After the mid-day dinner the little party withdrew to the
+library, where the Bibliomaniac began to discourse somewhat learnedly
+upon his hobby.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad to see, my dear Idiot," he observed, as he glanced about the
+room at the well-filled shelves, "that as you grow older you are
+cultivating a love of good literature."</p>
+
+<p>"I heartily echo the sentiment," said Mr. Pedagog, as he noted the
+titles of some of the volumes. "I may add that I am pleasurably
+surprised at some of your selections. I never knew, for instance, that
+you cared for Dryden, and yet I see here on the top shelf a voluminous
+edition of that poet."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot. "I have found Dryden very useful indeed.
+Particularly in that binding and in so many volumes. The color goes very
+well with the hangings, and the space the books occupy, eked out by a
+dozen others of the same color, gives to that top shelf all the esthetic
+effect of an attractive and tasteful frieze. Then, too, it is always
+well," he added, with a sly wink at Mrs. Idiot, "to have a lot of books
+for a top shelf that is difficult to reach that nothing under the canopy
+could induce you to read. It is not healthful to be stretching upward,
+and with Dryden upon the top shelf my wife and I are never tempted to
+undermine our constitutions by taking him down."</p>
+
+<p>The Bibliomaniac laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Your view is at least characteristic," said he, "and to tell you the
+absolute truth, I do not know that your judgment of the literary value
+of Dryden is at variance with my own. Somebody called him the Greatest
+Poet of a Little Age. Perhaps if the age had been bigger he'd not have
+shone so brilliantly."</p>
+
+<p>"Lowell," observed Mr. Pedagog, "was responsible for that remark, if I
+remember rightly, and I have no doubt it is a just one, and yet I do not
+hold it up against Dryden. Man does not make the age. The age makes the
+man. Had there been any inspiring influences at work to give him a
+motive, an incentive, Dryden might have been a greater poet. To excel
+his fellows was all that could rightly be expected of him, and that he
+did."</p>
+
+<p>"Assuredly," said the Idiot. "That has always been my view, and to-day
+we benefit by it. If he had gone directly to oblivion, Mrs. Idiot and I
+should have been utterly at a loss to know what to put on that top
+shelf."</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot offered his visitors a cigar.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said the Bibliomaniac, taking his and sniffing at it with
+all the airs and graces of a connoisseur.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 249px;"><a name="ILL_012" id="ILL_012"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_012.jpg" width="249" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I DID NOT SMOKE UNTIL I WAS FIFTY&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I don't know but that I will join you," said Mr. Pedagog. "I did not
+smoke until I was fifty, and I suppose I ought not to have taken it up
+then, but I did, and I have taken a great deal of comfort out of it. My
+allowance is fifty-two cigars a year, one for each Sunday afternoon," he
+added, with a kindly smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you want to look out you don't get smoker's heart," said the
+Idiot. "When a man plunges into a bad habit as rashly as that, he wants
+to pull up before it is too late."</p>
+
+<p>"I have felt no ill effects since the first one," rejoined Mr. Pedagog.
+"But you, my dear Idiot, how about your allowance? Is it still as great
+as ever? As I remember you in the old days you were something of a
+cigarette fiend."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 399px;"><a name="ILL_013" id="ILL_013"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_013.jpg" width="399" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;SMOKING KEEPS INSECTS FROM THE PLANTS&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I smoke just as much, but with this difference: I do not smoke for
+pleasure any more, Mr. Pedagog," the Idiot replied. "As a householder I
+smoke from a sense of duty. It keeps moths out of the house, and insects
+from the plants."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 329px;"><a name="ILL_014" id="ILL_014"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_014.jpg" width="329" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;THE BIBLIOMANIAC WAS INVESTIGATING THE CONTENTS OF THE
+LOWER SHELVES&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Bibliomaniac meanwhile had been investigating the contents of the
+lower shelves.</p>
+
+<p>"You've got a few rare things here, I see," he observed, taking up a
+volume of short sketches illustrated by Leech, in color. "This small
+tome is worth its weight in gold. Where did you pick it up?"</p>
+
+<p>"Auction," said the Idiot. "I didn't buy it by weight, either. I bought
+it by mistake. The colored pictures fascinated me, and when it was
+put up I bawled out 'fifteen.' Another fellow said 'sixteen.' I wasn't
+going to split nickels so I bid 'twenty.' So we kept at it until it was
+run up to 'thirty-six.' Then I thought I'd break the other fellow's
+heart by bidding fifty, and it was knocked down to me."</p>
+
+<p>"That's a stiff price, but on the whole it's worth it," said the
+Bibliomaniac, stroking the back of the book caressingly.</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Mr. Pedagog, "if you bid on it consciously where did the
+mistake come in?"</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot sighed. "I meant cents," he said, "but the other chap and the
+auctioneer meant dollars. I went up and planked down a half-dollar and
+was immediately made aware of my error."</p>
+
+<p>"But you could have explained," said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 378px;"><a name="ILL_015" id="ILL_015"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_015.jpg" width="378" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I PREFERRED TO PAY THE $49.50&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," said the Idiot, "I <i>could</i>, but after all I preferred to pay
+the extra $49.50 rather than make a public confession of such infernal
+innocence before some sixty or seventy <i>habitues</i> of a book-auction
+room."</p>
+
+<p>"And you were perfectly right!" said the Bibliomaniac. "You never would
+have dared set your foot in that place again if you had explained. They
+would have made life a burden to you. Furthermore, you have not paid too
+dearly for the experience. The book is worth forty dollars; and to learn
+better than to despise the man who makes his bid cautiously, and who
+advances by small bids rather than by antelopian jumps, is worth many
+times ten dollars to the man who collects rare books seriously. In the
+early days I scorned to break a five-dollar bill when I was bidding,
+just as you refused, as you put it, to split nickels, and many a time I
+have paid as high as twenty-five dollars for books that could have been
+had for twenty-one, because of that foolish sentiment."</p>
+
+<p>"I have often wondered," Mr. Pedagog put in at this point, holding his
+cigar in a gingerly and awed fashion, taking a puff at it between words,
+by which symptoms the man who seldom smokes may always be identified, "I
+have often wondered what was the mission of a private library, anyhow.
+And now that I find you two gentlemen interested in a phase of
+book-collecting with which I have had little sympathy myself, possibly I
+may, without being offensive, ask a question. Do you, for instance,
+Mr. Idiot, collect books because you wish to have something nobody else
+has got, or do you buy your books to read?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is a deep question," said the Idiot, "and I do not know that I can
+answer it off-hand. I have already confessed that I bought Dryden for
+his decorative quality. I purchased my Thackeray to read. I bought my
+Pepys Diary because I find it better reading than a Sunday newspaper,
+quite as gossipy, and with weather reports that are fully as reliable.
+But that particular Leech I bought because of my youthful love for
+colored pictures."</p>
+
+<p>"But you admit that it is valuable because of its rarity, and that
+compared to fifty dollars' worth of books that are not rare it is not to
+be compared with them from a literary point of view?" said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"I presume," said the Idiot, "that the fifty dollars I expended on that
+book would have provided me with a complete Shakespeare in one volume;
+all of Byron in green cloth and gold top; all of Dickens, Thackeray,
+Bulwer, and Austen in six volumes, with a margin of forty-five dollars
+left with which for nine years I could have paid for a subscription to
+the Mercantile Library, containing all the good reading of the present
+day and all the standard works of the past. But I rather like to have
+the books, and to feel that they are my own, even if it is only for the
+pleasure of lending them."</p>
+
+<p>"Still, if a man collects books merely for their contents&mdash;" persisted
+Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a wild, extravagant person," said the Idiot. "He might save
+himself hundreds of dollars, not to say thousands. The library on that
+plan need not occupy an honored place among the rooms of the house. A
+mere pigeon-hole with a subscriber's card to a circulating library filed
+away in it will do as well, or if the city or town in which he lives
+maintains a public library he may spare himself even that expense."</p>
+
+<p>"Good for you!" exclaimed the Bibliomaniac. "That's the best answer to
+the critics of book-collectors I have heard yet."</p>
+
+<p>"I agree with you," said Mr. Pedagog. "It is a very comprehensive reply.
+As for you, my dear Bibliomaniac, why do you collect books?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I love 'em as books," replied the Bibliomaniac. "Because of
+their associations, and because when I get a treasure I have the bliss
+of knowing I have something that others haven't."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it is selfishness?" asked Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Just as everything else is," returned the Bibliomaniac. "You, sir, if I
+may be personal without wishing to be offensive, are wedded to Mrs.
+Pedagog. You take pleasure in knowing that she belongs to you and not to
+any one else. The Idiot here is proud of his children, and is glad they
+are his children and nobody else's. <i>I</i> am wedded to my rare books, and
+it rejoices my soul to pick up a volume that is unique, and to know that
+it belongs to me and to no one else. If that is selfishness, then all
+possession is selfish."</p>
+
+<p>"That's about it," said the Idiot. "You collect books just as Mormons
+and Solomon used to collect wives. You are called a Bibliomaniac. I
+suppose Brigham Young and Solomon would have been known as
+Gamyomaniacs&mdash;though I don't suppose that age in women as in books is a
+requisite of value to marrying men&mdash;and they are both of them supposed
+to be rather canny persons."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pedagog puffed away in silence. It was evident that the <i>argumentum
+ad hominem</i> did not please him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said, after awhile, "possibly you are right. If a man wants a
+library to be a small British Museum&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He will take better care of his rarities than the Idiot does," said the
+Bibliomaniac, putting the rare Leech back into its place. "If that were
+mine I'd put it out of the reach of my children."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know you had any," said the Idiot, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you know what I mean," retorted the Bibliomaniac. "You place Dryden
+on the top shelf where Tommy and Mollie cannot get at him. But this
+book, which is worth ten larger paper editions of Dryden, you keep
+below, where the children can easily reach it. It's a wonder to me
+you've been able to keep it in its present superb condition."</p>
+
+<p>"The mind of a child," said Mr. Pedagog, sententiously, "is above
+values, above all conceits. It is the mind of sincerity, and a rare book
+has no greater attraction to the boy or girl than one not so favored."</p>
+
+<p>"That is not my reason," said the Idiot. "I know children pretty well,
+and I have observed that they are ambitious, and in a sense rebellious.
+They want to do what they cannot do. That is why, when mothers place jam
+on the top shelf of the pantry, the children always climb up to get it.
+If they would leave it on the dining-room table, within easy reach, the
+children would soon cease to regard it as a thing to be sought for. Make
+jam a required article of diet and the little ones will soon cease to
+want it. So with that book. If I should put that out of Tommy's reach,
+Tommy would lie awake nights to plan his campaign to get it. Leaving it
+where it is he doesn't think about it, doesn't want it, is not forbidden
+to have it, and so it escapes his notice."</p>
+
+<p>"You have the right idea, the human idea," said Mr. Pedagog, and even
+the Bibliomaniac was inclined to agree. But just then Tommy happened in,
+with Mollie close after. The boy walked straight to the bookcase, and
+Mollie gathered up the large shears from the Idiot's table, and together
+they approached their father.</p>
+
+<p>"Pa," said Mollie, holding up the scissors, "can I borrow these?"</p>
+
+<p>"What for?" asked the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"We want to cut the pictures out o' this," said Tommy, holding up the
+fifty-dollar Leech.</p>
+
+<p>After all, it is difficult to lay down a cast-iron rule as to how a
+private library should be constructed or arranged, particularly when
+one's loyalty is divided between one's children and one's merely bookish
+treasures.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="IV" id="IV">IV</a></h2>
+
+<h3>AS TO A SMALL DINNER</h3>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 258px;"><a name="ILL_016" id="ILL_016"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_016.jpg" width="258" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;THE COOK HAD TAKEN WINGS UNTO HERSELF&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>It was sad but true. Mr. and Mrs. Idiot had invited Mr. Whitechoker and
+Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog and the Poet to dinner, and for some reason or
+another the cook had taken wings unto herself and flown, and the guests
+were expected within two hours.</p>
+
+<p>"I see now," said the Idiot, "why they call it taking French leave.
+Nobody who doesn't understand French understands it. If it wasn't
+French, or if somebody would translate it for us, we might be able to
+comprehend it; as it is, it is one of the mysteries, and, as usual, we
+must make the best of it. Life, after all, my dear, consists largely of
+making the best of things."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm sure I don't know what to do," said Mrs. Idiot, despairfully,
+"unless you telegraph them all not to come, and tell them why."</p>
+
+<p>"It is too late to do that," said the Idiot, looking at his watch.
+"They've probably all left home by this time. Poets and clergymen and
+old people like Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog always do start an hour too early,
+for fear of missing their train."</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't care so much about the Poet," said Mrs. Idiot; "he doesn't
+know enough about housekeeping, anyhow, to make it matter. But Mr.
+Whitechoker and Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog&mdash;I simply can't ask them to camp
+out, as it were. The very fact that Mrs. Pedagog would become
+sympathetic immediately she learned what had happened would in itself be
+unbearable."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought women liked sympathy?" said the Idiot, with a proper
+manifestation of surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"So they do; but you might just as well talk about claret as meaning one
+thing as of sympathy being all of the same brand," Mrs. Idiot answered.
+"Certain kinds of claret are insufferable&mdash;sour and heady. I suppose
+there are sixty different kinds."</p>
+
+<p>"Sixty-two," said the Idiot, blandly. "The sixty you mean and two more
+whose names I have forgotten."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would be serious for a moment," Mrs. Idiot retorted, with as
+near an approach to irritation as was possible to one of her amiable
+disposition. "And it's just the same way with sympathy," she continued;
+"Mrs. Pedagog will lay this whole trouble to my inexperience. Probably
+she never had a servant take French leave in her life on the eve of a
+dinner-party."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll bet she didn't," said the Idiot. "And for why? Because she never
+gave a dinner-party in all her life. The habits of early life cling unto
+old age, and even as in her early days as a boarding-house keeper she
+never gave anything, so now she doubtless considers giving a dinner as a
+reckless waste of opportunity. And she is quite right. Does a lawyer
+invite his friends to join him in an opinion? Never. Does Mr. Tiffany
+request Mr. and Mrs. Idiot to accept a diamond tiara given in their
+honor? Not. Does a true poet, with three names on his autograph, give a
+poem to anybody when he can sell it? Not if he knows it. Why, then,
+expect a landlady, by birth and previous training, to <i>give</i> a dinner?"</p>
+
+<p>"I notice," said Mrs. Idiot, severely, "that you are always willing to
+give your views!"</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 319px;"><a name="ILL_017" id="ILL_017"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_017.jpg" width="319" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;TWO BIG BOXES OF POTATOES, A CAN OF FRENCH PEASE, AND A
+BOTTLE OF SARSAPARILLA&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Precisely, my dear, and that proves my point," replied the Idiot,
+amiably. "I am not a professional viewer, and I am not a photographer by
+trade. Therefore, why should I not <i>give</i> my views? But really," he
+added, "I wouldn't bother; it'll all come out right. I don't know just
+how, but I am confident we shall have the most glorious dinner of our
+lives. When I was down cellar this morning looking at the gas-meter I
+saw two big boxes full of potatoes, a can of French pease, and a bottle
+of sarsaparilla, and if they don't like what they get it will be because
+they are exacting. And I'll wager you from what I know of their manners
+that if you gave them dried apples, cold tongue, and milk they'd say it
+was the most delightful repast they ever sat down to."</p>
+
+<p>"But <i>I'd</i> know they didn't mean it," said Mrs. Idiot, smiling in spite
+of her woe.</p>
+
+<p>"And that brings up the question, why should your conscience be
+troubled by the insincerity of others?" said he. "Now, I'll tell you
+what we'll do. You fry the potatoes and I'll boil the can of pease; I
+think four minutes will boil them hard, like an egg, and together we'll
+put the sarsaparilla on ice, and bluff the whole thing through. Bluffing
+was always my strong point, and I have noticed, my dear, that in
+whatever I have tried to do since we were married you have contributed
+at least ninety per cent. to success. My bluff plus your efforts to make
+the thing a go will send our dinner to a premium."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot remained properly silent. As a matter of fact, she was not
+even listening. She was considering. What on earth to do was the
+question in her mind, and it so entirely absorbed it that she
+fortunately had little left for the rather easy views of the Idiot
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>"What is a dinner, anyhow?" the Idiot added, after the silence had to
+his mind become oppressive. "Is it a mere meal? Do the Poet and Mr. and
+Mrs. Pedagog and Mr. Whitechoker come here merely to get something to
+eat? Or do they come for the pleasure of our society, or for the
+pleasure of leaving home, or what? As I understand it, people go out to
+dine not because they have not a sufficiency of food at home, but
+because they wish to meet other people. That's what I do. I can always
+have something better to eat at home than I can get at somebody else's
+house; and furthermore, it is a more natural meal. Dinners generally are
+made up of pretty little things that nobody likes, and have no
+sustenance in them. A successful dinner lies not in successful cooking,
+but in pleasing conversation. Wherefore, it is not the cook, but the
+host and hostess who make a failure or a success of a dinner."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I presume if we simply spread the table and let you talk our
+guests will be satisfied?" said Mrs. Idiot, blandly.</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely," the Idiot replied. "It will be delightful. Just think of
+the menu! Instead of oysters I will indulge in a few opinions as to the
+intellectual qualities of bivalves generally, finishing up with a
+glowing tribute to the man who is content to be a clam and not talk too
+much. In the place of <i>purée</i> we will tackle some such subject as the
+future of Spain. I think I could ladle out a few sound ideas on that
+subject that would be as clear as the purest <i>consommé</i>. Then for fish,
+that would be easy. A good trout story, with imagination sauce, would do
+very well. For the <i>entrée</i> I will give you one of my most recent poems,
+and the roast will be&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And the rest of us are to sit and twiddle our thumbs while you
+soliloquize?" demanded Mrs. Idiot. "I rather think not. I will provide
+the roast, my dear John, and it will consist largely of remarks upon the
+ways of cooks."</p>
+
+<p>"A very proper subject for a roast," observed the Idiot, complacently,
+"and in your present frame of mind I think it will be not only well
+done, but rare as well, with plenty of crisp. And so we can simply talk
+this dinner through. It will be novel, certainly, and if you provide
+plenty of bread and butter no one need go away hungry."</p>
+
+<p>"Very true," Mrs. Idiot answered. "And now that you have had your fun,
+suppose we put our minds on the serious aspect of the case. Two hours
+from now four people are coming here hungry&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I have it!" cried the Idiot, delightedly. "Let's <i>borrow</i> a cook! I
+don't believe it's ever been done before. It would be splendid, not
+only in getting us out of our troubles, but in establishing an entirely
+new principle in domestic science. What is the use of neighbors who will
+not be neighborly and lend you their most cherished possession?"</p>
+
+<p>"None at all," sighed Mrs. Idiot, despairingly.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 399px;"><a name="ILL_018" id="ILL_018"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_018.jpg" width="399" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THE PEOPLE DOWN-STAIRS BORROWED OUR DINING-ROOM
+CHAIRS&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Now, when we lived in our flat in New York the people up-stairs
+borrowed our ice," said the Idiot; "the people down-stairs borrowed our
+dining-room chairs; the people across the hall borrowed butter and milk
+and eggs, and I think we once borrowed a lemon from the people on the
+top floor."</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" cried Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, we did, my dear," insisted the Idiot. "At least I did. You and the
+children were off in the country, and one hot summer's night, two years
+ago, I was consumed with a desire for a glass of lemonade, and as there
+were no lemons in the house, or the flat, I sent out to borrow. I began
+at the basement and worked up towards the roof, and ultimately got what
+I wanted, although, as I have said, it was the top-flat people I got it
+from."</p>
+
+<p>"And did you ever return it?" demanded Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"I regret to say that I didn't," said the Idiot. "But I will, and with
+interest. I wonder what two years' interest on a lemon is!" he added. "I
+suppose that a borrowed lemon compounded at the rate of six per cent.
+could be paid off by a lemon and one small Bermuda potato. I will send
+my check for both to those people to-morrow. What was their name?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never knew," said Mrs. Idiot. "I never liked them, and I never
+called. I am sorry you are under obligations to them."</p>
+
+<p>"Only for a lemon, though, dear," said the Idiot, "at six per cent."</p>
+
+<p>"But what does all this prove?" demanded the poor little housekeeper.</p>
+
+<p>"That the principle of lending is recognized among neighbors," the Idiot
+explained. "If a neighbor will lend a lemon, surely a neighbor will lend
+a cook. The principle involved is the same in both cases. Particularly
+so in this case, for my experience with cooks has been that they are,
+after all, for the most part nothing but human lemons. If the departed
+Bridget had been anything but full of sourness she would not have left
+us so unexpectedly."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't really think for a moment, do you, that the Jimpsonberrys
+would lend us their cook, or that she would come, or that I would ask
+them?" said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I suppose not," said the Idiot. "I suppose not. <i>But I don't see
+why!</i> First, the Jimpsonberrys, as our neighbors, ought to be willing to
+get us out of our trouble. Second, we don't ask their cook to come for
+nothing. By coming she will receive an addition to her wages which will
+help her to endow a policeman with a moderate fortune some day when she
+marries him. As for your asking Mrs. Jimpsonberry to lend us her cook
+for a few hours, that is the main objection. When one borrows one must
+give collateral, and it may be that it would embarrass you to offer Mike
+as security for the safe return of the Jimpsonberrys' cook. Anyhow, I
+see weak points in my plan, and we'd better abandon it. If the
+Jimpsonberrys' cook is the only available incendiary in the
+neighborhood, we'd better stop where we are. When we dined at
+Jimpsonberrys' last week I went away feeling that Jimpsonberry ought to
+collect fire insurance on that dinner. It wasn't cooked; it was a plain
+case of arson."</p>
+
+<p>It was at this precise moment, when poor Mrs. Idiot was beginning to
+despair of getting any advice of value from her husband, that the
+telephone-bell rang, and the Idiot rose up to answer the call.</p>
+
+<p>"Hello!" he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Hello, old man!" he added. "That you? Glad to see you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he continued, after a pause. "Of course we expect you."</p>
+
+<p>"Seven o'clock sharp," he remarked, a moment later. "You'll surely be
+here?" Then after a second pause, he added:</p>
+
+<p>"Good! You can stay all night if you wish; we've plenty of room.
+Good-bye."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 367px;"><a name="ILL_019" id="ILL_019"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_019.jpg" width="367" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;WHO WAS IT?&#39; ASKED MRS. IDIOT&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Who was it?" asked Mrs. Idiot, as the Idiot hung up the receiver of the
+telephone.</p>
+
+<p>"The Poet," replied the Idiot. "He wanted to know at what hour dinner
+was."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear!" cried Mrs. Idiot. "Why didn't you tell him the dinner isn't
+for to-night, but to-morrow night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't need to, my dear," said the Idiot, lighting a cigarette. "We've
+made a slight mistake. You invited these people, it now appears, for the
+twenty-ninth."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my love," said the Idiot, with an affectionate glance, "to-day is
+the&mdash;ah&mdash;the twenty-eighth."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot drew a sigh of relief.</p>
+
+<p>"My!" she cried, "what a blessing! I wonder how I got so mixed!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's economy, perhaps," suggested the Idiot. "If you will insist on
+buying out-of-date diaries and last year's calendars at bargain-counters
+because they are cheap, I don't really see how you can expect to keep up
+with the times."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot laughed heartily. Her relief of mind was unmistakable.</p>
+
+<p>"What would you have done, John, if this had really been the night?" she
+asked later.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know," said the Idiot. "I think I should have taken you to
+New York to dinner, and bluffed our guests into believing they had come
+up on the wrong night. It is very easy for a host to put his guests in
+the wrong if he wants to. I don't, but if I must, I must."</p>
+
+<p>As it was, the family dinner that night was a great success in spite of
+the absence of the cook, because Mrs. Idiot, who is an expert with the
+chafing-dish, found several odds and ends in the late cook's domains,
+which, under her expert manipulation, became dishes which the Idiot said
+afterwards "remained long in the memory without proving too permanent a
+tax upon the digestion."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="V" id="V">V</a></h2>
+
+<h3>ON THE MAINTENANCE OF AN ATTIC</h3>
+
+<p>The Idiot had been laid up for a week. That is to say, he was too
+indisposed to attend to business at his office, and the family physician
+thought it would be a good idea if his patient would be content to
+remain quietly indoors for a little while. To this the Idiot cheerfully
+consented.</p>
+
+<p>"If there is one thing that I can do to perfection," he said, "it is
+resting. Some men are born leisurely, some achieve leisure, and some are
+discharged by their employers. I belong to the first two classes. I can
+never become one of the third class, because, being my own employer, I
+am naturally pleased with myself, and am not likely to dispense with my
+own services."</p>
+
+<p>And so he stayed at home, and for a week pottered about the house, as he
+put it, and he had a glorious time.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do with yourself this morning, dear?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot on the morning of the first day. "I've got to go to market, and
+there are one or two other little things to be attended to which will
+keep me out for some hours. Do you think you can amuse yourself while I
+am out?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't know," said the Idiot. "I can try. Of course, you know,
+my dear, that I am a good deal of a baby yet. However, if you can trust
+me to stay all by my lonesome for two or three hours I'll try to behave.
+I promise not to take the piano apart, and I vow I won't steal any jam,
+and I sha'n't float hair-brushes in the bath-tub pretending that they
+are armored cruisers looking for Spaniards, and I'll try to be good, but
+I can't make any promises."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot smiled, as an indulgent guardian should, and went forth. The
+Idiot stayed at home and enjoyed himself. What he did is perhaps best
+indicated by his remarks some time later at a Sunday-night tea at which
+Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog, and Mr. Brief, the lawyer, were present.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "did you ever have an attic?"</p>
+
+<p>"A what?" demanded the Schoolmaster, naturally somewhat nonplussed.</p>
+
+<p>"An attic," said the Idiot. "A favored spot wherein to potter, to root,
+to rummage."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes," said Mrs. Pedagog, after a moment of deliberation. "I have
+had an attic, but it never seemed to me to be a particularly interesting
+spot. I've used it as a sort of store-room for things I didn't know what
+to do with."</p>
+
+<p>"Useless things," suggested Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Entirely so," acquiesced the good lady.</p>
+
+<p>"Then if they are useless, why keep them?" queried the Idiot. "Useless
+things might better be thrown away than stored away even in an attic."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 266px;"><a name="ILL_020" id="ILL_020"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_020.jpg" width="266" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I SET OFF A GIANT CRACKER UNDER HIS CHAIR&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Oh, as for that," rejoined Mrs. Pedagog, "they were useless in the
+sense that there was nothing I could do with them, and yet there was
+generally some quality of association or something about them that so
+appealed to me that I couldn't quite throw them away, or even bring
+myself to give them away."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the idea," said the Idiot. "One's cherished possessions are
+often stored away up-stairs and forgotten, and then sometimes years
+after you'll go rummaging about the house for lack of some other
+employment; an old trunk, a wooden box, will be unearthed in the attic,
+and then what a flood of memories will come rushing back over you as the
+long-forgotten objects come to light, one by one."</p>
+
+<p>"I have had much the same experience," said Mr. Brief, "in what I might
+term my professional attic. We keep a room for the storage of old
+papers, and strange exhibits in litigation turn up there frequently that
+bring back old-time lawsuits in a most interesting fashion."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose, then," observed Mr. Pedagog, with a shrug of tolerant
+contempt, "that the attic is, in your estimation, a sort of repository
+for family archives."</p>
+
+<p>"That's about it," said the Idiot. "You ought to see mine. There are
+archives from the Ark in mine. I've got all the portraits of my
+unpopular relatives up there, and such a gallery of smug-looking
+individuals you never saw. There's Uncle Jedediah, who hated me because
+I set off a giant cracker under his chair one Fourth of July, and who
+from that day vowed I was born to be hanged; and who sent me a crayon
+portrait of himself the following Christmas&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That seems to me to show a kindly feeling, not one of hatred, towards
+you," suggested Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 400px;"><a name="ILL_021" id="ILL_021"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_021.jpg" width="400" height="230" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;WOULD HANG THAT PORTRAIT UPON THE WALL OF MY BEDROOM&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Oh no," said the Idiot, with a laugh. "You never knew my dear old Uncle
+Jed. He sent it in a pure spirit of revenge. He had to send something,
+and he picked out the one thing he had reason to know I didn't want; and
+he was likewise aware that my mother had a sense of the proprieties and
+would hang that portrait upon the wall of my bedroom, whence it could
+stare at me, disapprovingly, forevermore. Still, when I became the head
+of my own house, I did not take a mean-spirited revenge on Uncle
+Jedediah's portrait by selling it to one of the comic papers with a joke
+under it; I gave it the nicest, warmest, most comfortable spot I could
+find for it under a pile of old magazines in the attic, and the other
+day when it came to light again I greeted it with an affectionate smile;
+and the picture of the old gentleman rising hurriedly from over the
+giant cracker on that long-forgotten Fourth, brought vividly to mind by
+the portrait, brought tears to my eyes, I laughed so heartily. It
+really was very affecting."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pedagog gazed at the Idiot fondly.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a great boy," he said. "You'd never suspect it, but I had a
+similar case of Uncle Jed, but the years I have lived since have
+softened my feelings so that I remember my old relative with a certain
+degree of affection."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall never believe, my dear John," said Mrs. Pedagog, "that in your
+day boys ever placed giant crackers under their uncles' chairs."</p>
+
+<p>"We never did, my love," Mr. Pedagog responded, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course not," laughed the Idiot. "They couldn't, you know. They
+hadn't been invented. What was your trouble with Uncle Jed, Mr.
+Pedagog?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, our difference of opinion was rather of an ethical import," replied
+Mr. Pedagog, genially. "My Uncle Jed was a preacher, and he used to
+speak entirely from notes which he would make out the night before and
+place in the pocket of his black coat. All I did was to take the notes
+of his next day's sermon out of his pocket one Saturday evening, and put
+in their stead a&mdash;ah&mdash;a recipe for what we called Washington pie&mdash;and a
+very good pie it was."</p>
+
+<p>"John!" ejaculated Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 343px;"><a name="ILL_022" id="ILL_022"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_022.jpg" width="343" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;STARTED TO PREACH WITH THE RECIPE FOR A WASHINGTON
+PIE&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I <i>did</i>, my dear," confessed the Schoolmaster, "and really I have never
+regretted it, although my particular uncle gave me a distressingly acrid
+and dreary lecture on my certain future when he found out what had
+happened. Yet what did happen, though mischievously intended, resulted
+in great good, for when the dear old gentleman stood up in the pulpit
+and started to preach the next morning, with the recipe for a Washington
+pie as the only available note at hand, he pulled himself together and
+preached off-hand the finest sermon of his life, and he discovered then
+the secret of his after-success. He became known ultimately as one of
+the most brilliant preachers of his time, and from that moment never
+went into the pulpit with any factitious aids to his memory."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean cribs, don't you?" asked the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"That is what college-boys call them, I believe," said Mr. Pedagog. "I
+will say further that a year before he died <i>my</i> Uncle Jed told me that
+it was my mischievous act that had given him the hint which became
+the keynote of his eloquence," he added, complacently. "I shall always
+remember him affectionately."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said the Idiot. "No doubt we all remember our Uncle Jeds
+affectionately. I certainly do. He was my mother's brother, and he meant
+well. I never really blamed him for not knowing how to sympathize with a
+boyish prank, because there has never been a school of instructions for
+uncles. Unclehood is about the hardest hood man has to wear, and as I
+have observed uncles and their habits, they either spoil or repel the
+small chaps and chappesses who happen to be made their nephews and
+nieces by an accident of birth. Uncles are either intensely genial or
+intensely irritable, and as far as I am concerned it is my belief that
+our colleges should include in their curriculum a chair of 'Uncleism.'
+Unclehood is a relationship that man has to accept. It is thrust upon
+him. He can't help himself. To be a father or a mother is a matter of
+volition. But even in a free country like our own, if a man has a
+brother or a sister he is liable to find himself an uncle at any time
+whether he wishes to be one or not. Then when it happens he's got to
+reason out a course of procedure without any basis in previous
+experience."</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you write a book on 'Hints to Uncles,' or 'The Complete
+Aunt,'" suggested Mr. Brief. "I have no doubt it would make good
+reading."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks for the idea," said the Idiot. "I think I'll do it. Not in the
+hope of profit, but for the benefit of the race."</p>
+
+<p>"What has all this to do with attics?" asked Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"The natural resting-place of the bad uncle," explained the Idiot.
+"Still, I maintain that it is every man's duty to keep an attic for the
+useless things, as Mrs. Pedagog calls them, which some day, when he
+least expects it, will carry his mind back to other days. The word
+itself, attic, carries the mind back to the splendors of Athens and
+other things that are out of date. When I was ill I found sincerest
+pleasure in rummaging. You can't rummage in a library if your library is
+properly looked after. You can't rummage in a bedroom in a well-kept
+house. You all know what parlors are&mdash;designed largely for the
+reception of people who come out to call upon you in their best Sunday
+clothes, and who would never think of calling upon you intimately, as a
+friend might, in his knickerbockers. You can't rummage there. The only
+place where one may rummage with any degree of success is in the attic,
+and my experience has been such that I believe my recent illness has
+contributed to my health. My mind has been carried back to conditions
+that used to be. Conditions which existed then and which were inferior
+to conditions which now prevail make me satisfied with the present.
+Where old-time conditions were better than the existing one I have
+naturally discovered how to improve. Rummaging, therefore, is improving
+to the mind and contributes to one's contentment."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 365px;"><a name="ILL_023" id="ILL_023"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_023.jpg" width="365" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;A LITTLE BUNDLE OF MY OWN LETTERS&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Then there are good economical reasons for the maintenance of an
+attic," the Idiot continued. "I found enough old boyhood collections of
+various things there to keep Tommy and Mollie happy for years without my
+having to pay out a penny for birthday presents&mdash;old stamps, old coins,
+old picture papers, and, I assure you, a lot of old newspapers, too,
+with better and more readable news in them than is now to be found in
+any of our modern bilious journals. Then the bundles of letters that
+came out of that place&mdash;my mother's letters to me, written while I was
+away at school; my father's letters in the old days at your house, Mrs.
+Pedagog, which did much to keep me straight then and re-reading of which
+doesn't hurt now; and, best of all," he added, with an affectionate
+glance at Mrs. Idiot, "a little bundle of my own letters to a certain
+person tied up with a blue ribbon, and full of pressed roses and autumn
+leaves and promises&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"In the attic?" asked Mr. Brief, with a dry smile. "Is that where Mrs.
+Idiot keeps your promises?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot blushed. "I have a cedar chest full of treasures up there,"
+she said. "I thought it was locked."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, anyhow, I found them," said the Idiot, cheerfully; "and while
+they were not especially good reading, they were good reminders of other
+days. It wouldn't be a bad idea if every married man were to read over
+the letters of his days of courtship once a year. I think it would bring
+back more forcibly than anything else the conditions of the contract
+which he was inviting the young partner of his joys to sign. If an attic
+never held anything but bundles of one's old love-letters it would
+demonstrate its right to become an institution."</p>
+
+<p>"Very true," said the lawyer; "but," he added, prompted by that cautious
+spirit which goes always with the professional giver of advice, "suppose
+that side by side with that little bundle of pressed flowers and autumn
+leaves and promises one should chance to find another little bundle of
+pressed flowers and autumn leaves and promises&mdash;the promises written by
+some other hand than the hand that is rummaging in the cedar chest? What
+then? Would that prove a pleasing find?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as for that," the Idiot remarked, "when I advocate the maintenance
+of an attic as one of the first duties of mankind, I mean its
+intelligent maintenance. The thing which makes of the British Museum,
+the National Attic of Great Britain, a positive educational force is its
+intelligent direction. It is the storehouse of the useless possessions
+of the British Empire which have an inspiring quality. There is nothing
+in it which makes a Briton think less of himself or which in any way
+unpleasantly disturbs his equanimity. So with the attic of the humble
+citizen. It must be intelligently directed if it is to become an
+institution, and should not be made the repository of useless things
+which ought to be destroyed, among which I class that other possible
+bundle to which you refer."</p>
+
+<p>And inasmuch as the whole party agreed to the validity of this
+proposition, the subject was dropped, and the Idiot and his guests
+wandered on to other things.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="VI" id="VI">VI</a></h2>
+
+<h3>THE IDIOT'S GARDEN</h3>
+
+<p>"I should think, my dear Idiot," Mr. Pedagog observed one summer
+evening, as his host stood upon the back piazza of "Castle Idiot," as
+they had come to call the dwelling-place of their friend, "that with all
+this space you have about you, you would devote some of it to a garden."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 350px;"><a name="ILL_024" id="ILL_024"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_024.jpg" width="350" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;WE SPRINKLED IT IN PERSON&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Why, I do," said the Idiot. "I've got a small patch down there behind
+the tennis-court, fifty by one hundred feet, under cultivation. The
+stuff we get is almost as good as the average canned goods, too. We had
+a stalk of asparagus the other night that was magnificent as far as it
+went. It was edible for quite a sixteenth of an inch, or at least I was
+told so. That portion of it had already been nibbled off by my son
+Thomas while it was resting in the pantry waiting to be served.
+However, the inedible end which arrived was quite sturdy, and might have
+stood between my family and starvation if the necessity had arisen."</p>
+
+<p>"One stalk of asparagus is a pretty poor crop, I should say," observed
+the lawyer, with a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"You might think so," said the Idiot. "But everything in the world is
+comparative, after all. Ants build ant-hills which are several feet
+lower than the Alps, and yet they are monumental, considering that they
+were made by ants. All things considered, Mrs. Idiot and I were proud of
+our asparagus crop, and distinctly regretted that it did not survive to
+be served in proper state at dinner. If I remember rightly, Thomas was
+severely reprimanded for his privateering act in biting off the green
+end of it before I had a chance to see it."</p>
+
+<p>"'Twasn't specially good," said Tommy, loftily.</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad it was not, my son," said the Idiot. "I should be very
+sorry to hear that you had derived the slightest sensation of pleasure
+from your piratical and utterly inexcusable act."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you usually serve so small a portion of the product of your
+garden?" asked Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;"><a name="ILL_025" id="ILL_025"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_025.jpg" width="300" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;HE DISCOVERED THE ONE PERFECT STALK&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Sometimes we don't serve anything at all from it," said the Idiot,
+"which you will observe is smaller yet. In this instance Mrs. Idiot
+intended a little surprise for me. We had struggled with that
+asparagus-bed for some time. The madame had studied up asparagus in her
+botany. I had looked it up in the cyclopedia and the Century dictionary.
+We had ordered it in various styles when we dined out at the New York
+hotels, and we had frequently bought cans of it in order to familiarize
+ourselves more intimately with its general personal appearance. Then we
+consulted people we thought would be likely to know how to obtain the
+best results, and what they told us to do we did, but somehow it didn't
+work. Our asparagus crop languished. We sprinkled it in person. We put
+all sorts of garden cosmetics on it to improve its complexion, but it
+seemed hopeless, and finally when I footed up the asparagus item in my
+account-book, and discovered that we had paid out enough money without
+results of a satisfactory nature to have kept us in canned asparagus for
+four years, we got discouraged, and resolved to give it up. It was
+while Michael, our gardener, was removing the evidences of our failure
+that he discovered the one perfect stalk, and like the honest old
+gardener that he is, he immediately brought it into the house and
+presented it to my wife. She naturally rejoiced that our efforts had not
+been entirely vain, and in her usual spirit of self-sacrifice had the
+stalk cooked as a surprise for me. As I have told you, that small
+circumstance Thomas, over which we seem to have no control, got ahead of
+us&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You was surprised, wasn't you, pa?" demanded the boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Somewhat, my son," said the Idiot, "but not in the way your mother had
+designed, exactly."</p>
+
+<p>"Is asparagus the extent of your gardening?" queried Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no, indeed!" replied Mrs. Idiot. "We've had peas and beets and beans
+and egg-plant and corn&mdash;almost everything, in fact, including potatoes."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, ma'am," said the Idiot, "almost everything, including potatoes.
+Our pea crop was lovely. We had five podfuls for dinner on the Fourth of
+July, and the children celebrated the day by podding them for the
+cook. They popped open almost as noisily as a torpedo. It was really
+very enjoyable. Indeed, one of the results of that pea crop has been to
+give me an idea by which I may some day redeem my losses on the
+asparagus-bed. An explosive pea which should be edible, and yet would
+pop open with the noise of a small fire-cracker, would be a delight to
+the children and serviceable for the table. I don't exactly know how to
+bring about the desired results, but it seems to me if I were to mix a
+little saltpetre in the water with which we irrigate our pea-trees the
+required snap would be obtained. Then on the Fourth of July the
+children, instead of burning their fingers and filling their parents
+with nervous dread setting off fire-crackers, could sit out on the back
+piazza and shell the peas for the cook&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'd rather shell Spangyards," said Mollie.</p>
+
+<p>"I am surprised at you, my child," said the Idiot. "A little girl like
+you should be an advocate of peace, not of war."</p>
+
+<p>"You can't eat Spaniards, either, can you, pa?" said Tommy, who, while
+he shared Mollie's views as to the comparative value for shelling
+purposes of peas and Spaniards, was nevertheless quite interested in the
+development of a pea-pod that would open with a bang.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 400px;"><a name="ILL_026" id="ILL_026"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_026.jpg" width="400" height="191" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;IT WOULD BE DEUCEDLY AWKWARD ... IF THEY WOULD EXPLODE
+IN THE MOUTH OF THE PERSON WHO WAS EATING THEM&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"No, Tommy," said the Idiot, "you can't eat Spaniards, and they'd be
+sure to disagree with you if you could."</p>
+
+<p>"That is a very interesting proposition of yours," said Mr. Brief, "but
+it has its dangers. A dynamite pea would prove very attractive so long
+as its explosive qualities were confined to the pod and its opening. But
+how are you going to keep the saltpetre out of the peas themselves?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is where the difficulty comes in," said the Idiot. "I frankly
+don't know how we could insulate the peas from the effects of the
+saltpetre."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be deucedly awkward," observed the Bibliomaniac, "if, as might
+very well happen, one or two of the peas should become so thoroughly
+impregnated with the stuff that they would explode in the mouth of the
+person who was eating them, like bombs in miniature."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 304px;"><a name="ILL_027" id="ILL_027"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_027.jpg" width="304" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;SHE COULD SLAM THEM DOWN ON THE HEARTH-STONES LIKE
+TORPEDOES&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"True," said the Idiot. "The only safeguard against that would be to
+compel the cook to test every pea before she cooked it. She could
+slam them down on the hearth-stone like torpedoes, and every one that
+didn't go off could be cooked and served with safety. Still, there would
+be danger even then. A careless cook might forever ruin the tooth of a
+favored guest. I guess I'd better give up the idea."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, don't, pa!" cried Tommy, his interest in explosive vegetables
+worked up to a high pitch. "I'll test 'em all for you, and if they work
+I don't see why you couldn't raise dynamite punkins!"</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a strong temptation, my son," said the Idiot, "which is all
+the more reason why I should abandon the plan. A dynamite punkin, as you
+call it, would wreck the whole neighborhood if one should set it off
+properly. No, we will, after all, confine our attention to vegetables of
+a more pacific nature. The others might prove more profitable at first,
+but when the novelty of them wore off, and one realized only their
+danger, a great deal of the pleasure one derives from eating fresh
+vegetables would be utterly destroyed."</p>
+
+<p>Tommy looked out over the railing of the piazza, deep regret and
+disappointment depicted in his brown little face; but if the glitter of
+his eyes meant anything it meant that the idea of putting vegetables on
+a war footing was not going to be allowed to drop into oblivion; and if
+the small youth progresses in inventive genius in a fair ratio to his
+past achievements in that line, I have no doubt that if a Vesuvian
+pumpkin <i>can</i> be produced at all, the day will dawn when Thomas is
+hailed as its inventor.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it true," asked Mr. Brief, "that home-raised peas are sweeter than
+any other?"</p>
+
+<p>"We think so," said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"We know so," amended the Idiot. "That Fourth-of-July night when we ate
+those five podfuls we discovered that fact. Five podfuls of peas are not
+enough to feed a family of four on, so we mixed them in with a few more
+that we bought at the grocer's, and we could tell ours from the others
+every time, they were so much sweeter."</p>
+
+<p>The Bibliomaniac laughed scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh!" said he. "How did you know that they were yours that were sweet,
+and not the grocery-bought peas?"</p>
+
+<p>"How does a father know his own children?" said the Idiot. "If you'd
+labored over those five pods as hard and assiduously as we did, nursing
+them through their infant troubles, guarding them against locusts and
+potato-bugs, carefully watching their development from infancy into the
+full vigor of a mature peahood, I guess you'd know your own from those
+of others. It's instinct, my dear Bibliomaniac."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell about the strawberry, pa," said Tommy, who liked to hear his
+father talk, in which respect I fear he takes strongly after his parent.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said the Idiot, "it's not much of a story. There was one. We had
+a strawberry patch twenty feet by ten. We had plenty of straw and plenty
+of patch, but the berries were timid about appearing. The results were
+similar to those in our asparagus venture. One berry was discovered
+trying to hide itself under half a bale of straw one morning, and while
+I was looking for Mrs. Idiot, to ask her to come down to the garden and
+see it grow, a miserable robin came along and bit its whole interior
+out. I hope the bird enjoyed it, because on a bed-rock estimate that
+berry cost twenty dollars. That is one of the things about gardening
+that make me especially weary. One doesn't mind spending forty-four
+dollars on a stalk of asparagus that is eaten, even surreptitiously, by
+a member of one's own family; but to pay twenty dollars for a strawberry
+to be wasted on a fifteen-cent robin is, to say the least, irritating."</p>
+
+<p>"You forget, John," said Mrs. Idiot, with a somewhat mirthful look in
+her eyes, "that we got fifteen boxes out of the strawberry-patch later."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't," said the Idiot. "I was coming to that, and it involves a
+confession. You were so blue about the loss of our one beautiful berry
+that I entered into a conspiracy with Michael to make that patch yield.
+The fifteen boxes of berries that we took out subsequently were bought
+at a New York fruit-store and judiciously scattered about the patch
+where you would find them. I had hoped you would never find it out, but
+when you spoke the other day of expending thirty-eight dollars on that
+strawberry-patch next year, I resolved then to undeceive you. This is
+the first favorable opportunity I have had."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot laughed heartily. "I knew it all along," she said. "Michael
+came to me with them and asked for instructions as to where to put them.
+Really, I&mdash;ah&mdash;I arranged them under the straw myself."</p>
+
+<p>"What an ass a hired man can be!" ejaculated the Idiot. "I shall
+discharge Michael to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you would," said Mrs. Idiot. "Ever since the conspiracy he has
+been entirely too independent."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't discharge Michael, papa," said Mollie. "He's awful nice. He's
+always willin' to stop anything he's doing to play with Tommy and me."</p>
+
+<p>"You bet he is!" cried Tommy. "He's a dandy, Mike is. He never says a
+word when I sit under the sprinkler, and he told me the other day that
+his grandfather would have been king of Ireland if Queen Victoria hadn't
+come in. He said the Queen was a lady, and his grandfather gave up his
+seat to her because he was a gentleman and couldn't do anything else."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," said the Idiot, suavely. "Then I won't discharge Michael.
+One feels a better American, a better Republican, if he has a royal
+personage in his employ. I always wondered where Michael got his
+imperious manner; now I know. As a descendant of a long line of kings it
+could not be otherwise. I will give him another chance. But let me give
+you all fair warning. If next summer Michael does not succeed in
+producing from my garden four beets, ten pods of peas, three
+string-beans, and less than ten thousand onions, he goes. I shall not
+pay a gardener forty dollars a month unless he can raise three dollars'
+worth of vegetables a year."</p>
+
+<p>"But really," said Mr. Pedagog, "haven't you raised anything in your
+garden?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes," said the Idiot. "I've raised my water bill in the garden. I
+used to pay twelve dollars a quarter for water, but now the bills come
+to at least twenty-five dollars. Truly, a garden is not without profit
+to some one."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="VII" id="VII">VII</a></h2>
+
+<h3>HOUSEHOLD POETRY</h3>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot, in response to an inquiry from the Poet, who was
+passing a Sunday with him at Castle Idiot, "I have found that there is a
+great deal of poetry in the apparently uninspiring little things of a
+household. There is to me as much poetry in a poker as there is in a
+snow-clad Alp, if you only have an eye to find it; and I am sure that to
+thousands of housewives the whole land over a sonnet to a clothes-pin,
+written by one who knows the clothes-pin's nature intimately, would be
+far more appealing than a similar number of lines trying to prove that
+we are all miserable phantoms flitting across a morass of woe."</p>
+
+<p>The Poet pulled away thoughtfully at his pipe. He was a broad-minded
+poet, and while he had never owned a poker of his own, he was ready to
+admit its possibilities; but he could not follow his friend closely
+enough to admit that it contained as much that was inspiring as did Mont
+Blanc, for instance, a bright particular Alp of which he was very fond.</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot continued:</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 266px;"><a name="ILL_028" id="ILL_028"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_028.jpg" width="266" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THE JOYS AND WOES OF THE TOILERS WHO MINED IT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"A ton of coal contains far more warmth than a woman's eyebrow; sends
+the mind of a thoughtful person chasing backward to the time when it lay
+snugly hid in the fair breast of nature; to the joys and woes of the
+toilers who mined it; through a variety of complexities of life, every
+one of them fraught with noble thoughts. Yet who ever wrote dainty
+verses to a ton of coal, and who hasn't at one time or another in his
+life written about the eyebrows of some woman?"</p>
+
+<p>The Poet laughed this time. "A triolet to a ton of coal would be a
+glorious thing now, wouldn't it?" he observed.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the Idiot. "A triolet could never be a glorious thing under
+any circumstances; but to the extent that a ton of coal contains a
+certain amount of grandeur in the service it renders to mankind, I think
+the form would be ennobled somewhat by the substance. Let's try it and
+see."</p>
+
+<p>"You do it," said the Poet; "I really don't think I could do the
+subject justice."</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot got out a pencil and a pad of paper and began.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I'll make it a triolet," he said, after biting the end of
+his pencil for a few moments. "A whole ton is a good deal to cram into a
+triolet. I'll just make it a plain poem of the go-as-you-please variety
+instead, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the manner of Whitman, perhaps?" suggested the Poet, dryly.</p>
+
+<p>"Just so," said the Idiot. "In the manner of Whitman; in fact, I think
+the manner of Whitman is the only manner for the poetic description of a
+ton of coal."</p>
+
+<p>He began to scribble on the pad.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to call this 'Content,'" he said in a few moments.
+"Contentment strikes me as the main lesson a ton of coal teaches."</p>
+
+<p>He scribbled on, and in four or five minutes he put down his pencil and
+read the following lines:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">"I'm glad I'm not as men are&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Always worrying about something, and often about nothing;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">About what was and what wasn't;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Fretting about what may be and what might have been;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Wondering whether when they are called upon to do their duty</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">They'll be able to do it,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And generally deciding they won't,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">To their own discomfort.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And if so be they're women,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Cogitating from morn till night,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">From night till morn,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Wherewithal shall they be clothed,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And if their hats are on straight!</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Yea!</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">I am glad I am not like one of these,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">But am myself&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">A ton of coal&mdash;jetty in my blackness and luminous in my bituminosity.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Lying here in the cellar content and not bothering a bit.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Not needing income or clothes, and wearing no hat, and with no complexion to bother about.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Happy and serene about my duty,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Certain that I shall succeed when the time for action comes;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Knowing that I shall burn,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And in the burning glow like the polar star.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Cackling and crackling,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Hissing and smoking,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Full of heat,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">A satisfaction to mankind,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">And never worth less than $5.65, delivered!</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">Ah, me! What bliss to be a ton of coal!</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 11em;">I am content."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>The Poet nodded his pleasure at the effort. "It is charmingly put," he
+said. "I must confess, my dear Idiot, that the idea of contentment is
+the last one that I should ever have extracted from contemplation of
+a binful of anthracite, and yet when I consider how you put it I wonder
+it has not occurred to every one. You have the manner of the Whitman
+parodist down fine, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said the Idiot. "It is entirely natural to me. I think,
+too, that using the Whitman lack of form carries with it the notion of
+the coal sliding down the chute, don't you? Coal runs into the cellar in
+such an irresponsible, formless way, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely," smiled the Poet. "You have the right notion about that. The
+form of a poem should really be adapted to the substance. It should be
+descriptive, always. Tennyson's 'Charge of the Light Brigade' has in its
+rhythm nothing more or less than the clatter of the horses' hoofs as
+they and their riders dashed through the valley of death at Balaklava.
+And how vividly Southey's brook comes before the mind in its mad rush
+downward as one reads that wonderfully lyrical poem. Why don't you write
+a book of household poetry? You seem to me to be eminently well
+qualified to undertake it."</p>
+
+<p>"I intend to," said the Idiot. "In fact, I've begun it already. Written
+five or six. Like to see 'em?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I should," said the Poet. "Anything you do interests me."</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot went to his desk and took from it a few pages of manuscript.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is a thing on pokers I did the other night. I called it 'The Song
+of the Poker Bold.'" And then he read these lines:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"Warder of the grate am I,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">Ever standing near;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">Poking, poking all day long,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">Knowing naught of fear.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"Keeping coals up to their work,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">Setting them aglow,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">Minding not the scorching heat,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">Rather like it so.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"Knocking ashes right and left,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">Flirting with the tiles;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">Bossing tongs and seeing that</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">The brazen kettle biles.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"And the little girls and boys</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">As they watch me pause,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">Wishing that I'd talk and tell</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">'Bout old Santa Claus!</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"Cracking jokes with crickets on</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">The merry hearth, elate;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">Happy lot indeed is mine&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">Warder of the grate!"</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Splendid!" cried the Poet, clapping his hands with enthusiasm.
+"Splendid! A good stiff pokeresque lyric, and your characterization of
+the poker as the 'Warder of the Grate' gives it a flavor of romance. You
+could almost imagine the implement going out into a mediæval world in
+search of knightly adventure&mdash;a sort of hearth-stone Quixote. Have you
+tackled the clothes-pin yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the Idiot. "Indeed, my first effort was a lyric on the
+clothes-pin. I started one night to do the contents of the
+kitchen-dresser drawer in French forms, but the first thing I took out
+was an egg-beater, and it wouldn't go, so I did the clothes-pin lyric. I
+call it</p>
+
+<h4>"FIDELITY</h4>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">"Blow, ye winds,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">I fear ye not;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">Blast, ye simoon,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Sere and hot!</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">"Hurricane,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">And cyclone, too,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">Blow, I have no</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Fear of you.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">"Lacking beauty,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Lacking grace,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">Lacking handsome</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Form and face;</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">"Lacking soul</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">And intellect,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">Still I stand up,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Proud, erect.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">"For the Fates</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Have given me</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">Wondrous great</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Tenacity.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">"And success,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Both fair and fine,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">Comes to him</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Who holds his line.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">"Burrs can stick</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">And so can glue&mdash;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">Mucilage,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Stratena, too;</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">"But there's nothing</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">Holds so fast</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 29em;">As the clothes-pin</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 30em;">To the last."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"And you gave up the egg-beater altogether?" asked the Poet, restraining
+a natural inclination to find flaws in the construction of the
+clothes-pin poem.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no," said the Idiot, "I knocked off a little quatrain on that. I
+called it 'The Speedy Egg-Beater,' and it goes like this:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 23em;">"Great Maude S. can beat all steeds,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 24em;">However speedy be their legs;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 23em;">But I distance her with ease</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 24em;">When it comes to beating eggs."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"I really think that you would have done better to give up the
+egg-beater," said the Poet, grown critical. "I've no patience with
+one-rhymed quatrains. Now if you had written:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 23em;">"Great Maude S. can beat all steeds,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 24em;">However speedy be their legs;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 23em;">But despite her doughty deeds;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 24em;">I can beat her beating eggs,</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"I should not have objected."</p>
+
+<p>"I accept the amendment," replied the Idiot, meekly. "I realized the
+weakness of the thing myself, and thought of changing it into a couplet,
+where you only need one rhyme. How's this on a 'Carpet-Tack'?"</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 266px;"><a name="ILL_029" id="ILL_029"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_029.jpg" width="266" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;FOR THOUGH I&#39;M BUT A CARPET-TACK<br />
+AFAR FROM MOIL AND STRIFE,<br />
+NO ONE CAN EVER TRULY SAY<br />
+THAT MINE&#39;S A POINTLESS LIFE&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 23em;">"However dull the day,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 24em;">However dull the skies,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 23em;">However dark the night may be,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 24em;">My spirits ever rise.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 23em;">"For though I'm but a carpet-tack,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 24em;">Afar from moil and strife,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 23em;">No one can ever truly say</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 24em;">That mine's a pointless life."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"That is very good," said the Poet. "I think almost any editor of any
+comic paper would be willing to pay you three dollars for that. It is as
+good as your poem on a ton of coal&mdash;simple in its expression and sweet
+in sentiment."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you'd think so," said the Idiot. "It struck me so. I've got
+one on a screw-driver, too, that is very much of the same order, and
+conveys a moral lesson to the reader who is always reaching out after
+the unattainable. It reads as follows:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"I cannot tool a tally-ho,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">I cannot drive a nag;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">I dare not hold the ribbons</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">On a hack or rumbling drag.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"I could not guide the reins upon</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">A simple billy-goat,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">And I should hesitate to try</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">To drive a can-al boat.</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"But I don't mind these things at all,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">For I can drive a screw,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">And I am happy, for that's just</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 22em;">What I was meant to do."</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 326px;"><a name="ILL_030" id="ILL_030"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_030.jpg" width="326" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I SHOULD HESITATE TO TRY TO WRITE A CAN-AL BOAT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"The fourth line of the second verse is weak, but otherwise it's good,"
+commented the Poet. "It's not a <i>can</i>-al boat; it's a can-<i>al</i> boat, and
+all the poetic license in the world wouldn't excuse your taking such
+a liberty with language."</p>
+
+<p>"I appreciate that," said the Idiot. "But I don't see how I could get
+around it."</p>
+
+<p>"There's only one way," said the Poet. "I think if you omitted that
+verse altogether you'd improve the poem."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I should have to eliminate the billy-goat," said the Idiot. "That
+takes a great deal of humor out of it. I always laugh when I encounter a
+beast like that in poetry; he seems so helpless when incarcerated in a
+poem."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 315px;"><a name="ILL_031" id="ILL_031"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_031.jpg" width="315" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I HAVEN&#39;T EVER HAD A HOME; I&#39;VE ALWAYS BOARDED&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"That may be," observed the Poet. "But it is my belief that the goat, of
+all animals in the kingdom, was the last one designed to be used in
+poetry, anyhow. He is bad enough in prose, and in this case will butt
+your poem to oblivion if you insist on keeping him in it. Any more?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the Idiot; "that's the last."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you've got a good start," said the Poet, rising to light his
+pipe, which had gone out. "And if I were you I'd go on and finish the
+book. 'The Idiot's Book of Household Poetry' would have a great sale.
+It has but one drawback that I can see. You harp on one string too much.
+Every one of your poems preaches contentment, satisfaction&mdash;nothing
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"That," said the Idiot, "is not an objection, but a virtue; for what
+other lesson," he added, with a glance of pride at his surroundings,
+"what other lesson, my dear Poet, should a home try to teach, and what
+other sentiment can mean so much to mankind?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," said the Poet, with a little sigh. "I haven't ever had a
+home; I've always boarded."</p>
+
+<p>Whereupon the Idiot rose up from his chair, and putting his arm about
+his friend's shoulder, said:</p>
+
+<p>"How you do talk! Never had a home? Why, my dear fellow, what's this?
+It's yours as long as it's mine!"</p>
+
+<h2><a name="VIII" id="VIII">VIII</a></h2>
+
+<h3>SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE HIRED MAN</h3>
+
+<p>"Who is that sitting down on your tennis-court, Mr. Idiot?" asked Mr.
+Brief, the lawyer. "Or is it anybody? I've been trying for the last
+half-hour to make out whether it's a man or one of those iron figures
+with which some people decorate their lawns."</p>
+
+<p>"That," replied the Idiot, calmly, "is my hired man. I pay him forty
+dollars a month to sit down there and let the grass grow under his feet.
+I heard you and Mr. Pedagog discussing the wonderful grassiness of my
+lawn after dinner last night, and I meant to have told you then that the
+credit thereof belongs entirely to the restful nature of that man's
+soul. He will stand for hours rooted to one spot and looking with
+apparent aimlessness out over the river. To most people this would seem
+to be prompted by a sheer indisposition to work, but this would do him a
+rank injustice, for his immovability is due entirely to his system. He
+is letting the grass grow beneath him, and the fact that our grass is so
+nourishing everywhere is due to his having stood for hours at various
+times over every square inch of territory to which I hold the
+title-deeds."</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot gazed out of the window at his retainer with affectionate
+admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"He certainly clings closely to his system," said the lawyer.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 348px;"><a name="ILL_032" id="ILL_032"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_032.jpg" width="348" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I FEEL THAT I COULD GO OUT AND MOW THREE ACRES OF
+GRASS&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"He is a model," said the Idiot. "He has done more to make my life here
+easy than any one in my service. For instance, you know the hurly-burly
+of existence in town. I go to my office in the morning, and whether I
+have much work or little to do, I come home in the afternoon absolutely
+worn out. The constant hustling and bustling of others in the city wears
+upon my mind, and consequently upon my body. The rush and roar of cables
+and electric-cars; the activity of messengers running to and fro in the
+streets; the weary horses dragging great lumbering wagons up and down
+the crowded thoroughfares, all affect my nature and impair my energy;
+and then, the day's work done, I return here, where all is quiet and
+still, and the very contrast between that man, standing silently on his
+appointed spot, or leaning against the house, or lying off in sheer
+content under some tree, and the mad scramble for lucre in the city,
+invigorates my tired body until I feel that I could go out and mow three
+acres of grass before dinner; in fact, I generally do."</p>
+
+<p>"I did not know that a restful nature was a requisite of a successful
+career as a hired man," said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"It is evident, then, that you have never had a hired man," rejoined the
+Idiot. "Nor can you ever have studied the species at close range.
+Ceaseless activity would be his ruin. If he did to-day all there is to
+do, he would be out of employment to-morrow, consequently he never does
+to-day's work to-day, and cultivates that leisurely attitude towards
+life upon which you have commented. Do you see that small beech-tree
+over there?" he added, pointing to a scrawny little sapling whose sole
+virtue appeared to be its rigid uprightness.</p>
+
+<p>"Is that a beech-tree?" asked Mr. Brief. "I thought it was a garden
+stake."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 318px;"><a name="ILL_033" id="ILL_033"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_033.jpg" width="318" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;He WOULD GO OUT DAY AFTER DAY AND SIT DOWN BESIDE IT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"It is a beech-tree," said the Idiot. "I planted it myself last autumn,
+and while it has as yet borne no beeches, I think if we give it time,
+and it withstands the rigors of the climate, it will produce its fruit.
+But it was not of its possibilities as a beech-bearing tree that I
+intended to speak. I wanted to indicate to you by a material object the
+value of having a hired man who likes to lean against things. At the
+close of this last winter that tree, instead of being as erect as a
+grenadier, as it now is, was all askew. The strong westerly winds which
+are constantly blowing across that open stretch bent the thing until it
+seemed that the tree was bound to be deformed; but Mike overcame the
+difficulty. He would go out day after day and sit down beside it and
+lean against it for two and three hours at a time, with the result that
+the tendency to curve was overcome, and a tree that I feared was doomed
+to fail now bids fair to resemble a successful telegraph-pole in its
+uprightness. And, of course, the added warmth of his body pressing down
+upon the earth which covers its roots gave it an added impulse to
+grow."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a wonderful system," smiled Mr. Brief. "I wonder it is not
+adopted everywhere."</p>
+
+<p>"It is, pretty much," said the Idiot. "Most hired men do the same thing.
+I don't think Mike differs radically from others of his kind. Of course,
+there are exceptions. My neighbor Jimpsonberry, for instance, has a man
+who is so infernally unrestful that he makes everybody tired. He is up
+every morning mowing Jimpsonberry's lawn at five o'clock, waking up
+every sleepy soul within ear-shot with the incessant and disturbing
+clicking of his machine. Mike would never think of making such a
+nuisance of himself. Furthermore, Jimpsonberry's lawn is kept so
+close-cropped that the grass doesn't get any chance, and in the heat of
+midsummer turns to a dull brick-red."</p>
+
+<p>After a pause, during which the company seemed to be deeply cogitating
+the philosophical bearing of the subject under discussion, the Idiot
+resumed:</p>
+
+<p>"There is another aspect of this matter," he said, "which Jimpsonberry's
+man brings to my mind. You know as well as I do that heat is
+contagious. If you feel as cool as a cucumber, and then all of a sudden
+see somebody who is dripping with perspiration and looking for all the
+world like a human kettle simmering on a kitchen-range, you begin to
+simmer yourself. It is mere sympathy, of course, but you simmer just the
+same, get uncomfortable and hot in the collar, and are shortly as badly
+off as the other fellow. So it is with Jimpsonberry's man. Time and time
+again he has spoiled all my pleasure by making me realize by a glance at
+his red face and sweating arms how beastly hot it is, when before I had
+seen him I felt tolerably comfortable. Mike, on the other hand, is not
+so inconsiderate, and I am confident would let the grass grow a mile
+high before he would consent to interfere with my temperature by pushing
+the mower up and down the lawn on a humid day."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you keep this interesting specimen of still life all through the
+year?" asked Mr. Brief, "or do you give him a much-needed vacation in
+winter? I should think he would be worn out with all this standing
+around, for nothing that I know of is more tiresome than doing
+nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the Idiot. "Mike never seems to need a vacation. Sitting down
+and leaning against things and standing around don't seem to tire him in
+the least. It might tire you or me, but you see he's used to it. The
+only effect it has on him, as I view the matter, is that it wears out
+his clothes. It doesn't impair his lack of vigor at all. So by the
+simple act of occasionally renewing his wardrobe, which I do every time
+I discard a suit of my own, I revive his wasted vitality, and he does
+not require to be sent to Europe, or to take an extended tour in the
+White Mountains to recuperate. I keep him all through the winter, and
+his system is quite the same then as in summer, except that he does his
+sitting around and leaning indoors instead of in the open."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose he looks after the furnace and keeps the walks clear of snow
+in winter time?" suggested Mr. Pedagog, who was beginning to take an
+interest in this marvellously restful personage.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 304px;"><a name="ILL_034" id="ILL_034"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_034.jpg" width="304" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;HE SHOVELS OFF A FOOT-PATH&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot; "and he attends to the windows as well. As a
+minder of the furnace he is invaluable. My house is as cool as a
+roof-garden all through the winter, and thanks to his unwillingness to
+over-exert himself shovelling coal into the furnace, I burn only about
+half as much as my neighbors, and my house is never overheated. This in
+itself is an indication of the virtue of Mike's method. One-half of the
+colds contracted by children nowadays are the result of overheated
+houses. Mike's method gives me a cool house at very moderate expense,
+owing to the great saving of coal, the children do not get colds because
+of overheating, and the expense of having a doctor every other day is
+averted. Then his snow-shovelling scheme goes back to the first
+principles of nature. Mike is not overawed by convention, and instead of
+following the steps of other men who shovel the snow entirely off, he
+shovels off a footpath to enable me to go to business, and then sits
+down and oversees the sun while it melts the balance. Sometimes, if the
+sun does not do the work promptly enough to suit him, he gets up little
+contests for the children. He divides up certain portions of the walk
+into equal parts, and starts the small boys on a race to see which one
+will get the portion assigned to him cleaned off first, the prize being
+something in the nature of an apple, which the cook orders from the
+market. I believe my son Thomas won ten apples last winter, although I
+am told that the Jimpsonberry boy, whose father's man is cross, and
+insists on doing all the work himself, is the champion snow-shoveller of
+the street."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he is, pa," put in Tommy. "Mike owes him 'leven apples. I only won
+eight."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that is a very good record, Thomas," said the Idiot, "and I will
+see to it that next winter you have a brand-new snow-shovel with which
+to enter the contest."</p>
+
+<p>"Mike lets us chop the kindling-wood, too," said Tommy, suddenly
+perceiving a chance to put in a good word for the genial Mike. "I think
+he's the nicest hired man as ever was."</p>
+
+<p>"He'll stop anything he's doing to talk to me," ventured Mollie, not
+wishing to be backward in laying wreaths upon the brow of their friend.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I have noticed that," said the Idiot. "Indeed, next to his extreme
+restfulness there is no quality that I know of in Mike that shines out
+so conspicuously as his intense love for children. He will neglect his
+own interests, as Mollie has suggested, to talk to the little ones, and
+I rather like him for it. No boy dares go near the Jimpsonberry man, who
+has exerted himself into a perpetual state of nervous exhaustion."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if he cleans your windows, that is something," observed Mrs.
+Pedagog, whose experience in keeping a boarding-house years before
+entitled her to speak as one having authority.</p>
+
+<p>"Unless his system is the same in that work as in the other branches
+committed to his care," said Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 270px;"><a name="ILL_035" id="ILL_035"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_035.jpg" width="270" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;SPEND A WHOLE DAY ON ONE WINDOW&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"It isn't quite," said the Idiot. "He really does exert himself in
+window-cleaning. I have frequently seen him spend a whole day on one
+window. His window-washing system is a very ingenious one,
+nevertheless."</p>
+
+<p>"It is, indeed," said Mrs. Idiot, with a show of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>"A new window-washing system?" grinned Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot. "It is his own invention. He washes them on the
+outside in summer and on the inside in winter. The result is this
+opalescent glass which you see. You would hardly guess that these
+windows are of French plate. Still, we don't mind so much. I couldn't
+ask him to wash them on the outside in winter, it is so dreadfully cold,
+and in the summer, of course, they are always open, and no one, unless
+he were disagreeable enough to go snooping about after unpleasant
+details, would notice that they are not immaculate."</p>
+
+<p>"And you pay this man forty dollars for this?" demanded Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, for this and other things. I pay him two dollars a month for the
+work he does. I pay him ten dollars a month because he's good to the
+children. I pay him ten dollars more for his civility, which is
+unvarying&mdash;he always puts his hat on when he comes into the house,
+having noticed, perhaps, that only those who are my social equals are
+entitled to appear bareheaded in my presence."</p>
+
+<p>"And the other eighteen?" persisted the lawyer, by nature a
+cross-examiner.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I don't grudge him that because&mdash;" a sort of a fond light lit up
+the Idiot's eyes as he gazed down upon Mike, still sitting on the
+tennis-court&mdash;"I don't grudge him that other eighteen dollars because it
+costs Mike twenty dollars a month to live; and he uses the rest of it to
+put his boy through college, so that when he grows up to be a man he
+will be something more than a hired man."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot; "I found that out from a third party some time
+ago, and I thought after all I'd keep him, for I know nobody else would
+have him, and then what would become of the boy in college?"</p>
+
+<h2><a name="IX" id="IX">IX</a></h2>
+
+<h3>ON SOCIAL ACCOUNTS</h3>
+
+<p>"It's rather strange, I think," observed Mrs. Idiot one evening, as she
+and the Idiot sat down to dine, "that the Dawkinses haven't been here
+for three or four months."</p>
+
+<p>"I've noticed it myself," said the Idiot. "We used to see 'em every day
+about. What's up? You and Polly Dawkins had a fight?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I know of," said Mrs. Idiot. "The last time we met she was
+very cordial, and asked most affectionately after you and the children.
+I presumed that possibly you and Dick had had some kind of a falling
+out."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it. Dick and I couldn't quarrel any more than you and
+Polly could. Perhaps as we grow older our ideals differ. Polly's rather
+anthropological in her talks, isn't she?"</p>
+
+<p>"A trifle," said Mrs. Idiot. "And musical and literary and scientific."</p>
+
+<p>"While you?" queried the Idiot.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 277px;"><a name="ILL_036" id="ILL_036"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_036.jpg" width="277" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;WELL, I&#39;M FOND OF GOLF&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm fond of golf and&mdash;ah&mdash;well&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Golf again," laughed the Idiot. "I guess that's it, Bess. When a woman
+wants to talk about the origin of the species and has to hear about a
+splendid putt, and her observations upon the sonata are invariably
+interrupted by animadversions upon the morals of caddies, and her
+criticisms of Browning end in a discussion of the St. Andrew's Rules,
+she's apt to shy off into a more congenial atmosphere, don't you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure," retorted Mrs. Idiot, "that while I admit I am more
+interested in golf than in anything else outside of you and the
+children, I can and do talk sometimes of other things than caddies, and
+beautiful drives, and stymies. You are very much mistaken if you think
+otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very true, my dear," said the Idiot. "And nobody knows it
+better than I do. I've heard you talk charmingly about lots of things
+besides stymies, and foozles, and putts, and drives, but you don't know
+anything about the men of the Stone Age, and you couldn't tell the
+difference between a sonata and a fugue any more than I. Furthermore,
+you have no patience with Browning, so that when Polly Dawkins asks if
+you like <i>Sordello</i>, you are more likely than not to say that you never
+ate any, but on the whole for small fish prefer whitebait."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"No, indeed," she replied. "I'd fall back on golf if Polly mentioned
+<i>Sordello</i> to me. You may remember that you sent it to me when we were
+engaged, and I loved you so much&mdash;then&mdash;that I read it. If I hadn't
+loved you I couldn't have done it."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," smiled the Idiot, "what did you think of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think Browning had a good lie, but he foozled," said Mrs. Idiot, with
+her eyes atwinkle, and the Idiot subsided for at least ten seconds.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you'd say that to Polly some time," he observed. "It's so very
+true, and put with an originality which cannot but appeal to the most
+hardened of literary women."</p>
+
+<p>"I will if I ever get the chance," said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose we make the chance?" suggested the Idiot. "Let's go down there
+and call to-night. I'll work the conversation up so that you can get
+that off as an impromptu."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 312px;"><a name="ILL_037" id="ILL_037"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_037.jpg" width="312" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL TEA&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"No," said Mrs. Idiot. "I don't think we'd better. In the first place,
+Mrs. Whalker told me yesterday that Polly is to read a paper on Balzac
+before the S.&nbsp;F.&nbsp;M.&nbsp;E. to-morrow evening, and on Friday morning she is
+to discuss the 'Influence of Mozart on De Koven' before the Musical
+Mothers' Meeting, and on Saturday afternoon she is going to have an
+anthropological tea at her house, which she is to open with some
+speculations as to whether in the Glacial Period dudes were addicted to
+the use of cigarettes."</p>
+
+<p>"Great Scott!" said the Idiot. "This is her busy week."</p>
+
+<p>"Tolerably so," said Mrs. Idiot. "She has probably reserved this evening
+to read up on Balzac for to-morrow's essay, so I think, my dear, we'd
+better not go."</p>
+
+<p>"Right as usual," said the Idiot. And then he added, "Poor Dawkins, who
+is taking care of him now?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said Mrs. Idiot, "that possibly Mrs. Dawkins has sublet the
+contract for looking after her husband and children to the United
+States Housekeeping Company Limited."</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot gazed blankly at his wife, and awaited an explanation.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 352px;"><a name="ILL_038" id="ILL_038"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_038.jpg" width="352" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THE BABY IS ROCKED TO SLEEP EVERY NIGHT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"An organization, my dear," she continued, "formed by a number of
+well-meaning and remorseful widows who, having lost their husbands,
+begin to appreciate their virtues, and who, finding themselves
+sympathetic when it is too late, are devoting themselves to the husbands
+of others who are neglected. A subscription of five hundred dollars will
+secure the supervision of all the domestic arrangements of a
+home&mdash;marketing, engagement and discharge of domestics, house-cleaning,
+buttons sewed on, darning done, care of flowers, wifely duties
+generally; for one thousand dollars they will bring up the children, and
+see that the baby is rocked to sleep every night, and suitably
+interested in elevating narratives and poems like Joseph's coat of many
+colors, and Tom, Tom the Piper's Son. This enables an advanced woman
+like Mrs. Dawkins to devote her mornings to the encyclopedias, her
+afternoons to the public libraries, and her evenings to the functions
+whereat she may read the papers which her devotion to the encyclopedias
+and the libraries has brought forth."</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, my dear Bess," said the Idiot, rising. "I wish to telephone
+Dr. Simmons."</p>
+
+<p>"For what&mdash;for whom?" demanded the lady.</p>
+
+<p>"You, of course," returned the Idiot. "You are developing alarming
+symptoms. You give every indication of a bad attack of professional
+humor. Your 'International Widows Company for the Protection and
+Amelioration of Neglected Husbandry' proves that!"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot laughed again.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 223px;"><a name="ILL_039" id="ILL_039"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_039.jpg" width="223" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;POOR DICK DAWKINS ISN&#39;T TAKEN CARE OF AT ALL&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Oh, I didn't say that there really is such an institution!" she cried.
+"I said that I supposed there was, for if there isn't, poor Dick Dawkins
+isn't taken care of at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm sorry for it all, anyhow," said the Idiot, seriously.
+"They're both of 'em good friends of ours, and I hate to see two
+families that have been so close drawing apart."</p>
+
+<p>Just then Mollie and Tommy came in.</p>
+
+<p>"Mamma, Willie Dawkins says he can't come to our party because his ma
+won't let him," said Mollie. "She says we don't never go down there."</p>
+
+<p>"That's it," said the Idiot. "Mrs. Dawkins has got so many irons in the
+fire she's begun to keep social books. I'll bet you she's got a ledger
+and a full set of double-entry account-books charging up calls payable
+and calls receivable."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see how she can get along unless she has," replied Mrs. Idiot.
+"With all her clubs and church societies and varied social obligations
+she needs an expert accountant to keep track of them all."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose a promise to read a paper on Balzac," put in the Idiot, "is
+something like a three-months' note. It's easy to promise to pay, with
+three months in which to prepare, but you've got to keep track of the
+date and meet the obligation when it falls due. As for me, I'd rather
+meet the note."</p>
+
+<p>"That is about it," said Mrs. Idiot. "If a woman goes into society
+properly she's got to make a business of it. For instance, there are
+about ten dances given at the club here every year. Polly is patroness
+for every one of 'em. There are twenty-five teas during the spring and
+summer months. Polly assists at half of them, and gives a fifth of
+them. She's president of the King's Daughters, corresponding secretary
+of the Dorcas, treasurer of the Red Cross Society, and goodness knows
+what all!"</p>
+
+<p>"I can quite understand why she needs to keep accounts&mdash;social
+accounts," said the Idiot. "But it's rather queer, don't you think, that
+she has the children on her books? The idea of saying that Jimmie and
+Gladys can't come to Mollie's party because Mollie hasn't been down
+there&mdash;why, it's nonsense!"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mrs. Idiot, "it is merely logical. Whatever Polly Dawkins
+does she tries to do thoroughly. I've no doubt she'll do Balzac up
+completely. If she keeps social books showing call balances in her favor
+or against herself she might as well go the whole thing and write the
+children in&mdash;only she's made a mistake, as far as we are concerned,
+unless she means to write us off without squaring up."</p>
+
+<p>"You talk like a financier," said the Idiot, admiringly. "What do you
+know about writing off?"</p>
+
+<p>"I used to help my father with his accounts, occasionally," said Mrs.
+Idiot. "Polly Dawkins's books ought to show a balance of one call in
+our favor. That's really the reason I'm not willing to call there
+to-night. She's so queer about it all, and, as a matter of fact, she
+owes me a call. I'm not going to overwhelm her with an added
+obligation."</p>
+
+<p>"Ho!" smiled the Idiot. "You keep books yourself, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"I keep score," said Mrs. Idiot. "I learned that playing golf."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a bad thing to keep score in golf," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"So they say, but I find it amusing," she replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And how many calls does Mrs. Wilkins owe you?" demanded the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," returned the wife. "And I don't care. When I want to see
+Mrs. Wilkins I call on her whether she owes me a call or not, but with
+Polly Dawkins it's different. She began the book-keeping, and as long as
+she likes it I must try to live up to her ideas. If social intercourse
+develops into a business, business requirements must be observed."</p>
+
+<p>"It's a good idea in a way," said the Idiot, reflectively. "But if you
+make a business of society, why don't you carry it to a logical
+conclusion? Balance your books, if you mean business, every month, and
+send your debtors a statement of their account."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I will if you wish me to," said Mrs. Idiot. "Suppose they don't
+pay?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dun 'em," said the Idiot. And then the matter dropped.</p>
+
+<p>On the fifth of the following month Mr. and Mrs. Idiot were seated
+comfortably in their library. The children had gone to bed, and they
+were enjoying the bliss of a quiet evening at home, when the door-bell
+rang, and in a moment or two the maid ushered in Mr. and Mrs. Richard
+Dawkins, preceded, of course, by their cards. The young householders
+were delighted, and Polly Dawkins was never more charming. She looked
+well, and she talked well, and there was not a symptom of any diminution
+of the old-time friendship perceptible&mdash;only she did appear to be tired
+and care-worn.</p>
+
+<p>The evening wore away pleasantly. The chat reverted to old times, and by
+degrees Mrs. Dawkins seemed to grow less tired.</p>
+
+<p>About ten o'clock the Idiot invited his neighbor to adjourn to the
+smoking-room, where they each lit a cigar and indulged in a
+companionable glass.</p>
+
+<p>"Idiot," said Dawkins, when his wife called out to him that it was time
+to go home, "your wife is a wonder. I've been trying for three months to
+make Polly come up here and she wouldn't. Keeps books, you know&mdash;now.
+Has to&mdash;so much to do. Thought you owed us a call, but received your
+bill Wednesday&mdash;looked it up&mdash;questioned servants&mdash;found you were
+right."</p>
+
+<p>"Bill," cried the Idiot. "What bill?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, the one Mrs. Idiot sent&mdash;this," said Dawkins, taking a piece of
+paper out of his pocket. "Confoundedly good joke."</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot took up the piece of paper. It was type-written&mdash;on Tommy's
+machine&mdash;and read as follows:</p>
+
+<p class="center">November 1 1898</p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dawkins</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><i>To Mr. and Mrs. Idiot Dr.</i></p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="">
+<tr><td align="left">September 29</td><td align="left">Evening call</td><td align="left">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="left">Account overdue. Please remit.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="left"></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>"Great Scott!" laughed the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," said the Idiot after the Dawkinses had gone, "that bill of
+yours was a great idea."</p>
+
+<p>"It wasn't my idea at all&mdash;it was yours," said Mrs. Idiot, laughing.
+"You said we ought to be business-like to the last and send out a
+statement on the first of the month. I sent it. And they paid up."</p>
+
+<p>"Richard," said Mrs. Dawkins, as they drove home, "did you get a
+receipt?"</p>
+
+<h2><a name="X" id="X">X</a></h2>
+
+<h3>AS TO SANTA CLAUS</h3>
+
+<p>"I am very glad I didn't take Tommy and Mollie to church with me this
+morning," said Mrs. Idiot, on her return from service. "It would have
+broken their hearts to have heard the sermon. I don't know what gets
+into Dr. Preachly sometimes. He gave us a blast about Santa Claus."</p>
+
+<p>"A blast about Santa Claus, eh!" said the Idiot. "And how did he blast
+the good old saint?"</p>
+
+<p>"He said he was a lie," rejoined Mrs. Idiot, indignantly, "and that it
+was the duty of every Christian in the land to see that the lie was
+exposed."</p>
+
+<p>"Great heavens!" cried the Idiot, in astonishment. "Doesn't Dr. Preachly
+believe in Santa Claus? Poor old Preachly! How much he has lost! Did he
+say anything about Hop o' My Thumb and Cinderella?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, of course not. Why should he?" returned Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, because; I suppose that a man who doesn't believe in Santa Claus is
+a skeptic on the subject of Hop o' My Thumb, and Rumpelstiltzken, and
+Cinderella, and Jack the Giant-Killer, and all the rest of that noble
+army of childhood friends," explained the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"He didn't mention them," said Mrs. Idiot. "He&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He's going to preach a series of sermons on lies, I presume," said the
+Idiot. "He's tackled Santa Claus first, as being the most seasonable of
+the lot, eh? Jack the Giant-Killer ought to be a good subject for a
+ministerial attack."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he pulled poor old Santa Claus to pieces," said Mrs. Idiot, with
+a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>"Why didn't you bring me a piece of him as a souvenir?" demanded the
+Idiot. "Just a lock of his hair for my collection of curios? What was
+done with the remains?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot laughed as she pulled over her gloves and smoothed them upon
+her lap.</p>
+
+<p>"There weren't any remains," she answered. "When Dr. Preachly got
+through with him there wasn't a vestige of the old chap left. To begin
+with, he was a lie, the doctor said. Then he went on and showed that he
+was a wickedly partial old fellow&mdash;a very snob, he called him&mdash;because
+he gives fine things to the children of the rich and little or nothing
+to the children of the poor. He filled the little folk with hope and
+brought them disappointment, and so on. It was a powerful sermon,
+although I wanted to weep over it."</p>
+
+<p>"Go ahead and weep," said the Idiot; "it's the appropriate thing to do.
+I don't wonder you wanted to cry; you've always liked Dr. Preachly."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"And you hate to see him make a&mdash;ah&mdash;a&mdash;well, you know&mdash;of himself in
+the pulpit; and I quite agree with you. I rather like Preachly myself.
+It is too bad to see a well-meaning man like that batting his brains out
+against the rock of Gibraltar, whether suicide is sin or not. What has
+put him in this despondent mood? Do you suppose he has heard?"</p>
+
+<p>"Heard what?" demanded Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"About the slippers," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"What slippers?" asked his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, the same old slippers," said the Idiot. "You know the ones I
+mean&mdash;the ones he's going to get from Santa Claus. Really, I'm not
+surprised, after all. If I were a minister, and realized that truckloads
+of embroidered slippers of every size and color, covered with stags of
+red worsted jumping over rivulets of yellow floss, with split agates for
+eyes set in over the toe, were to be dumped in my front yard every
+Christmas Eve by that old reprobate, Santa Claus, I think I, too, would
+set him down as a fraud, or an overworked cobbler, anyhow."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 331px;"><a name="ILL_040" id="ILL_040"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_040.jpg" width="331" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;DR. PREACHLY ONLY GOT EIGHT PAIRS LAST XMAS&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"That's exaggerated&mdash;a comic-paper idea," said Mrs. Idiot. "I don't
+believe the average clergyman gets so many slippers. Dr. Preachly only
+got eight pairs last Christmas."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that all?" cried the Idiot. "Mercy, what a small income of slippers!
+Dear me! how can he live with only eight pairs of slippers? But, after
+all, slippers are an appropriate gift for a clergyman," he added, "and
+Santa Claus should be credited with that fact. Slippers have soles, and
+the more slippers he gets the easier it is to save their soles, and
+therefore&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Really, my dear, you are flippant," said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all," rejoined the Idiot. "I am merely trying to sit on two
+stools at once&mdash;to retain my respect for Dr. Preachly without giving up
+my everlasting regard for Santa Claus. If I can't do both I am very much
+afraid it will be Dr. Preachly, and not Santa Claus, who will go to the
+wall in this establishment, and that would be sad. I can't say I think
+much of the doctor's logic. Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't notice his logic," Mrs. Idiot replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Very likely," said the Idiot; "from what you tell me of his discourse I
+imagine he must have left it at home, which is a bad thing to do in an
+argument. To begin, he called Santa a lie, did he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; said he didn't exist at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Good! Then how could he have been a snob?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, while of course I have no sympathy with his conclusions, Dr.
+Preachly handled that point pretty well. It certainly is true that in
+the homes of the rich there is a lavishness of gifts that you don't
+find in the homes of the poor, and therefore Santa Claus treats the rich
+better than he does the poor. We all know that."</p>
+
+<p>"Hum!" said the Idiot. "And so it is Santa Claus who is the snob, eh,
+and not Fortune?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Dr. Preachly did not touch upon that. All he said was that Santa
+Claus was a snob for favoring 'high society' and in many cases
+absolutely ignoring the submerged."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't see how," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose he brings a diamond necklace to the daughter of a Cr&oelig;sus?"</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 203px;"><a name="ILL_041" id="ILL_041"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_041.jpg" width="203" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;A CHINA DOLL TO THE DAUGHTER OF A CARPENTER&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"And a china doll to the daughter of a carpenter?" said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"That's tact, not snobbishness," said the Idiot. "What would the
+daughter of a carpenter do with a diamond necklace? The china doll is
+not only more appropriate, but a better plaything."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, anyhow, he gives richly to those that have, and sparsely, if at
+all, to those that haven't, Dr. Preachly said," said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"There is scriptural authority for that," observed the Idiot. "I wonder
+if Dr. Preachly reads his Bible! Perhaps I'd better send him one for
+Christmas instead of a pair of galoshes. He'll find in the Bible that
+'to him that hath shall be given,' and so forth. But to return to the
+logic&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I told you I didn't notice it," said Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor did Dr. Preachly, my dear; passed it by as if it were a poor
+relation, apparently. But this is true, a lie is an untruth. Truth alone
+lives, therefore an untruth does not live. Santa Claus is a lie and does
+not live, and is a snob, according to our reverend logician. Now, how
+can one who does not live be a snob or anything else? Truly, I wish Dr.
+Preachly would be more careful in his statements. As a pew-holder in his
+church I do not like to hear him denounce something that does not exist
+as having unworthy qualities. It's like shaking a sword at nothing and
+patting yourself on the back afterwards for your courage; still more in
+this instance is it like batting your poor mortal head against the hard
+surface of an everlasting rock, and our clergy should be in better
+business.</p>
+
+<p>"Let 'em fight the harmful lies&mdash;the lies of false social ideas as
+propagated by distinctions of pew-holding, for instance. The man who
+sits in the front of the church is no better than the man who sits at
+the back, and is frequently his inferior; but has he more or has he less
+influence? The man who hands in his check for ten thousand dollars,
+having that and more to spare, is not more the friend of religion and
+Christianity than the poor beggar who stumbles in and puts his penny in
+the plate, thus diminishing by one-fifth his capital. Suppose Santa
+Claus is in a material sense a fancy or a lie; Heaven help Dr. Preachly
+if he can't see the beauty and the ethical value of the deception. Is he
+not the embodiment of the golden rule, and is he not, after all&mdash;God
+bless him and them!&mdash;something beautiful in the eyes of the children?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm flippant, and I know it, but there are some things I cling to," he
+added, after a pause. "Santa Claus is one of them, and Dr. Preachly can
+preach through all eternity, and, with all due respect to him, he can't
+remove from my mind the beauty of an idea that was planted there by two
+people who were practical enough, my father and my mother. I've
+inherited Santa Claus, and I'm not going to give him up, and no
+preacher in our church or in the church of others can take him away from
+me by one sermon, or by an infinite number of sermons, however sincere
+they may be. Is dinner ready?"</p>
+
+<p>Dinner was ready. It was eaten reflectively, and after it the children
+went to Sunday-school. From this Tommy returned with a swollen eye,
+which later became dark.</p>
+
+<p>"Hullo, pop!" he said, addressing the Idiot as he entered the house.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 283px;"><a name="ILL_042" id="ILL_042"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_042.jpg" width="283" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;HULLO, SONNY! HAD A GOOD TIME?&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Hullo, sonny!" replied the Idiot, observing the swollen eye. "Had a
+good time?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yep," said the boy; "pretty good."</p>
+
+<p>"Been fighting?" suggested the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so very much," said the boy; "only a little." And he began to sing
+a popular air, as if he didn't care much about life in general, and
+didn't mind an aching eye, which was rapidly, by its inflammation,
+giving away the fact that he had met with trouble.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you learn at Sunday-school?" asked the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"More blessed to give than to receive," said Tommy.</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" said the Idiot. "I hope you will remember that, sonny. There is
+no satisfaction in all the world like that of giving if you can afford
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"I think tho, too," said Mollie, sitting down on her father's lap with
+the contented sigh of a little girl who has discovered that life is not
+all an illusion. "I gave my dollie away to-day, papa," she added. "She
+wath only thawdust, and Pollie Harrington hath her now. She was a
+drefful care, and I'm glad to be ridden of her."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 390px;"><a name="ILL_043" id="ILL_043"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_043.jpg" width="390" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I GAVE MY DOLLY AWAY TO-DAY&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>But the Idiot's mind was not on dolls, and he showed it. His boy's eye
+proved a greater care.</p>
+
+<p>"Come here, my boy," he said.</p>
+
+<p>The boy approached inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"How did this happen?" the Idiot asked. "Your eye is swollen."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know," cried Tommy, exultantly. "Jimmie Roberts said there
+wasn't no Santy Claus."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"I said there was, an' then I gave him one on the end of his nose."</p>
+
+<p>Here the boy struggled away from his father, as if he had done something
+he was willing to stand by.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me understand this," said the Idiot. "Jimmie said&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There wasn't any Santy Claus," interrupted Tommy.</p>
+
+<p>"Then what did you say?" asked the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"I told him he didn't know what he was talking about," said Tommy.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you say that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because he was wrong, papa," said Tommy. "I've seen Santy Claus; I saw
+him last year."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! You did, eh? I was not aware of that fact."</p>
+
+<p>Tommy began to laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't fool me, daddy," he said, climbing onto his father's knee.
+"Of course I've seen him, and he's the bulliest feller in all the world.
+<i>You're him!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>And a hug followed.</p>
+
+<p>Later on Mrs. Idiot and the Idiot sat together. The latter was deep in
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>"Children have queer notions," said he, after a while.</p>
+
+<p>"They are generally pretty right, though," observed Mrs. Idiot. "You are
+a pretty good Santa Claus, after all," she added.</p>
+
+<p>"Pollie," said the Idiot, rising, "I believe in Santa Claus because he
+represents the spirit of the hour, and whoever tries to turn him down
+tries to turn down that spirit&mdash;the most blessed thing we have. Let's
+keep the children believing in Santa Claus, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"I agree," said Mrs. Idiot. "For the secret is out. You are Santa Claus
+to them."</p>
+
+<p>"Heaven grant I may always be as much," said the Idiot. "For if a father
+is Santa Claus, and a boy or a girl believes in Santa Claus as a friend,
+as a companion, as something that brings them only sincerity and love
+and sympathy, then may we feel that Tiny Tim's prayer has been answered,
+and that God has blessed us all."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="XI" id="XI">XI</a></h2>
+
+<h3>AS TO NEW-YEAR'S DAY</h3>
+
+<p>It was New-Year's eve, and Mr. and Mrs. Idiot with their old friends
+were watching the old year die. The old year had been a fairly
+successful one for them all, and they were properly mournful over its
+prospective demise, but the promise of the new was sufficiently bright
+to mitigate their sorrow.</p>
+
+<p>"What a sandwich life is, after all!" ejaculated the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pedagog started nervously. The remark was so idiotic that even its
+source seemed to make it inexcusable.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 284px;"><a name="ILL_044" id="ILL_044"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_044.jpg" width="284" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I DON&#39;T QUITE CATCH YOUR DRIFT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I don't quite catch your drift," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"As the man said when an avalanche of snow fell off his neighbor's roof
+and missed him by an inch," said the Idiot. "Why, just think a moment,
+Doctor, and my drift will overwhelm you. Look about you and consider
+what we have ourselves demonstrated to-night. If that does not prove
+life a series of emotional sandwiches, then I don't know what a sandwich
+is. Twenty minutes ago we were all gladness over the prosperity of the
+year gone by. Five minutes ago we were all on the verge of tears because
+the good old year is going the way of all years. An hour from now we
+will be joyously acclaiming the new. Two thick slices of joy with a thin
+slice of grief between."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said Mr. Pedagog. "I see. There is something in the analogy, after
+all. The bread of joy and the ham of sorrow, as you might put it; do
+make up the sum of human existence; but in some cases, my lad, I am
+afraid you will find there is only one slice of bread to two of ham."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt," replied the Idiot, "but that does not affect my proposition
+that life is a sandwich. If one slice of ham between two slices of bread
+is a ham sandwich, why is not one slice of bread between two slices of
+ham a bread sandwich? What is a sandwich, anyhow? The dictionary says
+that a sandwich is something placed between two other things; hence,
+all things are sandwiches, because there is nothing in the world, the
+world being round, that is not between two other things. Therefore, all
+things being sandwiches, life is a sandwich, Q.&nbsp;E.&nbsp;D."</p>
+
+<p>"Is life a thing?" demanded Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," said the Idiot. "And a mighty good thing, too. If you don't
+believe it look the word thing up in the dictionary. All things are
+things."</p>
+
+<p>"But," continued the Schoolmaster, his old spirit of antagonism rising
+up in his breast, "granted that life is a thing, what is it between so
+that it becomes a sandwich?"</p>
+
+<p>"The past and the future," said the Idiot. "It is a slice of the
+immediate between a slice of past and one of future."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pedagog laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"You are still the same old Idiot," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot. "Gibraltar and I and Truth are the three
+unchangeable things in this life, and that's why I am so happy. I'm in
+such good company. Gibraltar and Truth are good enough companions for
+anybody."</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Mollie and Tommy, who had been allowed to sit up upon this
+rare occasion, stirred uneasily.</p>
+
+<p>"Ith I a thandwich, popper?" said the little girl, sleepily, raising her
+head from her father's shoulder and gazing into his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, indeed, you are," said her father, giving her an affectionate
+squeeze. "A sugar sandwich, Mollie. You're really good enough to eat."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'd rather be a pie," put in Tommy; "an apple pie."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, my son," returned the Idiot. "Have your own way. Henceforth
+be a pie if you prefer&mdash;an apple pie. But may I ask why you express this
+preference?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, because," said Tommy, "if I'm to be an apple pie somebody's got to
+fill me chock-full of apple sauce."</p>
+
+<p>"The son of his father," observed Mr. Whitechoker.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it is a pity," Mrs. Pedagog put in at this point, "that some of
+the good old customs of the New Year have gone out."</p>
+
+<p>"As to which, Mrs. Pedagog?" asked the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, New-Year's calling particularly," explained the lady. "It is no
+longer the thing for people to make New-Year's calls, and I must confess
+I regret it. It used to be a great pleasure to me in the old days to
+receive the gentlemen&mdash;my old friends, and relatives, and boarders."</p>
+
+<p>"Why distinguish between your old friends and your boarders, Mrs.
+Pedagog?" interrupted the Idiot. "They are synonymous terms."</p>
+
+<p>"They are now," said the good lady, "but&mdash;ah&mdash;they weren't always. I
+used sometimes to think you, for instance, didn't like me as much as you
+might."</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't dare," explained the Idiot. "If I'd liked you as much as I
+might I'd have told you so, and then Mr. Pedagog would have got jealous
+and there'd have been a horrid affair."</p>
+
+<p>The lady smiled graciously, and Mr. Pedagog threw a small paper pellet
+at the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm much obliged to you for holding off, Idiot," he said. "I don't know
+where I'd have been to-day if you'd got in ahead of me. Mrs. Pedagog has
+always had a soft spot in her heart for you."</p>
+
+<p>"I've got the other spot," said the Idiot, "and a pair of aces are hard
+to beat in pairs; but I think I voice Mrs. Pedagog's sentiments in the
+matter, Mr. Pedagog, when I say that she and I would always have been
+glad to see you every other New-Year's day if I had been the fortunate
+winner of her hand."</p>
+
+<p>"And Mr. Pedagog and I would have been glad to see you and Mrs. Pedagog
+in the sandwich years," said Mrs. Idiot to her husband; and then,
+turning to the Schoolmaster, added, "Wouldn't we, Mr. Pedagog?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, madame," returned Mr. Pedagog, courteously. "You might have been,
+but I would not. If I had married you I could never have seen any one
+else with pleasure. I should have kept my eyes solely for you."</p>
+
+<p>"John!" cried Mrs. Pedagog, arching her eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"Pleasantry, my dear&mdash;mere pleasantry," returned the Schoolmaster,
+tapping his fingers together and smiling sweetly upon Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"You didn't finish, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot. "You were telling us
+how you used to enjoy New-Year's calling before it went out."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied Mrs. Pedagog. "It was charming. I used positively to
+look forward to its coming with delight. We women, Mr. Idiot, found the
+old custom very delightful."</p>
+
+<p>"But the men, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "did you ever think of
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"What else did we think of? What else is there for a woman to think
+about?" replied Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Jane!" cried Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Pleasantry, my dear&mdash;mere pleasantry</i>," returned Mrs. Pedagog,
+frigidly. And Mr. Pedagog lit a cigar. It is not always pleasant to be
+quoted.</p>
+
+<p>"Still," said the Idiot, "you thought of men only as creatures of the
+moment&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Entirely," said Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"And not as creatures of the week following," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"What has that to do with it?" asked Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Much&mdash;from the man's stand-point," returned the Idiot. "His digestion
+was butchered to make a woman's holiday. Take myself as an example. I
+used to make New-Year's calls; and to get through with my list by
+midnight, I had to start in at nine o'clock in the morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Nine o'clock is not so early," said Mr. Whitechoker.</p>
+
+<p>"It's early for cake and pickled oysters," said the Idiot. "And for
+chicken salad and wedding-cake, and for lemonade and punch, and for
+lobster and egg-nog, and for ice-cream and <i>pâté-de-foie-gras</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"H'm!" said Mr. Pedagog, reflectively. "That's true."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite so," observed Mr. Whitechoker, brushing off his vest, upon which
+the ashes of his cigar had rested. "Especially for the punch."</p>
+
+<p>"There was no punch in my house," said Mrs. Pedagog. "Indeed, I always
+served a very simple luncheon. We did have chicken salad, of course, but
+the chicken was good and the salad was crisp&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'd swear to it," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"And we had egg-nog, but there was more egg than nog in it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Again I'd swear to it," said the Idiot, smacking his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"And as for the lobsters, nobody ever complained&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He'd have been a lobster himself who would," said the Idiot. "But that
+does not prove that no one ever suffered."</p>
+
+<p>"And as for the pickled oysters, no one ever suffered from them that I
+knew of," continued the good lady. "They are harmless eaten in
+moderation."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 233px;"><a name="ILL_045" id="ILL_045"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_045.jpg" width="233" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I FELT AS IF I HAD SWALLOWED AS OVERSHOE&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Exactly right," cried the Idiot. "No gentleman would ever complain of
+pickled oysters, even if they were made of inferior rubber, eaten in
+moderation. Yet I recall in my own experience a pickled oyster of most
+impressive quality. He was not a pickled oyster of the moment. He was
+the Admiral Dewey of pickled oysters. In appearance he resembled every
+other pickled oyster I ever met, but&mdash;well, he kept me in a state of
+worry for a month. Just eating him alone was eating pickled oysters in
+immoderation. I felt as if I had swallowed an overshoe. He was a
+charming pickled oyster, Mrs. Pedagog, and he was devoted to me, but he
+involved me in complications alongside of which the Philippine question
+is child's play. If a New-Year's caller could have confined his
+attentions to the ladies he met no harm would have come to him, but he
+couldn't, you know. The day was one continuous round of effort and
+indigestibles. What a man got at your house and had to eat merely to
+show his appreciation of your hospitality was all right and wholesome.
+Your lobster and egg-nog could do him no harm, but he couldn't stop with
+yours; he had to continue, and consume lobsters and egg-nog everywhere
+else and all day long. The day resolved itself into a magnificent gorge
+alongside of which that of Niagara seems like a wagon-rut. It finally
+came down to the point where either man or the custom had to die, and
+man being selfish, the custom went. Did you ever consider exactly how
+much indigestible food an amiable, well-meaning person had to consume in
+a round of, say, three dozen calls, Mrs. Pedagog?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brief nodded his approval. "Now you've struck it," he said. "I've
+been there, Idiot."</p>
+
+<p>"I must confess," said Mrs. Pedagog, "that I never looked into that
+question."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll tell you," the Idiot resumed. "The last time I made
+New-Year's calls I figured it out for the doctor the next morning, and
+as I recall the statistics, in the course of that day I ate one hundred
+and twenty-nine pickled oysters, thirteen plates of chicken salad, seven
+plates of lobster salad, five plates of mulled sardines, twenty-three
+plates of ice-cream, four hundred and sixty-three macaroons,
+eighty-seven sandwiches ranging from lettuce and ham to chicken and
+potted goose-liver, enough angel-cake to feed all the angels there are
+and two more, sixteen Welsh rarebits that were being made just as I
+happened in, and crystallized ginger and salted almonds and marrons to
+the extent of about eighteen pounds."</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy!" cried Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Say, pa, where was I then?" asked Tommy, his eyes glittering with
+delight.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 236px;"><a name="ILL_046" id="ILL_046"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_046.jpg" width="236" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;I FOUND EIGHT SANDWICHES AND A PINT OF SALTED
+ALMONDS&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"You were eating green cheese on the moon, Tommy," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Wisht I'd been with you," said Tommy. "Must o' been better than bein' a
+pie."</p>
+
+<p>"And all of these things," continued the Idiot, with a wink at his son,
+"I washed down with six gallons of lemonade, nineteen cups of coffee,
+eighteen cups of tea, and a taste of claret punch."</p>
+
+<p>"And how about the egg-nog?" asked the Bibliomaniac, slyly.</p>
+
+<p>"I judge there were about six crates of eggs in it," said the Idiot. "I
+never had the nerve to estimate the nog-end of it."</p>
+
+<p>"What did the doctor say when you told him all that?" asked Mrs.
+Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot chuckled. "What did he say?" he cried. "Why, I should think
+you could guess. He blamed it all on the Welsh rarebits, but he thought
+he could get me into shape again in time for the next New Year. I've
+never been the same man since."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, the way I look at it," said Mrs. Pedagog, "is that it is a great
+pity that women must be deprived of a function that gives them pleasure
+because the men make pigs of themselves."</p>
+
+<p>"But you don't understand, Mrs. Pedagog," the Idiot persisted. "I grant
+you that the man who eats all that makes a pig of himself, but he has no
+choice. He can't help himself. When a charming hostess insists, he'd be
+a greater pig if he refused to partake of her hospitality. The custom
+involved an inevitable sacrifice of man's digestion upon the altar of
+woman. That's all there was about it. If it could have been arranged so
+that a man could take a hamper about with him and stow all the cakes and
+salads and other good things away in that, and eat them later as he
+happened to need or want them, instead of in his own inner self, the
+good old custom might have been preserved, but that is impossible in
+these conventional days."</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't have eaten it all," put in Mrs. Idiot. "You could have
+pretended to eat it and put it down somewhere."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 368px;"><a name="ILL_047" id="ILL_047"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_047.jpg" width="368" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THEY WERE FOUND SOME DAYS LATER WHEN THE ROOM WAS PUT
+IN ORDER&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I know that, my dear. I didn't even on that occasion eat it all&mdash;I only
+ate what I told you. I found eight sandwiches and a pint of salted
+almonds in my coat-tail pocket the next morning, which I managed
+surreptitiously to hide away while my hostesses were getting me
+something else, and in one place, while nobody was watching me, I hid a
+half-dozen pickled oysters under a sofa, where I suppose they were found
+some days later when the room was put in order."</p>
+
+<p>As the Idiot spoke the clock struck twelve, and the guests all rose up.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's to the New Year!" said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet," interposed the Idiot. "That's only a signal for the Welsh
+rarebits to be brought in. I've sworn them off for the New Year, but I
+haven't for the old. The clock is a half-hour fast."</p>
+
+<p>"No, my dear," said Mrs. Idiot. "It was, but I put it back. It's exactly
+right now."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said the Idiot, "I join you in the toast, Mr. Pedagog. Here's to
+the New Year: may it bring joy to everybody. Meanwhile may it bring also
+the Welsh rarebits."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you'd sworn off," suggested Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"So I had," replied the Idiot, "but circumstances over which I have no
+control force me to postpone my reformation for another twelve months.
+If they had been served at half-past eleven I should have stuck to my
+resolve; as they have been delayed until twelve-one I cannot do less
+than eat them. I do not believe in wilful waste; and besides, it is
+quite as much the duty of the host to consume the good things he places
+before his guests as it is for the guests to partake. I can wait a year,
+I think, without wholly ruining what little digestion my former devotion
+to New-Year's calling has left me. Gentlemen, I propose the ladies: May
+their future be as golden as this rarebit; and for the men, may they
+always be worthy to be the toast upon which that golden future may rest
+with the certainty born of confidence."</p>
+
+<p>And the guests fell to and ate each a golden buck to the New Year&mdash;all
+save Mollie and Tommy. These two important members of the household went
+up to their little beds, but just before going to sleep Tommy called
+through the door to his little sister:</p>
+
+<p>"Mollie!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeth!"</p>
+
+<p>"Want to play a game with me to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeth!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you get a cake and a pie and some gingersnaps and a lot of apples
+and some candy and we'll play New-Year's calls."</p>
+
+<p>"Splendid!" lisped Mollie. "You'll call on me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Tommy; "and all you'll have to do will be to force food on
+me."</p>
+
+<p>And they soon passed into the land of dreams.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="XII" id="XII">XII</a></h2>
+
+<h3>SOME DOMESTIC INVENTIONS</h3>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 253px;"><a name="ILL_048" id="ILL_048"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_048.jpg" width="253" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THERE&#39;S NOT MUCH MONEY IN STOCKS&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I think I'll give up the business of broking and go into inventing,"
+said the Idiot one Sunday morning, as he and Mrs. Idiot and their
+friends sat down at breakfast. "There's not much money in stocks, but
+the successful inventor of a patent clothes-pin makes a fortune."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd think twice about that before acting," observed Mr. Brief. "There
+may not be much money in stocks, but you can work eight hours a day, and
+get good pay in a broker's office, while the inventor has to wait upon
+inspiration."</p>
+
+<p>"True enough," said the Idiot; "but waiting on inspiration isn't a bad
+business in itself. You can play golf or read a rattling good novel, or
+go to a yacht-race while you wait."</p>
+
+<p>"But where does the money come in?" asked Mr. Pedagog, his usual
+caution coming to the fore.</p>
+
+<p>"Inspiration brings it with her," said the Idiot, "and by the barrel,
+too. What's the use of toiling eight hours a day for fifty weeks in a
+year for three thousand dollars when by waiting on inspiration in a
+pleasant way you make a million all of a sudden?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Pedagog, indulgently, "if you have the inspiration
+lassoed, as you might say, your argument is all right; but if you are
+merely going to sit down and wait for it to ring you up on the
+telephone, and ask you when and where you wish your barrels of gold
+delivered, I think it will be your creditors, and not fortune, who will
+be found knocking at your door. How are you going about this business,
+provided you do retire from Wall Street?"</p>
+
+<p>"Choose my field and work it," replied the Idiot. "For the present I
+should choose the home. That is the field I am most interested in just
+now. I should study its necessities, and endeavor to meet whatever these
+might demand with an adequate supply. Any man who stays around home all
+day will find lots of room for the employment of his talents along
+inventive lines."</p>
+
+<p>"You've tried it, have you?" asked Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly I have," said the Idiot, "though I haven't invented anything
+yet. Why, only last week I stayed home on Monday&mdash;wash-day&mdash;and a
+thousand things that might be invented suggested themselves to me."</p>
+
+<p>"As, for instance?" asked Mrs. Idiot, who was anxious to know of any
+possible thing that could mitigate the horrors of wash-day.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 237px;"><a name="ILL_049" id="ILL_049"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_049.jpg" width="237" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;A NICE LITTLE BASKET-HAT ON HER HEAD TO HOLD THE PINS
+IN&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Well, it wouldn't help <i>you</i> much, my dear," said the Idiot, "but the
+wash-lady would hail with unmixed delight a substitute for her mouth to
+hold clothes-pins in while she is hanging out the clothes. I watched
+Ellen in the yard for ten minutes that day, and it was pathetic. There
+she was, standing on her tiptoes, hanging innumerable garments on the
+line, her mouth full of clothes-pins, and Jimpsonberry's hired man
+leaning over the fence trying to shout sweet nothings in her ear. If she
+had had a nice little basket-hat on her head to hold the pins in she
+could have answered back without stopping her work every other minute
+to take them out of her mouth in order to retort to his honeyed
+sentiments."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Idiot laughed. "Ellen finds time enough to talk and do the washing,
+too," she said. "I sometimes think she does more talking than washing."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt of it; she's only human, like the rest of us," said the Idiot.
+"But she might save time to do something else for us if she could do the
+washing and the talking at the same time. She may give up the washing,
+but she'll never give up the talking. Therefore, why not make the
+talking easier?"</p>
+
+<p>"What you need most, I think," put in Mr. Brief, "is an instrument to
+keep hired men from leaning over the fence and distracting the attention
+of the laundress from her work. That would be a great boon."</p>
+
+<p>"Not unless idleness is a great boon," retorted the Idiot. "Half the
+hired men I know would be utterly out of employment if they couldn't
+lean over a fence and talk to somebody. Leaning over a fence and talking
+to somebody forms seventy-five per cent. of the hired man's daily labor.
+He seems to think that is what he is paid for. Still, any one who
+objects could very easily remedy the conversational detail in so far as
+it goes on over the fence."</p>
+
+<p>"By the use of barbed wire, I presume," suggested Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"By something far more subtle and delicately suggestive," rejoined the
+Idiot. "Hired men do not mind barbed-wire fences. They rather like them
+when they annoy other people. When they annoy themselves they know how
+to treat them. My own man Mike, for instance, minds them not at all.
+Indeed, he has taken my pruning-shears and clipped all the barbs off the
+small stretch of it we had at the rear end of our lot to keep him from
+climbing over for a short cut home."</p>
+
+<p>"With what result?" asked Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 267px;"><a name="ILL_050" id="ILL_050"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_050.jpg" width="267" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;AN ELECTRIC NOTICE TO QUIT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"With the result that I had to buy a new pair of pruning-shears," said
+the Idiot. "My Anti-Over-the-Fence-Gabber," he continued, "would involve
+certain complex details, but it would work. I should have an electric
+battery connected with the upper cable of the fence, and an operator
+stationed inside of the house, close to a key which would send some
+six hundred or seven hundred volts through the cable whenever needed.
+Then if I felt that Jimpsonberry's man was interfering with my
+laundress, as soon as he leaned over the fence I'd have the operator
+send him an electric notice to quit."</p>
+
+<p>"A message?" said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"No, a plain shock. Two hundred volts as a starter, three hundred as a
+reminder, and the full seven hundred if necessary to make the hint
+plainer."</p>
+
+<p>"That would be cruel," observed Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Not wholly," said the Idiot. "It would be an advantage to the man
+himself in one way. Hired men have too little electricity in their
+systems, Mrs. Pedagog. If Jimpsonberry's man, for instance, would take
+all the electricity I'd give him and apply it to his work,
+Jimpsonberry's unpulled dandelions would not be such a constant menace
+to my lawn. I compel Mike to weed out my lawn every spring and autumn,
+but Jimpsonberry doesn't attend to his at all. He doesn't sleep on it,
+and so doesn't bother about it. Consequently, when his dandelions go to
+seed the seed is blown over into my grass, and every year I get an
+uninvited crop, which at a dollar a thousand would make me a
+millionaire."</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you apply your inventive genius to the discovery of a
+seedless dandelion?" asked the Lawyer. "It seems to me that would be the
+best solution of the dandelion problem."</p>
+
+<p>"Because Jimpsonberry wouldn't have 'em if I discovered 'em," said the
+Idiot. "I judge from the millions he raises every year that he is
+satisfied with dandelions as they are. He's got enough for himself, and
+never makes any charge for those he gives to his neighbors."</p>
+
+<p>"I think a furnace-feeder would be a good thing, too," the Idiot
+continued, in a moment. "My furnace is a chronic sufferer from
+indigestion because on some days it is gorged with coal and on others
+with ashes. Seems to me if I could get a month's time in which to
+concentrate my attention upon a furnace-feeder, I could devise some kind
+of a contraption that would invoke the enthusiastic love of the suburban
+resident in Arctic latitudes the world over."</p>
+
+<p>"I have often thought of that possibility myself," observed Mr. Pedagog,
+his eyes fondly resting upon a steaming plate of griddle-cakes that
+had just been brought in. "But coal is a rebellious quantity. A
+furnace-feeder would need to be delicately adjusted, and coal cannot be
+handled with delicacy. It requires a chute rather than a tube. It must
+be manipulated with the shovel, not the sugar-tongs."</p>
+
+<p>"Correct," said the Idiot. "Therefore, <i>you</i> would experiment on a chute
+or a shovel, abandoning all idea of refining the coal. I, on the other
+hand, would experiment with the coal itself, Mr. Pedagog. Why not
+liquefy it, and let it drop automatically into the furnace through a
+self-acting spigot?"</p>
+
+<p>"Liquefy coal?" asked Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," replied the Idiot. "We liquefy pretty nearly everything
+else. If liquid air, why not liquid coal? Everything we have in nature
+in these days apparently can be liquefied, and while I am not familiar
+with the process, I see no reason why a ton of coal should not be
+reduced to such a shape that it can be bottled. Once bottled and
+provided with an automatic dropper, it could easily be adjusted so as to
+flow in proper quantities into the furnace at proper intervals."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be very expensive. Do you know what a pint of liquid air
+costs?" demanded the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the Idiot. "I neither breathe nor drink it. The plain old
+stuff is good enough for me, and cheap if you don't have to go to the
+mountains or the sea-shore to get your supply."</p>
+
+<p>"Granting coal could be liquefied," the Doctor assented, "I venture to
+say that a ton of it would cost as much as five hundred dollars."</p>
+
+<p>"I've no doubt it would," said the Idiot; "but I could afford a ton of
+coal at five hundred dollars if my scheme worked. A successful invention
+would make bread seem cheap at ten dollars a loaf. There's another thing
+I should put my mind on, and that is a method of cooking a cauliflower
+so that everybody in the house, as well as the neighbors, should not
+know that you are doing so," he continued. "I am particularly fond of
+cauliflower, but it is undeniable that in the process of cooking it
+becomes obtrusive, almost to the point of ostentation. I've spoken about
+it many times. Mike, the gardener, to whom I've spoken on the subject,
+thinks the cauliflower itself, if sprinkled with <i>eau de Cologne</i> while
+growing, would cease to be obnoxious in the cooking; but that is too
+expensive a process. It would take a dozen cases of <i>eau de Cologne</i> to
+bring a single cauliflower to maturity. My son, Tommy, has stated that
+he thinks it might be boiled in Florida-water instead of in the simple
+variety that comes from the pipes. A good suggestion for a small boy,
+but also expensive. Hired men and small boys do not think of the
+exchequer of the principal in their plans. They don't have to. Their
+allowance and wages are usually all velvet&mdash;an elegant vulgarism for
+surplus&mdash;and for my own part I have constantly to veto their little
+schemes for the betterment of my condition in order to have any
+condition at all left. But as far as the arrangement of an odorless
+cauliflower-cooker is concerned, it is as simple as A&nbsp;B&nbsp;C,
+barring one or two complications."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish you'd hurry up and invent it," cried Mrs. Idiot, with
+enthusiasm. "What are the main features of this simple contrivance?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'd have a boiler, in the first place, in which to boil the animal,"
+said the Idiot. "When the water was ready I'd clap the creature into it,
+and before it had time to remonstrate I'd fasten a hermetically sealed
+cover over the top."</p>
+
+<p>"But when you took it off the results would still be overpowering," said
+Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 249px;"><a name="ILL_051" id="ILL_051"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_051.jpg" width="249" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;FINDING OUT WHAT IS BEING COOKED FOR DINNER&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"No, my dear sir," said the Idiot, "for the simple reason that I should
+affix a cold-air box and a flue to the hermetically sealed boiler.
+Through the cold-air box fresh air would constantly flow into the
+boiler. Through the flue all the aromatic drawbacks of the cauliflower
+would be carried off through the chimney into the upper air. Anybody who
+wished to know whether we were going to have cauliflower for dinner or
+not would have to climb up to the roof and sniff at the chimney-top to
+find out."</p>
+
+<p>"It <i>is</i> simple, isn't it, Mrs. Idiot?" Mrs. Pedagog said.</p>
+
+<p>"Very," replied Mrs. Idiot. "Indeed, it seems so extremely simple that I
+should like to know where the complications lie."</p>
+
+<p>"Where all the complications in cooking lie, my dear," said the
+Idiot, "in the cook. The chief complication would lie in getting a cook
+who could, or if she could, would, use the thing intelligently."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see," said Mr. Brief, dryly&mdash;"I don't see but that what you
+ought to devote your time to, my dear Idiot, is the invention of an
+intelligent cook."</p>
+
+<p>"Humph!" laughed the Idiot. "I may be an idiot, Mr. Brief, but I'm not
+an ass. There are some things that man may reasonably hope to
+accomplish&mdash;such as setting fire to the Hudson River, or growing
+butternuts on the summit of Mont Blanc&mdash;but as for trying to invent an
+intelligent cook who would stay in the country for more than two weeks
+for less than ten thousand dollars a year, that, sir, is beyond all the
+conceptions of the human mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Ain't Bridget intelligent, pa?" asked Tommy.</p>
+
+<p>Here was a complication, for Tommy liked to retail to Bridget the gossip
+of the day, and especially what "pa said."</p>
+
+<p>"H'm&mdash;ah&mdash;oh yes, indeed, she is, Tommy," the Idiot replied, with some
+embarrassment. "Very; she's been with us three months."</p>
+
+<p>"How much do you pay her, pa?" asked the boy.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said the Idiot, "not more than fifteen hundred dollars a month.
+Just take another griddle-cake, my son, and remember that there are some
+things little boys should not talk about."</p>
+
+<p>"Like tumpany's bald heads?" lisped Mollie, complacently, her eye fixed
+upon Mr. Pedagog's shining dome.</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely," observed Mr. Pedagog, appreciating the situation.</p>
+
+<p>And while everybody else laughed the Idiot looked upon his children with
+a sternly affectionate face.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear," said he to Mrs. Idiot, "I think it is time the babies got
+ready for Sunday-school."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="XIII" id="XIII">XIII</a></h2>
+
+<h3>A SUBURBAN COMPLICATION</h3>
+
+<p>"Well, old chap," said the Poet some weeks later, when he happened to be
+spending the night off in the suburbs with his old friend, "how goes the
+noble art of inventing? Has your horseless cauliflower bloomed as yet?"</p>
+
+<p>"Horseless cauliflower is good, but tautological," said the Idiot. "The
+cauliflower is an automobile in itself, without the intervention of man.
+Who told you I was inventing instead of broking these days?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Pedagog said something about it the last time I met him," said the
+Poet. "He's a mighty good friend of yours. He says you are the most
+perfect Idiot he ever met."</p>
+
+<p>"He's a bully good fellow," said the Idiot, affectionately. "You know I
+used to think Pedagog wasn't of any earthly use except to teach people
+things, but as I look back upon my experience with him he has never
+taught me anything that was worth forgetting. So he told you I was going
+into invention, did he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; and he said he thought you were going about it in the right way,"
+rejoined the Poet. "You weren't spending ten thousand dollars to get a
+four-dollar invention on the market, he said, but were inventing things
+that you knew at the outset weren't worth risking your money on."</p>
+
+<p>The Idiot smiled broadly.</p>
+
+<p>"He said that, did he? Well, he doesn't know what he is talking about,"
+he retorted. "I am spending money on my inventions. I have already
+invested fifty cents in my patent Clothes-Pin-Holding Laundry-Bonnet,
+and I have strung the wires along my fence to be used in my electric
+Hired-Man-Discourager; and when I have managed to save up a few dollars
+more I'm going to get a battery to attach to it, when woe betide that
+man of Jimpsonberry's if he tries to talk to Maria while she is at work!
+Furthermore, I have extended the operations of that same useful
+invention so that it will meet a long-felt want in all suburban
+communities as a discourager of promiscuous wooing. You never lived
+in the country, did you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not permanently," said the Poet.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 299px;"><a name="ILL_052" id="ILL_052"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_052.jpg" width="299" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;COURTING HIS BEST GIRL ON SOME OTHER FELLOW&#39;S STONE
+WALL&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Then you are not aware of a singular habit the young country swain has
+of courting his best girl on some other fellow's stone wall after the
+sun goes down," said the Idiot. "Some balmy evening next spring, if
+you'll come up here I'll show you one of the features of suburban life
+that will give you an idea for a poem. That stone wall that runs along
+the front of my place has been the scene of more engagements than I can
+tell you of. Many a time when I have come home late at night I have
+counted as many as ten couples sitting on the cold coping of that wall
+telling each other how beautiful the world is, and holding each other on
+with loving arms."</p>
+
+<p>"Rather an affecting scene, that," said the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"It was at first," rejoined the Idiot, "and I rather liked to see it.
+Indeed, I once suggested to Mrs. Idiot that we should have the coping
+upholstered, so that they might sit more comfortably. I even wanted to
+put a back along the inner side of it for them to lean against, but
+after a while it palled. We couldn't sit out on our own front porch on
+a summer evening and talk without sentimental interruptions that were
+demoralizing to a sustained conversation. We'd try to talk, for
+instance, about Browning, or Tennyson, or Le Gallienne, or some other
+poet of their class, when we'd be interrupted by such sentiments as,
+'Ess I is,' and 'I's oo ducky,' and 'Ain't de moon boofer?' Then when we
+had guests we never dared to take them out-of-doors, but remained cooped
+up inside the house, because Mrs. Idiot feared to intrude upon the
+sacred right of those ten couples to do their courting comparatively
+unobserved."</p>
+
+<p>"It must have been a nuisance," said the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"It grew to be so; but I hadn't the heart to stop it, even if I could
+have done so, so I put up a hedge to hide them from view and soften the
+sound of their voices; but it didn't work very long. They didn't seem to
+appreciate my motive, and it so happened that the hedge which I put up
+with the most innocent of intentions was a Japanese quince that blossoms
+out in thorns half an inch long, to an extent which suggests the fretful
+porcupine. These, for some reason or other, excited the animosity of
+my twenty young friends on the wall, and at the end of the season there
+were not two consecutive feet of the hedge that had not been hacked and
+cut to pieces by my indignant but uninvited guests."</p>
+
+<p>"What impudence!" cried the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"Only the ardor of youth," observed the Idiot, calmly. "Put yourself in
+the same place. Suppose that you, just as you were about to declare your
+undying love for the girl of your choice, and while gently stealing your
+arm about her waist, were to have the back of your hand ripped off by a
+brutal hedge?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see," laughed the Poet. "I dare say I should be indignant."</p>
+
+<p>"They were properly so," said the Idiot, "properly so; and neither Mrs.
+Idiot nor I really blamed them."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 377px;"><a name="ILL_053" id="ILL_053"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_053.jpg" width="377" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;HOLDING UP A GREAT OSAGE ORANGE&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"We let the matter rest, and made no complaint," he continued. "Time
+went on, and the courters became a trifle more assertive. One of them
+came into the house one evening and demanded to know what I meant by
+assaulting him and his lady friend, holding up a great Osage orange
+which he alleged to have been the murderous weapon I had used; and I
+really had to apologize, for I was guilty. It happened that while
+walking about my small preserves I had picked up this orange, which had
+fallen onto my lawn from a tree on Jimpsonberry's place, and had
+unthinkingly tried to see how far I could throw it. It went just over
+the hedge, and had unceremoniously knocked Strephon's hat into the
+middle of next week and frightened Phyllis into hysterics. I was placed
+on the defensive, but for the life of me I couldn't help laughing, with
+the result that Strephon stalked angrily away, alleging that I should
+hear from him further in the matter."</p>
+
+<p>"And did you?" asked the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the Idiot, "I never did; but the incident rather soured me
+towards the people who seemed to regard my stone wall as their property.
+I even came to feel like purchasing a gatling-gun and loading it with
+Osage oranges for the purpose of repelling them, but even under this
+provocation I still continued to ignore the matter."</p>
+
+<p>"You are too easy-going," suggested the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"I was," said the Idiot, "until they began to use the sidewalk that runs
+parallel with the wall as a tablet upon which to inscribe in letters
+of flame their undying affection. One Sunday morning, as Mrs. Idiot and
+I started for church, we were horrified to find our flagstones scribbled
+all over with poetry, done in chalk, after the order of</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"Roses is pink, and violets is blue,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">Sugar is sweet, and so be you.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 343px;"><a name="ILL_054" id="ILL_054"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_054.jpg" width="343" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THE PICTURE OF A HEART WITH AN ARROW DRAWN THROUGH
+IT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Further along was the picture of a heart with an arrow drawn through
+it, and the two names 'Larry' and 'Mame' written on either side. And one
+unusually affectionate youth had actually cut the initials of his young
+lady and himself in the top of the coping, with a cold-chisel, I
+suspect. It's there yet. It was then my spirit rose up into fierce
+denunciation. That night, when the clans had gathered and were going
+through the initial stages I marched out in front of them, cleared my
+throat ostentatiously, and made a speech. It was the most nervous speech
+I ever made; worse than after-dinner speaking by a good deal. I called
+their attention to how I had suffered: referred pathetically to the
+destruction of the hedge; inveighed sarcastically against the
+Osage-orange man; told them in highly original fashion that worms, if
+taken at the ebb that leads on to fortune, would surely turn and rend
+their persecutors, and that I'd had enough. I forgave them the hedge; I
+forgave them the annoyance they had cost me, but I asserted that I'd see
+them all condemned to eternal celibacy before I would permit my sidewalk
+to be turned into an anthology of love, and my coping into an intaglio
+of eternal blessedness. I requested them if they wished to write poetry
+to write it upon their own hearths, and if they had any inscriptions to
+cut to chip in and buy an obelisk of their own and hieroglyph to their
+hearts' content. I even offered to buy them each a slate and pencil,
+which they might bring with them when they came, upon which to send
+their sentiments down to posterity, and I finished with what I consider
+to be a pleasing perversion of Longfellow's poem on the Woodman, with a
+few lines beginning:</p>
+
+<p>
+<span style="margin-left: 21em;">"Scribbler, spare that sidewalk.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Then I departed, threatening to have them all arrested."</p>
+
+<p>"Good!" said the Poet. "I didn't think you'd ever do it. You have nerve
+enough, but you are too good-natured."</p>
+
+<p>"I wasn't good-natured then," said the Idiot, regretfully; "and when I
+got through I stalked back into the house, scolded Mollie, sent Tommy to
+bed, and behaved like a bear for the rest of the evening."</p>
+
+<p>"And the people on the wall? They slunk away in despair, I suppose,"
+said the Poet.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 327px;"><a name="ILL_055" id="ILL_055"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_055.jpg" width="327" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;IT TOOK MY HIRED MAN TWO WEEKS TO SCRUB IT OUT&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Not they," said the Idiot; "not by a long shot. They combined against
+me, and next morning when I started for town I found my sidewalk in
+worse shape than ever. One flag had written upon it the pleasing mandate
+'Go drown yourself.' Another bore the mystic word 'Chump' in great
+capital letters, and at the end of my walk was a pastel portrait of
+myself, of rough and awkward composition, labelled with my name in full.
+It took my hired man two weeks to scrub it out. And on the following
+Hallowe'en they strung a huge banner on my telephone wires, inscribed
+'The Idiot Asylum,' and every blessed gate I have to my name had been
+removed from the premises."</p>
+
+<p>"What an outrage!" cried the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it. Merely a suburban ebullition," said the Idiot. "They
+don't mean anything by it. They are mere children, after all, and from
+their point of view I have interfered with their rights."</p>
+
+<p>"And you propose to stand all this?" asked the Poet. "If I were you I'd
+get a pile of broken bottles, as they do in England, and place them
+along the top of that wall so that they couldn't possibly use it."</p>
+
+<p>"Brutal custom, that," said the Idiot. "May do for Englishmen; won't do
+here at all. In the first place, it spoils the appearance of the wall;
+in the second place, it is not efficacious; in the third place, it would
+place me in a false position. Everybody'd soon be asking where I got all
+those bottles. An Englishman drinks enough beer in the course of a week
+to keep his walls covered with broken bottles for a century. I don't,
+and I'm not going to buy bottles. I've got a better scheme."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" cried the Poet. "Now we are coming to the invention."</p>
+
+<p>"Merely an extension of my 'Hired-Man-Discourager,'" said the Idiot.
+"Simple, and I trust efficacious. I am going to put a live wire along
+the coping of my wall. Broken bottles are cheap, my dear Poet, but
+they don't work. If I put broken bottles on my wall the Amalgamated
+Brotherhood of Wooers would meet on my lawn and pass resolutions against
+me, and ultimately they would demand the use of my parlor, unless I
+misunderstand their nature.</p>
+
+<p>"The lovers' rights must be respected always, and I'm truly thankful
+that they have stopped short at my frontage. When they operate along my
+frontier-line they are harmless, interesting, even amusing. If they
+carry their principles through and penetrate beyond the edge, why, then
+Mrs. Idiot and I will have to give it up.</p>
+
+<p>"My scheme is to make them feel that they are welcome to the wall, but
+to make the wall&mdash;well, to give an element of surprise to the wall. Just
+as Jimpsonberry's man is soon to be surprised electrically, which is
+legitimately, so do I propose to surprise these inconsiderate persons
+who cut down my hedges, who scribble up my sidewalk with their poems,
+and who hang Hallowe'en banners on my telephone wires. I wish them all
+well, but next spring when they attempt to revive the customs of the
+past they will find that even I am resentful."</p>
+
+<p>"But how?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall have a wire running along the coping, as I have already said,
+that between the hours of eight and twelve p.m. will be so full of
+shocking things that my uninvited guests will cease to bother me. Can
+you imagine the effect of a live wire upon ten loving couples engaged in
+looking at the moon while sitting on it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you claim to insist upon their rights as lovers," said the Poet,
+deprecatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly I do," said the Idiot. "Man has a right to make love wherever
+he can. If he can't make love on my wall, let him make love somewhere
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"But where?" cried the Poet. "Your swains up here have no home,
+apparently."</p>
+
+<p>"Or Jimpsonberry's wall," said the Idiot. "By the way, do you know
+anything about moths?"</p>
+
+<h2><a name="XIV" id="XIV">XIV</a></h2>
+
+<h3>SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE MOTH</h3>
+
+<p>"Do you know anything about the habits of moths?" repeated the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Moths?" echoed the Poet, eying the Idiot closely, the transition from
+live wires to moths proving rather too sudden for his comprehension.
+"No, I don't know anything about moths except that I have heard that
+they are an unmitigated nuisance."</p>
+
+<p>"They are worse than a nuisance," said the Idiot. "They are a devouring
+element, and they are worse than fire. If your house catches fire you
+can summon an engine and have it put out, and what damage it does you
+can collect for if you are careful enough to keep your possessions
+insured; but with the moth it is different. There isn't any moth
+department in town that you can ring up, nor is there a
+moth-extinguisher that you can keep close at hand to fight them with.
+Furthermore, there is no moth-insurance company here or elsewhere to
+protect the man who suffers damage at their teeth, that I know of.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a mean, sneaking, underhanded element, the moth is. Fire has a
+decent sense of the proprieties. Moths have none at all. When fire
+attacks you it smokes, and crackles, and hisses, and roars, and lets you
+know in clarion tones that it has come. The moth steals upon you in the
+dead of night, and chews up your best trousers, gorges himself upon your
+wife's furs, tickles his palate with your swellest flannel golf-shirt,
+munches away upon your handsomest rug, punches holes in your best
+sofa-cushions with his tusks, and then silently folds his tent and
+steals away without so much as a thank-you for his meal. For unmitigated
+meanness commend me to the moth!"</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to speak with feeling," said the Poet, with a smile. "Have you
+suffered?"</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 400px;"><a name="ILL_056" id="ILL_056"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_056.jpg" width="400" height="355" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;AN UNPAID GROCER&#39;S BILL BECOMES AN ABSOLUTE PLEASURE&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"Suffered?" cried the Idiot. "Suffered is not the word. They have
+tortured me. Alongside of the moth and his nefarious work even a
+book-agent pales into insignificance, and an unpaid grocer's bill
+becomes an absolute pleasure. You can meet a book-agent on his own
+ground, for you know his limitations. I have done so myself. Only
+yesterday one of them called upon me to sell me a Cyclopedia of Cookery,
+and before he got away I had actually sold him a copy of your poems."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah," said the Poet, shaking his head. "You sold my gift, did you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it," laughed the Idiot. "When your book came out I bought
+a copy, and two days later you sent me another with an inscription,
+which I treasure affectionately. I sold him the one I bought."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a beautiful Idiot," said the Poet, slapping his knee
+enthusiastically.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't lay claim so much to beauty as to sublimity," said the Idiot,
+lighting a cigar. "And even that is not to my credit. Beauty and
+sublimity are gifts. No amount of cultivation can produce genius when it
+does not exist. When I see a beautiful woman it is not she that I
+admire. I admire the gracious Hand that made her."</p>
+
+<p>"Give me that idea, old man!" cried the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"It is yours from this on," said the Idiot, with a sigh. "I am not equal
+to it. I may be able to think thoughts, but thoughts are of no more use
+to me than a piano is to a man who can't read music. But we are becoming
+discursive. We were talking about moths, not thoughts. You said that I
+must have suffered, and I said that I had been tortured, and I have. My
+evening clothes have been ruined by them; my best shirts have been eaten
+by them; my silk hat, in which I have taken much pride, has four bald
+spots on its side because of their insatiable appetite, and as far as I
+can find out, I have no redress. You can't sue a moth for damages, you
+know, with any degree of satisfaction."</p>
+
+<p>"Why should you expect to sue a moth for damages any more than to have a
+mosquito indicted for assault?" suggested the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, as for that," said the Idiot, "you can treat the mosquito without
+much difficulty. He merits capital punishment, and if you are yourself
+alert you can squash him at the moment of his crime. But the moth is
+different. You are absolutely helpless in the face of him. He works
+in secret."</p>
+
+<p>"I am told that there are such things as camphor-balls," observed the
+Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"There are," said the Idiot. "And I truly think the moth enjoys them as
+much as a young girl enjoys a military ball. Whenever we give a
+camphor-ball the moths attend, and as far as I can find out dance all
+through it. They seem to enjoy functions of that nature. Furthermore, I
+have yet to meet the man who likes to go about in a suit of clothes that
+smells like a drug-store. I don't. I hate the odor of camphor, and if I
+have my choice of going to a dinner in a perforated dress-suit or in one
+that is redolent of the camphor-ball, I prefer the one with holes in it.
+What I can't understand is why a race as proud as the one to which you
+and I belong should have to knuckle under to an inferior lot of insects
+such as the moth represents."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 400px;"><a name="ILL_057" id="ILL_057"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_057.jpg" width="400" height="319" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THE LION, THE ELEPHANT, THE TIGER, ALL HAVE THEIR WORK
+TO DO&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I suppose there is something about it that we cannot understand," said
+the Poet, dreamily. "All created things have their uses. The lion, the
+elephant, the tiger, the boa-constrictor, all have their work to do in
+life. Even the mosquito has his mission, whatever it may be. You must
+admit this. Why not, therefore, admit that the moth serves a purpose in
+the great scheme of life?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Poet," said the Idiot, "far be it from me to deny the truth of
+what you say. There is hardly a living creature that I have ever
+encountered in all my life that has not had some truly utilitarian
+quality in its make-up. The lion is a splendid creature, and with the
+bear and the fox and the rhinoceros and the tapir he serves a purpose.
+They at least teach boys geography, and teach it interestingly. The boy
+who knows where the tapir hath its lair knows more geography than I do.
+My son Tommy has learned more of geography from a visit to the circus
+where those animals are shown than he ever learned from books. I can
+quite see likewise the utilitarian value of the mosquito. He keeps the
+sea-shore from being overcrowded, and he prevents some people from
+sleeping too much. He is an accomplished vocalist, and from my own point
+of view is superior to a Wagner opera, since Wagner opera puts me to
+sleep, while the magnificent discords of the mosquito keep me awake. But
+the moth is beyond me. What his contribution to the public welfare
+may be I cannot reason out, although I have tried."</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 400px;"><a name="ILL_058" id="ILL_058"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_058.jpg" width="400" height="397" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;&#39;THEY EAT UP MY NEW CLOTHES&#39;&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"And you find nothing in his favor?" asked the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"Much," replied the Idiot, "but he has no system. His mission is to eat
+old clothes, but he is such a very disgusting glutton that he does not
+discriminate between old and new, and I have no use for him. If in his
+search for a meal he would choose the garments of three years ago, which
+I ought not to wear because they are so old-fashioned as to make me
+conspicuous when I do wear them, it would be all right. But the moth is
+no such discriminating person. He is not a lover of old vintages. When
+he calls in a number of his brother moths to dine at his expense he does
+not treat them to an overcoat of '89, or to a dress-suit of '93, or to a
+silk hat laid down in '95. He wants the latest thing, and as far as I
+can find out he gets it. I have just been compelled to lay in a new
+stock of under and over clothes because the ones I had have been served
+upon his table."</p>
+
+<p>"The moth must live," observed the Poet.</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 275px;"><a name="ILL_059" id="ILL_059"></a>
+<img src="images/ill_059.jpg" width="275" height="400" alt="" />
+<span class="caption">&quot;WASTED MY ENERGY UPON THE UNRESPONSIVE AIR&quot;</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>"I'm perfectly willing he should if he'll only discriminate," retorted
+the Idiot. "We have enough old clothes in this house, my dear Poet, to
+give a banquet of seventeen courses to six hundred moths every night for
+the next six months. If they would content themselves with that I should
+be satisfied. But they won't. They eat up my new clothes; they destroy
+my new hats; they munch away upon my most treasured golf-vests. That is
+why I asked you if you knew anything about moths. I am anxious to reform
+them. As you have said, I have gone into inventing, and my inventions
+are wholly designed to meet long-felt wants in all households. The man
+who invents a scheme to circumvent or properly to satisfy the appetite
+of the moth will find his name indissolubly linked with fame. I have
+thought, and thought, and thought about it. The moth must either be
+domesticated or extinguished. I have tried to extinguish him, but
+without avail. When he has flown forth I have endeavored to punch him in
+the head, and I have wasted my energy upon the unresponsive air. Did you
+ever undertake to punch a moth in the head?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never," said the Poet. "I am not a fighter."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear boy," rejoined the Idiot, "I don't know a hero in real life or
+in fiction who could meet a moth on his own ground. I read about Mr.
+Willie B. Travers, of New York, who can drive four horses about the
+arena at the horse show without turning a hair. I read about Emerson
+McJones, of Boston, putting up his face against the administration on a
+question of national import. I have read of the prowess of Alexander, of
+Cæsar, of D'Artagnan, of Bonaparte, and of Teddy Roosevelt, but there
+isn't a man among 'em who can fight the moth. You can bombard him with a
+gatling-gun loaded to the muzzle with camphor-balls, and he still waves
+his banner defiantly in your face. You may lunge at him with a rapier,
+and he jumps lightly aside, and to express his contempt bites a hole in
+your parlor hangings. You can turn the hose on him, and he soars
+buoyantly away out of reach. You can't kill him, because you can't catch
+him. You can't drive him away, and until we go back to the dress of the
+knights of old and wear nickel-plated steel clothing, and live in rooms
+of solid masonry, we can't starve him out. There is, therefore, only one
+thing to do, and that is to domesticate him. If you in the course of
+your investigations into nature have ever discovered any trait in the
+moth that science can lay hold upon, something through which we can
+appeal to his better nature, if he has such a thing, you will be
+conferring a great boon upon the whole domestic world. What I want to
+find out is if he possesses some particularly well-defined taste; if
+there is any one kind of texture or fabric that he likes better than
+another. If there is such a thing I'll have a brand-new suit made of
+that same material especially for him, furnish a nice comfortable, warm
+spot in the attic as a dining-room, and let him feed there forevermore,
+when and how he pleases. The manners and customs of moths are an open
+book to most of us. His tastes are as mysterious as the ocean's depths."</p>
+
+<p>The Poet shook his head dubiously. "I am afraid, my dear Idiot, that you
+have at last tackled a problem that will prove too much for you. How to
+get at the point you desire is, I fear, impossible of discovery," he
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"It would seem so," replied the Idiot. "But I shall not despair. If the
+ordinary cook of commerce can be made humanly intelligent I do not see
+any reason why we should abandon so comparatively simple a proposition
+as the domesticization of the moth."</p>
+
+<p>Tommy and Mollie had been listening with great interest, and as the
+Idiot finished Mollie observed that she thought the best way to do was
+to ask the moth what he liked most, but Tommy had a less conciliatory
+plan.</p>
+
+<p>"Best thing's to get rid of 'em altogether, pa," he said. "Mollie and
+I'll squash 'em for you for fi' cents apiece."</p>
+
+<p>Which struck the Poet as the most practical idea that had been advanced
+during the discussion.</p>
+
+<h2><a name="XV" id="XV">XV</a></h2>
+
+<h3>SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE BURGLAR</h3>
+
+<p>"Are you ever bothered much by burglars off here in the country?" asked
+Mr. Pedagog one spring afternoon, as he and the Idiot and the youngsters
+strolled about the Idiot's small farm.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the Idiot. "They've only visited me twice."</p>
+
+<p>"Only twice, eh?" observed the Schoolmaster. "Well, I should think that
+was often enough, considering that you haven't lived here more than a
+year and a half."</p>
+
+<p>"It was," said the Idiot. "I didn't say I wanted them to come again, did
+I?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not," returned Mr. Pedagog. "But you said 'only twice,' as if
+two visits of that nature were less than might have been expected."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, aren't they?" asked the Idiot. "Just make a little calculation.
+I've lived on this place precisely five hundred and ninety-four days,
+and, of course, an equal number of nights. It seems to me that in
+breaking into my house only twice when they might have come every night
+shows a degree of restraint upon our Suburban Burglary Company that is
+worthy of the highest commendation. You, of course, refer to
+professional burglars, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pedagog laughed. "Are there any amateur burglars?"</p>
+
+<p>"Are there!" ejaculated the Idiot. "Well, rather. There is the Gasman,
+and man who inspects the water-meter, and the Iceman, and the Plumber.
+If you refer to that class, why, I have them with me always."</p>
+
+<p>"Which of the two classes do you prefer?" asked Mr. Pedagog, with a
+chuckle.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'm not quite sure as to that," returned the Idiot. "I've often
+wondered myself whether I preferred the straight-out honest pirate, who
+does his work surreptitiously by night, and who doesn't pretend to be
+anything but a pirate, or the sleek, insinuating chap, who comes into
+our house by day, and runs up a bill against you which in his heart of
+hearts he knows is not a proper one. There are burglars and burglars in
+this world, Mr. Pedagog, and the one who lands in the penitentiary is
+not always a bigger rascal than the fellow who holds the respect of the
+community and sets himself up as a prominent citizen. Highwaymen may be
+divided into classes, some of them respectable, others not. There was
+Dick Turpin, who ran honest risks to obtain a living; there are men in
+Wall Street who work greater ruin, and are held in higher esteem. There
+is the footpad who takes your watch, and pawns it to buy bread for his
+starving family, and there is the very charming young person who sits
+behind a table at a church fair, and charges you seven dollars for a
+fifty-cent sofa-cushion. So it goes. Socially I prefer the esteemed
+citizen who makes me pay twenty-eight dollars for ten dollars' worth of
+gas; but when it comes down to a strict business basis I must say I have
+lost less money through the operations of the professional thief than
+through those of the amateur highwayman. Take a recent case in my own
+experience, for instance. Only last week I sent anonymously a small
+clock which cost me twenty dollars to a guild fair here in town, and
+Mrs. Idiot bought it for a birthday present for me for forty dollars. In
+other words, I have a twenty-dollar clock on my hands that has cost me
+sixty dollars."</p>
+
+<p>"But you have the satisfaction of knowing that you have contributed to
+the good work of the guild," suggested Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"That is true enough," said the Idiot; "but the guild is only forty
+dollars to the good. They'd have been better off if I had given them
+fifty dollars in cash, and I'd have saved ten."</p>
+
+<p>"But you have the clock," insisted Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"I certainly have," replied the Idiot; "and if time is money I shall
+soon be rich, for that clock makes time to beat the band. If it keeps on
+as it has started and we stand by it, we shall soon be about a month
+ahead of the sun. It gains a week every forty-eight hours. If that clock
+were truthful, I should be a centenarian at forty."</p>
+
+<p>"But you're not sorry you gave it?" said Mr. Pedagog, deprecatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all," said the Idiot. "My only regret is that Mrs. I. bought it.
+But," he added, hastily, "she needn't know that."</p>
+
+<p>"I won't say a word," said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't, neither, pa," said Tommy, with a degree of complacency which
+showed that the temptation to tell was great.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I won't say mor'n two or three words about it, anyhow," put in
+Mollie, not anxious to commit herself to perpetual silence on the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the most beautiful clock I ever saw," said the Idiot, quickly,
+realizing the possibilities of Mollie's two or three words.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I fink," said Mollie, "and I'm goin' to tell mamma that you
+said so."</p>
+
+<p>"All right," said the Idiot. "Suppose you and Tommy run right up and
+tell her now."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd rather hear you talk, pa," said Tommy.</p>
+
+<p>"He does take after you, doesn't he?" said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot, "he does. He likes to hear me talk as much as I
+do, bless him!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is a commendable sign in a son," observed Mr. Pedagog. "But tell
+about the two professionals. Did they get anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"They did," said the Idiot. "And at the same time I lost nothing. The
+first chap came on the scene, along about two o'clock in the morning. He
+was a very industrious mechanic, and I regret to say he was not
+adequately paid for his services. He tackled the safe." At this point
+the Idiot threw back his head and laughed heartily.</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen the safe," said Mr. Pedagog, "and to tell you the truth, my
+dear Idiot, I have wondered at your choosing so obvious a receptacle for
+your valuables. It does not, to my mind, deny itself as a safe should.
+It advertises the fact that your silver, your wife's jewels perhaps, are
+within. I have spoken once or twice to our friend Mr. Brief about it."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt," replied the Idiot. "However, I can't see why a safe has any
+disadvantages."</p>
+
+<p>"It lies in this," said Mr. Pedagog, impressively. "You confess at once
+to the burglar the exact location of the things he's after. Without a
+safe your silver, or Mrs. Idiot's jewels, such as they are, might be
+found anywhere in the house. But when you take the trouble to buy a
+safe, any burglar in creation who has ordinary common-sense must know
+that your valuables are concentrated in that one spot."</p>
+
+<p>"That, I rejoice to say," said the Idiot, "is the burglar's view."</p>
+
+<p>"You should not rejoice," said Mr. Pedagog, with some of his old-time
+severity. "You make his work so comparatively easy that he is content to
+follow a base profession, as you have termed it. Truly, I wonder at you.
+You place on your first floor a bald safe&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't seen any advertised as having a full head of hair," observed
+the Idiot, complacently.</p>
+
+<p>"You misunderstand me," said Mr. Pedagog. "When I say bald I mean
+evident, plain, obvious. You practically say: Here are the things which
+I value. What is to be found within this safe, Mr. Burglar, <i>are the
+very things you are after</i>. Therefore, say you to the burglar: Attack
+this safe. Break it open, rifle it of its contents; in other words, here
+is the swag, as I believe it is called."</p>
+
+<p>"You are wholly right," said the Idiot. "I bought that safe for that
+precise reason, and I bought a big one and a strong one. But you don't
+know the story of that safe, do you, Mr. Pedagog?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do not," said the Schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>"Then let me tell you," said the Idiot. "That safe has been broken open,
+and by a professional burglar. The burglar had his tools, and he had
+his expert knowledge of their use. He arrived at my house, as I recall
+the situation, somewhere about&mdash;ah&mdash;two o'clock at night. He bored at
+the lock until three. He fooled about the combination. He did everything
+that a respectable burglar might be expected to do, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He failed, of course, since you say you have lost nothing," said Mr.
+Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all," said the Idiot. "After two hours and fifty-five minutes'
+work on that safe he got it open. And&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And?" queried Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"He found it empty," said the Idiot; "absolutely empty. There was not a
+spoon, a fork, a tea-pot, or a diamond necklace, or even a scrap of
+paper in it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why do you have it," said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Merely to keep the burglar busy while he is in my house, and to make
+him expert in honest work. An ordinary mechanic, intelligent enough to
+get that safe open by night or by day, would be entitled to at least two
+dollars for his services. The individual involved got it open; and when
+he opened it&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Found nothing!" cried Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly," said the Idiot, pulling away on his cigar. "I suppose I
+should have left a check inside payable to bearer for a dollar and a
+half to compensate him for his trouble, but I am so neglectful that I
+really didn't."</p>
+
+<p>"And you bought a safe&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Merely to provide employment for the unemployed burglar," said the
+Idiot. "That is all a safe is good for, Mr. Pedagog. Experience has
+shown that the house-safe isn't worth the paint it is covered with in
+the matter of protection. But as a decoy it works to a charm. A safe, in
+other words, is a splendid thing to keep things out of, as well as to
+keep the burglar busy while he is your guest. If our particular visitor
+had not spent all his time breaking the safe open he might have been
+able to locate our spoons."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a pity," said Mr. Pedagog, dryly, "that you did not add to the
+impression the futility of his work made upon his mind a short note of
+admonition indicating to him that he might be in better business."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Mr. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "that would have been rude.
+Invited or otherwise, the man was a guest in my house, and a note of
+that kind would have savored of sarcasm, or, if not, would have placed
+me in the position of having taken advantage of my guest's weakness to
+be facetious at his expense."</p>
+
+<p>"You take an original view of it," said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it," returned the Idiot. "I got the idea from a Boston
+girl. Once when she and her sister-in-law found themselves alone at
+night in a huge country-house they were suddenly overcome with fear of
+burglars, and rather than run any personal risk from the midnight
+marauder they left a big card on top of the safe inscribed with these
+words: 'Dear Sir,&mdash;The combination of this safe is 11-16-91. There is
+nothing in it. If you must have our silver, call at the Shawmut Safe
+Deposit Company, where it is now stored.' The two girls were cousins of
+mine."</p>
+
+<p>The Schoolmaster smiled again. "There must be a streak of your
+particular kind of genius running all through your family," said he.</p>
+
+<p>"True&mdash;there is," said the Idiot. "I'm not the only Idiot in my tribe."</p>
+
+<p>"And the second burglar. How about him?" asked Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he was easy," said the Idiot. "I compromised with him. You see, I
+met him on his way out. I was coming home late, and just as I arrived he
+was leaving. I invited him back, lit the gas in the dining-room, and
+asked him to join me in a bit of cold tongue and a bottle of beer. He
+tried to shuffle out of it, but when I said I preferred to reason with
+him rather than have him arrested he sat down, and we talked the
+situation over. I discovered that for about three hundred dollars' worth
+of my stuff that he had in a bag slung over his shoulder he might get as
+much as fifty dollars, and at great risk. I showed him how foolish that
+was, and offered to give him forty dollars if he'd leave the stuff, so
+saving me two hundred and sixty dollars, and avoiding all trouble for
+himself. He didn't like it at first, but under the genial influence of
+the beer and the cold tongue and my conversation he finally yielded, and
+walked out of my house with a check drawn to bearer for forty dollars in
+his pocket."</p>
+
+<p>"I am astonished at you!" cried Mr. Pedagog. "You compounded a felony."</p>
+
+<p>"Not exactly," said the Idiot. "I should have done so if I hadn't
+stopped payment on the check the next day."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said Mr. Pedagog, "I see!"</p>
+
+<p>"All I lost was the revenue-stamp on the check," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"And did you ever hear from the man again?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," observed the Idiot. "I met him on the train a day or two
+later&mdash;sat next to him in the smoking-car, in fact."</p>
+
+<p>"And did he know you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. We had a very pleasant chat going to town. He said he was moving
+away from here. He couldn't stand it, he said. He was going to work in
+some new field where a man could get living pay for his work. Said he'd
+been robbed by some of our best people; what's the use of working for
+nothing? he asked. The poor man was kept down, and all that sort of
+talk."</p>
+
+<p>"And you parted friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot. "I felt rather sorry for him, and when he said
+good-bye I gave him a cigar and a five-dollar bill, and that was the end
+of him. I have since received a letter from him in which he said that my
+kindness was appreciated, and that I could leave my valuables out on the
+lawn all night hereafter with perfect impunity. 'There isn't a thief in
+our whole suburban gang would be mean enough to touch it after your
+kindness to me,' he wrote."</p>
+
+<p>"Extraordinary!" said Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Very," said the Idiot. "Nevertheless, I have not taken his hint about
+leaving my silver out-of-doors, and have worked as hard as ever on my
+patent burglar-alarm."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed! Have you a new idea in that line?" asked the Schoolmaster.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot. "It is wholly novel. It is designed to alarm the
+burglar, and not scare the people in the house. Did you ever hear of
+anything like that before?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" ejaculated Mr. Pedagog, with enthusiasm. "How is it to work?"</p>
+
+<p>"That," said the Idiot, "is what I am trying to find out. When I do I'll
+let you know, Doctor."</p>
+
+<h2><a name="XVI" id="XVI">XVI</a></h2>
+
+<h3>CONCLUSION</h3>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Mr. and Mrs. Idiot</span></h4>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">Request the Pleasure of Your Company</span></h4>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">at Dinner</span></h4>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">On Thursday Evening</span>, May 31, 1900</h4>
+
+<h4><span class="smcap">At Half-after Seven O'Clock</span></h4>
+
+<h4>R.S.V.P. <span class="smcap">Last Call</span></h4>
+
+<p>Handsomely engraved, a card bearing the above inscription was sent about
+the middle of May to all the Idiot's old friends of Mrs.
+Smithers-Pedagog's select home for gentlemen, and it is needless to say
+that they all accepted.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder what the dickens he means by 'Last Call,'" said Mr. Brief to
+the Genial Old Gentleman who occasionally imbibed. "Sounds like the
+warning of the dining-car porter on a Pullman train."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure I can't imagine," said the other; "and what's more, I'm
+content to wait and find out. Of course you are going?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am, indeed," said Mr. Brief. "I'd travel farther than that for the
+pleasure of an hour with the dear old boy, and particularly now that he
+has so good a cook. Dined there lately?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Genial Old Gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>"Had any of those mulled sardines he gives you Sunday nights?"</p>
+
+<p>"More than was good for me. Ain't they fine?" said the Genial Old
+Gentleman, smacking his lips ecstatically.</p>
+
+<p>"Immense!" said Mr. Brief. "A cook that can mull sardines like that is
+worth her weight in gold. Where do you suppose he got her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, he married her!" cried the Genial Old Gentleman, promptly. "Mrs.
+Idiot cooks those herself, on the chafing-dish. Didn't you know that?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Mr. Brief. "I happened in late Sunday night, and we had 'em.
+They were so awfully good I didn't do a thing but eat, and forgot to
+ask who cooked 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"It's the way of the world," sighed the Genial Old Gentleman. "We old
+bachelors have to get along on what comes to us, but the energetic chap
+who goes out into the world and marries the right sort of a woman&mdash;Jove,
+what a lucky chap he is!"</p>
+
+<p>"There's some truth in that," agreed Mr. Brief; "but, on the whole, just
+think what a terrible thing it would be to marry a bad cook, and to have
+to eat everything she prepared with an outward show of delight just to
+keep peace in the family."</p>
+
+<p>"That's your cautious lawyer's view of it," said the Genial Old
+Gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>"Why the deuce don't you get married yourself, then," said Mr. Brief.
+"If you feel that way&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to," said the Genial Old Gentleman. "Fact is, Brief, old
+man, all I should ever marry for would be the comfort of a home, and I
+can always get that by going up to the Idiot's."</p>
+
+<p>The other invited guests were no less perplexed by the final words of
+the Idiot's invitation, and with the pleasure of accepting was mingled
+an agreeable curiosity to know what was meant by "Last Call." The
+evening came, and all were present. It was a goodly company, and by
+special favor the children were allowed to sit up and partake; and, what
+was more, Mary, the housemaid of the old days, assisted in the serving
+of the dinner.</p>
+
+<p>"Seems like old times," said Mr. Whitechoker, beaming at Mrs. Pedagog
+and smiling pleasantly at Mary. "I shall almost expect our host to be
+sarcastic."</p>
+
+<p>"Sarcasm, Mr. Whitechoker," said the Idiot, unfolding his napkin, "is
+all right in its place, but as I have grown older I haven't found that
+having given rein to it I was happier afterwards. Sometimes, no doubt,
+Mrs. Pedagog has thought me rude&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Never!" said the ancient landlady.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, there's something worse than having others think you rude," said
+the Idiot. "That's realizing yourself that you have been so, and I hope
+Mrs. Pedagog will accept here and now an apology&mdash;a blanket
+apology&mdash;which shall cover a multitude of past sins."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Idiot," said Mrs. Pedagog, "do you know how I have always
+thought of you?"</p>
+
+<p>"As a son," said Mr. Pedagog. "And I have felt towards you as a father."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder you didn't give me a thrashing once in a while, then," said
+the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"We have often wished to," observed Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"John!" cried Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, <i>I</i> have," said Mr. Pedagog. "Mrs. Pedagog has all the amiable
+weakness of a woman towards her naughty boy. Spank him next time, not
+this."</p>
+
+<p>Everybody laughed, and the Idiot rose from his place and walked to Mrs.
+Pedagog's side and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>"You're a nice old mommie," he said, "and the naughty boy loves you.
+He'll be hanged if he'll kiss his daddy, though!" he added, with a
+glance at Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"I will," said Mollie; and she did so.</p>
+
+<p>The old Schoolmaster returned the little girl's salute with emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"Bless you, little one!" he said, huskily. "I love you even as I loved
+your papa."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a-goin' to kiss everybody," said Tommy; and he started in with Mary
+and put his little scheme through to the bitter end. "What are we going
+to have for dessert?" he added, complacently, as he resumed his seat.</p>
+
+<p>"Idiot," said Mr. Brief, when the third course had been served, "what do
+you mean by 'Last Call?'"</p>
+
+<p>"We are going to give up housekeeping," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"No trouble, I hope," said Mr. Whitechoker.</p>
+
+<p>"Lots!" ejaculated the Idiot. "But not very troublesome troubles. The
+fact is we intend to travel."</p>
+
+<p>"To travel, eh?" said the Genial Old Gentleman. "Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"Abroad," replied the Idiot. "We have never been abroad, you know. I've
+been abroad, and Mrs. Idiot has been abroad, but <i>we</i> have never been
+abroad. We are going together this time, and we are going to take the
+children, and for a year we propose to see Europe under the most
+favorable conditions. I think that abroad will seem a little different
+if we go together."</p>
+
+<p>"Undoubtedly," said Mr. Whitechoker. "But London is a cold, godless
+place."</p>
+
+<p>"It is if you go alone," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"And Paris is vile," suggested Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<p>"To the man who has only himself to think of," said the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"And Italy is dirty," said the Bibliomaniac.</p>
+
+<p>"There's water in Venice," observed the Idiot. "Not very clean water, to
+be sure, but wet enough to wash the edges of the sidewalks."</p>
+
+<p>"And travel is uncomfortable," observed the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"Admitted," said the Idiot. "Travel is about the hardest work and the
+worst-paid work I know of, but we cannot help ourselves. Now that we are
+rich we must accept the penalties imposed by modern society upon the
+wealthy. You never knew a rich man to lead a comfortable life, did you,
+Mr. Pedagog?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are few of them who seem to know how," admitted the Schoolmaster.
+"But&mdash;you do."</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt," said the Idiot. "But you see I do not wish to be
+ostentatiously different from my kind, so having made a fortune I am
+going to live as people of fortune do and be as uncomfortable as I know
+how."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand about this fortune," said Mr. Brief. "Have you run
+up against a rich uncle somewhere, or is this sudden wealth the result
+of your inventions, concerning which we have heard so much lately?"</p>
+
+<p>"Neither," replied the Idiot. "The fact is, I made an investment some
+years ago in a certain stock, for which I paid twenty-three. I sold it
+three weeks ago for one hundred and sixty-three, clearing one hundred
+and forty dollars each on a thousand shares."</p>
+
+<p>The Poet gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"One hundred and forty thousand dollars profit!" cried Mr. Whitechoker.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the Idiot, calmly, "that's about the size of it. Terrible,
+isn't it? Here I was a happy man; content to stay at home and toil eight
+hours a day for a small stipend; living in tolerable comfort, and
+nothing to worry over. All of a sudden this thing happens, and like all
+other men of wealth I must become a wanderer. I shudder to think of what
+might have happened if I'd made a million; I shouldn't have had a home
+at all then."</p>
+
+<p>The guests looked at their host with amazement. To most of them he had
+reached the supreme moment of his idiocy.</p>
+
+<p>"Ahem!" said the Poet. "I fail to see why."</p>
+
+<p>"Look at the ways of the millionaire and you'll see," observed the
+Idiot, suavely. "Given his million he gives up his house and builds
+himself a small, first-class hotel in some big city, which for the
+greater part of the year is occupied by servants. He next erects a
+country palace at Lenox or at Newport. This he calls a cottage, though
+it usually looks more like a public library or a hospital or a
+club-house. Then he builds himself a camp, with stained-glass windows,
+in the Adirondacks, and has to float a small railroad in order to get
+himself and his wife's trunks into camp. Shortly after these follows a
+bungalow modelled after a French château, somewhere in the South, and
+then a yacht warranted to cross the ocean in ten days, and to produce
+sea-sickness twelve hours sooner than the regular ocean-steamer, becomes
+one of the necessities of life. Result, he never lives anywhere. To
+occupy all his residences, camps, and bungalows he has to keep eternally
+on the move, and when he thinks he needs a trip to Europe he has his
+yacht got ready and sends it over, going himself on a fast steamer. He
+meets his yacht at Southampton, and orders the captain to proceed
+directly to some Mediterranean port, going himself, meanwhile, to
+London. After a month of London he goes to Paris, and thence to the
+Mediterranean port, where, after steaming aboard of the yacht for three
+or four days, he sends the boat back to New York and returns himself by
+the regular liner. Oh, it's a terrible thing to be a millionaire and
+have nowhere to lay one's head, with every poorer man envying you, many
+hating you, and hands raised against you everywhere."</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause, and the assembled company properly expressed their
+appreciation of the millionaire's hard lot by silence.</p>
+
+<p>"The scheme has its advantages," observed Mrs. Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"Some," said the Idiot. "But think, my dear, of the town house with
+thirty-nine servants; the Newport house with thirty-four; the camp with
+sixty, including gamekeepers and guides; the bungalow with thirty more,
+and the yacht with a captain, a crew, stewards, stewardesses, and a cook
+you can't get away from without jumping overboard. Just think how that
+would multiply your troubles. You would come to me from time to time and
+ask me how I could expect you to discharge seven butlers and four cooks
+in one morning, and no doubt you'd request me sometimes to stop in at
+the intelligence office on my way home and employ a dozen housemaids for
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"But you would have a manager for all this," suggested Mrs. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the point," observed the Idiot. "We'd have to have a manager,
+and for my part I shouldn't relish being managed. What chance would Mrs.
+Idiot have against a manager ahead of an army of servants of such
+magnitude? We have more than we can keep in subjection as we stand now,
+with this one small house. If it wasn't for Mary, who keeps an eye on
+things, I don't know what we should do."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I am glad you're rich, pa," said Tommy; "you can increase my
+allowance."</p>
+
+<p>"And I can have a pony," lisped Mollie.</p>
+
+<p>"Alas! Poor children!" cried the Idiot. "That is the saddest part of
+wealth. Instead of bringing the little ones up ourselves, to be wholly
+fashionable it will be necessary to sublet the contract to a committee
+of tutors and governesses. The obligations of social life hereafter will
+require that we meet our children by appointment only, and that when
+they dine they shall eat in solitary grandeur until they become so
+polished in manners that their parents may once more formally welcome
+them at table. All the good old democratic ways of the domestic republic
+are now to be set aside. Tommy, instead of yelling for a buckwheat-cake
+at the top of his lungs, upon our return will request a butler in
+choicest French to hand him a <i>pâté de foie gras</i>; and dear little
+Mollie will have to give up attracting the waitress' attention by shying
+an olive-pit at her and imperiously summon her by means of an electric
+buzzer set to buzzing with her toe."</p>
+
+<p>"Mercy! What a picture of woe!" cried Mr. Pedagog.</p>
+
+<p>"Not altogether true, is it?" suggested the Doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you ever visited Newport?" asked the Idiot.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the Doctor, "never."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, don't," said the Idiot, "unless you wish to look upon that
+picture&mdash;a picture of life whence childhood is abolished; where <i>blasé</i>
+little swells take the place of lively small boys, and diminutive grand
+duchesses, clad in regal garb, have supplanted the little daughters who
+bring smiles and sunshine into the life of the common people. Ah, my
+friends," the Idiot continued, with a shake of his head, "there are sad
+sights to be seen in this world, but I know of none sadder than those
+rich little scions of the American aristocracy in whose veins the good
+red blood of a not very remote ancestry has turned blue through too much
+high living and too little real living."</p>
+
+<p>"I should think you'd take that hundred and forty thousand dollars and
+throw it into the sea," said Mr. Brief.</p>
+
+<p>"That would be wicked waste," observed the Idiot. "I propose to use it
+to win back the good old home-life, and the best way to perpetuate that
+is to leave it for a time and travel. When you have travelled and seen
+how uncomfortable others are, and discovered how uncomfortable you are
+while travelling, nothing can exceed the bliss of getting back to the
+first simple principles of the real home."</p>
+
+<p>"As a sensible man, why don't you stay here, then?" queried the Poet.</p>
+
+<p>"Because," said the Idiot, "if I stayed here with that hundred and forty
+thousand dollars on my mind I should nurse it, and in a short while I'd
+become a millionaire, and such a misfortune as that I shall never
+invite. We shall go abroad and spend&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not all of it, I hope?" said Mr. Whitechoker.</p>
+
+<p>"No," replied the Idiot. "But enough of it to mitigate the horrors of
+our condition while absent."</p>
+
+<p>And so it was that Castle Idiot was closed, and that for a time at least
+"The Idiot at Home" became a thing of the past. Wherever he and his
+small family may be, may I not bespeak for him the kindly, even
+affectionate, esteem of those who have followed him with me through
+these pages? He has his faults; they are many and manifest, for he has
+never shown the slightest disposition to conceal them, but, as Mrs.
+Pedagog remarked to me the other night, "He has a large heart, and it is
+in the right place. If he only wouldn't talk so much!"</p>
+
+<h4>THE END</h4>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>By MARK TWAIN</h2>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>THE MAN THAT CORRUPTED HADLEYBURG, <span class="smcap">and Other Stories and Essays</span>.
+Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Lucius Hitchcock</span> and Others.</p>
+
+<p>THE AMERICAN CLAIMANT, <span class="smcap">and Other Stories and Sketches</span>.</p>
+
+<p>THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN. With Photogravure Portrait of the
+Author.</p>
+
+<p>A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT.</p>
+
+<p>THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER.</p>
+
+<p>LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI.</p>
+
+<p>TOM SAWYER ABROAD; TOM SAWYER, DETECTIVE; <span class="smcap">and Other Stories, etc., etc</span>.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>New Library Edition from New Electrotype Plates. Illustrated.
+Crown 8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1.75 each.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS OF JOAN OF ARC. By the Sieur <span class="smcap">Louis de Conte</span> (her
+page and secretary). Illustrated from Original Drawings by <span class="smcap">F.&nbsp;V. Du
+Mond</span>, and from Reproductions of Old Paintings and Statues. Crown 8vo,
+Cloth, Ornamental, $2.50.</p>
+
+<p>HOW TO TELL A STORY, <span class="smcap">and Other Essays</span>. Post 8vo, Cloth, Ornamental,
+$1.50.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h2>By ROBERT W. CHAMBERS</h2>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>THE CONSPIRATORS. Illustrated. Post 8vo, Cloth, $1.50.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>There is an unmistakable brilliancy about "The Conspirators"; the
+rollicking spirits of the hero, the man who tells the story, are
+infectious, and his ardor in love is delightfully
+romantic.&mdash;<i>Chicago Tribune.</i></p></blockquote>
+
+<p>LORRAINE. Illustrated. Cloth, $1.25.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Of this novel <i>The Interior</i> says: "A more absorbing story could
+scarcely be imagined; there is no better tale among recent
+publications than 'Lorraine.'"</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<h4>HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, <span class="smcap">Publishers</span></h4>
+
+<h4>NEW YORK AND LONDON</h4>
+
+<p class="center">&#9758; <i>Any of the above works will be sent by mail, postage
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+
+
+
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+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Idiot at Home, 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/license
+
+
+Title: The Idiot at Home
+
+Author: John Kendrick Bangs
+
+Illustrator: F. T. Richards
+
+Release Date: May 12, 2012 [EBook #39682]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE IDIOT AT HOME ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Annie McGuire. This book was produced from
+scanned images of public domain material from the Internet
+Archive.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Book Cover]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: JOHN KENDRICK BANGS]
+
+
+
+
+The Idiot at Home
+
+
+By
+John Kendrick Bangs
+
+
+Illustrated by
+F. T. Richards
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+NEW YORK AND LONDON
+HARPER & BROTHERS _Publishers_
+1900
+
+
+
+
+BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BOOMING OF ACRE HILL. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth, $1.25.
+
+THE ENCHANTED TYPEWRITER. Illustrated by PETER NEWELL. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+COFFEE AND REPARTEE and THE IDIOT. 1 vol. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+THE DREAMERS: A CLUB. Illustrated by EDWARD PENFIELD. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+A REBELLIOUS HEROINE, A Story. Illustrated by W. T. SMEDLEY. 16mo,
+Cloth, Ornamental, Uncut Edges, $1.25.
+
+A HOUSE-BOAT ON THE STYX. Illustrated by PETER NEWELL. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+THE PURSUIT OF THE HOUSE-BOAT. Illustrated by PETER NEWELL. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+PASTE JEWELS. Being Seven Tales of Domestic Woe. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.00.
+
+GHOSTS I HAVE MET, AND SOME OTHERS. With Illustrations by NEWELL, FROST,
+and RICHARDS. 16mo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+THE BICYCLERS, AND THREE OTHER FARCES. Illustrated, 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+PEEPS AT PEOPLE. Illustrated by EDWARD PENFIELD. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+MR. BONAPARTE OF CORSICA. Illustrated by H. W. MCVICKAR. 16mo, Cloth,
+Ornamental, $1.25.
+
+THE WATER GHOST, AND OTHERS. Illustrated. 16mo, Cloth, Ornamental $1.25.
+
+THREE WEEKS IN POLITICS. Illustrated. 32mo, Cloth, Ornamental, 50 cents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEW YORK AND LONDON:
+HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Copyright, 1900, by JOHN KENDRICK BANGS.
+
+
+
+
+TO
+"MISS BANGS OF LONDON"
+
+FROM
+"MR. BARNES OF NEW YORK"
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ PAGE
+ I. BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION 1
+ II. A LITTLE DINNER TO SOME OLD FRIENDS 21
+ III. IN THE LIBRARY 43
+ IV. AS TO A SMALL DINNER 63
+ V. ON THE MAINTENANCE OF AN ATTIC 84
+ VI. THE IDIOT'S GARDEN 105
+ VII. HOUSEHOLD POETRY 125
+ VIII. SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE HIRED MAN 145
+ IX. ON SOCIAL ACCOUNTS 165
+ X. AS TO SANTA CLAUS 185
+ XI. AS TO NEW-YEAR'S DAY 205
+ XII. SOME DOMESTIC INTENTIONS 228
+ XIII. A SUBURBAN COMPLICATION 249
+ XIV. SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE MOTH 269
+ XV. SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE BURGLAR 288
+ XVI. CONCLUSION 301
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ PAGE
+ JOHN KENDRICK BANGS _Frontispiece_
+ "POSSESSED A LIBRARY OF FIRST EDITIONS" 5
+ "'THEY NEVER HAD THE FUN OF BUYING THEM'" 9
+ "'GUARANTEED TO HANG ONTO A GARMENT IN A GALE'" 13
+ "'AND SOME PEOPLE SAY WAGNER IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN THAT'" 17
+ "TOMMY AND MOLLIE GAVE THE COOK A GREAT DEAL OF TROUBLE" 23
+ "'LET THE FATHERS LOOK AFTER THE CHILDREN AT NIGHT'" 29
+ "A LITTLE FIGURE CLAD IN WHITE" 35
+ "'I'D RATHER BE SPANKED THAN NOT NOTICED AT ALL'" 39
+ "'I DID NOT SMOKE UNTIL I WAS FIFTY'" 45
+ "'SMOKING KEEPS INSECTS FROM THE PLANTS'" 49
+ "THE BIBLIOMANIAC WAS INVESTIGATING THE CONTENTS OF THE LOWER
+ SHELVES" 53
+ "'I PREFERRED TO PAY THE $49.50'" 57
+ "THE COOK HAD TAKEN WINGS ONTO HERSELF" 65
+ "'TWO BIG BOXES OF POTATOES, A CAN OF FRENCH PEASE, AND A BOTTLE
+ OF SARSAPARILLA'" 69
+ "'THE PEOPLE DOWN-STAIRS BORROWED OUR DINING-ROOM CHAIRS'" 75
+ "'WHO WAS IT?' ASKED MRS. IDIOT" 79
+ "'I SET OFF A GIANT CRACKER UNDER HIS CHAIR'" 87
+ "'WOULD HANG THAT PORTRAIT UPON THE WALL OF MY BEDROOM'" 91
+ "'STARTED TO PREACH WITH THE RECIPE FOR A WASHINGTON PIE'" 95
+ "'A LITTLE BUNDLE OF MY OWN LETTERS'" 101
+ "'WE SPRINKLED IT IN PERSON'" 107
+ "'HE DISCOVERED THE ONE PERFECT STALK'" 111
+ "'IT WOULD DE DEUCEDLY AWKWARD ... IF THEY WOULD EXPLODE IN THE
+ MOUTH OF THE PERSON WHO WAS EATING THEM'" 115
+ "SHE COULD SLAM THEM DOWN ON THE HEARTH-STONES LIKE TORPEDOES'" 119
+ "'THE JOYS AND WOES OF THE TOILERS WHO MINED IT'" 127
+ "'FOR THOUGH I'M BUT A CARPET-TACK,'" ETC. 131
+ "'I SHOULD HESITATE TO TRY TO DRIVE A CANAL-BOAT'" 137
+ "'I HAVEN'T EVER HAD A HOME; I'VE ALWAYS BOARDED'" 141
+ "'I FEEL THAT I COULD GO OUT AND MOW THREE ACRES OF GRASS'" 147
+ "'HE WOULD GO OUT DAY AFTER DAY AND SIT DOWN BESIDE IT'" 151
+ "'HE SHOVELS OFF A FOOT-PATH'" 155
+ "'SPEND A WHOLE DAY ON ONE WINDOW'" 161
+ "'WELL, I'M FOND OF GOLF'" 167
+ "'AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL TEA'" 171
+ "'THE BABY IS ROCKED TO SLEEP EVERY NIGHT'" 175
+ "'POOR DICK DAWKINS ISN'T TAKEN CARE OF AT ALL'" 179
+ "'DR. PREACHLY ONLY GOT EIGHT PAIRS LAST XMAS'" 189
+ "'A CHINA DOLL TO THE DAUGHTER OF A CARPENTER'" 193
+ "'HULLO, SONNY! HAD A GOOD TIME?'" 197
+ "'I GAVE MY DOLLY AWAY TO-DAY'" 201
+ "'I DON'T QUITE CATCH YOUR DRIFT'" 207
+ "'I FELT AS IF I HAD SWALLOWED AN OVERSHOE'" 213
+ "'I FOUND EIGHT SANDWICHES AND A PINT OF SALTED ALMONDS'" 219
+ "'THEY WERE FOUND SOME DAYS LATER WHEN THE ROOM WAS PUT IN
+ ORDER'" 223
+ "'THERE'S NOT MUCH MONEY IN STOCKS'" 231
+ "'A NICE LITTLE BASKET-HAT ON HER HEAD TO HOLD THE PINS IN'" 235
+ "'AN ELECTRIC NOTICE TO QUIT'" 239
+ FINDING OUT WHAT IS BEING COOKED FOR DINNER 245
+ "'COURTING HIS BEST GIRL ON SOME OTHER FELLOW'S STONE WALL'" 251
+ "'HOLDING UP A GREAT OSAGE ORANGE'" 255
+ "'THE PICTURE OF A HEART WITH AN ARROW DRAWN THROUGH IT'" 259
+ "'IT TOOK MY HIRED MAN TWO WEEKS TO SCRUB IT OUT'" 265
+ "'AN UNPAID GROCER'S BILL BECOMES AN ABSOLUTE PLEASURE'" 271
+ "'THE LION, THE ELEPHANT, THE TIGER, ALL HAVE THEIR WORK TO DO'" 275
+ "'THEY EAT UP MY NEW CLOTHES'" 279
+ "'WASTED MY ENERGY UPON THE UNRESPONSIVE AIR'" 283
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION
+
+
+"My dear," said the Idiot one morning, as he and his good wife and the
+two little ones, Mollie and Tommy, sat down at the breakfast-table, "now
+that we are finally settled in our new house I move we celebrate. Let's
+give a dinner to my old friends of Mrs. Smithers's; they were nice old
+people, and I should like to get them together again. I saw Dr. Pedagog
+in the city yesterday, and he inquired most affectionately, not to say
+anxiously, about the children."
+
+"Why should he be anxious about the children?" asked Mrs. Idiot,
+placidly, as she sweetened her husband's coffee. "Does he suspect them
+of lacking completeness or variety?"
+
+The Idiot tapped his forehead significantly.
+
+"He didn't know whether they take after you or after me, but I relieved
+his mind on that score," he said. "I told him that they didn't take
+after anybody that either of us ever knew. They have started in on a
+line of Idiocy that is entirely their own. He seemed very much pleased
+when I said that, and observed that he was glad to hear it."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed.
+
+"It was very nice of the Doctor to ask about them, but I am a little
+afraid he wants to take a hand in their bringing up," she said.
+
+"No doubt of it," said the Idiot. "Pedagog always was anxious to
+experiment. Many a time I have suspected him of having designs even on
+me."
+
+"Mrs. Pedagog told me last year that he had devised an entirely new
+system of home training," observed Mrs. Idiot, "and they both regretted
+that they had no children of their own to try it on."
+
+"And of course you offered to lend Tommy to them?" said the Idiot, with
+a sly glance at his son, who was stowing away his oatmeal at a rate that
+bade fair to create a famine.
+
+"Of course," said Mrs. Idiot. "He's got to get raw material somewhere,
+and I thought Tommy would be just the thing."
+
+"Well, I ain't a-goin'," said Tommy, helping himself liberally and for
+the third time to the oatmeal.
+
+"My son," said the Idiot, with a mock show of sternness, "if your mother
+chooses to lend you to any one it is not for you to say that you 'ain't
+a-goin'. It may be that I shall interfere to the extent of demanding to
+know what security for your safe return is offered, but otherwise
+neither you nor I shall intervene. What your mother says is law for you
+as well as for me. Please understand that, Thomas."
+
+"All right, pa," said Tommy; and then he added in an undertone,
+presumably to the butter, "But I ain't a-goin', just the same."
+
+"I'll go," said Mollie, who rather liked the idea of being lent to
+somebody, since it involved a visit to some strange and therefore
+fascinating spot away from home. "Lend me to somebody, will you, mamma?"
+
+"Yes, ma, lend Mollie to 'em," said Tommy, with, a certain dry
+enthusiasm, "and then maybe you can borrow a boy from somebody else for
+me to play with. I don't see why you don't swap her off for a boy,
+anyhow. I like her well enough, but what you ever wanted to buy her for
+in the beginning I don't know. Girls isn't any good."
+
+"Thomas," said the Idiot, "you talk too much, and, what is more, you say
+vain things which some day you will regret. When you get older you will
+recall this dictum of yours, that 'girls isn't any good,' with a blush
+of shame, and remember that your mother was once a girl."
+
+"Well, she's outgrown it," said Tommy; and then reverting to his
+father's choice of words, he added, "What is dictums, anyhow?"
+
+"Pooh!" cried the little girl. "Smarty don't know what dictums is!"
+
+"Suppose you two young persons subside for a few minutes!" interrupted
+the Idiot. "I wish to talk to your mother, and I haven't got all day.
+You'll be wanting some bread and butter to-morrow, and I must go to town
+and earn it."
+
+"All right, pa," said Tommy. "I ain't got anything to say that I can't
+say to myself. I'd rather talk to myself, anyhow. You can be as sassy--"
+
+"Thomas!" said the Idiot, severely.
+
+"All right, pa," said Tommy; and with a side remark to the cream-jug,
+that he still thought Mollie ought to be swapped off for something, it
+didn't matter what as long as it wasn't another girl, the boy lapsed
+into a deep though merely temporary silence.
+
+"You said you'd like to give a dinner to Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog and the
+others," said Mrs. Idiot. "I quite approve."
+
+"I think it would be nice," returned the Idiot. "It has been more than
+six years since we were all together."
+
+"You wouldn't prefer having them at breakfast, would you?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot, with a smile. "I remember hearing you say once that breakfast was
+your best time."
+
+"How long is six years, pa?" asked Tommy.
+
+"Really, Thomas," replied the Idiot, severely, "you are the most absurd
+creature. How long is six years!"
+
+"I meant in inches," said Tommy, unabashed. "You always told me to ask
+you when I wanted to know things. Of course, if you don't know--"
+
+"It's more'n a mile, I guess," observed Mollie, with some superiority of
+manner. "Ain't it, pa?"
+
+The Idiot glanced at his wife in despair.
+
+"I don't think, my dear, that I am as strong at breakfast as I used to
+be," said he. "There was a time when I could hold my own, but things
+seem to have changed. Make it dinner; and, Tommy, when you have deep
+problems to solve, like how long is six years in inches, try to work
+them out for yourself. It will fix the results more firmly in your
+mind."
+
+"All right, pa," replied Tommy; "I thought maybe you knew. I thought you
+said you knew everything."
+
+[Illustration: "POSSESSED A LIBRARY OF FIRST EDITIONS"]
+
+In accordance with the Idiot's suggestion the invitations were sent out.
+It was a most agreeable proposition as far as his wife was concerned,
+for the Idiot's old associates, his fellow-boarders at Mrs.
+Smithers-Pedagog's "High-Class Home for Single Gentlemen," had proved
+to be the stanchest of his friends. They had, as time passed on, gone
+their several ways. The Poet had made himself so famous that even his
+bad things got into print; the Bibliomaniac, by an unexpected stroke of
+fortune, had come into possession of his own again, and now possessed a
+library of first editions that auctioneers looked upon with envious
+eyes, and which aroused the hatred of many another collector. The Doctor
+had prospered equally, and was now one of the most successful operators
+for appendicitis; in fact, could now afford to refuse all other practice
+than that involved in that delicate and popular line of work. The genial
+gentleman who occasionally imbibed had not wholly reformed, but, as the
+Idiot put it, had developed into one who occasionally did _not_ imbibe.
+Mr. Brief had become an assistant district attorney, and was prominently
+mentioned for a judgeship, and Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog lived placidly along
+together, never for an instant regretting the inspiration which led them
+to economize by making two into one. In short, time and fortune had
+dealt kindly with all, even with Mary, the housemaid, who was now
+general manager of the nursery in the Idiot's household.
+
+The home life of "Mr. and Mrs. Idiot" had been all that either of the
+young people could have wished for, and prosperity had waited upon them
+in all things. The Idiot had become a partner in the business of his
+father-in-law, and even in bad times had managed to save something,
+until now, with two children, aged five and six, he found himself the
+possessor of his own home in a suburban city. It had been finished only
+a month when the proposed dinner was first mentioned, and the natural
+pride of its master and mistress was delightful to look upon.
+
+"Why, do you know, my dear," said the Idiot one evening, on his return
+from town, "they are talking of asking me to resign from the club
+because they say I am offensive about this place, and Watson says my
+conversation has become a bore to everybody because the burden of my
+song yesterday was pots and pans and kettles and things like that?"
+
+"I suppose clubmen are not interested in pots and pans and kettles and
+things," Mrs. Idiot observed. "Some people aren't, you know."
+
+"Not interested?" echoed the Idiot. "What kind of people can they be not
+to be interested in pots and pans and kettles and things? I guess it's
+because of their dense ignorance."
+
+[Illustration: "'THEY NEVER HAD THE FUN OF BUYING THEM'"]
+
+"They never had the fun of buying them, perhaps," suggested Mrs. Idiot.
+
+[Illustration: "'GUARANTEED TO HANG ONTO A GARMENT IN A GALE'"]
+
+"Possibly," assented the Idiot. "And I'll tell you one thing, Pollie,
+dear," he added, "if they had had that fun just once, instead of
+squandering their savings on clothes and the theatre, and on horses,
+you'd find every blessed one of those chaps thronging the hardware shops
+all day and spending their money there. Why, do you know I even enjoyed
+getting the clothes-pins, and what is more, it was instructive. I never
+knew before what countless varieties of clothes-pins there were. There's
+the plain kind of commerce that look like a pair of legs with a polo-cap
+on. I was brought up on those, and I used to steal them when I was a
+small boy, to act as understudies for Noah and Shem and Ham and Japheth
+in my Noah's ark. Then there's the patent kind with a spring to it that
+is guaranteed to hang onto a garment in a gale if it has to let go of
+the rope. Very few people realize the infinite variety of the
+clothes-pin, and when I try to tell these chaps at the club about it
+they yawn and try to change the subject to things like German opera and
+impressionism and international complications."
+
+"How foolish of them!" laughed Mrs. Idiot. "The idea of preferring to
+talk of Wagner when one can discourse upon clothes-pins!"
+
+"I am afraid you are sarcastic," rejoined the Idiot. "But you needn't
+be; if you'd only reason it out you'd see at once that my view is
+correct. Anybody can talk about Wagner. Any person who knows a picture
+from a cable-car can talk with seeming intelligence on art, and even a
+member of Congress can talk about international complications off-hand
+for hours; but how many of these people know about clothes-pins?"
+
+"Very few," said Mrs. Idiot, meekly.
+
+"Very few, indeed," observed the Idiot. "And the same way with
+egg-beaters. I'll bet you a laundry-stove that if I should write to the
+_Recorder_ to-morrow morning, and ask a question about Wagner, the
+musical editor would give me an answer within twenty-four hours; but
+with reference to egg-beaters it would take 'em a week to find out. And
+that's just the trouble. The newspapers are filled up with stuff that
+everybody knows about, but they don't know a thing about other things on
+the subject of which the public is ignorant."
+
+"I think," said Mrs. Idiot, reflectively, "that that is probably due to
+the fact that they consider Wagner more important than an egg-beater."
+
+[Illustration: "'AND SOME PEOPLE SAY WAGNER IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN
+THAT'"]
+
+"Well, then, they don't know, that's all," rejoined the Idiot, rising
+and walking out into the kitchen and taking the fascinating object over
+which he was waxing so enthusiastic from the dresser drawer. "Just look
+at that!" he cried, turning the cog-wheel which set the three
+intersecting metal loops whizzing like a squirrel in its wheel-cage.
+"Just look at that! It's beautiful, and some people say Wagner is more
+important than that."
+
+"Well, I must say, my dear," said Mrs. Idiot, "that I have a leaning
+that way myself. Of course, I admit the charm of the egg-beater, but--"
+
+"Tell me one thing," demanded the Idiot. "Can you get along without
+Wagner?"
+
+"Why, yes," Mrs. Idiot replied, "if I have to."
+
+"And can you get along without an egg-beater?" he cried, triumphantly.
+
+The evidence was overwhelming, and Mrs. Idiot, with an appreciative
+ebullition of mirth, acknowledged herself defeated, and so charmingly
+withal, that the next day when her husband returned home he brought her
+two tickets for the opera of Siegfried as a reward for her graceful
+submission.
+
+"I could have bought ten dozen muffin-rings for the same money," said
+he, as he gave them to her, "but people who know when to give in, and do
+give in as amiably as you do, my dear, deserve to be rewarded; and, on
+the whole, when you use these tickets, if you'll ask me, I think I'll
+escort you to Siegfried myself."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+A LITTLE DINNER TO SOME OLD FRIENDS
+
+
+[Illustration: "TOMMY AND MOLLIE GAVE THE COOK A GREAT DEAL OF TROUBLE"]
+
+Ten days later all was excitement at the Idiot's new home. Tommy and
+Mollie were in a state bordering upon frenzy, and gave the cook a great
+deal of trouble, requesting a taste of this, that, and the other thing,
+which she was preparing for the dinner to Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog, the
+Bibliomaniac, and the others. Inwardly, too, they were somewhat
+wrathful, for they could not understand why they were not permitted to
+dine with their parents as usual.
+
+"I guess maybe it's your manners that keeps you away, Tommy," said
+Mollie.
+
+"Hoh!" said Tommy. "It can't be that, because pa says I ain't got any.
+It's because you're too young to be introdoosed into society, and I've
+got to stay up-stairs and look after you. If you weren't a girl!"
+
+Here Tommy clenched his fists and looked unutterable things. Mollie
+shuddered and was glad she was a girl as she imagined the awful things
+Tommy would do to her had she been a boy.
+
+"Neither of 'em's it, Tommy," she said, in a conciliatory manner. "It's
+because they ain't got enough dining-room chairs, that's why. I know,
+because I counted 'em, and there's only eight, and there's nine people
+comin'."
+
+"I guess maybe that's it," said Tommy, pacified somewhat. "And anyhow, I
+don't care. I saw that piece of paper ma gave Jennie, and she wrote down
+all the things they're goin' to have, and it's goin' to be two hours
+between the soup and the ice-cream. I couldn't ever wait that long for
+the ice-cream. I don't see why they don't begin with ice-cream."
+
+"I guess maybe we're better off as it is," said Mollie. "Popper and
+mommer ain't likely to forget us, and, besides, we can talk."
+
+And with this comforting reflection the little ones retired to their
+nursery contented in mind and spirit--and they didn't suffer a bit.
+Their "popper and mommer" didn't forget them. The ice-cream was
+excellent, and they had their share of it almost before the guests began
+with their oysters.
+
+At seven o'clock Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog had arrived, and at seven-ten all
+the invited guests were present.
+
+"If it hadn't been for my wife," Mr. Pedagog whispered in his host's
+ear, "I should have been late, too."
+
+"Don't apologize, old man," replied the Idiot, gripping the
+Schoolmaster's hand warmly. "I sometimes go to dinners on time myself."
+
+In a few moments dinner was announced, and shortly after all were
+seated, and in memory of old times the guests naturally waited for the
+Idiot to begin.
+
+"Do you know," he said, as he squeezed the juice from a luscious lemon
+over an unprotesting oyster, at the same time glancing affectionately
+over the company, "I haven't felt so much at home for years as I do
+now."
+
+"Not very complimentary to your wife," said Mr. Brief.
+
+"Oh, I know what he means," observed Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"And I have so many other opportunities to compliment her," said the
+Idiot.
+
+"But really, Mrs. Pedagog," he added, addressing the good lady who sat
+at his right, "I feel absolutely contented to-night. All the good things
+of the past and of the present seem to be concentrated about this
+board--except the three up-stairs, who can't very well be here."
+
+"Three?" asked Mr. Pedagog. "I thought there were only two--"
+
+"Certainly," said the Idiot. "Tommy and Mollie, but there is Mary, your
+old housemaid. We can't very well ask them to dine with us, you know."
+
+"I don't see why Tommy and Mollie can't be invited," said Mr. Pedagog,
+much to the Idiot's surprise, it seemed so like a violation of his
+system, as it might be presumed to be.
+
+"You believe in having children at table, then, Mr. Pedagog?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot.
+
+"Most certainly," said the Schoolmaster. Mrs. Pedagog glanced smilingly
+at Mrs. Idiot, as much as to say, "Oh, these men!"
+
+"I certainly do approve of having children at table on all occasions,"
+he continued. "How else are they to learn how to conduct themselves? The
+discipline of the nursery is apt to be lax, and it is my belief that
+many of the bad table manners of the present-day child are due to the
+sense of freedom which eating dinner in the nursery naturally
+inculcates."
+
+"There is something in what you say," said the Idiot. "Tommy, for
+instance, never learned to throw a French pancake across the table at
+his sister by watching his mother and myself here in the dining-room,
+yet in the freedom of the nursery I have known it done."
+
+"Precisely," said Mr. Pedagog. "That very little incident illustrates my
+point exactly. And I have no doubt that in the nursery the offence
+seemed less heinous than it would had it occurred in the dining-room,
+and hence did not meet with the full measure of punishment that it
+deserved."
+
+"I have forgotten exactly what was done on that occasion," said the
+Idiot, calmly. "It is my impression that I compelled Thomas to eat the
+pancake."
+
+"I am sure I never heard of the incident before," said Mrs. Idiot, her
+cheeks growing very red. "He didn't really, did he, dear?"
+
+"By jove!" cried the Idiot, snapping his forefinger against his thumb,
+"what a traitor I am, to be sure. I promised Thomas never to tell, and
+here I've given the poor little chap away; but the boy was excusable, I
+assure you all--that is, he was excusable in a sense. Mollie had
+previously hit him in the eye with a salted almond, and--"
+
+"It is quite evident," put in Mrs. Pedagog, her womanly sympathy leading
+her to rush to the aid of Mrs. Idiot, who seemed somewhat mortified over
+the Idiot's confidences, "that you were not at home, my dear. I have
+myself observed that extraordinary episodes of this nature generally
+happen when it is the father who is left in charge of the children."
+
+"Quite right, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Doctor, nodding his head gravely.
+"I have noticed the same thing in my professional practice. As long as
+the mother is about discipline is maintained, but once leave the father
+in charge and riot is the order of the day."
+
+"That's exactly what I was going to say," said the Idiot. "Many a time
+when Mrs. Idiot has gone out shopping, as she did on the day in
+question, and I have remained at home for a rest, I have wished
+before evening came that I had gone shopping and let my wife have the
+rest. As a matter of fact, the bringing up of children should be left to
+the mother--"
+
+"Oh, but the father should have something to do with it," interrupted
+Mrs. Idiot. "It is too great a responsibility to place on a woman's
+shoulders."
+
+"You didn't let me finish, my dear," said the Idiot, amiably. "I was
+going to say that the mother should bring the children up, and the
+father should take 'em down when they get up too high."
+
+"My views to a dot," said Mr. Pedagog, with more enthusiasm than he had
+ever yet shown over the Idiot's dicta. "Just as in ordinary colonial
+government, the home authorities should govern, and when necessary a
+stronger power should intervene."
+
+"Ideal--is it not?" laughed Mrs. Idiot, addressing Mrs. Pedagog. "The
+mother, Spain. The children, Cuba. Papa, the great and glorious United
+States!"
+
+"Ahem! Well," said Mr. Pedagog, "I didn't mean that exactly, you know--"
+
+"But it's what you said, John," said Mrs. Pedagog, somewhat severely.
+
+[Illustration: "'LET THE FATHERS LOOK AFTER THE CHILDREN AT NIGHT'"]
+
+"Well, I don't see why there can't be a division of responsibility,"
+said the Poet, who had never married, and who knew children only as a
+theory. "Let the mothers look after them in the daytime, and the fathers
+at night."
+
+This sally was greeted with an outburst of applause, it was so
+practical.
+
+"Excuse me!" said the Idiot. "I'm not selfish, but I don't want to have
+charge of the children at night. Why, when Tommy was cutting his teeth I
+suffered agonies when night came on. I was down-town all day, and so
+wasn't very much bothered then, but at night it was something awful. Not
+only Tommy's tooth, but the fear that his mother would tread on a tack."
+
+"That was unselfish," said Mr. Pedagog, dryly. "You weren't afraid of
+treading on one yourself."
+
+"How could I?" said the Idiot. "I had all I could do trying to keep my
+wife from knowing that I was disturbed. It is bad enough to be worried
+over a crying babe, without being bothered by an irritated husband, so I
+simply lay there pretending to be asleep and snoring away for dear
+life."
+
+"You are the most considerate man I ever heard of," said Mrs. Pedagog,
+smiling broadly.
+
+"You don't mean to say," said the Poet, with a frown, "that you made
+your wife get up and take all the trouble and bother--"
+
+"I'd only have been in the way," said the Idiot, meekly.
+
+"So he kept quiet and pretended to snore like the good old Idiot that he
+is," put in the Doctor. "And he did the right thing, too," he added. "If
+all fathers would obliterate themselves on occasions of that sort, and
+let the mothers rule, the Tommys and Dickies and Harrys would go to
+sleep a great deal more quickly."
+
+"We are rambling," said Mr. Pedagog. "The question of a father's duty
+towards a teething son has nothing to do with the question of a child's
+right to dine with his parents."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," said the Idiot. "If we are to consider this matter
+scientifically we must start right. Teething is a natural first step,
+for if a child hath no teeth, wherewithal shall he eat dinners with his
+parents or without them?"
+
+"That is all very well," retorted Mr. Pedagog, "but to discuss
+fire-engines intelligently it is not necessary to go back to the times
+of Elisha to begin it."
+
+Mr. Whitechoker--now the Rev. Theophilus Whitechoker, D.D., for he, too,
+had prospered--smiled deprecatingly. There is no man in the world who
+more thoroughly appreciates a biblical joke than the prosperous
+clergyman.
+
+"Well," said the Idiot, reflectively, "I quite agree with your
+proposition that children should dine in the dining-room with their
+parents and not up-stairs in the nursery, with a lot of tin soldiers and
+golliwogs. The manners of parents are no better than those of tin
+soldiers and golliwogs, but their conversation is apt to prove more
+instructive; and as for the stern father who says his children must dine
+in the kitchen until they learn better manners, I never had much
+confidence in him or in his manners, either."
+
+"I don't see," said the genial old gentleman who occasionally imbibed,
+"how you can discipline children in the nursery. If they misbehave in
+the dining-room you can send them up-stairs to the nursery, but if they
+misbehave in the nursery, where the deuce can you send them?"
+
+"To bed," said Mr. Brief.
+
+"Never!" cried the Idiot. "Children, Mr. Brief, as I understand
+them--and I have known three very well; myself as a boy, and Tommy and
+Mollie--children, as I understand them, are never naughty for the mere
+fun of being so. Their wickedness grows out of their wonderful stores of
+unexpended and unexpendable energy. Take my son Thomas on last Saturday
+afternoon, for instance. It was a rainy Saturday, and Tommy, instead of
+being out-of-doors all morning and afternoon getting rid of his
+superfluous vitality, had been cooped up in the house all day doing
+nothing. Shortly before dinner we had a difference of opinion which
+lasted for more time than I like to think about. I was tired and
+irritable. Tommy wasn't tired, but he _was_ irritable, and, from his
+point of view, was as right as I was. He had the best of me to the
+extent that I was tired and he wasn't. I had the best of him to the
+extent that I had authority and he hadn't--"
+
+"And who came out ahead?" asked Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I did," said the Idiot, "because I was bigger than he was; but what I
+was going to say was this: Mr. Brief would have sent him to bed,
+thereby adding to the boy's stock of energy, already too great for his
+little mind to control."
+
+"And what did you do?" asked Mr. Brief.
+
+"Nothin'," said a small but unmistakably masculine voice from behind the
+portieres.
+
+"Thomas!" said the Idiot, severely, as all turned to see who had spoken.
+
+[Illustration: "A LITTLE FIGURE CLAD IN WHITE"]
+
+A little figure clad in white, ably supported by a still smaller figure,
+also clad in white, but with an additional ruffle about the neck, both
+of them barefooted, appeared in the doorway.
+
+"Why, Mollie!" said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"We comed down to thee how you wath gettin' along," said the little
+girl.
+
+"Yes, we did," said the boy. "But he didn't do a thing to me that day,"
+he added, climbing on his father's knee and snuggling down against his
+vest-pocket with a sweet little sigh of satisfaction. "Did you, pa?"
+
+"Yes, Thomas," said the Idiot. "Don't you remember that I ignored you
+utterly?"
+
+[Illustration: "'I'D RATHER BE SPANKED THAN NOT NOTICED AT ALL'"]
+
+"Yes, I do," said Tommy. "But I'd rather be spanked than not noticed at
+all."
+
+"I am afraid," said Mr. Pedagog a few hours later, as he and Mrs.
+Pedagog were returning home, "I am very much afraid that the Idiot's
+children are being spoiled."
+
+"I hope they are!" returned the good lady, "for really, John, I never
+knew a boy or a girl to grow into man or womanhood and amount to
+anything who hadn't been spoiled in childhood. Spoiling is another name
+for the attitude of parents who make comrades of their children and who
+do not set themselves up as tyrants--"
+
+"But the veneration of a child for his father and mother--" Mr. Pedagog
+began.
+
+"Should not degenerate into the awe which one feels for an unrelenting
+despot!" interrupted Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+The old gentleman discreetly retired from the field.
+
+As for Mrs. and Mr. Idiot, they retired that night satisfied with the
+evening's diversion, and just before he turned out the light the Idiot
+walked into the nursery to say good-night to the children.
+
+"You're a good old pop!" said Tommy, with an affectionate hug. "_The
+best I ever had!_"
+
+As for Mollie, she was sleeping soundly, with a smile on her placid
+little face which showed that, "spoiled" as she was, she was happy; and
+what should the Idiot or any one else seek to bring into a child's life
+but happiness?
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+IN THE LIBRARY
+
+
+The Bibliomaniac had come off into the country to spend Sunday with the
+Idiot, and, as fortune would have it, Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog also appeared
+on the scene. After the mid-day dinner the little party withdrew to the
+library, where the Bibliomaniac began to discourse somewhat learnedly
+upon his hobby.
+
+"I am glad to see, my dear Idiot," he observed, as he glanced about the
+room at the well-filled shelves, "that as you grow older you are
+cultivating a love of good literature."
+
+"I heartily echo the sentiment," said Mr. Pedagog, as he noted the
+titles of some of the volumes. "I may add that I am pleasurably
+surprised at some of your selections. I never knew, for instance, that
+you cared for Dryden, and yet I see here on the top shelf a voluminous
+edition of that poet."
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "I have found Dryden very useful indeed.
+Particularly in that binding and in so many volumes. The color goes very
+well with the hangings, and the space the books occupy, eked out by a
+dozen others of the same color, gives to that top shelf all the esthetic
+effect of an attractive and tasteful frieze. Then, too, it is always
+well," he added, with a sly wink at Mrs. Idiot, "to have a lot of books
+for a top shelf that is difficult to reach that nothing under the canopy
+could induce you to read. It is not healthful to be stretching upward,
+and with Dryden upon the top shelf my wife and I are never tempted to
+undermine our constitutions by taking him down."
+
+The Bibliomaniac laughed.
+
+"Your view is at least characteristic," said he, "and to tell you the
+absolute truth, I do not know that your judgment of the literary value
+of Dryden is at variance with my own. Somebody called him the Greatest
+Poet of a Little Age. Perhaps if the age had been bigger he'd not have
+shone so brilliantly."
+
+"Lowell," observed Mr. Pedagog, "was responsible for that remark, if I
+remember rightly, and I have no doubt it is a just one, and yet I do not
+hold it up against Dryden. Man does not make the age. The age makes the
+man. Had there been any inspiring influences at work to give him a
+motive, an incentive, Dryden might have been a greater poet. To excel
+his fellows was all that could rightly be expected of him, and that he
+did."
+
+"Assuredly," said the Idiot. "That has always been my view, and to-day
+we benefit by it. If he had gone directly to oblivion, Mrs. Idiot and I
+should have been utterly at a loss to know what to put on that top
+shelf."
+
+The Idiot offered his visitors a cigar.
+
+"Thank you," said the Bibliomaniac, taking his and sniffing at it with
+all the airs and graces of a connoisseur.
+
+[Illustration: "'I DID NOT SMOKE UNTIL I WAS FIFTY'"]
+
+"I don't know but that I will join you," said Mr. Pedagog. "I did not
+smoke until I was fifty, and I suppose I ought not to have taken it up
+then, but I did, and I have taken a great deal of comfort out of it. My
+allowance is fifty-two cigars a year, one for each Sunday afternoon," he
+added, with a kindly smile.
+
+"Well, you want to look out you don't get smoker's heart," said the
+Idiot. "When a man plunges into a bad habit as rashly as that, he wants
+to pull up before it is too late."
+
+"I have felt no ill effects since the first one," rejoined Mr. Pedagog.
+"But you, my dear Idiot, how about your allowance? Is it still as great
+as ever? As I remember you in the old days you were something of a
+cigarette fiend."
+
+[Illustration: "'SMOKING KEEPS INSECTS FROM THE PLANTS'"]
+
+"I smoke just as much, but with this difference: I do not smoke for
+pleasure any more, Mr. Pedagog," the Idiot replied. "As a householder I
+smoke from a sense of duty. It keeps moths out of the house, and insects
+from the plants."
+
+[Illustration: "THE BIBLIOMANIAC WAS INVESTIGATING THE CONTENTS OF THE
+LOWER SHELVES"]
+
+The Bibliomaniac meanwhile had been investigating the contents of the
+lower shelves.
+
+"You've got a few rare things here, I see," he observed, taking up a
+volume of short sketches illustrated by Leech, in color. "This small
+tome is worth its weight in gold. Where did you pick it up?"
+
+"Auction," said the Idiot. "I didn't buy it by weight, either. I bought
+it by mistake. The colored pictures fascinated me, and when it was
+put up I bawled out 'fifteen.' Another fellow said 'sixteen.' I wasn't
+going to split nickels so I bid 'twenty.' So we kept at it until it was
+run up to 'thirty-six.' Then I thought I'd break the other fellow's
+heart by bidding fifty, and it was knocked down to me."
+
+"That's a stiff price, but on the whole it's worth it," said the
+Bibliomaniac, stroking the back of the book caressingly.
+
+"But," said Mr. Pedagog, "if you bid on it consciously where did the
+mistake come in?"
+
+The Idiot sighed. "I meant cents," he said, "but the other chap and the
+auctioneer meant dollars. I went up and planked down a half-dollar and
+was immediately made aware of my error."
+
+"But you could have explained," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+[Illustration: "'I PREFERRED TO PAY THE $49.50'"]
+
+"Oh, yes," said the Idiot, "I _could_, but after all I preferred to pay
+the extra $49.50 rather than make a public confession of such infernal
+innocence before some sixty or seventy _habitues_ of a book-auction
+room."
+
+"And you were perfectly right!" said the Bibliomaniac. "You never would
+have dared set your foot in that place again if you had explained. They
+would have made life a burden to you. Furthermore, you have not paid too
+dearly for the experience. The book is worth forty dollars; and to learn
+better than to despise the man who makes his bid cautiously, and who
+advances by small bids rather than by antelopian jumps, is worth many
+times ten dollars to the man who collects rare books seriously. In the
+early days I scorned to break a five-dollar bill when I was bidding,
+just as you refused, as you put it, to split nickels, and many a time I
+have paid as high as twenty-five dollars for books that could have been
+had for twenty-one, because of that foolish sentiment."
+
+"I have often wondered," Mr. Pedagog put in at this point, holding his
+cigar in a gingerly and awed fashion, taking a puff at it between words,
+by which symptoms the man who seldom smokes may always be identified, "I
+have often wondered what was the mission of a private library, anyhow.
+And now that I find you two gentlemen interested in a phase of
+book-collecting with which I have had little sympathy myself, possibly I
+may, without being offensive, ask a question. Do you, for instance,
+Mr. Idiot, collect books because you wish to have something nobody else
+has got, or do you buy your books to read?"
+
+"That is a deep question," said the Idiot, "and I do not know that I can
+answer it off-hand. I have already confessed that I bought Dryden for
+his decorative quality. I purchased my Thackeray to read. I bought my
+Pepys Diary because I find it better reading than a Sunday newspaper,
+quite as gossipy, and with weather reports that are fully as reliable.
+But that particular Leech I bought because of my youthful love for
+colored pictures."
+
+"But you admit that it is valuable because of its rarity, and that
+compared to fifty dollars' worth of books that are not rare it is not to
+be compared with them from a literary point of view?" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I presume," said the Idiot, "that the fifty dollars I expended on that
+book would have provided me with a complete Shakespeare in one volume;
+all of Byron in green cloth and gold top; all of Dickens, Thackeray,
+Bulwer, and Austen in six volumes, with a margin of forty-five dollars
+left with which for nine years I could have paid for a subscription to
+the Mercantile Library, containing all the good reading of the present
+day and all the standard works of the past. But I rather like to have
+the books, and to feel that they are my own, even if it is only for the
+pleasure of lending them."
+
+"Still, if a man collects books merely for their contents--" persisted
+Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"He is a wild, extravagant person," said the Idiot. "He might save
+himself hundreds of dollars, not to say thousands. The library on that
+plan need not occupy an honored place among the rooms of the house. A
+mere pigeon-hole with a subscriber's card to a circulating library filed
+away in it will do as well, or if the city or town in which he lives
+maintains a public library he may spare himself even that expense."
+
+"Good for you!" exclaimed the Bibliomaniac. "That's the best answer to
+the critics of book-collectors I have heard yet."
+
+"I agree with you," said Mr. Pedagog. "It is a very comprehensive reply.
+As for you, my dear Bibliomaniac, why do you collect books?"
+
+"Because I love 'em as books," replied the Bibliomaniac. "Because of
+their associations, and because when I get a treasure I have the bliss
+of knowing I have something that others haven't."
+
+"Then it is selfishness?" asked Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Just as everything else is," returned the Bibliomaniac. "You, sir, if I
+may be personal without wishing to be offensive, are wedded to Mrs.
+Pedagog. You take pleasure in knowing that she belongs to you and not to
+any one else. The Idiot here is proud of his children, and is glad they
+are his children and nobody else's. _I_ am wedded to my rare books, and
+it rejoices my soul to pick up a volume that is unique, and to know that
+it belongs to me and to no one else. If that is selfishness, then all
+possession is selfish."
+
+"That's about it," said the Idiot. "You collect books just as Mormons
+and Solomon used to collect wives. You are called a Bibliomaniac. I
+suppose Brigham Young and Solomon would have been known as
+Gamyomaniacs--though I don't suppose that age in women as in books is a
+requisite of value to marrying men--and they are both of them supposed
+to be rather canny persons."
+
+Mr. Pedagog puffed away in silence. It was evident that the _argumentum
+ad hominem_ did not please him.
+
+"Well," he said, after awhile, "possibly you are right. If a man wants a
+library to be a small British Museum--"
+
+"He will take better care of his rarities than the Idiot does," said the
+Bibliomaniac, putting the rare Leech back into its place. "If that were
+mine I'd put it out of the reach of my children."
+
+"I didn't know you had any," said the Idiot, eagerly.
+
+"Oh, you know what I mean," retorted the Bibliomaniac. "You place Dryden
+on the top shelf where Tommy and Mollie cannot get at him. But this
+book, which is worth ten larger paper editions of Dryden, you keep
+below, where the children can easily reach it. It's a wonder to me
+you've been able to keep it in its present superb condition."
+
+"The mind of a child," said Mr. Pedagog, sententiously, "is above
+values, above all conceits. It is the mind of sincerity, and a rare book
+has no greater attraction to the boy or girl than one not so favored."
+
+"That is not my reason," said the Idiot. "I know children pretty well,
+and I have observed that they are ambitious, and in a sense rebellious.
+They want to do what they cannot do. That is why, when mothers place jam
+on the top shelf of the pantry, the children always climb up to get it.
+If they would leave it on the dining-room table, within easy reach, the
+children would soon cease to regard it as a thing to be sought for. Make
+jam a required article of diet and the little ones will soon cease to
+want it. So with that book. If I should put that out of Tommy's reach,
+Tommy would lie awake nights to plan his campaign to get it. Leaving it
+where it is he doesn't think about it, doesn't want it, is not forbidden
+to have it, and so it escapes his notice."
+
+"You have the right idea, the human idea," said Mr. Pedagog, and even
+the Bibliomaniac was inclined to agree. But just then Tommy happened in,
+with Mollie close after. The boy walked straight to the bookcase, and
+Mollie gathered up the large shears from the Idiot's table, and together
+they approached their father.
+
+"Pa," said Mollie, holding up the scissors, "can I borrow these?"
+
+"What for?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"We want to cut the pictures out o' this," said Tommy, holding up the
+fifty-dollar Leech.
+
+After all, it is difficult to lay down a cast-iron rule as to how a
+private library should be constructed or arranged, particularly when
+one's loyalty is divided between one's children and one's merely bookish
+treasures.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+AS TO A SMALL DINNER
+
+
+[Illustration: "THE COOK HAD TAKEN WINGS UNTO HERSELF"]
+
+It was sad but true. Mr. and Mrs. Idiot had invited Mr. Whitechoker and
+Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog and the Poet to dinner, and for some reason or
+another the cook had taken wings unto herself and flown, and the guests
+were expected within two hours.
+
+"I see now," said the Idiot, "why they call it taking French leave.
+Nobody who doesn't understand French understands it. If it wasn't
+French, or if somebody would translate it for us, we might be able to
+comprehend it; as it is, it is one of the mysteries, and, as usual, we
+must make the best of it. Life, after all, my dear, consists largely of
+making the best of things."
+
+"Well, I'm sure I don't know what to do," said Mrs. Idiot, despairfully,
+"unless you telegraph them all not to come, and tell them why."
+
+"It is too late to do that," said the Idiot, looking at his watch.
+"They've probably all left home by this time. Poets and clergymen and
+old people like Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog always do start an hour too early,
+for fear of missing their train."
+
+"I wouldn't care so much about the Poet," said Mrs. Idiot; "he doesn't
+know enough about housekeeping, anyhow, to make it matter. But Mr.
+Whitechoker and Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog--I simply can't ask them to camp
+out, as it were. The very fact that Mrs. Pedagog would become
+sympathetic immediately she learned what had happened would in itself be
+unbearable."
+
+"I thought women liked sympathy?" said the Idiot, with a proper
+manifestation of surprise.
+
+"So they do; but you might just as well talk about claret as meaning one
+thing as of sympathy being all of the same brand," Mrs. Idiot answered.
+"Certain kinds of claret are insufferable--sour and heady. I suppose
+there are sixty different kinds."
+
+"Sixty-two," said the Idiot, blandly. "The sixty you mean and two more
+whose names I have forgotten."
+
+"I wish you would be serious for a moment," Mrs. Idiot retorted, with as
+near an approach to irritation as was possible to one of her amiable
+disposition. "And it's just the same way with sympathy," she continued;
+"Mrs. Pedagog will lay this whole trouble to my inexperience. Probably
+she never had a servant take French leave in her life on the eve of a
+dinner-party."
+
+"I'll bet she didn't," said the Idiot. "And for why? Because she never
+gave a dinner-party in all her life. The habits of early life cling unto
+old age, and even as in her early days as a boarding-house keeper she
+never gave anything, so now she doubtless considers giving a dinner as a
+reckless waste of opportunity. And she is quite right. Does a lawyer
+invite his friends to join him in an opinion? Never. Does Mr. Tiffany
+request Mr. and Mrs. Idiot to accept a diamond tiara given in their
+honor? Not. Does a true poet, with three names on his autograph, give a
+poem to anybody when he can sell it? Not if he knows it. Why, then,
+expect a landlady, by birth and previous training, to _give_ a dinner?"
+
+"I notice," said Mrs. Idiot, severely, "that you are always willing to
+give your views!"
+
+[Illustration: "'TWO BIG BOXES OF POTATOES, A CAN OF FRENCH PEASE, AND A
+BOTTLE OF SARSAPARILLA'"]
+
+"Precisely, my dear, and that proves my point," replied the Idiot,
+amiably. "I am not a professional viewer, and I am not a photographer by
+trade. Therefore, why should I not _give_ my views? But really," he
+added, "I wouldn't bother; it'll all come out right. I don't know just
+how, but I am confident we shall have the most glorious dinner of our
+lives. When I was down cellar this morning looking at the gas-meter I
+saw two big boxes full of potatoes, a can of French pease, and a bottle
+of sarsaparilla, and if they don't like what they get it will be because
+they are exacting. And I'll wager you from what I know of their manners
+that if you gave them dried apples, cold tongue, and milk they'd say it
+was the most delightful repast they ever sat down to."
+
+"But _I'd_ know they didn't mean it," said Mrs. Idiot, smiling in spite
+of her woe.
+
+"And that brings up the question, why should your conscience be
+troubled by the insincerity of others?" said he. "Now, I'll tell you
+what we'll do. You fry the potatoes and I'll boil the can of pease; I
+think four minutes will boil them hard, like an egg, and together we'll
+put the sarsaparilla on ice, and bluff the whole thing through. Bluffing
+was always my strong point, and I have noticed, my dear, that in
+whatever I have tried to do since we were married you have contributed
+at least ninety per cent. to success. My bluff plus your efforts to make
+the thing a go will send our dinner to a premium."
+
+Mrs. Idiot remained properly silent. As a matter of fact, she was not
+even listening. She was considering. What on earth to do was the
+question in her mind, and it so entirely absorbed it that she
+fortunately had little left for the rather easy views of the Idiot
+himself.
+
+"What is a dinner, anyhow?" the Idiot added, after the silence had to
+his mind become oppressive. "Is it a mere meal? Do the Poet and Mr. and
+Mrs. Pedagog and Mr. Whitechoker come here merely to get something to
+eat? Or do they come for the pleasure of our society, or for the
+pleasure of leaving home, or what? As I understand it, people go out to
+dine not because they have not a sufficiency of food at home, but
+because they wish to meet other people. That's what I do. I can always
+have something better to eat at home than I can get at somebody else's
+house; and furthermore, it is a more natural meal. Dinners generally are
+made up of pretty little things that nobody likes, and have no
+sustenance in them. A successful dinner lies not in successful cooking,
+but in pleasing conversation. Wherefore, it is not the cook, but the
+host and hostess who make a failure or a success of a dinner."
+
+"Then I presume if we simply spread the table and let you talk our
+guests will be satisfied?" said Mrs. Idiot, blandly.
+
+"Precisely," the Idiot replied. "It will be delightful. Just think of
+the menu! Instead of oysters I will indulge in a few opinions as to the
+intellectual qualities of bivalves generally, finishing up with a
+glowing tribute to the man who is content to be a clam and not talk too
+much. In the place of _puree_ we will tackle some such subject as the
+future of Spain. I think I could ladle out a few sound ideas on that
+subject that would be as clear as the purest _consomme_. Then for fish,
+that would be easy. A good trout story, with imagination sauce, would do
+very well. For the _entree_ I will give you one of my most recent poems,
+and the roast will be--"
+
+"And the rest of us are to sit and twiddle our thumbs while you
+soliloquize?" demanded Mrs. Idiot. "I rather think not. I will provide
+the roast, my dear John, and it will consist largely of remarks upon the
+ways of cooks."
+
+"A very proper subject for a roast," observed the Idiot, complacently,
+"and in your present frame of mind I think it will be not only well
+done, but rare as well, with plenty of crisp. And so we can simply talk
+this dinner through. It will be novel, certainly, and if you provide
+plenty of bread and butter no one need go away hungry."
+
+"Very true," Mrs. Idiot answered. "And now that you have had your fun,
+suppose we put our minds on the serious aspect of the case. Two hours
+from now four people are coming here hungry--"
+
+"I have it!" cried the Idiot, delightedly. "Let's _borrow_ a cook! I
+don't believe it's ever been done before. It would be splendid, not
+only in getting us out of our troubles, but in establishing an entirely
+new principle in domestic science. What is the use of neighbors who will
+not be neighborly and lend you their most cherished possession?"
+
+"None at all," sighed Mrs. Idiot, despairingly.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE PEOPLE DOWN-STAIRS BORROWED OUR DINING-ROOM
+CHAIRS'"]
+
+"Now, when we lived in our flat in New York the people up-stairs
+borrowed our ice," said the Idiot; "the people down-stairs borrowed our
+dining-room chairs; the people across the hall borrowed butter and milk
+and eggs, and I think we once borrowed a lemon from the people on the
+top floor."
+
+"Never!" cried Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Yes, we did, my dear," insisted the Idiot. "At least I did. You and the
+children were off in the country, and one hot summer's night, two years
+ago, I was consumed with a desire for a glass of lemonade, and as there
+were no lemons in the house, or the flat, I sent out to borrow. I began
+at the basement and worked up towards the roof, and ultimately got what
+I wanted, although, as I have said, it was the top-flat people I got it
+from."
+
+"And did you ever return it?" demanded Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"I regret to say that I didn't," said the Idiot. "But I will, and with
+interest. I wonder what two years' interest on a lemon is!" he added. "I
+suppose that a borrowed lemon compounded at the rate of six per cent.
+could be paid off by a lemon and one small Bermuda potato. I will send
+my check for both to those people to-morrow. What was their name?"
+
+"I never knew," said Mrs. Idiot. "I never liked them, and I never
+called. I am sorry you are under obligations to them."
+
+"Only for a lemon, though, dear," said the Idiot, "at six per cent."
+
+"But what does all this prove?" demanded the poor little housekeeper.
+
+"That the principle of lending is recognized among neighbors," the Idiot
+explained. "If a neighbor will lend a lemon, surely a neighbor will lend
+a cook. The principle involved is the same in both cases. Particularly
+so in this case, for my experience with cooks has been that they are,
+after all, for the most part nothing but human lemons. If the departed
+Bridget had been anything but full of sourness she would not have left
+us so unexpectedly."
+
+"You don't really think for a moment, do you, that the Jimpsonberrys
+would lend us their cook, or that she would come, or that I would ask
+them?" said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Well, I suppose not," said the Idiot. "I suppose not. _But I don't see
+why!_ First, the Jimpsonberrys, as our neighbors, ought to be willing to
+get us out of our trouble. Second, we don't ask their cook to come for
+nothing. By coming she will receive an addition to her wages which will
+help her to endow a policeman with a moderate fortune some day when she
+marries him. As for your asking Mrs. Jimpsonberry to lend us her cook
+for a few hours, that is the main objection. When one borrows one must
+give collateral, and it may be that it would embarrass you to offer Mike
+as security for the safe return of the Jimpsonberrys' cook. Anyhow, I
+see weak points in my plan, and we'd better abandon it. If the
+Jimpsonberrys' cook is the only available incendiary in the
+neighborhood, we'd better stop where we are. When we dined at
+Jimpsonberrys' last week I went away feeling that Jimpsonberry ought to
+collect fire insurance on that dinner. It wasn't cooked; it was a plain
+case of arson."
+
+It was at this precise moment, when poor Mrs. Idiot was beginning to
+despair of getting any advice of value from her husband, that the
+telephone-bell rang, and the Idiot rose up to answer the call.
+
+"Hello!" he said.
+
+"Oh! Hello, old man!" he added. "That you? Glad to see you."
+
+"Yes," he continued, after a pause. "Of course we expect you."
+
+"Seven o'clock sharp," he remarked, a moment later. "You'll surely be
+here?" Then after a second pause, he added:
+
+"Good! You can stay all night if you wish; we've plenty of room.
+Good-bye."
+
+[Illustration: "'WHO WAS IT?' ASKED MRS. IDIOT"]
+
+"Who was it?" asked Mrs. Idiot, as the Idiot hung up the receiver of the
+telephone.
+
+"The Poet," replied the Idiot. "He wanted to know at what hour dinner
+was."
+
+"Oh, dear!" cried Mrs. Idiot. "Why didn't you tell him the dinner isn't
+for to-night, but to-morrow night?"
+
+"Didn't need to, my dear," said the Idiot, lighting a cigarette. "We've
+made a slight mistake. You invited these people, it now appears, for the
+twenty-ninth."
+
+"Certainly," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Well, my love," said the Idiot, with an affectionate glance, "to-day is
+the--ah--the twenty-eighth."
+
+Mrs. Idiot drew a sigh of relief.
+
+"My!" she cried, "what a blessing! I wonder how I got so mixed!"
+
+"It's economy, perhaps," suggested the Idiot. "If you will insist on
+buying out-of-date diaries and last year's calendars at bargain-counters
+because they are cheap, I don't really see how you can expect to keep up
+with the times."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed heartily. Her relief of mind was unmistakable.
+
+"What would you have done, John, if this had really been the night?" she
+asked later.
+
+"Oh, I don't know," said the Idiot. "I think I should have taken you to
+New York to dinner, and bluffed our guests into believing they had come
+up on the wrong night. It is very easy for a host to put his guests in
+the wrong if he wants to. I don't, but if I must, I must."
+
+As it was, the family dinner that night was a great success in spite of
+the absence of the cook, because Mrs. Idiot, who is an expert with the
+chafing-dish, found several odds and ends in the late cook's domains,
+which, under her expert manipulation, became dishes which the Idiot said
+afterwards "remained long in the memory without proving too permanent a
+tax upon the digestion."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+ON THE MAINTENANCE OF AN ATTIC
+
+
+The Idiot had been laid up for a week. That is to say, he was too
+indisposed to attend to business at his office, and the family physician
+thought it would be a good idea if his patient would be content to
+remain quietly indoors for a little while. To this the Idiot cheerfully
+consented.
+
+"If there is one thing that I can do to perfection," he said, "it is
+resting. Some men are born leisurely, some achieve leisure, and some are
+discharged by their employers. I belong to the first two classes. I can
+never become one of the third class, because, being my own employer, I
+am naturally pleased with myself, and am not likely to dispense with my
+own services."
+
+And so he stayed at home, and for a week pottered about the house, as he
+put it, and he had a glorious time.
+
+"What are you going to do with yourself this morning, dear?" asked Mrs.
+Idiot on the morning of the first day. "I've got to go to market, and
+there are one or two other little things to be attended to which will
+keep me out for some hours. Do you think you can amuse yourself while I
+am out?"
+
+"Well, I don't know," said the Idiot. "I can try. Of course, you know,
+my dear, that I am a good deal of a baby yet. However, if you can trust
+me to stay all by my lonesome for two or three hours I'll try to behave.
+I promise not to take the piano apart, and I vow I won't steal any jam,
+and I sha'n't float hair-brushes in the bath-tub pretending that they
+are armored cruisers looking for Spaniards, and I'll try to be good, but
+I can't make any promises."
+
+Mrs. Idiot smiled, as an indulgent guardian should, and went forth. The
+Idiot stayed at home and enjoyed himself. What he did is perhaps best
+indicated by his remarks some time later at a Sunday-night tea at which
+Mr. and Mrs. Pedagog, and Mr. Brief, the lawyer, were present.
+
+"Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "did you ever have an attic?"
+
+"A what?" demanded the Schoolmaster, naturally somewhat nonplussed.
+
+"An attic," said the Idiot. "A favored spot wherein to potter, to root,
+to rummage."
+
+"Why, yes," said Mrs. Pedagog, after a moment of deliberation. "I have
+had an attic, but it never seemed to me to be a particularly interesting
+spot. I've used it as a sort of store-room for things I didn't know what
+to do with."
+
+"Useless things," suggested Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Entirely so," acquiesced the good lady.
+
+"Then if they are useless, why keep them?" queried the Idiot. "Useless
+things might better be thrown away than stored away even in an attic."
+
+"Oh, as for that," rejoined Mrs. Pedagog, "they were useless in the
+sense that there was nothing I could do with them, and yet there was
+generally some quality of association or something about them that so
+appealed to me that I couldn't quite throw them away, or even bring
+myself to give them away."
+
+"That is the idea," said the Idiot. "One's cherished possessions are
+often stored away up-stairs and forgotten, and then sometimes years
+after you'll go rummaging about the house for lack of some other
+employment; an old trunk, a wooden box, will be unearthed in the attic,
+and then what a flood of memories will come rushing back over you as the
+long-forgotten objects come to light, one by one."
+
+"I have had much the same experience," said Mr. Brief, "in what I might
+term my professional attic. We keep a room for the storage of old
+papers, and strange exhibits in litigation turn up there frequently that
+bring back old-time lawsuits in a most interesting fashion."
+
+"I suppose, then," observed Mr. Pedagog, with a shrug of tolerant
+contempt, "that the attic is, in your estimation, a sort of repository
+for family archives."
+
+[Illustration: "'I SET OFF A GIANT CRACKER UNDER HIS CHAIR'"]
+
+"That's about it," said the Idiot. "You ought to see mine. There are
+archives from the Ark in mine. I've got all the portraits of my
+unpopular relatives up there, and such a gallery of smug-looking
+individuals you never saw. There's Uncle Jedediah, who hated me because
+I set off a giant cracker under his chair one Fourth of July, and who
+from that day vowed I was born to be hanged; and who sent me a crayon
+portrait of himself the following Christmas--"
+
+"That seems to me to show a kindly feeling, not one of hatred, towards
+you," suggested Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+[Illustration: "'WOULD HANG THAT PORTRAIT UPON THE WALL OF MY BEDROOM'"]
+
+"Oh no," said the Idiot, with a laugh. "You never knew my dear old Uncle
+Jed. He sent it in a pure spirit of revenge. He had to send something,
+and he picked out the one thing he had reason to know I didn't want; and
+he was likewise aware that my mother had a sense of the proprieties and
+would hang that portrait upon the wall of my bedroom, whence it could
+stare at me, disapprovingly, forevermore. Still, when I became the head
+of my own house, I did not take a mean-spirited revenge on Uncle
+Jedediah's portrait by selling it to one of the comic papers with a joke
+under it; I gave it the nicest, warmest, most comfortable spot I could
+find for it under a pile of old magazines in the attic, and the other
+day when it came to light again I greeted it with an affectionate smile;
+and the picture of the old gentleman rising hurriedly from over the
+giant cracker on that long-forgotten Fourth, brought vividly to mind by
+the portrait, brought tears to my eyes, I laughed so heartily. It
+really was very affecting."
+
+Mr. Pedagog gazed at the Idiot fondly.
+
+"You are a great boy," he said. "You'd never suspect it, but I had a
+similar case of Uncle Jed, but the years I have lived since have
+softened my feelings so that I remember my old relative with a certain
+degree of affection."
+
+"I shall never believe, my dear John," said Mrs. Pedagog, "that in your
+day boys ever placed giant crackers under their uncles' chairs."
+
+"We never did, my love," Mr. Pedagog responded, quickly.
+
+"Why, of course not," laughed the Idiot. "They couldn't, you know. They
+hadn't been invented. What was your trouble with Uncle Jed, Mr.
+Pedagog?"
+
+"Oh, our difference of opinion was rather of an ethical import," replied
+Mr. Pedagog, genially. "My Uncle Jed was a preacher, and he used to
+speak entirely from notes which he would make out the night before and
+place in the pocket of his black coat. All I did was to take the notes
+of his next day's sermon out of his pocket one Saturday evening, and put
+in their stead a--ah--a recipe for what we called Washington pie--and a
+very good pie it was."
+
+"John!" ejaculated Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+[Illustration: "'STARTED TO PREACH WITH THE RECIPE FOR A WASHINGTON
+PIE'"]
+
+"I _did_, my dear," confessed the Schoolmaster, "and really I have never
+regretted it, although my particular uncle gave me a distressingly acrid
+and dreary lecture on my certain future when he found out what had
+happened. Yet what did happen, though mischievously intended, resulted
+in great good, for when the dear old gentleman stood up in the pulpit
+and started to preach the next morning, with the recipe for a Washington
+pie as the only available note at hand, he pulled himself together and
+preached off-hand the finest sermon of his life, and he discovered then
+the secret of his after-success. He became known ultimately as one of
+the most brilliant preachers of his time, and from that moment never
+went into the pulpit with any factitious aids to his memory."
+
+"You mean cribs, don't you?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"That is what college-boys call them, I believe," said Mr. Pedagog. "I
+will say further that a year before he died _my_ Uncle Jed told me that
+it was my mischievous act that had given him the hint which became
+the keynote of his eloquence," he added, complacently. "I shall always
+remember him affectionately."
+
+"Of course," said the Idiot. "No doubt we all remember our Uncle Jeds
+affectionately. I certainly do. He was my mother's brother, and he meant
+well. I never really blamed him for not knowing how to sympathize with a
+boyish prank, because there has never been a school of instructions for
+uncles. Unclehood is about the hardest hood man has to wear, and as I
+have observed uncles and their habits, they either spoil or repel the
+small chaps and chappesses who happen to be made their nephews and
+nieces by an accident of birth. Uncles are either intensely genial or
+intensely irritable, and as far as I am concerned it is my belief that
+our colleges should include in their curriculum a chair of 'Uncleism.'
+Unclehood is a relationship that man has to accept. It is thrust upon
+him. He can't help himself. To be a father or a mother is a matter of
+volition. But even in a free country like our own, if a man has a
+brother or a sister he is liable to find himself an uncle at any time
+whether he wishes to be one or not. Then when it happens he's got to
+reason out a course of procedure without any basis in previous
+experience."
+
+"Why don't you write a book on 'Hints to Uncles,' or 'The Complete
+Aunt,'" suggested Mr. Brief. "I have no doubt it would make good
+reading."
+
+"Thanks for the idea," said the Idiot. "I think I'll do it. Not in the
+hope of profit, but for the benefit of the race."
+
+"What has all this to do with attics?" asked Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"The natural resting-place of the bad uncle," explained the Idiot.
+"Still, I maintain that it is every man's duty to keep an attic for the
+useless things, as Mrs. Pedagog calls them, which some day, when he
+least expects it, will carry his mind back to other days. The word
+itself, attic, carries the mind back to the splendors of Athens and
+other things that are out of date. When I was ill I found sincerest
+pleasure in rummaging. You can't rummage in a library if your library is
+properly looked after. You can't rummage in a bedroom in a well-kept
+house. You all know what parlors are--designed largely for the
+reception of people who come out to call upon you in their best Sunday
+clothes, and who would never think of calling upon you intimately, as a
+friend might, in his knickerbockers. You can't rummage there. The only
+place where one may rummage with any degree of success is in the attic,
+and my experience has been such that I believe my recent illness has
+contributed to my health. My mind has been carried back to conditions
+that used to be. Conditions which existed then and which were inferior
+to conditions which now prevail make me satisfied with the present.
+Where old-time conditions were better than the existing one I have
+naturally discovered how to improve. Rummaging, therefore, is improving
+to the mind and contributes to one's contentment."
+
+[Illustration: "'A LITTLE BUNDLE OF MY OWN LETTERS'"]
+
+"Then there are good economical reasons for the maintenance of an
+attic," the Idiot continued. "I found enough old boyhood collections of
+various things there to keep Tommy and Mollie happy for years without my
+having to pay out a penny for birthday presents--old stamps, old coins,
+old picture papers, and, I assure you, a lot of old newspapers, too,
+with better and more readable news in them than is now to be found in
+any of our modern bilious journals. Then the bundles of letters that
+came out of that place--my mother's letters to me, written while I was
+away at school; my father's letters in the old days at your house, Mrs.
+Pedagog, which did much to keep me straight then and re-reading of which
+doesn't hurt now; and, best of all," he added, with an affectionate
+glance at Mrs. Idiot, "a little bundle of my own letters to a certain
+person tied up with a blue ribbon, and full of pressed roses and autumn
+leaves and promises--"
+
+"In the attic?" asked Mr. Brief, with a dry smile. "Is that where Mrs.
+Idiot keeps your promises?"
+
+Mrs. Idiot blushed. "I have a cedar chest full of treasures up there,"
+she said. "I thought it was locked."
+
+"Well, anyhow, I found them," said the Idiot, cheerfully; "and while
+they were not especially good reading, they were good reminders of other
+days. It wouldn't be a bad idea if every married man were to read over
+the letters of his days of courtship once a year. I think it would bring
+back more forcibly than anything else the conditions of the contract
+which he was inviting the young partner of his joys to sign. If an attic
+never held anything but bundles of one's old love-letters it would
+demonstrate its right to become an institution."
+
+"Very true," said the lawyer; "but," he added, prompted by that cautious
+spirit which goes always with the professional giver of advice, "suppose
+that side by side with that little bundle of pressed flowers and autumn
+leaves and promises one should chance to find another little bundle of
+pressed flowers and autumn leaves and promises--the promises written by
+some other hand than the hand that is rummaging in the cedar chest? What
+then? Would that prove a pleasing find?"
+
+"Oh, as for that," the Idiot remarked, "when I advocate the maintenance
+of an attic as one of the first duties of mankind, I mean its
+intelligent maintenance. The thing which makes of the British Museum,
+the National Attic of Great Britain, a positive educational force is its
+intelligent direction. It is the storehouse of the useless possessions
+of the British Empire which have an inspiring quality. There is nothing
+in it which makes a Briton think less of himself or which in any way
+unpleasantly disturbs his equanimity. So with the attic of the humble
+citizen. It must be intelligently directed if it is to become an
+institution, and should not be made the repository of useless things
+which ought to be destroyed, among which I class that other possible
+bundle to which you refer."
+
+And inasmuch as the whole party agreed to the validity of this
+proposition, the subject was dropped, and the Idiot and his guests
+wandered on to other things.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+THE IDIOT'S GARDEN
+
+
+"I should think, my dear Idiot," Mr. Pedagog observed one summer
+evening, as his host stood upon the back piazza of "Castle Idiot," as
+they had come to call the dwelling-place of their friend, "that with all
+this space you have about you, you would devote some of it to a garden."
+
+"Why, I do," said the Idiot. "I've got a small patch down there behind
+the tennis-court, fifty by one hundred feet, under cultivation. The
+stuff we get is almost as good as the average canned goods, too. We had
+a stalk of asparagus the other night that was magnificent as far as it
+went. It was edible for quite a sixteenth of an inch, or at least I was
+told so. That portion of it had already been nibbled off by my son
+Thomas while it was resting in the pantry waiting to be served.
+However, the inedible end which arrived was quite sturdy, and might have
+stood between my family and starvation if the necessity had arisen."
+
+"One stalk of asparagus is a pretty poor crop, I should say," observed
+the lawyer, with a laugh.
+
+"You might think so," said the Idiot. "But everything in the world is
+comparative, after all. Ants build ant-hills which are several feet
+lower than the Alps, and yet they are monumental, considering that they
+were made by ants. All things considered, Mrs. Idiot and I were proud of
+our asparagus crop, and distinctly regretted that it did not survive to
+be served in proper state at dinner. If I remember rightly, Thomas was
+severely reprimanded for his privateering act in biting off the green
+end of it before I had a chance to see it."
+
+"'Twasn't specially good," said Tommy, loftily.
+
+"I am very glad it was not, my son," said the Idiot. "I should be very
+sorry to hear that you had derived the slightest sensation of pleasure
+from your piratical and utterly inexcusable act."
+
+"Do you usually serve so small a portion of the product of your
+garden?" asked Mr. Brief.
+
+[Illustration: "'WE SPRINKLED IT IN PERSON'"]
+
+[Illustration: "'HE DISCOVERED THE ONE PERFECT STALK'"]
+
+"Sometimes we don't serve anything at all from it," said the Idiot,
+"which you will observe is smaller yet. In this instance Mrs. Idiot
+intended a little surprise for me. We had struggled with that
+asparagus-bed for some time. The madame had studied up asparagus in her
+botany. I had looked it up in the cyclopedia and the Century dictionary.
+We had ordered it in various styles when we dined out at the New York
+hotels, and we had frequently bought cans of it in order to familiarize
+ourselves more intimately with its general personal appearance. Then we
+consulted people we thought would be likely to know how to obtain the
+best results, and what they told us to do we did, but somehow it didn't
+work. Our asparagus crop languished. We sprinkled it in person. We put
+all sorts of garden cosmetics on it to improve its complexion, but it
+seemed hopeless, and finally when I footed up the asparagus item in my
+account-book, and discovered that we had paid out enough money without
+results of a satisfactory nature to have kept us in canned asparagus for
+four years, we got discouraged, and resolved to give it up. It was
+while Michael, our gardener, was removing the evidences of our failure
+that he discovered the one perfect stalk, and like the honest old
+gardener that he is, he immediately brought it into the house and
+presented it to my wife. She naturally rejoiced that our efforts had not
+been entirely vain, and in her usual spirit of self-sacrifice had the
+stalk cooked as a surprise for me. As I have told you, that small
+circumstance Thomas, over which we seem to have no control, got ahead of
+us--"
+
+"You was surprised, wasn't you, pa?" demanded the boy.
+
+"Somewhat, my son," said the Idiot, "but not in the way your mother had
+designed, exactly."
+
+"Is asparagus the extent of your gardening?" queried Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Oh no, indeed!" replied Mrs. Idiot. "We've had peas and beets and beans
+and egg-plant and corn--almost everything, in fact, including potatoes."
+
+"Yes, ma'am," said the Idiot, "almost everything, including potatoes.
+Our pea crop was lovely. We had five podfuls for dinner on the Fourth of
+July, and the children celebrated the day by podding them for the
+cook. They popped open almost as noisily as a torpedo. It was really
+very enjoyable. Indeed, one of the results of that pea crop has been to
+give me an idea by which I may some day redeem my losses on the
+asparagus-bed. An explosive pea which should be edible, and yet would
+pop open with the noise of a small fire-cracker, would be a delight to
+the children and serviceable for the table. I don't exactly know how to
+bring about the desired results, but it seems to me if I were to mix a
+little saltpetre in the water with which we irrigate our pea-trees the
+required snap would be obtained. Then on the Fourth of July the
+children, instead of burning their fingers and filling their parents
+with nervous dread setting off fire-crackers, could sit out on the back
+piazza and shell the peas for the cook--"
+
+"I'd rather shell Spangyards," said Mollie.
+
+"I am surprised at you, my child," said the Idiot. "A little girl like
+you should be an advocate of peace, not of war."
+
+"You can't eat Spaniards, either, can you, pa?" said Tommy, who, while
+he shared Mollie's views as to the comparative value for shelling
+purposes of peas and Spaniards, was nevertheless quite interested in the
+development of a pea-pod that would open with a bang.
+
+"No, Tommy," said the Idiot, "you can't eat Spaniards, and they'd be
+sure to disagree with you if you could."
+
+"That is a very interesting proposition of yours," said Mr. Brief, "but
+it has its dangers. A dynamite pea would prove very attractive so long
+as its explosive qualities were confined to the pod and its opening. But
+how are you going to keep the saltpetre out of the peas themselves?"
+
+"That is where the difficulty comes in," said the Idiot. "I frankly
+don't know how we could insulate the peas from the effects of the
+saltpetre."
+
+[Illustration: "'IT WOULD BE DEUCEDLY AWKWARD ... IF THEY WOULD EXPLODE
+IN THE MOUTH OF THE PERSON WHO WAS EATING THEM'"]
+
+"It would be deucedly awkward," observed the Bibliomaniac, "if, as might
+very well happen, one or two of the peas should become so thoroughly
+impregnated with the stuff that they would explode in the mouth of the
+person who was eating them, like bombs in miniature."
+
+[Illustration: "'SHE COULD SLAM THEM DOWN ON THE HEARTH-STONES LIKE
+TORPEDOES'"]
+
+"True," said the Idiot. "The only safeguard against that would be to
+compel the cook to test every pea before she cooked it. She could
+slam them down on the hearth-stone like torpedoes, and every one that
+didn't go off could be cooked and served with safety. Still, there would
+be danger even then. A careless cook might forever ruin the tooth of a
+favored guest. I guess I'd better give up the idea."
+
+"Oh, don't, pa!" cried Tommy, his interest in explosive vegetables
+worked up to a high pitch. "I'll test 'em all for you, and if they work
+I don't see why you couldn't raise dynamite punkins!"
+
+"It would be a strong temptation, my son," said the Idiot, "which is all
+the more reason why I should abandon the plan. A dynamite punkin, as you
+call it, would wreck the whole neighborhood if one should set it off
+properly. No, we will, after all, confine our attention to vegetables of
+a more pacific nature. The others might prove more profitable at first,
+but when the novelty of them wore off, and one realized only their
+danger, a great deal of the pleasure one derives from eating fresh
+vegetables would be utterly destroyed."
+
+Tommy looked out over the railing of the piazza, deep regret and
+disappointment depicted in his brown little face; but if the glitter of
+his eyes meant anything it meant that the idea of putting vegetables on
+a war footing was not going to be allowed to drop into oblivion; and if
+the small youth progresses in inventive genius in a fair ratio to his
+past achievements in that line, I have no doubt that if a Vesuvian
+pumpkin _can_ be produced at all, the day will dawn when Thomas is
+hailed as its inventor.
+
+"Is it true," asked Mr. Brief, "that home-raised peas are sweeter than
+any other?"
+
+"We think so," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"We know so," amended the Idiot. "That Fourth-of-July night when we ate
+those five podfuls we discovered that fact. Five podfuls of peas are not
+enough to feed a family of four on, so we mixed them in with a few more
+that we bought at the grocer's, and we could tell ours from the others
+every time, they were so much sweeter."
+
+The Bibliomaniac laughed scornfully.
+
+"Pooh!" said he. "How did you know that they were yours that were sweet,
+and not the grocery-bought peas?"
+
+"How does a father know his own children?" said the Idiot. "If you'd
+labored over those five pods as hard and assiduously as we did, nursing
+them through their infant troubles, guarding them against locusts and
+potato-bugs, carefully watching their development from infancy into the
+full vigor of a mature peahood, I guess you'd know your own from those
+of others. It's instinct, my dear Bibliomaniac."
+
+"Tell about the strawberry, pa," said Tommy, who liked to hear his
+father talk, in which respect I fear he takes strongly after his parent.
+
+"Well," said the Idiot, "it's not much of a story. There was one. We had
+a strawberry patch twenty feet by ten. We had plenty of straw and plenty
+of patch, but the berries were timid about appearing. The results were
+similar to those in our asparagus venture. One berry was discovered
+trying to hide itself under half a bale of straw one morning, and while
+I was looking for Mrs. Idiot, to ask her to come down to the garden and
+see it grow, a miserable robin came along and bit its whole interior
+out. I hope the bird enjoyed it, because on a bed-rock estimate that
+berry cost twenty dollars. That is one of the things about gardening
+that make me especially weary. One doesn't mind spending forty-four
+dollars on a stalk of asparagus that is eaten, even surreptitiously, by
+a member of one's own family; but to pay twenty dollars for a strawberry
+to be wasted on a fifteen-cent robin is, to say the least, irritating."
+
+"You forget, John," said Mrs. Idiot, with a somewhat mirthful look in
+her eyes, "that we got fifteen boxes out of the strawberry-patch later."
+
+"No, I don't," said the Idiot. "I was coming to that, and it involves a
+confession. You were so blue about the loss of our one beautiful berry
+that I entered into a conspiracy with Michael to make that patch yield.
+The fifteen boxes of berries that we took out subsequently were bought
+at a New York fruit-store and judiciously scattered about the patch
+where you would find them. I had hoped you would never find it out, but
+when you spoke the other day of expending thirty-eight dollars on that
+strawberry-patch next year, I resolved then to undeceive you. This is
+the first favorable opportunity I have had."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed heartily. "I knew it all along," she said. "Michael
+came to me with them and asked for instructions as to where to put them.
+Really, I--ah--I arranged them under the straw myself."
+
+"What an ass a hired man can be!" ejaculated the Idiot. "I shall
+discharge Michael to-morrow."
+
+"I wish you would," said Mrs. Idiot. "Ever since the conspiracy he has
+been entirely too independent."
+
+"Don't discharge Michael, papa," said Mollie. "He's awful nice. He's
+always willin' to stop anything he's doing to play with Tommy and me."
+
+"You bet he is!" cried Tommy. "He's a dandy, Mike is. He never says a
+word when I sit under the sprinkler, and he told me the other day that
+his grandfather would have been king of Ireland if Queen Victoria hadn't
+come in. He said the Queen was a lady, and his grandfather gave up his
+seat to her because he was a gentleman and couldn't do anything else."
+
+"Very well," said the Idiot, suavely. "Then I won't discharge Michael.
+One feels a better American, a better Republican, if he has a royal
+personage in his employ. I always wondered where Michael got his
+imperious manner; now I know. As a descendant of a long line of kings it
+could not be otherwise. I will give him another chance. But let me give
+you all fair warning. If next summer Michael does not succeed in
+producing from my garden four beets, ten pods of peas, three
+string-beans, and less than ten thousand onions, he goes. I shall not
+pay a gardener forty dollars a month unless he can raise three dollars'
+worth of vegetables a year."
+
+"But really," said Mr. Pedagog, "haven't you raised anything in your
+garden?"
+
+"Oh yes," said the Idiot. "I've raised my water bill in the garden. I
+used to pay twelve dollars a quarter for water, but now the bills come
+to at least twenty-five dollars. Truly, a garden is not without profit
+to some one."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+HOUSEHOLD POETRY
+
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot, in response to an inquiry from the Poet, who was
+passing a Sunday with him at Castle Idiot, "I have found that there is a
+great deal of poetry in the apparently uninspiring little things of a
+household. There is to me as much poetry in a poker as there is in a
+snow-clad Alp, if you only have an eye to find it; and I am sure that to
+thousands of housewives the whole land over a sonnet to a clothes-pin,
+written by one who knows the clothes-pin's nature intimately, would be
+far more appealing than a similar number of lines trying to prove that
+we are all miserable phantoms flitting across a morass of woe."
+
+The Poet pulled away thoughtfully at his pipe. He was a broad-minded
+poet, and while he had never owned a poker of his own, he was ready to
+admit its possibilities; but he could not follow his friend closely
+enough to admit that it contained as much that was inspiring as did Mont
+Blanc, for instance, a bright particular Alp of which he was very fond.
+
+The Idiot continued:
+
+[Illustration: "'THE JOYS AND WOES OF THE TOILERS WHO MINED IT'"]
+
+"A ton of coal contains far more warmth than a woman's eyebrow; sends
+the mind of a thoughtful person chasing backward to the time when it lay
+snugly hid in the fair breast of nature; to the joys and woes of the
+toilers who mined it; through a variety of complexities of life, every
+one of them fraught with noble thoughts. Yet who ever wrote dainty
+verses to a ton of coal, and who hasn't at one time or another in his
+life written about the eyebrows of some woman?"
+
+The Poet laughed this time. "A triolet to a ton of coal would be a
+glorious thing now, wouldn't it?" he observed.
+
+"No," said the Idiot. "A triolet could never be a glorious thing under
+any circumstances; but to the extent that a ton of coal contains a
+certain amount of grandeur in the service it renders to mankind, I think
+the form would be ennobled somewhat by the substance. Let's try it and
+see."
+
+"You do it," said the Poet; "I really don't think I could do the
+subject justice."
+
+The Idiot got out a pencil and a pad of paper and began.
+
+"I don't think I'll make it a triolet," he said, after biting the end of
+his pencil for a few moments. "A whole ton is a good deal to cram into a
+triolet. I'll just make it a plain poem of the go-as-you-please variety
+instead, eh?"
+
+"In the manner of Whitman, perhaps?" suggested the Poet, dryly.
+
+"Just so," said the Idiot. "In the manner of Whitman; in fact, I think
+the manner of Whitman is the only manner for the poetic description of a
+ton of coal."
+
+He began to scribble on the pad.
+
+"I'm going to call this 'Content,'" he said in a few moments.
+"Contentment strikes me as the main lesson a ton of coal teaches."
+
+He scribbled on, and in four or five minutes he put down his pencil and
+read the following lines:
+
+ "I'm glad I'm not as men are--
+ Always worrying about something, and often about nothing;
+ About what was and what wasn't;
+ Fretting about what may be and what might have been;
+ Wondering whether when they are called upon to do their duty
+ They'll be able to do it,
+ And generally deciding they won't,
+ To their own discomfort.
+ And if so be they're women,
+ Cogitating from morn till night,
+ From night till morn,
+ Wherewithal shall they be clothed,
+ And if their hats are on straight!
+ Yea!
+ I am glad I am not like one of these,
+ But am myself--
+ A ton of coal--jetty in my blackness and luminous in my bituminosity.
+ Lying here in the cellar content and not bothering a bit.
+ Not needing income or clothes, and wearing no hat, and with no
+ complexion to bother about.
+ Happy and serene about my duty,
+ Certain that I shall succeed when the time for action comes;
+ Knowing that I shall burn,
+ And in the burning glow like the polar star.
+ Cackling and crackling,
+ Hissing and smoking,
+ Full of heat,
+ A satisfaction to mankind,
+ And never worth less than $5.65, delivered!
+ Ah, me! What bliss to be a ton of coal!
+ I am content."
+
+The Poet nodded his pleasure at the effort. "It is charmingly put," he
+said. "I must confess, my dear Idiot, that the idea of contentment is
+the last one that I should ever have extracted from contemplation of
+a binful of anthracite, and yet when I consider how you put it I wonder
+it has not occurred to every one. You have the manner of the Whitman
+parodist down fine, too."
+
+"Thank you," said the Idiot. "It is entirely natural to me. I think,
+too, that using the Whitman lack of form carries with it the notion of
+the coal sliding down the chute, don't you? Coal runs into the cellar in
+such an irresponsible, formless way, eh?"
+
+"Precisely," smiled the Poet. "You have the right notion about that. The
+form of a poem should really be adapted to the substance. It should be
+descriptive, always. Tennyson's 'Charge of the Light Brigade' has in its
+rhythm nothing more or less than the clatter of the horses' hoofs as
+they and their riders dashed through the valley of death at Balaklava.
+And how vividly Southey's brook comes before the mind in its mad rush
+downward as one reads that wonderfully lyrical poem. Why don't you write
+a book of household poetry? You seem to me to be eminently well
+qualified to undertake it."
+
+"I intend to," said the Idiot. "In fact, I've begun it already. Written
+five or six. Like to see 'em?"
+
+"Indeed I should," said the Poet. "Anything you do interests me."
+
+The Idiot went to his desk and took from it a few pages of manuscript.
+
+"Here is a thing on pokers I did the other night. I called it 'The Song
+of the Poker Bold.'" And then he read these lines:
+
+ "Warder of the grate am I,
+ Ever standing near;
+ Poking, poking all day long,
+ Knowing naught of fear.
+
+ "Keeping coals up to their work,
+ Setting them aglow,
+ Minding not the scorching heat,
+ Rather like it so.
+
+ "Knocking ashes right and left,
+ Flirting with the tiles;
+ Bossing tongs and seeing that
+ The brazen kettle biles.
+
+ "And the little girls and boys
+ As they watch me pause,
+ Wishing that I'd talk and tell
+ 'Bout old Santa Claus!
+
+ "Cracking jokes with crickets on
+ The merry hearth, elate;
+ Happy lot indeed is mine--
+ Warder of the grate!"
+
+"Splendid!" cried the Poet, clapping his hands with enthusiasm.
+"Splendid! A good stiff pokeresque lyric, and your characterization of
+the poker as the 'Warder of the Grate' gives it a flavor of romance. You
+could almost imagine the implement going out into a mediaeval world in
+search of knightly adventure--a sort of hearth-stone Quixote. Have you
+tackled the clothes-pin yet?"
+
+"Yes," replied the Idiot. "Indeed, my first effort was a lyric on the
+clothes-pin. I started one night to do the contents of the
+kitchen-dresser drawer in French forms, but the first thing I took out
+was an egg-beater, and it wouldn't go, so I did the clothes-pin lyric. I
+call it
+
+"FIDELITY
+
+ "Blow, ye winds,
+ I fear ye not;
+ Blast, ye simoon,
+ Sere and hot!
+
+ "Hurricane,
+ And cyclone, too,
+ Blow, I have no
+ Fear of you.
+
+ "Lacking beauty,
+ Lacking grace,
+ Lacking handsome
+ Form and face;
+
+ "Lacking soul
+ And intellect,
+ Still I stand up,
+ Proud, erect.
+
+ "For the Fates
+ Have given me
+ Wondrous great
+ Tenacity.
+
+ "And success,
+ Both fair and fine,
+ Comes to him
+ Who holds his line.
+
+ "Burrs can stick
+ And so can glue--
+ Mucilage,
+ Stratena, too;
+
+ "But there's nothing
+ Holds so fast
+ As the clothes-pin
+ To the last."
+
+"And you gave up the egg-beater altogether?" asked the Poet, restraining
+a natural inclination to find flaws in the construction of the
+clothes-pin poem.
+
+"Oh no," said the Idiot, "I knocked off a little quatrain on that. I
+called it 'The Speedy Egg-Beater,' and it goes like this:
+
+ "Great Maude S. can beat all steeds,
+ However speedy be their legs;
+ But I distance her with ease
+ When it comes to beating eggs."
+
+"I really think that you would have done better to give up the
+egg-beater," said the Poet, grown critical. "I've no patience with
+one-rhymed quatrains. Now if you had written:
+
+ "Great Maude S. can beat all steeds,
+ However speedy be their legs;
+ But despite her doughty deeds;
+ I can beat her beating eggs,
+
+"I should not have objected."
+
+"I accept the amendment," replied the Idiot, meekly. "I realized the
+weakness of the thing myself, and thought of changing it into a couplet,
+where you only need one rhyme. How's this on a 'Carpet-Tack'?"
+
+[Illustration: "'FOR THOUGH I'M BUT A CARPET-TACK
+
+AFAR FROM MOIL AND STRIFE,
+
+NO ONE CAN EVER TRULY SAY
+
+THAT MINE'S A POINTLESS LIFE'"]
+
+ "However dull the day,
+ However dull the skies,
+ However dark the night may be,
+ My spirits ever rise.
+
+ "For though I'm but a carpet-tack,
+ Afar from moil and strife,
+ No one can ever truly say
+ That mine's a pointless life."
+
+"That is very good," said the Poet. "I think almost any editor of any
+comic paper would be willing to pay you three dollars for that. It is as
+good as your poem on a ton of coal--simple in its expression and sweet
+in sentiment."
+
+"I thought you'd think so," said the Idiot. "It struck me so. I've got
+one on a screw-driver, too, that is very much of the same order, and
+conveys a moral lesson to the reader who is always reaching out after
+the unattainable. It reads as follows:
+
+ "I cannot tool a tally-ho,
+ I cannot drive a nag;
+ I dare not hold the ribbons
+ On a hack or rumbling drag.
+
+ "I could not guide the reins upon
+ A simple billy-goat,
+ And I should hesitate to try
+ To drive a can-al boat.
+
+ "But I don't mind these things at all,
+ For I can drive a screw,
+ And I am happy, for that's just
+ What I was meant to do."
+
+[Illustration: "'I SHOULD HESITATE TO TRY TO WRITE A CAN-AL BOAT'"]
+
+"The fourth line of the second verse is weak, but otherwise it's good,"
+commented the Poet. "It's not a _can_-al boat; it's a can-_al_ boat, and
+all the poetic license in the world wouldn't excuse your taking such
+a liberty with language."
+
+"I appreciate that," said the Idiot. "But I don't see how I could get
+around it."
+
+"There's only one way," said the Poet. "I think if you omitted that
+verse altogether you'd improve the poem."
+
+"Then I should have to eliminate the billy-goat," said the Idiot. "That
+takes a great deal of humor out of it. I always laugh when I encounter a
+beast like that in poetry; he seems so helpless when incarcerated in a
+poem."
+
+"That may be," observed the Poet. "But it is my belief that the goat, of
+all animals in the kingdom, was the last one designed to be used in
+poetry, anyhow. He is bad enough in prose, and in this case will butt
+your poem to oblivion if you insist on keeping him in it. Any more?"
+
+"No," said the Idiot; "that's the last."
+
+"Well, you've got a good start," said the Poet, rising to light his
+pipe, which had gone out. "And if I were you I'd go on and finish the
+book. 'The Idiot's Book of Household Poetry' would have a great sale.
+It has but one drawback that I can see. You harp on one string too much.
+Every one of your poems preaches contentment, satisfaction--nothing
+else."
+
+"That," said the Idiot, "is not an objection, but a virtue; for what
+other lesson," he added, with a glance of pride at his surroundings,
+"what other lesson, my dear Poet, should a home try to teach, and what
+other sentiment can mean so much to mankind?"
+
+[Illustration: "'I HAVEN'T EVER HAD A HOME; I'VE ALWAYS BOARDED'"]
+
+"I don't know," said the Poet, with a little sigh. "I haven't ever had a
+home; I've always boarded."
+
+Whereupon the Idiot rose up from his chair, and putting his arm about
+his friend's shoulder, said:
+
+"How you do talk! Never had a home? Why, my dear fellow, what's this?
+It's yours as long as it's mine!"
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE HIRED MAN
+
+
+"Who is that sitting down on your tennis-court, Mr. Idiot?" asked Mr.
+Brief, the lawyer. "Or is it anybody? I've been trying for the last
+half-hour to make out whether it's a man or one of those iron figures
+with which some people decorate their lawns."
+
+"That," replied the Idiot, calmly, "is my hired man. I pay him forty
+dollars a month to sit down there and let the grass grow under his feet.
+I heard you and Mr. Pedagog discussing the wonderful grassiness of my
+lawn after dinner last night, and I meant to have told you then that the
+credit thereof belongs entirely to the restful nature of that man's
+soul. He will stand for hours rooted to one spot and looking with
+apparent aimlessness out over the river. To most people this would seem
+to be prompted by a sheer indisposition to work, but this would do him a
+rank injustice, for his immovability is due entirely to his system. He
+is letting the grass grow beneath him, and the fact that our grass is so
+nourishing everywhere is due to his having stood for hours at various
+times over every square inch of territory to which I hold the
+title-deeds."
+
+The Idiot gazed out of the window at his retainer with affectionate
+admiration.
+
+"He certainly clings closely to his system," said the lawyer.
+
+[Illustration: "'I FEEL THAT I COULD GO OUT AND MOW THREE ACRES OF
+GRASS'"]
+
+"He is a model," said the Idiot. "He has done more to make my life here
+easy than any one in my service. For instance, you know the hurly-burly
+of existence in town. I go to my office in the morning, and whether I
+have much work or little to do, I come home in the afternoon absolutely
+worn out. The constant hustling and bustling of others in the city wears
+upon my mind, and consequently upon my body. The rush and roar of cables
+and electric-cars; the activity of messengers running to and fro in the
+streets; the weary horses dragging great lumbering wagons up and down
+the crowded thoroughfares, all affect my nature and impair my energy;
+and then, the day's work done, I return here, where all is quiet and
+still, and the very contrast between that man, standing silently on his
+appointed spot, or leaning against the house, or lying off in sheer
+content under some tree, and the mad scramble for lucre in the city,
+invigorates my tired body until I feel that I could go out and mow three
+acres of grass before dinner; in fact, I generally do."
+
+"I did not know that a restful nature was a requisite of a successful
+career as a hired man," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"It is evident, then, that you have never had a hired man," rejoined the
+Idiot. "Nor can you ever have studied the species at close range.
+Ceaseless activity would be his ruin. If he did to-day all there is to
+do, he would be out of employment to-morrow, consequently he never does
+to-day's work to-day, and cultivates that leisurely attitude towards
+life upon which you have commented. Do you see that small beech-tree
+over there?" he added, pointing to a scrawny little sapling whose sole
+virtue appeared to be its rigid uprightness.
+
+"Is that a beech-tree?" asked Mr. Brief. "I thought it was a garden
+stake."
+
+[Illustration: "'He WOULD GO OUT DAY AFTER DAY AND SIT DOWN BESIDE IT'"]
+
+"It is a beech-tree," said the Idiot. "I planted it myself last autumn,
+and while it has as yet borne no beeches, I think if we give it time,
+and it withstands the rigors of the climate, it will produce its fruit.
+But it was not of its possibilities as a beech-bearing tree that I
+intended to speak. I wanted to indicate to you by a material object the
+value of having a hired man who likes to lean against things. At the
+close of this last winter that tree, instead of being as erect as a
+grenadier, as it now is, was all askew. The strong westerly winds which
+are constantly blowing across that open stretch bent the thing until it
+seemed that the tree was bound to be deformed; but Mike overcame the
+difficulty. He would go out day after day and sit down beside it and
+lean against it for two and three hours at a time, with the result that
+the tendency to curve was overcome, and a tree that I feared was doomed
+to fail now bids fair to resemble a successful telegraph-pole in its
+uprightness. And, of course, the added warmth of his body pressing down
+upon the earth which covers its roots gave it an added impulse to
+grow."
+
+"It is a wonderful system," smiled Mr. Brief. "I wonder it is not
+adopted everywhere."
+
+"It is, pretty much," said the Idiot. "Most hired men do the same thing.
+I don't think Mike differs radically from others of his kind. Of course,
+there are exceptions. My neighbor Jimpsonberry, for instance, has a man
+who is so infernally unrestful that he makes everybody tired. He is up
+every morning mowing Jimpsonberry's lawn at five o'clock, waking up
+every sleepy soul within ear-shot with the incessant and disturbing
+clicking of his machine. Mike would never think of making such a
+nuisance of himself. Furthermore, Jimpsonberry's lawn is kept so
+close-cropped that the grass doesn't get any chance, and in the heat of
+midsummer turns to a dull brick-red."
+
+After a pause, during which the company seemed to be deeply cogitating
+the philosophical bearing of the subject under discussion, the Idiot
+resumed:
+
+"There is another aspect of this matter," he said, "which Jimpsonberry's
+man brings to my mind. You know as well as I do that heat is
+contagious. If you feel as cool as a cucumber, and then all of a sudden
+see somebody who is dripping with perspiration and looking for all the
+world like a human kettle simmering on a kitchen-range, you begin to
+simmer yourself. It is mere sympathy, of course, but you simmer just the
+same, get uncomfortable and hot in the collar, and are shortly as badly
+off as the other fellow. So it is with Jimpsonberry's man. Time and time
+again he has spoiled all my pleasure by making me realize by a glance at
+his red face and sweating arms how beastly hot it is, when before I had
+seen him I felt tolerably comfortable. Mike, on the other hand, is not
+so inconsiderate, and I am confident would let the grass grow a mile
+high before he would consent to interfere with my temperature by pushing
+the mower up and down the lawn on a humid day."
+
+"Do you keep this interesting specimen of still life all through the
+year?" asked Mr. Brief, "or do you give him a much-needed vacation in
+winter? I should think he would be worn out with all this standing
+around, for nothing that I know of is more tiresome than doing
+nothing."
+
+"No," said the Idiot. "Mike never seems to need a vacation. Sitting down
+and leaning against things and standing around don't seem to tire him in
+the least. It might tire you or me, but you see he's used to it. The
+only effect it has on him, as I view the matter, is that it wears out
+his clothes. It doesn't impair his lack of vigor at all. So by the
+simple act of occasionally renewing his wardrobe, which I do every time
+I discard a suit of my own, I revive his wasted vitality, and he does
+not require to be sent to Europe, or to take an extended tour in the
+White Mountains to recuperate. I keep him all through the winter, and
+his system is quite the same then as in summer, except that he does his
+sitting around and leaning indoors instead of in the open."
+
+"I suppose he looks after the furnace and keeps the walks clear of snow
+in winter time?" suggested Mr. Pedagog, who was beginning to take an
+interest in this marvellously restful personage.
+
+[Illustration: "'HE SHOVELS OFF A FOOT-PATH'"]
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot; "and he attends to the windows as well. As a
+minder of the furnace he is invaluable. My house is as cool as a
+roof-garden all through the winter, and thanks to his unwillingness to
+over-exert himself shovelling coal into the furnace, I burn only about
+half as much as my neighbors, and my house is never overheated. This in
+itself is an indication of the virtue of Mike's method. One-half of the
+colds contracted by children nowadays are the result of overheated
+houses. Mike's method gives me a cool house at very moderate expense,
+owing to the great saving of coal, the children do not get colds because
+of overheating, and the expense of having a doctor every other day is
+averted. Then his snow-shovelling scheme goes back to the first
+principles of nature. Mike is not overawed by convention, and instead of
+following the steps of other men who shovel the snow entirely off, he
+shovels off a footpath to enable me to go to business, and then sits
+down and oversees the sun while it melts the balance. Sometimes, if the
+sun does not do the work promptly enough to suit him, he gets up little
+contests for the children. He divides up certain portions of the walk
+into equal parts, and starts the small boys on a race to see which one
+will get the portion assigned to him cleaned off first, the prize being
+something in the nature of an apple, which the cook orders from the
+market. I believe my son Thomas won ten apples last winter, although I
+am told that the Jimpsonberry boy, whose father's man is cross, and
+insists on doing all the work himself, is the champion snow-shoveller of
+the street."
+
+"Yes, he is, pa," put in Tommy. "Mike owes him 'leven apples. I only won
+eight."
+
+"Well, that is a very good record, Thomas," said the Idiot, "and I will
+see to it that next winter you have a brand-new snow-shovel with which
+to enter the contest."
+
+"Mike lets us chop the kindling-wood, too," said Tommy, suddenly
+perceiving a chance to put in a good word for the genial Mike. "I think
+he's the nicest hired man as ever was."
+
+"He'll stop anything he's doing to talk to me," ventured Mollie, not
+wishing to be backward in laying wreaths upon the brow of their friend.
+
+"Yes, I have noticed that," said the Idiot. "Indeed, next to his extreme
+restfulness there is no quality that I know of in Mike that shines out
+so conspicuously as his intense love for children. He will neglect his
+own interests, as Mollie has suggested, to talk to the little ones, and
+I rather like him for it. No boy dares go near the Jimpsonberry man, who
+has exerted himself into a perpetual state of nervous exhaustion."
+
+"Well, if he cleans your windows, that is something," observed Mrs.
+Pedagog, whose experience in keeping a boarding-house years before
+entitled her to speak as one having authority.
+
+"Unless his system is the same in that work as in the other branches
+committed to his care," said Mr. Brief.
+
+[Illustration: "'SPEND A WHOLE DAY ON ONE WINDOW'"]
+
+"It isn't quite," said the Idiot. "He really does exert himself in
+window-cleaning. I have frequently seen him spend a whole day on one
+window. His window-washing system is a very ingenious one,
+nevertheless."
+
+"It is, indeed," said Mrs. Idiot, with a show of feeling.
+
+"A new window-washing system?" grinned Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "It is his own invention. He washes them on the
+outside in summer and on the inside in winter. The result is this
+opalescent glass which you see. You would hardly guess that these
+windows are of French plate. Still, we don't mind so much. I couldn't
+ask him to wash them on the outside in winter, it is so dreadfully cold,
+and in the summer, of course, they are always open, and no one, unless
+he were disagreeable enough to go snooping about after unpleasant
+details, would notice that they are not immaculate."
+
+"And you pay this man forty dollars for this?" demanded Mr. Brief.
+
+"Oh, for this and other things. I pay him two dollars a month for the
+work he does. I pay him ten dollars a month because he's good to the
+children. I pay him ten dollars more for his civility, which is
+unvarying--he always puts his hat on when he comes into the house,
+having noticed, perhaps, that only those who are my social equals are
+entitled to appear bareheaded in my presence."
+
+"And the other eighteen?" persisted the lawyer, by nature a
+cross-examiner.
+
+"Well, I don't grudge him that because--" a sort of a fond light lit up
+the Idiot's eyes as he gazed down upon Mike, still sitting on the
+tennis-court--"I don't grudge him that other eighteen dollars because it
+costs Mike twenty dollars a month to live; and he uses the rest of it to
+put his boy through college, so that when he grows up to be a man he
+will be something more than a hired man."
+
+"Ah!" said Mr. Brief.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot; "I found that out from a third party some time
+ago, and I thought after all I'd keep him, for I know nobody else would
+have him, and then what would become of the boy in college?"
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+ON SOCIAL ACCOUNTS
+
+
+"It's rather strange, I think," observed Mrs. Idiot one evening, as she
+and the Idiot sat down to dine, "that the Dawkinses haven't been here
+for three or four months."
+
+"I've noticed it myself," said the Idiot. "We used to see 'em every day
+about. What's up? You and Polly Dawkins had a fight?"
+
+"Not that I know of," said Mrs. Idiot. "The last time we met she was
+very cordial, and asked most affectionately after you and the children.
+I presumed that possibly you and Dick had had some kind of a falling
+out."
+
+"Not a bit of it. Dick and I couldn't quarrel any more than you and
+Polly could. Perhaps as we grow older our ideals differ. Polly's rather
+anthropological in her talks, isn't she?"
+
+"A trifle," said Mrs. Idiot. "And musical and literary and scientific."
+
+"While you?" queried the Idiot.
+
+[Illustration: "'WELL, I'M FOND OF GOLF'"]
+
+"Well, I'm fond of golf and--ah--well--"
+
+"Golf again," laughed the Idiot. "I guess that's it, Bess. When a woman
+wants to talk about the origin of the species and has to hear about a
+splendid putt, and her observations upon the sonata are invariably
+interrupted by animadversions upon the morals of caddies, and her
+criticisms of Browning end in a discussion of the St. Andrew's Rules,
+she's apt to shy off into a more congenial atmosphere, don't you think?"
+
+"I am sure," retorted Mrs. Idiot, "that while I admit I am more
+interested in golf than in anything else outside of you and the
+children, I can and do talk sometimes of other things than caddies, and
+beautiful drives, and stymies. You are very much mistaken if you think
+otherwise."
+
+"That is very true, my dear," said the Idiot. "And nobody knows it
+better than I do. I've heard you talk charmingly about lots of things
+besides stymies, and foozles, and putts, and drives, but you don't know
+anything about the men of the Stone Age, and you couldn't tell the
+difference between a sonata and a fugue any more than I. Furthermore,
+you have no patience with Browning, so that when Polly Dawkins asks if
+you like _Sordello_, you are more likely than not to say that you never
+ate any, but on the whole for small fish prefer whitebait."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed.
+
+"No, indeed," she replied. "I'd fall back on golf if Polly mentioned
+_Sordello_ to me. You may remember that you sent it to me when we were
+engaged, and I loved you so much--then--that I read it. If I hadn't
+loved you I couldn't have done it."
+
+"Well," smiled the Idiot, "what did you think of it?"
+
+"I think Browning had a good lie, but he foozled," said Mrs. Idiot, with
+her eyes atwinkle, and the Idiot subsided for at least ten seconds.
+
+"I wish you'd say that to Polly some time," he observed. "It's so very
+true, and put with an originality which cannot but appeal to the most
+hardened of literary women."
+
+"I will if I ever get the chance," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Suppose we make the chance?" suggested the Idiot. "Let's go down there
+and call to-night. I'll work the conversation up so that you can get
+that off as an impromptu."
+
+[Illustration: "AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL TEA"]
+
+"No," said Mrs. Idiot. "I don't think we'd better. In the first place,
+Mrs. Whalker told me yesterday that Polly is to read a paper on Balzac
+before the S. F. M. E. to-morrow evening, and on Friday morning she is
+to discuss the 'Influence of Mozart on De Koven' before the Musical
+Mothers' Meeting, and on Saturday afternoon she is going to have an
+anthropological tea at her house, which she is to open with some
+speculations as to whether in the Glacial Period dudes were addicted to
+the use of cigarettes."
+
+"Great Scott!" said the Idiot. "This is her busy week."
+
+"Tolerably so," said Mrs. Idiot. "She has probably reserved this evening
+to read up on Balzac for to-morrow's essay, so I think, my dear, we'd
+better not go."
+
+"Right as usual," said the Idiot. And then he added, "Poor Dawkins, who
+is taking care of him now?"
+
+"I think," said Mrs. Idiot, "that possibly Mrs. Dawkins has sublet the
+contract for looking after her husband and children to the United
+States Housekeeping Company Limited."
+
+The Idiot gazed blankly at his wife, and awaited an explanation.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE BABY IS ROCKED TO SLEEP EVERY NIGHT'"]
+
+"An organization, my dear," she continued, "formed by a number of
+well-meaning and remorseful widows who, having lost their husbands,
+begin to appreciate their virtues, and who, finding themselves
+sympathetic when it is too late, are devoting themselves to the husbands
+of others who are neglected. A subscription of five hundred dollars will
+secure the supervision of all the domestic arrangements of a
+home--marketing, engagement and discharge of domestics, house-cleaning,
+buttons sewed on, darning done, care of flowers, wifely duties
+generally; for one thousand dollars they will bring up the children, and
+see that the baby is rocked to sleep every night, and suitably
+interested in elevating narratives and poems like Joseph's coat of many
+colors, and Tom, Tom the Piper's Son. This enables an advanced woman
+like Mrs. Dawkins to devote her mornings to the encyclopedias, her
+afternoons to the public libraries, and her evenings to the functions
+whereat she may read the papers which her devotion to the encyclopedias
+and the libraries has brought forth."
+
+"Excuse me, my dear Bess," said the Idiot, rising. "I wish to telephone
+Dr. Simmons."
+
+"For what--for whom?" demanded the lady.
+
+"You, of course," returned the Idiot. "You are developing alarming
+symptoms. You give every indication of a bad attack of professional
+humor. Your 'International Widows Company for the Protection and
+Amelioration of Neglected Husbandry' proves that!"
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed again.
+
+[Illustration: "POOR DICK DAWKINS ISN'T TAKEN CARE OF AT ALL'"]
+
+"Oh, I didn't say that there really is such an institution!" she cried.
+"I said that I supposed there was, for if there isn't, poor Dick Dawkins
+isn't taken care of at all."
+
+"Well, I'm sorry for it all, anyhow," said the Idiot, seriously.
+"They're both of 'em good friends of ours, and I hate to see two
+families that have been so close drawing apart."
+
+Just then Mollie and Tommy came in.
+
+"Mamma, Willie Dawkins says he can't come to our party because his ma
+won't let him," said Mollie. "She says we don't never go down there."
+
+"That's it," said the Idiot. "Mrs. Dawkins has got so many irons in the
+fire she's begun to keep social books. I'll bet you she's got a ledger
+and a full set of double-entry account-books charging up calls payable
+and calls receivable."
+
+"I don't see how she can get along unless she has," replied Mrs. Idiot.
+"With all her clubs and church societies and varied social obligations
+she needs an expert accountant to keep track of them all."
+
+"I suppose a promise to read a paper on Balzac," put in the Idiot, "is
+something like a three-months' note. It's easy to promise to pay, with
+three months in which to prepare, but you've got to keep track of the
+date and meet the obligation when it falls due. As for me, I'd rather
+meet the note."
+
+"That is about it," said Mrs. Idiot. "If a woman goes into society
+properly she's got to make a business of it. For instance, there are
+about ten dances given at the club here every year. Polly is patroness
+for every one of 'em. There are twenty-five teas during the spring and
+summer months. Polly assists at half of them, and gives a fifth of
+them. She's president of the King's Daughters, corresponding secretary
+of the Dorcas, treasurer of the Red Cross Society, and goodness knows
+what all!"
+
+"I can quite understand why she needs to keep accounts--social
+accounts," said the Idiot. "But it's rather queer, don't you think, that
+she has the children on her books? The idea of saying that Jimmie and
+Gladys can't come to Mollie's party because Mollie hasn't been down
+there--why, it's nonsense!"
+
+"No," said Mrs. Idiot, "it is merely logical. Whatever Polly Dawkins
+does she tries to do thoroughly. I've no doubt she'll do Balzac up
+completely. If she keeps social books showing call balances in her favor
+or against herself she might as well go the whole thing and write the
+children in--only she's made a mistake, as far as we are concerned,
+unless she means to write us off without squaring up."
+
+"You talk like a financier," said the Idiot, admiringly. "What do you
+know about writing off?"
+
+"I used to help my father with his accounts, occasionally," said Mrs.
+Idiot. "Polly Dawkins's books ought to show a balance of one call in
+our favor. That's really the reason I'm not willing to call there
+to-night. She's so queer about it all, and, as a matter of fact, she
+owes me a call. I'm not going to overwhelm her with an added
+obligation."
+
+"Ho!" smiled the Idiot. "You keep books yourself, eh?"
+
+"I keep score," said Mrs. Idiot. "I learned that playing golf."
+
+"It's a bad thing to keep score in golf," said the Idiot.
+
+"So they say, but I find it amusing," she replied.
+
+"And how many calls does Mrs. Wilkins owe you?" demanded the Idiot.
+
+"I don't know," returned the wife. "And I don't care. When I want to see
+Mrs. Wilkins I call on her whether she owes me a call or not, but with
+Polly Dawkins it's different. She began the book-keeping, and as long as
+she likes it I must try to live up to her ideas. If social intercourse
+develops into a business, business requirements must be observed."
+
+"It's a good idea in a way," said the Idiot, reflectively. "But if you
+make a business of society, why don't you carry it to a logical
+conclusion? Balance your books, if you mean business, every month, and
+send your debtors a statement of their account."
+
+"Well, I will if you wish me to," said Mrs. Idiot. "Suppose they don't
+pay?"
+
+"Dun 'em," said the Idiot. And then the matter dropped.
+
+On the fifth of the following month Mr. and Mrs. Idiot were seated
+comfortably in their library. The children had gone to bed, and they
+were enjoying the bliss of a quiet evening at home, when the door-bell
+rang, and in a moment or two the maid ushered in Mr. and Mrs. Richard
+Dawkins, preceded, of course, by their cards. The young householders
+were delighted, and Polly Dawkins was never more charming. She looked
+well, and she talked well, and there was not a symptom of any diminution
+of the old-time friendship perceptible--only she did appear to be tired
+and care-worn.
+
+The evening wore away pleasantly. The chat reverted to old times, and by
+degrees Mrs. Dawkins seemed to grow less tired.
+
+About ten o'clock the Idiot invited his neighbor to adjourn to the
+smoking-room, where they each lit a cigar and indulged in a
+companionable glass.
+
+"Idiot," said Dawkins, when his wife called out to him that it was time
+to go home, "your wife is a wonder. I've been trying for three months to
+make Polly come up here and she wouldn't. Keeps books, you know--now.
+Has to--so much to do. Thought you owed us a call, but received your
+bill Wednesday--looked it up--questioned servants--found you were
+right."
+
+"Bill," cried the Idiot. "What bill?"
+
+"Why, the one Mrs. Idiot sent--this," said Dawkins, taking a piece of
+paper out of his pocket. "Confoundedly good joke."
+
+The Idiot took up the piece of paper. It was type-written--on Tommy's
+machine--and read as follows:
+
+ November 1 1898
+ MR. AND MRS. RICHARD DAWKINS
+ _To Mr. and Mrs. Idiot Dr._
+
+ September 20 Evening call 1
+ Account overdue.
+ Please remit.
+
+"Great Scott!" laughed the Idiot.
+
+"My dear," said the Idiot after the Dawkinses had gone, "that bill of
+yours was a great idea."
+
+"It wasn't my idea at all--it was yours," said Mrs. Idiot, laughing.
+"You said we ought to be business-like to the last and send out a
+statement on the first of the month. I sent it. And they paid up."
+
+"Richard," said Mrs. Dawkins, as they drove home, "did you get a
+receipt?"
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+AS TO SANTA CLAUS
+
+
+"I am very glad I didn't take Tommy and Mollie to church with me this
+morning," said Mrs. Idiot, on her return from service. "It would have
+broken their hearts to have heard the sermon. I don't know what gets
+into Dr. Preachly sometimes. He gave us a blast about Santa Claus."
+
+"A blast about Santa Claus, eh!" said the Idiot. "And how did he blast
+the good old saint?"
+
+"He said he was a lie," rejoined Mrs. Idiot, indignantly, "and that it
+was the duty of every Christian in the land to see that the lie was
+exposed."
+
+"Great heavens!" cried the Idiot, in astonishment. "Doesn't Dr. Preachly
+believe in Santa Claus? Poor old Preachly! How much he has lost! Did he
+say anything about Hop o' My Thumb and Cinderella?"
+
+"No, of course not. Why should he?" returned Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Oh, because; I suppose that a man who doesn't believe in Santa Claus is
+a skeptic on the subject of Hop o' My Thumb, and Rumpelstiltzken, and
+Cinderella, and Jack the Giant-Killer, and all the rest of that noble
+army of childhood friends," explained the Idiot.
+
+"He didn't mention them," said Mrs. Idiot. "He--"
+
+"He's going to preach a series of sermons on lies, I presume," said the
+Idiot. "He's tackled Santa Claus first, as being the most seasonable of
+the lot, eh? Jack the Giant-Killer ought to be a good subject for a
+ministerial attack."
+
+"Well, he pulled poor old Santa Claus to pieces," said Mrs. Idiot, with
+a sigh.
+
+"Why didn't you bring me a piece of him as a souvenir?" demanded the
+Idiot. "Just a lock of his hair for my collection of curios? What was
+done with the remains?"
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed as she pulled over her gloves and smoothed them upon
+her lap.
+
+"There weren't any remains," she answered. "When Dr. Preachly got
+through with him there wasn't a vestige of the old chap left. To begin
+with, he was a lie, the doctor said. Then he went on and showed that he
+was a wickedly partial old fellow--a very snob, he called him--because
+he gives fine things to the children of the rich and little or nothing
+to the children of the poor. He filled the little folk with hope and
+brought them disappointment, and so on. It was a powerful sermon,
+although I wanted to weep over it."
+
+"Go ahead and weep," said the Idiot; "it's the appropriate thing to do.
+I don't wonder you wanted to cry; you've always liked Dr. Preachly."
+
+"Of course," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"And you hate to see him make a--ah--a--well, you know--of himself in
+the pulpit; and I quite agree with you. I rather like Preachly myself.
+It is too bad to see a well-meaning man like that batting his brains out
+against the rock of Gibraltar, whether suicide is sin or not. What has
+put him in this despondent mood? Do you suppose he has heard?"
+
+"Heard what?" demanded Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"About the slippers," said the Idiot.
+
+"What slippers?" asked his wife.
+
+"Oh, the same old slippers," said the Idiot. "You know the ones I
+mean--the ones he's going to get from Santa Claus. Really, I'm not
+surprised, after all. If I were a minister, and realized that truckloads
+of embroidered slippers of every size and color, covered with stags of
+red worsted jumping over rivulets of yellow floss, with split agates for
+eyes set in over the toe, were to be dumped in my front yard every
+Christmas Eve by that old reprobate, Santa Claus, I think I, too, would
+set him down as a fraud, or an overworked cobbler, anyhow."
+
+[Illustration: "'DR. PREACHLY ONLY GOT EIGHT PAIRS LAST XMAS'"]
+
+"That's exaggerated--a comic-paper idea," said Mrs. Idiot. "I don't
+believe the average clergyman gets so many slippers. Dr. Preachly only
+got eight pairs last Christmas."
+
+"Is that all?" cried the Idiot. "Mercy, what a small income of slippers!
+Dear me! how can he live with only eight pairs of slippers? But, after
+all, slippers are an appropriate gift for a clergyman," he added, "and
+Santa Claus should be credited with that fact. Slippers have soles, and
+the more slippers he gets the easier it is to save their soles, and
+therefore--"
+
+"Really, my dear, you are flippant," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Not at all," rejoined the Idiot. "I am merely trying to sit on two
+stools at once--to retain my respect for Dr. Preachly without giving up
+my everlasting regard for Santa Claus. If I can't do both I am very much
+afraid it will be Dr. Preachly, and not Santa Claus, who will go to the
+wall in this establishment, and that would be sad. I can't say I think
+much of the doctor's logic. Do you?"
+
+"I didn't notice his logic," Mrs. Idiot replied.
+
+"Very likely," said the Idiot; "from what you tell me of his discourse I
+imagine he must have left it at home, which is a bad thing to do in an
+argument. To begin, he called Santa a lie, did he?"
+
+"Yes; said he didn't exist at all."
+
+"Good! Then how could he have been a snob?"
+
+"Why, while of course I have no sympathy with his conclusions, Dr.
+Preachly handled that point pretty well. It certainly is true that in
+the homes of the rich there is a lavishness of gifts that you don't
+find in the homes of the poor, and therefore Santa Claus treats the rich
+better than he does the poor. We all know that."
+
+"Hum!" said the Idiot. "And so it is Santa Claus who is the snob, eh,
+and not Fortune?"
+
+"Well, Dr. Preachly did not touch upon that. All he said was that Santa
+Claus was a snob for favoring 'high society' and in many cases
+absolutely ignoring the submerged."
+
+"But I don't see how," said the Idiot.
+
+"Suppose he brings a diamond necklace to the daughter of a Croesus?"
+
+"Precisely," said the Idiot.
+
+[Illustration: "'A CHINA DOLL TO THE DAUGHTER OF A CARPENTER'"]
+
+"And a china doll to the daughter of a carpenter?" said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"That's tact, not snobbishness," said the Idiot. "What would the
+daughter of a carpenter do with a diamond necklace? The china doll is
+not only more appropriate, but a better plaything."
+
+"Well, anyhow, he gives richly to those that have, and sparsely, if at
+all, to those that haven't, Dr. Preachly said," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"There is scriptural authority for that," observed the Idiot. "I wonder
+if Dr. Preachly reads his Bible! Perhaps I'd better send him one for
+Christmas instead of a pair of galoshes. He'll find in the Bible that
+'to him that hath shall be given,' and so forth. But to return to the
+logic--"
+
+"I told you I didn't notice it," said Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Nor did Dr. Preachly, my dear; passed it by as if it were a poor
+relation, apparently. But this is true, a lie is an untruth. Truth alone
+lives, therefore an untruth does not live. Santa Claus is a lie and does
+not live, and is a snob, according to our reverend logician. Now, how
+can one who does not live be a snob or anything else? Truly, I wish Dr.
+Preachly would be more careful in his statements. As a pew-holder in his
+church I do not like to hear him denounce something that does not exist
+as having unworthy qualities. It's like shaking a sword at nothing and
+patting yourself on the back afterwards for your courage; still more in
+this instance is it like batting your poor mortal head against the hard
+surface of an everlasting rock, and our clergy should be in better
+business.
+
+"Let 'em fight the harmful lies--the lies of false social ideas as
+propagated by distinctions of pew-holding, for instance. The man who
+sits in the front of the church is no better than the man who sits at
+the back, and is frequently his inferior; but has he more or has he less
+influence? The man who hands in his check for ten thousand dollars,
+having that and more to spare, is not more the friend of religion and
+Christianity than the poor beggar who stumbles in and puts his penny in
+the plate, thus diminishing by one-fifth his capital. Suppose Santa
+Claus is in a material sense a fancy or a lie; Heaven help Dr. Preachly
+if he can't see the beauty and the ethical value of the deception. Is he
+not the embodiment of the golden rule, and is he not, after all--God
+bless him and them!--something beautiful in the eyes of the children?"
+
+"I'm flippant, and I know it, but there are some things I cling to," he
+added, after a pause. "Santa Claus is one of them, and Dr. Preachly can
+preach through all eternity, and, with all due respect to him, he can't
+remove from my mind the beauty of an idea that was planted there by two
+people who were practical enough, my father and my mother. I've
+inherited Santa Claus, and I'm not going to give him up, and no
+preacher in our church or in the church of others can take him away from
+me by one sermon, or by an infinite number of sermons, however sincere
+they may be. Is dinner ready?"
+
+Dinner was ready. It was eaten reflectively, and after it the children
+went to Sunday-school. From this Tommy returned with a swollen eye,
+which later became dark.
+
+"Hullo, pop!" he said, addressing the Idiot as he entered the house.
+
+[Illustration: "'HULLO, SONNY! HAD A GOOD TIME?'"]
+
+"Hullo, sonny!" replied the Idiot, observing the swollen eye. "Had a
+good time?"
+
+"Yep," said the boy; "pretty good."
+
+"Been fighting?" suggested the Idiot.
+
+"Not so very much," said the boy; "only a little." And he began to sing
+a popular air, as if he didn't care much about life in general, and
+didn't mind an aching eye, which was rapidly, by its inflammation,
+giving away the fact that he had met with trouble.
+
+"What did you learn at Sunday-school?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"More blessed to give than to receive," said Tommy.
+
+"Good!" said the Idiot. "I hope you will remember that, sonny. There is
+no satisfaction in all the world like that of giving if you can afford
+it."
+
+[Illustration: "'I GAVE MY DOLLY AWAY TO-DAY'"]
+
+"I think tho, too," said Mollie, sitting down on her father's lap with
+the contented sigh of a little girl who has discovered that life is not
+all an illusion. "I gave my dollie away to-day, papa," she added. "She
+wath only thawdust, and Pollie Harrington hath her now. She was a
+drefful care, and I'm glad to be ridden of her."
+
+But the Idiot's mind was not on dolls, and he showed it. His boy's eye
+proved a greater care.
+
+"Come here, my boy," he said.
+
+The boy approached inquiringly.
+
+"How did this happen?" the Idiot asked. "Your eye is swollen."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," cried Tommy, exultantly. "Jimmie Roberts said there
+wasn't no Santy Claus."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I said there was, an' then I gave him one on the end of his nose."
+
+Here the boy struggled away from his father, as if he had done something
+he was willing to stand by.
+
+"Let me understand this," said the Idiot. "Jimmie said--"
+
+"There wasn't any Santy Claus," interrupted Tommy.
+
+"Then what did you say?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"I told him he didn't know what he was talking about," said Tommy.
+
+"Why did you say that?"
+
+"Because he was wrong, papa," said Tommy. "I've seen Santy Claus; I saw
+him last year."
+
+"Ah! You did, eh? I was not aware of that fact."
+
+Tommy began to laugh.
+
+"You can't fool me, daddy," he said, climbing onto his father's knee.
+"Of course I've seen him, and he's the bulliest feller in all the world.
+_You're him!_"
+
+And a hug followed.
+
+Later on Mrs. Idiot and the Idiot sat together. The latter was deep in
+thought.
+
+"Children have queer notions," said he, after a while.
+
+"They are generally pretty right, though," observed Mrs. Idiot. "You are
+a pretty good Santa Claus, after all," she added.
+
+"Pollie," said the Idiot, rising, "I believe in Santa Claus because he
+represents the spirit of the hour, and whoever tries to turn him down
+tries to turn down that spirit--the most blessed thing we have. Let's
+keep the children believing in Santa Claus, eh?"
+
+"I agree," said Mrs. Idiot. "For the secret is out. You are Santa Claus
+to them."
+
+"Heaven grant I may always be as much," said the Idiot. "For if a father
+is Santa Claus, and a boy or a girl believes in Santa Claus as a friend,
+as a companion, as something that brings them only sincerity and love
+and sympathy, then may we feel that Tiny Tim's prayer has been answered,
+and that God has blessed us all."
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+AS TO NEW-YEAR'S DAY
+
+
+It was New-Year's eve, and Mr. and Mrs. Idiot with their old friends
+were watching the old year die. The old year had been a fairly
+successful one for them all, and they were properly mournful over its
+prospective demise, but the promise of the new was sufficiently bright
+to mitigate their sorrow.
+
+"What a sandwich life is, after all!" ejaculated the Idiot.
+
+Mr. Pedagog started nervously. The remark was so idiotic that even its
+source seemed to make it inexcusable.
+
+[Illustration: "'I DON'T QUITE CATCH YOUR DRIFT'"]
+
+"I don't quite catch your drift," said he.
+
+"As the man said when an avalanche of snow fell off his neighbor's roof
+and missed him by an inch," said the Idiot. "Why, just think a moment,
+Doctor, and my drift will overwhelm you. Look about you and consider
+what we have ourselves demonstrated to-night. If that does not prove
+life a series of emotional sandwiches, then I don't know what a sandwich
+is. Twenty minutes ago we were all gladness over the prosperity of the
+year gone by. Five minutes ago we were all on the verge of tears because
+the good old year is going the way of all years. An hour from now we
+will be joyously acclaiming the new. Two thick slices of joy with a thin
+slice of grief between."
+
+"Ah!" said Mr. Pedagog. "I see. There is something in the analogy, after
+all. The bread of joy and the ham of sorrow, as you might put it; do
+make up the sum of human existence; but in some cases, my lad, I am
+afraid you will find there is only one slice of bread to two of ham."
+
+"No doubt," replied the Idiot, "but that does not affect my proposition
+that life is a sandwich. If one slice of ham between two slices of bread
+is a ham sandwich, why is not one slice of bread between two slices of
+ham a bread sandwich? What is a sandwich, anyhow? The dictionary says
+that a sandwich is something placed between two other things; hence,
+all things are sandwiches, because there is nothing in the world, the
+world being round, that is not between two other things. Therefore, all
+things being sandwiches, life is a sandwich, Q. E. D."
+
+"Is life a thing?" demanded Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Certainly," said the Idiot. "And a mighty good thing, too. If you don't
+believe it look the word thing up in the dictionary. All things are
+things."
+
+"But," continued the Schoolmaster, his old spirit of antagonism rising
+up in his breast, "granted that life is a thing, what is it between so
+that it becomes a sandwich?"
+
+"The past and the future," said the Idiot. "It is a slice of the
+immediate between a slice of past and one of future."
+
+Mr. Pedagog laughed.
+
+"You are still the same old Idiot," he said.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "Gibraltar and I and Truth are the three
+unchangeable things in this life, and that's why I am so happy. I'm in
+such good company. Gibraltar and Truth are good enough companions for
+anybody."
+
+Meanwhile Mollie and Tommy, who had been allowed to sit up upon this
+rare occasion, stirred uneasily.
+
+"Ith I a thandwich, popper?" said the little girl, sleepily, raising her
+head from her father's shoulder and gazing into his eyes.
+
+"Yes, indeed, you are," said her father, giving her an affectionate
+squeeze. "A sugar sandwich, Mollie. You're really good enough to eat."
+
+"Well, I'd rather be a pie," put in Tommy; "an apple pie."
+
+"Very well, my son," returned the Idiot. "Have your own way. Henceforth
+be a pie if you prefer--an apple pie. But may I ask why you express this
+preference?"
+
+"Oh, because," said Tommy, "if I'm to be an apple pie somebody's got to
+fill me chock-full of apple sauce."
+
+"The son of his father," observed Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"I think it is a pity," Mrs. Pedagog put in at this point, "that some of
+the good old customs of the New Year have gone out."
+
+"As to which, Mrs. Pedagog?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"Well, New-Year's calling particularly," explained the lady. "It is no
+longer the thing for people to make New-Year's calls, and I must confess
+I regret it. It used to be a great pleasure to me in the old days to
+receive the gentlemen--my old friends, and relatives, and boarders."
+
+"Why distinguish between your old friends and your boarders, Mrs.
+Pedagog?" interrupted the Idiot. "They are synonymous terms."
+
+"They are now," said the good lady, "but--ah--they weren't always. I
+used sometimes to think you, for instance, didn't like me as much as you
+might."
+
+"I didn't dare," explained the Idiot. "If I'd liked you as much as I
+might I'd have told you so, and then Mr. Pedagog would have got jealous
+and there'd have been a horrid affair."
+
+The lady smiled graciously, and Mr. Pedagog threw a small paper pellet
+at the Idiot.
+
+"I'm much obliged to you for holding off, Idiot," he said. "I don't know
+where I'd have been to-day if you'd got in ahead of me. Mrs. Pedagog has
+always had a soft spot in her heart for you."
+
+"I've got the other spot," said the Idiot, "and a pair of aces are hard
+to beat in pairs; but I think I voice Mrs. Pedagog's sentiments in the
+matter, Mr. Pedagog, when I say that she and I would always have been
+glad to see you every other New-Year's day if I had been the fortunate
+winner of her hand."
+
+"And Mr. Pedagog and I would have been glad to see you and Mrs. Pedagog
+in the sandwich years," said Mrs. Idiot to her husband; and then,
+turning to the Schoolmaster, added, "Wouldn't we, Mr. Pedagog?"
+
+"No, madame," returned Mr. Pedagog, courteously. "You might have been,
+but I would not. If I had married you I could never have seen any one
+else with pleasure. I should have kept my eyes solely for you."
+
+"John!" cried Mrs. Pedagog, arching her eyebrows.
+
+"Pleasantry, my dear--mere pleasantry," returned the Schoolmaster,
+tapping his fingers together and smiling sweetly upon Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"You didn't finish, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot. "You were telling us
+how you used to enjoy New-Year's calling before it went out."
+
+"Yes," replied Mrs. Pedagog. "It was charming. I used positively to
+look forward to its coming with delight. We women, Mr. Idiot, found the
+old custom very delightful."
+
+"But the men, Mrs. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "did you ever think of
+them?"
+
+"What else did we think of? What else is there for a woman to think
+about?" replied Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Jane!" cried Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"_Pleasantry, my dear--mere pleasantry_," returned Mrs. Pedagog,
+frigidly. And Mr. Pedagog lit a cigar. It is not always pleasant to be
+quoted.
+
+"Still," said the Idiot, "you thought of men only as creatures of the
+moment--"
+
+"Entirely," said Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"And not as creatures of the week following," said the Idiot.
+
+"What has that to do with it?" asked Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Much--from the man's stand-point," returned the Idiot. "His digestion
+was butchered to make a woman's holiday. Take myself as an example. I
+used to make New-Year's calls; and to get through with my list by
+midnight, I had to start in at nine o'clock in the morning."
+
+"Nine o'clock is not so early," said Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"It's early for cake and pickled oysters," said the Idiot. "And for
+chicken salad and wedding-cake, and for lemonade and punch, and for
+lobster and egg-nog, and for ice-cream and _pate-de-foie-gras_."
+
+"H'm!" said Mr. Pedagog, reflectively. "That's true."
+
+"Quite so," observed Mr. Whitechoker, brushing off his vest, upon which
+the ashes of his cigar had rested. "Especially for the punch."
+
+"There was no punch in my house," said Mrs. Pedagog. "Indeed, I always
+served a very simple luncheon. We did have chicken salad, of course, but
+the chicken was good and the salad was crisp--"
+
+"I'd swear to it," said the Idiot.
+
+"And we had egg-nog, but there was more egg than nog in it--"
+
+"Again I'd swear to it," said the Idiot, smacking his lips.
+
+"And as for the lobsters, nobody ever complained--"
+
+"He'd have been a lobster himself who would," said the Idiot. "But that
+does not prove that no one ever suffered."
+
+"And as for the pickled oysters, no one ever suffered from them that I
+knew of," continued the good lady. "They are harmless eaten in
+moderation."
+
+[Illustration: "'I FELT AS IF I HAD SWALLOWED AS OVERSHOE'"]
+
+"Exactly right," cried the Idiot. "No gentleman would ever complain of
+pickled oysters, even if they were made of inferior rubber, eaten in
+moderation. Yet I recall in my own experience a pickled oyster of most
+impressive quality. He was not a pickled oyster of the moment. He was
+the Admiral Dewey of pickled oysters. In appearance he resembled every
+other pickled oyster I ever met, but--well, he kept me in a state of
+worry for a month. Just eating him alone was eating pickled oysters in
+immoderation. I felt as if I had swallowed an overshoe. He was a
+charming pickled oyster, Mrs. Pedagog, and he was devoted to me, but he
+involved me in complications alongside of which the Philippine question
+is child's play. If a New-Year's caller could have confined his
+attentions to the ladies he met no harm would have come to him, but he
+couldn't, you know. The day was one continuous round of effort and
+indigestibles. What a man got at your house and had to eat merely to
+show his appreciation of your hospitality was all right and wholesome.
+Your lobster and egg-nog could do him no harm, but he couldn't stop with
+yours; he had to continue, and consume lobsters and egg-nog everywhere
+else and all day long. The day resolved itself into a magnificent gorge
+alongside of which that of Niagara seems like a wagon-rut. It finally
+came down to the point where either man or the custom had to die, and
+man being selfish, the custom went. Did you ever consider exactly how
+much indigestible food an amiable, well-meaning person had to consume in
+a round of, say, three dozen calls, Mrs. Pedagog?"
+
+Mr. Brief nodded his approval. "Now you've struck it," he said. "I've
+been there, Idiot."
+
+"I must confess," said Mrs. Pedagog, "that I never looked into that
+question."
+
+"Well, I'll tell you," the Idiot resumed. "The last time I made
+New-Year's calls I figured it out for the doctor the next morning, and
+as I recall the statistics, in the course of that day I ate one hundred
+and twenty-nine pickled oysters, thirteen plates of chicken salad, seven
+plates of lobster salad, five plates of mulled sardines, twenty-three
+plates of ice-cream, four hundred and sixty-three macaroons,
+eighty-seven sandwiches ranging from lettuce and ham to chicken and
+potted goose-liver, enough angel-cake to feed all the angels there are
+and two more, sixteen Welsh rarebits that were being made just as I
+happened in, and crystallized ginger and salted almonds and marrons to
+the extent of about eighteen pounds."
+
+"Mercy!" cried Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Say, pa, where was I then?" asked Tommy, his eyes glittering with
+delight.
+
+"You were eating green cheese on the moon, Tommy," said the Idiot.
+
+"Wisht I'd been with you," said Tommy. "Must o' been better than bein' a
+pie."
+
+"And all of these things," continued the Idiot, with a wink at his son,
+"I washed down with six gallons of lemonade, nineteen cups of coffee,
+eighteen cups of tea, and a taste of claret punch."
+
+"And how about the egg-nog?" asked the Bibliomaniac, slyly.
+
+"I judge there were about six crates of eggs in it," said the Idiot. "I
+never had the nerve to estimate the nog-end of it."
+
+"What did the doctor say when you told him all that?" asked Mrs.
+Pedagog.
+
+The Idiot chuckled. "What did he say?" he cried. "Why, I should think
+you could guess. He blamed it all on the Welsh rarebits, but he thought
+he could get me into shape again in time for the next New Year. I've
+never been the same man since."
+
+"Well, the way I look at it," said Mrs. Pedagog, "is that it is a great
+pity that women must be deprived of a function that gives them pleasure
+because the men make pigs of themselves."
+
+"But you don't understand, Mrs. Pedagog," the Idiot persisted. "I grant
+you that the man who eats all that makes a pig of himself, but he has no
+choice. He can't help himself. When a charming hostess insists, he'd be
+a greater pig if he refused to partake of her hospitality. The custom
+involved an inevitable sacrifice of man's digestion upon the altar of
+woman. That's all there was about it. If it could have been arranged so
+that a man could take a hamper about with him and stow all the cakes and
+salads and other good things away in that, and eat them later as he
+happened to need or want them, instead of in his own inner self, the
+good old custom might have been preserved, but that is impossible in
+these conventional days."
+
+"You needn't have eaten it all," put in Mrs. Idiot. "You could have
+pretended to eat it and put it down somewhere."
+
+[Illustration: "'I FOUND EIGHT SANDWICHES AND A PINT OF SALTED
+ALMONDS'"]
+
+[Illustration: "'THEY WERE FOUND SOME DAYS LATER WHEN THE ROOM WAS PUT
+IN ORDER'"]
+
+"I know that, my dear. I didn't even on that occasion eat it all--I only
+ate what I told you. I found eight sandwiches and a pint of salted
+almonds in my coat-tail pocket the next morning, which I managed
+surreptitiously to hide away while my hostesses were getting me
+something else, and in one place, while nobody was watching me, I hid a
+half-dozen pickled oysters under a sofa, where I suppose they were found
+some days later when the room was put in order."
+
+As the Idiot spoke the clock struck twelve, and the guests all rose up.
+
+"Here's to the New Year!" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Not yet," interposed the Idiot. "That's only a signal for the Welsh
+rarebits to be brought in. I've sworn them off for the New Year, but I
+haven't for the old. The clock is a half-hour fast."
+
+"No, my dear," said Mrs. Idiot. "It was, but I put it back. It's exactly
+right now."
+
+"Then," said the Idiot, "I join you in the toast, Mr. Pedagog. Here's to
+the New Year: may it bring joy to everybody. Meanwhile may it bring also
+the Welsh rarebits."
+
+"I thought you'd sworn off," suggested Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"So I had," replied the Idiot, "but circumstances over which I have no
+control force me to postpone my reformation for another twelve months.
+If they had been served at half-past eleven I should have stuck to my
+resolve; as they have been delayed until twelve-one I cannot do less
+than eat them. I do not believe in wilful waste; and besides, it is
+quite as much the duty of the host to consume the good things he places
+before his guests as it is for the guests to partake. I can wait a year,
+I think, without wholly ruining what little digestion my former devotion
+to New-Year's calling has left me. Gentlemen, I propose the ladies: May
+their future be as golden as this rarebit; and for the men, may they
+always be worthy to be the toast upon which that golden future may rest
+with the certainty born of confidence."
+
+And the guests fell to and ate each a golden buck to the New Year--all
+save Mollie and Tommy. These two important members of the household went
+up to their little beds, but just before going to sleep Tommy called
+through the door to his little sister:
+
+"Mollie!"
+
+"Yeth!"
+
+"Want to play a game with me to-morrow?"
+
+"Yeth!"
+
+"Well, you get a cake and a pie and some gingersnaps and a lot of apples
+and some candy and we'll play New-Year's calls."
+
+"Splendid!" lisped Mollie. "You'll call on me?"
+
+"Yes," said Tommy; "and all you'll have to do will be to force food on
+me."
+
+And they soon passed into the land of dreams.
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+SOME DOMESTIC INVENTIONS
+
+
+[Illustration: "'THERE'S NOT MUCH MONEY IN STOCKS'"]
+
+"I think I'll give up the business of broking and go into inventing,"
+said the Idiot one Sunday morning, as he and Mrs. Idiot and their
+friends sat down at breakfast. "There's not much money in stocks, but
+the successful inventor of a patent clothes-pin makes a fortune."
+
+"I'd think twice about that before acting," observed Mr. Brief. "There
+may not be much money in stocks, but you can work eight hours a day, and
+get good pay in a broker's office, while the inventor has to wait upon
+inspiration."
+
+"True enough," said the Idiot; "but waiting on inspiration isn't a bad
+business in itself. You can play golf or read a rattling good novel, or
+go to a yacht-race while you wait."
+
+"But where does the money come in?" asked Mr. Pedagog, his usual
+caution coming to the fore.
+
+"Inspiration brings it with her," said the Idiot, "and by the barrel,
+too. What's the use of toiling eight hours a day for fifty weeks in a
+year for three thousand dollars when by waiting on inspiration in a
+pleasant way you make a million all of a sudden?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. Pedagog, indulgently, "if you have the inspiration
+lassoed, as you might say, your argument is all right; but if you are
+merely going to sit down and wait for it to ring you up on the
+telephone, and ask you when and where you wish your barrels of gold
+delivered, I think it will be your creditors, and not fortune, who will
+be found knocking at your door. How are you going about this business,
+provided you do retire from Wall Street?"
+
+"Choose my field and work it," replied the Idiot. "For the present I
+should choose the home. That is the field I am most interested in just
+now. I should study its necessities, and endeavor to meet whatever these
+might demand with an adequate supply. Any man who stays around home all
+day will find lots of room for the employment of his talents along
+inventive lines."
+
+"You've tried it, have you?" asked Mr. Brief.
+
+"Certainly I have," said the Idiot, "though I haven't invented anything
+yet. Why, only last week I stayed home on Monday--wash-day--and a
+thousand things that might be invented suggested themselves to me."
+
+"As, for instance?" asked Mrs. Idiot, who was anxious to know of any
+possible thing that could mitigate the horrors of wash-day.
+
+[Illustration: "'A NICE LITTLE BASKET-HAT ON HER HEAD TO HOLD THE PINS
+IN'"]
+
+"Well, it wouldn't help _you_ much, my dear," said the Idiot, "but the
+wash-lady would hail with unmixed delight a substitute for her mouth to
+hold clothes-pins in while she is hanging out the clothes. I watched
+Ellen in the yard for ten minutes that day, and it was pathetic. There
+she was, standing on her tiptoes, hanging innumerable garments on the
+line, her mouth full of clothes-pins, and Jimpsonberry's hired man
+leaning over the fence trying to shout sweet nothings in her ear. If she
+had had a nice little basket-hat on her head to hold the pins in she
+could have answered back without stopping her work every other minute
+to take them out of her mouth in order to retort to his honeyed
+sentiments."
+
+Mrs. Idiot laughed. "Ellen finds time enough to talk and do the washing,
+too," she said. "I sometimes think she does more talking than washing."
+
+"No doubt of it; she's only human, like the rest of us," said the Idiot.
+"But she might save time to do something else for us if she could do the
+washing and the talking at the same time. She may give up the washing,
+but she'll never give up the talking. Therefore, why not make the
+talking easier?"
+
+"What you need most, I think," put in Mr. Brief, "is an instrument to
+keep hired men from leaning over the fence and distracting the attention
+of the laundress from her work. That would be a great boon."
+
+"Not unless idleness is a great boon," retorted the Idiot. "Half the
+hired men I know would be utterly out of employment if they couldn't
+lean over a fence and talk to somebody. Leaning over a fence and talking
+to somebody forms seventy-five per cent. of the hired man's daily labor.
+He seems to think that is what he is paid for. Still, any one who
+objects could very easily remedy the conversational detail in so far as
+it goes on over the fence."
+
+"By the use of barbed wire, I presume," suggested Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"By something far more subtle and delicately suggestive," rejoined the
+Idiot. "Hired men do not mind barbed-wire fences. They rather like them
+when they annoy other people. When they annoy themselves they know how
+to treat them. My own man Mike, for instance, minds them not at all.
+Indeed, he has taken my pruning-shears and clipped all the barbs off the
+small stretch of it we had at the rear end of our lot to keep him from
+climbing over for a short cut home."
+
+"With what result?" asked Mr. Brief.
+
+[Illustration: "'AN ELECTRIC NOTICE TO QUIT'"]
+
+"With the result that I had to buy a new pair of pruning-shears," said
+the Idiot. "My Anti-Over-the-Fence-Gabber," he continued, "would involve
+certain complex details, but it would work. I should have an electric
+battery connected with the upper cable of the fence, and an operator
+stationed inside of the house, close to a key which would send some
+six hundred or seven hundred volts through the cable whenever needed.
+Then if I felt that Jimpsonberry's man was interfering with my
+laundress, as soon as he leaned over the fence I'd have the operator
+send him an electric notice to quit."
+
+"A message?" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"No, a plain shock. Two hundred volts as a starter, three hundred as a
+reminder, and the full seven hundred if necessary to make the hint
+plainer."
+
+"That would be cruel," observed Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Not wholly," said the Idiot. "It would be an advantage to the man
+himself in one way. Hired men have too little electricity in their
+systems, Mrs. Pedagog. If Jimpsonberry's man, for instance, would take
+all the electricity I'd give him and apply it to his work,
+Jimpsonberry's unpulled dandelions would not be such a constant menace
+to my lawn. I compel Mike to weed out my lawn every spring and autumn,
+but Jimpsonberry doesn't attend to his at all. He doesn't sleep on it,
+and so doesn't bother about it. Consequently, when his dandelions go to
+seed the seed is blown over into my grass, and every year I get an
+uninvited crop, which at a dollar a thousand would make me a
+millionaire."
+
+"Why don't you apply your inventive genius to the discovery of a
+seedless dandelion?" asked the Lawyer. "It seems to me that would be the
+best solution of the dandelion problem."
+
+"Because Jimpsonberry wouldn't have 'em if I discovered 'em," said the
+Idiot. "I judge from the millions he raises every year that he is
+satisfied with dandelions as they are. He's got enough for himself, and
+never makes any charge for those he gives to his neighbors."
+
+"I think a furnace-feeder would be a good thing, too," the Idiot
+continued, in a moment. "My furnace is a chronic sufferer from
+indigestion because on some days it is gorged with coal and on others
+with ashes. Seems to me if I could get a month's time in which to
+concentrate my attention upon a furnace-feeder, I could devise some kind
+of a contraption that would invoke the enthusiastic love of the suburban
+resident in Arctic latitudes the world over."
+
+"I have often thought of that possibility myself," observed Mr. Pedagog,
+his eyes fondly resting upon a steaming plate of griddle-cakes that
+had just been brought in. "But coal is a rebellious quantity. A
+furnace-feeder would need to be delicately adjusted, and coal cannot be
+handled with delicacy. It requires a chute rather than a tube. It must
+be manipulated with the shovel, not the sugar-tongs."
+
+"Correct," said the Idiot. "Therefore, _you_ would experiment on a chute
+or a shovel, abandoning all idea of refining the coal. I, on the other
+hand, would experiment with the coal itself, Mr. Pedagog. Why not
+liquefy it, and let it drop automatically into the furnace through a
+self-acting spigot?"
+
+"Liquefy coal?" asked Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Certainly," replied the Idiot. "We liquefy pretty nearly everything
+else. If liquid air, why not liquid coal? Everything we have in nature
+in these days apparently can be liquefied, and while I am not familiar
+with the process, I see no reason why a ton of coal should not be
+reduced to such a shape that it can be bottled. Once bottled and
+provided with an automatic dropper, it could easily be adjusted so as to
+flow in proper quantities into the furnace at proper intervals."
+
+"It would be very expensive. Do you know what a pint of liquid air
+costs?" demanded the Doctor.
+
+"No," said the Idiot. "I neither breathe nor drink it. The plain old
+stuff is good enough for me, and cheap if you don't have to go to the
+mountains or the sea-shore to get your supply."
+
+"Granting coal could be liquefied," the Doctor assented, "I venture to
+say that a ton of it would cost as much as five hundred dollars."
+
+"I've no doubt it would," said the Idiot; "but I could afford a ton of
+coal at five hundred dollars if my scheme worked. A successful invention
+would make bread seem cheap at ten dollars a loaf. There's another thing
+I should put my mind on, and that is a method of cooking a cauliflower
+so that everybody in the house, as well as the neighbors, should not
+know that you are doing so," he continued. "I am particularly fond of
+cauliflower, but it is undeniable that in the process of cooking it
+becomes obtrusive, almost to the point of ostentation. I've spoken about
+it many times. Mike, the gardener, to whom I've spoken on the subject,
+thinks the cauliflower itself, if sprinkled with _eau de Cologne_ while
+growing, would cease to be obnoxious in the cooking; but that is too
+expensive a process. It would take a dozen cases of _eau de Cologne_ to
+bring a single cauliflower to maturity. My son, Tommy, has stated that
+he thinks it might be boiled in Florida-water instead of in the simple
+variety that comes from the pipes. A good suggestion for a small boy,
+but also expensive. Hired men and small boys do not think of the
+exchequer of the principal in their plans. They don't have to. Their
+allowance and wages are usually all velvet--an elegant vulgarism for
+surplus--and for my own part I have constantly to veto their little
+schemes for the betterment of my condition in order to have any
+condition at all left. But as far as the arrangement of an odorless
+cauliflower-cooker is concerned, it is as simple as A B C, barring one
+or two complications."
+
+"I wish you'd hurry up and invent it," cried Mrs. Idiot, with
+enthusiasm. "What are the main features of this simple contrivance?"
+
+"I'd have a boiler, in the first place, in which to boil the animal,"
+said the Idiot. "When the water was ready I'd clap the creature into it,
+and before it had time to remonstrate I'd fasten a hermetically sealed
+cover over the top."
+
+"But when you took it off the results would still be overpowering," said
+Mr. Pedagog.
+
+[Illustration: "'FINDING OUT WHAT IS BEING COOKED FOR DINNER'"]
+
+"No, my dear sir," said the Idiot, "for the simple reason that I should
+affix a cold-air box and a flue to the hermetically sealed boiler.
+Through the cold-air box fresh air would constantly flow into the
+boiler. Through the flue all the aromatic drawbacks of the cauliflower
+would be carried off through the chimney into the upper air. Anybody who
+wished to know whether we were going to have cauliflower for dinner or
+not would have to climb up to the roof and sniff at the chimney-top to
+find out."
+
+"It _is_ simple, isn't it, Mrs. Idiot?" Mrs. Pedagog said.
+
+"Very," replied Mrs. Idiot. "Indeed, it seems so extremely simple that I
+should like to know where the complications lie."
+
+"Where all the complications in cooking lie, my dear," said the
+Idiot, "in the cook. The chief complication would lie in getting a cook
+who could, or if she could, would, use the thing intelligently."
+
+"I don't see," said Mr. Brief, dryly--"I don't see but that what you
+ought to devote your time to, my dear Idiot, is the invention of an
+intelligent cook."
+
+"Humph!" laughed the Idiot. "I may be an idiot, Mr. Brief, but I'm not
+an ass. There are some things that man may reasonably hope to
+accomplish--such as setting fire to the Hudson River, or growing
+butternuts on the summit of Mont Blanc--but as for trying to invent an
+intelligent cook who would stay in the country for more than two weeks
+for less than ten thousand dollars a year, that, sir, is beyond all the
+conceptions of the human mind."
+
+"Ain't Bridget intelligent, pa?" asked Tommy.
+
+Here was a complication, for Tommy liked to retail to Bridget the gossip
+of the day, and especially what "pa said."
+
+"H'm--ah--oh yes, indeed, she is, Tommy," the Idiot replied, with some
+embarrassment. "Very; she's been with us three months."
+
+"How much do you pay her, pa?" asked the boy.
+
+"Well," said the Idiot, "not more than fifteen hundred dollars a month.
+Just take another griddle-cake, my son, and remember that there are some
+things little boys should not talk about."
+
+"Like tumpany's bald heads?" lisped Mollie, complacently, her eye fixed
+upon Mr. Pedagog's shining dome.
+
+"Precisely," observed Mr. Pedagog, appreciating the situation.
+
+And while everybody else laughed the Idiot looked upon his children with
+a sternly affectionate face.
+
+"My dear," said he to Mrs. Idiot, "I think it is time the babies got
+ready for Sunday-school."
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+A SUBURBAN COMPLICATION
+
+
+"Well, old chap," said the Poet some weeks later, when he happened to be
+spending the night off in the suburbs with his old friend, "how goes the
+noble art of inventing? Has your horseless cauliflower bloomed as yet?"
+
+"Horseless cauliflower is good, but tautological," said the Idiot. "The
+cauliflower is an automobile in itself, without the intervention of man.
+Who told you I was inventing instead of broking these days?"
+
+"Mr. Pedagog said something about it the last time I met him," said the
+Poet. "He's a mighty good friend of yours. He says you are the most
+perfect Idiot he ever met."
+
+"He's a bully good fellow," said the Idiot, affectionately. "You know I
+used to think Pedagog wasn't of any earthly use except to teach people
+things, but as I look back upon my experience with him he has never
+taught me anything that was worth forgetting. So he told you I was going
+into invention, did he?"
+
+"Yes; and he said he thought you were going about it in the right way,"
+rejoined the Poet. "You weren't spending ten thousand dollars to get a
+four-dollar invention on the market, he said, but were inventing things
+that you knew at the outset weren't worth risking your money on."
+
+The Idiot smiled broadly.
+
+"He said that, did he? Well, he doesn't know what he is talking about,"
+he retorted. "I am spending money on my inventions. I have already
+invested fifty cents in my patent Clothes-Pin-Holding Laundry-Bonnet,
+and I have strung the wires along my fence to be used in my electric
+Hired-Man-Discourager; and when I have managed to save up a few dollars
+more I'm going to get a battery to attach to it, when woe betide that
+man of Jimpsonberry's if he tries to talk to Maria while she is at work!
+Furthermore, I have extended the operations of that same useful
+invention so that it will meet a long-felt want in all suburban
+communities as a discourager of promiscuous wooing. You never lived
+in the country, did you?"
+
+"Not permanently," said the Poet.
+
+[Illustration: "'COURTING HIS BEST GIRL ON SOME OTHER FELLOW'S STONE
+WALL'"]
+
+"Then you are not aware of a singular habit the young country swain has
+of courting his best girl on some other fellow's stone wall after the
+sun goes down," said the Idiot. "Some balmy evening next spring, if
+you'll come up here I'll show you one of the features of suburban life
+that will give you an idea for a poem. That stone wall that runs along
+the front of my place has been the scene of more engagements than I can
+tell you of. Many a time when I have come home late at night I have
+counted as many as ten couples sitting on the cold coping of that wall
+telling each other how beautiful the world is, and holding each other on
+with loving arms."
+
+"Rather an affecting scene, that," said the Poet.
+
+"It was at first," rejoined the Idiot, "and I rather liked to see it.
+Indeed, I once suggested to Mrs. Idiot that we should have the coping
+upholstered, so that they might sit more comfortably. I even wanted to
+put a back along the inner side of it for them to lean against, but
+after a while it palled. We couldn't sit out on our own front porch on
+a summer evening and talk without sentimental interruptions that were
+demoralizing to a sustained conversation. We'd try to talk, for
+instance, about Browning, or Tennyson, or Le Gallienne, or some other
+poet of their class, when we'd be interrupted by such sentiments as,
+'Ess I is,' and 'I's oo ducky,' and 'Ain't de moon boofer?' Then when we
+had guests we never dared to take them out-of-doors, but remained cooped
+up inside the house, because Mrs. Idiot feared to intrude upon the
+sacred right of those ten couples to do their courting comparatively
+unobserved."
+
+"It must have been a nuisance," said the Poet.
+
+"It grew to be so; but I hadn't the heart to stop it, even if I could
+have done so, so I put up a hedge to hide them from view and soften the
+sound of their voices; but it didn't work very long. They didn't seem to
+appreciate my motive, and it so happened that the hedge which I put up
+with the most innocent of intentions was a Japanese quince that blossoms
+out in thorns half an inch long, to an extent which suggests the fretful
+porcupine. These, for some reason or other, excited the animosity of
+my twenty young friends on the wall, and at the end of the season there
+were not two consecutive feet of the hedge that had not been hacked and
+cut to pieces by my indignant but uninvited guests."
+
+"What impudence!" cried the Poet.
+
+"Only the ardor of youth," observed the Idiot, calmly. "Put yourself in
+the same place. Suppose that you, just as you were about to declare your
+undying love for the girl of your choice, and while gently stealing your
+arm about her waist, were to have the back of your hand ripped off by a
+brutal hedge?"
+
+"I see," laughed the Poet. "I dare say I should be indignant."
+
+"They were properly so," said the Idiot, "properly so; and neither Mrs.
+Idiot nor I really blamed them."
+
+[Illustration: "'HOLDING UP A GREAT OSAGE ORANGE'"]
+
+"We let the matter rest, and made no complaint," he continued. "Time
+went on, and the courters became a trifle more assertive. One of them
+came into the house one evening and demanded to know what I meant by
+assaulting him and his lady friend, holding up a great Osage orange
+which he alleged to have been the murderous weapon I had used; and I
+really had to apologize, for I was guilty. It happened that while
+walking about my small preserves I had picked up this orange, which had
+fallen onto my lawn from a tree on Jimpsonberry's place, and had
+unthinkingly tried to see how far I could throw it. It went just over
+the hedge, and had unceremoniously knocked Strephon's hat into the
+middle of next week and frightened Phyllis into hysterics. I was placed
+on the defensive, but for the life of me I couldn't help laughing, with
+the result that Strephon stalked angrily away, alleging that I should
+hear from him further in the matter."
+
+"And did you?" asked the Poet.
+
+"No," said the Idiot, "I never did; but the incident rather soured me
+towards the people who seemed to regard my stone wall as their property.
+I even came to feel like purchasing a gatling-gun and loading it with
+Osage oranges for the purpose of repelling them, but even under this
+provocation I still continued to ignore the matter."
+
+"You are too easy-going," suggested the Poet.
+
+"I was," said the Idiot, "until they began to use the sidewalk that runs
+parallel with the wall as a tablet upon which to inscribe in letters
+of flame their undying affection. One Sunday morning, as Mrs. Idiot and
+I started for church, we were horrified to find our flagstones scribbled
+all over with poetry, done in chalk, after the order of
+
+ "Roses is pink, and violets is blue,
+ Sugar is sweet, and so be you.
+
+[Illustration: "'THE PICTURE OF A HEART WITH AN ARROW DRAWN THROUGH
+IT'"]
+
+"Further along was the picture of a heart with an arrow drawn through
+it, and the two names 'Larry' and 'Mame' written on either side. And one
+unusually affectionate youth had actually cut the initials of his young
+lady and himself in the top of the coping, with a cold-chisel, I
+suspect. It's there yet. It was then my spirit rose up into fierce
+denunciation. That night, when the clans had gathered and were going
+through the initial stages I marched out in front of them, cleared my
+throat ostentatiously, and made a speech. It was the most nervous speech
+I ever made; worse than after-dinner speaking by a good deal. I called
+their attention to how I had suffered: referred pathetically to the
+destruction of the hedge; inveighed sarcastically against the
+Osage-orange man; told them in highly original fashion that worms, if
+taken at the ebb that leads on to fortune, would surely turn and rend
+their persecutors, and that I'd had enough. I forgave them the hedge; I
+forgave them the annoyance they had cost me, but I asserted that I'd see
+them all condemned to eternal celibacy before I would permit my sidewalk
+to be turned into an anthology of love, and my coping into an intaglio
+of eternal blessedness. I requested them if they wished to write poetry
+to write it upon their own hearths, and if they had any inscriptions to
+cut to chip in and buy an obelisk of their own and hieroglyph to their
+hearts' content. I even offered to buy them each a slate and pencil,
+which they might bring with them when they came, upon which to send
+their sentiments down to posterity, and I finished with what I consider
+to be a pleasing perversion of Longfellow's poem on the Woodman, with a
+few lines beginning:
+
+ "Scribbler, spare that sidewalk.
+
+"Then I departed, threatening to have them all arrested."
+
+"Good!" said the Poet. "I didn't think you'd ever do it. You have nerve
+enough, but you are too good-natured."
+
+"I wasn't good-natured then," said the Idiot, regretfully; "and when I
+got through I stalked back into the house, scolded Mollie, sent Tommy to
+bed, and behaved like a bear for the rest of the evening."
+
+"And the people on the wall? They slunk away in despair, I suppose,"
+said the Poet.
+
+[Illustration: "'IT TOOK MY HIRED MAN TWO WEEKS TO SCRUB IT OUT'"]
+
+"Not they," said the Idiot; "not by a long shot. They combined against
+me, and next morning when I started for town I found my sidewalk in
+worse shape than ever. One flag had written upon it the pleasing mandate
+'Go drown yourself.' Another bore the mystic word 'Chump' in great
+capital letters, and at the end of my walk was a pastel portrait of
+myself, of rough and awkward composition, labelled with my name in full.
+It took my hired man two weeks to scrub it out. And on the following
+Hallowe'en they strung a huge banner on my telephone wires, inscribed
+'The Idiot Asylum,' and every blessed gate I have to my name had been
+removed from the premises."
+
+"What an outrage!" cried the Poet.
+
+"Not a bit of it. Merely a suburban ebullition," said the Idiot. "They
+don't mean anything by it. They are mere children, after all, and from
+their point of view I have interfered with their rights."
+
+"And you propose to stand all this?" asked the Poet. "If I were you I'd
+get a pile of broken bottles, as they do in England, and place them
+along the top of that wall so that they couldn't possibly use it."
+
+"Brutal custom, that," said the Idiot. "May do for Englishmen; won't do
+here at all. In the first place, it spoils the appearance of the wall;
+in the second place, it is not efficacious; in the third place, it would
+place me in a false position. Everybody'd soon be asking where I got all
+those bottles. An Englishman drinks enough beer in the course of a week
+to keep his walls covered with broken bottles for a century. I don't,
+and I'm not going to buy bottles. I've got a better scheme."
+
+"Ah!" cried the Poet. "Now we are coming to the invention."
+
+"Merely an extension of my 'Hired-Man-Discourager,'" said the Idiot.
+"Simple, and I trust efficacious. I am going to put a live wire along
+the coping of my wall. Broken bottles are cheap, my dear Poet, but
+they don't work. If I put broken bottles on my wall the Amalgamated
+Brotherhood of Wooers would meet on my lawn and pass resolutions against
+me, and ultimately they would demand the use of my parlor, unless I
+misunderstand their nature.
+
+"The lovers' rights must be respected always, and I'm truly thankful
+that they have stopped short at my frontage. When they operate along my
+frontier-line they are harmless, interesting, even amusing. If they
+carry their principles through and penetrate beyond the edge, why, then
+Mrs. Idiot and I will have to give it up.
+
+"My scheme is to make them feel that they are welcome to the wall, but
+to make the wall--well, to give an element of surprise to the wall. Just
+as Jimpsonberry's man is soon to be surprised electrically, which is
+legitimately, so do I propose to surprise these inconsiderate persons
+who cut down my hedges, who scribble up my sidewalk with their poems,
+and who hang Hallowe'en banners on my telephone wires. I wish them all
+well, but next spring when they attempt to revive the customs of the
+past they will find that even I am resentful."
+
+"But how?"
+
+"I shall have a wire running along the coping, as I have already said,
+that between the hours of eight and twelve p.m. will be so full of
+shocking things that my uninvited guests will cease to bother me. Can
+you imagine the effect of a live wire upon ten loving couples engaged in
+looking at the moon while sitting on it?"
+
+"Yet you claim to insist upon their rights as lovers," said the Poet,
+deprecatingly.
+
+"Certainly I do," said the Idiot. "Man has a right to make love wherever
+he can. If he can't make love on my wall, let him make love somewhere
+else."
+
+"But where?" cried the Poet. "Your swains up here have no home,
+apparently."
+
+"Or Jimpsonberry's wall," said the Idiot. "By the way, do you know
+anything about moths?"
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE MOTH
+
+
+"Do you know anything about the habits of moths?" repeated the Idiot.
+
+"Moths?" echoed the Poet, eying the Idiot closely, the transition from
+live wires to moths proving rather too sudden for his comprehension.
+"No, I don't know anything about moths except that I have heard that
+they are an unmitigated nuisance."
+
+"They are worse than a nuisance," said the Idiot. "They are a devouring
+element, and they are worse than fire. If your house catches fire you
+can summon an engine and have it put out, and what damage it does you
+can collect for if you are careful enough to keep your possessions
+insured; but with the moth it is different. There isn't any moth
+department in town that you can ring up, nor is there a
+moth-extinguisher that you can keep close at hand to fight them with.
+Furthermore, there is no moth-insurance company here or elsewhere to
+protect the man who suffers damage at their teeth, that I know of.
+
+"He is a mean, sneaking, underhanded element, the moth is. Fire has a
+decent sense of the proprieties. Moths have none at all. When fire
+attacks you it smokes, and crackles, and hisses, and roars, and lets you
+know in clarion tones that it has come. The moth steals upon you in the
+dead of night, and chews up your best trousers, gorges himself upon your
+wife's furs, tickles his palate with your swellest flannel golf-shirt,
+munches away upon your handsomest rug, punches holes in your best
+sofa-cushions with his tusks, and then silently folds his tent and
+steals away without so much as a thank-you for his meal. For unmitigated
+meanness commend me to the moth!"
+
+"You seem to speak with feeling," said the Poet, with a smile. "Have you
+suffered?"
+
+[Illustration: "'AN UNPAID GROCER'S BILL BECOMES AN ABSOLUTE PLEASURE'"]
+
+"Suffered?" cried the Idiot. "Suffered is not the word. They have
+tortured me. Alongside of the moth and his nefarious work even a
+book-agent pales into insignificance, and an unpaid grocer's bill
+becomes an absolute pleasure. You can meet a book-agent on his own
+ground, for you know his limitations. I have done so myself. Only
+yesterday one of them called upon me to sell me a Cyclopedia of Cookery,
+and before he got away I had actually sold him a copy of your poems."
+
+"Ah," said the Poet, shaking his head. "You sold my gift, did you?"
+
+"Not a bit of it," laughed the Idiot. "When your book came out I bought
+a copy, and two days later you sent me another with an inscription,
+which I treasure affectionately. I sold him the one I bought."
+
+"You are a beautiful Idiot," said the Poet, slapping his knee
+enthusiastically.
+
+"I don't lay claim so much to beauty as to sublimity," said the Idiot,
+lighting a cigar. "And even that is not to my credit. Beauty and
+sublimity are gifts. No amount of cultivation can produce genius when it
+does not exist. When I see a beautiful woman it is not she that I
+admire. I admire the gracious Hand that made her."
+
+"Give me that idea, old man!" cried the Poet.
+
+"It is yours from this on," said the Idiot, with a sigh. "I am not equal
+to it. I may be able to think thoughts, but thoughts are of no more use
+to me than a piano is to a man who can't read music. But we are becoming
+discursive. We were talking about moths, not thoughts. You said that I
+must have suffered, and I said that I had been tortured, and I have. My
+evening clothes have been ruined by them; my best shirts have been eaten
+by them; my silk hat, in which I have taken much pride, has four bald
+spots on its side because of their insatiable appetite, and as far as I
+can find out, I have no redress. You can't sue a moth for damages, you
+know, with any degree of satisfaction."
+
+"Why should you expect to sue a moth for damages any more than to have a
+mosquito indicted for assault?" suggested the Poet.
+
+"Oh, as for that," said the Idiot, "you can treat the mosquito without
+much difficulty. He merits capital punishment, and if you are yourself
+alert you can squash him at the moment of his crime. But the moth is
+different. You are absolutely helpless in the face of him. He works
+in secret."
+
+"I am told that there are such things as camphor-balls," observed the
+Poet.
+
+"There are," said the Idiot. "And I truly think the moth enjoys them as
+much as a young girl enjoys a military ball. Whenever we give a
+camphor-ball the moths attend, and as far as I can find out dance all
+through it. They seem to enjoy functions of that nature. Furthermore, I
+have yet to meet the man who likes to go about in a suit of clothes that
+smells like a drug-store. I don't. I hate the odor of camphor, and if I
+have my choice of going to a dinner in a perforated dress-suit or in one
+that is redolent of the camphor-ball, I prefer the one with holes in it.
+What I can't understand is why a race as proud as the one to which you
+and I belong should have to knuckle under to an inferior lot of insects
+such as the moth represents."
+
+[Illustration: "'THE LION, THE ELEPHANT, THE TIGER, ALL HAVE THEIR WORK
+TO DO'"]
+
+"I suppose there is something about it that we cannot understand," said
+the Poet, dreamily. "All created things have their uses. The lion, the
+elephant, the tiger, the boa-constrictor, all have their work to do in
+life. Even the mosquito has his mission, whatever it may be. You must
+admit this. Why not, therefore, admit that the moth serves a purpose in
+the great scheme of life?"
+
+"My dear Poet," said the Idiot, "far be it from me to deny the truth of
+what you say. There is hardly a living creature that I have ever
+encountered in all my life that has not had some truly utilitarian
+quality in its make-up. The lion is a splendid creature, and with the
+bear and the fox and the rhinoceros and the tapir he serves a purpose.
+They at least teach boys geography, and teach it interestingly. The boy
+who knows where the tapir hath its lair knows more geography than I do.
+My son Tommy has learned more of geography from a visit to the circus
+where those animals are shown than he ever learned from books. I can
+quite see likewise the utilitarian value of the mosquito. He keeps the
+sea-shore from being overcrowded, and he prevents some people from
+sleeping too much. He is an accomplished vocalist, and from my own point
+of view is superior to a Wagner opera, since Wagner opera puts me to
+sleep, while the magnificent discords of the mosquito keep me awake. But
+the moth is beyond me. What his contribution to the public welfare
+may be I cannot reason out, although I have tried."
+
+"And you find nothing in his favor?" asked the Poet.
+
+"Much," replied the Idiot, "but he has no system. His mission is to eat
+old clothes, but he is such a very disgusting glutton that he does not
+discriminate between old and new, and I have no use for him. If in his
+search for a meal he would choose the garments of three years ago, which
+I ought not to wear because they are so old-fashioned as to make me
+conspicuous when I do wear them, it would be all right. But the moth is
+no such discriminating person. He is not a lover of old vintages. When
+he calls in a number of his brother moths to dine at his expense he does
+not treat them to an overcoat of '89, or to a dress-suit of '93, or to a
+silk hat laid down in '95. He wants the latest thing, and as far as I
+can find out he gets it. I have just been compelled to lay in a new
+stock of under and over clothes because the ones I had have been served
+upon his table."
+
+"The moth must live," observed the Poet.
+
+[Illustration: "'THEY EAT UP MY NEW CLOTHES'"]
+
+[Illustration: "'WASTED MY ENERGY UPON THE UNRESPONSIVE AIR'"]
+
+"I'm perfectly willing he should if he'll only discriminate," retorted
+the Idiot. "We have enough old clothes in this house, my dear Poet, to
+give a banquet of seventeen courses to six hundred moths every night for
+the next six months. If they would content themselves with that I should
+be satisfied. But they won't. They eat up my new clothes; they destroy
+my new hats; they munch away upon my most treasured golf-vests. That is
+why I asked you if you knew anything about moths. I am anxious to reform
+them. As you have said, I have gone into inventing, and my inventions
+are wholly designed to meet long-felt wants in all households. The man
+who invents a scheme to circumvent or properly to satisfy the appetite
+of the moth will find his name indissolubly linked with fame. I have
+thought, and thought, and thought about it. The moth must either be
+domesticated or extinguished. I have tried to extinguish him, but
+without avail. When he has flown forth I have endeavored to punch him in
+the head, and I have wasted my energy upon the unresponsive air. Did you
+ever undertake to punch a moth in the head?"
+
+"Never," said the Poet. "I am not a fighter."
+
+"My dear boy," rejoined the Idiot, "I don't know a hero in real life or
+in fiction who could meet a moth on his own ground. I read about Mr.
+Willie B. Travers, of New York, who can drive four horses about the
+arena at the horse show without turning a hair. I read about Emerson
+McJones, of Boston, putting up his face against the administration on a
+question of national import. I have read of the prowess of Alexander, of
+Caesar, of D'Artagnan, of Bonaparte, and of Teddy Roosevelt, but there
+isn't a man among 'em who can fight the moth. You can bombard him with a
+gatling-gun loaded to the muzzle with camphor-balls, and he still waves
+his banner defiantly in your face. You may lunge at him with a rapier,
+and he jumps lightly aside, and to express his contempt bites a hole in
+your parlor hangings. You can turn the hose on him, and he soars
+buoyantly away out of reach. You can't kill him, because you can't catch
+him. You can't drive him away, and until we go back to the dress of the
+knights of old and wear nickel-plated steel clothing, and live in rooms
+of solid masonry, we can't starve him out. There is, therefore, only one
+thing to do, and that is to domesticate him. If you in the course of
+your investigations into nature have ever discovered any trait in the
+moth that science can lay hold upon, something through which we can
+appeal to his better nature, if he has such a thing, you will be
+conferring a great boon upon the whole domestic world. What I want to
+find out is if he possesses some particularly well-defined taste; if
+there is any one kind of texture or fabric that he likes better than
+another. If there is such a thing I'll have a brand-new suit made of
+that same material especially for him, furnish a nice comfortable, warm
+spot in the attic as a dining-room, and let him feed there forevermore,
+when and how he pleases. The manners and customs of moths are an open
+book to most of us. His tastes are as mysterious as the ocean's depths."
+
+The Poet shook his head dubiously. "I am afraid, my dear Idiot, that you
+have at last tackled a problem that will prove too much for you. How to
+get at the point you desire is, I fear, impossible of discovery," he
+said.
+
+"It would seem so," replied the Idiot. "But I shall not despair. If the
+ordinary cook of commerce can be made humanly intelligent I do not see
+any reason why we should abandon so comparatively simple a proposition
+as the domesticization of the moth."
+
+Tommy and Mollie had been listening with great interest, and as the
+Idiot finished Mollie observed that she thought the best way to do was
+to ask the moth what he liked most, but Tommy had a less conciliatory
+plan.
+
+"Best thing's to get rid of 'em altogether, pa," he said. "Mollie and
+I'll squash 'em for you for fi' cents apiece."
+
+Which struck the Poet as the most practical idea that had been advanced
+during the discussion.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+SOME CONSIDERATION OF THE BURGLAR
+
+
+"Are you ever bothered much by burglars off here in the country?" asked
+Mr. Pedagog one spring afternoon, as he and the Idiot and the youngsters
+strolled about the Idiot's small farm.
+
+"No," said the Idiot. "They've only visited me twice."
+
+"Only twice, eh?" observed the Schoolmaster. "Well, I should think that
+was often enough, considering that you haven't lived here more than a
+year and a half."
+
+"It was," said the Idiot. "I didn't say I wanted them to come again, did
+I?"
+
+"Of course not," returned Mr. Pedagog. "But you said 'only twice,' as if
+two visits of that nature were less than might have been expected."
+
+"Well, aren't they?" asked the Idiot. "Just make a little calculation.
+I've lived on this place precisely five hundred and ninety-four days,
+and, of course, an equal number of nights. It seems to me that in
+breaking into my house only twice when they might have come every night
+shows a degree of restraint upon our Suburban Burglary Company that is
+worthy of the highest commendation. You, of course, refer to
+professional burglars, don't you?"
+
+Mr. Pedagog laughed. "Are there any amateur burglars?"
+
+"Are there!" ejaculated the Idiot. "Well, rather. There is the Gasman,
+and man who inspects the water-meter, and the Iceman, and the Plumber.
+If you refer to that class, why, I have them with me always."
+
+"Which of the two classes do you prefer?" asked Mr. Pedagog, with a
+chuckle.
+
+"Well, I'm not quite sure as to that," returned the Idiot. "I've often
+wondered myself whether I preferred the straight-out honest pirate, who
+does his work surreptitiously by night, and who doesn't pretend to be
+anything but a pirate, or the sleek, insinuating chap, who comes into
+our house by day, and runs up a bill against you which in his heart of
+hearts he knows is not a proper one. There are burglars and burglars in
+this world, Mr. Pedagog, and the one who lands in the penitentiary is
+not always a bigger rascal than the fellow who holds the respect of the
+community and sets himself up as a prominent citizen. Highwaymen may be
+divided into classes, some of them respectable, others not. There was
+Dick Turpin, who ran honest risks to obtain a living; there are men in
+Wall Street who work greater ruin, and are held in higher esteem. There
+is the footpad who takes your watch, and pawns it to buy bread for his
+starving family, and there is the very charming young person who sits
+behind a table at a church fair, and charges you seven dollars for a
+fifty-cent sofa-cushion. So it goes. Socially I prefer the esteemed
+citizen who makes me pay twenty-eight dollars for ten dollars' worth of
+gas; but when it comes down to a strict business basis I must say I have
+lost less money through the operations of the professional thief than
+through those of the amateur highwayman. Take a recent case in my own
+experience, for instance. Only last week I sent anonymously a small
+clock which cost me twenty dollars to a guild fair here in town, and
+Mrs. Idiot bought it for a birthday present for me for forty dollars. In
+other words, I have a twenty-dollar clock on my hands that has cost me
+sixty dollars."
+
+"But you have the satisfaction of knowing that you have contributed to
+the good work of the guild," suggested Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"That is true enough," said the Idiot; "but the guild is only forty
+dollars to the good. They'd have been better off if I had given them
+fifty dollars in cash, and I'd have saved ten."
+
+"But you have the clock," insisted Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I certainly have," replied the Idiot; "and if time is money I shall
+soon be rich, for that clock makes time to beat the band. If it keeps on
+as it has started and we stand by it, we shall soon be about a month
+ahead of the sun. It gains a week every forty-eight hours. If that clock
+were truthful, I should be a centenarian at forty."
+
+"But you're not sorry you gave it?" said Mr. Pedagog, deprecatingly.
+
+"Not at all," said the Idiot. "My only regret is that Mrs. I. bought it.
+But," he added, hastily, "she needn't know that."
+
+"I won't say a word," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I won't, neither, pa," said Tommy, with a degree of complacency which
+showed that the temptation to tell was great.
+
+"Well, I won't say mor'n two or three words about it, anyhow," put in
+Mollie, not anxious to commit herself to perpetual silence on the
+subject.
+
+"It is the most beautiful clock I ever saw," said the Idiot, quickly,
+realizing the possibilities of Mollie's two or three words.
+
+"That's what I fink," said Mollie, "and I'm goin' to tell mamma that you
+said so."
+
+"All right," said the Idiot. "Suppose you and Tommy run right up and
+tell her now."
+
+"I'd rather hear you talk, pa," said Tommy.
+
+"He does take after you, doesn't he?" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot, "he does. He likes to hear me talk as much as I
+do, bless him!"
+
+"It is a commendable sign in a son," observed Mr. Pedagog. "But tell
+about the two professionals. Did they get anything?"
+
+"They did," said the Idiot. "And at the same time I lost nothing. The
+first chap came on the scene, along about two o'clock in the morning. He
+was a very industrious mechanic, and I regret to say he was not
+adequately paid for his services. He tackled the safe." At this point
+the Idiot threw back his head and laughed heartily.
+
+"I have seen the safe," said Mr. Pedagog, "and to tell you the truth, my
+dear Idiot, I have wondered at your choosing so obvious a receptacle for
+your valuables. It does not, to my mind, deny itself as a safe should.
+It advertises the fact that your silver, your wife's jewels perhaps, are
+within. I have spoken once or twice to our friend Mr. Brief about it."
+
+"No doubt," replied the Idiot. "However, I can't see why a safe has any
+disadvantages."
+
+"It lies in this," said Mr. Pedagog, impressively. "You confess at once
+to the burglar the exact location of the things he's after. Without a
+safe your silver, or Mrs. Idiot's jewels, such as they are, might be
+found anywhere in the house. But when you take the trouble to buy a
+safe, any burglar in creation who has ordinary common-sense must know
+that your valuables are concentrated in that one spot."
+
+"That, I rejoice to say," said the Idiot, "is the burglar's view."
+
+"You should not rejoice," said Mr. Pedagog, with some of his old-time
+severity. "You make his work so comparatively easy that he is content to
+follow a base profession, as you have termed it. Truly, I wonder at you.
+You place on your first floor a bald safe--"
+
+"I haven't seen any advertised as having a full head of hair," observed
+the Idiot, complacently.
+
+"You misunderstand me," said Mr. Pedagog. "When I say bald I mean
+evident, plain, obvious. You practically say: Here are the things which
+I value. What is to be found within this safe, Mr. Burglar, _are the
+very things you are after_. Therefore, say you to the burglar: Attack
+this safe. Break it open, rifle it of its contents; in other words, here
+is the swag, as I believe it is called."
+
+"You are wholly right," said the Idiot. "I bought that safe for that
+precise reason, and I bought a big one and a strong one. But you don't
+know the story of that safe, do you, Mr. Pedagog?"
+
+"I do not," said the Schoolmaster.
+
+"Then let me tell you," said the Idiot. "That safe has been broken open,
+and by a professional burglar. The burglar had his tools, and he had
+his expert knowledge of their use. He arrived at my house, as I recall
+the situation, somewhere about--ah--two o'clock at night. He bored at
+the lock until three. He fooled about the combination. He did everything
+that a respectable burglar might be expected to do, and--"
+
+"He failed, of course, since you say you have lost nothing," said Mr.
+Pedagog.
+
+"Not at all," said the Idiot. "After two hours and fifty-five minutes'
+work on that safe he got it open. And--"
+
+"And?" queried Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"He found it empty," said the Idiot; "absolutely empty. There was not a
+spoon, a fork, a tea-pot, or a diamond necklace, or even a scrap of
+paper in it."
+
+"Then why do you have it," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Merely to keep the burglar busy while he is in my house, and to make
+him expert in honest work. An ordinary mechanic, intelligent enough to
+get that safe open by night or by day, would be entitled to at least two
+dollars for his services. The individual involved got it open; and when
+he opened it--"
+
+"Found nothing!" cried Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Exactly," said the Idiot, pulling away on his cigar. "I suppose I
+should have left a check inside payable to bearer for a dollar and a
+half to compensate him for his trouble, but I am so neglectful that I
+really didn't."
+
+"And you bought a safe--"
+
+"Merely to provide employment for the unemployed burglar," said the
+Idiot. "That is all a safe is good for, Mr. Pedagog. Experience has
+shown that the house-safe isn't worth the paint it is covered with in
+the matter of protection. But as a decoy it works to a charm. A safe, in
+other words, is a splendid thing to keep things out of, as well as to
+keep the burglar busy while he is your guest. If our particular visitor
+had not spent all his time breaking the safe open he might have been
+able to locate our spoons."
+
+"It is a pity," said Mr. Pedagog, dryly, "that you did not add to the
+impression the futility of his work made upon his mind a short note of
+admonition indicating to him that he might be in better business."
+
+"My dear Mr. Pedagog," said the Idiot, "that would have been rude.
+Invited or otherwise, the man was a guest in my house, and a note of
+that kind would have savored of sarcasm, or, if not, would have placed
+me in the position of having taken advantage of my guest's weakness to
+be facetious at his expense."
+
+"You take an original view of it," said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Not a bit of it," returned the Idiot. "I got the idea from a Boston
+girl. Once when she and her sister-in-law found themselves alone at
+night in a huge country-house they were suddenly overcome with fear of
+burglars, and rather than run any personal risk from the midnight
+marauder they left a big card on top of the safe inscribed with these
+words: 'Dear Sir,--The combination of this safe is 11-16-91. There is
+nothing in it. If you must have our silver, call at the Shawmut Safe
+Deposit Company, where it is now stored.' The two girls were cousins of
+mine."
+
+The Schoolmaster smiled again. "There must be a streak of your
+particular kind of genius running all through your family," said he.
+
+"True--there is," said the Idiot. "I'm not the only Idiot in my tribe."
+
+"And the second burglar. How about him?" asked Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Oh, he was easy," said the Idiot. "I compromised with him. You see, I
+met him on his way out. I was coming home late, and just as I arrived he
+was leaving. I invited him back, lit the gas in the dining-room, and
+asked him to join me in a bit of cold tongue and a bottle of beer. He
+tried to shuffle out of it, but when I said I preferred to reason with
+him rather than have him arrested he sat down, and we talked the
+situation over. I discovered that for about three hundred dollars' worth
+of my stuff that he had in a bag slung over his shoulder he might get as
+much as fifty dollars, and at great risk. I showed him how foolish that
+was, and offered to give him forty dollars if he'd leave the stuff, so
+saving me two hundred and sixty dollars, and avoiding all trouble for
+himself. He didn't like it at first, but under the genial influence of
+the beer and the cold tongue and my conversation he finally yielded, and
+walked out of my house with a check drawn to bearer for forty dollars in
+his pocket."
+
+"I am astonished at you!" cried Mr. Pedagog. "You compounded a felony."
+
+"Not exactly," said the Idiot. "I should have done so if I hadn't
+stopped payment on the check the next day."
+
+"Oh," said Mr. Pedagog, "I see!"
+
+"All I lost was the revenue-stamp on the check," said the Idiot.
+
+"And did you ever hear from the man again?"
+
+"Yes," observed the Idiot. "I met him on the train a day or two
+later--sat next to him in the smoking-car, in fact."
+
+"And did he know you?"
+
+"Yes. We had a very pleasant chat going to town. He said he was moving
+away from here. He couldn't stand it, he said. He was going to work in
+some new field where a man could get living pay for his work. Said he'd
+been robbed by some of our best people; what's the use of working for
+nothing? he asked. The poor man was kept down, and all that sort of
+talk."
+
+"And you parted friends?"
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "I felt rather sorry for him, and when he said
+good-bye I gave him a cigar and a five-dollar bill, and that was the end
+of him. I have since received a letter from him in which he said that my
+kindness was appreciated, and that I could leave my valuables out on the
+lawn all night hereafter with perfect impunity. 'There isn't a thief in
+our whole suburban gang would be mean enough to touch it after your
+kindness to me,' he wrote."
+
+"Extraordinary!" said Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Very," said the Idiot. "Nevertheless, I have not taken his hint about
+leaving my silver out-of-doors, and have worked as hard as ever on my
+patent burglar-alarm."
+
+"Oh, indeed! Have you a new idea in that line?" asked the Schoolmaster.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot. "It is wholly novel. It is designed to alarm the
+burglar, and not scare the people in the house. Did you ever hear of
+anything like that before?"
+
+"Never!" ejaculated Mr. Pedagog, with enthusiasm. "How is it to work?"
+
+"That," said the Idiot, "is what I am trying to find out. When I do I'll
+let you know, Doctor."
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+ MR. AND MRS. IDIOT
+ REQUEST THE PLEASURE OF YOUR COMPANY
+ AT DINNER
+ ON THURSDAY EVENING, May 31, 1900
+ AT HALF-AFTER SEVEN O'CLOCK
+ R.S.V.P. LAST CALL
+
+Handsomely engraved, a card bearing the above inscription was sent about
+the middle of May to all the Idiot's old friends of Mrs.
+Smithers-Pedagog's select home for gentlemen, and it is needless to say
+that they all accepted.
+
+"I wonder what the dickens he means by 'Last Call,'" said Mr. Brief to
+the Genial Old Gentleman who occasionally imbibed. "Sounds like the
+warning of the dining-car porter on a Pullman train."
+
+"I'm sure I can't imagine," said the other; "and what's more, I'm
+content to wait and find out. Of course you are going?"
+
+"I am, indeed," said Mr. Brief. "I'd travel farther than that for the
+pleasure of an hour with the dear old boy, and particularly now that he
+has so good a cook. Dined there lately?"
+
+"Yes," said the Genial Old Gentleman.
+
+"Had any of those mulled sardines he gives you Sunday nights?"
+
+"More than was good for me. Ain't they fine?" said the Genial Old
+Gentleman, smacking his lips ecstatically.
+
+"Immense!" said Mr. Brief. "A cook that can mull sardines like that is
+worth her weight in gold. Where do you suppose he got her?"
+
+"Why, he married her!" cried the Genial Old Gentleman, promptly. "Mrs.
+Idiot cooks those herself, on the chafing-dish. Didn't you know that?"
+
+"No," said Mr. Brief. "I happened in late Sunday night, and we had 'em.
+They were so awfully good I didn't do a thing but eat, and forgot to
+ask who cooked 'em."
+
+"It's the way of the world," sighed the Genial Old Gentleman. "We old
+bachelors have to get along on what comes to us, but the energetic chap
+who goes out into the world and marries the right sort of a woman--Jove,
+what a lucky chap he is!"
+
+"There's some truth in that," agreed Mr. Brief; "but, on the whole, just
+think what a terrible thing it would be to marry a bad cook, and to have
+to eat everything she prepared with an outward show of delight just to
+keep peace in the family."
+
+"That's your cautious lawyer's view of it," said the Genial Old
+Gentleman.
+
+"Why the deuce don't you get married yourself, then," said Mr. Brief.
+"If you feel that way--"
+
+"I don't want to," said the Genial Old Gentleman. "Fact is, Brief, old
+man, all I should ever marry for would be the comfort of a home, and I
+can always get that by going up to the Idiot's."
+
+The other invited guests were no less perplexed by the final words of
+the Idiot's invitation, and with the pleasure of accepting was mingled
+an agreeable curiosity to know what was meant by "Last Call." The
+evening came, and all were present. It was a goodly company, and by
+special favor the children were allowed to sit up and partake; and, what
+was more, Mary, the housemaid of the old days, assisted in the serving
+of the dinner.
+
+"Seems like old times," said Mr. Whitechoker, beaming at Mrs. Pedagog
+and smiling pleasantly at Mary. "I shall almost expect our host to be
+sarcastic."
+
+"Sarcasm, Mr. Whitechoker," said the Idiot, unfolding his napkin, "is
+all right in its place, but as I have grown older I haven't found that
+having given rein to it I was happier afterwards. Sometimes, no doubt,
+Mrs. Pedagog has thought me rude--"
+
+"Never!" said the ancient landlady.
+
+"Well, there's something worse than having others think you rude," said
+the Idiot. "That's realizing yourself that you have been so, and I hope
+Mrs. Pedagog will accept here and now an apology--a blanket
+apology--which shall cover a multitude of past sins."
+
+"My dear Idiot," said Mrs. Pedagog, "do you know how I have always
+thought of you?"
+
+"As a son," said Mr. Pedagog. "And I have felt towards you as a father."
+
+"I wonder you didn't give me a thrashing once in a while, then," said
+the Idiot.
+
+"We have often wished to," observed Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"John!" cried Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"Well, _I_ have," said Mr. Pedagog. "Mrs. Pedagog has all the amiable
+weakness of a woman towards her naughty boy. Spank him next time, not
+this."
+
+Everybody laughed, and the Idiot rose from his place and walked to Mrs.
+Pedagog's side and kissed her.
+
+"You're a nice old mommie," he said, "and the naughty boy loves you.
+He'll be hanged if he'll kiss his daddy, though!" he added, with a
+glance at Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"I will," said Mollie; and she did so.
+
+The old Schoolmaster returned the little girl's salute with emphasis.
+
+"Bless you, little one!" he said, huskily. "I love you even as I loved
+your papa."
+
+"I'm a-goin' to kiss everybody," said Tommy; and he started in with Mary
+and put his little scheme through to the bitter end. "What are we going
+to have for dessert?" he added, complacently, as he resumed his seat.
+
+"Idiot," said Mr. Brief, when the third course had been served, "what do
+you mean by 'Last Call?'"
+
+"We are going to give up housekeeping," said the Idiot.
+
+"No trouble, I hope," said Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"Lots!" ejaculated the Idiot. "But not very troublesome troubles. The
+fact is we intend to travel."
+
+"To travel, eh?" said the Genial Old Gentleman. "Where?"
+
+"Abroad," replied the Idiot. "We have never been abroad, you know. I've
+been abroad, and Mrs. Idiot has been abroad, but _we_ have never been
+abroad. We are going together this time, and we are going to take the
+children, and for a year we propose to see Europe under the most
+favorable conditions. I think that abroad will seem a little different
+if we go together."
+
+"Undoubtedly," said Mr. Whitechoker. "But London is a cold, godless
+place."
+
+"It is if you go alone," said the Idiot.
+
+"And Paris is vile," suggested Mr. Brief.
+
+"To the man who has only himself to think of," said the Idiot.
+
+"And Italy is dirty," said the Bibliomaniac.
+
+"There's water in Venice," observed the Idiot. "Not very clean water, to
+be sure, but wet enough to wash the edges of the sidewalks."
+
+"And travel is uncomfortable," observed the Poet.
+
+"Admitted," said the Idiot. "Travel is about the hardest work and the
+worst-paid work I know of, but we cannot help ourselves. Now that we are
+rich we must accept the penalties imposed by modern society upon the
+wealthy. You never knew a rich man to lead a comfortable life, did you,
+Mr. Pedagog?"
+
+"There are few of them who seem to know how," admitted the Schoolmaster.
+"But--you do."
+
+"No doubt," said the Idiot. "But you see I do not wish to be
+ostentatiously different from my kind, so having made a fortune I am
+going to live as people of fortune do and be as uncomfortable as I know
+how."
+
+"I don't understand about this fortune," said Mr. Brief. "Have you run
+up against a rich uncle somewhere, or is this sudden wealth the result
+of your inventions, concerning which we have heard so much lately?"
+
+"Neither," replied the Idiot. "The fact is, I made an investment some
+years ago in a certain stock, for which I paid twenty-three. I sold it
+three weeks ago for one hundred and sixty-three, clearing one hundred
+and forty dollars each on a thousand shares."
+
+The Poet gasped.
+
+"One hundred and forty thousand dollars profit!" cried Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"Yes," said the Idiot, calmly, "that's about the size of it. Terrible,
+isn't it? Here I was a happy man; content to stay at home and toil eight
+hours a day for a small stipend; living in tolerable comfort, and
+nothing to worry over. All of a sudden this thing happens, and like all
+other men of wealth I must become a wanderer. I shudder to think of what
+might have happened if I'd made a million; I shouldn't have had a home
+at all then."
+
+The guests looked at their host with amazement. To most of them he had
+reached the supreme moment of his idiocy.
+
+"Ahem!" said the Poet. "I fail to see why."
+
+"Look at the ways of the millionaire and you'll see," observed the
+Idiot, suavely. "Given his million he gives up his house and builds
+himself a small, first-class hotel in some big city, which for the
+greater part of the year is occupied by servants. He next erects a
+country palace at Lenox or at Newport. This he calls a cottage, though
+it usually looks more like a public library or a hospital or a
+club-house. Then he builds himself a camp, with stained-glass windows,
+in the Adirondacks, and has to float a small railroad in order to get
+himself and his wife's trunks into camp. Shortly after these follows a
+bungalow modelled after a French chateau, somewhere in the South, and
+then a yacht warranted to cross the ocean in ten days, and to produce
+sea-sickness twelve hours sooner than the regular ocean-steamer, becomes
+one of the necessities of life. Result, he never lives anywhere. To
+occupy all his residences, camps, and bungalows he has to keep eternally
+on the move, and when he thinks he needs a trip to Europe he has his
+yacht got ready and sends it over, going himself on a fast steamer. He
+meets his yacht at Southampton, and orders the captain to proceed
+directly to some Mediterranean port, going himself, meanwhile, to
+London. After a month of London he goes to Paris, and thence to the
+Mediterranean port, where, after steaming aboard of the yacht for three
+or four days, he sends the boat back to New York and returns himself by
+the regular liner. Oh, it's a terrible thing to be a millionaire and
+have nowhere to lay one's head, with every poorer man envying you, many
+hating you, and hands raised against you everywhere."
+
+There was a pause, and the assembled company properly expressed their
+appreciation of the millionaire's hard lot by silence.
+
+"The scheme has its advantages," observed Mrs. Idiot.
+
+"Some," said the Idiot. "But think, my dear, of the town house with
+thirty-nine servants; the Newport house with thirty-four; the camp with
+sixty, including gamekeepers and guides; the bungalow with thirty more,
+and the yacht with a captain, a crew, stewards, stewardesses, and a cook
+you can't get away from without jumping overboard. Just think how that
+would multiply your troubles. You would come to me from time to time and
+ask me how I could expect you to discharge seven butlers and four cooks
+in one morning, and no doubt you'd request me sometimes to stop in at
+the intelligence office on my way home and employ a dozen housemaids for
+you."
+
+"But you would have a manager for all this," suggested Mrs. Pedagog.
+
+"That's the point," observed the Idiot. "We'd have to have a manager,
+and for my part I shouldn't relish being managed. What chance would Mrs.
+Idiot have against a manager ahead of an army of servants of such
+magnitude? We have more than we can keep in subjection as we stand now,
+with this one small house. If it wasn't for Mary, who keeps an eye on
+things, I don't know what we should do."
+
+"Well, I am glad you're rich, pa," said Tommy; "you can increase my
+allowance."
+
+"And I can have a pony," lisped Mollie.
+
+"Alas! Poor children!" cried the Idiot. "That is the saddest part of
+wealth. Instead of bringing the little ones up ourselves, to be wholly
+fashionable it will be necessary to sublet the contract to a committee
+of tutors and governesses. The obligations of social life hereafter will
+require that we meet our children by appointment only, and that when
+they dine they shall eat in solitary grandeur until they become so
+polished in manners that their parents may once more formally welcome
+them at table. All the good old democratic ways of the domestic republic
+are now to be set aside. Tommy, instead of yelling for a buckwheat-cake
+at the top of his lungs, upon our return will request a butler in
+choicest French to hand him a _pate de foie gras_; and dear little
+Mollie will have to give up attracting the waitress' attention by shying
+an olive-pit at her and imperiously summon her by means of an electric
+buzzer set to buzzing with her toe."
+
+"Mercy! What a picture of woe!" cried Mr. Pedagog.
+
+"Not altogether true, is it?" suggested the Doctor.
+
+"Have you ever visited Newport?" asked the Idiot.
+
+"No," said the Doctor, "never."
+
+"Well, don't," said the Idiot, "unless you wish to look upon that
+picture--a picture of life whence childhood is abolished; where _blase_
+little swells take the place of lively small boys, and diminutive grand
+duchesses, clad in regal garb, have supplanted the little daughters who
+bring smiles and sunshine into the life of the common people. Ah, my
+friends," the Idiot continued, with a shake of his head, "there are sad
+sights to be seen in this world, but I know of none sadder than those
+rich little scions of the American aristocracy in whose veins the good
+red blood of a not very remote ancestry has turned blue through too much
+high living and too little real living."
+
+"I should think you'd take that hundred and forty thousand dollars and
+throw it into the sea," said Mr. Brief.
+
+"That would be wicked waste," observed the Idiot. "I propose to use it
+to win back the good old home-life, and the best way to perpetuate that
+is to leave it for a time and travel. When you have travelled and seen
+how uncomfortable others are, and discovered how uncomfortable you are
+while travelling, nothing can exceed the bliss of getting back to the
+first simple principles of the real home."
+
+"As a sensible man, why don't you stay here, then?" queried the Poet.
+
+"Because," said the Idiot, "if I stayed here with that hundred and forty
+thousand dollars on my mind I should nurse it, and in a short while I'd
+become a millionaire, and such a misfortune as that I shall never
+invite. We shall go abroad and spend--"
+
+"Not all of it, I hope?" said Mr. Whitechoker.
+
+"No," replied the Idiot. "But enough of it to mitigate the horrors of
+our condition while absent."
+
+And so it was that Castle Idiot was closed, and that for a time at least
+"The Idiot at Home" became a thing of the past. Wherever he and his
+small family may be, may I not bespeak for him the kindly, even
+affectionate, esteem of those who have followed him with me through
+these pages? He has his faults; they are many and manifest, for he has
+never shown the slightest disposition to conceal them, but, as Mrs.
+Pedagog remarked to me the other night, "He has a large heart, and it is
+in the right place. If he only wouldn't talk so much!"
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+By MARK TWAIN
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE MAN THAT CORRUPTED HADLEYBURG, AND OTHER STORIES AND ESSAYS.
+Illustrated by LUCIUS HITCHCOCK and Others.
+
+THE AMERICAN CLAIMANT, AND OTHER STORIES AND SKETCHES.
+
+THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN. With Photogravure Portrait of the
+Author.
+
+A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT.
+
+THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER.
+
+LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI.
+
+TOM SAWYER ABROAD; TOM SAWYER, DETECTIVE; AND OTHER STORIES, ETC., ETC.
+
+ _New Library Edition from New Electrotype Plates. Illustrated.
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