summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--6313.txt5196
-rw-r--r--6313.zipbin0 -> 104538 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
5 files changed, 5212 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/6313.txt b/6313.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2788930
--- /dev/null
+++ b/6313.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,5196 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Masterpieces Of American Wit And Humor
+Edited by Thomas L. Masson
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Masterpieces Of American Wit And Humor
+
+Author: Thomas L. Masson (Editor)
+
+Release Date: August, 2004 [EBook #6313]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on November 25, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MASTERPIECES OF AMERICAN WIT ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Duncan Harrod, Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Mark Twain]
+
+MASTERPIECES OF AMERICAN WIT AND HUMOR
+
+Edited by Thomas L. Masson
+
+Volume IV
+
+By
+
+Fitzhugh Ludlow
+Harriet Beecher Stowe
+Danforth Marble
+William Dean Howells
+Samuel Minturn Peck
+William Cullen Bryant
+and others
+
+1903
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+AGNES REPPLIER
+A Plea for Humor
+
+MARIETTA HOLLEY
+An Unmarried Female
+
+FITZHUGH LUDLOW
+Selections from a Brace of Boys
+
+ROBERT JONES BURDETTE
+Rheumatism Movement Cure
+
+OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES
+An Aphorism and a Lecture
+
+JOSHUA S. MORRIS
+The Harp of a Thousand Strings
+
+SEBA SMITH
+My First Visit to Portland
+
+WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT
+The Mosquito
+
+JOHN CARVER
+Country Burial-places
+
+DANFORTH MARBLE
+The Hoosier and the Salt-pile
+
+ANNE BACHE
+The Quilting
+
+FITZ-GREENE HALLECK
+A Fragment
+
+Domestic Happiness
+
+CHARLES F. BROWNE ("Artemus Ward")
+One of Mr. Ward's Business Letters
+
+On "Forts"
+
+JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
+Without and Within
+
+LOUISA MAY ALCOTT
+Street Scenes in Washington
+
+ALBERT BIGELOW PAINE
+Mis' Smith
+
+JAMES JEFFREY ROOHE
+A Boston Lullaby
+
+CHARLES GRAHAM HALPINE
+Irish Astronomy
+
+SAMUEL MINTURN PEOK
+Bessie Brown, M. D.
+
+ROBERT C. SANDS
+A Monody
+
+CAROLYN WELLS
+The Poster Girl
+
+JAMES GARDNER SANDERSON
+The Conundrum of the Golf Links
+
+HARRIET BEECHER STOWE
+The Minister's Wooing
+
+WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS
+Mrs. Johnson
+
+ANONYMOUS
+The Trout, the Cat and the Fox The British Matron
+
+
+
+
+Agnes Repplier
+
+A PLEA FOR HUMOR
+
+
+More than half a dozen years have passed since Mr. Andrew Lang,
+startled for once out of his customary light-heartedness, asked
+himself, and his readers, and the ghost of Charles Dickens--all three
+powerless to answer--whether the dismal seriousness of the present
+day was going to last forever; or whether, when the great wave of
+earnestness had rippled over our heads, we would pluck up heart to be
+merry and, if needs be, foolish once again. Not that mirth and folly
+are in any degree synonymous, as of old; for the merry fool, too
+scarce, alas! even in the times when Jacke of Dover hunted for him in
+the highways, has since then grown to be rarer than a phenix. He has
+carried his cap and bells and jests and laughter elsewhere, and has
+left us to the mercies of the serious fool, who is by no means so
+seductive a companion. If the Cocquecigrues are in possession of the
+land, and if they are tenants exceedingly hard to evict, it is
+because of the encouragement they receive from those to whom we
+innocently turn for help: from the poets, novelists and men of
+letters whose duty it is to brighten and make glad our days.
+
+"It is obvious," sighs Mr. Birrell dejectedly, "that many people
+appear to like a drab-colored world, hung around with dusky shreds of
+philosophy"; but it is more obvious still that, whether they like it
+or not, the drapings grow a trifle dingier every year, and that no
+one seems to have the courage to tack up something gay. What is much
+worse, even those bits of wanton color which have rested generations
+of weary eyes are being rapidly obscured by somber and intricate
+scroll-work, warranted to oppress and fatigue. The great masterpieces
+of humor, which have kept men young by laughter, are being tried in
+the courts of an orthodox morality and found lamentably wanting; or
+else, by way of giving them another chance, they are being subjected
+to the _peine forte et dure_ of modern analysis, and are revealing
+hideous and melancholy meanings in the process. I have always believed
+that Hudibras owes its chilly treatment at the hands of critics--with
+the single and most genial exception of Sainte-Beuve--to the absolute
+impossibility of twisting it into something serious. Strive as we may,
+we cannot put a new construction on those vigorous old jokes, and to
+be simply and barefacedly amusing is no longer considered a sufficient
+_raison d'etre_. It is the most significant token of our ever-
+increasing "sense of moral responsibility in literature" that we
+should be always trying to graft our own conscientious purposes upon
+those authors who, happily for themselves, lived and died before
+virtue, colliding desperately with cakes and ale, had imposed such
+depressing obligations.
+
+"'Don Quixote,'" says Mr. Shorthouse with unctuous gravity, "will
+come in time to be recognized as one of the saddest books ever
+written"; and, if the critics keep on expounding it much longer, I
+truly fear it will. It may be urged that Cervantes himself was low
+enough to think it exceedingly funny; but then one advantage of our
+new and keener insight into literature is to prove to us how
+indifferently great authors understood their own masterpieces.
+Shakespeare, we are told, knew comparatively little about "Hamlet,"
+and he is to be congratulated on his limitations. Defoe would hardly
+recognize "Robinson Crusoe" as "a picture of civilization," having
+innocently supposed it to be quite the reverse; and he would be as
+amazed as we are to learn from Mr. Frederic Harrison that his book
+contains "more psychology, more political economy, and more
+anthropology than are to be found in many elaborate treatises on
+these especial subjects"--blighting words which I would not even
+venture to quote if I thought that any boy would chance to read them
+and so have one of the pleasures of his young life destroyed. As for
+"Don Quixote," which its author persisted in regarding with such
+misplaced levity, it has passed through many bewildering
+vicissitudes. It has figured bravely as a satire on the Duke of
+Lerma, on Charles V., on Philip II., on Ignatius Loyola-Cervantes was
+the most devout of Catholics--and on the Inquisition, which,
+fortunately, did not think so. In fact, there is little or nothing
+which it has not meant in its time; and now, having attained that
+deep spiritual inwardness which we have been recently told is lacking
+in poor Goldsmith, we are requested by Mr. Shorthouse to refrain from
+all brutal laughter, but, with a shadowy smile and a profound
+seriousness, to attune ourselves to the proper state of receptivity.
+Old-fashioned, coarse-minded people may perhaps ask, "But if we are
+not to laugh at 'Don Quixote,' at whom are we, please, to laugh?"--a
+question which I, for one, would hardly dare to answer. Only, after r
+eading the following curious sentence, extracted from a lately
+published volume of criticism, I confess to finding myself in a state
+of mental perplexity utterly alien to mirth. "How much happier," its
+author sternly reminds us, "was poor Don Quixote in his energetic
+career, in his earnest redress of wrong, and in his ultimate triumph
+over self, than he could have been in the gnawing reproach and
+spiritual stigma which a yielding to weakness never failingly
+entails!" Beyond this point it would be hard to go. Were these things
+really spoken of the "ingenious gentleman" of La Mancha or of John
+Howard or George Peabody or perhaps Elizabeth Fry--or is there no
+longer such a thing as recognized absurdity In the world?
+
+Another gloomy indication of the departure of humor from our midst is
+the tendency of philosophical writers to prove by analysis that, if
+they are not familiar with the thing itself, they at least know of
+what it should consist. Mr. Shorthouse's depressing views about "Don
+Quixote" are merely introduced as illustrating a very scholarly and
+comfortless paper on the subtle qualities of mirth. No one could deal
+more gracefully and less humorously with his topic than does Mr.
+Shorthouse, and we are compelled to pause every now and then and
+reassure ourselves as to the subject matter of his eloquence.
+Professor Everett has more recently and more cheerfully defined for
+us the Philosophy of the Comic, in a way which, if it does not add to
+our gaiety, cannot be accused of plunging us deliberately into gloom.
+He thinks, indeed--and small wonder--that there is "a genuine
+difficulty in distinguishing between the comic and the tragic," and
+that what we need is some formula which shall accurately interpret
+the precise qualities of each, and he is disposed to illustrate his
+theory by dwelling on the tragic side of Falstaff, which is, of all
+injuries, the grimmest and hardest to forgive. Falstaff is now the
+forlorn hope of those who love to laugh, and when he is taken away
+from us, as soon, alas! he will be, and sleeps with Don Quixote in
+the "dull cold marble" of an orthodox sobriety, how shall we make
+merry our souls? Mr. George Radford, who enriched the first volume of
+"Obiter dicta" with such a loving study of the fat-witted old knight,
+tells us reassuringly that by laughter man is distinguished from the
+beasts, though the cares and sorrows of life have all but deprived
+him of this elevating grace and degraded him into a brutal solemnity.
+Then comes along a rare genius like Falstaff, who restores the power
+of laughter, and transforms the stolid brute once more into a man,
+and who accordingly has the highest claim to our grateful and
+affectionate regard. That there are those who persist in looking upon
+him as a selfish and worthless fellow is, from Mr. Radford's point of
+view, a sorrowful instance of human thanklessness and perversity. But
+this I take to be the enamored and exaggerated language of a too
+faithful partizan. Morally speaking, Falstaff has not a leg to stand
+upon, and there is a tragic element lurking always amid the fun. But,
+seen in the broad sunlight of his transcendent humor, this shadow is
+as the halfpennyworth of bread to his own noble ocean of sack, and
+why should we be forever trying to force it into prominence? When
+Charlotte Bronte advised her friend Ellen Nussey to read none of
+Shakespeare's comedies, she was not beguiled for a moment into
+regarding them as serious and melancholy lessons of life; but with
+uncompromising directness put them down as mere improper plays, the
+amusing qualities of which were insufficient to excuse their
+coarseness, and which were manifestly unfit for the "gentle Ellen's"
+eyes.
+
+In fact, humor would at all times have been the poorest excuse to
+offer to Miss Bronte for any form of moral dereliction, for it was
+the one quality she lacked herself and failed to tolerate in others.
+Sam Weller was apparently as obnoxious to her as was Falstaff, for
+she would not even consent to meet Dickens when she was being
+lionized in London society--a degree of abstemiousness on her part
+which it is disheartening to contemplate. It does not seem too much
+to say that every shortcoming in Charlotte Bronte's admirable work,
+every limitation in her splendid genius, arose primarily from her
+want of humor. Her severities of judgment--and who more severe than
+she?--were due to the same melancholy cause; for humor is the
+kindliest thing alive. Compare the harshness with which she handles
+her hapless curates and the comparative crudity of her treatment,
+with the surprising lightness of Miss Austen's touch as she rounds
+and completes her immortal clerical portraits. Miss Bronte tells us,
+in one of her letters, that she regarded _all_ curates as
+"highly uninteresting, narrow, and unattractive specimens of the
+coarser sex," just as she found _all_ the Belgian schoolgirls
+"cold, selfish, animal and inferior." But to Miss Austen's keen and
+friendly eye the narrowest of clergymen was not wholly uninteresting,
+the most inferior of schoolgirls not without some claim to our
+consideration; even the coarseness of the male sex was far from
+vexing her maidenly serenity, probably because she was unacquainted
+with the Rochester type. Mr. Elton is certainly narrow, Mary Bennet
+extremely inferior; but their authoress only laughs at them softly,
+with a quiet tolerance and a good-natured sense of amusement at their
+follies. It was little wonder that Charlotte Bronte, who had at all
+times the courage of her convictions, could not and would not read
+Jane Austen's novels. "They have not got story enough for me," she
+boldly affirmed. "I don't want my blood curdled, but I like to have
+it stirred. Miss Austen strikes me as milk-and-watery and, to say
+truth, dull." Of course she did! How was a woman, whose ideas of
+after-dinner conversation are embodied in the amazing language of
+Baroness Ingram and her titled friends to appreciate the delicious,
+sleepy small-talk in "Sense and Sensibility," about the respective
+heights of the respective grandchildren? It is to Miss Bronte's
+abiding lack of humor that we owe such stately caricatures as Blanche
+Ingram and all the high-born, ill-bred company who gather in
+Thornfield Hall, like a group fresh from Madame Tussaud's ingenious
+workshop, and against whose waxen unreality Jane Eyre and Rochester,
+alive to their very finger-tips, contrast like twin sparks of fire.
+It was her lack of humor, too, which beguiled her into asserting that
+the forty "wicked, sophistical and immoral French novels" which found
+their way down to lonely Haworth gave her "a thorough idea of France
+and Paris"--alas! poor, misjudged France!--and which made her think
+Thackeray very nearly as wicked, sophistical and immoral as the
+French novels. Even her dislike for children was probably due to the
+same irremediable misfortune; for the humors of children are the only
+redeeming points amid their general naughtiness and vexing
+misbehavior. Mr. Swinburne, guiltless himself of any jocose
+tendencies, has made the unique discovery that Charlotte Bronte
+strongly resembles Cervantes, and that Paul Emanuel is a modern
+counterpart of Don Quixote; and well it is for our poet that the
+irascible little professor never heard him hint at such a similarity.
+Surely, to use one of Mr. Swinburne's own incomparable expressions,
+the parallel is no better than a "subsimious absurdity."
+
+On the other hand, we are told that Miss Austen owed her lively sense
+of humor to her habit of dissociating the follies of mankind from any
+rigid standard of right and wrong; which means, I suppose, that she
+never dreamed she had a mission. Nowadays, indeed, no writer is
+without one. We cannot even read a paper upon gypsies and not become
+aware that its author is deeply imbued with a sense of his personal
+responsibility for these agreeable rascals whom he insists upon our
+taking seriously as if we wanted to have anything to do with them on
+such terms! "Since the time of Carlyle," says Mr. Bagehot,
+"earnestness has been a favorite virtue in literature"; but Oarlyle,
+though sharing largely in that profound melancholy which he declared
+to be the basis of every English soul, and though he was unfortunate
+enough to think Pickwick sad trash, had nevertheless a grim and
+eloquent humor of his own. With him, at least, earnestness never
+degenerated into dulness; and while dulness may be, as he
+unhesitatingly affirmed, the first requisite for a great and free
+people, yet a too heavy percentage of this valuable quality is fatal
+to the sprightly grace of literature. "In our times," said an old
+Scotchwoman, "there's fully mony modern principles," and the first of
+these seems to be the substitution of a serious and critical
+discernment for the light-hearted sympathy of former days. Our
+grandfathers cried a little and laughed a good deal over their books,
+without the smallest sense of anxiety or responsibility in the
+matter; but we are called on repeatedly to face problems which we
+would rather let alone, to dive dismally into motives, to trace
+subtle connections, to analyze uncomfortable sensations, and to
+exercise in all cases a discreet and conscientious severity, when
+what we really want and need is half an hour's amusement. There is no
+stronger proof of the great change that has swept over mankind than
+the sight of a nation which used to chuckle over "Tom Jones"
+absorbing a few years ago countless editions of "Robert Elsmer
+e." What is droller still is that the people who read "Robert
+Elsmere" would think it wrong to enjoy "Tom Jones," and that the
+people who enjoyed "Tom Jones" would have thought it wrong to read
+"Robert Elsmere"; and that the people who, wishing to be on the safe
+side of virtue, think it wrong to read either, are scorned greatly as
+lacking true moral discrimination.
+
+Now he would be a brave man who would undertake to defend the utterly
+indefensible literature of the past. Where it was most humorous it
+was also most coarse, wanton and cruel; but, in banishing these
+objectionable qualities, we have effectually contrived to rid
+ourselves of the humor as well, and with it we have lost one of the
+safest instincts of our souls. Any book which serves to lower the sum
+of human gaiety is a moral delinquent; and instead of coddling it
+into universal notice and growing owlish in its gloom, we should put
+it briskly aside in favor of brighter and pleasanter things. When
+Father Faber said that there was no greater help to a religious life
+than a keen sense of the ridiculous, he startled a number of pious
+people, yet what a luminous and cordial message it was to help us on
+our way! Mr. Birrell has recorded the extraordinary delight with
+which he came across some after-dinner sally of the Reverend Henry
+Martyn's; for the very thought of that ardent and fiery spirit
+relaxing into pleasantries over the nuts and wine made him appear
+like an actual fellow-being of our own. It is with the same feeling
+intensified, as I have already noted, that we read some of the
+letters of the early fathers--those grave and hallowed figures seen
+through a mist of centuries--and find them jesting at one another in
+the gayest and least sacerdotal manner imaginable. "Who could tell a
+story with more wit, who could joke so pleasantly?" sighs St. Gregory
+of Nazienzen of his friend St. Basil, remembering doubtless with a
+heavy heart the shafts of good-humored raillery that had brightened
+their lifelong intercourse. With what kindly and loving zest does
+Gregory, himself the most austere of men, mock at Basil's
+asceticism--at those "sad and hungry banquets" of which he was
+invited to partake, those "ungarden-like gardens, void of pot-herbs,"
+in which he was expected to dig! With what delightful alacrity does
+Basil vindicate his reputation for humor by making a most excellent
+joke in court, for the benefit of a brutal magistrate who fiercely
+threatened to tear out his liver! "Your intention is a benevolent
+one," said the saint, who had been for years a confirmed invalid.
+"Where it is now located, it has given me nothing but trouble."
+Surely, as we read such an anecdote as this, we share in the curious
+sensation experienced by little Tom Tulliver, when, by dint of
+Maggie's repeated questions, he began slowly to understand that the
+Romance had once been real men, who were happy enough to speak their
+own language without any previous introduction to the Eton grammar.
+In like manner, when we come to realize that the fathers of the
+primitive church enjoyed their quips and cranks and jests as much as
+do Mr. Trollope's jolly deans or vicars, we feel we have at last
+grasped the secret of their identity, and we appreciate the force of
+Father Faber's appeal to the frank spirit of a wholesome mirth.
+
+Perhaps one reason for the scanty tolerance that humor receives at
+the hands of the disaffected is because of the rather selfish way in
+which the initiated enjoy their fun; for there is always a secret
+irritation about a laugh in which we cannot join. Mr. George
+Saintsbury is plainly of this way of thinking, and, being blessed
+beyond his fellows with a love for all that is jovial, he speaks from
+out of the richness of his experience. "Those who have a sense of
+humor," he says, "instead of being quietly and humbly thankful, are
+perhaps a little too apt to celebrate their joy in the face of the
+afflicted ones who have it not; and the afflicted ones only follow a
+general law in protesting that it is a very worthless thing, if not a
+complete humbug." This spirit of exclusiveness on the one side and of
+irascibility on the other may be greatly deplored, but who is there
+among us, I wonder, wholly innocent of blame? Mr. Saintsbury himself
+confesses to a silent chuckle of delight when he thinks of the dimly
+veiled censoriousness with which Peacock's inimitable humor has been
+received by one-half of the reading world. In other words, his
+enjoyment of the Reverend Doctors Folliott and Opimian is sensibly
+increased by the reflection that a great many worthy people, even
+among his own acquaintances, are, by some mysterious law of their
+being, debarred from any share in his pleasure. Yet surely we need
+not be so niggardly in this matter. There is wit enough in those two
+reverend gentlemen to go all around the living earth and leave plenty
+for generations now unborn. Each might say with Juliet:
+
+ "The more I give to thee,
+ The more I have;"
+
+for wit is as infinite as love, and a deal more lasting in its
+qualities. When Peacock describes a country gentleman's range of
+ideas as "nearly commensurate with that of the great king
+Nebuchadnezzar when he was turned out to grass," he affords us a
+happy illustration of the eternal fitness of humor, for there can
+hardly come a time when such an apt comparison will fail to point its
+meaning.
+
+Mr. Birrell is quite as selfish in his felicity as Mr. Saintsbury,
+and perfectly frank in acknowledging it. He dwells rapturously over
+certain well-loved pages of "Pride and Prejudice" and "Mansfield
+Park," and then deliberately adds, "When an admirer of Miss Austen
+reads these familiar passages, the smile of satisfaction, betraying
+the deep inward peace they never fail to beget, widens like 'a circle
+in the water,' as he remembers (and he is always careful to remember)
+how his dearest friend, who has been so successful in life, can no
+more read Miss Austen than he can read the Moabitish stone." The same
+peculiarity is noticeable in the more ardent lovers of Charles Lamb.
+They seem to want him all to themselves, look askance upon any
+fellow-being who ventures to assert a modest preference for their
+idol, and brighten visibly when some ponderous critic declares the
+Letters to be sad stuff and not worth half the exasperating nonsense
+talked about them. Yet Lamb flung his good things to the wind with
+characteristic prodigality, little recking by whom or in what spirit
+they were received. How many witticisms, I wonder, were roared into
+the deaf ears of old Thomas Westwood, who heard them not, alas! but
+who laughed all the same, out of pure sociability, and with a
+pleasant sense that something funny had been said! And what of that
+ill-fated pun which Lamb, in a moment of deplorable abstraction, let
+fall at a funeral, to the surprise and consternation of the mourners?
+Surely a man who could joke at a funeral never meant his pleasantries
+to be hoarded up for the benefit of an initiated few, but would
+gladly see them the property of all living men; ay, and of all dead
+men, too, were such a distribution possible. "Damn the age! I will
+write for antiquity!" he exclaimed with not unnatural heat when the
+"Gypsy's Malison" was rejected by the ingenious editors of the
+_Gem_, on the ground that it would "shock all mothers"; and even
+this expression, uttered with pardonable irritation, manifests no
+solicitude for a narrow and esoteric audience.
+
+"Wit is useful for everything, but sufficient for nothing," says
+Amiel, who probably felt he needed some excuse for burying so much of
+his Gallic sprightliness in Teutonic gloom; and dulness, it must be
+admitted, has the distinct advantage of being useful for everybody
+and sufficient for nearly everybody as well. Nothing, we are told, is
+more rational than ennui; and Mr. Bagehot, contemplating the "grave
+files of speechless men" who have always represented the English
+land, exults more openly and energetically even than Carlyle in the
+saving dulness, the superb impenetrability, which stamps the
+Englishman, as it stamped the Roman, with the sign-manual of patient
+strength. Stupidity, he reminds us, is not folly, and moreover it
+often insures a valuable consistency. "What I says is this here, as I
+was a-saying yesterday, is the average Englishman's notion of
+historical eloquence and habitual discretion." But Mr. Bagehot could
+well afford to trifle thus coyly with dulness, because he knew it
+only theoretically and as a dispassionate observer. His own roof-tree
+is free from the blighting presence; his own pages are guiltless of
+the leaden touch. It has been well said that an ordinary mortal might
+live for a twelvemonth like a gentleman on Hazlitt's ideas; but he
+might, if he were clever, shine all his life long with the reflected
+splendor of Mr. Bagehot's wit, and be thought to give forth a very
+respectable illumination. There is a telling quality in every stroke;
+a pitiless dexterity that drives the weapon, like a fairy's arrow,
+straight to some vital point. When we read that "of all pursuits ever
+invented by man for separating the faculty of argument from the
+capacity of belief, the art of debating is probably the most
+effective," we feel that an unwelcome statement has been expressed
+with Mephistophelian coolness; and remembering that these words were
+uttered before Mr. Gladstone had attained his parliamentary
+preeminence, we have but another proof of the imperishable accuracy
+of wit. Only say a clever thing, and mankind will go on forever
+furnishing living illustrations of its truth. It was Thurlow who
+originally remarked that, "companies have neither bodies to kick nor
+souls to lose," and the jest fits in so aptly with our everyday
+humors and experiences that I have heard men attribute it casually to
+their friends, thinking, perhaps, that it must have been born in
+these times of giant corporations, of city railroads, and of trusts.
+What a gap between Queen Victoria and Queen Bess; what a thorough and
+far-reaching change in everything that goes to make up the life and
+habits of men; and yet Shakespeare's fine strokes of humor have
+become so fitted to our common speech that the very unconsciousness
+with which we apply them proves how they tally with our modern
+emotions and opportunities. Lesser lights burn quite as steadily.
+Pope and Goldsmith reappear on the lips of people whose knowledge of
+the "Essay on Man" is of the very haziest character, and whose
+acquaintance with "She Stoops to Conquer" is confined exclusively to
+Mr. Abbey's graceful illustrations. Not very long ago I heard a
+bright schoolgirl, when reproached for wet feet or some such youthful
+indiscretion, excuse herself gaily on the plea that she was "bullying
+nature"; and, knowing that the child was but modestly addicted to her
+books, I wondered how many of Doctor Holmes's trenchant sayings have
+become a heritage in our households, detached often from their
+original kinship, and seeming like the rightful property of every one
+who utters them. It is an amusing, barefaced, witless sort of
+robbery, yet surely not without its compensations; for it must be a
+pleasant thing to reflect in old age that the general murkiness of
+life has been lit up here and there by sparks struck from one's
+youthful fire, and that these sparks, though they wander occasionally
+masterless as will-o'-the-wisps, are destined never to go out.
+
+Are destined never to go out! In its vitality lies the supreme
+excellence of humor. Whatever has "wit enough to keep it sweet"
+defies corruption and outlasts all time; but the wit must be of that
+outward and visible order which needs no introduction or
+demonstration at our hands. It is an old trick with dull novelists to
+describe their characters as being exceptionally brilliant people,
+and to trust that we will take their word for it and ask no further
+proof. Every one remembers how Lord Beaconsfield would tell us that a
+cardinal could "sparkle with anecdote and blaze with repartee"; and
+how utterly destitute of sparkle or blaze were the specimens of His
+Eminence's conversation with which we were subsequently favored.
+Those "lively dinners" in "Endymion" and "Lothair" at which we were
+assured the brightest minds in England loved to gather became mere
+Barmecide feasts when reported to us without a single amusing remark,
+such waifs and strays of conversation as reached our ears being of
+the dreariest and most fatuous description. It is not so with the
+real masters of their craft. Mr. Peacock does not stop to explain to
+us that Doctor Folliott is witty. The reverend gentleman opens his
+mouth and acquaints us with the fact himself. There is no need for
+George Eliot to expatiate on Mrs. Poyser's humor. Five minutes of
+that lady's society is amply sufficient for the revelation. We do not
+even hear Mr. Poyser and the rest of the family enlarging delightedly
+on the subject, as do all of Lawyer Putney's friends, in Mr.
+Howells's story, "Annie Kilburn"; and yet even the united testimony
+of Hatboro' fails to clear up our lingering doubts concerning Mr.
+Putney's wit. The dull people of that soporific town are really and
+truly and realistically dull. There is no mistaking them. The stamp
+of veracity is upon every brow. They pay morning calls, and we listen
+to their conversation with a dreamy impression that we have heard it
+all many times before, and that the ghosts of our own morning calls
+are revisiting us, not in the glimpses of the moon, but in Mr.
+Howells's decorous and quiet pages. That curious conviction that we
+have formerly passed through a precisely similar experience is strong
+upon us as we read, and it is the most emphatic testimony to the
+novelist's peculiar skill. But there is none of this instantaneous
+acquiescence in Mr. Putney's wit; for although he does make one very
+nice little joke, it is hardly enough to flavor all his conversation,
+which is for the most part rather unwholesome than humorous. The only
+way to elucidate him is to suppose that Mr. Howells, in sardonic
+mood, wishes to show us that if a man be discreet enough to take to
+hard drinking in his youth, before his general emptiness is
+ascertained, his friends invariably credit him with a host of shining
+qualities which, we are given to understand he balked and frustrated
+by his one unfortunate weakness. How many of us know these
+exceptionally brilliant lawyers, doctors, politicians and journalists
+who bear a charmed reputation based exclusively upon their inebriety,
+and who take good care not to imperil it by too long a relapse into
+the mortifying self-revelations of soberness! And what wrong has been
+done to the honored name of humor by these pretentious rascals! We do
+not love Falstaff because he is drunk; we do not admire Becky Sharp
+because she is wicked. Drunkenness and wickedness are things easy of
+imitation; yet all the sack in Christendom could not beget us another
+Falstaff--though Seithenyn ap Seithyn comes very near to the
+incomparable model--and all the wickedness in the world could not
+fashion us a second Becky Sharp. There are too many dull topers and
+stupid sinners among mankind to admit of any uncertainty on these
+points.
+
+Bishop Burnet, in describing Lord Halifax, tells us, with thinly
+veiled disapprobation, that he was "a man of fine and ready wit, full
+of life, and very pleasant, but much turned to satire. His
+imagination was too hard for his judgment, and a severe jest took
+more with him than all arguments whatever." Yet this was the first
+statesman of his age, and one whose clear and tranquil vision
+penetrated so far beyond the turbulent, troubled times he lived in
+that men looked askance upon a power they but dimly understood. The
+sturdy "Trimmer," who would be bullied neither by king nor commons,
+who would "speak his mind and not be hanged as long as there was law
+in England," must have turned with infinite relief from the horrible
+medley of plots and counterplots, from the ugly images of Oates and
+Dangerfield, from the scaffolds of Stafford and Russell and Sidney,
+from the Bloody Circuit and the massacre of Glencoe, from the false
+smiles of princes and the howling arrogance of the mob, to any jest,
+however "severe," which would restore to him his cold and fastidious
+serenity and keep his judgment and his good temper unimpaired.
+"Ridicule is the test of truth," said Hazlitt, and it is a test which
+Halifax remorselessly applied, and which would not be without its
+uses to the Trimmer of to-day, in whom this adjusting sense is
+lamentably lacking. For humor distorts nothing, and only false gods
+are laughed off their earthly pedestals. What monstrous absurdities
+and paradoxes have resisted whole batteries of serious arguments, and
+then crumbled swiftly into dust before the ringing death-knell of a
+laugh! What healthy exultation, what genial mirth, what loyal
+brotherhood of mirth attends the friendly sound! Yet in labeling our
+life and literature, as the Danes labeled their Royal Theatre in
+Copenhagen, "Not for amusement merely," we have pushed one step
+further, and the legend too often stands, "Not for amusement at all."
+Life is no laughing matter, we are told, which is true; and, what is
+still more dismal to contemplate, books are no laughing matters,
+either. Only now and then some gay, defiant rebel, like Mr.
+Saintsbury, flaunts the old flag, hums a bar of "Blue Bonnets over
+the Border," and ruffles the quiet waters of our souls by hinting
+that this age of Apollinaris and of lectures is at fault, and that it
+has produced nothing which can vie as literature with the products of
+the ages of wine and song.
+
+
+
+
+Marietta Holley
+
+AN UNMARRIED FEMALE
+
+
+I suppose we are about as happy as the most of folks, but as I was
+sayin' a few days ago to Betsey Bobbet, a neighborin' female of
+ours--"Every station-house in life has its various skeletons. But we
+ort to try to be contented with that spear of life we are called on
+to handle." Betsey hain't married, and she don't seem to be
+contented. She is awful opposed to wimmin's rights--she thinks it is
+wimmin's only spear to marry, but as yet she can't find any man
+willin' to lay holt of that spear with her. But you can read in her
+daily life, and on her eager, willin' countenance, that she fully
+realizes the sweet words of the poet, "While there is life there is
+hope."
+
+Betsey hain't handsome. Her cheek-bones are high, and she bein' not
+much more than skin and bone they show plainer than they would if she
+was in good order. Her complexion (not that I blame her for it)
+hain't good, and her eyes are little and sot way back in her head.
+Time has seen fit to deprive her of her hair and teeth, but her large
+nose he has kindly suffered her to keep, but she has got the best
+white ivory teeth money will buy, and two long curls fastened behind
+each ear, besides frizzles on the top of her head; and if she wasn't
+naturally bald, and if the curls was the color of her hair, they
+would look well. She is awful sentimental; I have seen a good many
+that had it bad, but of all the sentimental creeters I ever did see,
+Betsey Bobbet is the sentimentalest; you couldn't squeeze a laugh out
+of her with a cheeze-press.
+
+As I said, she is awful opposed to wimmin's havin' any right, only
+the right to get married. She holds on to that right as tight as any
+single woman I ever see, which makes it hard and wearyin' on the
+single men round here.
+
+For take the men that are the most opposed to wimmin's havin' a
+right, and talk the most about its bein' her duty to cling to man
+like a vine to a tree, they don't want Betsey to cling to them; they
+won't let her cling to 'em. For when they would be a-goin' on about
+how wicked it was for wimmin to vote--and it was her only spear to
+marry, says I to 'em, "Which had you ruther do, let Betsey Bobbet
+cling to you or let her vote?" and they would every one of 'em quail
+before that question. They would drop their heads before my keen gray
+eyes--and move off the subject.
+
+But Betsey don't get discouraged. Every time I see her she says in a
+hopeful, wishful tone, "That the deepest men of minds in the country
+agree with her in thinkin' that it is wimmin's duty to marry and not
+to vote." And then she talks a sight about the retirin' modesty and
+dignity of the fair sect, and how shameful and revoltin' it would be
+to see wimmin throwin' 'em away and boldly and unblushin'ly talkin'
+about law and justice.
+
+Why, to hear Betsey Bobbet talk about wimmin's throwin' their modesty
+away, you would think if they ever went to the political pole they
+would have to take their dignity and modesty and throw 'em against
+the pole and go without any all the rest of their lives.
+
+Now I don't believe in no such stuff as that. I think a woman can be
+bold and unwomanly in other things besides goin' with a thick veil
+over her face, and a brass-mounted parasol, once a year, and gently
+and quietly dropping a vote for a Christian President, or a religious
+and noble-minded pathmaster.
+
+She thinks she talks dreadful polite and proper. She says "I was
+cameing," instead of "I was coming"; and "I have saw," instead of "I
+have seen"; and "papah" for paper, and "deah" for dear. I don't know
+much about grammer, but common sense goes a good ways. She writes the
+poetry for the _Jonesville Augur_, or "_Augah_," as she calls it. She
+used to write for the opposition paper, the _Jonesville Gimlet_, but
+the editor of the _Augur_, a longhaired chap, who moved into
+Jonesville a few months ago, lost his wife soon after he come there,
+and sense that she has turned Dimocrat, and writes for his paper
+stidy. They say that he is a dreadful big feelin' man, and I have
+heard--it came right straight to me--his cousin's wife's sister told
+it to the mother-in-law of one of my neighbors' brother's wife, that
+he didn't like Betsey's poetry at all, and all he printed it for was
+to plague the editor of the _Gimlet_, because she used to write for
+him. I myself wouldn't give a cent a bushel for all the poetry she can
+write. And it seems to me, that if I was Betsey, I wouldn't try to
+write so much. Howsumever, I don't know what turn I should take if I
+was Betsey Bobbet; that is a solemn subject, and one I don't love to
+think on.
+
+I never shall forget the first piece of her poetry I ever see. Josiah
+Allen and I had both on us been married goin' on a year, and I had
+occasion to go to his trunk one day, where he kept a lot of old
+papers, and the first thing I laid my hand on was these verses.
+Josiah went with her a few times after his wife died, on Fourth of
+July or so, and two or three camp-meetin's and the poetry seemed to
+be wrote about the time _we_ was married. It was directed over
+the top of it, "Owed to Josiah," just as if she were in debt to him.
+This was the way it read:
+
+ "OWED TO JOSIAH
+
+ "Josiah, I the tale have hurn,
+ With rigid ear, and streaming eye,
+ I saw from me that you did turn,
+ I never knew the reason why.
+ Oh, Josiah,
+ It seemed as if I must expiah.
+
+ "Why did you--oh, why did you blow
+ Upon my life of snowy sleet,
+ The fiah of love to fiercest glow,
+ Then turn a damphar on the heat?
+ Oh, Josiah,
+ It seemed as if I must expiah.
+
+ "I saw thee coming down the street,
+ _She_ by your side in bonnet bloo,
+ The stuns that grated 'neath thy feet,
+ Seemed crunching on my vitals, too.
+ Oh, Josiah,
+ It seemed as if I must expiah.
+
+ "I saw thee washing sheep last night,
+ On the bridge I stood with marble brow.
+ The waters raged, thou clasped it tight,
+ I sighed, 'should both be drownded now'-
+ I thought, Josiah,
+ Oh, happy sheep to thus expiah."
+
+I showed the poetry to Josiah that night after he came home, and told
+him I had read it. He looked awful ashamed to think I had seen it,
+and, says he, with a dreadful sheepish look: "The persecution I
+underwent from that female can never be told; she fairly hunted me
+down. I hadn't no rest for the soles of my feet. I thought one spell
+she would marry me in spite of all I could do, without givin' me the
+benefit of law or gospel." He see I looked stern, and he added, with
+a sick-lookin' smile, "I thought one spell, to use Betsey's language,
+'I was a gonah.'"
+
+I didn't smile. Oh, no, for the deep principle of my sect was reared
+up. I says to him in a tone cold enough to almost freeze his ears:
+"Josiah Allen, shet up; of all the cowardly things a man ever done,
+it is goin 'round braggin' about wimmin likin' 'em, and follern' 'em
+up. Enny man that'll do that is little enough to crawl through a
+knot-hole without rubbing his clothes." Says I: "I suppose you made
+her think the moon rose in your head and set in your heels. I daresay
+you acted foolish enough round her to sicken a snipe, and if you
+makes fun of her now to please me, I let you know you have got holt
+of the wrong individual.
+
+"Now," says I, "go to bed"; and I added, in still more freezing
+accents, "for I want to mend your pantaloons." He gathered up his
+shoes and stockin's and started off to bed, and we hain't never
+passed a word on the subject sence. I believe when you disagree with
+your pardner, in freein' your _mind_ in the first on't, and then
+not to be a-twittin' about it afterward. And as for bein' jealous, I
+should jest as soon think of bein' jealous of a meetin'-house as I
+should of Josiah. He is a well-principled man. And I guess he wasn't
+fur out o' the way about Betsey Bobbet, though I wouldn't encourage
+him by lettin' him say a word on the subject, for I always make it a
+rule to stand up for my own sect; but when I hear her go on about the
+editor of the _Augur_, I can believe anything about Betsey Bobbet.
+
+She came in here one day last week. It was about ten o'clock in the
+morning. I had got my house slick as a pin, and my dinner under way
+(I was goin' to have a b'iled dinner, and a cherry puddin' b'iled
+with sweet sass to eat on it), and I sot down to finish sewin' up the
+breadth of my new rag carpet. I thought I would get it done while I
+hadn't so much to do, for it bein' the first of March I knew sugarin'
+would be comin' on, and then cleanin'-house time, and I wanted it to
+put down jest as soon as the stove was carried out in the summer
+kitchen. The fire was sparklin' away, and the painted floor a-shinin'
+and the dinner a-b'ilin', and I sot there sewin' jest as calm as a
+clock, not dreamin' of no trouble, when in came Betsey Bobbet.
+
+I met her with outward calm, and asked her to set down and lay off
+her things. She sot down but she said she couldn't lay off her
+things. Says she: "I was comin' down past, and I thought I would call
+and let you see the last numbah of the _Augah_. There is a piece
+in it concernin' the tariff that stirs men's souls. I like it evah so
+much."
+
+She handed me the paper folded, so I couldn't see nothin' but a piece
+of poetry by Betsey Bobbet. I see what she wanted of me, and so I
+dropped my breadths of carpetin' and took hold of it, and began to
+read it.
+
+"Read it audible, if you please," says she. "Especially the precious
+remahks ovah it; it is such a feast for me to be a-sittin' and heah
+it rehearsed by a musical vorce."
+
+Says I, "I s'pose I can rehearse it if it will do you any good," so I
+began as follows:
+
+"It is seldom that we present the readers of the _Augur_ (the best
+paper for the fireside in Jonesville or the world) with a poem like
+the following. It may be, by the assistance of the _Augur_ (only
+twelve shillings a year in advance, wood and potatoes taken in
+exchange), the name of Betsey Bobbet will yet be carved on the lofty
+pinnacle of fame's towering pillow. We think, however, that she could
+study such writers as Sylvanus Cobb and Tupper with profit both to
+herself and to them.
+
+"Editor of the Augur."
+
+Here Betsey interrupted me. "The deah editah of the _Augah_ has no
+need to advise me to read Tuppah, for he is indeed my most favorite
+authar. You have devorhed him, haven't you, Josiah's Allen wife?"
+
+"Devoured who?" says I, in a tone pretty near as cold as a cold
+icicle.
+
+"Mahten, Fahqueah, Tuppah, that sweet authar," says she.
+
+"No, mom," says I shortly; "I hain't devoured Martin Farquhar Tupper,
+nor no other man. I hain't a cannibal."
+
+"Oh! you understand me not; I meant, devorhed his sweet, tender
+lines."
+
+"I hain't devoured his tenderlines, nor nothin' relatin' to him," and
+I made a motion to lay the paper down, but Betsey urged me to go on,
+and so I read:
+
+"GUSHINGS OF A TENDAH SOUL
+
+ "Oh let who will,
+ Oh let who can,
+ Be tied onto
+ A horrid male man.
+
+ "Thus said I 'ere
+ My tendah heart was touched,
+ Thus said I 'ere
+ My tendah feelings gushed.
+
+ "But oh a change
+ Hath swept ore me,
+ As billows sweep
+ The 'deep blue sea.'
+
+ "A voice, a noble form
+ One day I saw;
+ An arrow flew,
+ My heart is nearly raw.
+
+ "His first pardner lies
+ Beneath the turf,
+ He is wandering now,
+ In sorrow's briny surf.
+
+ "Two twins, the little
+ Deah cherub creechahs
+ Now wipe the teahs
+ From off his classic feachahs.
+
+ "Oh sweet lot, worthy
+ Angel arisen,
+ To wipe teahs
+ From eyes like hisen.
+
+"What think you of it?" says she, as I finished readin'.
+
+I looked right at her 'most a minute with a majestic look. In spite
+of her false curls and her new white ivory teeth, she is a humbly
+critter. I looked at her silently while she sot and twisted her long
+yellow bunnet-strings, and then I spoke out. "Hain't the editor of
+the _Augur_ a widower with a pair of twins?"
+
+"Yes," says she with a happy look.
+
+Then says I, "If the man hain't a fool, he'll think you are one."
+
+"Oh!" says she, and she dropped her bunnet-strings and clasped her
+long bony hands together in her brown cotton gloves. "Oh, we ahdent
+soles of genious have feelin's you cold, practical natures know
+nuthing of, and if they did not gush out in poetry we should expiah.
+You may as well try to tie up the gushing catarack of Niagarah with a
+piece of welting-cord as to tie up the feelin's of an ahdent sole."
+
+"Ardent sole!" says I coldly. "Which makes the most noise, Betsey
+Bobbet, a three-inch brook or a ten-footer? which is the tearer?
+which is the roarer? Deep waters run stillest. I have no faith in
+feelin's that stalk round in public in mournin' weeds. I have no
+faith in such mourners," says I.
+
+"Oh, Josiah's wife, cold, practical female being, you know me not; we
+are sundered as fah apart as if you was sitting on the North Pole and
+I was sitting on the South Pole. Uncongenial being, you know me not."
+
+"I may not know you, Betsey Bobbet, but I do know decency, and I know
+that no munny would tempt me to write such stuff as that poetry and
+send it to a widower with twins."
+
+"Oh!" says she, "what appeals to the tendah feelin' heart of a single
+female woman more than to see a lonely man who has lost his relict?
+And pity never seems so much like pity as when it is given to the
+deah little children of widowehs. And," says she, "I think moah than
+as likely as not, this soaring sole of genious did not wed his
+affinity, but was united to a mere woman of clay."
+
+"Mere woman of clay!" says I, fixin' my spektacles upon her in a most
+searchin' manner. "Where will you find a woman, Betsey Bobbet, that
+hain't more or less clay? And affinity, that is the meanest word I
+ever heard; no married woman has any right to hear it. I'll excuse
+you, bein' a female; but if a man had said it to me I'd holler to
+Josiah. There is a time for everything, and the time to hunt affinity
+is before you are married; married folks hain't no right to hunt it,"
+says I sternly.
+
+"We kindred soles soah above such petty feelin's--we soah far above
+them."
+
+"I hain't much of a soarer," says I, "and I don't pretend to be; and
+to tell you the truth," says I, "I am glad I ain't."
+
+"The editah of the _Augah_" says she, and she grasped the paper
+offen the stand, and folded it up, and presented it at me like a
+spear, "the editah of this paper is a kindred sole: he appreciates
+me, he undahstands me, and will not our names in the pages of this
+very papah go down to posterety togathah?"
+
+"Then," says I, drove out of all patience with her, "I wish you was
+there now, both of you. I wish," says I, lookin' fixedly on her, "I
+wish you was both of you in posterity now."
+
+
+
+
+Fitzhugh Ludlow
+
+SELECTIONS FROM A BRACE OF BOYS
+
+
+I am a bachelor uncle. That, as a mere fact, might happen to anybody;
+but I am a bachelor uncle by internal fitness. I am one essentially,
+just as I am an individual of the Caucasian division of the human
+race; and if, through untoward circumstances--which heaven forbid--I
+should lose my present position, I shouldn't be surprised if you saw
+me out in the _Herald_ under "Situations Wanted--Males." Thanks
+to a marrying tendency in the rest of my family, I have now little
+need to advertise, all the business being thrown into my way which a
+single member of my profession can attend to.
+
+I meander, like a desultory, placid river of an old bachelor as I am,
+through the flowery mead of several nurseries, but I am detained
+longest among the children of my sister Lu.
+
+Lu married Mr. Lovegrove. He is a merchant, retired with a fortune
+amassed by the old-fashioned, slow processes of trade, and regards
+the mercantile life of the present day only as so much greed and
+gambling Christianly baptized.... Lu is my favorite sister; Lovegrove
+an unusually good article of brother-in-law; and I cannot say that
+any of my nieces and nephews interest me more than their two
+children, Daniel and Billy, who are more unlike than words can paint
+them. They are far apart in point of years; Daniel is twenty-two,
+Bill eleven. I was reminded of this fact the other day by Billy, as
+he stood between my legs, scowling at his book of sums.
+
+"'A boy has eighty-five turnips and gives his sister thirty'--pretty
+present for a girl, isn't it?" said Billy, with an air of supreme
+contempt, "Could _you_ stand such stuff--say?"
+
+I put on my instructive face and answered:
+
+"Well, my dear Billy, you know that arithmetic is necessary to you if
+you mean to be an industrious man and succeed in business. Suppose
+your parents were to lose all their property, what would become of
+them without a little son who could make money and keep accounts?"
+
+"Oh," said Billy, with surprise, "hasn't father got enough stamps to
+see him through?"
+
+"He has now, I hope; but people don't always keep them. Suppose they
+should go by some accident, when your father was too old to make any
+more stamps for himself?"
+
+"You haven't thought of Brother Daniel--"
+
+True; for nobody ever had in connection with the active employments
+of life.
+
+"No, Billy," I replied, "I forgot him; but then, you know, Daniel is
+more of a student than a business man, and--"
+
+"Oh, Uncle Teddy! you don't think I mean he'd support them? I meant
+I'd have to take care of father and mother and him, too, when they'd
+all got to be old people together. Just think! I'm eleven, and he's
+twenty-two; so he is just twice as old as I am. How old are you?"
+
+"Forty, Billy, last August."
+
+"Well, you aren't so awful old, and when I get to be as old as you,
+Daniel will be eighty. Seth Kendall's grandfather isn't more than
+that, and he has to be fed with a spoon, and a nurse puts him to bed,
+and wheels him round in a chair like a baby. That takes the stamps, I
+bet! Well, I tell you how I'll keep my accounts: I'll have a stick
+like Robinson Crusoe, and every time I make a toadskin I'll gouge a
+piece out of one side of the stick, and every time I spend one I'll
+gouge a piece out of the other."
+
+"Spend a _what?_" said the gentle and astonished voice of my sister
+Lu, who, unperceived, had slipped into the room.
+
+"A toadskin, ma," replied Billy, shutting up Oolburn with a farewell
+glance of contempt.
+
+"Dear, dear! Where does the boy learn such horrid words?"
+
+"Why, ma, don't you know what a toadskin is? Here's one," said Billy,
+drawing a dingy five-cent stamp from his pocket. "And don't I wish I
+had lots of 'em!"
+
+"Oh!" sighed his mother, "to think I should have a child so addicted
+to slang! How I wish he were like Daniel!"
+
+"Well, mother," replied Billy, "if you wanted two boys just alike
+you'd oughter had twins. There ain't any use of my trying to be like
+Daniel now, when he's got eleven years the start. Whoop! There's a
+dog fight; hear 'em! It's Joe Casey's dog--I know his bark!"
+
+With these words my nephew snatched his Glengarry bonnet from the
+table and bolted downstairs to see the fun.
+
+"What will become of him?" said Lu hopelessly; "he has no taste for
+anything but rough play; and then such language as he uses! Why
+_isn't_ he like Daniel?" "I suppose because his maker never repeats
+himself. Even twins often possess strongly marked individualities.
+Don't you think it would be a good plan to learn Billy better before
+you try to teach him? If you do, you'll make something as good of him
+as Daniel; though it will be rather different from that model."
+
+"Remember, Ned, that you never did like Daniel as well as you do
+Billy. But we all know the proverb about old maid's daughters and old
+bachelor's sons. I wish you had Billy for a month--then you'd see."
+
+"I'm not sure that I'd do any better than you. I might err as much in
+other directions. But I'd try to start right by acknowledging that he
+was a new problem, not to be worked without finding out the value of
+X in his particular instance. The formula which solves one boy will
+no more solve the next one than the rule of three will solve a
+question in calculus--or, to rise into your sphere, than the receipt
+for one-two-three-fourcake will conduct you to a successful issue
+through plum pudding."
+
+I excel in metaphysical discussion, and was about giving further
+elaboration to my favorite idea, when the door burst open. Master
+Billy came tumbling in with a torn jacket, a bloody nose, the traces
+of a few tears in his eyes, and the mangiest of cur dogs in his
+hands.
+
+"Oh my! my!! my!!!" exclaimed his mother.
+
+"Don't you get scared, ma!" cried Billy, smiling a stern smile of
+triumph; "I smashed the nose off him! He won't sass me again for
+nothing _this_ while. Uncle Teddy, d'ye know it wasn't a dog
+fight after all? There was that nasty, good-for-nothing Joe Casey, 'n
+Patsy Grogan, and a lot of bad boys from Mackerelville; and they'd
+caught this poor little ki-oodle and tied a tin pot to his tail, and
+were trying to set Joe's dog on him, though he's ten times littler."
+
+"You naughty, naughty boy! How did you suppose your mother'd feel to
+see you playing with those ragamuffins?"
+
+"Yes, I _played_ 'em! I polished 'em--that's the play I did! Says I,
+'Put down that poor little pup; ain't you ashamed of yourself, Patsy
+Grogan? 'I guess you don't know who I am,' says he. That's the way
+they always say, Uncle Teddy, to make a fellow think they're some
+awful great fighters. So says I again, 'Well, you put down that dog,
+or I'll show you who I am'; and when he held on, I let him have it.
+Then he dropped the pup, and as I stooped to pick it up he gave me one
+on the bugle."
+
+"_Bugle!_ Oh! Ooh! Ooh!"
+
+"The rest pitched in to help him; but I grabbed the pup, and while I
+was trying to give as good as I got--only a fellow can't do it well
+with only one hand, Uncle Teddy--up came a policeman, and the whole
+crowd ran away. So I got the dog safe, and here he is!"
+
+With that Billy set down his "ki-oodle," bid farewell to every fear,
+and wiped his bleeding nose. The unhappy beast slunk back between the
+legs of his preserver and followed him out of the room, as Lu, with
+an expression of maternal despair, bore him away for the correction
+of his dilapidated raiment and depraved associations. I felt such
+sincere pride in this young Mazzini of the dog nation that I was
+vexed at Lu for bestowing on him reproof instead of congratulation;
+but she was not the only conservative who fails to see a good cause
+and a heroic heart under a bloody nose and torn jacket. I resolved
+that if Billy was punished he should have his recompense before long
+in an extra holiday at Barnum's or the Hippotheatron.
+
+You already have some idea of my other nephew, if you have noticed
+that none of us, not even that habitual disrespecter of dignities,
+Billy, ever called him Dan. It would have seemed as incongruous as to
+call Billy William. He was one of those youths who never gave their
+parents a moment's uneasiness; who never had to have their wills
+broken, and never forgot to put on their rubbers or take an umbrella.
+In boyhood he was intended for a missionary. Had it been possible for
+him to go to Greenland's icy mountains without catching cold, or
+India's coral strand without getting bilious, his parents would have
+carried out their pleasing dream of contributing him to the world's
+evangelization. Lu and Mr. Lovegrove had no doubt that he would have
+been greatly blessed if he could have stood it....
+
+Both she and his father always encouraged old manners in him. I think
+they took such pride in raising a peculiarly pale boy as a gardener
+does in getting a nice blanch on his celery, and so long as he was
+not absolutely sick, the graver he was the better. He was a sensitive
+plant, a violet by a mossy stone, and all that sort of thing....
+
+At the time I introduce Billy, both Lu and her husband were much
+changed. They had gained a great deal in width of view and liberality
+of judgment. They read Dickens and Thackeray with avidity; went now
+and then to the opera; proposed to let Billy take a quarter at
+Dodworth's; had statues in their parlor without any thought of shame
+at their lack of petticoats, and did multitudes of things which, in
+their early married life, they would have considered shocking. . . .
+They would greatly have liked to see Daniel shine in society. Of his
+erudition they were proud even to worship. The young man never had
+any business, and his father never seemed to think of giving him any,
+knowing, as Billy would say, that he had stamps enough to "see him
+through." If Daniel liked, his father would have endowed a
+professorship in some college and given him the chair; but that would
+have taken him away from his own room and the family physician.
+
+Daniel knew how much his parents wished him to make a figure in the
+world, and only blamed himself for his failure, magnanimously
+forgetting that they had crushed out the faculties which enable a man
+to mint the small change of every-day society in the exclusive
+cultivation of such as fit him for smelting its ponderous ingots.
+With that merciful blindness which alone prevents all our lives from
+becoming a horror of nerveless self-reproach, his parents were
+equally unaware of their share in the harm done him when they
+ascribed to a delicate organization the fact that, at an age when
+love runs riot in all healthy blood, he could not see a Balmoral
+without his cheeks rivaling the most vivid stripe in it. They
+flattered themselves that he would outgrow his bashfulness; but
+Daniel had no such hope, and frequently confided in me that he
+thought he should never marry at all.
+
+About two hours after Billy's disappearance under his mother's
+convoy, the defender of the oppressed returned to my room bearing the
+dog under his arm. His cheeks shone with washing like a pair of waxy
+Spitzenbergs, and other indignities had been offered him to the
+extent of the brush and comb. He also had a whole jacket on....
+
+Billy and I also obtained permission to go out together and be gone
+the entire afternoon. We put Crab on a comfortable bed of rags in an
+old shoebox, and then strolled hand-in-hand across that most
+delightful of New York breathing places--Stuyvesant Square.
+
+"Uncle Teddy," exclaimed Billy with ardor, "I wish I could do
+something to show you how much I think of you for being so good to
+me. I don't know how. Would it make you happy if I was to learn a
+hymn for you--a smashing big hymn--six verses, long metre, and no
+grumbling?"
+
+"No, Billy, you make me happy enough just by being a good boy."
+
+"Oh, Uncle Teddy!" replied Billy decidedly. "I'm afraid I can't do
+it. I've tried so often, and always make such a mess of it." ...
+
+We now got into a Broadway stage going down, and being unable, on
+account of the noise, to converse further upon those spiritual
+conflicts of Billy's which so much interested me, amused ourselves
+with looking out until just as we reached the Astor House, when he
+asked me where we were going.
+
+"Where do you guess?" said I.
+
+He cast a glance through the front window and his face became
+irradiated. Oh, there's nothing like the simple, cheap luxury of
+pleasing a child to create sunshine enough for the chasing away of
+the blues of adult devils!
+
+"We're going to Barnum's!" said Billy, involuntarily clapping his
+hands.
+
+So we were; and, much as stuck-up people pretend to look down on the
+place, I frequently am. Not only so, but I always see that class
+largely represented there when I do go. To be sure, they always make
+believe that they only come to amuse the children, or because they've
+country cousins visiting them, but never fail to refer to the vulgar
+set one finds there, and the fact of the animals smelling like
+anything but Jockey Club; yet I notice that after they've been in the
+hall three minutes they're as much interested as any of the people
+they come to pooh-pooh, and only put on the high-bred air when they
+fancy some of their own class are looking at them. I boldly
+acknowledge that I go because I like it. I am especially happy, to be
+sure, if I have a child along to go into ecstasies, and give me a
+chance, by asking questions, for the exhibition of that fund of
+information which is said to be one of my chief charms in the social
+circle, and on several occasions has led that portion of the public
+immediately about the Happy Family into the erroneous impression that
+I was Mr. Barnum glibly explaining his five hundred thousand
+curiosities.
+
+On the present occasion we found several visitors of the better class
+in the room devoted to the aquarium. Among these was a young lady,
+apparently about nineteen, in a tight-fitting basque of black velvet,
+which showed her elegant figure to fine advantage, a skirt of garnet
+silk, looped up over a pretty Balmoral, and the daintiest imaginable
+pair of kid walking-boots. Her height was a trifle over the medium;
+her eyes, a soft, expressive brown, shaded by masses of hair which
+exactly matched their color, and, at that rat-and-miceless day, fell
+in such graceful abandon as to show at once that nature was the only
+maid who crimped their waves into them. Her complexion was rosy with
+health and sympathetic enjoyment; her mouth was faultless, her nose
+sensitive, her manners full of refinement, and her voice as musical
+as a wood-robin's when she spoke to the little boy of six at her
+side, to whom she was revealing the palace of the great show-king.
+Billy and I were flattening our noses against the abode of the
+balloon fish and determining whether he looked most like a horse-
+chestnut burr or a ripe cucumber, when his eyes and my own
+simultaneously fell on the child and lady. In a moment, to Billy the
+balloon fish was as though he had not been.
+
+"That's a pretty little boy," said I. And then I asked Billy one of
+those senseless routine questions which must make children look at
+us, regarding the scope of our intellects very much as we look at
+Bushmen.
+
+"How would you like to play with him?"
+
+"Him!" replied Billy scornfully, "that's his first pair of boots; see
+him pull up his little breeches to show the red tops to 'em! But,
+crackey! isn't _she_ a smasher?"
+
+After that we visited the wax figures and the sleepy snakes, the
+learned seal, and the glass-blowers. Whenever we passed from one room
+into another Billy could be caught looking anxiously to see if the
+pretty girl and child were coming too.
+
+Time fails me to describe how Billy was lost in astonishment at the
+Lightning Calculator--wanted me to beg the secret of that prodigy for
+him to do his sums by--finally thought he had discovered it, and
+resolved to keep his arm whirling all the time he studied his
+arithmetic lesson the next morning. Equally inadequate is it to
+relate in full how he became so confused among the wax-works that he
+pinched the solemnest showman's legs to see if he was real, and
+perplexed the beautiful Circassian to the verge of idiocy by telling
+her he had read in his geography all about the way they sold girls
+like her.
+
+We had reached the stairs to that subterranean chamber in which the
+Behemoth of Holy Writ was wallowing about without a thought of the
+dignity which one expects from a canonical character. Billy had
+always languished upon his memories of this diverting beast, and I
+stood ready to see him plunge headlong the moment that he read the
+signboard at the head of the stairs. When he paused and hesitated
+there, not seeming at all anxious to go down till he saw the pretty
+girl and the child following after--a sudden intuition flashed across
+me. Could it be possible that Billy was caught in that vortex which
+whirled me down at ten years--a little boy's first love?
+
+We were lingering about the elliptical basin, and catching occasional
+glimpses between bubbles of a vivified hair trunk of monstrous
+compass, whose knobby lid opened at one end and showed a red morocco
+lining, when the pretty girl, in leaning over to point out the rising
+monster, dropped into the water one of her little gloves, and the
+swash made by the hippopotamus drifted it close under Billy's hand.
+Either in play or as a mere coincidence the animal followed it. The
+other children about the tank screamed and started back as he bumped
+his nose against the side; but Billy manfully bent down and grabbed
+the glove not an inch from one of his big tusks, then marched around
+the tank and presented it to the lady with a chivalry of manner in
+one of his years quite surprising.
+
+"That's a real nice boy--you said so, didn't you, Lottie?--and I wish
+he'd come and play with me," said the little fellow by the young
+lady's side, as Billy turned away, gracefully thanked, to come back
+to me with his cheeks roseate with blushes.
+
+As he heard this Billy idled along the edge of the tank for a moment,
+then faced about and said:
+
+"P'raps I will some day. Where do you live?"
+
+"I live on East Seventeenth Street with papa--and Lottie stays there,
+too, now--she's my cousin. Where d'you live?"
+
+"Oh! I live close by--right on that big green square, where I guess
+the nurse takes you once in awhile," said Billy patronizingly. Then,
+looking up pluckily at the young lady, he added, "I never saw you out
+there."
+
+"No; Jimmy's papa has only been in his new house a little while, and
+I've just come to visit him."
+
+"Say, will you come and play with me some time?" chimed in the
+inextinguishable Jimmy. "I've got a cooking-stove--for real fire--and
+blocks, and a ball with a string."
+
+Billy, who belonged to a club for the practise of the great American
+game, and was what A. Ward would call the most superior battist among
+the I. G. B. B. 0., or "Infant Giants," smiled from an altitude upon
+Jimmy, but promised to go and play with him the next Saturday
+afternoon.
+
+Late that evening, after we had got home and dined, as I sat in my
+room over "Pickwick" with a sedative cigar, a gentle knock at the
+door told of Daniel. I called "Come in!" and, entering with a slow,
+dejected air, he sat down by my fire. For ten minutes he remained
+silent, though occasionally looking up as if about to speak, then
+dropping his head again, to ponder on the coals. Finally I laid down
+Dickens and spoke myself:
+
+"You don't seem well to-night, Daniel?"
+
+"I don't feel very well, uncle."
+
+"What's the matter, my boy?"
+
+"Oh-ah, I don't know. That is, I wish I knew how to tell you."
+
+I studied him for a few minutes with kindly curiosity, then answered:
+
+"Perhaps I can save you the trouble by cross-examining it out of you.
+Let's try the method of elimination. I know that you're not harassed
+by any economical considerations, for you've all the money you want;
+and I know that ambition doesn't trouble you, for your tastes are
+scholarly. This narrows down the investigation of your symptoms--
+listlessness, general dejection, and all--to three causes--dyspepsia,
+religious conflicts, love. Now, is your digestion awry?"
+
+"No, sir; good as usual. I'm not melancholy on religion, and--"
+
+"You don't tell me you're in love?"
+
+"Well,--yes--I suppose that's about it, Uncle Teddy."
+
+I took a long breath to recover from my astonishment at this
+unimaginable revelation, then said: "Is your feeling returned?"
+
+"I really don't know, uncle; I don't believe it is. I don't see how
+it can be. I never did anything to make her love me. What is there in
+me to love? I've borne nothing for her--that is, nothing that could
+do her any good--though I've endured on her account, I may say,
+anguish. So, look at it any way you please, I neither am, do nor
+suffer anything that can get a woman's love."
+
+ "Oh, you man of learning! Even in love you tote your grammar along
+with you, and arrange a divine passion under the active, passive and
+neuter!"
+
+Daniel smiled faintly.
+
+"You've no idea, Uncle Teddy, that you are twitting on facts; but you
+hit the truth there; indeed, you do. If she were a Greek or Latin
+woman I could talk Anacreon or Horace to her. If women only
+understood the philosophy of the flowers as well as they do the
+poetry--"
+
+"Thank God they don't, Daniel!" sighed I devoutly.
+
+"Never mind--in that case I could entrance her for hours, talking
+about the grounds of differences between Linnaeus and Jussieu. Women
+like the star business, they say--and I could tell her where all the
+constellations are; but sure as I tried to get off any sentiment
+about them, I'd break down and make myself ridiculous. But what
+earthly chance would the greatest philosopher that ever lived have
+with the woman he loved if he depended for her favor on his ability
+to analyze her bouquet or tell her when she might look out for the
+next occultation of Orion? I can't talk bread-and-butter talk. I
+can't do anything that makes a man even tolerable to a woman!"
+
+"I hope you don't mean that nothing but bread-and-butter talk is
+tolerable to a woman!"
+
+"No; but it's necessary to some extent--at any rate, the ability is--
+in order to succeed in society; and it's in society men first meet
+and strike women. And, oh, Uncle Teddy! I'm such a fish out of water
+in society!--such a dreadful floundering fish! When I see her dancing
+gracefully as a swan swims, and feel that fellows like little Jack
+Mankyn, who 'don't know twelve times,' can dance to her perfect
+admiration; when I see that she likes ease of manners--and all sorts
+of men without an idea in their heads have that--while I turn all
+colors when I speak to her, and am clumsy, and abrupt, and
+abstracted, and bad at repartee--Uncle Teddy! sometimes (though it
+seems so ungrateful to father and mother, who have spent such pains
+for me)--sometimes, do you know, it seems to me as if I'd exchange
+all I've ever learned for the power to make a good appearance before
+her!"
+
+"Daniel, my boy, it's too much a matter of reflection with you! A
+woman is not to be taken by laying plans. If you love the lady (whose
+name I don't ask you, because I know you'll tell me as soon as you
+think best), you must seek her companionship until you're well enough
+acquainted with her to have her regard you as something different
+from the men whom she meets merely in society, and judge your
+qualities by another standard than that she applies to them. If she's
+a sensible girl (and God forbid you should marry her otherwise), she
+knows that people can't always be dancing, or holding fans, or
+running after orange-ice. If she's a girl capable of appreciating
+your best points (and woe to you if you marry a girl who can't!),
+she'll find them out upon closer intimacy, and, once found, they'll a
+hundred times outweigh all brilliant advantages kept in the show-case
+of fellows who have nothing on the shelves. When this comes about,
+you will pop the question unconsciously, and, to adapt Milton, she'll
+drop into your lap, 'gathered--not harshly plucked.'"
+
+"I know that's sensible, Uncle Teddy, and I'll try. Let me tell you
+the sacredest of secrets--regularly every day of my life I send her a
+little poem fastened round the prettiest bouquet I can get at
+Hanft's."
+
+"Does she know who sends them?"
+
+"She can't have any idea. The German boy that takes them knows not a
+word of English except her name and address. You'll forgive me,
+uncle, for not mentioning her name yet? You see, she may despise or
+hate me some day when she knows who it is that has paid her these
+attentions; and then I'd like to be able to feel that at least I've
+never hurt her by any absurd connection with myself."
+
+"Forgive you? Nonsense! The feeling does your heart infinite credit,
+though a little counsel with your head will show you that your only
+absurdity is self-depreciation."
+
+Daniel bid me good-night. As I put out my cigar and went to bed my
+mind reverted to the dauntless little Hotspur who had spent the
+afternoon with me and reversed his mother's wish, thinking:
+
+"Oh, if Daniel were more like Billy!"
+
+It was always Billy's habit to come and sit with me while I smoked my
+after-breakfast cigar, but the next morning did not see him enter my
+room until St. George's hands pointed to a quarter of nine.
+
+"Well, Billy Boy Blue, come blow your horn; what haystack have you
+been under till this time of day? We shan't have a minute to look
+over our spelling together, and I know a boy who's going in for
+promotion next week. Have you had your breakfast and taken care of
+Orab?"
+
+"Yes, sir; but I didn't feel like getting up this morning."
+
+"Are you sick?"
+
+"No-o-o--it isn't that; but you'll laugh at me if I tell you."
+
+"Indeed I won't, Billy!"
+
+"Well"--his voice dropped to a whisper, and he stole close to my
+side--"I had such a nice dream about _her_ just the last thing
+before the bell rang; and when I woke up I felt so queer--so kinder
+good and kinder bad--and I wanted to see her so much that, if I
+hadn't been a big boy, I believe I should have blubbered. I tried
+ever so much to go to sleep and see her again; but the more I tried
+the more I couldn't. After all, I had to get up without it, though I
+didn't want any breakfast, and only ate two buckwheat cakes, when I
+always eat six, you know, Uncle Teddy. Can you keep a secret?"
+
+"Yes, dear, so you couldn't get it out of me if you were to shake me
+upside-down like a savings bank."
+
+"Oh, ain't you mean! That was when I was small I did that. I'll tell
+you the secret, though--that girl and I are going to get married. I
+mean to ask her the first chance I get. Oh, isn't she a smasher!"
+
+"My dear Billy, won't you wait a little while to see if you always
+like her as well as you do now? Then, too, you'll be older."
+
+"I'm old enough, Uncle Teddy, and I love her dearly! I'm as old as
+the kings of France used to be when they got married--I read it in
+Abbott's histories. But there's the clock striking nine! I must run
+or I shall get a tardy mark, and, perhaps, she'll want to see my
+certificate sometimes."
+
+So saying, he kissed me on the cheek and set off for school as fast
+as his legs could carry him. Oh, Love, omnivorous Love, that sparest
+neither the dotard leaning on his staff nor the boy with pantaloons
+buttoning on his jacket--omnipotent Love, that, after parents and
+teachers have failed, in one instant can make Billy try to become a
+good boy!
+
+With both of my nephews hopelessly enamored and myself the confidant
+of both, I had my hands full. Daniel was generally dejected and
+distrustful; Billy buoyant and jolly. Daniel found it impossible to
+overcome his bashfulness; was spontaneous only in sonnets, brilliant
+only in bouquets. Billy was always coming to me with pleasant news,
+told in his slangy New York boy vernacular. One day he would exclaim:
+"Oh, I'm getting on prime! I got such a smile off her this morning as
+I went by the window!" Another day he wanted counsel how to get a
+valentine to her--because it was too big to shove in a lamp-post, and
+she might catch him if he left it on the steps, rang the bell and ran
+away. Daniel wrote his own valentine; but, despite its originality,
+that document gave him no such comfort as Billy got from his twenty-
+five cents' worth of embossed paper, pink cupids and doggerel.
+Finally Billy announced to me that he had been to play with Jimmy and
+got introduced to his girl.
+
+Shortly after this Lu gave what they call "a little company"--not a
+party, but a reunion of forty or fifty people with whom the family
+were well acquainted, several of them living in our immediate
+neighborhood. There was a goodly proportion of young folk, and there
+was to be dancing; but the music was limited to a single piano played
+by the German exile usual on such occasions, and the refreshments did
+not rise to the splendor of a costly supper. This kind of compromise
+with fashionable gaiety was wisely deemed by Lu the best method of
+introducing Daniel to the _beau monde_--a push given the timid
+eaglet by the maternal bird, with a soft tree-top between him and the
+vast expanse of society. How simple was the entertainment may be
+inferred from the fact that Lu felt somewhat discomposed when she got
+a note from one of her guests asking leave to bring along her niece,
+who was making her a few weeks' visit. As a matter of course,
+however, she returned answer to bring the young lady, and welcome.
+
+Daniel's dressing-room having been given up to the gentlemen, I
+invited him to make his toilet in mine, and, indeed, wanting him to
+create a favorable impression, became his valet _pro tem_, tying
+his cravat and teasing the divinity student look out of his side
+hair. My little dandy Billy came in for another share of attention,
+and when I managed to button his jacket for him so that it showed his
+shirt-studs "like a man's," Count d'Orsey could not have felt a more
+pleasing sense of his sufficiency for all the demands of the gay
+world.
+
+When we reached the parlor we found Pa and and Ma Lovegrove already
+receiving. About a score of guests had arrived. Most of them were old
+married couples, which, after paying their _devoirs_, fell in
+two like unriveted scissors--the gentlemen finding a new pivot in pa
+and the ladies in ma, where they mildly opened and shut upon such
+questions as severally concerned them, such as "the way gold closed"
+and "how the children were."
+
+Besides the old married people, there were several old young men of
+distinctly hopeless and unmarried aspect who, having nothing in
+common with the other class, nor sufficient energy of character to
+band themselves for mutual protection, hovered dejectedly about the
+arch pillars or appeared to be considering whether, on the whole, it
+would not be feasible and best to sit down on the center table. These
+subsisted upon such crumbs of comfort as Lu could get an occasional
+chance to throw them by rapid sorties of conversation--became
+galvanically active the moment they were punched up and fell flat the
+moment the punching was remitted. I did all I could for them, but,
+having Daniel in tow, dared not sail too near the edge of the
+Doldrums, lest he should drop into sympathetic stagnation and be
+taken preternaturally bashful, with his sails all aback, just as I
+wanted to carry him gallantly into action with some clipper-built
+cruiser of a nice young lady. Finally, Lu bethought herself of that
+last plank of drowning conversationalists, the photograph album. All
+the dejected young men made for it at once, some reaching it just as
+they were about to sink for the last time, but all getting a grip on
+it somehow, and staying there in company with other people's babies
+whom they didn't know, and celebrities whom they knew to death,
+until, one by one, they either stranded upon a motherly dowager by
+the Fireplace Shoals, or were rescued from the Soda Reef by some
+gallant wrecker of a strong-minded young lady, with a view to taking
+salvage out of them in the German.
+
+Besides these were already arrived a dozen nice little boys and
+girls, who had been invited to make it pleasant for Billy. I had to
+remind him of the fact that they were his guests, for, in comparison
+with the queen of his affections, they were in danger of being
+despised by him as small fry.
+
+The younger ladies and gentlemen--those who had fascinations to
+disport or were in the habit of disporting what they considered such,
+were probably still at home consulting the looking-glass until that
+oracle should announce the auspicious moment for their setting forth.
+
+Daniel was in conversation with a perfect godsend of a girl, who
+understood Latin and had begun Greek. Billy was taking a moment's
+vacation from his boys and girls, busy with "Old Maid" in the
+extension room, and whispering with his hand in mine, "Oh, don't I
+wish _she_ were here!" when a fresh invoice of ladies, just unpacked
+from the dressing-room in all the airy elegance of evening costume,
+floated through the door. I heard Lu say:
+
+"Ah, Mrs. Rumbullion! Happy to see your niece, too. How d'ye do, Miss
+Pilgrim?"
+
+At this last word Billy jumped as if he had been shot, and the bevy
+of ladies opening about sister Lu disclosed the charming face and
+figure of the pretty girl we had met at Barnum's.
+
+Billy's countenance rapidly changed from astonishment to joy.
+
+"Isn't that splendid, Uncle Teddy? Just as I was wishing it! It's
+just like the fairy books!" and, rushing up to the party of
+newcomers, "My dear Lottie!" cried he, "if I'd only known you were
+coming I'd have gone after you!"
+
+As he caught her by the hand I was pleased to see her soft eyes
+brighten with gratification at his enthusiasm, but my sister Lu
+looked on naturally with astonishment in every feature.
+
+"Why, Billy!" said she, "you ought not to call a strange young lady
+'_Lottie!_' Miss Pilgrim, you must excuse my wild boy."
+
+"And you must excuse my mother, Lottie," said Billy, affectionately
+patting Miss Pilgrim's rose kid, "for calling you a strange young
+lady. You are not strange at all--you're just as nice a girl as there
+is."
+
+"There are no excuses necessary," said Miss Pilgrim, with a
+bewitching little laugh. "Billy and I know each other intimately
+well, Mrs. Lovegrove; and I confess that when I heard the lady aunt
+had been invited to visit was his mother, I felt all the more willing
+to infringe etiquette this evening by coming where I had no previous
+introduction."
+
+"Don't you care!" said Billy encouragingly--"I'll introduce you to
+every one of our family; I know 'em, if you don't."
+
+At this moment I came up as Billy's reinforcement, and fearing lest
+in his enthusiasm he might forget the canon of society which
+introduces a gentleman to a lady, not the lady to him, I ventured to
+suggest it delicately by saying:
+
+"Billy, will you grant me the favor of a presentation to Miss
+Pilgrim?"
+
+"In a minute, Uncle Teddy," answered Billy, considerably lowering his
+voice. "The older people first;" and after this reproof I was left to
+wait in the cold until he had gone through the ceremony of
+introducing to the young lady his father and his mother.
+
+Billy, who had now assumed entire guardianship of Miss Pilgrim, with
+an air of great dignity intrusted her to my care and left us
+promenading while he went in search of Daniel. I myself looked in
+vain for that youth, whom I had not seen since the entrance of the
+last comers. Miss Pilgrim and I found a congenial common ground in
+Billy, whom she spoke of as one of the most delightfully original
+boys she had ever met--in fact, altogether the most fascinating young
+gentleman she had seen in New York society. You may be sure it wasn't
+Billy's left ear which burned when I made my responses.
+
+In five minutes he reappeared to announce, in a tone of
+disappointment, that he could find Daniel nowhere. He could see a
+light through his keyhole, but the door was locked, and he could get
+no admittance. Just then Lu came up to present a certain--no, an
+uncertain--young man of the fleet stranded on parlor furniture
+earlier in the evening. To Lu's great astonishment Miss Pilgrim asked
+Billy's permission to leave. It was granted with all the courtesy of
+a _preux chevalier_, on the condition readily assented to by the
+lady that she should dance one lancers with him during the evening.
+
+"Dear me!" exclaimed Lu, after Billy had gone back like a superior
+being to assist at the childish amusement of his contemporaries,
+"would anybody ever suppose that was our Billy?"
+
+"I should, my dear sister," said I, with proud satisfaction; "but you
+remember I always was just to Billy."
+
+Left free, I went myself to hunt up Daniel, I found his door locked
+and a light shining through the keyhole, as Billy had stated. I made
+no attempt to enter by knocking, but, going to my room and opening
+the window next his, leaned out as far as I could, shoved up his sash
+with my cane, and pushed aside his curtain. Such an unusual method of
+communication could not fail to bring him to the window with a rush.
+When he saw me he trembled like a guilty thing, his countenance fell,
+and, no longer able to feign absence, he unlocked his door and let me
+enter by the normal mode.
+
+"Why, Daniel Lovegrove, my nephew, what does this mean? Are you
+sick?" "Uncle Edward, I am not sick--and this means that I am a fool.
+Even a little boy like Billy puts me to shame. I feel humbled to the
+very dust. I wish I'd been a missionary and got massacred by savages.
+Oh, that I'd been permitted to wear damp stockings in childhood, or
+that my mother hadn't carried me through the measles! If it weren't
+wrong to take my life into my own hands, I'd open that window, and--
+and--sit in a draft this very evening! Oh, yes! I'm just that bitter!
+Oh, oh, oh!"
+
+And he paced the floor with strides of frenzy.
+
+"Well, my dear fellow, let's look at the matter calmly a minute. What
+brought on this sudden attack? You seemed doing well enough the first
+ten minutes after we came down. I was only out of your sight long
+enough to speak to the Rumbullion party, who had just come in, and
+when I turned around you were gone. Now you are in this fearful
+condition. What is there in the Rumbullions to start you off on such
+a bender of bashfulness as this which I here behold?"
+
+"Rumbullion indeed!" said Daniel. "A hundred Rumbullions could not
+make me feel as I do. But _she_ can shake me into a whirlwind with her
+little finger; and _she_ came with the Rumbullions!"
+
+"What! D'you--Miss Pilgrim?"
+
+"Miss Pilgrim!"
+
+I labored with Daniel for ten minutes, using every encouragement and
+argument I could think of, and finally threatened him that I would
+bring up the whole Rumbullion party, Miss Pilgrim included, telling
+them that he had invited them to look at his conchological cabinet,
+unless he instantly shook the ice out of his manner and accompanied
+me downstairs. The dreadful menace had the desired effect. He knew
+that I would not scruple to fulfil it; and at the same time that it
+made him surrender, it also provoked him with me to a degree which
+gave his eyes and cheeks as fine a glow as I could have wished for
+the purpose of a favorable impression. The stimulus of wrath was good
+for him, and there was little tremor in his knees when he descended
+the stairs. Well-a-day! So Daniel and Billy were rivals!
+
+The latter gentleman met us at the foot of the staircase.
+
+"Oh, there you are, Daniel!" he said cheerily. "I was just going to
+look after you and Uncle Teddy. We've wanted you for the dances.
+We've had the lancers twice, and three round dances; and I danced the
+second lancers with Lottie. Now we're going to play some games--to
+amuse the children, you know," he added loftily, with the adult
+gesture of pointing his thumb over his shoulder at the extension
+room. "Lottie's going to play, too; so will you and Daniel, won't
+you, uncle? Oh, here comes Lottie now! This is my brother, Miss
+Pilgrim--let me introduce him to you. I'm sure you'll like him.
+There's nothing he don't know."
+
+Miss Pilgrim had just come to the newel-post of the staircase and,
+when she looked into Daniel's face, blushed like the red, red rose,
+losing her self-possession perceptibly more than Daniel.
+
+The courage of weak warriors and timid gallants mounts as the
+opposite party's falls, and Daniel made out to say in a firm tone
+that it was long since he had enjoyed the pleasure of meeting Miss
+Pilgrim.
+
+"Not since Mrs. Cramcroud's last sociable, I think," replied Miss
+Pilgrim, her cheeks and eyes still playing the telltale.
+
+"Oho! so you don't want any introduction!" exclaimed Master Billy. "I
+didn't know you knew each other, Lottie?"
+
+"I have met Mr. Lovegrove in society. Shall we go and join the
+plays?"
+
+"To be sure we shall!" cried Billy. "You needn't mind--all the grown
+people are going, too."
+
+On entering the parlor we found it as he had said. The guests being
+almost all well acquainted with each other, at the solicitation of
+jolly little Miss Bloomingal, sister Lu had consented to make a
+pleasant Christmas kind of time of it, in which everybody was
+permitted to be young again and romp with the rompiest. We played
+blindman's buff till we were tired of that--Daniel, to Lu's delight,
+coming out splendidly as blindman, and evincing such "cheek" in the
+style he hunted down and caught the ladies as satisfied me that
+nothing but his eyesight stood in the way of his making an audacious
+figure in the world. Then a pretty little girl, Tilly Turtelle, who
+seemed quite a premature flirt, proposed "doorkeeper"--a suggestion
+accepted with great _eclat_ by all the children, several grown
+people assenting.
+
+To Billy--quite as much on account of his shining prominence in the
+executive faculties as of his character as host--was committed the
+duty of counting out the first person to be sent into the hall. There
+were so many of us that "Aina maina mona mike" would not go quite
+round; but, with that promptness of expedient which belongs to
+genius, Billy instantly added on, "Intery-mintery-cutery-corn," and
+the last word of the cabalistic formula fell upon me--Edward Balbus.
+I disappeared into the entry amidst peals of happy laughter from both
+old and young, calling, when the door opened again to ask me whom I
+wanted, for the pretty lisping flirt who had proposed the game. After
+giving me a coquettish little chirrup of a kiss and telling me my
+beard scratched, she bade me on my return, send out to her "Mithter
+Billy Lovegrove." I obeyed her; my youngest nephew retired; and after
+a couple of seconds, during which Tilly undoubtedly got what she
+proposed the game for, Billy being a great favorite with the little
+girls, she came back, pouting and blushing, to announce that he
+wanted Miss Pilgrim. That young lady showed no mock-modesty, but
+arose at once and laughingly went out to her youthful admirer, who,
+as I afterward learned, embraced her ardently and told her he loved
+her better than any girl in the world. As he turned to go back she
+told him that he might send to her one of her juvenile cousins,
+Reginald Rumbullion. Now, whether because on this youthful
+Rumbullion's account Billy had suffered the pangs of that most
+terrible passion, jealousy, or from his natural enjoyment of playing
+practical jokes destructive of all dignity in his elders, Billy
+marched into the room, and, having shut the door behind him,
+paralyzed the crowded parlor by an announcement that Mr. Daniel
+Lovegrove was wanted.
+
+I was standing at his side and could feel him tremble--see him turn
+pale.
+
+"Dear me!" he whispered in a choking voice, "can she mean me?"
+
+"Of course she does," said I. "Who else? Do you hesitate? Surely you
+can't refuse such an invitation from a lady?"
+
+"No, I suppose not," said he mechanically. And amidst much laughter
+from the disinterested while the faces of Mrs. Rumbullion and his
+mother were spectacles of crimson astonishment, he made his exit from
+the room. Never in my life did I so much long for that instrument
+described by Mr. Samuel Weller--a pair of patent double-million-
+magnifying microscopes of hextry power, to see through a deal door.
+Instead of this, I had to learn what happened only by report.
+
+Lottie Pilgrim was standing under the hall burners with her elbow on
+the newel-post, looking more vividly charming than he had ever seen
+her before at Mrs. Cramcroud's sociable or elsewhere. When startled
+by the apparition of Mr. Daniel Lovegrove instead of the little Rum-
+bullion whom she was expecting, she had no time to exclaim or hide
+her mounting color, none at all to explain to her own mind the
+mistake that had occurred, before his arm was clasped around her
+waist, and his lips so closely pressed to hers, that through her soft
+thick hair she could feel the throbbing of his temples. As for
+Daniel, he seemed in a walking dream, from which he waked to see Miss
+Pilgrim looking into his eyes with utter though not incensed
+stupefaction--to stammer:
+
+"Forgive me! Do forgive me! I thought you were in earnest."
+
+"So I was," she said tremulously, as soon as she could catch her
+voice, "in sending for my cousin Reginald."
+
+"Oh, dear, what shall I do! Believe me, I was told you wanted me. Let
+me go and explain it to mother--she'll tell the rest. I couldn't do
+it--I'd die of mortification. Oh, that wretched boy Billy!"
+
+On the principle already mentioned, his agitation reassured her.
+
+"Don't try to explain it now--it may get Billy a scolding. Are there
+any but intimate family friends here this evening?"
+
+"No--I believe--no--I'm sure," replied Daniel, collecting his
+faculties.
+
+"Then I don't mind what they think. Perhaps they'll suppose we've
+known each other long; but we'll arrange it by-and-by. They'll think
+the more of it the longer we stay out here--hear them laugh! I must
+run back now. I'll send you somebody."
+
+A round of juvenile applause greeted her as she hurried into the
+parlor, and a number of grown people smiled quite musically. Her
+quick woman wit showed her how to retaliate and divide the
+embarrassment of the occasion. As she passed me she said in an
+undersone:
+
+"Answer quick! Who's that fat lady on the sofa, that laughs so loud?"
+
+"Mrs. Cromwell Crags," said I as quietly.
+
+Miss Pilgrim made a satirically low courtsey and spoke in a modest
+but distinct voice:
+
+"I really must be excused for asking. I'm a stranger, you know; but
+is there such a lady here as Mrs. Craggs--Mrs. _Cromwell_ Craggs? For
+if so, the present doorkeeper would like to see Mrs. Cromwell Craggs."
+
+Then came the turn of the fat lady to be laughed at; but out she had
+to go and get kissed like the rest of us.
+
+Before the close of the evening Billy was made as jealous as his
+parents and I was surprised to see Daniel in close conversation with
+Miss Pilgrim among the geraniums and fuchsias of the conservatory. "A
+regular flirtation!" said Billy somewhat indignantly. The conclusion
+they arrived at was, that after all no great harm had been done, and
+that the dear little fellow ought not to be peached on for his fun.
+If I had known at the time how easily they forgave him, I should have
+suspected that the offense Billy had led Daniel into committing was
+not unlikely to be repeated on the offender's own account; but so
+much as I could see showed me that the ice was broken.
+
+--From "Little Brother, and Other Genre Pictures."
+
+
+
+
+Robert Jones Burdette
+
+RHEUMATISM MOVEMENT CURE
+
+
+One day, not a great while ago, Mr. Middlerib read in his favorite
+paper a paragraph stating that the sting of a bee was a sure cure for
+rheumatism, and citing several remarkable instances in which people
+had been perfectly cured by this abrupt remedy. Mr. Middlerib thought
+of the rheumatic twinges that grappled his knees once in awhile and
+made his life a burden.
+
+He read the article several times and pondered over it. He understood
+that the stinging must be done scientifically and thoroughly. The
+bee, as he understood the article, was to be griped by the ears and
+set down upon the rheumatic joint and held there until it stung
+itself stingless. He had some misgivings about the matter. He knew it
+would hurt. He hardly thought it could hurt any worse than the
+rheumatism, and it had been so many years since he was stung by a bee
+that he had almost forgotten what it felt like. He had, however, a
+general feeling that it would hurt some. But desperate diseases
+require desperate remedies, and Mr. Middlerib was willing to undergo
+any amount of suffering if it would cure his rheumatism.
+
+He contracted with Master Middlerib for a limited supply of bees;
+humming and buzzing about in the summer air, Mr. Middlerib did not
+know how to get them. He felt, however, that he could safely depend
+upon the instincts and methods of boyhood. He knew that if there was
+any way in heaven whereby the shyest bee that ever lifted a two
+hundred pound man off the clover could be induced to enter a wide-
+mouthed glass bottle, his son knew that way.
+
+For the small sum of one dime Master Middlerib agreed to procure
+several, to wit: six bees, sex and age not specified; but, as Mr.
+Middlerib was left in uncertainty as to the race, it was made
+obligatory upon the contractor to have three of them honey and three
+humble, or, in the generally accepted vernacular, bumblebees. Mr. M.
+did not tell his son what he wanted those bees for, and the boy went
+off on his mission with his head so full of astonishment that it
+fairly whirled. Evening brings all home, and the last rays of the
+declining sun fell upon Master Middlerib with a short, wide-mouthed
+bottle comfortably populated with hot, ill-natured bees, and Mr.
+Middlerib and a dime. The dime and the bottle changed hands. Mr.
+Middlerib put the bottle in his coat pocket and went into the house
+eyeing everybody he met very suspiciously, as though he had made up
+his mind to sting to death the first person who said "bee" to him. He
+confided his guilty secret to none of his family. He hid his bees in
+his bedroom, and as he looked at them just before putting them away
+he half wished the experiment was safely over. He wished the
+imprisoned bees did not look so hot and cross. With exquisite care he
+submerged the bottle in a basin of water and let a few drops in on
+the heated inmates to cool them off.
+
+At the tea table he had a great fright. Miss Middlerib, in the
+artless simplicity of her romantic nature, said:
+
+"I smell bees. How the odor brings up---"
+
+But her father glared at her and said, with superfluous harshness and
+execrable grammar: "Hush up! You don't smell nothing."
+
+Whereupon Mrs. Middlerib asked him if he had eaten anything that
+disagreed with him, and Miss Middlerib said:
+
+"Why, pa!" and Master Middlerib smiled as he wondered.
+
+Bedtime at last, and the night was warm and sultry. Under various
+false pretenses, Mr. Middlerib strolled about the house until
+everybody else was in bed, and then he sought his room. He turned the
+lamp down until its feeble ray shone dimly as a death-light.
+
+Mr. Middlerib disrobed slowly--very slowly. When at last he was ready
+to go lumbering into his peaceful couch, he heaved a profound sigh,
+so full of apprehension and grief that Mrs. Middlerib, who was
+awakened by it, said if it gave him so much pain to come to bed
+perhaps he had better sit up all night. Mr. Middlerib choked another
+sigh, but said nothing and crept into bed. After lying still a few
+moments he reached out and got his bottle of bees.
+
+It was not an easy thing to do to pick one bee out of the bottle with
+his fingers and not get into trouble. The first bee Mr. Middlerib got
+was a little brown honey-bee, that wouldn't weigh half an ounce if
+you picked him up by the ears, but if you lifted him by the hind leg
+would weigh as much as the last end of a bay mule. Mr. Middlerib
+could not repress a groan.
+
+"What's the matter with you?" sleepily asked his wife.
+
+It was very hard for Mr. Middlerib to say he only felt hot, but he
+did it. He didn't have to lie about it, either. He did feel very hot
+indeed--about eighty-six all over, and one hundred and ninety-seven
+on the end of his thumb. He reversed the bee and pressed the warlike
+terminus of it firmly against the rheumatic knee.
+
+It didn't hurt so badly as he thought it would.
+
+It didn't hurt at all.
+
+Then Mr. Middlerib remembered that when the honey-bee stabs a human
+foe it generally leaves its harpoon in the wound, and the invalid
+knew that the only thing this bee had to sting with was doing its
+work at the end of his thumb.
+
+He reached his arm out from under the sheets and dropped this
+disabled atom of rheumatism liniment on the carpet. Then, after a
+second of blank wonder, he began to feel round for the bottle, and
+wished he knew what he did with it.
+
+In the meantime strange things had been going on. When he caught hold
+of the first bee, Mr. Middlerib, for reasons, drew it out in such
+haste that for a time he forgot all about the bottle and its remedial
+contents, and left it lying uncorked in the bed, between himself and
+his innocent wife. In the darkness there had been a quiet but general
+emigration from that bottle. The bees, their wings clogged with the
+water Mr. Middlerib had poured upon them to cool and tranquillize
+them, were crawling aimlessly over the sheet. While Mr. Middlerib was
+feeling around for it, his ears were suddenly thrilled and his heart
+frozen by a wild, piercing scream from his wife.
+
+"Murder!" she screamed. "Murder! Oh Help me! Help! Help!"
+
+Mr. Middlerib sat bolt upright in bed. His hair stood on end. The
+night was warm, but he turned to ice in a minute.
+
+"Where in thunder," he said, with pallid lips, as he felt all over
+the bed in frenzied haste, "where in thunder are them infernal bees?"
+
+And a large "bumble," with a sting as pitiless as the finger of
+scorn, just then climbed up the inside of Mr. Middlerib's nightshirt,
+until it got squarely between his shoulders, and then it felt for his
+marrow, and he said calmly:
+
+"Here is one of them."
+
+And Mrs. Middlerib felt ashamed of her feeble screams when Mr.
+Middlerib threw up both arms and, with a howl that made the windows
+rattle, roared:
+
+"Take him off! Oh, land of Scott, somebody take him off!"
+
+And when the little honey-bee began tickling the sole of Mrs.
+Middlerib's foot, she shrieked that the house was bewitched, and
+immediately went into spasms.
+
+The household was aroused by this time. Miss Middlerib and Master
+Middlerib and the servants were pouring into the room, adding to the
+general confusion by howling at random and asking irrelevant
+questions, while they gazed at the figure of a man a little on in
+years arrayed in a long night-shirt, pawing fiercely at the
+unattainable spot in the middle of his back, while he danced an
+unnatural, weird, wicked-looking jig by the dim, religious light of
+the night-lamp. And while he danced and howled, and while they gazed
+and shouted, a navy-blue wasp, that Master Middlerib had put in the
+bottle for good measure and variety, and to keep the menagerie
+stirred up, had dried his legs and wings with a corner of the sheet,
+and after a preliminary circle or two around the bed to get up his
+motion and settle down to a working gait, he fired himself across the
+room, and to his dying day Mr. Middlerib will always believe that one
+of the servants mistook him for a burglar and shot him.
+
+No one, not even Mr. Middlerib himself, could doubt that he was, at
+least for the time, most thoroughly cured of rheumatism. His own boy
+could not have carried himself more lightly or with greater agility.
+But the cure was not permanent, and Mr. Middlerib does not like to
+talk about it.--_New York Weekly_.
+
+
+
+
+Oliver Wendell Holmes
+
+AN APHORISM AND A LECTURE
+
+
+One of the boys mentioned, the other evening, in the course of a very
+pleasant poem he read us, a little trick of the Commons table-
+boarders, which I, nourished at the parental board, had never heard
+of. Young fellows being always hungry----Allow me to stop dead short,
+in order to utter an aphorism which has been forming itself in one of
+the blank interior spaces of my intelligence, like a crystal in the
+cavity of a geode.
+
+Aphorism by the Professor
+
+In order to know whether a human being is young or old, offer it food
+of different kinds at short intervals. If young, it will eat anything
+at any hour of the day or night. If old, it observes stated periods,
+and you might as well attempt to regulate the time of high-water to
+suit a fishing-party as to change these periods.
+
+The crucial experiment is this. Offer a bulky and boggy bun to the
+suspected individual just ten minutes before dinner. If this is
+eagerly accepted and devoured, the fact of youth is established. If
+the subject of the question starts back and expresses surprise and
+incredulity, as if you could not possibly be in earnest, the fact of
+maturity is no less clear.
+
+--Excuse me--I return to my story of the Commons table. Young fellows
+being always hungry, and tea and dry toast being the meager fare of
+the evening meal, it was a trick of some of the boys to impale a
+slice of meat upon a fork at dinner time and stick the fork holding
+it beneath the table, so that they could get it at tea time. The
+dragons that guarded this table of the Hesperides found out the trick
+at last and kept a sharp lookout for missing forks--they knew where
+to find one if it was not in its place. Now the odd thing was that,
+after waiting so many years to hear of this college trick, I should
+hear it mentioned a _second time_ within the same twenty-four
+hours by a college youth of the present generation. Strange, but
+true. And so it has happened to me and to every person, often and
+often, to be hit in rapid succession by these twinned facts or
+thoughts, as if they were linked like chain-shot.
+
+I was going to leave the simple reader to wonder over this, taking it
+as an unexplained marvel. I think, however, I will turn over a furrow
+of subsoil in it. The explanation is, of course, that in a great many
+thoughts there must be a few coincidences, and these instantly arrest
+our attention. Now we shall probably never have the least idea of the
+enormous number of impressions which pass through our consciousness,
+until in some future life we see the photographic record of our
+thoughts and the stereoscopic picture of our actions. There go more
+pieces to make up a conscious life or a living body than you think
+for. Why, some of you were surprised when a friend of mine told you
+there were fifty-eight separate pieces in a fiddle. How many
+"swimming glands"--solid, organized, regularly formed, rounded disks,
+taking an active part in all your vital processes, part and parcel,
+each one of them, of your corporal being--do you suppose are whirled
+along like pebbles in a stream with the blood which warms your frame
+and colors your cheeks? A noted German physiologist spread out a
+minute drop of blood under the microscope, in narrow streaks, and
+counted the globules, and then made a calculation. The counting by
+the micrometer took him a _week_. You have, my full-grown friend, of
+these little couriers in crimson or scarlet livery, running on your
+vital errands day and night as long as you live, sixty-five billions
+five hundred and seventy thousand millions, errors excepted. Did I
+hear some gentleman say "Doubted"? I am the Professor; I sit in my
+chair with a petard under it that will blow me through the skylight of
+my lecture-room if I do not know what I am talking about and whom I am
+quoting.
+
+Now, my dear friends, who are putting your hands to your foreheads
+and saying to yourselves that you feel a little confused, as if you
+had been waltzing until things began to whirl slightly round you, is
+it possible that you do not clearly apprehend the exact connection of
+all that I have been saying and its bearing on what is now to come?
+Listen, then. The number of these living elements in our body
+illustrates the incalculable multitude of our thoughts; the number of
+our thoughts accounts for those frequent coincidences spoken of;
+these coincidences in the world of thought illustrate those which we
+constantly observe in the world of outward events, of which the
+presence of the young girl now at our table, and proving to be the
+daughter of an old acquaintance some of us may remember, is the
+special example which led me through this labyrinth of reflections,
+and finally lands me at the commencement of this young girl's story,
+which, as I said, I have found the time and felt the interest to
+learn something of, and which I think I can tell without wronging the
+unconscious subject of my brief delineation.
+
+A Short Lecture on Phrenology
+
+_Read to the Boarders at Our Breakfast Table _
+
+I shall begin, my friends, with the definition of a _pseudoscience_. A
+pseudoscience consists of a _nomenclature_, with a self-adjusting
+arrangement, by which all positive evidence, or such as favors its
+doctrines, is admitted, and all negative evidence, or such as tells
+against it, is excluded. It is invariably connected with some
+lucrative practical application. Its professors and practitioners are
+usually shrewd people; they are very serious with the public, but wink
+and laugh a good deal among themselves. The believing multitude
+consists of women of both sexes, feeble-minded inquirers, poetical
+optimists, people who always get cheated in buying horses,
+philanthropists who insist on hurrying up the millennium, and others
+of this class, with here and there a clergyman, less frequently a
+lawyer, very rarely a physician, and almost never a horse-jockey or a
+member of the detective police. I did not say that Phrenology was one
+of the pseudosciences.
+
+A pseudoscience does not necessarily consist wholly of lies. It may
+contain many truths, and even valuable ones. The rottenest bank
+starts with a little specie. It puts out a thousand promises to pay
+on the strength of a single dollar, but the dollar is very commonly a
+good one. The practitioners of the pseudosciences know that common
+minds after they have been baited with a real fact or two, will jump
+at the merest rag of a lie, or even at the bare hook. When we have
+one fact found us, we are very apt to supply the next out of our own
+imagination. (How many persons can read Judges XV. 16 correctly the
+first time?) The pseudosciences take advantage of this. I did not say
+that it was so with Phrenology.
+
+I have rarely met a sensible man who would not allow that there was
+_something_ in Phrenology. A broad, high forehead, it is commonly
+agreed, promises intellect; one that is "villainous low," and has a
+huge hind-head back of it, is wont to mark an animal nature. I have as
+rarely met an unbiased and sensible man who really believed in the
+bumps. It is observed, however, that persons with what the
+phrenologists call "good heads" are more prone than others
+toward plenary belief in the doctrine.
+
+It is so hard to prove a negative that, if a man should assert that
+the moon was in truth a green cheese, formed by the coagulable
+substance of the Milky Way, and challenge me to prove the contrary, I
+might be puzzled. But if he offer to sell me a ton of this lunar
+cheese, I call on him to prove the truth of the caseous nature of our
+satellite before I purchase.
+
+It is not necessary to prove the falsity of the phrenological
+statement. It is only necessary to show that its truth is not proved,
+and cannot be, by the common course of argument. The walls of the
+head are double, with a great air-chamber between them, over the
+smallest and most closely crowded "organs." Can you tell how much
+money there is in a safe, which also has thick double walls, by
+kneading its knobs with your fingers? So when a man fumbles about my
+forehead, and talks about the organs of _Individuality_, _Size_, etc.,
+I trust him as much as I should if he felt of the outside of my
+strongbox and told me that there was a five-dollar or a ten-dollar
+bill under this or that particular rivet. Perhaps there is; _only he
+doesn't know anything about it_. But this is a point that I, the
+Professor, understand, my friends, or ought to, certainly, better than
+you do. The next argument you will all appreciate.
+
+I proceed, therefore, to explain the self-adjusting mechanism of
+Phrenology, which is _very similar_ to that of the pseudosciences. An
+example will show it most conveniently.
+
+A-- is a notorious thief. Messrs. Bumpus and Crane examine him and
+find a good-sized organ of Acquisitiveness. Positive fact for
+Phrenology. Casts and drawings of A-- are multiplied, and the bump
+_does not lose_ in the act of copying--I did not say it gained.
+--What do you look for so? (to the boarders).
+
+Presently B-- turns up, a bigger thief than A--. But B-- has no bump
+at all over Acquisitiveness. Negative fact; goes against Phrenology.
+Not a bit of it. Don't you see how small Conscientiousness is?
+_That's_ the reason B-- stole.
+
+And then comes C--, ten times as much a thief as either A-- or B--;
+used to steal before he was weaned, and would pick one of his own
+pockets and put its contents in another, if he could find no other
+way of committing petty larceny. Unfortunately C-- has a _hollow_,
+instead of a bump, over Acquisitiveness. Ah! but just look and see
+what a bump of Alimentiveness! Did not O-- buy nuts and gingerbread,
+when a boy, with the money he stole? Of course you see why he is a
+thief, and how his example confirms our noble science.
+
+At last comes along a case which is apparently a _settler_, for
+there is a little brain with vast and varied powers--a case like that
+of Byron, for instance. Then comes out the grand reserve--reason
+which covers everything and renders it simply impossible ever to
+corner a phrenologist. "It is not the size alone, but the _quality_ of
+an organ, which determines its degree of power."
+
+Oh! oh! I see. The argument may be briefly stated thus by the
+phrenologist: "Heads I win, tails you lose." Well, that's convenient.
+It must be confessed that Phrenology has a certain resemblance to the
+pseudosciences. I did not say it was a pseudoscience.
+
+I have often met persons who have been altogether struck up and
+amazed at the accuracy with which some wandering Professor of
+Phrenology had read their characters written upon their skulls. Of
+course, the Professor acquires his information solely through his
+cranial inspections and manipulations. What are you laughing at? (to
+the boarders). But let us just _suppose_, for a moment, that a
+tolerably cunning fellow, who did not know or care anything about
+Phrenology, should open a shop and undertake to read off people's
+characters at fifty cents or a dollar apiece. Let us see how well he
+could get along without the "organs."
+
+I will suppose myself to set up such a shop. I would invest one
+hundred dollars, more or less, in casts of brains, skulls, charts,
+and other matters that would make the most show for the money. That
+would do to begin with. I would then advertise myself as the
+celebrated Professor Brainey, or whatever name I might choose, and
+wait for my first customer--a middle-aged man. I look at him, ask him
+a question or two, so as to hear him talk. When I have got the hang
+of him, I ask him to sit down, and proceed to fumble his skull,
+dictating as follows:
+
+SCALE FROM 1 TO 10
+
+LIST OF FACULTIES FOR CUSTOMER--PRIVATE NOTES FOR MY PUPIL:
+_Each to be accompanied with a wink._
+
+Amativeness, 7 Most men love the conflicting sex, and all men
+ love to be told they do.
+
+Alimentiveness, 8 Don't you see that he has burst off his
+ lowest waistcoat button with feeding--hey?
+
+Acquisitiveness, 8 Of course. A middle-aged Yankee.
+
+Approbativeness, 7+ Hat well brushed. Hair ditto. Mark the effect of
+ that plus sign.
+
+Self-esteem, 6 His face shows that.
+
+Benevolence, 9 That'll please him.
+
+Conscientiousness, 8 1/2 That fraction looks first rate.
+
+Mirthfulness, 7 Has laughed twice since he came in. That sounds
+ well.
+
+Ideality, 9
+
+Form, Size, Weight,
+Color, Locality,
+Eventuality, etc., Average everything that can't be guessed.
+etc. (4 to 6)
+
+And so of other faculties
+
+Of course, you know, that isn't the way the phrenologists do. They go
+only by the bumps. What do you keep laughing so for (to the
+boarders)? I only said that is the way I should practise "Phrenology"
+for a living.
+
+
+
+
+Joshua S. Morris
+
+THE HARP OF A THOUSAND STRINGS
+
+
+A Hard-Shell Baptist Sermon
+
+(This characteristic effusion first appeared in a New Orleans paper.
+The locality is supposed to be a village on the bank of the
+Mississippi River, whither the volunteer parson had brought his
+flatboat for the purpose of trade.)
+
+I may say to you, my brethring, that I am not an edicated man, an' I
+am not one of them as believes that edication is necessary for a
+Gospel minister, for I believe the Lord edicates his preachers jest
+as he wants 'em to be edicated; an' although I say it that oughtn't
+to say it, yet in the State of Indianny, whar I live, thar's no man
+as gets bigger congregations nor what I gits.
+
+Thar may be some here to-day, my brethring, as don't know what
+persuasion I am uv. Well, I must say to you, my brethring, that I'm a
+Hard-shell Baptist. Thar's some folks as don't like the Hard-shell
+Baptists, but I'd rather have a hard shell as no shell at all. You
+see me here to-day, my brethring, dressed up in fine clothes; you
+mout think I was proud, but I am not proud, my brethring, and
+although I've been a preacher of the Gospel for twenty years, an'
+although I'm capting of the flatboat that lies at your landing, I'm
+not proud, my brethring.
+
+I am not gwine to tell edzactly whar my tex may be found; suffice to
+say, it's in the leds of the Bible, and you'll find it somewhar
+between the first chapter of the book of Generations and the last
+chapter of the book of Revolutions, and ef you'll go and search the
+Scriptures, you'll not only find my tex thar, but a great many other
+texes as will do you good to read, and my tex, when you shall find
+it, you shall find it to read thus:
+
+"And he played on a harp uv a thousand strings, sperits uv jest men
+made perfeck."
+
+My text, my brethring, leads me to speak of sperits. Now, thar's a
+great many kinds of sperits in the world--in the fuss place, thar's
+the sperits as some folks call ghosts, and thar's the sperits of
+turpentine, and thar's the sperits as some folks call liquor, an'
+I've got as good an artikel of them kind of sperits on my flatboat as
+ever was fotch down the Mississippi River; but thar's a great many
+other kinds of sperits, for the tex says, "He played on a harp uv a
+_t-h-o-u-s-_and strings, sperits uv jest men made perfeck."
+
+But I tell you the kind uv sperits as is meant in the tex is FIRE.
+That's the kind uv sperits as is meant in the tex, my brethring. Now,
+thar's a great many kinds of fire in the world. In the fuss place,
+there's the common sort of fire you light your cigar or pipe with,
+and then thar's foxfire and camphire, fire before you're ready, and
+fire and fall back, and many other kinds uv fire, for the tex says,
+"He played _on_ the harp uv a _thous_and strings, sperits of jest men
+made perfeck."
+
+But I'll tell you the kind of fire as is meant in the tex, my
+brethring--it's HELL FIRE! an' that's the kind uv fire as a great
+many uv you'll come to, ef you don't do better nor what you have been
+doin'--for "He played on a harp uv a _thous_and strings, sperits
+uv jest men made perfeck."
+
+Now, the different sorts of fire in the world may be likened unto the
+different persuasions of Christians in the world. In the first place,
+we have the Piscapalions, an' they are a high-sailin' and highfalutin'
+set, and they may be likened unto a turkey buzzard that flies up into
+the air, and he goes up, and up, and up, till he looks no bigger than
+your finger nail, and the fust thing you know, he cums down, and down,
+and down, and is a-fillin' himself on the carkiss of a dead hoss by
+the side of the road, and "He played on a harp uv a _thous_and
+strings, sperits uv _jest_ men made perfeck."
+
+And then thar's the Methodis, and they may be likened unto the
+squirril runnin' up into a tree, for the Methodis beleeves in gwine
+on from one degree of grace to another, and finally on to perfection,
+and the squirril goes up and up, and up and up, and he jumps from
+limb to limb, and branch to branch, and the fust thing you know he
+falls, and down he cums kerflumix, and that's like the Methodis, for
+they is allers fallen from grace, ah! and "He played on a harp uv a
+_thous_and strings, sperits of jest men made perfeck."
+
+And then, my brethring, that's the Baptist, ah! and they have been
+likened unto a 'possum on a 'simmon tree, and thunders may roll and
+the earth may quake, but that 'possum clings thar still, ah! and you
+may shake one foot loose, an the other's thar, and you may shake all
+feet loose, and he laps his tail around the limb, and clings, and he
+clings furever, for "He played on the harp uv a _thous_and strings,
+sperits uv jest men made perfeck."
+
+
+
+
+Seba Smith
+
+MY FIRST VISIT TO PORTLAND
+
+
+In the fall of the year 1829 I took it into my head I'd go to
+Portland. I had heard a good deal about Portland, what a fine place
+it was, and how the folks got rich there proper fast; and that fall
+there was a couple of new papers come up to our place from there,
+called the _Portland Courier_ and _Family Reader_, and they told a
+good many queer kind of things about Portland, and one thing and
+another; and all at once it popped into my head, and I up and told
+father, and says:
+
+"I'm going to Portland, whether or no; and I'll see what this world
+is made of yet."
+
+Father stared a little at first and said he was afraid I would get
+lost; but when he see I was bent upon it, he give it up, and he
+stepped to his chist, and opened the till, and took out a dollar and
+gave it to me; and says he:
+
+"Jack, this is all I can do for you; but go and lead an honest life,
+and I believe I shall hear good of you yet."
+
+He turned and walked across the room, but I could see the tears start
+into his eyes. And mother sat down and had a hearty crying spell.
+
+This made me feel rather bad for a minit or two, and I almost had a
+mind to give it up; and then again father's dream came into my mind,
+and I mustered up courage and declared I'd go. So I tackled up the
+old horse, and packed in a load of ax-handles and a few notions; and
+mother fried me some doughnuts and put 'em into a box, along with
+some cheese and sausages and ropped me up another shirt, for I told
+her I didn't know how long I should be gone. After I got rigged out,
+I went round and bid all the neighbors good-by and jumped in and
+drove off for Portland.
+
+Aunt Sally had been married two or three years before and moved to
+Portland; and I inquired round till I found out where she lived and
+went there and put the old horse up, and ate some supper and went to
+bed.
+
+And the next morning I got up and straightened right off to see the
+editor of the _Portland Courier_, for I knew by what I had seen
+in his paper that he was just the man to tell me which way to steer.
+And when I come to see him, I knew I was right; for soon as I told
+him my name and what I wanted, he took me by the hand as kind as if
+he had been a brother, and says he:
+
+"Mister," says he, "I'll do anything I can to assist you. You have
+come to a good town. Portland is a healthy, thriving place, and any
+man with a proper degree of enterprise may do well here. But," says
+he, "stranger," and he looked mighty kind of knowing, says he, "if
+you want to make out to your mind, you must do as the steamboats do."
+
+"Well," says I, "how do they do?" for I didn't know what a steamboat
+was any more than the man in the moon.
+
+"Why," says he, "they go ahead. And you must drive about among the
+folks here just as tho' you were at home on the farm among the
+cattle. Don't be afraid of any of them, but figure away, and I dare
+say you'll get into good business in a very little while. But," says
+he, "there's one thing you must be careful of, and that is, not to
+get into the hands of those are folks that trades up round Hucklers'
+Row, for there's some sharpers up there, if they get hold of you,
+would twist your eye-teeth out in five minits."
+
+Well, arter he had giv me all the good advice he could, I went back
+to Aunt Sally's agin and got some breakfast; and then I walked all
+over the town, to see what chance I could find to sell my ax-handles
+and things and to git into business.
+
+After I had walked about three or four hours, I come along toward the
+upper end of the town, where I found there were stores and shops of
+all sorts and sizes. And I met a feller, and says I:
+
+"What place is this?"
+
+"Why, this," says he, "is Hucklers' Row."
+
+"What," says I, "are these the stores where the traders in Hucklers'
+Row keep?"
+
+And says he, "Yes."
+
+Well, then, says I to myself, I have a pesky good mind to go in and
+have a try with one of these chaps and see if they can twist my eye-
+teeth out. If they can get the best end of the bargain out of me they
+can do what there ain't a man in our place can do; and I should just
+like to know what sort of stuff these ere Portland chaps are made of.
+So in I goes into the best-looking store among 'em. And I see some
+biscuit lying on the shelf, and says I:
+
+"Mister, how much do you ax apiece for them ere biscuits?"
+
+"A cent apiece," says he.
+
+"Well," says I, "I shan't give you that, but if you've a mind to,
+I'll give you two cents for three of them, for I begin to feel a
+little as tho' I would like to take a bite."
+
+"Well," says he, "I wouldn't sell 'em to anybody else so, but seeing
+it's you I don't care if you take 'em."
+
+I knew he lied, for he never seen me before in his life. Well, he
+handed down the biscuits, and I took 'em, and walked round the store
+awhile, to see what else he had to sell. At last says I:
+
+"Mister, have you got any good cider?"
+
+Says he, "Yes, as good as ever you see."
+
+"Well," says I, "what do you ax a glass for it?"
+
+"Two cents," says he.
+
+"Well," says I, "seems to me I feel more dry than I do hungry now.
+Ain't you a mind to take these ere biscuits again and give me a glass
+of cider?" and says he:
+
+"I don't care if I do."
+
+So he took and laid 'em on the shelf again and poured out a glass of
+cider. I took the glass of cider and drinkt it down, and, to tell you
+the truth about it, it was capital good cider. Then says I:
+
+"I guess it's about time for me to be a-going," and so I stept along
+toward the door; but he ups and says, says he:
+
+"Stop, mister, I believe you haven't paid me for the cider."
+
+"Not paid you for the cider!" says I; "what do you mean by that?
+Didn't the biscuits that I give you just come to the cider?"
+
+"Oh, ah, right!" says he.
+
+So I started to go again, but before I had reached the door he says,
+says he:
+
+"But stop, mister, you didn't pay me for the biscuits."
+
+"What!" says I, "do you mean to impose upon me? Do you think I am
+going to pay you for the biscuits, and let you keep them, too? Ain't
+they there now on your shelf? What more do you want? I guess, sir,
+you don't whittle me in that way."
+
+So I turned about and marched off and left the feller staring and
+scratching his head as tho' he was struck with a dunderment.
+
+Howsomever, I didn't want to cheat him, only jest to show 'em it
+wasn't so easy a matter to pull my eye-teeth out; so I called in next
+day and paid him two cents.
+
+
+
+
+William Cullen Bryant
+
+THE MOSQUITO
+
+
+Fair insect! that with threadlike legs spread out
+ And blood-extracting bill and filmy wing,
+Dost murmur, as thou slowly sail'st about,
+ In pitiless ears, full many a plaintive thing,
+And tell how little our large veins should bleed,
+Would we but yield them to thy bitter need?
+
+Unwillingly I own, and, what is worse,
+ Full angrily men hearken to thy plaint;
+Thou gettest many a brush and many a curse,
+ For saying thou art gaunt and starved and faint.
+Even the old beggar, while he asks for food,
+Would kill thee, hapless stranger, if he could.
+
+I call thee stranger, for the town, I ween,
+ Has not the honor of so proud a birth-
+Thou com'st from Jersey meadows, fresh and green,
+ The offspring of the gods, though born on earth;
+For Titan was thy sire, and fair was she,
+The ocean nymph that nursed thy infancy.
+
+Beneath the rushes was thy cradle swung,
+ And when at length thy gauzy wings grew strong,
+Abroad to gentle airs their folds were flung,
+ Rose in the sky, and bore thee soft along;
+The south wind breathed to waft thee on thy way,
+And danced and shone beneath the billowy bay.
+
+Calm rose afar the city spires, and thence
+ Came the deep murmur of its throng of men,
+And as its grateful odors met thy sense,
+ They seemed the perfumes of thy native fen.
+Fair lay its crowded streets, and at the sight
+Thy tiny song grew shriller with delight.
+
+At length thy pinion fluttered in Broadway--
+ Ah, there were fairy steps, and white necks kissed
+By wanton airs, and eyes whose killing ray
+ Shone through the snowy veils like stars through mist;
+And fresh as morn, on many a cheek and chin,
+Bloomed the bright blood through the transparent skin.
+
+Sure these were sights to tempt an anchorite!
+ What! do I hear thy slender voice complain?
+Thou wailest when I talk of beauty's light,
+ As if it brought the memory of pain.
+Thou art a wayward being--well--come near,
+And pour thy tale of sorrow in mine ear.
+
+What say'st thou, slanderer! rouge makes thee sick?
+ And China Bloom at best is sorry food?
+And Rowland's Kalydor, if laid on thick,
+ Poisons the thirsty wretch that bores for blood.
+Go! 'Twas a just reward that met thy crime-
+But shun the sacrilege another time.
+
+That bloom was made to look at--not to touch;
+ To worship--not approach--that radiant white;
+And well might sudden vengeance light on such
+ As dared, like thee, most impiously to bite.
+Thou shouldst have gazed at distance and admired-
+Murmur'd thy admiration and retired.
+
+Thou'rt welcome to the town--but why come here
+ To bleed a brother poet, gaunt like thee?
+Alas! the little blood I have is dear,
+ And thin will be the banquet drawn from me.
+Look round--the pale-eyed sisters in my cell,
+Thy old acquaintance, Song and Famine, dwell.
+
+Try some plump alderman, and suck the blood
+ Enrich'd by gen'rous wine and costly meat;
+On well-filled skins, sleek as thy native mud,
+ Fix thy light pump, and press thy freckled feet.
+Go to the men for whom, in ocean's halls,
+The oyster breeds and the green turtle sprawls.
+
+There corks are drawn, and the red vintage flows.
+ To fill the swelling veins for thee, and now
+The ruddy cheek, and now the ruddier nose
+ Shall tempt thee, as thou flittest round the brow;
+And when the hour of sleep its quiet brings,
+No angry hand shall rise to brush thy wings.
+
+
+
+
+John Carver
+
+COUNTRY BURIAL-PLACES
+
+
+In passing through New England, a stranger will be struck with the
+variety, in taste and feeling, respecting burial-places. Here and
+there may be seen a solitary grave, in a desolate and dreary pasture
+lot, and anon under the shade of some lone tree, the simple stone
+reared by affection to the memory of one known and loved by the
+humble fireside only. There, on that gentle elevation, sloping green
+and beautiful toward the south, is a family enclosure adorned with
+trees and filled with the graves of the household. How many breaking
+hearts have there left the loved till that bright morning! Here in
+this garden, beside the vine-covered arbor and amidst the shrubbery
+which her own hand planted, is the monument to the faithful wife and
+loving mother. How appropriate! How beautiful! And to the old
+landholders of New England, what motive to hold sacred from the hand
+of lucre so strong as the ground loved by the living as the burial-
+place of _their_ dead!
+
+Apropos to burying in gardens, I heard a story of an old man who was
+bent on interring his wife in his garden, despite of the opposition
+of all his neighbors to his doing so. Indeed, the old fellow avowed
+this as his chief reason and to all their entreaties and deprecations
+and earnest requests he still declared he would do it. Finding
+everything they could do to be of no avail, the people bethought
+themselves of a certain physician, who was said to have great
+influence over the old man, and who owned an orchard adjoining the
+very garden; so, going to him in a body, they besought him to attempt
+to change the determination of his obstinate friend. The doctor
+consented to do so and went. After offering his condolence on the
+loss of his wife, and proffering any aid he might be able to render
+at the funeral, the doctor said, "I understand you intend to bury
+your deceased wife in your garden."
+
+"Yes," answered the old man, "I do. And the more people object the
+more I'm determined to do it!"
+
+"Right!" replied the doctor, with an emphatic shake of the head,
+"Right! I applaud the deed. I'd bury her there, if I was you. The
+boys are always stealing the pears from my favorite tree that
+overhangs your garden, and by and by you'll die, Uncle Diddie, and
+they'll bury you there, too, and then I'm sure that the boys will
+never dare steal another pear."
+
+"No! I'll be hanged if I bury her there," said the old man in great
+wrath. "I'll bury her in the graveyard."
+
+New England can boast her beautiful places of sculpture, but as a
+common thing they are too much neglected, and attractive only to the
+lover of oddities and curious old epitaphs. Occasionally you may see
+a strangely shaped tomb, or as in a well-known village, a knocker
+placed on the door of his family vault by some odd specimen of
+humanity. When asked the reason for doing so singular a thing, he
+gravely replied that "when the old gentleman should come to claim his
+own, the tenants might have the pleasure of saying, 'not at home,' or
+of fleeing out of the back door."
+
+In passing through these neglected grounds you will often find some
+touchingly beautiful scriptural allusion--some apt quotation or some
+emblem so lovely and instructive that the memory of it will go with
+you for days. Here in a neglected spot and amid a cluster of raised
+stones is the grave of the stranger clergyman's child, who died on
+its journey. The inscription is sweet when taken in connection with
+the portion of sacred history from which the quotation is made: "Is
+it well with the child? And she answered, It is well." Again, the
+only inscription is an emblem--a butterfly rising from the chrysalis.
+Glorious thought, embodied in emblem so singular! "Sown in
+corruption, raised in incorruption!"
+
+Then come you to some strangely odd, as for instance:
+
+ "Here lies John Auricular,
+ Who in the ways of the Lord walked perpendicular"
+
+Again:
+
+ "Many a cold wind o'er my body shall roll
+ While in Abraham's bosom I'm feasting my soul"
+
+appropriate certainly, as the grave was on a cold northeast slope of
+one of our bleak hills. Again, a Dutchman's epitaph for his twin
+babes:
+
+ "Here lies two babes, dead as two nits,
+ Who shook to death mit ague fits.
+ They was too good to live mit me.
+ So God He took 'em to live mit He."
+
+There is the grave of a young man who, dying suddenly, was eulogized
+with this strange aim at the sublime:
+
+ "He lived,
+ He died!"
+
+Not a hundred miles from Boston is a gravestone the epitaph upon
+which, to all who knew the parties, borders strongly upon the
+burlesque. A widower who within a few months buried his wife and
+adopted daughter, the former of whom was all her life long a thorn in
+his flesh, and whose death could not but have been a relief, wrote
+thus: "They were lovely and beloved in their lives, and in death were
+not divided." Poor man! Well _he_ knew how full of strife and
+sorrow an evil woman can make life! He was worn to a shadow before
+her death, and his hair was all gone. Many of the neighbors thought
+surely that _he_ well knew what had become of it, especially as
+it disappeared by the handful. But the grave covers all faults; and
+those who knew her could only hope that she might rest from her
+labors and her works follow her!
+
+On a low, sandy mound far down on the Cape rises a tall slate stone,
+with fitting emblems and epitaphs as follows:
+
+ "Here lies Judy and John
+ That lovely pair,
+ John was killed by a whale,
+ And Judy sleeps here."
+
+--Sketches of New England.
+
+
+
+
+Danforth Marble
+
+THE HOOSIER AND THE SALT-PILE
+
+
+"I'm sorry," says Dan, as he knocked the ashes from his regalia, as
+he sat in a small crowd over a glass of sherry at Florence's, New
+York, one evening. "I'm sorry that the stages are disappearing so
+rapidly; I never enjoyed traveling so well as in the slow coaches.
+I've made a good many passages over the Alleghanies, and across Ohio,
+from Cleveland to Columbus and Cincinnati, all over the South, down
+East, and up North, in stages, and I generally had a good time.
+
+"When I passed over from Cleveland to Cincinnati, the last time, in a
+stage, I met a queer crowd--such a _corps_, such a time you never did
+see; I never was better amused in my life. We had a good team--
+spanking horses, fine coaches, and one of them _drivers_ you read of.
+Well, there was nine 'insiders,' and I don't believe there ever was a
+stageful of Christians ever started before so chuck full of music.
+
+"There was a beautiful young lady going to one of the Cincinnati
+academies; next to her sat a Jew peddler--for Cowes and a market;
+wedging him in was a dandy blackleg, with jewelry and chains around
+his breast and neck--enough to hang him. There was myself and an old
+gentleman with large spectacles, gold-headed cane, and a jolly,
+soldiering-iron-looking nose; by him was a circus rider whose breath
+was enough to breed yaller fever and could be felt just as easy as
+cotton velvet! A cross old woman came next, and whose _look_ would
+have given any reasonable man the double-breasted blues before
+breakfast; alongside of her was a rale backwoods preacher, with the
+biggest and ugliest mouth ever got up since the flood. He was flanked
+by the low comedian of the party, an Indiana Hoosier, 'gwine down to
+Orleans to get an army contract' to supply the forces then in Mexico
+with beef.
+
+"We rolled along for some time; nobody seemed inclined to 'open.' The
+old aunty sot bolt upright, looking crab-apples and persimmons at the
+Hoosier and the preacher; the young lady dropped the green curtain of
+her bonnet over her pretty face, and leaned back in her seat, to nod
+and dream over japonicas and jumbles, pantalettes and poetry; the old
+gentleman, proprietor of the Bardolph 'nose,' looked out at the
+'corduroy' and swashes; the gambler fell off into a doze, and the
+circus covey followed suit, leaving the preacher and me _vis-a-vis_
+and saying nothing to nobody. 'Indiany,' he stuck his mug out at the
+window and criticized the cattle we now and then passed. I was
+wishing somebody would give the conversation a start, when 'Indiany'
+made a break:
+
+"'This ain't no great stock country,' says he to the old gentleman
+with the cane.
+
+"'No, sir,' was the reply. 'There's very little grazing here; the
+range is nearly wore out.'
+
+"Then there was nothing said again for some time. Bimeby the Hoosier
+opened again:
+
+"'It's the d----est place for 'simmon trees and turkey buzzards I
+ever did see!'
+
+"The old gentleman with the cane didn't say nothing, and the preacher
+gave a long groan. The young lady smiled through her veil, and the
+old lady snapped her eyes and looked sideways at the speaker.
+
+"'Don't make much beef here, I reckon,' says the Hoosier.
+
+"'No,' says the gentleman.
+
+"'Well, I don't see how in h-ll they all manage to get along in a
+country whar thar ain't no ranges and they don't make no beef. A man
+ain't considered worth a cuss in Indiany what hasn't got his brand on
+a hundred head.'
+
+"'Yours is a great beef country, I believe,' says the old gentleman.
+
+"'Well, sir, it ain't anything else. A man that's got sense enuff to
+foller his own cow-bell with us ain't in no danger of starvin'. I'm
+gwine down to Orleans to see if I can't git a contract out of Uncle
+Sam to feed the boys what's been lickin' them infernal Mexicans so
+bad. I s'pose you've seed them cussed lies what's been in the papers
+about the Indiany boys at Bony Visty.'
+
+"'I've read some accounts of the battle,' says the old gentleman,
+`that didn't give a very flattering account of the conduct of some of
+our troops.'
+
+"With that the Indiany man went into a full explanation of the
+affair, and, gittin' warmed up as he went along, begun to cuss and
+swear like he'd been through a dozen campaigns himself. The old
+preacher listened to him with evident signs of displeasure, twistin'
+and groanin' till he couldn't stand it no longer.
+
+"'My friend,' says he, 'you must excuse me, but your conversation
+would be a great deal more interesting to me--and I'm sure would
+please the company much better--if you wouldn't swear so terribly.
+It's very wrong to swear and I hope you'll have respect for our
+feelings if you hain't no respect for your Maker.'
+
+"If the Hoosier had been struck with thunder and lightnin' he
+couldn't have been more completely tuck a-back. He shut his mouth
+right in the middle of what he was sayin' and looked at the preacher,
+while his face got as red as fire.
+
+"'Swearin',' says the preacher, 'is a terrible bad practice, and
+there ain't no use in it nohow. The Bible says, "swear not at all,"
+and I s'pose you know the Commandments about swearin'?'
+
+"The old lady sort of brightened up--the preacher was her `duck of a
+man'; the old fellow with the `nose' and cane let off a few `umph,
+ah! umphs.' But 'Indiany' kept shady; he appeared to be _cowed_ down.
+
+"'I know,' says the preacher, 'that a great many people swear without
+thinkin', and some people don't believe the Bible.'
+
+"And then he went on to preach a regular sermon agin swearing, and to
+quote Scripture like he had the whole Bible by heart. In the course
+of his argument he undertook to prove the Scriptures to be true, and
+told us all about the miracles and prophecies, and their fulfilment.
+The old gentleman with the cane took a part in the conversation, and
+the Hoosier listened without ever opening his head.
+
+"'I've just heard of a gentleman,' says the preacher, 'that's been to
+the Holy Land and went over the Bible country. It's astonishin' to
+hear what wonderful things he has seen. He was at Sodom and Gomorrow,
+and seen the place whar Lot's wife fell!'
+
+"'Ah,' says the old gentleman with the cane.
+
+"'Yes,' says the preacher, 'he went to the very spot; and what's the
+remarkablest thing of all, he seen the pillar of salt what she was
+turned into!'
+
+"'Is it possible!' says the old gentleman.
+
+"'Yes, sir; he seen the salt, standin' thar to this day.'
+
+"'What!' says the Hoosier,'real genewine, good salt?'
+
+"'Yes, sir; a pillar of salt, jest as it was when that wicked woman
+was punished for her disobedience.'
+
+"All but the gambler, who was snoozing in the corner of the coach,
+looked at the preacher--the Hoosier with an expression of countenance
+that plainly told that his mind was powerfully convicted of an
+important fact.
+
+"'Right out in the open air?' he asked.
+
+"'Yes, standin' right in the open field, whar she fell.'
+
+"'Well, sir,' says 'Indiany,' 'all I've got to say is, _if she'd
+dropped in our parts, the cattle would have licked her up afore
+sundown!_'
+
+"The preacher raised both his hands at such an irreverent remark, and
+the old gentleman laughed himself into a fit of asthmatics; what he
+didn't get over till he came to the next change of horses. The
+Hoosier had played the mischief with the gravity of the whole party;
+even the old maid had to put her handkerchief to her face, and the
+young lady's eyes were filled with tears for half an hour afterward.
+The old preacher hadn't another word to say on the subject; but
+whenever we came to any place or met anybody on the road, the circus
+man cursed the thing along by asking what was the price of salt."
+
+
+
+
+Anne Bache
+
+THE QUILTING
+
+
+The day is set, the ladies met,
+ And at the frame are seated;
+In order plac'd, they work in haste,
+ To get the quilt completed.
+While fingers fly, their tongues they ply,
+ And animate their labors,
+By counting beaux, discussing clothes,
+ Or talking of their neighbors.
+
+"Dear, what a pretty frock you've on--"
+ "I'm very glad you like it."
+"I'm told that Miss Micomicon
+ Don't speak to Mr. Micat."
+"I saw Miss Bell the other day,
+ Young Green's new gig adorning--"
+"What keeps your sister Ann away?"
+ "She went to town this morning."
+
+"'Tis time to roll"--"my needle's broke--"
+ "So Martin's stock is selling;"-
+"Louisa's wedding-gown's bespoke--"
+ "Lend me your scissors, Ellen."
+"_That_ match will never come about--"
+ "Now don't fly in a passion;"
+"Hair-puffs, they say, are going out--"
+ "Yes, curls are all in fashion."
+
+The quilt is done, the tea begun-
+ The beaux are all collecting;
+The table's cleared, the music heard-
+ His partner each selecting.
+The merry band in order stand,
+ The dance begins with vigor;
+And rapid feet the measure beat,
+ And trip the mazy figure.
+
+Unheeded fly the moments by,
+ Old Time himself seems dancing,
+Till night's dull eye is op'd to spy
+ The steps of morn advancing.
+Then closely stowed, to each abode,
+ The carriages go tilting;
+And many a dream has for its theme
+ The pleasures of the Quilting.
+
+
+
+
+Fitz-Greene Halleck
+
+A FRAGMENT
+
+
+His shop is a grocer's--a snug, genteel place,
+ Near the corner of Oak Street and Pearl;
+He can dress, dance, and bow to the ladies with grace,
+ And ties his cravat with a curl.
+
+He's asked to all parties--north, south, east and west,
+ That take place between Chatham and Cherry,
+And when he's been absent full oft has the "best
+ Society" ceased to be merry.
+
+And nothing has darkened a sky so serene,
+ Nor disordered his beauship's Elysium,
+Till this season among our _elite_ there has been
+ What is called by the clergy "a schism."
+
+'Tis all about eating and drinking--one set
+ Gives sponge-cake, a few kisses or so,
+And is cooled after dancing with classic sherbet
+ "Sublimed" [see Lord Byron] "with snow."
+
+Another insists upon punch and _perdrix_,
+ Lobster salad, champagne, and, by way
+Of a novelty only, those pearls of our sea,
+ Stewed oysters from Lynn-Haven Bay.
+
+Miss Flounce, the young milliner, blue-eyed and bright,
+ In the front parlor over her shop,
+"Entertains," as the phrase is, a party to-night
+ Upon peanuts and ginger pop.
+
+And Miss Fleece, who's a hosier and not quite as young,
+ But is wealthier far than Miss Flounce,
+She "entertains" also to-night, with cold tongue,
+ Smoked herring and cherry bounce.
+
+In praise of cold water the Theban bard spoke,
+ He of Teos sang sweetly of wine;
+Miss Flounce is a Pindar in cashmere and cloak,
+ Miss Fleece an Anacreon divine.
+
+The Montagues carry the day in Swamp Place,
+ In Pike Street the Capulets reign;
+A _limonadiere_ is the badge of one race,
+ Of the other a flask of champagne.
+
+Now as each the same evening her _soiree_ announces,
+ What better, he asks, can be done,
+Than drink water from eight until ten with the Flounces,
+ And then wine with the Fleeces till one!
+
+
+
+
+DOMESTIC HAPPINESS
+
+
+"Beside the nuptial curtain bright,"
+ The Bard of Eden sings;
+"Young Love his constant lamp will light
+ And wave his purple wings."
+But raindrops from the clouds of care
+ May bid that lamp be dim,
+And the boy Love will pout and swear,
+ 'Tis then no place for him.
+
+So mused the lovely Mrs. Dash;
+ 'Tis wrong to mention names;
+When for her surly husband's cash
+ She urged in vain her claims.
+"I want a little money, dear,
+ For Vandervoort and Flandin,
+Their bill, which now has run a year,
+ To-morrow mean to hand in."
+
+"More?" cried the husband, half asleep,
+ "You'll drive me to despair";
+The lady was too proud to weep,
+ And too polite to swear.
+She bit her lip for very spite,
+ He felt a storm was brewing,
+And dream'd of nothing else all night,
+ But brokers, banks, and ruin.
+
+He thought her pretty once, but dreams
+ Have sure a wondrous power,
+For to his eye the lady seems
+ Quite alter'd since that hour;
+And Love, who on their bridal eve,
+ Had promised long to stay;
+Forgot his promise, took French leave,
+ And bore his lamp away.
+
+
+
+
+Charles F. Browne ("Artemus Ward")
+
+ONE OF MR. WARD'S BUSINESS LETTERS
+
+
+To the Editor of the--
+
+_Sir:_ I'm movin along--slowly along--down tords your place. I
+want you should rite me a letter, saying how is the show bizness in
+your place. My show at present consists of three moral Bares, a
+Kangaroo (a amoozin little Raskal--'twould make you larf yourself to
+deth to see the little cuss jump up and squeal), wax figgers of G.
+Washington, Gen. Tayler, John Bunyan, Capt. Kidd, and Dr. Webster in
+the act of killin Dr. Parkman, besides several miscellanyus moral wax
+statoots of celebrated piruts & murderers, &c., ekalled by few &
+exceld by none. Now, Mr. Editor, scratch orf a few lines sayin how is
+the show bizniss down to your place. I shall hav my hanbills dun at
+your offiss. Depend upon it. I want you should git my hanbills up in
+flamin stile. Also git up a tremenjus excitemunt in yr. paper 'bowt
+my onparaleled Show. We must fetch the public sumhow. We must wurk on
+their feelins. Cum the moral on em strong. If it's a temperance
+community, tell em I sined the pledge fifteen minits arter Ise born,
+but on the contery, ef your peple take their tods, say Mister Ward is
+as Jenial a feller as ever we met. full of conwiviality, & the life
+an sole of the Soshul Bored. Take, don't you? If you say anythin
+abowt my show, say my snaiks is as harmliss as the new born Babe.
+What a interistin study it is to see a zewological animil like a
+snake under perfect subjecshun! My kangaroo is the most larfable
+little cuss I ever saw. All for 15 cents. I am anxyus to skewer your
+inflooence. I repeet in regard to them hanbills that I shall git 'em
+struck orf up to your printin office. My perlitical sentiments agree
+with yourn exactly. I know they do, becaws I never saw a man whoos
+didn't.
+
+Respectively yures, A. WARD.
+
+P.S.--You scratch my back & Ile scratch your back.
+
+
+
+
+ON "FORTS"
+
+
+Every man has got a Fort. It's sum men's fort to do one thing, and
+some other men's fort to do another, while there is numeris shiftliss
+critters goin' round loose whose fort is not to do nothin'.
+
+Shakspeer rote good plase, but he wouldn't hav succeeded as a
+Washington correspondent of a New York daily paper. He lackt the
+rekesit fancy and immagginashun.
+
+That's so!
+
+Old George Washington's Fort was not to hev eny public man of the
+present day resemble him to eny alarmin extent. Whare bowts can
+George's ekal be found? I ask, & boldly answer no whares, or any
+whare else.
+
+Old man Townsin's Fort was to maik Sassy-periller. "Goy to the world!
+anuther life saived!" (Cotashun from Townsin's advertisement.)
+
+Cyrus Field's Fort is to lay a sub-machine tellegraf under the
+boundin billers of the Oshun and then have it Bust.
+
+Spaldin's Fort is to maik Prepared Gloo, which mends everything.
+Wonder ef it will mend a sinner's wickid waze. (Impromptoo goak.)
+
+Zoary's Fort is to be a femaile circus feller.
+
+My Fort is the grate moral show bizniss & ritin choice famerly
+literatoor for the noospapers. That's what's the matter with _me_.
+
+&., &., &. So I mite go on to a indefnit extent.
+
+Twict I've endevered to do things which thay wasn't my Fort. The fust
+time was when I undertuk to lick a owdashus cuss who cut a hole in my
+tent & krawld threw. Sez I, "My jentle Sir, go out or I shall fall on
+to you putty hevy." Sez he, "Wade in, Old wax figgers," whereupon I
+went for him, but he cawt me powerful on the hed & knockt me threw
+the tent into a cow pastur. He pursood the attack & flung me into a
+mud puddle. As I arose & rung out my drencht garmints I koncluded
+fitin wasn't my Fort. He now rize the kurtin upon Seen 2nd: It is
+rarely seldum that I seek consolation in the Flowin Bole. But in a
+certain town in Injianny in the Faul of 18--, my orgin grinder got
+sick with the fever & died. I never felt so ashamed in my life, & I
+thowt I'd hist in a few swallers of suthin strengthnin. Konsequents
+was I histid in so much I didn't zackly know whare bowts I was. I
+turned my livin wild beasts of Pray loose into the streets and spilt
+all my wax wurks. I then bet I cood play hoss. So I hitched myself to
+a Kanawl bote, there bein two other hosses hicht on also, one behind
+and another ahead of me. The driver hollerd for us to git up, and we
+did. But the hosses bein onused to sich a arrangemunt begun to kick &
+squeal and rair up. Konsequents was I was kickt vilently in the
+stummuck & back, and presuntly I fownd myself in the Kanawl with the
+other hosses, kickin & yellin like a tribe of Cusscaroorus savvijis.
+I was rescood & as I was bein carrid to the tavern on a hemlock Bored
+I sed in a feeble voise, "Boys, playin hoss isn't my Fort."
+
+_Morul_.--Never don't do nothin which isn't your Fort, for ef you do
+you'll find yourself splashin round in the Kanawl, figgeratively
+speakin.
+
+
+
+
+James Russell Lowell
+
+WITHOUT AND WITHIN
+
+
+My coachman, in the moonlight there,
+ Looks through the sidelight of the door;
+I hear him with his brethren swear,
+ As I could do--but only more.
+
+Flattening his nose against the pane,
+ He envies me my brilliant lot,
+Breathes on his aching fist in vain,
+ And dooms me to a place more hot.
+
+He sees me into supper go,
+ A silken wonder at my side,
+Bare arms, bare shoulders, and a row
+ Of flounces, for the door too wide.
+
+He thinks how happy is my arm,
+ 'Neath its white-gloved and jeweled load;
+And wishes me some dreadful harm,
+ Hearing the merry corks explode.
+
+Meanwhile I inly curse the bore
+ Of hunting still the same old coon,
+And envy him, outside the door,
+ The golden quiet of the moon.
+
+The winter wind is not so cold
+ As the bright smile he sees me win,
+Nor the host's oldest wine so old
+ As our poor gabble, sour and thin.
+
+I envy him the rugged prance
+ By which his freezing feet he warms,
+And drag my lady's chains and dance,
+ The galley-slave of dreary forms.
+
+Oh, could he have my share of din,
+ And I his quiet--past a doubt
+'Twould still be one man bored within,
+ And just another bored without.
+
+
+
+
+Louisa May Alcott
+
+STREET SCENES IN WASHINGTON
+
+
+The mules were my especial delight; and an hour's study of a constant
+succession of them introduced me to many of their characteristics:
+for six of these odd little beasts drew each army wagon and went
+hopping like frogs through the stream of mud that gently rolled along
+the street. The coquettish mule had small feet, a nicely trimmed
+tassel of a tail, perked-up ears, and seemed much given to little
+tosses of the head, affected skips and prances; and, if he wore the
+bells or were bedizened with a bit of finery, put on as many airs as
+any belle. The moral mule was a stout, hard-working creature, always
+tugging with all his might, often pulling away after the rest had
+stopped, laboring under the conscientious delusion that food for the
+entire army depended upon his private exertions. I respected this
+style of mule; and, had I possessed a juicy cabbage, would have
+pressed it upon him with thanks for his excellent example. The
+histrionic mule was a melodramatic quadruped, prone to startling
+humanity by erratic leaps and wild plunges, much shaking of his
+stubborn head, and lashing out of his vicious heels; now and then
+falling flat and apparently dying a la Forrest; a gasp--a squirm--a
+flop, and so on, till the street was well blocked up, the drivers all
+swearing like demons in bad hats, and the chief actor's circulation
+decidedly quickened by every variety of kick, cuff, jerk and haul.
+When the last breath seemed to have left his body, and "doctors were
+in vain," a sudden resurrection took place; and if ever a mule
+laughed with scornful triumph, that was the beast, as he leisurely
+rose, gave a comfortable shake, and, calmly regarding the excited
+crowd, seemed to say--"A hit! a decided hit! for the stupidest of
+animals has bamboozled a dozen men. Now, then! what are _you_
+stopping the way for?" The pathetic mule was, perhaps, the most
+interesting of all; for, though he always seemed to be the smallest,
+thinnest, weakest of the six, the postillion with big boots, long-
+tailed coat and heavy whip was sure to bestride this one, who
+struggled feebly along, head down, coat muddy and rough, eye
+spiritless and sad, his very tail a mortified stump, and the whole
+beast a picture of meek misery, fit to touch a heart of stone. The
+jovial mule was a roly-poly, happy-go-lucky little piece of
+horseflesh, taking everything easily, from cudgeling to caressing;
+strolling along with a roguish twinkle of the eye, and, if the thing
+were possible, would have had his hands in his pockets and whistled
+as he went. If there ever chanced to be an apple core, a stray turnip
+or wisp of hay in the gutter, this Mark Tapley was sure to find it,
+and none of his mates seemed to begrudge him his bite. I suspected
+this fellow was the peacemaker, confidant and friend of all the
+others, for he had a sort of "Cheer-up-old-boy-I'll-pull-you-through"
+look which was exceedingly engaging.
+
+Pigs also possessed attractions for me, never having had an
+opportunity of observing their graces of mind and manner till I came
+to Washington, whose porcine citizens appeared to enjoy a larger
+liberty than many of its human ones. Stout, sedate-looking pigs
+hurried by each morning to their places of business, with a
+preoccupied air, and sonorous greetings to their friends. Genteel
+pigs, with an extra curl to their tails, promenaded in pairs,
+lunching here and there, like gentlemen of leisure. Rowdy pigs pushed
+the passersby off the sidewalk; tipsy pigs hiccoughed their version
+of "We won't go home till morning" from the gutter; and delicate
+young pigs tripped daintily through the mud as if they plumed
+themselves upon their ankles, and kept themselves particularly neat
+in point of stockings. Maternal pigs, with their interesting
+families, strolled by in the sun; and often the pink, baby-like
+squealers lay down for a nap, with a trust in Providence worthy of
+human imitation.--_Hospital Sketches._
+
+
+
+
+MIS' SMITH
+
+
+All day she hurried to get through, The same as lots of wimmin do;
+Sometimes at night her husban' said, "Ma, ain't you goin' to come to
+bed?" And then she'd kinder give a hitch, And pause half way between a
+stitch, And sorter sigh, and say that she Was ready as she'd ever be,
+She reckoned.
+
+And so the years went one by one, An' somehow she was never done; An'
+when the angel said, as how "Miss Smith, it's time you rested now,"
+She sorter raised her eyes to look A second, as a stitch she took;
+"All right, I'm comin' now," says she, "I'm ready as I'll ever be, I
+reckon."
+
+Albert Bigelow Paine.
+
+
+
+
+A BOSTON LULLABY
+
+
+Baby's brain is tired of thinking
+ On the Wherefore and the Whence;
+Baby's precious eyes are blinking
+ With incipient somnolence.
+
+Little hands are weary turning
+ Heavy leaves of lexicon;
+Little nose is fretted learning
+ How to keep its glasses on.
+
+Baby knows the laws of nature
+ Are beneficent and wise;
+His medulla oblongata
+ Bids my darling close his eyes
+
+And his pneumogastrics tell him
+ Quietude is always best
+When his little cerebellum
+ Needs recuperative rest.
+
+Baby must have relaxation,
+ Let the world go wrong or right-
+Sleep, my darling, leave Creation
+ To its chances for the night.
+
+James Jeffrey Roche.
+
+
+
+
+IRISH ASTRONOMY
+
+
+O'Ryan was a man of might
+ Whin Ireland was a nation,
+But poachin' was his heart's delight
+ And constant occupation.
+He had an ould militia gun,
+ And sartin sure his aim was;
+He gave the keepers many a run,
+ And wouldn't mind the game laws
+
+St. Pathrick wanst was passin' by
+ O'Ryan's little houldin',
+And, as the saint felt wake and dhry
+ He thought he'd enther bould in.
+"O'Ryan," says the saint, "avick!
+ To praich at Thurles I'm goin';
+So let me have a rasher quick,
+ And a dhrop of Innishowen."
+
+"No rasher will I cook for you
+ While betther is to spare, sir,
+But here's a jug of mountain dew,
+ And there's a rattlin' hare, sir."
+St. Pathrick he looked mighty sweet,
+ And says he, "Good luck attind you,
+And whin you're in your windin' sheet,
+ It's up to heaven I'll sind you."
+
+O'Ryan gave his pipe a whiff-
+ "Them tidin's is thransportin',
+But may I ax your saintship if
+ There's any kind of sportin'?"
+St. Pathrick said, "A Lion's there,
+ Two Bears, a Bull, and Cancer"-
+"Bedad," says Mick, "the huntin's rare;
+ St. Pathrick, I'm your man, sir."
+
+So, to conclude my song aright,
+ For fear I'd tire your patience
+You'll see O'Ryan any night,
+ Amid the constellations.
+And Venus follows in his track
+ Till Mars grows jealous raally,
+But, faith, he fears the Irish knack
+ Of handling the shillaly.
+
+Charles Graham Halpine.
+
+
+
+
+BESSIE BROWN, M.D.
+
+
+'Twas April when she came to town;
+ The birds had come, the bees were swarming.
+Her name, she said, was Doctor Brown:
+ I saw at once that she was charming.
+She took a cottage tinted green,
+ Where dewy roses loved to mingle;
+And on the door, next day, was seen
+ A dainty little shingle.
+
+Her hair was like an amber wreath;
+ Her hat was darker, to enhance it.
+The violet eyes that glowed beneath
+ Were brighter than her keenest lancet.
+The beauties of her glove and gown
+ The sweetest rhyme would fail to utter.
+Ere she had been a day in town
+ The town was in a flutter.
+
+The gallants viewed her feet and hands,
+ And swore they never saw such wee things;
+The gossips met in purring bands
+ And tore her piecemeal o'er the tea things.
+The former drank the Doctor's health
+ With clinking cups, the gay carousers;
+The latter watched her door by stealth,
+ Just like so many mousers.
+
+But Doctor Bessie went her way
+ Unmindful of the spiteful cronies,
+And drove her buggy every day
+ Behind a dashing pair of ponies.
+Her flower-like face so bright she bore
+ I hoped that time might never wilt her.
+The way she tripped across the floor
+ Was better than a philter.
+
+Her patients thronged the village street;
+ Her snowy slate was always quite full.
+Some said her bitters tasted sweet,
+ And some pronounced her pills delightful.
+'Twas strange--I knew not what it meant-
+ She seemed a nymph from Eldorado;
+Where'er she came, where'er she went,
+ Grief lost its gloomy shadow.
+
+Like all the rest, I, too, grew ill;
+ My aching heart there was no quelling.
+I tremble at my Doctor's bill-
+ And lo! the items still are swelling.
+The drugs I've drunk you'd weep to hear!
+ They've quite enriched the fair concocter,
+And I'm a ruined man, I fear,
+ Unless--I wed the Doctor!
+
+Samuel Minturn Peck.
+
+
+
+
+THE TROUT, THE CAT AND THE FOX
+
+A Fable
+
+(Anonymous)
+
+
+A fine full-grown Trout for had some time kept his station in a clear
+stream, when, one morning, a Cat, extravagantly fond, as cats are
+wont to be, of fish, caught a glimpse of him, as he glided from
+beneath an overhanging part of the bank, toward the middle of the
+river; and with this glimpse, she resolved to spare no pains to
+capture him. As she sat on the bank waiting for the return of the
+fish, and laying a plan for her enterprise, a Fox came up, and
+saluting her, said:
+
+"Your servant, Mrs. Puss. A pleasant place this for taking the
+morning air; and a notable place for fish, eh!"
+
+"Good morning, Mr. Reynard," replied the Cat. "The place is, as you
+say, pleasant enough. As for fish, you can judge for yourself whether
+there are any in this part of the river. I do not deny that near the
+falls, about four miles from here, some very fine salmon and other
+fish are to be found."
+
+At this very moment, very inappositely for the Cat's hint, the Trout
+made his appearance; and the Fox looking significantly at her, said:
+
+"The falls, madam! Perhaps this fine Trout is on his way thither. It
+may be that you would like the walk; allow me the pleasure of
+accompanying you?"
+
+"I thank you, sir," replied the Cat, "but I am not disposed to walk
+so far at present. Indeed, I hardly know whether I am quite well. I
+think I will rest myself a little, and then return home."
+
+"Whatever you may determine," rejoined the Fox, "I hope to be
+permitted to enjoy your society and conversation; and possibly I may
+have the great gratification of preventing the tedium which, were you
+left alone, your indisposition might produce."
+
+In speaking thus, the crafty Fox had no doubt that the only
+indisposition from which the Cat was suffering was an unwillingness
+to allow him a share of her booty; and he was determined that, so far
+as management could go, she should catch no fish that day without his
+being a party to the transaction. As the trout still continued in
+sight, be began to commend his shape and color; and the Cat, seeing
+no way of getting rid of him, finally agreed that they should jointly
+try their skill and divide the spoil. Upon this compact, they both
+went actively to work.
+
+They agreed first to try the following device: A small knob of earth
+covered with rushes stood in the water close to the bank. Both the
+fishers were to crouch behind these rushes; the Fox was to move the
+water very gently with the end of his long brush, and withdraw it so
+soon as the Trout's attention should have been drawn to that point;
+and the Cat was to hold her right paw underneath, and be ready, so
+soon as the fish should come over it, to throw him out on the bank.
+No sooner was the execution of this device commenced than it seemed
+likely to succeed. The Trout soon noticed the movement on the water,
+and glided quickly toward the point where it was made; but when he
+had arrived within about twice his own length of it, he stopped and
+then backed toward the middle of the river. Several times this
+maneuver was repeated, and always with the same result, until the
+tricky pair were convinced that they must try some other scheme.
+
+It so happened that whilst they were considering what they should do
+next, the Fox espied a small piece of meat, when it was agreed that
+he should tear this into little bits and throw them into the stream
+above where they then were; that the Cat should wait, crouched behind
+a tuft of grass, to dash into the river and seize the Trout, if he
+should come to take any piece of meat floating near the bank; and
+that the Fox should, on the first movement of the Cat, return and
+give his help. This scheme was put into practice, but with no better
+success than the other. The Trout came and took the pieces of meat
+which had floated farthest off from the bank, but to those which
+floated near he seemed to pay no attention. As he rose to take the
+last, he put his mouth out of the water and said, "To other travelers
+with these petty tricks: here we are 'wide awake as a black fish' and
+are not to be caught with bits and scraps, like so many silly
+gudgeons!"
+
+As the Trout went down, the Fox said, in an undertone: "Say you so,
+my fine fellow; we may, perhaps, make a _gudgeon_ of you yet!"
+
+Then, turning to the Cat, he proposed to her a new scheme in the
+following terms:
+
+"I have a scheme to propose which cannot, I am persuaded, fail of
+succeeding, if you will lend your talent and skill for the execution
+of it. As I crossed the bridge, a little way above, I saw the dead
+body of a small dog, and near it a flat piece of wood rather longer
+than your person. Now, let us throw the dead dog into the river and
+give the Trout time to examine it; then, let us put the piece of wood
+into the water, and do you set yourself upon it so that it shall be
+lengthwise under you, and your mouth may lean over one edge and your
+tail hang in the water as if you were dead. The Trout, no doubt, will
+come up to you, when you may seize him and paddle to the bank with
+him, where I will be in waiting to help you land the prey."
+
+The scheme pleased the Cat so much that, in spite of her repugnance
+to the wetting, which it promised her, she resolved to act the part
+which the cunning Fox had assigned to her. They first threw the dead
+dog into the river and, going down the stream, they soon had the
+satisfaction of seeing the Trout glide up close to it and examine it.
+They then returned to the bridge and put the piece of wood into the
+water, and the Cat, having placed herself upon it and taken a posture
+as if she were dead, was soon carried down by the current to where
+the Trout was. Apparently without the least suspicion, he came up
+close to the Cat's head, and she, seizing him by one of his gills,
+held him in spite of all his struggles. The task of regaining the
+bank still had to be performed, and this was no small difficulty, for
+the Trout struggled so hard, and the business of navigation was so
+new to the Cat, that not without great labor and fatigue did she
+reach the place where the Fox was waiting for her. As one end of the
+board struck the bank, the Fox put his right forepaw upon it, then
+seizing the fish near the tail, as the Cat let it go, he gave the
+board a violent push which sent it toward the middle of the stream,
+and instantly ran off with the Trout in his mouth toward the bridge.
+
+It had so happened that after the Fox had quitted the bridge the last
+time, an Otter had come there to watch for fish, and he, seeing the
+Trout in the Fox's mouth, rushed toward him, and compelled him to
+drop the fish and put himself on the defensive. It had also happened
+that this Otter had been seen in an earlier part of the day, and that
+notice of him had been given to the farmer to whom the Cat belonged,
+and who had more than once declared that if ever he found her fishing
+again she should be thrown into the river with a stone tied to her
+neck. The moment the farmer heard of the Otter, he took his gun, and
+followed by a laborer and two strong dogs, went toward the river,
+where he arrived just as the Cat, exhausted by the fatigue of her
+second voyage, was crawling up the bank. Immediately he ordered the
+laborer to put the sentence of drowning in execution; then, followed
+by his dogs, he arrived near the bridge just as the Fox and the Otter
+were about to join battle. Instantly the dogs set on the Fox and tore
+him to pieces; and the farmer, shooting the Otter dead on the spot,
+possessed himself of the Trout, which had thus served to detain first
+one, then the other of his destroyers, till a severe punishment had
+overtaken each of them. Moral.--The inexperienced are never so much
+in danger of being deceived and hurt as when they think themselves a
+match for the crafty, and suppose that they have penetrated their
+designs and seen through all their stratagems. As to the crafty, they
+are ever in danger, either by being overreached one by another or of
+falling in a hurry into some snare of their own, where, as commonly
+happens, should they be caught, they are treated with a full measure
+of severity.--Aesop, Jr., in America.
+
+
+
+
+Robert C. Sands
+
+A MONODY
+
+
+Made on the Late Mr. Samuel Patch, by an Aadmirer of the Bathos
+
+By water he shall die and take his end.--Shakespeare
+
+Toll for Sam Patch! Sam Patch, who jumps no more,
+ This or the world to come. Sam Patch is dead!
+The vulgar pathway to the unknown shore
+ Of dark futurity, he would not tread.
+ No friends stood sorrowing round his dying bed;
+Nor with decorous woe, sedately stepp'd
+ Behind his corpse, and tears by retail shed--
+The mighty river, as it onward swept,
+In one great wholesale sob, his body drowned and kept.
+
+Toll for Sam Patch! he scorned the common way
+ That leads to fame, up heights of rough ascent,
+And having heard Pope and Longinus say
+ That some great men had risen by falls, he went
+ And jumped, where wild Passaic's waves had rent
+The antique rocks--the air free passage gave--
+ And graciously the liquid element
+Upbore him, like some sea-god on its wave;
+And all the people said that Sam was very brave.
+
+Fame, the clear spirit that doth to heaven upraise,
+ Let Sam to dive into what Byron calls
+The hell of waters. For the sake of praise,
+ He wooed the bathos down great waterfalls;
+ The dizzy precipice, which the eye appals
+Of travelers for pleasure, Samuel found
+ Pleasant as are to women lighted halls,
+Crammed full of fools and fiddles; to the sound
+Of the eternal roar, he timed his desperate bound.
+
+Sam was a fool. But the large world of such
+ Has thousands--better taught, alike absurd,
+And less sublime. Of fame he soon got much,
+ Where distant cataracts spout, of him men heard.
+ Alas for Sam! Had he aright preferred
+The kindly element, to which he gave
+ Himself so fearlessly, we had not heard
+That it was now his winding sheet and grave,
+Nor sung, 'twixt tears and smiles, our requiem for the brave.
+
+He soon got drunk with rum and with renown,
+ As many others in high places do--
+Whose fall is like Sam's last--for down and down,
+ By one mad impulse driven, they flounder through
+ The gulf that keeps the future from our view,
+And then are found not. May they rest in peace!
+ We heave the sigh to human frailty due--
+And shall not Sam have his? The muse shall cease
+To keep the heroic roll, which she began in Greece--
+
+With demigods who went to the Black Sea
+ For wool (and if the best accounts be straight,
+Came back, in Negro phraseology,
+ With the same wool each upon his pate),
+ In which she chronicled the deathless fate
+Of him who jumped into the perilous ditch
+ Left by Rome's street commissioners, in a state
+Which made it dangerous, and by jumping which
+He made himself renowned and the contractors rich--
+
+I say the muse shall quite forget to sound
+ The chord whose music is undying, if
+She do not strike it when Sam Patch is drowned.
+ Leander dived for love. Leucadia's cliff
+ The Lesbian Sappho leapt from in a miff,
+To punish Phaon; Icarus went dead
+ Because the wax did not continue stiff;
+And, had he minded what his father said,
+He had not given a name unto his watery bed.
+
+And Helle's case was all an accident,
+ As everybody knows. Why sing of these?
+Nor would I rank with Sam that man who went
+ Down into Aetna's womb--Empedocles,
+ I think he called himself. Themselves to please,
+Or else unwillingly, they made their springs;
+ For glory in the abstract, Sam made his,
+To prove to all men, commons, lords, and kings,
+That "some things may be done, as well as other things."
+
+I will not be fatigued, by citing more
+ Who jump'd of old, by hazard or design,
+Nor plague the weary ghosts of boyish lore,
+ Vulcan, Apollo, Phaeton--in fine
+ All Tooke's Pantheon. Yet they grew divine
+By their long tumbles; and if we can match
+ Their hierarchy, shall we not entwine
+One wreath? Who ever came "up to the scratch,"
+And for so little, jumped so bravely as Sam Patch?
+
+To long conclusions many men have jumped
+ In logic, and the safer course they took;
+By any other they would have been stumped,
+ Unable to argue, or to quote a book,
+ And quite dumbfounded, which they cannot brook;
+They break no bones, and suffer no contusion,
+ Hiding their woful fall, by hook and crook,
+In slang and gibberish, sputtering and confusion;
+But that was not the way Sam came to _his_ conclusion.
+
+He jumped in person. Death or victory
+ Was his device, "and there was no mistake,"
+Except his last; and then he did but die,
+ A blunder which the wisest men will make.
+ Aloft, where mighty floods the mountains break,
+To stand, the target of the thousand eyes,
+ And down into the coil and water-quake,
+To leap, like Maia's offspring, from the skies--
+For this all vulgar flights he ventured to despise.
+
+And while Niagara prolongs its thunder,
+ Though still the rock primeval disappears
+And nations change their bounds--the theme of wonder
+ Shall Sam go down the cataract of long years:
+ And if there be sublimity in tears,
+Those shall be precious which the adventurer shed
+ When his frail star gave way, and waked his fears,
+Lest, by the ungenerous crowd it might be said,
+That he was all a hoax, or that his pluck had fled.
+
+Who would compare the maudlin Alexander,
+ Blubbering because he had no job in hand,
+Acting the hypocrite, or else the gander,
+ With Sam, whose grief we all can understand?
+ His crying was not womanish, nor plann'd
+For exhibition; but his heart o'erswelled
+ With its own agony, when he the grand,
+Natural arrangements for a jump beheld.
+And measuring the cascade, found not his courage quelled.
+
+His last great failure set the final seal
+ Unto the record Time shall never tear,
+While bravery has its honor--while men feel
+ The holy natural sympathies which are
+ First, last and mightiest in the bosom. Where
+The tortured tides of Genesee descend,
+ He came--his only intimate a bear--
+(We know now that he had another friend),
+The martyr of renown, his wayward course to end.
+
+The fiend that from the infernal rivers stole
+ Hell-drafts for man, too much tormented him;
+With nerves unstrung, but steadfast of his soul,
+ He stood upon the salient current's brim;
+ His head was giddy, and his sight was dim;
+And then he knew this leap would be his last--
+ Saw air, and earth, and water, wildly swim,
+With eyes of many multitudes, dense and vast,
+That stared in mockery; none a look of kindness cast.
+
+Beat down, in the huge amphitheatre,
+ "I see before me the gladiator lie,"
+And tier on tier, the myriads waiting there
+ The bow of grace without one pitying eye--
+ He was a slave--a captive hired to die--
+_Sam_ was born free as Caesar; and he might
+ The hopeless issue have refused to try;
+No! with true leap, but soon with faltering flight--
+"Deep in the roaring gulf, he plunged to endless night."
+
+But, ere he leapt, he begged of those who made
+ Money by this dread venture, that if he
+Should perish, such collection should be paid
+ As might be picked up from the "company"
+ _To his Mother._ This, his last request, shall be--
+Tho' she who bore him ne'er his fate should know--
+ An iris, glittering o'er his memory--
+When all the streams have worn their barriers low,
+And, by the sea drunk up, forever cease to flow.
+
+On him who chooses to jump down cataracts,
+ Why should the sternest moralist be severe?
+Judge not the dead by prejudice--but facts,
+ Such as in strictest evidence appear.
+ Else were the laurels of all ages sere.
+Give to the brave, who have passed the final goal--
+ The gates that ope not back--the generous tear;
+And let the muse's clerk upon her scroll
+In coarse, but honest verse, make up the judgment roll.
+
+_Therefore it is considered_ that Sam Patch
+ Shall never be forgot in prose or rhyme;
+His name shall be a portion in the batch
+ Of the heroic dough, which baking Time
+ Kneads for consuming ages--and the chime
+Of Fame's old bells, long as they truly ring,
+ Shall tell of him; he dived for the sublime,
+And found it. Thou, who, with the eagle's wing,
+Being a goose, would'st fly--dream not of such a thing!
+
+
+
+
+THE BRITISH MATRON
+
+(Anonymous)
+
+
+I have heard a good deal of the tenacity with which English ladies
+retain their personal beauty to a late period of life; but (not to
+suggest that an American eye needs use and cultivation before it can
+quite appreciate the charm of English beauty at any age) it strikes
+me that an English lady of fifty is apt to become a creature less
+refined and delicate, so far as her physique goes, than anything that
+we Western people class under the name of woman. She has an awful
+ponderosity of frame--not pulpy, like the looser development of our
+few fat women, but massive, with solid beef and streaky tallow; so
+that (though struggling manfully against the ideal) you inevitably
+think of her as made up of steaks and sirloins. When she walks her
+advance is elephantine. When she sits down it is on a great round
+space of her Maker's footstool, where she looks as if nothing could
+ever move her. She imposes awe and respect by the muchness of her
+personality, to such a degree that you probably credit her with far
+greater moral and intellectual force than she can fairly claim. Her
+visage is usually grim and stern, seldom positively forbidding, yet
+calmly terrible, not merely by its breadth and weight of feature, but
+because it seems to express so much well-defined self-reliance, such
+acquaintance with the world, its toils, troubles and dangers, and
+such sturdy capacity for trampling down a foe. Without anything
+positively salient, or actively offensive, or, indeed, unjustly
+formidable to her neighbors, she has the effect of a seventy-four-gun
+ship in time of peace; for, while you assure yourself that there is
+no real danger, you cannot help thinking how tremendous would be her
+onset if pugnaciously inclined, and how futile the effort to inflict
+any counter-injury. She certainly looks tenfold--nay, a hundredfold--
+better able to take care of herself than our slender-framed and
+haggard womankind; but I have not found reason to suppose that the
+English dowager of fifty has actually greater courage, fortitude and
+strength of character than our women of similar age, or even a
+tougher physical endurance than they. Morally, she is strong, I
+suspect, only in society and in common routine of social affairs, and
+would be found powerless and timid in any exceptional strait that
+might call for energy outside of the conventionalities amid which she
+has grown up.
+
+You can meet this figure in the street, and live, and even smile at
+the recollection. But conceive of her in a ballroom, with the bare,
+brawny arms that she invariably displays there, and all the other
+corresponding development, such as is beautiful in the maiden
+blossom, but a spectacle to howl at in such an overblown cabbage-rose
+as this.
+
+Yet, somewhere in this enormous bulk there must be hidden the modest,
+slender, violet-nature of a girl, whom an alien mass of earthliness
+has unkindly overgrown; for an English maiden in her teens, though
+very seldom so pretty as our own damsels, possesses, to say the
+truth, a certain charm of half-blossom, and delicately folded leaves,
+and tender womanhood, shielded by maidenly reserves, with which,
+somehow or other, our American girls often fail to adorn themselves
+during an appreciable moment. It is a pity that the English violet
+should grow into such an outrageously developed peony as I have
+attempted to describe. I wonder whether a middle-aged husband ought
+to be considered as legally married to all the accretions that have
+overgrown the slenderness of his bride, since he led her to the
+altar, and which make her so much more than he ever bargained for! Is
+it not a sounder view of the case that the matrimonial bond cannot be
+held to include the three-fourths of the wife that had no existence
+when the ceremony was performed? And ought not an English married
+pair to insist upon the celebration of a silver wedding at the end of
+twenty-five years to legalize all that corporeal growth of which both
+parties have individually come into possession since pronounced one
+flesh?--_Our Old Home_.
+
+
+
+
+THE POSTER GIRL
+
+
+The blessed Poster Girl leaned out
+ From a pinky-purple heaven;
+One eye was red and one was green;
+ Her bang was cut uneven;
+She had three fingers on her hand,
+ And the hairs on her head were seven,
+
+Her robe, ungirt from clasp to hem,
+ No sunflowers did adorn;
+But a heavy Turkish portiere
+ Was very neatly worn;
+And the hat that lay along her back
+ Was yellow like canned corn.
+
+It was a kind of wobbly wave
+ That she was standing on,
+And high aloft she flung a scarf
+ That must have weighed a ton;
+And she was rather tall--at least
+ She reached up to the sun.
+
+She curved and writhed, and then she said
+ Less green of speech than blue:
+"Perhaps I _am_ absurd--perhaps
+ I _don't_ appeal to you;
+But my artistic worth depends
+ Upon the point of view."
+
+I saw her smile, although her eyes
+ Were only smudgy smears;
+And then she swished her swirling arms,
+ And wagged her gorgeous ears,
+She sobbed a blue-and-green-checked sob,
+ And wept some purple tears.
+
+Carolyn Wells.
+
+
+
+
+James Gardner Sanderson
+
+THE CONUNDRUM OF THE GOLF LINKS
+
+
+(_With thanks to Kipling_)
+
+When the flush of the new-born sun fell first on
+ Eden's gold and green,
+Our Father Adam sat under the Tree and shaved
+ his driver clean,
+And joyously whirled it round his head and
+ knocked the apples off,
+Till the Devil whispered behind the leaves:
+ "Well done--but is it golf?"
+
+Wherefore he called his wife and fled to practise
+ again his swing--
+The first of the world who foozled his stroke (yet
+ the grandpapa of Tyng);
+And he left his clubs to the use of his sons--and
+ that was a glorious gain,
+When the Devil chuckled "Beastly Golf" in the
+ ear of the horrored Cain.
+
+They putted and drove in the North and South;
+ they talked and laid links in the West;
+Till the waters rose o'er Ararat's tees, and the
+ aching wrists could rest--
+Could rest till that blank, blank canvasback,
+ heard the Devil jeer and scoff,
+As he flew with the flood-fed olive branch, "Dry
+ weather. Let's play golf."
+
+They pulled and sliced and pounded the earth,
+ and the balls went sailing off
+Into bunkers and trees while the Devil grinned,
+ "Keep your eye on it! _That's_ not golf."
+Then the Devil took his sulphured cleik and
+ mightily he swung,
+While each man marveled and cursed his form
+ and each in an alien tongue.
+
+The tale is as old as the Eden Tree--and new as
+ the newest green,
+For each man knows ere his lip thatch grows the
+ caddy's mocking mien.
+And each man hears, though the ball falls fair,
+ the Devil's cursed cough
+Of joy as the man holes out in ten, "You did
+ it--but what poor golf!"
+
+We have learned to whittle the Eden Tree to
+ the shape of a niblick's shaft,
+We have learned to make a mashie with a
+ wondrous handicraft,
+We know that a hazard is often played best by
+ re-driving off,
+But the Devil whoops as he whooped of old, "It's
+ easy, but is it golf?"
+
+When the flicker of summer falls faint on the
+ Clubroom's gold and green,
+The sons of Adam sit them down and boast of
+ strokes unseen;
+They talk of stymies and brassie lies to the tune
+ of the steward's cough,
+But the Devil whispers in their ears, "Gadzooks!
+ But that's not golf!"
+
+Now if we could win to the Eden Tree where
+ the Nine-Mile Links are laid,
+And seat ourselves where Man first swore as he
+ drove from the grateful shade,
+And if we could play where our Fathers played
+ and follow our swings well through,
+By the favor of God we might know of Golf
+ what our Father Adam knew.
+
+
+
+
+Harriet Beecher Stowe
+
+THE MINISTER'S WOOING
+
+
+ "Wal, the upshot on't was, they fussed and fuzzled and wuzzled till
+they'd drinked up all the tea in the teapot; and then they went down
+and called on the Parson, and wuzzled him all up talkin' about this,
+that, and t'other that wanted lookin' to, and that it was no way to
+leave everything to a young chit like Huldy, and that he ought to be
+lookin' about for an experienced woman.
+
+"The Parson, he thanked 'em kindly, and said he believed their
+motives was good, but he didn't go no further.
+
+"He didn't ask Mis' Pipperidge to come and stay there and help him,
+nor nothin' o' that kind; but he said he'd attend to matters himself.
+The fact was, the Parson had got such a likin' for havin' Huldy
+'round that he couldn't think o' such a thing as swappin' her off for
+the Widder Pipperidge.
+
+"'But,' he thought to himself, 'Huldy is a good girl; but I oughtn't
+to be a-leavin' everything to her--it's too hard on her. I ought to
+be instructin' and guidin' and helpin' of her; 'cause 'tain't
+everybody could be expected to know and do what Mis' Carryl did'; and
+so at it he went; and Lordy massy! didn't Huldy hev a time on't when
+the minister began to come out of his study and wanted to ten' 'round
+an' see to things? Huldy, you see, thought all the world of the
+minister, and she was 'most afraid to laugh; but she told me she
+couldn't, for the life of her, help it when his back was turned, for
+he wuzzled things up in the most singular way. But Huldy, she'd just
+say, 'Yes, sir,' and get him off into his study, and go on her own
+way.
+
+"'Huldy,' says the minister one day, 'you ain't experienced outdoors;
+and when you want to know anything you must come to me.'
+
+"'Yes, sir,' said Huldy.
+
+"'Now, Huldy,' says the Parson, 'you must be sure to save the turkey
+eggs, so that we can have a lot of turkeys for Thanksgiving.'
+
+"'Yes, sir,' says Huldy; and she opened the pantry door and showed
+him a nice dishful she'd been a-savin' up. Wal, the very next day the
+parson's hen-turkey was found killed up to old Jim Scrogg's barn.
+Folks say Scroggs killed it, though Scroggs, he stood to it he
+didn't; at any rate, the Scroggses they made a meal on't, and Huldy,
+she felt bad about it 'cause she'd set her heart on raisin' the
+turkeys; and says she, 'Oh, dear! I don't know what I shall do. I was
+just ready to set her.'
+
+"'Do, Huldy?' says the Parson; 'why, there's the other turkey, out
+there by the door, and a fine bird, too, he is.'
+
+"Sure enough, there was the old tom-turkey a-struttin' and a-sidlin'
+and a-quitterin', and a-floutin' his tail feathers in the sun, like a
+lively young widower all ready to begin life over again.
+
+"'But,' says Huldy, 'you know _he_ can't set on eggs.'
+
+"'He can't? I'd like to know why" says the Parson. 'He _shall_ set on
+eggs, and hatch 'em, too.'
+
+'"Oh, Doctor!' says Huldy, all in a tremble; 'cause, you know, she
+didn't want to contradict the minister, and she was afraid she should
+laugh--' I never heard that a tom-turkey would set on eggs.'
+
+"'Why, they ought to,' said the Parson getting quite 'arnest. 'What
+else be they good for? You just bring out the eggs, now, and put 'em
+in the nest, and I'll make him set on 'em.'
+
+"So Huldy, she thought there weren't no way to convince him but to
+let him try; so she took the eggs out and fixed 'em all nice in the
+nest; and then she come back and found old Tom a-skirmishin' with the
+Parson pretty lively, I tell ye. Ye see, old Tom, he didn't take the
+idea at all; and he flopped and gobbled, and fit the Parson; and the
+Parson's wig got 'round so that his cue stuck straight out over his
+ear, but he'd got his blood up. Ye see, the old Doctor was used to
+carryin' his p'ints o' doctrine; and he hadn't fit the Arminians and
+Socinians to be beat by a tom-turkey; and finally he made a dive and
+ketched him by the neck in spite o' his floppin', and stroked him
+down, and put Huldy's apron 'round him.
+
+"'There, Huldy,' he says, quite red in the face, 'we've got him now';
+and he traveled off to the barn with him as lively as a cricket.
+
+"Huldy came behind, just chokin' with laugh, and afraid the minister
+would look 'round and see her.
+
+"'Now, Huldy, we'll crook his legs and set him down,' says the
+Parson, when they got him to the nest; 'you see, he is getting quiet,
+and he'll set there all right.'
+
+"And the Parson, he sot him down; and old Tom, he sot there solemn
+enough and held his head down all droopin', lookin' like a rail pious
+old cock as long as the Parson sot by him.
+
+"'There; you see how still he sets,' says the Parson to Huldy.
+
+"Huldy was 'most dyin' for fear she should laugh. 'I'm afraid he'll
+get up,' says she, 'when you do.'
+
+"'Oh, no, he won't!' says the Parson, quite confident. 'There,
+there,' says he, layin' his hands on him as if pronouncin' a
+blessin'.
+
+"But when the Parson riz up, old Tom he riz up, too, and began to
+march over the eggs.
+
+"'Stop, now!' says the Parson. 'I'll make him get down agin; hand me
+that corn-basket; we'll put that over him.'
+
+"So he crooked old Tom's legs and got him down agin; and they put the
+corn-basket over him, and then they both stood and waited.
+
+"'That'll do the thing, Huldy,' said the Parson.
+
+"'I don't know about it,' says Huldy.
+
+"'Oh, yes, it will, child; I understand,' says he.
+
+"Just as he spoke, the basket riz up and stood, and they could see
+old Tom's long legs.
+
+"'I'll make him stay down, confound him,' says the Parson, for you
+see, parsons is men, like the rest on us, and the Doctor had got his
+spunk up.
+
+"'You jist hold him a minute, and I'll get something that'll make him
+stay, I guess; and out he went to the fence and brought in a long,
+thin, flat stone, and laid it on old Tom's back.
+
+"'Oh, my eggs!' says Huldy. 'I'm afraid he's smashed 'em!'
+
+"And sure enough, there they was, smashed flat enough under the
+stone.
+
+"'I'll have him killed,' said the Parson. 'We won't have such a
+critter 'round.'
+
+"Wall next week, Huldy, she jist borrowed the minister's horse and
+side-saddle and rode over to South Parish to her Aunt Bascome's--
+Widder Bascome's, you know, that lives there by the trout-brook--and
+got a lot o' turkey eggs o' her, and come back and set a hen on 'em,
+and said nothin'; and in good time there was as nice a lot o' turkey-
+chicks as ever ye see.
+
+"Huldy never said a word to the minister about his experiment, and he
+never said a word to her; but he sort o' kep more to his books and
+didn't take it on him to advise so much.
+
+"But not long arter he took it into his head that Huldy ought to have
+a pig to be a-fattin' with the buttermilk.
+
+"Mis' Pipperidge set him up to it; and jist then old Tom Bigelow, out
+to Juniper Hill, told him if he'd call over he'd give him a little
+pig.
+
+"So he sent for a man, and told him to build a pig-pen right out by
+the well, and have it all ready when he came home with his pig.
+
+"Huldy said she wished he might put a curb round the well out there,
+because in the dark sometimes a body might stumble into it; and the
+Parson said he might do that.
+
+"Wal, old Aikin, the carpenter, he didn't come till 'most the middle
+of the afternoon; and then he sort o' idled, so that he didn't get up
+the well-curb till sundown; and then he went off, and said he'd come
+and do the pig-pen next day.
+
+"Wal, arter dark, Parson Carryl, he driv into the yard, full chizel,
+with his pig.
+
+"'There, Huldy. I've got you a nice little pig.'
+
+"'Dear me!' says Huldy; 'where have you put him?'
+
+"'Why, out there in the pig-pen, to be sure.'
+
+"'Oh, dear me!' says Huldy,'that's the well-curb--there ain't no pig-
+pen built,' says she.
+
+"'Lordy massy!' says the Parson; 'then I've thrown the pig in the
+well!'
+
+"Wal, Huldy she worked and worked, and finally she fished piggy out
+in the bucket, but he was as dead as a doornail; and she got him out
+o' the way quietly, and didn't say much; and the Parson he took to a
+great Hebrew book in his study.
+
+"After that the Parson set sich store by Huldy that he come to her
+and asked her about everything, and it was amazin' how everything she
+put her hand to prospered. Huldy planted marigolds and larkspurs,
+pinks and carnations, all up and down the path to the front door; and
+trained up mornin'-glories and scarlet runners round the windows. And
+she was always gettin' a root here, and a sprig there, and a seed
+from somebody else; for Huldy was one o' them that has the gift, so
+that ef you jist give 'em the leastest of anything they make a great
+bush out of it right away; so that in six months Huldy had roses and
+geraniums and lilies sich as it would take a gardener to raise.
+
+"Huldy was so sort o' chipper and fair spoken that she got the hired
+men all under her thumb: they come to her and took her orders jist as
+meek as so many calves, and she traded at the store, and kep' the
+accounts, and she had her eyes everywhere, and tied up all the ends
+so tight that there wa'n't no gettin' 'round her. She wouldn't let
+nobody put nothin' off on Parson Carryl 'cause he was a minister.
+Huldy was allers up to anybody that wanted to make a hard bargain,
+and afore he knew jist what he was about she'd got the best end of
+it, and everybody said that Huldy was the most capable girl they ever
+traded with.
+
+"Wal, come to the meetin' of the Association, Mis' Deakin Blodgett
+and Mis' Pipperidge come callin' up to the Parson's all in a stew and
+offerin' their services to get the house ready, but the Doctor he
+jist thanked 'em quite quiet, and turned 'em over to Huldy; and Huldy
+she told 'em that she'd got everything ready, and showed 'em her
+pantries, and her cakes, and her pies, and her puddin's, and took 'em
+all over the house; and they went peekin' and pokin', openin'
+cupboard doors, and lookin' into drawers; and they couldn't find so
+much as a thread out o' the way, from garret to cellar, and so they
+went off quite discontented. Arter that the women sat a new trouble
+a-brewin'. They began to talk that it was a year now since Mis'
+Carryl died; and it railly wasn't proper such a young gal to be
+stayin' there, who everybody could see was a-settin' her cap for the
+minister.
+
+"Mis' Pipperidge said, that so long as she looked on Huldy as the
+hired gal she hadn't thought much about it; but Huldy was railly
+takin' on airs as an equal, and appearin' as mistress o' the house in
+a way that would make talk if it went on. And Mis' Pipperidge she
+driv 'round up to Deakin Abner Snow's, and down to Mis 'Lijah
+Perry's, and asked them if they wasn't afraid that the way the Parson
+and Huldy was a-goin on might make talk. And they said they hadn't
+thought on't before, but now, come to think on't it, they was sure it
+would and they all went and talked with somebody else and asked them
+if they didn't think it would make talk. So come Sunday, between
+meetin's there warn't nothin' else talked about; and Huldy saw folks
+a-noddin' and a-winkin', and a-lookin' arter her, and she begun to
+feel drefful sort o' disagreeable. Finally Mis' Sawin, she says to
+her, 'My dear, didn't you never think folk would talk about you and
+the minister?'
+
+"'No; why should they?' says Huldy, quite innocent.
+
+"'Wal, dear,' says she, 'I think it's a shame; but they say you're
+tryin' to catch him, and that it's so bold and improper for you to be
+courtin' of him right in his own house--you know folks will talk--I
+thought I'd tell you, 'cause I think so much of you,' says she.
+
+"Huldy was a gal of spirit, and she despised the talk, but it made
+her drefful uncomfortable; and when she got home at night she sat
+down in the mornin'-glory porch, quite quiet, and didn't sing a word.
+
+"The minister he had heard the same thing from one of his deakins
+that day; and when he saw Huldy so kind o' silent, he says to her,
+'Why don't you sing, my child?'
+
+"He had a pleasant sort o' way with him, the minister had, and Huldy
+had got to likin' to be with him; and it all come over her that
+perhaps she ought to go away; and her throat kind o' filled up so she
+couldn't hardly speak; and, says she, 'I can't sing to-night'
+
+"Says he, 'You don't know how much good your singin' has done me, nor
+how much good you have done me in all ways, Huldy. I wish I knew how
+to show my gratitude.'
+
+"'Oh, sir!' says Huldy, '_is_ it improper for me to be here?'
+
+"'No, dear,' says the minister, 'but ill-natured folks will talk; but
+there is one way we can stop it, Huldy--if you'll marry me. You'll
+make me very happy, and I'll do all I can to make you happy. Will
+you?'
+
+"Wal, Huldy never told me just what she said to the minister; gals
+never does give you the particulars of them things jist as you'd like
+'em--only I know the upshot and the hull on't was, that Huldy she did
+a considerable lot o' clear starchin' and ironin' the next two days,
+and the Friday o' next week the minister and she rode over together
+to Doctor Lothrop's, in Oldtown, and the Doctor he jist made 'em man
+and wife."
+
+
+
+
+William Dean Howells
+
+MRS. JOHNSON
+
+
+It was on a morning of the lovely New England May that we left the
+horse-car and, spreading our umbrellas, walked down the street to our
+new home in Charlesbridge, through a storm of snow and rain so finely
+blent by the influences of this fortunate climate that no flake knew
+itself from its sister drop, or could be better identified by the
+people against whom they beat in unison. A vernal gale from the east
+fanned our cheeks and pierced our marrow and chilled our blood, while
+the raw, cold green of the adventurous grass on the borders of the
+sopping sidewalks gave, as it peered through its veil of melting snow
+and freezing rain, a peculiar cheerfulness to the landscape. Here and
+there in the vacant lots abandoned hoopskirts defied decay; and near
+the half-finished wooden houses empty mortar-beds and bits of lath
+and slate, strewn over the scarred and mutilated ground, added their
+interest to the scene....
+
+This heavenly weather, which the Pilgrim Fathers, with the idea of
+turning their thoughts effectually from earthly pleasures, came so
+far to discover, continued with slight amelioration throughout the
+month of May and far into June; and it was a matter of constant
+amazement with one who had known less austere climates, to behold how
+vegetable life struggled with the hostile skies, and, in an
+atmosphere as chill and damp as that of a cellar, shot forth the buds
+and blossoms upon the pear trees, called out the sour Puritan courage
+of the currant-bushes, taught a reckless native grapevine to wander
+and wanton over the southern side of the fence, and decked the banks
+with violets as fearless and as fragile as New England girls, so that
+about the end of June, when the heavens relented and the sun blazed
+out at last, there was little for him to do but to redden and darken
+the daring fruits that had attained almost their full growth without
+his countenance.
+
+Then, indeed, Charlesbridge appeared to us a kind of paradise. The
+wind blew all day from the southwest, and all day in the grove across
+the way the orioles sang to their nestlings.... The house was almost
+new and in perfect repair; and, better than all, the kitchen had as
+yet given no signs of unrest in those volcanic agencies which are
+constantly at work there, and which, with sudden explosions, make
+Herculaneums and Pompeiis of so many smiling households. Breakfast,
+dinner and tea came up with illusive regularity, and were all the
+most perfect of their kind; and we laughed and feasted in our vain
+security. We had out from the city to banquet with us the friends we
+loved, and we were inexpressibly proud before them of the help who
+first wrought miracles of cookery in our honor, and then appeared in
+a clean white apron and the glossiest black hair to wait upon the
+table. She was young and certainly very pretty; she was as gay as a
+lark, and was courted by a young man whose clothes would have been a
+credit, if they had not been a reproach, to our lowly basement. She
+joyfully assented to the idea of staying with us till she married.
+
+In fact, there was much that was extremely pleasant about the little
+place when the warm weather came, and it was not wonderful to us that
+Jenny was willing to remain. It was very quiet; we called one another
+to the window if a large dog went by our door; and whole days passed
+without the movement of any wheels but the butcher's upon our street,
+which flourished in ragweed and buttercups and daisies, and in the
+autumn burned, like the borders of nearly all the streets in
+Charlesbridge, with the pallid azure flame of the succory. The
+neighborhood was in all things a frontier between city and country.
+The horse-cars, the type of such civilization--full of imposture,
+discomfort, and sublime possibility--as we yet possess, went by the
+head of our street, and might, perhaps, be available to one skilled
+in calculating the movements of comets; while two minutes' walk would
+take us into a wood so wild and thick that no roof was visible
+through the trees. We learned, like innocent pastoral people of the
+golden age, to know the several voices of the cows pastured in the
+vacant lot, and, like engine-drivers of the iron-age, to distinguish
+the different whistles of the locomotives passing on the neighboring
+railroad. . . .
+
+We played a little at gardening, of course, and planted tomatoes,
+which the chickens seemed to like, for they ate them up as fast as
+they ripened; and we watched with pride the growth of our Lawton
+blackberries, which, after attaining the most stalwart proportions,
+were still as bitter as the scrubbiest of their savage brethren, and
+which, when by advice left on the vines for a week after they turned
+black, were silently gorged by secret and gluttonous flocks of robins
+and orioles. As for our grapes, the frost cut them off in the hour of
+their triumph.
+
+So, as I have hinted, we were not surprised that Jenny should be
+willing to remain with us, and were as little prepared for her
+desertion as for any other change of our mortal state. But one day in
+September she came to her nominal mistress with tears in her
+beautiful eyes and protestations of unexampled devotion upon her
+tongue, and said that she was afraid she must leave us. She liked the
+place, and she never had worked for anyone that was more of a lady,
+but she had made up her mind to go into the city. All this, so far,
+was quite in the manner of domestics who, in ghost stories, give
+warning to the occupants of haunted houses; and Jenny's mistress
+listened in suspense for the motive of her desertion, expecting to
+hear no less than that it was something which walked up and down the
+stairs and dragged iron links after it, or something that came and
+groaned at the front door, like populace dissatisfied with a
+political candidate. But it was in fact nothing of this kind; simply,
+there were no lamps upon our street, and Jenny, after spending Sunday
+evenings with friends in East Charlesbridge, was always alarmed on
+her return in walking from the horse-car to our door. The case was
+hopeless, and Jenny and our household parted with respect and regret.
+
+We had not before this thought it a grave disadvantage that our
+street was unlighted. Our street was not drained nor graded; no
+municipal cart ever came to carry away our ashes; there was not a
+water-butt within half a mile to save us from fire, nor more than the
+one-thousandth part of a policeman to protect us from theft. Yet, as
+I paid a heavy tax, I somehow felt that we enjoyed the benefits of
+city government, and never looked upon Charlesbridge as in any way
+undesirable for residence. But when it became necessary to find help
+in Jenny's place, the frosty welcome given to application at the
+intelligence offices renewed a painful doubt awakened by her
+departure. To be sure, the heads of the offices were polite enough;
+but when the young housekeeper had stated her case at the first to
+which she applied, and the Intelligencer had called out to the
+invisible expectants in the adjoining room, "Anny wan wants to do
+giner'l housewark in Charlsbrudge?" there came from the maids invoked
+so loud, so fierce, so full a "No!" as shook the lady's heart with an
+indescribable shame and dread. The name that, with an innocent pride
+in its literary and historical associations, she had written at the
+heads of her letters, was suddenly become a matter of reproach to
+her; and she was almost tempted to conceal thereafter that she lived
+in Charlesbridge, and to pretend that she dwelt upon some wretched
+little street in Boston. "You see," said the head of the office, "the
+gairls doesn't like to live so far away from the city. Now, if it was
+on'y in the Port." ...
+
+This pen is not graphic enough to give the remote reader an idea of
+the affront offered to an inhabitant of Old Charlesbridge in these
+closing words. Neither am I of sufficiently tragic mood to report
+here all the sufferings undergone by an unhappy family in finding
+servants, or to tell how the winter was passed with miserable
+makeshifts. Alas! is it not the history of a thousand experiences?
+Anyone who looks upon this page could match it with a tale as full of
+heartbreak and disaster, while I conceive that, in hastening to speak
+of Mrs. Johnson, I approach a subject of unique interest. ...
+
+I say our last Irish girl went with the last snow, and on one of
+those midsummerlike days that sometimes fall in early April to our
+yet bleak and desolate zone, our hearts sang of Africa and golden
+joys. A Libyan longing took us, and we would have chosen, if we
+could, to bear a strand of grotesque beads, or a handful of brazen
+gauds, and traffic them for some sable maid with crisp locks, whom,
+uncoffling from the captive train beside the desert, we should make
+to do our general housework forever, through the right of lawful
+purchase. But we knew that this was impossible, and that if we
+desired colored help we must seek it at the intelligence office,
+which is in one of those streets chiefly inhabited by the orphaned
+children and grandchildren of slavery. To tell the truth, these
+orphans do not seem to grieve much for their bereavement, but lead a
+life of joyous and rather indolent oblivion in their quarter of the
+city. They are often to be seen sauntering up and down the street by
+which the Oharlesbridge cars arrive--the young with a harmless
+swagger and the old with the generic limp which our Autocrat has
+already noted as attending advanced years in their race.... How gaily
+are the young ladies of this race attired, as they trip up and down
+the sidewalks, and in and out through the pendant garments at the
+shop doors! They are the black pansies and marigolds, and dark-
+blooded dahlias among womankind. They try to assume something of our
+colder race's demeanor, but even the passer on the horse-car can see
+that it is not native with them, and is better pleased when they
+forget us, and ungenteely laugh in encountering friends, letting
+their white teeth glitter through the generous lips that open to
+their ears. In the streets branching upward from this avenue, very
+little colored men and maids play with broken or enfeebled toys, or
+sport on the wooden pavements of the entrances to the inner courts.
+Now and then a colored soldier or sailor--looking strange in his
+uniform even after the custom of several years--emerges f
+rom those passages; or, more rarely, a black gentleman, stricken in
+years, and cased in shining broadcloth, walks solidly down the brick
+sidewalk, cane in hand--a vision of serene self-complacency and so
+plainly the expression of virtuous public sentiment that the great
+colored louts, innocent enough till then in their idleness, are taken
+with a sudden sense of depravity, and loaf guiltily up against the
+house-walls. At the same moment, perhaps, a young damsel, amorously
+scuffling with an admirer through one of the low open windows,
+suspends the strife, and bids him--"Go along, now, do!" More rarely
+yet than the gentleman described, one may see a white girl among the
+dark neighbors, whose frowsy head is uncovered, and whose sleeves are
+rolled up to her elbows, and who, though no doubt quite at home,
+looks as strange there as that pale anomaly which may sometimes be
+seen among a crew of blackbirds.
+
+An air not so much of decay as of unthrift, and yet hardly of
+unthrift, seems to prevail in the neighborhood, which has none of the
+aggressive and impudent squalor of an Irish quarter and none of the
+surly wickedenss of a low American street. A gaiety not born of the
+things that bring its serious joy to the true New England heart--a
+ragged gaiety, which comes of summer in the blood, and not in the
+pocket or the conscience, and which affects the countenance and the
+whole demeanor, setting the feet to some inward music, and at times
+bursting into a line of song or a childlike and irresponsible laugh--
+gives tone to the visible life and wakens a very friendly spirit in
+the passer, who somehow thinks there of a milder climate, and is half
+persuaded that the orange-peel on the sidewalks came from fruit grown
+in the soft atmosphere of those back courts.
+
+It was in this quarter, then, that we heard of Mrs. Johnson; and it
+was from a colored boarding-house there that she came to
+Charlesbridge to look at us, bringing her daughter of twelve years
+with her. She was a matron of mature age and portly figure, with a
+complexion like coffee soothed with the richest cream; and her
+manners were so full of a certain tranquillity and grace that she
+charmed away all our will to ask for references. It was only her
+barbaric laughter and lawless eye that betrayed how slightly her New
+England birth and breeding covered her ancestral traits, and bridged
+the gulf of a thousand years of civilization that lay between her
+race and ours. But in fact, she was doubly estranged by descent; for,
+as we learned later, a sylvan wilderness mixed with that of the
+desert in her veins; her grandfather was an Indian, and her ancestors
+on this side had probably sold their lands for the same value in
+trinkets that bought the original African pair on the other side.
+
+The first day that Mrs. Johnson descended into our kitchen she
+conjured from the malicious disorder in which it had been left by the
+flitting Irish kobold a dinner that revealed the inspirations of
+genius, and was quite different from a dinner of mere routine and
+laborious talent. Something original and authentic mingled with the
+accustomed flavors; and, though vague reminiscences of canal-boat
+travel and woodland camps arose from the relish of certain of the
+dishes, there was yet the assurance of such power in the preparation
+of the whole that we knew her to be merely running over the chords of
+our appetite with preliminary savors, as a musician acquaints his
+touch with the keys of an unfamiliar piano before breaking into
+brilliant and triumphant execution. Within a week she had mastered
+her instrument, and thereafter there was no faltering in her
+performances, which she varied constantly, through inspiration or
+from suggestion.... But, after all, it was in puddings that Mrs.
+Johnson chiefly excelled. She was one of those cooks--rare as men of
+genius in literature--who love their own dishes; and she had, in her
+personally childlike simplicity of taste and the inherited appetites
+of her savage forefathers, a dominant passion for sweets. So far as
+we could learn, she subsisted principally upon puddings and tea.
+Through the same primitive instincts, no doubt, she loved praise. She
+openly exulted in our artless flatteries of her skill; she waited
+jealously at the head of the kitchen stairs to hear what was said of
+her work, especially if there were guests; and she was never too
+weary to attempt emprises of cookery.
+
+While engaged in these, she wore a species of sightly handkerchief
+like a turban upon her head, and about her person those mystical
+swathings in which old ladies of the African race delight. But she
+most pleasured our sense of beauty and moral fitness when, after the
+last pan was washed and the last pot was scraped, she lighted a
+potent pipe, and, taking her stand at the kitchen door, laded the
+soft evening air with its pungent odors. If we surprised her at these
+supreme moments, she took the pipe from her lips and put it behind
+her, with a low, mellow chuckle and a look of half-defiant
+consciousness, never guessing that none of her merits took us half so
+much as the cheerful vice which she only feigned to conceal.
+
+Some things she could not do so perfectly as cooking because of her
+failing eyesight, and we persuaded her that spectacles would both
+become and befriend a lady of her years, and so bought her a pair of
+steel-bowed glasses. She wore them in some great emergencies at
+first, but had clearly no pride in them. Before long she laid them
+aside altogether, and they had passed from our thoughts, when one day
+we heard her mellow note of laughter and her daughter's harsher
+cackle outside our door, and, opening it, beheld Mrs. Johnson in
+gold-bowed spectacles of massive frame. We then learned that their
+purchase was in fulfilment of a vow made long ago, in the lifetime of
+Mr. Johnson, that if ever she wore glasses, they should be gold-
+bowed; and I hope the manes of the dead were half as happy in these
+votive spectacles as the simple soul that offered them.
+
+She and her late partner were the parents of eleven children, some of
+whom were dead and some of whom were wanderers in unknown parts.
+During his lifetime she had kept a little shop in her native town,
+and it was only within a few years that she had gone into service.
+She cherished a natural haughtiness of spirit, and resented control,
+although disposed to do all she could of her own notion. Being told
+to say when she wanted an afternoon, she explained that when she
+wanted an afternoon she always took it without asking, but always
+planned so as not to discommode the ladies with whom she lived.
+These, she said, had numbered twenty-seven within three years, which
+made us doubt the success of her system in all cases, though she
+merely held out the fact as an assurance of her faith in the future,
+and a proof of the ease with which places are to be found. She
+contended, moreover, that a lady who had for thirty years had a house
+of her own was in nowise bound to ask permission to receive visits
+from friends where she might be living, but that they ought freely to
+come and go like other guests. In this spirit she once invited her
+son-in-law, Professor Jones, of Providence, to dine with her; and her
+defied mistress, on entering the dining-room found the Professor at
+pudding and tea there--an impressively respectable figure in black
+clothes, with a black face rendered yet more effective by a pair of
+green goggles. It appeared that this dark professor was a light of
+phrenology in Rhode Island, and that he was believed to have uncommon
+virtue in his science by reason of being blind as well as black.
+
+I am loath to confess that Mrs. Johnson had not a flattering opinion
+of the Caucasian race in all respects. In fact, she had very good
+philosophical and scriptural reasons for looking upon us as an
+upstart people of new blood, who had come into their whiteness by no
+creditable or pleasant process. The late Mr. Johnson, who had died in
+the West Indies, whither he voyaged for his health in quality of a
+cook upon a Down East schooner, was a man of letters, and had written
+a book to show the superiority of the black over the white branches
+of the human family. In this he held that, as all islands have been
+at their first discovery found peopled by blacks, we must needs
+believe that humanity was first created of that color. Mrs. Johnson
+could not show us her husband's work (a sole copy in the library of
+an English gentleman at Port au Prince is not to be bought for
+money), but she often developed its arguments to the lady of the
+house; and one day, with a great show of reluctance and many protests
+that no personal slight was meant, let fall the fact that Mr. Johnson
+believed the white race descended from Gehaz the leper, upon whom the
+leprosy of Naaman fell when the latter returned by divine favor to
+his original blackness. "And he went out from his presence a leper as
+white as snow," said Mrs. Johnson, quoting irrefutable Scripture.
+"Leprosy, leprosy," she added thoughtfully--"nothing but leprosy
+bleached you out."
+
+It seems to me much in her praise that she did not exult in our taint
+and degradation, as some white philosophers used to do in the
+opposite idea that a part of the human family were cursed to lasting
+blackness and slavery in Ham and his children, but even told us of a
+remarkable approach to whiteness in many of her own offspring. In a
+kindred spirit of charity, no doubt, she refused ever to attend
+church with people of her elder and wholesomer blood. When she went
+to church, she said, she always went to a white church, though while
+with us I am bound to say she never went to any. She professed to
+read her Bible in her bedroom on Sundays; but we suspected from
+certain sounds and odors which used to steal out of this sanctuary,
+that her piety more commonly found expression in dozing and smoking.
+
+I would not make a wanton jest here of Mrs. Johnson's anxiety to
+claim honor for the African color, while denying this color in many
+of her own family. It afforded a glimpse of the pain with which all
+her people must endure, however proudly they hide it or light-
+heartedly forget it, from the despite and contumely to which they are
+guiltlessly born; and when I thought how irreparable was this
+disgrace and calamity of a black skin, and how irreparable it must be
+for ages yet, in this world where every other chance and all manner
+of wilful guilt and wickedness may hope for covert and pardon, I had
+little heart to laugh. Indeed, it was so pathetic to hear this poor
+old soul talk of her dead and lost ones, and try, in spite of all Mr.
+Johnson's theories and her own arrogant generalizations to establish
+their whiteness, that we must have been very cruel and silly people
+to turn their sacred fables even into matter of question. I have no
+doubt that her Antoinette Anastasia and her Thomas Jefferson
+Wilberforce--it is impossible to give a full idea of the splendor and
+scope of the baptismal names in Mrs. Johnson's family--have as light
+skins and as golden hair in heaven as her reverend maternal fancy
+painted for them in our world. There, certainly, they would not be
+subject to tanning, which had ruined the delicate complexion, and had
+knotted into black woolly tangles the once wavy blond locks of our
+little maid-servant Naomi; and I would fain believe that Toussaint
+Washington Johnson, who ran away to sea so many years ago, has found
+some fortunate zone where his hair and skin keep the same sunny and
+rosy tints they wore to his mother's eyes in infancy. But I have no
+means of knowing this, or of telling whether he was the prodigy of
+intellect that he was declared to be. Naomi could no more be taken in
+proof of the one assertion than of the other. When she came to us, it
+was agreed that she should go to school; but she overruled her mother
+in this as in everything else, and never went. Except Sunday-school
+lessons, she had no other instructions than that her mistress gave
+her in the evenings, when a heavy day's play and the natural
+influences of the hour conspired with original causes to render her
+powerless before words of one syllable.
+
+The first week of her services she was obedient and faithful to her
+duties; but, relaxing in the atmosphere of a house which seems to
+demoralize all menials, she shortly fell into disorderly ways of
+lying in wait for callers out of doors, and, when people rang, of
+running up the front steps and letting them in from the outside. As
+the season expanded, and the fine weather became confirmed, she spent
+her time in the fields, appearing at the house only when nature
+importunately craved molasses.
+
+In her untamable disobedience, Naomi alone betrayed her sylvan blood,
+for she was in all other respects Negro and not Indian. But it was of
+her aboriginal ancestry that Mrs. Johnson chiefly boasted--when not
+engaged in argument to maintain the superiority of the African race.
+She loved to descant upon it as the cause and explanation of her own
+arrogant habit of feeling; and she seemed, indeed, to have inherited
+something of the Indian's _hauteur_ along with the Ethiop's
+subtle cunning and abundant amiability. She gave many instances in
+which her pride had met and overcome the insolence of employers, and
+the kindly old creature was by no means singular in her pride of
+being reputed proud.
+
+She could never have been a woman of strong logical faculties, but
+she had in some things a very surprising and awful astuteness. She
+seldom introduced any purpose directly, but bore all about it, and
+then suddenly sprung it upon her unprepared antagonist. At other
+times she obscurely hinted a reason, and left a conclusion to be
+inferred; as when she warded off reproach for some delinquency by
+saying in a general way that she had lived with ladies who used to
+come scolding into the kitchen after they had taken their bitters.
+"Quality ladies took their bitters regular," she added, to remove any
+sting of personality from her remark; for, from many things she had
+let fall, we knew that she did not regard us as quality. On the
+contrary, she often tried to overbear us with the gentility of her
+former places; and would tell the lady over whom she reigned that she
+had lived with folks worth their three and four hundred thousand
+dollars, who never complained as she did of the ironing. Yet she had
+a sufficient regard for the literary occupations of the family, Mr.
+Johnson having been an author. She even professed to have herself
+written a book, which was still in manuscript and preserved somewhere
+among her best clothes.
+
+It was well, on many accounts, to be in contact with a mind so
+original and suggestive as Mrs. Johnson's. We loved to trace its
+intricate yet often transparent operations, and were perhaps too fond
+of explaining its peculiarities by facts of ancestry--of finding
+hints of the Pow-wow of the Grand Custom in each grotesque
+development. We were conscious of something warmer in this old soul
+than in ourselves, and sometimes wilder, and we chose to think it the
+tropic and the untracked forest. She had scarcely any being apart
+from her affection; she had no morality, but was good because she
+neither hated nor envied; and she might have been a saint far more
+easily than far more civilized people.
+
+There was that also in her sinuous yet malleable nature, so full of
+guile and so full of goodness, that reminded us pleasantly of lowly
+folks in elder lands, where relaxing oppressions have lifted the
+restraints of fear between master and servant without disturbing the
+familiarity of their relation. She advised freely with us upon all
+household matters, and took a motherly interest in whatever concerned
+us. She could be flattered or caressed into almost any service, but
+no threat or command could move her. When she erred, she never
+acknowledged her wrong in words, but handsomely expressed her regrets
+in a pudding or sent up her apologies in a favorite dish secretly
+prepared. We grew so well used to this form of exculpation that,
+whenever Mrs. Johnson took an afternoon at an inconvenient season, we
+knew that for a week afterward we should be feasted like princes. She
+owned frankly that she loved us, that she never had done half so much
+for people before, and that she never had been nearly so well suited
+in any other place; and for a brief and happy time we thought that we
+never should be obliged to part.
+
+One day, however, our dividing destiny appeared in the basement, and
+was presented to us as Hippolyto Thucydides, the son of Mrs. Johnson,
+who had just arrived on a visit to his mother from the State of New
+Hampshire. He was a heavy and loutish youth, standing upon the
+borders of boyhood, and looking forward to the future with a vacant
+and listless eye. I mean this was his figurative attitude; his actual
+manner, as he lolled upon a chair beside the kitchen window, was so
+eccentric that we felt a little uncertain how to regard him, and Mrs.
+Johnson openly described him as peculiar. He was so deeply tanned by
+the fervid suns of the New Hampshire winter, and his hair had so far
+suffered from the example of the sheep lately under his charge, that
+he could not be classed by any stretch of compassion with the blond
+and straight-haired members of Mrs. Johnson's family.
+
+He remained with us all the first day until late in the afternoon,
+when his mother took him out to get him a boarding-house. Then he
+departed in the van of her and Naomi, pausing at the gate to collect
+his spirits, and, after he had sufficiently animated himself by
+clapping his palms together, starting off down the street at a hand-
+gallop, to the manifest terror of the cows in the pasture and the
+confusion of the less demonstrative people of our household. Other
+characteristic traits appeared in Hippolyto Thucydides within no very
+long period of time, and he ran away from his lodgings so often
+during the summer that he might be said to board round among the
+outlying cornfields and turnip patches of Charlesbridge. As a check
+upon this habit, Mrs. Johnson seemed to have invited him to spend his
+whole time in our basement; for whenever we went below we found him
+there, balanced--perhaps in homage to us, and perhaps as a token of
+extreme sensibility in himself--upon the low window-sill, the bottoms
+of his boots touching the floor inside, and his face buried in the
+grass without.
+
+We could formulate no very tenable objection to all this, and yet the
+presence of Thucydides in our kitchen unaccountably oppressed our
+imaginations. We beheld him all over the house, a monstrous eidolon,
+balanced upon every window-sill; and he certainly attracted
+unpleasant notice to our place, no less by his furtive and hang-dog
+manner of arrival than by the bold displays with which he celebrated
+his departures. We hinted this to Mrs. Johnson, but she could not
+enter into our feeling. Indeed, all the wild poetry of her maternal
+and primitive nature seemed to cast itself about this hapless boy;
+and if we had listened to her we should have believed that there was
+no one so agreeable in society, or so quickwitted in affairs, as
+Hippolyto, when he chose. ...
+
+At last, when we said positively that Thucydides should come to us no
+more, and then qualified the prohibition by allowing him to come
+every Sunday, she answered that she never would hurt the child's
+feelings by telling him not to come where his mother was; that people
+who did not love her children did not love her; and that, if Hippy
+went, she went. We thought it a masterpiece of firmness to rejoin
+that Hippolyto must go in any event, but I am bound to own that he
+did not go, and that his mother stayed, and so fed us with every
+cunning, propitiatory dainty, that we must have been Pagans to renew
+our threat. In fact, we begged Mrs. Johnson to go into the country
+with us, and she, after long reluctation on Hippy's account,
+consented, agreeing to send him away to friends during her absence.
+
+We made every preparation, and on the eve of our departure Mrs.
+Johnson went into the city to engage her son's passage to Bangor,
+while we awaited her return in untroubled security.
+
+But she did not appear until midnight, and then responded with but a
+sad "Well, sah!" to the cheerful "Well, Mrs. Johnson!" that greeted
+her.
+
+"All right, Mrs. Johnson?"
+
+Mrs. Johnson made a strange noise, half chuckle and half death-rattle
+in her throat. "All wrong, sah. Hippy's off again; and I've been all
+over the city after him."
+
+"Then you can't go with us in the morning?"
+
+"How _can_ I, sah?"
+
+Mrs. Johnson went sadly out of the room. Then she came back to the
+door again, and opening it, uttered, for the first time in our
+service, words of apology and regret: "I hope I ha'n't put you out
+any. I _wanted_ to go with you, but I ought to _knowed_ I
+couldn't. All is, I loved you too much."--_Suburban Sketches._
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Masterpieces Of American Wit And Humor
+Edited by Thomas L. Masson
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MASTERPIECES OF AMERICAN WIT ***
+
+This file should be named 6313.txt or 6313.zip
+
+Produced by Duncan Harrod, Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+https://gutenberg.org or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03
+
+Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+https://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
diff --git a/6313.zip b/6313.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f82db4f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/6313.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..802a573
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #6313 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/6313)