THE MAN THAT
CORRUPTED HADLEYBURG
AND OTHER STORIES
by Mark Twain
contents:
1.THE
MAN THAT CORRUPTED
HADLEYBURG
2.MY FIRST LIE, AND HOW I GOT OUT OF IT
3.THE ESQUIMAUX MAIDEN'S ROMANCE
4.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND THE BOOK OF MRS.
EDDY 5.IS HE LIVING OR IS HE DEAD?
6.MY DEBUT AS A LITERARY PERSON
7.AT THE APPETITE-CURE
8.CONCERNING THE JEWS
9.FROM THE 'LONDON TIMES' OF 1904
10.ABOUT PLAY-ACTING
11.TRAVELLING WITH A REFORMER
12.DIPLOMATIC PAY AND CLOTHES
13.LUCK
14.THE CAPTAIN'S STORY
15.STIRRING TIMES IN AUSTRIA
16.PRIVATE HISTORY OF THE 'JUMPING FROG'
STORY 17.[Translation.]
18.[My Retranslation.]
19.MY MILITARY CAMPAIGN
20.MEISTERSCHAFT
21.MY BOYHOOD DREAMS
22.TO THE ABOVE OLD PEOPLE
23.IN MEMORIAM
1.THE MAN THAT CORRUPTED
HADLEYBURG
It was many years ago.
Hadleyburg was the most honest and upright town in all the region round about.
It had kept that reputation unsmirched during three generations, and was
prouder of it than of any other of its possessions. It was so proud of it, and
so anxious to insure its perpetuation, that it began to teach the principles of
honest dealing to its babies in the cradle, and made the like teachings the
staple of their culture thenceforward through all the years devoted to their
education. Also, throughout the formative years temptations were kept out of
the way of the young people, so that their honesty could have every chance to
harden and solidify, and become a part of their very bone. The neighbouring
towns were jealous of this honourable supremacy, and affected to sneer at
Hadleyburg's pride in it and call it vanity; but all the same they were obliged
to acknowledge that Hadleyburg was in reality an incorruptible town; and if
pressed they would also acknowledge that the mere fact that a young man hailed
from Hadleyburg was all the recommendation he needed when he went forth from
his natal town to seek for responsible employment.
But at last, in the drift of
time, Hadleyburg had the ill luck to offend a passing stranger—possibly without
knowing it, certainly without caring, for Hadleyburg was sufficient unto
itself, and cared not a rap for strangers or their opinions. Still, it would
have been well to make an exception in this one's case, for he was a bitter
man, and revengeful. All through his wanderings during a whole year he kept his
injury in mind, and gave all his leisure moments to trying to invent a
compensating satisfaction for it. He contrived many plans, and all of them were
good, but none of them was quite sweeping enough: the poorest of them would
hurt a great many individuals, but what he wanted was a plan which would
comprehend the entire town, and not let so much as one person escape unhurt. At
last he had a fortunate idea, and when it fell into his brain it lit up his
whole head with an evil joy. He began to form a plan at once, saying to himself
“That is the thing to do—I will corrupt the town.”
Six months later he went to
Hadleyburg, and arrived in a buggy at the house of the old cashier of the bank
about ten at night. He got a sack out of the buggy, shouldered it, and
staggered with it through the cottage yard, and knocked at the door. A woman's
voice said “Come in,” and he entered, and set his sack behind the stove in the
parlour, saying politely to the old lady who sat reading the “Missionary
Herald” by the lamp:
“Pray keep your seat, madam,
I will not disturb you. There—now it is pretty well concealed; one would hardly
know it was there. Can I see your husband a moment, madam?”
No, he was gone to Brixton,
and might not return before morning.
“Very well, madam, it is no
matter. I merely wanted to leave that sack in his care, to be delivered to the
rightful owner when he shall be found. I am a stranger; he does not know me; I
am merely passing through the town to-night to discharge a matter which has
been long in my mind. My errand is now completed, and I go pleased and a little
proud, and you will never see me again. There is a paper attached to the sack
which will explain everything. Good-night, madam.”
The old lady was afraid of
the mysterious big stranger, and was glad to see him go. But her curiosity was
roused, and she went straight to the sack and brought away the paper. It began
as follows:
“TO BE PUBLISHED, or, the right man sought out by private inquiry—
either will answer. This sack contains gold coin weighing a hundred
and sixty pounds four ounces—”
“Mercy on us, and the door
not locked!”
Mrs. Richards flew to it all
in a tremble and locked it, then pulled down the window-shades and stood
frightened, worried, and wondering if there was anything else she could do
toward making herself and the money more safe. She listened awhile for
burglars, then surrendered to curiosity, and went back to the lamp and finished
reading the paper:
“I am a foreigner, and am presently going back to my own country, to
remain there permanently. I am grateful to America for what I have
received at her hands during my long stay under her flag; and to one of
her citizens—a citizen of Hadleyburg—I am especially grateful for a
great kindness done me a year or two ago. Two great kindnesses in fact.
I will explain. I was a gambler. I say I WAS. I was a ruined gambler.
I arrived in this village at night, hungry and without a penny. I asked
for help—in the dark; I was ashamed to beg in the light. I begged of
the right man. He gave me twenty dollars—that is to say, he gave me
life, as I considered it. He also gave me fortune; for out of that money
I have made myself rich at the gaming-table. And finally, a remark
which he made to me has remained with me to this day, and has at last
conquered me; and in conquering has saved the remnant of my morals: I
shall gamble no more. Now I have no idea who that man was, but I want
him found, and I want him to have this money, to give away, throw away,
or keep, as he pleases. It is merely my way of testifying my gratitude
to him. If I could stay, I would find him myself; but no matter, he will
be found. This is an honest town, an incorruptible town, and I know
I can trust it without fear. This man can be identified by the remark
which he made to me; I feel persuaded that he will remember it.
“And now my plan is this: If you prefer to conduct the inquiry
privately, do so. Tell the contents of this present writing to any one
who is likely to be the right man. If he shall answer, 'I am the man;
the remark I made was so-and-so,' apply the test—to wit: open the
sack, and in it you will find a sealed envelope containing that remark.
If the remark mentioned by the candidate tallies with it, give him the
money, and ask no further questions, for he is certainly the right man.
“But if you shall prefer a public inquiry, then publish this present
writing in the local paper—with these instructions added, to wit:
Thirty days from now, let the candidate appear at the town-hall at eight
in the evening (Friday), and hand his remark, in a sealed envelope, to
the Rev. Mr. Burgess (if he will be kind enough to act); and let Mr.
Burgess there and then destroy the seals of the sack, open it, and see
if the remark is correct: if correct, let the money be delivered, with
my sincere gratitude, to my benefactor thus identified.”
Mrs. Richards sat down, gently quivering with excitement, and was soon lost in thinkings—after this pattern: “What a strange thing it is! ... And what a fortune for that kind man who set his bread afloat upon the waters!... If it had only been my husband that did it!—for we are so poor, so old and poor!...” Then, with a sigh—“But it was not my Edward; no, it was not he that gave a stranger twenty dollars. It is a pity too; I see it now....” Then, with a shudder—“But it is GAMBLERS' money! the wages of sin; we couldn't take it; we couldn't touch it. I don't like to be near it; it seems a defilement.” She moved to a farther chair... “I wish Edward would come, and take it to the bank; a burglar might come at any moment; it is dreadful to be here all alone with it.”
At eleven Mr. Richards
arrived, and while his wife was saying “I am SO glad you've come!” he was
saying, “I am so tired—tired clear out; it is dreadful to be poor, and have to
make these dismal journeys at my time of life. Always at the grind, grind,
grind, on a salary—another man's slave, and he sitting at home in his slippers,
rich and comfortable.”
“I am so sorry for you,
Edward, you know that; but be comforted; we have our livelihood; we have our
good name—”
“Yes, Mary, and that is
everything. Don't mind my talk—it's just a moment's irritation and doesn't mean
anything. Kiss me—there, it's all gone now, and I am not complaining any more.
What have you been getting? What's in the sack?”
Then his wife told him the
great secret. It dazed him for a moment; then he said:
“It weighs a hundred and
sixty pounds? Why, Mary, it's for-ty thousand dollars—think of it—a whole
fortune! Not ten men in this village are worth that much. Give me the paper.”
He skimmed through it and
said:
“Isn't it an adventure! Why,
it's a romance; it's like the impossible things one reads about in books, and
never sees in life.” He was well stirred up now; cheerful, even gleeful. He
tapped his old wife on the cheek, and said humorously, “Why, we're rich, Mary,
rich; all we've got to do is to bury the money and burn the papers. If the
gambler ever comes to inquire, we'll merely look coldly upon him and say: 'What
is this nonsense you are talking? We have never heard of you and your sack of
gold before;' and then he would look foolish, and—”
“And in the meantime, while
you are running on with your jokes, the money is still here, and it is fast
getting along toward burglar-time.”
“True. Very well, what shall
we do—make the inquiry private? No, not that; it would spoil the romance. The
public method is better. Think what a noise it will make! And it will make all
the other towns jealous; for no stranger would trust such a thing to any town
but Hadleyburg, and they know it. It's a great card for us. I must get to the
printing-office now, or I shall be too late.”
“But stop—stop—don't leave
me here alone with it, Edward!”
But he was gone. For only a
little while, however. Not far from his own house he met the editor—proprietor
of the paper, and gave him the document, and said “Here is a good thing for
you, Cox—put it in.”
“It may be too late, Mr.
Richards, but I'll see.”
At home again, he and his
wife sat down to talk the charming mystery over; they were in no condition for
sleep. The first question was, Who could the citizen have been who gave the
stranger the twenty dollars? It seemed a simple one; both answered it in the
same breath—
“Barclay Goodson.”
“Yes,” said Richards, “he
could have done it, and it would have been like him, but there's not another in
the town.”
“Everybody will grant that,
Edward—grant it privately, anyway. For six months, now, the village has been
its own proper self once more—honest, narrow, self-righteous, and stingy.”
“It is what he always called
it, to the day of his death—said it right out publicly, too.”
“Yes, and he was hated for
it.”
“Oh, of course; but he
didn't care. I reckon he was the best-hated man among us, except the Reverend
Burgess.”
“Well, Burgess deserves
it—he will never get another congregation here. Mean as the town is, it knows
how to estimate HIM. Edward, doesn't it seem odd that the stranger should
appoint Burgess to deliver the money?”
“Well, yes—it does. That
is—that is—”
“Why so much that-IS-ing?
Would YOU select him?”
“Mary, maybe the stranger
knows him better than this village does.”
“Much THAT would help
Burgess!”
The husband seemed perplexed
for an answer; the wife kept a steady eye upon him, and waited. Finally
Richards said, with the hesitancy of one who is making a statement which is
likely to encounter doubt,
“Mary, Burgess is not a bad
man.”
His wife was certainly
surprised.
“Nonsense!” she exclaimed.
“He is not a bad man. I
know. The whole of his unpopularity had its foundation in that one thing—the
thing that made so much noise.”
“That 'one thing,' indeed!
As if that 'one thing' wasn't enough, all by itself.”
“Plenty. Plenty. Only he
wasn't guilty of it.”
“How you talk! Not guilty of
it! Everybody knows he WAS guilty.”
“Mary, I give you my word—he
was innocent.”
“I can't believe it and I
don't. How do you know?”
“It is a confession. I am
ashamed, but I will make it. I was the only man who knew he was innocent. I
could have saved him, and—and—well, you know how the town was wrought up—I
hadn't the pluck to do it. It would have turned everybody against me. I felt
mean, ever so mean; but I didn't dare; I hadn't the manliness to face that.”
Mary looked troubled, and
for a while was silent. Then she said stammeringly:
“I—I don't think it would
have done for you to—to—One mustn't—er—public opinion—one has to be so
careful—so—” It was a difficult road, and she got mired; but after a little she
got started again. “It was a great pity, but—Why, we couldn't afford it,
Edward—we couldn't indeed. Oh, I wouldn't have had you do it for anything!”
“It would have lost us the
good-will of so many people, Mary; and then—and then—”
“What troubles me now is,
what HE thinks of us, Edward.”
“He? HE doesn't suspect that
I could have saved him.”
“Oh,” exclaimed the wife, in
a tone of relief, “I am glad of that. As long as he doesn't know that you could
have saved him, he—he—well that makes it a great deal better. Why, I might have
known he didn't know, because he is always trying to be friendly with us, as
little encouragement as we give him. More than once people have twitted me with
it. There's the Wilsons, and the Wilcoxes, and the Harknesses, they take a mean
pleasure in saying 'YOUR FRIEND Burgess,' because they know it pesters me. I
wish he wouldn't persist in liking us so; I can't think why he keeps it up.”
“I can explain it. It's
another confession. When the thing was new and hot, and the town made a plan to
ride him on a rail, my conscience hurt me so that I couldn't stand it, and I
went privately and gave him notice, and he got out of the town and stayed out
till it was safe to come back.”
“Edward! If the town had
found it out—”
“DON'T! It scares me yet, to
think of it. I repented of it the minute it was done; and I was even afraid to
tell you lest your face might betray it to somebody. I didn't sleep any that
night, for worrying. But after a few days I saw that no one was going to
suspect me, and after that I got to feeling glad I did it. And I feel glad yet,
Mary—glad through and through.”
“So do I, now, for it would
have been a dreadful way to treat him. Yes, I'm glad; for really you did owe
him that, you know. But, Edward, suppose it should come out yet, some day!”
“It won't.”
“Why?”
“Because everybody thinks it
was Goodson.”
“Of course they would!”
“Certainly. And of course HE
didn't care. They persuaded poor old Sawlsberry to go and charge it on him, and
he went blustering over there and did it. Goodson looked him over, like as if
he was hunting for a place on him that he could despise the most; then he says,
'So you are the Committee of Inquiry, are you?' Sawlsberry said that was about
what he was. 'H'm. Do they require particulars, or do you reckon a kind of a
GENERAL answer will do?' 'If they require particulars, I will come back, Mr.
Goodson; I will take the general answer first.' 'Very well, then, tell them to
go to hell—I reckon that's general enough. And I'll give you some advice,
Sawlsberry; when you come back for the particulars, fetch a basket to carry
what is left of yourself home in.'”
“Just like Goodson; it's got
all the marks. He had only one vanity; he thought he could give advice better
than any other person.”
“It settled the business,
and saved us, Mary. The subject was dropped.”
“Bless you, I'm not doubting
THAT.”
Then they took up the
gold-sack mystery again, with strong interest. Soon the conversation began to
suffer breaks—interruptions caused by absorbed thinkings. The breaks grew more
and more frequent. At last Richards lost himself wholly in thought. He sat
long, gazing vacantly at the floor, and by-and-by he began to punctuate his
thoughts with little nervous movements of his hands that seemed to indicate
vexation. Meantime his wife too had relapsed into a thoughtful silence, and her
movements were beginning to show a troubled discomfort. Finally Richards got up
and strode aimlessly about the room, ploughing his hands through his hair, much
as a somnambulist might do who was having a bad dream. Then he seemed to arrive
at a definite purpose; and without a word he put on his hat and passed quickly
out of the house. His wife sat brooding, with a drawn face, and did not seem to
be aware that she was alone. Now and then she murmured, “Lead us not into t...
but—but—we are so poor, so poor!... Lead us not into... Ah, who would be hurt
by it?—and no one would ever know... Lead us....” The voice died out in
mumblings. After a little she glanced up and muttered in a half-frightened,
half-glad way—
“He is gone! But, oh dear,
he may be too late—too late... Maybe not—maybe there is still time.” She rose
and stood thinking, nervously clasping and unclasping her hands. A slight
shudder shook her frame, and she said, out of a dry throat, “God forgive
me—it's awful to think such things—but... Lord, how we are made—how strangely
we are made!”
She turned the light low,
and slipped stealthily over and knelt down by the sack and felt of its ridgy
sides with her hands, and fondled them lovingly; and there was a gloating light
in her poor old eyes. She fell into fits of absence; and came half out of them
at times to mutter “If we had only waited!—oh, if we had only waited a little,
and not been in such a hurry!”
Meantime Cox had gone home
from his office and told his wife all about the strange thing that had
happened, and they had talked it over eagerly, and guessed that the late Goodson
was the only man in the town who could have helped a suffering stranger with so
noble a sum as twenty dollars. Then there was a pause, and the two became
thoughtful and silent. And by-and-by nervous and fidgety. At last the wife
said, as if to herself,
“Nobody knows this secret
but the Richardses... and us... nobody.”
The husband came out of his
thinkings with a slight start, and gazed wistfully at his wife, whose face was
become very pale; then he hesitatingly rose, and glanced furtively at his hat,
then at his wife—a sort of mute inquiry. Mrs. Cox swallowed once or twice, with
her hand at her throat, then in place of speech she nodded her head. In a
moment she was alone, and mumbling to herself.
And now Richards and Cox
were hurrying through the deserted streets, from opposite directions. They met,
panting, at the foot of the printing-office stairs; by the night-light there
they read each other's face. Cox whispered:
“Nobody knows about this but
us?”
The whispered answer was:
“Not a soul—on honour, not a
soul!”
“If it isn't too late to—”
The men were starting
up-stairs; at this moment they were overtaken by a boy, and Cox asked,
“Is that you, Johnny?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You needn't ship the early
mail—nor ANY mail; wait till I tell you.”
“It's already gone, sir.”
“GONE?” It had the sound of
an unspeakable disappointment in it.
“Yes, sir. Time-table for
Brixton and all the towns beyond changed to-day, sir—had to get the papers in
twenty minutes earlier than common. I had to rush; if I had been two minutes
later—”
The men turned and walked
slowly away, not waiting to hear the rest. Neither of them spoke during ten
minutes; then Cox said, in a vexed tone,
“What possessed you to be in
such a hurry, I can't make out.”
The answer was humble
enough:
“I see it now, but somehow I
never thought, you know, until it was too late. But the next time—”
“Next time be hanged! It
won't come in a thousand years.”
Then the friends separated
without a good-night, and dragged themselves home with the gait of mortally
stricken men. At their homes their wives sprang up with an eager “Well?”—then
saw the answer with their eyes and sank down sorrowing, without waiting for it
to come in words. In both houses a discussion followed of a heated sort—a new
thing; there had been discussions before, but not heated ones, not ungentle
ones. The discussions to-night were a sort of seeming plagiarisms of each
other. Mrs. Richards said:
“If you had only waited,
Edward—if you had only stopped to think; but no, you must run straight to the
printing-office and spread it all over the world.”
“It SAID publish it.”
“That is nothing; it also
said do it privately, if you liked. There, now—is that true, or not?”
“Why, yes—yes, it is true;
but when I thought what a stir it would make, and what a compliment it was to
Hadleyburg that a stranger should trust it so—”
“Oh, certainly, I know all
that; but if you had only stopped to think, you would have seen that you
COULDN'T find the right man, because he is in his grave, and hasn't left chick
nor child nor relation behind him; and as long as the money went to somebody
that awfully needed it, and nobody would be hurt by it, and—and—”
She broke down, crying. Her
husband tried to think of some comforting thing to say, and presently came out
with this:
“But after all, Mary, it
must be for the best—it must be; we know that. And we must remember that it was
so ordered—”
“Ordered! Oh, everything's
ORDERED, when a person has to find some way out when he has been stupid. Just
the same, it was ORDERED that the money should come to us in this special way,
and it was you that must take it on yourself to go meddling with the designs of
Providence—and who gave you the right? It was wicked, that is what it was—just
blasphemous presumption, and no more becoming to a meek and humble professor
of—”
“But, Mary, you know how we
have been trained all our lives long, like the whole village, till it is
absolutely second nature to us to stop not a single moment to think when
there's an honest thing to be done—”
“Oh, I know it, I know
it—it's been one everlasting training and training and training in
honesty—honesty shielded, from the very cradle, against every possible
temptation, and so it's ARTIFICIAL honesty, and weak as water when temptation
comes, as we have seen this night. God knows I never had shade nor shadow of a
doubt of my petrified and indestructible honesty until now—and now, under the
very first big and real temptation, I—Edward, it is my belief that this town's
honesty is as rotten as mine is; as rotten as yours. It is a mean town, a hard,
stingy town, and hasn't a virtue in the world but this honesty it is so
celebrated for and so conceited about; and so help me, I do believe that if
ever the day comes that its honesty falls under great temptation, its grand
reputation will go to ruin like a house of cards. There, now, I've made
confession, and I feel better; I am a humbug, and I've been one all my life,
without knowing it. Let no man call me honest again—I will not have it.”
“I—Well, Mary, I feel a good
deal as you do: I certainly do. It seems strange, too, so strange. I never
could have believed it—never.”
A long silence followed;
both were sunk in thought. At last the wife looked up and said:
“I know what you are
thinking, Edward.”
Richards had the embarrassed
look of a person who is caught.
“I am ashamed to confess it,
Mary, but—”
“It's no matter, Edward, I
was thinking the same question myself.”
“I hope so. State it.”
“You were thinking, if a
body could only guess out WHAT THE REMARK WAS that Goodson made to the
stranger.”
“It's perfectly true. I feel
guilty and ashamed. And you?”
“I'm past it. Let us make a
pallet here; we've got to stand watch till the bank vault opens in the morning
and admits the sack... Oh dear, oh dear—if we hadn't made the mistake!”
The pallet was made, and Mary
said:
“The open sesame—what could
it have been? I do wonder what that remark could have been. But come; we will
get to bed now.”
“And sleep?”
“No; think.”
“Yes; think.”
By this time the Coxes too
had completed their spat and their reconciliation, and were turning in—to
think, to think, and toss, and fret, and worry over what the remark could
possibly have been which Goodson made to the stranded derelict; that golden
remark; that remark worth forty thousand dollars, cash.
The reason that the village
telegraph-office was open later than usual that night was this: The foreman of
Cox's paper was the local representative of the Associated Press. One might say
its honorary representative, for it wasn't four times a year that he could
furnish thirty words that would be accepted. But this time it was different.
His despatch stating what he had caught got an instant answer:
“Send the whole thing—all the details—twelve hundred words.”
A colossal order! The
foreman filled the bill; and he was the proudest man in the State. By
breakfast-time the next morning the name of Hadleyburg the Incorruptible was on
every lip in America, from Montreal to the Gulf, from the glaciers of Alaska to
the orange-groves of Florida; and millions and millions of people were discussing
the stranger and his money-sack, and wondering if the right man would be found,
and hoping some more news about the matter would come soon—right away.
II
Hadleyburg village woke up
world-celebrated—astonished—happy—vain. Vain beyond imagination. Its nineteen
principal citizens and their wives went about shaking hands with each other,
and beaming, and smiling, and congratulating, and saying THIS thing adds a new
word to the dictionary—HADLEYBURG, synonym for INCORRUPTIBLE—destined to live
in dictionaries for ever! And the minor and unimportant citizens and their
wives went around acting in much the same way. Everybody ran to the bank to see
the gold-sack; and before noon grieved and envious crowds began to flock in
from Brixton and all neighbouring towns; and that afternoon and next day
reporters began to arrive from everywhere to verify the sack and its history
and write the whole thing up anew, and make dashing free-hand pictures of the
sack, and of Richards's house, and the bank, and the Presbyterian church, and
the Baptist church, and the public square, and the town-hall where the test
would be applied and the money delivered; and damnable portraits of the
Richardses, and Pinkerton the banker, and Cox, and the foreman, and Reverend
Burgess, and the postmaster—and even of Jack Halliday, who was the loafing,
good-natured, no-account, irreverent fisherman, hunter, boys' friend,
stray-dogs' friend, typical “Sam Lawson” of the town. The little mean,
smirking, oily Pinkerton showed the sack to all comers, and rubbed his sleek
palms together pleasantly, and enlarged upon the town's fine old reputation for
honesty and upon this wonderful endorsement of it, and hoped and believed that
the example would now spread far and wide over the American world, and be
epoch-making in the matter of moral regeneration. And so on, and so on.
By the end of a week things
had quieted down again; the wild intoxication of pride and joy had sobered to a
soft, sweet, silent delight—a sort of deep, nameless, unutterable content. All
faces bore a look of peaceful, holy happiness.
Then a change came. It was a
gradual change; so gradual that its beginnings were hardly noticed; maybe were
not noticed at all, except by Jack Halliday, who always noticed everything; and
always made fun of it, too, no matter what it was. He began to throw out
chaffing remarks about people not looking quite so happy as they did a day or
two ago; and next he claimed that the new aspect was deepening to positive
sadness; next, that it was taking on a sick look; and finally he said that
everybody was become so moody, thoughtful, and absent-minded that he could rob
the meanest man in town of a cent out of the bottom of his breeches pocket and
not disturb his reverie.
At this stage—or at about
this stage—a saying like this was dropped at bedtime—with a sigh, usually—by
the head of each of the nineteen principal households:
“Ah, what COULD have been
the remark that Goodson made?”
And straightway—with a
shudder—came this, from the man's wife:
“Oh, DON'T! What horrible
thing are you mulling in your mind? Put it away from you, for God's sake!”
But that question was wrung
from those men again the next night—and got the same retort. But weaker.
And the third night the men
uttered the question yet again—with anguish, and absently. This time—and the
following night—the wives fidgeted feebly, and tried to say something. But
didn't.
And the night after that
they found their tongues and responded—longingly:
“Oh, if we COULD only
guess!”
Halliday's comments grew
daily more and more sparklingly disagreeable and disparaging. He went
diligently about, laughing at the town, individually and in mass. But his laugh
was the only one left in the village: it fell upon a hollow and mournful
vacancy and emptiness. Not even a smile was findable anywhere. Halliday carried
a cigar-box around on a tripod, playing that it was a camera, and halted all
passers and aimed the thing and said “Ready!—now look pleasant, please,” but
not even this capital joke could surprise the dreary faces into any softening.
So three weeks passed—one
week was left. It was Saturday evening after supper. Instead of the aforetime
Saturday-evening flutter and bustle and shopping and larking, the streets were
empty and desolate. Richards and his old wife sat apart in their little parlour—miserable
and thinking. This was become their evening habit now: the life-long habit
which had preceded it, of reading, knitting, and contented chat, or receiving
or paying neighbourly calls, was dead and gone and forgotten, ages ago—two or
three weeks ago; nobody talked now, nobody read, nobody visited—the whole
village sat at home, sighing, worrying, silent. Trying to guess out that
remark.
The postman left a letter.
Richards glanced listlessly at the superscription and the post-mark—unfamiliar,
both—and tossed the letter on the table and resumed his might-have-beens and
his hopeless dull miseries where he had left them off. Two or three hours later
his wife got wearily up and was going away to bed without a good-night—custom
now—but she stopped near the letter and eyed it awhile with a dead interest,
then broke it open, and began to skim it over. Richards, sitting there with his
chair tilted back against the wall and his chin between his knees, heard
something fall. It was his wife. He sprang to her side, but she cried out:
“Leave me alone, I am too
happy. Read the letter—read it!”
He did. He devoured it, his
brain reeling. The letter was from a distant State, and it said:
“I am a stranger to you, but no matter: I have something to tell. I
have just arrived home from Mexico, and learned about that episode. Of
course you do not know who made that remark, but I know, and I am the
only person living who does know. It was GOODSON. I knew him well, many
years ago. I passed through your village that very night, and was his
guest till the midnight train came along. I overheard him make that
remark to the stranger in the dark—it was in Hale Alley. He and I
talked of it the rest of the way home, and while smoking in his house.
He mentioned many of your villagers in the course of his talk—most of
them in a very uncomplimentary way, but two or three favourably: among
these latter yourself. I say 'favourably'—nothing stronger. I remember
his saying he did not actually LIKE any person in the town—not one; but
that you—I THINK he said you—am almost sure—had done him a very great
service once, possibly without knowing the full value of it, and he
wished he had a fortune, he would leave it to you when he died, and a
curse apiece for the rest of the citizens. Now, then, if it was you that
did him that service, you are his legitimate heir, and entitled to the
sack of gold. I know that I can trust to your honour and honesty, for in
a citizen of Hadleyburg these virtues are an unfailing inheritance, and
so I am going to reveal to you the remark, well satisfied that if you
are not the right man you will seek and find the right one and see that
poor Goodson's debt of gratitude for the service referred to is paid.
This is the remark 'YOU ARE FAR FROM BEING A BAD MAN: GO, AND REFORM.'
“HOWARD L. STEPHENSON.”
“Oh, Edward, the money is
ours, and I am so grateful, OH, so grateful,—kiss me, dear, it's for ever since
we kissed—and we needed it so—the money—and now you are free of Pinkerton and
his bank, and nobody's slave any more; it seems to me I could fly for joy.”
It was a happy half-hour
that the couple spent there on the settee caressing each other; it was the old
days come again—days that had begun with their courtship and lasted without a
break till the stranger brought the deadly money. By-and-by the wife said:
“Oh, Edward, how lucky it
was you did him that grand service, poor Goodson! I never liked him, but I love
him now. And it was fine and beautiful of you never to mention it or brag about
it.” Then, with a touch of reproach, “But you ought to have told ME, Edward,
you ought to have told your wife, you know.”
“Well, I—er—well, Mary, you
see—”
“Now stop hemming and
hawing, and tell me about it, Edward. I always loved you, and now I'm proud of
you. Everybody believes there was only one good generous soul in this village,
and now it turns out that you—Edward, why don't you tell me?”
“Well—er—er—Why, Mary, I
can't!”
“You CAN'T? WHY can't you?”
“You see, he—well, he—he
made me promise I wouldn't.”
The wife looked him over,
and said, very slowly:
“Made—you—promise? Edward,
what do you tell me that for?”
“Mary, do you think I would
lie?”
She was troubled and silent
for a moment, then she laid her hand within his and said:
“No... no. We have wandered
far enough from our bearings—God spare us that! In all your life you have never
uttered a lie. But now—now that the foundations of things seem to be crumbling
from under us, we—we—” She lost her voice for a moment, then said, brokenly,
“Lead us not into temptation... I think you made the promise, Edward. Let it
rest so. Let us keep away from that ground. Now—that is all gone by; let us be
happy again; it is no time for clouds.”
Edward found it something of
an effort to comply, for his mind kept wandering—trying to remember what the
service was that he had done Goodson.
The couple lay awake the
most of the night, Mary happy and busy, Edward busy, but not so happy. Mary was
planning what she would do with the money. Edward was trying to recall that
service. At first his conscience was sore on account of the lie he had told
Mary—if it was a lie. After much reflection—suppose it WAS a lie? What then?
Was it such a great matter? Aren't we always ACTING lies? Then why not tell
them? Look at Mary—look what she had done. While he was hurrying off on his
honest errand, what was she doing? Lamenting because the papers hadn't been
destroyed and the money kept. Is theft better than lying?
THAT point lost its
sting—the lie dropped into the background and left comfort behind it. The next
point came to the front: HAD he rendered that service? Well, here was Goodson's
own evidence as reported in Stephenson's letter; there could be no better
evidence than that—it was even PROOF that he had rendered it. Of course. So
that point was settled... No, not quite. He recalled with a wince that this
unknown Mr. Stephenson was just a trifle unsure as to whether the performer of
it was Richards or some other—and, oh dear, he had put Richards on his honour!
He must himself decide whither that money must go—and Mr. Stephenson was not
doubting that if he was the wrong man he would go honourably and find the right
one. Oh, it was odious to put a man in such a situation—ah, why couldn't
Stephenson have left out that doubt? What did he want to intrude that for?
Further reflection. How did
it happen that RICHARDS'S name remained in Stephenson's mind as indicating the
right man, and not some other man's name? That looked good. Yes, that looked
very good. In fact it went on looking better and better, straight along—until by-and-by
it grew into positive PROOF. And then Richards put the matter at once out of
his mind, for he had a private instinct that a proof once established is better
left so.
He was feeling reasonably
comfortable now, but there was still one other detail that kept pushing itself
on his notice: of course he had done that service—that was settled; but what
WAS that service? He must recall it—he would not go to sleep till he had
recalled it; it would make his peace of mind perfect. And so he thought and
thought. He thought of a dozen things—possible services, even probable
services—but none of them seemed adequate, none of them seemed large enough,
none of them seemed worth the money—worth the fortune Goodson had wished he
could leave in his will. And besides, he couldn't remember having done them,
anyway. Now, then—now, then—what KIND of a service would it be that would make
a man so inordinately grateful? Ah—the saving of his soul! That must be it.
Yes, he could remember, now, how he once set himself the task of converting
Goodson, and laboured at it as much as—he was going to say three months; but
upon closer examination it shrunk to a month, then to a week, then to a day,
then to nothing. Yes, he remembered now, and with unwelcome vividness, that
Goodson had told him to go to thunder and mind his own business—HE wasn't
hankering to follow Hadleyburg to heaven!
So that solution was a
failure—he hadn't saved Goodson's soul. Richards was discouraged. Then after a
little came another idea: had he saved Goodson's property? No, that wouldn't
do—he hadn't any. His life? That is it! Of course. Why, he might have thought
of it before. This time he was on the right track, sure. His imagination-mill
was hard at work in a minute, now.
Thereafter, during a stretch
of two exhausting hours, he was busy saving Goodson's life. He saved it in all
kinds of difficult and perilous ways. In every case he got it saved
satisfactorily up to a certain point; then, just as he was beginning to get
well persuaded that it had really happened, a troublesome detail would turn up
which made the whole thing impossible. As in the matter of drowning, for
instance. In that case he had swum out and tugged Goodson ashore in an
unconscious state with a great crowd looking on and applauding, but when he had
got it all thought out and was just beginning to remember all about it, a whole
swarm of disqualifying details arrived on the ground: the town would have known
of the circumstance, Mary would have known of it, it would glare like a
limelight in his own memory instead of being an inconspicuous service which he
had possibly rendered “without knowing its full value.” And at this point he
remembered that he couldn't swim anyway.
Ah—THERE was a point which
he had been overlooking from the start: it had to be a service which he had
rendered “possibly without knowing the full value of it.” Why, really, that
ought to be an easy hunt—much easier than those others. And sure enough,
by-and-by he found it. Goodson, years and years ago, came near marrying a very
sweet and pretty girl, named Nancy Hewitt, but in some way or other the match
had been broken off; the girl died, Goodson remained a bachelor, and by-and-by
became a soured one and a frank despiser of the human species. Soon after the
girl's death the village found out, or thought it had found out, that she
carried a spoonful of negro blood in her veins. Richards worked at these
details a good while, and in the end he thought he remembered things concerning
them which must have gotten mislaid in his memory through long neglect. He
seemed to dimly remember that it was HE that found out about the negro blood;
that it was he that told the village; that the village told Goodson where they
got it; that he thus saved Goodson from marrying the tainted girl; that he had done
him this great service “without knowing the full value of it,” in fact without
knowing that he WAS doing it; but that Goodson knew the value of it, and what a
narrow escape he had had, and so went to his grave grateful to his benefactor
and wishing he had a fortune to leave him. It was all clear and simple, now,
and the more he went over it the more luminous and certain it grew; and at
last, when he nestled to sleep, satisfied and happy, he remembered the whole
thing just as if it had been yesterday. In fact, he dimly remembered Goodson's
TELLING him his gratitude once. Meantime Mary had spent six thousand dollars on
a new house for herself and a pair of slippers for her pastor, and then had
fallen peacefully to rest.
That same Saturday evening
the postman had delivered a letter to each of the other principal
citizens—nineteen letters in all. No two of the envelopes were alike, and no
two of the superscriptions were in the same hand, but the letters inside were
just like each other in every detail but one. They were exact copies of the
letter received by Richards—handwriting and all—and were all signed by
Stephenson, but in place of Richards's name each receiver's own name appeared.
All night long eighteen
principal citizens did what their caste-brother Richards was doing at the same
time—they put in their energies trying to remember what notable service it was
that they had unconsciously done Barclay Goodson. In no case was it a holiday
job; still they succeeded.
And while they were at this
work, which was difficult, their wives put in the night spending the money,
which was easy. During that one night the nineteen wives spent an average of
seven thousand dollars each out of the forty thousand in the sack—a hundred and
thirty-three thousand altogether.
Next day there was a
surprise for Jack Halliday. He noticed that the faces of the nineteen chief
citizens and their wives bore that expression of peaceful and holy happiness
again. He could not understand it, neither was he able to invent any remarks
about it that could damage it or disturb it. And so it was his turn to be
dissatisfied with life. His private guesses at the reasons for the happiness
failed in all instances, upon examination. When he met Mrs. Wilcox and noticed
the placid ecstasy in her face, he said to himself, “Her cat has had
kittens”—and went and asked the cook; it was not so, the cook had detected the
happiness, but did not know the cause. When Halliday found the duplicate
ecstasy in the face of “Shadbelly” Billson (village nickname), he was sure some
neighbour of Billson's had broken his leg, but inquiry showed that this had not
happened. The subdued ecstasy in Gregory Yates's face could mean but one
thing—he was a mother-in-law short; it was another mistake. “And
Pinkerton—Pinkerton—he has collected ten cents that he thought he was going to
lose.” And so on, and so on. In some cases the guesses had to remain in doubt,
in the others they proved distinct errors. In the end Halliday said to himself,
“Anyway it roots up that there's nineteen Hadleyburg families temporarily in
heaven: I don't know how it happened; I only know Providence is off duty
to-day.”
An architect and builder
from the next State had lately ventured to set up a small business in this
unpromising village, and his sign had now been hanging out a week. Not a
customer yet; he was a discouraged man, and sorry he had come. But his weather
changed suddenly now. First one and then another chief citizen's wife said to
him privately:
“Come to my house Monday
week—but say nothing about it for the present. We think of building.”
He got eleven invitations
that day. That night he wrote his daughter and broke off her match with her
student. He said she could marry a mile higher than that.
Pinkerton the banker and two
or three other well-to-do men planned country-seats—but waited. That kind don't
count their chickens until they are hatched.
The Wilsons devised a grand
new thing—a fancy-dress ball. They made no actual promises, but told all their
acquaintanceship in confidence that they were thinking the matter over and
thought they should give it—“and if we do, you will be invited, of course.”
People were surprised, and said, one to another, “Why, they are crazy, those
poor Wilsons, they can't afford it.” Several among the nineteen said privately
to their husbands, “It is a good idea, we will keep still till their cheap
thing is over, then WE will give one that will make it sick.”
The days drifted along, and
the bill of future squanderings rose higher and higher, wilder and wilder, more
and more foolish and reckless. It began to look as if every member of the
nineteen would not only spend his whole forty thousand dollars before
receiving-day, but be actually in debt by the time he got the money. In some
cases light-headed people did not stop with planning to spend, they really
spent—on credit. They bought land, mortgages, farms, speculative stocks, fine
clothes, horses, and various other things, paid down the bonus, and made
themselves liable for the rest—at ten days. Presently the sober second thought
came, and Halliday noticed that a ghastly anxiety was beginning to show up in a
good many faces. Again he was puzzled, and didn't know what to make of it. “The
Wilcox kittens aren't dead, for they weren't born; nobody's broken a leg;
there's no shrinkage in mother-in-laws; NOTHING has happened—it is an
insolvable mystery.”
There was another puzzled
man, too—the Rev. Mr. Burgess. For days, wherever he went, people seemed to
follow him or to be watching out for him; and if he ever found himself in a
retired spot, a member of the nineteen would be sure to appear, thrust an
envelope privately into his hand, whisper “To be opened at the town-hall Friday
evening,” then vanish away like a guilty thing. He was expecting that there
might be one claimant for the sack—doubtful, however, Goodson being dead—but it
never occurred to him that all this crowd might be claimants. When the great
Friday came at last, he found that he had nineteen envelopes.
III
The town-hall had never
looked finer. The platform at the end of it was backed by a showy draping of
flags; at intervals along the walls were festoons of flags; the gallery fronts
were clothed in flags; the supporting columns were swathed in flags; all this
was to impress the stranger, for he would be there in considerable force, and
in a large degree he would be connected with the press. The house was full. The
412 fixed seats were occupied; also the 68 extra chairs which had been packed
into the aisles; the steps of the platform were occupied; some distinguished strangers
were given seats on the platform; at the horseshoe of tables which fenced the
front and sides of the platform sat a strong force of special correspondents
who had come from everywhere. It was the best-dressed house the town had ever
produced. There were some tolerably expensive toilets there, and in several
cases the ladies who wore them had the look of being unfamiliar with that kind
of clothes. At least the town thought they had that look, but the notion could
have arisen from the town's knowledge of the fact that these ladies had never
inhabited such clothes before.
The gold-sack stood on a
little table at the front of the platform where all the house could see it. The
bulk of the house gazed at it with a burning interest, a mouth-watering
interest, a wistful and pathetic interest; a minority of nineteen couples gazed
at it tenderly, lovingly, proprietarily, and the male half of this minority
kept saying over to themselves the moving little impromptu speeches of
thankfulness for the audience's applause and congratulations which they were
presently going to get up and deliver. Every now and then one of these got a
piece of paper out of his vest pocket and privately glanced at it to refresh
his memory.
Of course there was a buzz
of conversation going on—there always is; but at last, when the Rev. Mr.
Burgess rose and laid his hand on the sack, he could hear his microbes gnaw,
the place was so still. He related the curious history of the sack, then went
on to speak in warm terms of Hadleyburg's old and well-earned reputation for
spotless honesty, and of the town's just pride in this reputation. He said that
this reputation was a treasure of priceless value; that under Providence its
value had now become inestimably enhanced, for the recent episode had spread
this fame far and wide, and thus had focussed the eyes of the American world
upon this village, and made its name for all time, as he hoped and believed, a
synonym for commercial incorruptibility. (Applause.) “And who is to be the
guardian of this noble fame—the community as a whole? No! The responsibility is
individual, not communal. From this day forth each and every one of you is in
his own person its special guardian, and individually responsible that no harm
shall come to it. Do you—does each of you—accept this great trust? (Tumultuous
assent.) Then all is well. Transmit it to your children and to your children's
children. To-day your purity is beyond reproach—see to it that it shall remain
so. To-day there is not a person in your community who could be beguiled to
touch a penny not his own—see to it that you abide in this grace. (“We will! we
will!”) This is not the place to make comparisons between ourselves and other
communities—some of them ungracious towards us; they have their ways, we have
ours; let us be content. (Applause.) I am done. Under my hand, my friends,
rests a stranger's eloquent recognition of what we are; through him the world
will always henceforth know what we are. We do not know who he is, but in your
name I utter your gratitude, and ask you to raise your voices in indorsement.”
The house rose in a body and
made the walls quake with the thunders of its thankfulness for the space of a
long minute. Then it sat down, and Mr. Burgess took an envelope out of his
pocket. The house held its breath while he slit the envelope open and took from
it a slip of paper. He read its contents—slowly and impressively—the audience
listening with tranced attention to this magic document, each of whose words
stood for an ingot of gold:
“'The remark which I made to
the distressed stranger was this: “You are very far from being a bad man; go,
and reform.”' Then he continued:—'We shall know in a moment now whether the
remark here quoted corresponds with the one concealed in the sack; and if that
shall prove to be so—and it undoubtedly will—this sack of gold belongs to a
fellow-citizen who will henceforth stand before the nation as the symbol of the
special virtue which has made our town famous throughout the land—Mr.
Billson!'”
The house had gotten itself
all ready to burst into the proper tornado of applause; but instead of doing
it, it seemed stricken with a paralysis; there was a deep hush for a moment or
two, then a wave of whispered murmurs swept the place—of about this tenor:
“BILLSON! oh, come, this is TOO thin! Twenty dollars to a stranger—or
ANYBODY—BILLSON! Tell it to the marines!” And now at this point the house
caught its breath all of a sudden in a new access of astonishment, for it
discovered that whereas in one part of the hall Deacon Billson was standing up
with his head meekly bowed, in another part of it Lawyer Wilson was doing the
same. There was a wondering silence now for a while. Everybody was puzzled, and
nineteen couples were surprised and indignant.
Billson and Wilson turned
and stared at each other. Billson asked, bitingly:
“Why do YOU rise, Mr.
Wilson?”
“Because I have a right to.
Perhaps you will be good enough to explain to the house why YOU rise.”
“With great pleasure.
Because I wrote that paper.”
“It is an impudent falsity!
I wrote it myself.”
It was Burgess's turn to be
paralysed. He stood looking vacantly at first one of the men and then the
other, and did not seem to know what to do. The house was stupefied. Lawyer
Wilson spoke up now, and said:
“I ask the Chair to read the
name signed to that paper.”
That brought the Chair to
itself, and it read out the name:
“John Wharton BILLSON.”
“There!” shouted Billson,
“what have you got to say for yourself now? And what kind of apology are you
going to make to me and to this insulted house for the imposture which you have
attempted to play here?”
“No apologies are due, sir;
and as for the rest of it, I publicly charge you with pilfering my note from
Mr. Burgess and substituting a copy of it signed with your own name. There is
no other way by which you could have gotten hold of the test-remark; I alone,
of living men, possessed the secret of its wording.”
There was likely to be a
scandalous state of things if this went on; everybody noticed with distress
that the shorthand scribes were scribbling like mad; many people were crying
“Chair, chair! Order! order!” Burgess rapped with his gavel, and said:
“Let us not forget the
proprieties due. There has evidently been a mistake somewhere, but surely that
is all. If Mr. Wilson gave me an envelope—and I remember now that he did—I
still have it.”
He took one out of his
pocket, opened it, glanced at it, looked surprised and worried, and stood
silent a few moments. Then he waved his hand in a wandering and mechanical way,
and made an effort or two to say something, then gave it up, despondently.
Several voices cried out:
“Read it! read it! What is
it?”
So he began, in a dazed and
sleep-walker fashion:
“'The remark which I made to
the unhappy stranger was this: “You are far from being a bad man. (The house
gazed at him marvelling.) Go, and reform."'” (Murmurs: “Amazing! what can
this mean?”) “This one,” said the Chair, “is signed Thurlow G. Wilson.”
“There!” cried Wilson, “I
reckon that settles it! I knew perfectly well my note was purloined.”
“Purloined!” retorted
Billson. “I'll let you know that neither you nor any man of your kidney must
venture to—”
The Chair: “Order,
gentlemen, order! Take your seats, both of you, please.”
They obeyed, shaking their
heads and grumbling angrily. The house was profoundly puzzled; it did not know
what to do with this curious emergency. Presently Thompson got up. Thompson was
the hatter. He would have liked to be a Nineteener; but such was not for him;
his stock of hats was not considerable enough for the position. He said:
“Mr. Chairman, if I may be
permitted to make a suggestion, can both of these gentlemen be right? I put it
to you, sir, can both have happened to say the very same words to the stranger?
It seems to me—”
The tanner got up and
interrupted him. The tanner was a disgruntled man; he believed himself entitled
to be a Nineteener, but he couldn't get recognition. It made him a little
unpleasant in his ways and speech. Said he:
“Sho, THAT'S not the point!
THAT could happen—twice in a hundred years—but not the other thing. NEITHER of
them gave the twenty dollars!” (A ripple of applause.)
Billson. “I did!”
Wilson. “I did!”
Then each accused the other
of pilfering.
The Chair. “Order! Sit down,
if you please—both of you. Neither of the notes has been out of my possession
at any moment.”
A Voice. “Good—that settles
THAT!”
The Tanner. “Mr. Chairman,
one thing is now plain: one of these men has been eavesdropping under the other
one's bed, and filching family secrets. If it is not unparliamentary to suggest
it, I will remark that both are equal to it. (The Chair. “Order! order!”) I
withdraw the remark, sir, and will confine myself to suggesting that IF one of
them has overheard the other reveal the test-remark to his wife, we shall catch
him now.”
A Voice. “How?”
The Tanner. “Easily. The two
have not quoted the remark in exactly the same words. You would have noticed
that, if there hadn't been a considerable stretch of time and an exciting
quarrel inserted between the two readings.”
A Voice. “Name the
difference.”
The Tanner. “The word VERY
is in Billson's note, and not in the other.”
Many Voices. “That's so—he's
right!”
The Tanner. “And so, if the
Chair will examine the test-remark in the sack, we shall know which of these
two frauds—(The Chair. “Order!”)—which of these two adventurers—(The Chair.
“Order! order!”)—which of these two gentlemen—(laughter and applause)—is
entitled to wear the belt as being the first dishonest blatherskite ever bred
in this town—which he has dishonoured, and which will be a sultry place for him
from now out!” (Vigorous applause.)
Many Voices. “Open it!—open
the sack!”
Mr. Burgess made a slit in
the sack, slid his hand in, and brought out an envelope. In it were a couple of
folded notes. He said:
“One of these is marked,
'Not to be examined until all written communications which have been addressed
to the Chair—if any—shall have been read.' The other is marked 'THE TEST.'
Allow me. It is worded—to wit:
“'I do not require that the
first half of the remark which was made to me by my benefactor shall be quoted
with exactness, for it was not striking, and could be forgotten; but its
closing fifteen words are quite striking, and I think easily rememberable;
unless THESE shall be accurately reproduced, let the applicant be regarded as
an impostor. My benefactor began by saying he seldom gave advice to anyone, but
that it always bore the hallmark of high value when he did give it. Then he
said this—and it has never faded from my memory: 'YOU ARE FAR FROM BEING A BAD
MAN—'”
Fifty Voices. “That settles
it—the money's Wilson's! Wilson! Wilson! Speech! Speech!”
People jumped up and crowded
around Wilson, wringing his hand and congratulating fervently—meantime the
Chair was hammering with the gavel and shouting:
“Order, gentlemen! Order!
Order! Let me finish reading, please.” When quiet was restored, the reading was
resumed—as follows:
“'GO, AND REFORM—OR, MARK MY
WORDS—SOME DAY, FOR YOUR SINS YOU WILL DIE AND GO TO HELL OR HADLEYBURG—TRY AND
MAKE IT THE FORMER.'”
A ghastly silence followed.
First an angry cloud began to settle darkly upon the faces of the citizenship;
after a pause the cloud began to rise, and a tickled expression tried to take
its place; tried so hard that it was only kept under with great and painful
difficulty; the reporters, the Brixtonites, and other strangers bent their
heads down and shielded their faces with their hands, and managed to hold in by
main strength and heroic courtesy. At this most inopportune time burst upon the
stillness the roar of a solitary voice—Jack Halliday's:
“THAT'S got the hall-mark on
it!”
Then the house let go,
strangers and all. Even Mr. Burgess's gravity broke down presently, then the
audience considered itself officially absolved from all restraint, and it made
the most of its privilege. It was a good long laugh, and a tempestuously
wholehearted one, but it ceased at last—long enough for Mr. Burgess to try to
resume, and for the people to get their eyes partially wiped; then it broke out
again, and afterward yet again; then at last Burgess was able to get out these
serious words:
“It is useless to try to
disguise the fact—we find ourselves in the presence of a matter of grave
import. It involves the honour of your town—it strikes at the town's good name.
The difference of a single word between the test-remarks offered by Mr. Wilson
and Mr. Billson was itself a serious thing, since it indicated that one or the
other of these gentlemen had committed a theft—”
The two men were sitting
limp, nerveless, crushed; but at these words both were electrified into
movement, and started to get up.
“Sit down!” said the Chair,
sharply, and they obeyed. “That, as I have said, was a serious thing. And it
was—but for only one of them. But the matter has become graver; for the honour
of BOTH is now in formidable peril. Shall I go even further, and say in
inextricable peril? BOTH left out the crucial fifteen words.” He paused. During
several moments he allowed the pervading stillness to gather and deepen its
impressive effects, then added: “There would seem to be but one way whereby
this could happen. I ask these gentlemen—Was there COLLUSION?—AGREEMENT?”
A low murmur sifted through
the house; its import was, “He's got them both.”
Billson was not used to
emergencies; he sat in a helpless collapse. But Wilson was a lawyer. He
struggled to his feet, pale and worried, and said:
“I ask the indulgence of the
house while I explain this most painful matter. I am sorry to say what I am
about to say, since it must inflict irreparable injury upon Mr. Billson, whom I
have always esteemed and respected until now, and in whose invulnerability to
temptation I entirely believed—as did you all. But for the preservation of my
own honour I must speak—and with frankness. I confess with shame—and I now
beseech your pardon for it—that I said to the ruined stranger all of the words
contained in the test-remark, including the disparaging fifteen. (Sensation.)
When the late publication was made I recalled them, and I resolved to claim the
sack of coin, for by every right I was entitled to it. Now I will ask you to consider
this point, and weigh it well; that stranger's gratitude to me that night knew
no bounds; he said himself that he could find no words for it that were
adequate, and that if he should ever be able he would repay me a thousandfold.
Now, then, I ask you this; could I expect—could I believe—could I even remotely
imagine—that, feeling as he did, he would do so ungrateful a thing as to add
those quite unnecessary fifteen words to his test?—set a trap for me?—expose me
as a slanderer of my own town before my own people assembled in a public hall?
It was preposterous; it was impossible. His test would contain only the kindly
opening clause of my remark. Of that I had no shadow of doubt. You would have
thought as I did. You would not have expected a base betrayal from one whom you
had befriended and against whom you had committed no offence. And so with
perfect confidence, perfect trust, I wrote on a piece of paper the opening
words—ending with “Go, and reform,”—and signed it. When I was about to put it
in an envelope I was called into my back office, and without thinking I left
the paper lying open on my desk.” He stopped, turned his head slowly toward
Billson, waited a moment, then added: “I ask you to note this; when I returned,
a little latter, Mr. Billson was retiring by my street door.” (Sensation.)
In a moment Billson was on
his feet and shouting:
“It's a lie! It's an
infamous lie!”
The Chair. “Be seated, sir!
Mr. Wilson has the floor.”
Billson's friends pulled him
into his seat and quieted him, and Wilson went on:
“Those are the simple facts.
My note was now lying in a different place on the table from where I had left
it. I noticed that, but attached no importance to it, thinking a draught had
blown it there. That Mr. Billson would read a private paper was a thing which
could not occur to me; he was an honourable man, and he would be above that. If
you will allow me to say it, I think his extra word 'VERY' stands explained: it
is attributable to a defect of memory. I was the only man in the world who could
furnish here any detail of the test-mark—by HONOURABLE means. I have finished.”
There is nothing in the
world like a persuasive speech to fuddle the mental apparatus and upset the
convictions and debauch the emotions of an audience not practised in the tricks
and delusions of oratory. Wilson sat down victorious. The house submerged him
in tides of approving applause; friends swarmed to him and shook him by the
hand and congratulated him, and Billson was shouted down and not allowed to say
a word. The Chair hammered and hammered with its gavel, and kept shouting:
“But let us proceed,
gentlemen, let us proceed!”
At last there was a
measurable degree of quiet, and the hatter said:
“But what is there to
proceed with, sir, but to deliver the money?”
Voices. “That's it! That's
it! Come forward, Wilson!”
The Hatter. “I move three
cheers for Mr. Wilson, Symbol of the special virtue which—”
The cheers burst forth
before he could finish; and in the midst of them—and in the midst of the
clamour of the gavel also—some enthusiasts mounted Wilson on a big friend's
shoulder and were going to fetch him in triumph to the platform. The Chair's
voice now rose above the noise:
“Order! To your places! You
forget that there is still a document to be read.” When quiet had been restored
he took up the document, and was going to read it, but laid it down again
saying “I forgot; this is not to be read until all written communications
received by me have first been read.” He took an envelope out of his pocket,
removed its enclosure, glanced at it—seemed astonished—held it out and gazed at
it—stared at it.
Twenty or thirty voices
cried out:
“What is it? Read it! read
it!”
And he did—slowly, and
wondering:
“'The remark which I made to
the stranger—(Voices. “Hello! how's this?”)—was this: “You are far from being a
bad man. (Voices. “Great Scott!”) Go, and reform.”' (Voice. “Oh, saw my leg
off!”) Signed by Mr. Pinkerton the banker.”
The pandemonium of delight
which turned itself loose now was of a sort to make the judicious weep. Those
whose withers were unwrung laughed till the tears ran down; the reporters, in
throes of laughter, set down disordered pot-hooks which would never in the
world be decipherable; and a sleeping dog jumped up scared out of its wits, and
barked itself crazy at the turmoil. All manner of cries were scattered through
the din: “We're getting rich—TWO Symbols of Incorruptibility!—without counting
Billson!” “THREE!—count Shadbelly in—we can't have too many!” “All
right—Billson's elected!” “Alas, poor Wilson! victim of TWO thieves!”
A Powerful Voice. “Silence!
The Chair's fished up something more out of its pocket.”
Voices. “Hurrah! Is it
something fresh? Read it! read! read!”
The Chair (reading). “'The
remark which I made,' etc. 'You are far from being a bad man. Go,' etc. Signed,
'Gregory Yates.'”
Tornado of Voices. “Four
Symbols!” “'Rah for Yates!” “Fish again!”
The house was in a roaring
humour now, and ready to get all the fun out of the occasion that might be in
it. Several Nineteeners, looking pale and distressed, got up and began to work
their way towards the aisles, but a score of shouts went up:
“The doors, the doors—close
the doors; no Incorruptible shall leave this place! Sit down, everybody!” The
mandate was obeyed.
“Fish again! Read! read!”
The Chair fished again, and
once more the familiar words began to fall from its lips—“'You are far from
being a bad man—'”
“Name! name! What's his
name?”
“'L. Ingoldsby Sargent.'”
“Five elected! Pile up the
Symbols! Go on, go on!”
“'You are far from being a
bad—'”
“Name! name!”
“'Nicholas Whitworth.'”
“Hooray! hooray! it's a
symbolical day!”
Somebody wailed in, and
began to sing this rhyme (leaving out “it's”) to the lovely “Mikado” tune of
“When a man's afraid of a beautiful maid;” the audience joined in, with joy;
then, just in time, somebody contributed another line—
“And don't you this forget—”
The house roared it out. A
third line was at once furnished—
“Corruptibles far from Hadleyburg are—”
The house roared that one
too. As the last note died, Jack Halliday's voice rose high and clear,
freighted with a final line—
“But the Symbols are here, you bet!”
That was sung, with booming
enthusiasm. Then the happy house started in at the beginning and sang the four
lines through twice, with immense swing and dash, and finished up with a
crashing three-times-three and a tiger for “Hadleyburg the Incorruptible and
all Symbols of it which we shall find worthy to receive the hall-mark
to-night.”
Then the shoutings at the
Chair began again, all over the place:
“Go on! go on! Read! read
some more! Read all you've got!”
“That's it—go on! We are
winning eternal celebrity!”
A dozen men got up now and
began to protest. They said that this farce was the work of some abandoned
joker, and was an insult to the whole community. Without a doubt these
signatures were all forgeries—
“Sit down! sit down! Shut
up! You are confessing. We'll find your names in the lot.”
“Mr. Chairman, how many of
those envelopes have you got?”
The Chair counted.
“Together with those that
have been already examined, there are nineteen.”
A storm of derisive applause
broke out.
“Perhaps they all contain
the secret. I move that you open them all and read every signature that is
attached to a note of that sort—and read also the first eight words of the
note.”
“Second the motion!”
It was put and
carried—uproariously. Then poor old Richards got up, and his wife rose and
stood at his side. Her head was bent down, so that none might see that she was
crying. Her husband gave her his arm, and so supporting her, he began to speak
in a quavering voice:
“My friends, you have known
us two—Mary and me—all our lives, and I think you have liked us and respected
us—”
The Chair interrupted him:
“Allow me. It is quite
true—that which you are saying, Mr. Richards; this town DOES know you two; it
DOES like you; it DOES respect you; more—it honours you and LOVES you—”
Halliday's voice rang out:
“That's the hall-marked
truth, too! If the Chair is right, let the house speak up and say it. Rise!
Now, then—hip! hip! hip!—all together!”
The house rose in mass,
faced toward the old couple eagerly, filled the air with a snow-storm of waving
handkerchiefs, and delivered the cheers with all its affectionate heart.
The Chair then continued:
“What I was going to say is
this: We know your good heart, Mr. Richards, but this is not a time for the
exercise of charity toward offenders. (Shouts of “Right! right!”) I see your
generous purpose in your face, but I cannot allow you to plead for these men—”
“But I was going to—”
“Please take your seat, Mr.
Richards. We must examine the rest of these notes—simple fairness to the men
who have already been exposed requires this. As soon as that has been done—I
give you my word for this—you shall be heard.”
Many voices. “Right!—the
Chair is right—no interruption can be permitted at this stage! Go on!—the
names! the names!—according to the terms of the motion!”
The old couple sat
reluctantly down, and the husband whispered to the wife, “It is pitifully hard
to have to wait; the shame will be greater than ever when they find we were
only going to plead for OURSELVES.”
Straightway the jollity
broke loose again with the reading of the names.
“'You are far from being a
bad man—' Signature, 'Robert J. Titmarsh.'”
'“You are far from being a
bad man—' Signature, 'Eliphalet Weeks.'”
“'You are far from being a
bad man—' Signature, 'Oscar B. Wilder.'”
At this point the house lit
upon the idea of taking the eight words out of the Chairman's hands. He was not
unthankful for that. Thenceforward he held up each note in its turn and waited.
The house droned out the eight words in a massed and measured and musical deep
volume of sound (with a daringly close resemblance to a well-known church
chant)—“You are f-a-r from being a b-a-a-a-d man.” Then the Chair said,
“Signature, 'Archibald Wilcox.'” And so on, and so on, name after name, and
everybody had an increasingly and gloriously good time except the wretched
Nineteen. Now and then, when a particularly shining name was called, the house
made the Chair wait while it chanted the whole of the test-remark from the
beginning to the closing words, “And go to hell or Hadleyburg—try and make it
the for-or-m-e-r!” and in these special cases they added a grand and agonised
and imposing “A-a-a-a-MEN!”
The list dwindled, dwindled,
dwindled, poor old Richards keeping tally of the count, wincing when a name
resembling his own was pronounced, and waiting in miserable suspense for the
time to come when it would be his humiliating privilege to rise with Mary and
finish his plea, which he was intending to word thus: “... for until now we
have never done any wrong thing, but have gone our humble way unreproached. We
are very poor, we are old, and, have no chick nor child to help us; we were
sorely tempted, and we fell. It was my purpose when I got up before to make
confession and beg that my name might not be read out in this public place, for
it seemed to us that we could not bear it; but I was prevented. It was just; it
was our place to suffer with the rest. It has been hard for us. It is the first
time we have ever heard our name fall from any one's lips—sullied. Be
merciful—for the sake or the better days; make our shame as light to bear as in
your charity you can.” At this point in his reverie Mary nudged him, perceiving
that his mind was absent. The house was chanting, “You are f-a-r,” etc.
“Be ready,” Mary whispered.
“Your name comes now; he has read eighteen.”
The chant ended.
“Next! next! next!” came
volleying from all over the house.
Burgess put his hand into
his pocket. The old couple, trembling, began to rise. Burgess fumbled a moment,
then said:
“I find I have read them
all.”
Faint with joy and surprise,
the couple sank into their seats, and Mary whispered:
“Oh, bless God, we are
saved!—he has lost ours—I wouldn't give this for a hundred of those sacks!”
The house burst out with its
“Mikado” travesty, and sang it three times with ever-increasing enthusiasm,
rising to its feet when it reached for the third time the closing line—
“But the Symbols are here,
you bet!”
and finishing up with cheers
and a tiger for “Hadleyburg purity and our eighteen immortal representatives of
it.”
Then Wingate, the saddler,
got up and proposed cheers “for the cleanest man in town, the one solitary
important citizen in it who didn't try to steal that money—Edward Richards.”
They were given with great
and moving heartiness; then somebody proposed that “Richards be elected sole
Guardian and Symbol of the now Sacred Hadleyburg Tradition, with power and
right to stand up and look the whole sarcastic world in the face.”
Passed, by acclamation; then
they sang the “Mikado” again, and ended it with—
“And there's ONE Symbol
left, you bet!”
There was a pause; then—
A Voice. “Now, then, who's
to get the sack?”
The Tanner (with bitter
sarcasm). “That's easy. The money has to be divided among the eighteen
Incorruptibles. They gave the suffering stranger twenty dollars apiece—and that
remark—each in his turn—it took twenty-two minutes for the procession to move
past. Staked the stranger—total contribution, $360. All they want is just the
loan back—and interest—forty thousand dollars altogether.”
Many Voices (derisively.)
“That's it! Divvy! divvy! Be kind to the poor—don't keep them waiting!”
The Chair. “Order! I now
offer the stranger's remaining document. It says: 'If no claimant shall appear
(grand chorus of groans), I desire that you open the sack and count out the
money to the principal citizens of your town, they to take it in trust (Cries
of “Oh! Oh! Oh!”), and use it in such ways as to them shall seem best for the
propagation and preservation of your community's noble reputation for
incorruptible honesty (more cries)—a reputation to which their names and their
efforts will add a new and far-reaching lustre.” (Enthusiastic outburst of
sarcastic applause.) That seems to be all. No—here is a postscript:
“'P.S.—CITIZENS OF
HADLEYBURG: There IS no test-remark—nobody made one. (Great sensation.) There
wasn't any pauper stranger, nor any twenty-dollar contribution, nor any
accompanying benediction and compliment—these are all inventions. (General buzz
and hum of astonishment and delight.) Allow me to tell my story—it will take
but a word or two. I passed through your town at a certain time, and received a
deep offence which I had not earned. Any other man would have been content to
kill one or two of you and call it square, but to me that would have been a
trivial revenge, and inadequate; for the dead do not SUFFER. Besides I could
not kill you all—and, anyway, made as I am, even that would not have satisfied
me. I wanted to damage every man in the place, and every woman—and not in their
bodies or in their estate, but in their vanity—the place where feeble and
foolish people are most vulnerable. So I disguised myself and came back and
studied you. You were easy game. You had an old and lofty reputation for
honesty, and naturally you were proud of it—it was your treasure of treasures,
the very apple of your eye. As soon as I found out that you carefully and
vigilantly kept yourselves and your children OUT OF TEMPTATION, I knew how to
proceed. Why, you simple creatures, the weakest of all weak things is a virtue
which has not been tested in the fire. I laid a plan, and gathered a list of
names. My project was to corrupt Hadleyburg the Incorruptible. My idea was to
make liars and thieves of nearly half a hundred smirchless men and women who
had never in their lives uttered a lie or stolen a penny. I was afraid of
Goodson. He was neither born nor reared in Hadleyburg. I was afraid that if I
started to operate my scheme by getting my letter laid before you, you would
say to yourselves, 'Goodson is the only man among us who would give away twenty
dollars to a poor devil'—and then you might not bite at my bait. But heaven
took Goodson; then I knew I was safe, and I set my trap and baited it. It may
be that I shall not catch all the men to whom I mailed the pretended
test-secret, but I shall catch the most of them, if I know Hadleyburg nature.
(Voices. “Right—he got every last one of them.”) I believe they will even steal
ostensible GAMBLE-money, rather than miss, poor, tempted, and mistrained
fellows. I am hoping to eternally and everlastingly squelch your vanity and
give Hadleyburg a new renown—one that will STICK—and spread far. If I have
succeeded, open the sack and summon the Committee on Propagation and
Preservation of the Hadleyburg Reputation.'”
A Cyclone of Voices. “Open
it! Open it! The Eighteen to the front! Committee on Propagation of the
Tradition! Forward—the Incorruptibles!”
The Chair ripped the sack
wide, and gathered up a handful of bright, broad, yellow coins, shook them
together, then examined them.
“Friends, they are only
gilded disks of lead!”
There was a crashing
outbreak of delight over this news, and when the noise had subsided, the tanner
called out:
“By right of apparent
seniority in this business, Mr. Wilson is Chairman of the Committee on
Propagation of the Tradition. I suggest that he step forward on behalf of his
pals, and receive in trust the money.”
A Hundred Voices. “Wilson!
Wilson! Wilson! Speech! Speech!”
Wilson (in a voice trembling
with anger). “You will allow me to say, and without apologies for my language,
DAMN the money!”
A Voice. “Oh, and him a
Baptist!”
A Voice. “Seventeen Symbols
left! Step up, gentlemen, and assume your trust!”
There was a pause—no
response.
The Saddler. “Mr. Chairman,
we've got ONE clean man left, anyway, out of the late aristocracy; and he needs
money, and deserves it. I move that you appoint Jack Halliday to get up there
and auction off that sack of gilt twenty-dollar pieces, and give the result to
the right man—the man whom Hadleyburg delights to honour—Edward Richards.”
This was received with great
enthusiasm, the dog taking a hand again; the saddler started the bids at a
dollar, the Brixton folk and Barnum's representative fought hard for it, the
people cheered every jump that the bids made, the excitement climbed moment by
moment higher and higher, the bidders got on their mettle and grew steadily
more and more daring, more and more determined, the jumps went from a dollar up
to five, then to ten, then to twenty, then fifty, then to a hundred, then—
At the beginning of the
auction Richards whispered in distress to his wife: “Oh, Mary, can we allow it?
It—it—you see, it is an honour—reward, a testimonial to purity of character,
and—and—can we allow it? Hadn't I better get up and—Oh, Mary, what ought we to
do?—what do you think we—” (Halliday's voice. “Fifteen I'm bid!—fifteen for the
sack!—twenty!—ah, thanks!—thirty—thanks again! Thirty, thirty, thirty!—do I
hear forty?—forty it is! Keep the ball rolling, gentlemen, keep it
rolling!—fifty!—thanks, noble Roman!—going at fifty, fifty,
fifty!—seventy!—ninety!—splendid!—a hundred!—pile it up, pile it up!—hundred
and twenty—forty!—just in time!—hundred and fifty!—Two hundred!—superb! Do I
hear two h—thanks!—two hundred and fifty!—“)
“It is another temptation,
Edward—I'm all in a tremble—but, oh, we've escaped one temptation, and that
ought to warn us, to—(“Six did I hear?—thanks!—six fifty, six f—SEVEN
hundred!”) And yet, Edward, when you think—nobody susp—(“Eight hundred
dollars!—hurrah!—make it nine!—Mr. Parsons, did I hear you
say—thanks!—nine!—this noble sack of virgin lead going at only nine hundred
dollars, gilding and all—come! do I hear—a thousand!—gratefully yours!—did some
one say eleven?—a sack which is going to be the most celebrated in the whole
Uni—“) Oh, Edward (beginning to sob), we are so poor!—but—but—do as you think
best—do as you think best.”
Edward fell—that is, he sat
still; sat with a conscience which was not satisfied, but which was overpowered
by circumstances.
Meantime a stranger, who
looked like an amateur detective gotten up as an impossible English earl, had
been watching the evening's proceedings with manifest interest, and with a
contented expression in his face; and he had been privately commenting to
himself. He was now soliloquising somewhat like this: 'None of the Eighteen are
bidding; that is not satisfactory; I must change that—the dramatic unities
require it; they must buy the sack they tried to steal; they must pay a heavy
price, too—some of them are rich. And another thing, when I make a mistake in
Hadleyburg nature the man that puts that error upon me is entitled to a high
honorarium, and some one must pay. This poor old Richards has brought my
judgment to shame; he is an honest man:—I don't understand it, but I
acknowledge it. Yes, he saw my deuces—AND with a straight flush, and by rights
the pot is his. And it shall be a jack-pot, too, if I can manage it. He
disappointed me, but let that pass.'
He was watching the bidding.
At a thousand, the market broke: the prices tumbled swiftly. He waited—and
still watched. One competitor dropped out; then another, and another. He put in
a bid or two now. When the bids had sunk to ten dollars, he added a five; some
one raised him a three; he waited a moment, then flung in a fifty-dollar jump,
and the sack was his—at $1,282. The house broke out in cheers—then stopped; for
he was on his feet, and had lifted his hand. He began to speak.
“I desire to say a word, and
ask a favour. I am a speculator in rarities, and I have dealings with persons
interested in numismatics all over the world. I can make a profit on this
purchase, just as it stands; but there is a way, if I can get your approval,
whereby I can make every one of these leaden twenty-dollar pieces worth its
face in gold, and perhaps more. Grant me that approval, and I will give part of
my gains to your Mr. Richards, whose invulnerable probity you have so justly
and so cordially recognised tonight; his share shall be ten thousand dollars,
and I will hand him the money to-morrow. (Great applause from the house. But
the “invulnerable probity” made the Richardses blush prettily; however, it went
for modesty, and did no harm.) If you will pass my proposition by a good
majority—I would like a two-thirds vote—I will regard that as the town's
consent, and that is all I ask. Rarities are always helped by any device which
will rouse curiosity and compel remark. Now if I may have your permission to
stamp upon the faces of each of these ostensible coins the names of the
eighteen gentlemen who—”
Nine-tenths of the audience
were on their feet in a moment—dog and all—and the proposition was carried with
a whirlwind of approving applause and laughter.
They sat down, and all the
Symbols except “Dr.” Clay Harkness got up, violently protesting against the
proposed outrage, and threatening to—
“I beg you not to threaten
me,” said the stranger calmly. “I know my legal rights, and am not accustomed
to being frightened at bluster.” (Applause.) He sat down. “Dr.” Harkness saw an
opportunity here. He was one of the two very rich men of the place, and
Pinkerton was the other. Harkness was proprietor of a mint; that is to say, a
popular patent medicine. He was running for the Legislature on one ticket, and
Pinkerton on the other. It was a close race and a hot one, and getting hotter
every day. Both had strong appetites for money; each had bought a great tract
of land, with a purpose; there was going to be a new railway, and each wanted
to be in the Legislature and help locate the route to his own advantage; a
single vote might make the decision, and with it two or three fortunes. The
stake was large, and Harkness was a daring speculator. He was sitting close to
the stranger. He leaned over while one or another of the other Symbols was
entertaining the house with protests and appeals, and asked, in a whisper,
“What is your price for the
sack?”
“Forty thousand dollars.”
“I'll give you twenty.”
“No.”
“Twenty-five.”
“No.”
“Say thirty.”
“The price is forty thousand
dollars; not a penny less.”
“All right, I'll give it. I
will come to the hotel at ten in the morning. I don't want it known; will see
you privately.”
“Very good.” Then the
stranger got up and said to the house:
“I find it late. The
speeches of these gentlemen are not without merit, not without interest, not
without grace; yet if I may be excused I will take my leave. I thank you for
the great favour which you have shown me in granting my petition. I ask the
Chair to keep the sack for me until to-morrow, and to hand these three
five-hundred-dollar notes to Mr. Richards.” They were passed up to the Chair.
“At nine I will call for the
sack, and at eleven will deliver the rest of the ten thousand to Mr. Richards
in person at his home. Good-night.”
Then he slipped out, and
left the audience making a vast noise, which was composed of a mixture of
cheers, the “Mikado” song, dog-disapproval, and the chant, “You are f-a-r from
being a b-a-a-d man—a-a-a a-men!”
IV
At home the Richardses had
to endure congratulations and compliments until midnight. Then they were left
to themselves. They looked a little sad, and they sat silent and thinking.
Finally Mary sighed and said:
“Do you think we are to
blame, Edward—MUCH to blame?” and her eyes wandered to the accusing triplet of
big bank-notes lying on the table, where the congratulators had been gloating
over them and reverently fingering them. Edward did not answer at once; then he
brought out a sigh and said, hesitatingly:
“We—we couldn't help it,
Mary. It—well it was ordered. ALL things are.”
Mary glanced up and looked
at him steadily, but he didn't return the look. Presently she said:
“I thought congratulations
and praises always tasted good. But—it seems to me, now—Edward?”
“Well?”
“Are you going to stay in
the bank?”
“N—no.”
“Resign?”
“In the morning—by note.”
“It does seem best.”
Richards bowed his head in
his hands and muttered:
“Before I was not afraid to
let oceans of people's money pour through my hands, but—Mary, I am so tired, so
tired—”
“We will go to bed.”
At nine in the morning the
stranger called for the sack and took it to the hotel in a cab. At ten Harkness
had a talk with him privately. The stranger asked for and got five cheques on a
metropolitan bank—drawn to “Bearer,”—four for $1,500 each, and one for $34,000.
He put one of the former in his pocket-book, and the remainder, representing
$38,500, he put in an envelope, and with these he added a note which he wrote
after Harkness was gone. At eleven he called at the Richards' house and
knocked. Mrs. Richards peeped through the shutters, then went and received the
envelope, and the stranger disappeared without a word. She came back flushed
and a little unsteady on her legs, and gasped out:
“I am sure I recognised him!
Last night it seemed to me that maybe I had seen him somewhere before.”
“He is the man that brought
the sack here?”
“I am almost sure of it.”
“Then he is the ostensible
Stephenson too, and sold every important citizen in this town with his bogus
secret. Now if he has sent cheques instead of money, we are sold too, after we
thought we had escaped. I was beginning to feel fairly comfortable once more,
after my night's rest, but the look of that envelope makes me sick. It isn't
fat enough; $8,500 in even the largest bank-notes makes more bulk than that.”
“Edward, why do you object
to cheques?”
“Cheques signed by
Stephenson! I am resigned to take the $8,500 if it could come in bank-notes—for
it does seem that it was so ordered, Mary—but I have never had much courage,
and I have not the pluck to try to market a cheque signed with that disastrous
name. It would be a trap. That man tried to catch me; we escaped somehow or
other; and now he is trying a new way. If it is cheques—”
“Oh, Edward, it is TOO bad!”
And she held up the cheques and began to cry.
“Put them in the fire!
quick! we mustn't be tempted. It is a trick to make the world laugh at US,
along with the rest, and—Give them to ME, since you can't do it!” He snatched
them and tried to hold his grip till he could get to the stove; but he was
human, he was a cashier, and he stopped a moment to make sure of the signature.
Then he came near to fainting.
“Fan me, Mary, fan me! They
are the same as gold!”
“Oh, how lovely, Edward!
Why?”
“Signed by Harkness. What
can the mystery of that be, Mary?”
“Edward, do you think—”
“Look here—look at this!
Fifteen—fifteen—fifteen—thirty-four. Thirty-eight thousand five hundred! Mary,
the sack isn't worth twelve dollars, and Harkness—apparently—has paid about par
for it.”
“And does it all come to us,
do you think—instead of the ten thousand?”
“Why, it looks like it. And
the cheques are made to 'Bearer,' too.”
“Is that good, Edward? What
is it for?”
“A hint to collect them at
some distant bank, I reckon. Perhaps Harkness doesn't want the matter known.
What is that—a note?”
“Yes. It was with the
cheques.”
It was in the “Stephenson”
handwriting, but there was no signature. It said:
“I am a disappointed man. Your honesty is beyond the reach of
temptation. I had a different idea about it, but I wronged you in that,
and I beg pardon, and do it sincerely. I honour you—and that is sincere
too. This town is not worthy to kiss the hem of your garment. Dear sir,
I made a square bet with myself that there were nineteen debauchable men
in your self-righteous community. I have lost. Take the whole pot, you
are entitled to it.”
Richards drew a deep sigh,
and said:
“It seems written with
fire—it burns so. Mary—I am miserable again.”
“I, too. Ah, dear, I wish—”
“To think, Mary—he BELIEVES
in me.”
“Oh, don't, Edward—I can't
bear it.”
“If those beautiful words
were deserved, Mary—and God knows I believed I deserved them once—I think I
could give the forty thousand dollars for them. And I would put that paper
away, as representing more than gold and jewels, and keep it always. But now—We
could not live in the shadow of its accusing presence, Mary.”
He put it in the fire.
A messenger arrived and
delivered an envelope. Richards took from it a note and read it; it was from
Burgess:
“You saved me, in a difficult time. I saved you last night. It was at
cost of a lie, but I made the sacrifice freely, and out of a grateful
heart. None in this village knows so well as I know how brave and good
and noble you are. At bottom you cannot respect me, knowing as you do of
that matter of which I am accused, and by the general voice condemned;
but I beg that you will at least believe that I am a grateful man; it
will help me to bear my burden. (Signed) 'BURGESS.'”
“Saved, once more. And on
such terms!” He put the note in the lire. “I—I wish I were dead, Mary, I wish I
were out of it all!”
“Oh, these are bitter,
bitter days, Edward. The stabs, through their very generosity, are so deep—and
they come so fast!”
Three days before the
election each of two thousand voters suddenly found himself in possession of a
prized memento—one of the renowned bogus double-eagles. Around one of its faces
was stamped these words: “THE REMARK I MADE TO THE POOR STRANGER WAS—” Around
the other face was stamped these: “GO, AND REFORM. (SIGNED) PINKERTON.” Thus
the entire remaining refuse of the renowned joke was emptied upon a single
head, and with calamitous effect. It revived the recent vast laugh and
concentrated it upon Pinkerton; and Harkness's election was a walk-over.
Within twenty-four hours
after the Richardses had received their cheques their consciences were quieting
down, discouraged; the old couple were learning to reconcile themselves to the
sin which they had committed. But they were to learn, now, that a sin takes on
new and real terrors when there seems a chance that it is going to be found
out. This gives it a fresh and most substantial and important aspect. At church
the morning sermon was of the usual pattern; it was the same old things said in
the same old way; they had heard them a thousand times and found them
innocuous, next to meaningless, and easy to sleep under; but now it was
different: the sermon seemed to bristle with accusations; it seemed aimed
straight and specially at people who were concealing deadly sins. After church
they got away from the mob of congratulators as soon as they could, and hurried
homeward, chilled to the bone at they did not know what—vague, shadowy,
indefinite fears. And by chance they caught a glimpse of Mr. Burgess as he
turned a corner. He paid no attention to their nod of recognition! He hadn't
seen it; but they did not know that. What could his conduct mean? It might
mean—it might—mean—oh, a dozen dreadful things. Was it possible that he knew
that Richards could have cleared him of guilt in that bygone time, and had been
silently waiting for a chance to even up accounts? At home, in their distress
they got to imagining that their servant might have been in the next room
listening when Richards revealed the secret to his wife that he knew of
Burgess's innocence; next Richards began to imagine that he had heard the swish
of a gown in there at that time; next, he was sure he HAD heard it. They would
call Sarah in, on a pretext, and watch her face; if she had been betraying them
to Mr. Burgess, it would show in her manner. They asked her some questions—questions
which were so random and incoherent and seemingly purposeless that the girl
felt sure that the old people's minds had been affected by their sudden good
fortune; the sharp and watchful gaze which they bent upon her frightened her,
and that completed the business. She blushed, she became nervous and confused,
and to the old people these were plain signs of guilt—guilt of some fearful
sort or other—without doubt she was a spy and a traitor. When they were alone
again they began to piece many unrelated things together and get horrible
results out of the combination. When things had got about to the worst Richards
was delivered of a sudden gasp and his wife asked:
“Oh, what is it?—what is
it?”
“The note—Burgess's note!
Its language was sarcastic, I see it now.” He quoted: “'At bottom you cannot
respect me, KNOWING, as you do, of THAT MATTER OF which I am accused'—oh, it is
perfectly plain, now, God help me! He knows that I know! You see the ingenuity
of the phrasing. It was a trap—and like a fool, I walked into it. And Mary—!”
“Oh, it is dreadful—I know
what you are going to say—he didn't return your transcript of the pretended
test-remark.”
“No—kept it to destroy us
with. Mary, he has exposed us to some already. I know it—I know it well. I saw
it in a dozen faces after church. Ah, he wouldn't answer our nod of
recognition—he knew what he had been doing!”
In the night the doctor was
called. The news went around in the morning that the old couple were rather
seriously ill—prostrated by the exhausting excitement growing out of their
great windfall, the congratulations, and the late hours, the doctor said. The
town was sincerely distressed; for these old people were about all it had left
to be proud of, now.
Two days later the news was
worse. The old couple were delirious, and were doing strange things. By witness
of the nurses, Richards had exhibited cheques—for $8,500? No—for an amazing
sum—$38,500! What could be the explanation of this gigantic piece of luck?
The following day the nurses
had more news—and wonderful. They had concluded to hide the cheques, lest harm
come to them; but when they searched they were gone from under the patient's
pillow—vanished away. The patient said:
“Let the pillow alone; what
do you want?”
“We thought it best that the
cheques—”
“You will never see them
again—they are destroyed. They came from Satan. I saw the hell-brand on them,
and I knew they were sent to betray me to sin.” Then he fell to gabbling
strange and dreadful things which were not clearly understandable, and which
the doctor admonished them to keep to themselves.
Richards was right; the
cheques were never seen again.
A nurse must have talked in
her sleep, for within two days the forbidden gabblings were the property of the
town; and they were of a surprising sort. They seemed to indicate that Richards
had been a claimant for the sack himself, and that Burgess had concealed that
fact and then maliciously betrayed it.
Burgess was taxed with this
and stoutly denied it. And he said it was not fair to attach weight to the
chatter of a sick old man who was out of his mind. Still, suspicion was in the
air, and there was much talk.
After a day or two it was
reported that Mrs. Richards's delirious deliveries were getting to be
duplicates of her husband's. Suspicion flamed up into conviction, now, and the
town's pride in the purity of its one undiscredited important citizen began to
dim down and flicker toward extinction.
Six days passed, then came
more news. The old couple were dying. Richards's mind cleared in his latest
hour, and he sent for Burgess. Burgess said:
“Let the room be cleared. I
think he wishes to say something in privacy.”
“No!” said Richards; “I want
witnesses. I want you all to hear my confession, so that I may die a man, and
not a dog. I was clean—artificially—like the rest; and like the rest I fell
when temptation came. I signed a lie, and claimed the miserable sack. Mr.
Burgess remembered that I had done him a service, and in gratitude (and
ignorance) he suppressed my claim and saved me. You know the thing that was
charged against Burgess years ago. My testimony, and mine alone, could have
cleared him, and I was a coward and left him to suffer disgrace—”
“No—no—Mr. Richards, you—”
“My servant betrayed my
secret to him—”
“No one has betrayed
anything to me—” “—And then he did a natural and justifiable thing; he repented
of the saving kindness which he had done me, and he EXPOSED me—as I deserved—”
“Never!—I make oath—”
“Out of my heart I forgive
him.”
Burgess's impassioned
protestations fell upon deaf ears; the dying man passed away without knowing
that once more he had done poor Burgess a wrong. The old wife died that night.
The last of the sacred
Nineteen had fallen a prey to the fiendish sack; the town was stripped of the
last rag of its ancient glory. Its mourning was not showy, but it was deep.
By act of the
Legislature—upon prayer and petition—Hadleyburg was allowed to change its name
to (never mind what—I will not give it away), and leave one word out of the
motto that for many generations had graced the town's official seal.
It is an honest town once
more, and the man will have to rise early that catches it napping again.
2.MY FIRST LIE, AND HOW I
GOT OUT OF IT
As I understand it, what you
desire is information about 'my first lie, and how I got out of it.' I was born
in 1835; I am well along, and my memory is not as good as it was. If you had
asked about my first truth it would have been easier for me and kinder of you,
for I remember that fairly well. I remember it as if it were last week. The family
think it was week before, but that is flattery and probably has a selfish
project back of it. When a person has become seasoned by experience and has
reached the age of sixty-four, which is the age of discretion, he likes a
family compliment as well as ever, but he does not lose his head over it as in
the old innocent days.
I do not remember my first
lie, it is too far back; but I remember my second one very well. I was nine
days old at the time, and had noticed that if a pin was sticking in me and I
advertised it in the usual fashion, I was lovingly petted and coddled and
pitied in a most agreeable way and got a ration between meals besides.
It was human nature to want
to get these riches, and I fell. I lied about the pin—advertising one when
there wasn't any. You would have done it; George Washington did it, anybody
would have done it. During the first half of my life I never knew a child that
was able to rise above that temptation and keep from telling that lie. Up to
1867 all the civilised children that were ever born into the world were
liars—including George. Then the safety-pin came in and blocked the game. But
is that reform worth anything? No; for it is reform by force and has no virtue
in it; it merely stops that form of lying, it doesn't impair the disposition to
lie, by a shade. It is the cradle application of conversion by fire and sword,
or of the temperance principle through prohibition.
To return to that early lie.
They found no pin and they realised that another liar had been added to the world's
supply. For by grace of a rare inspiration a quite commonplace but seldom
noticed fact was borne in upon their understandings—that almost all lies are
acts, and speech has no part in them. Then, if they examined a little further
they recognised that all people are liars from the cradle onwards, without
exception, and that they begin to lie as soon as they wake in the morning, and
keep it up without rest or refreshment until they go to sleep at night. If they
arrived at that truth it probably grieved them—did, if they had been heedlessly
and ignorantly educated by their books and teachers; for why should a person
grieve over a thing which by the eternal law of his make he cannot help? He
didn't invent the law; it is merely his business to obey it and keep still;
join the universal conspiracy and keep so still that he shall deceive his
fellow-conspirators into imagining that he doesn't know that the law exists. It
is what we all do—we that know. I am speaking of the lie of silent assertion;
we can tell it without saying a word, and we all do it—we that know. In the
magnitude of its territorial spread it is one of the most majestic lies that
the civilisations make it their sacred and anxious care to guard and watch and
propagate.
For instance. It would not be
possible for a humane and intelligent person to invent a rational excuse for
slavery; yet you will remember that in the early days of the emancipation
agitation in the North the agitators got but small help or countenance from any
one. Argue and plead and pray as they might, they could not break the universal
stillness that reigned, from pulpit and press all the way down to the bottom of
society—the clammy stillness created and maintained by the lie of silent
assertion—the silent assertion that there wasn't anything going on in which
humane and intelligent people were interested.
From the beginning of the
Dreyfus case to the end of it all France, except a couple of dozen moral
paladins, lay under the smother of the silent-assertion lie that no wrong was
being done to a persecuted and unoffending man. The like smother was over
England lately, a good half of the population silently letting on that they
were not aware that Mr. Chamberlain was trying to manufacture a war in South
Africa and was willing to pay fancy prices for the materials.
Now there we have instances
of three prominent ostensible civilisations working the silent-assertion lie.
Could one find other instances in the three countries? I think so. Not so very
many perhaps, but say a billion—just so as to keep within bounds. Are those
countries working that kind of lie, day in and day out, in thousands and
thousands of varieties, without ever resting? Yes, we know that to be true. The
universal conspiracy of the silent-assertion lie is hard at work always and
everywhere, and always in the interest of a stupidity or a sham, never in the
interest of a thing fine or respectable. Is it the most timid and shabby of all
lies? It seems to have the look of it. For ages and ages it has mutely laboured
in the interest of despotisms and aristocracies and chattel slaveries, and
military slaveries, and religious slaveries, and has kept them alive; keeps
them alive yet, here and there and yonder, all about the globe; and will go on
keeping them alive until the silent-assertion lie retires from business—the
silent assertion that nothing is going on which fair and intelligent men are
aware of and are engaged by their duty to try to stop.
What I am arriving at is
this: When whole races and peoples conspire to propagate gigantic mute lies in
the interest of tyrannies and shams, why should we care anything about the
trifling lies told by individuals? Why should we try to make it appear that
abstention from lying is a virtue? Why should we want to beguile ourselves in
that way? Why should we without shame help the nation lie, and then be ashamed
to do a little lying on our own account? Why shouldn't we be honest and
honourable, and lie every time we get a chance? That is to say, why shouldn't
we be consistent, and either lie all the time or not at all? Why should we help
the nation lie the whole day long and then object to telling one little
individual private lie in our own interest to go to bed on? Just for the
refreshment of it, I mean, and to take the rancid taste out of our mouth.
Here in England they have
the oddest ways. They won't tell a spoken lie—nothing can persuade them. Except
in a large moral interest, like politics or religion, I mean. To tell a spoken
lie to get even the poorest little personal advantage out of it is a thing
which is impossible to them. They make me ashamed of myself sometimes, they are
so bigoted. They will not even tell a lie for the fun of it; they will not tell
it when it hasn't even a suggestion of damage or advantage in it for any one.
This has a restraining influence upon me in spite of reason, and I am always
getting out of practice.
Of course, they tell all
sorts of little unspoken lies, just like anybody; but they don't notice it
until their attention is called to it. They have got me so that sometimes I
never tell a verbal lie now except in a modified form; and even in the modified
form they don't approve of it. Still, that is as far as I can go in the
interest of the growing friendly relations between the two countries; I must
keep some of my self-respect—and my health. I can live on a pretty low diet,
but I can't get along on no sustenance at all.
Of course, there are times
when these people have to come out with a spoken lie, for that is a thing which
happens to everybody once in a while, and would happen to the angels if they
came down here much. Particularly to the angels, in fact, for the lies I speak
of are self-sacrificing ones told for a generous object, not a mean one; but
even when these people tell a lie of that sort it seems to scare them and
unsettle their minds. It is a wonderful thing to see, and shows that they are
all insane. In fact, it is a country which is full of the most interesting
superstitions.
I have an English friend of
twenty-five years' standing, and yesterday when we were coming down-town on top
of the 'bus I happened to tell him a lie—a modified one, of course; a
half-breed, a mulatto; I can't seem to tell any other kind now, the market is
so flat. I was explaining to him how I got out of an embarrassment in Austria
last year. I do not know what might have become of me if I hadn't happened to
remember to tell the police that I belonged to the same family as the Prince of
Wales. That made everything pleasant and they let me go; and apologised, too,
and were ever so kind and obliging and polite, and couldn't do too much for me,
and explained how the mistake came to be made, and promised to hang the officer
that did it, and hoped I would let bygones be bygones and not say anything
about it; and I said they could depend on me. My friend said, austerely:
'You call it a modified lie?
Where is the modification?'
I explained that it lay in
the form of my statement to the police. 'I didn't say I belonged to the Royal
Family; I only said I belonged to the same family as the Prince—meaning the
human family, of course; and if those people had had any penetration they would
have known it. I can't go around furnishing brains to the police; it is not to
be expected.'
'How did you feel after that
performance?'
'Well, of course I was
distressed to find that the police had misunderstood me, but as long as I had
not told any lie I knew there was no occasion to sit up nights and worry about
it.'
My friend struggled with the
case several minutes, turning it over and examining it in his mind, then he
said that so far as he could see the modification was itself a lie, it being a
misleading reservation of an explanatory fact, and so I had told two lies
instead of only one.
'I wouldn't have done it,'
said he; 'I have never told a lie, and I should be very sorry to do such a
thing.'
Just then he lifted his hat
and smiled a basketful of surprised and delighted smiles down at a gentleman
who was passing in a hansom.
'Who was that, G—-?'
'I don't know.'
'Then why did you do that?'
'Because I saw he thought he
knew me and was expecting it of me. If I hadn't done it he would have been
hurt. I didn't want to embarrass him before the whole street.'
'Well, your heart was right,
G—-, and your act was right. What you did was kindly and courteous and beautiful;
I would have done it myself; but it was a lie.'
'A lie? I didn't say a word.
How do you make it out?'
'I know you didn't speak,
still you said to him very plainly and enthusiastically in dumb show, “Hello!
you in town? Awful glad to see you, old fellow; when did you get back?”
Concealed in your actions was what you have called “a misleading reservation of
an explanatory fact”—the act that you had never seen him before. You expressed
joy in encountering him—a lie; and you made that reservation—another lie. It
was my pair over again. But don't be troubled—we all do it.'
Two hours later, at dinner,
when quite other matters were being discussed, he told how he happened along
once just in the nick of time to do a great service for a family who were old
friends of his. The head of it had suddenly died in circumstances and
surroundings of a ruinously disgraceful character. If know the facts would
break the hearts of the innocent family and put upon them a load of unendurable
shame. There was no help but in a giant lie, and he girded up his loins and
told it.
'The family never found out,
G—-?'
'Never. In all these years
they have never suspected. They were proud of him and had always reason to be;
they are proud of him yet, and to them his memory is sacred and stainless and
beautiful.'
'They had a narrow escape,
G—-.'
'Indeed they had.'
'For the very next man that
came along might have been one of these heartless and shameless truth-mongers.
You have told the truth a million times in your life, G—-, but that one golden
lie atones for it all. Persevere.'
Some may think me not strict
enough in my morals, but that position is hardly tenable. There are many kinds
of lying which I do not approve. I do not like an injurious lie, except when it
injures somebody else; and I do not like the lie of bravado, nor the lie of
virtuous ecstasy; the latter was affected by Bryant, the former by Carlyle.
Mr. Bryant said, 'Truth
crushed to earth will rise again.' I have taken medals at thirteen world's
fairs, and may claim to be not without capacity, but I never told as big a one
as that. Mr. Bryant was playing to the gallery; we all do it. Carlyle said, in
substance, this—I do not remember the exact words: 'This gospel is eternal—that
a lie shall not live.' I have a reverent affection for Carlyle's books, and
have read his 'Revelation' eight times; and so I prefer to think he was not
entirely at himself when he told that one. To me it is plain that he said it in
a moment of excitement, when chasing Americans out of his back-yard with
brickbats. They used to go there and worship. At bottom he was probably fond of
it, but he was always able to conceal it. He kept bricks for them, but he was
not a good shot, and it is matter of history that when he fired they dodged,
and carried off the brick; for as a nation we like relics, and so long as we
get them we do not much care what the reliquary thinks about it. I am quite
sure that when he told that large one about a lie not being able to live he had
just missed an American and was over excited. He told it above thirty years
ago, but it is alive yet; alive, and very healthy and hearty, and likely to
outlive any fact in history. Carlyle was truthful when calm, but give him
Americans enough and bricks enough and he could have taken medals himself.
As regards that time that
George Washington told the truth, a word must be said, of course. It is the
principal jewel in the crown of America, and it is but natural that we should
work it for all it is worth, as Milton says in his 'Lay of the Last Minstrel.'
It was a timely and judicious truth, and I should have told it myself in the
circumstances. But I should have stopped there. It was a stately truth, a lofty
truth—a Tower; and I think it was a mistake to go on and distract attention
from its sublimity by building another Tower alongside of it fourteen times as
high. I refer to his remark that he 'could not lie.' I should have fed that to
the marines; or left it to Carlyle; it is just in his style. It would have
taken a medal at any European fair, and would have got an honourable mention
even at Chicago if it had been saved up. But let it pass; the Father of his
Country was excited. I have been in those circumstances, and I recollect.
With the truth he told I
have no objection to offer, as already indicated. I think it was not
premeditated but an inspiration. With his fine military mind, he had probably
arranged to let his brother Edward in for the cherry tree results, but by an
inspiration he saw his opportunity in time and took advantage of it. By telling
the truth he could astonish his father; his father would tell the neighbours;
the neighbours would spread it; it would travel to all firesides; in the end it
would make him President, and not only that, but First President. He was a
far-seeing boy and would be likely to think of these things. Therefore, to my
mind, he stands justified for what he did. But not for the other Tower; it was
a mistake. Still, I don't know about that; upon reflection I think perhaps it
wasn't. For indeed it is that Tower that makes the other one live. If he hadn't
said 'I cannot tell a lie' there would have been no convulsion. That was the
earthquake that rocked the planet. That is the kind of statement that lives for
ever, and a fact barnacled to it has a good chance to share its immortality.
To sum up, on the whole I am
satisfied with things the way they are. There is a prejudice against the spoken
lie, but none against any other, and by examination and mathematical
computation I find that the proportion of the spoken lie to the other varieties
is as 1 to 22,894. Therefore the spoken lie is of no consequence, and it is not
worth while to go around fussing about it and trying to make believe that it is
an important matter. The silent colossal National Lie that is the support and
confederate of all the tyrannies and shams and inequalities and unfairnesses
that afflict the peoples—that is the one to throw bricks and sermons at. But
let us be judicious and let somebody else begin.
And then—But I have wandered
from my text. How did I get out of my second lie? I think I got out with
honour, but I cannot be sure, for it was a long time ago and some of the
details have faded out of my memory. I recollect that I was reversed and
stretched across some one's knee, and that something happened, but I cannot now
remember what it was. I think there was music; but it is all dim now and
blurred by the lapse of time, and this may be only a senile fancy.
3.THE ESQUIMAUX MAIDEN'S
ROMANCE
'Yes, I will tell you
anything about my life that you would like to know, Mr. Twain,' she said, in
her soft voice, and letting her honest eyes rest placidly upon my face, 'for it
is kind and good of you to like me and care to know about me.'
She had been absently
scraping blubber-grease from her cheeks with a small bone-knife and
transferring it to her fur sleeve, while she watched the Aurora Borealis swing
its flaming streamers out of the sky and wash the lonely snow plain and the
templed icebergs with the rich hues of the prism, a spectacle of almost
intolerable splendour and beauty; but now she shook off her reverie and
prepared to give me the humble little history I had asked for. She settled
herself comfortably on the block of ice which we were using as a sofa, and I
made ready to listen.
She was a beautiful creature.
I speak from the Esquimaux point of view. Others would have thought her a
trifle over-plump. She was just twenty years old, and was held to be by far the
most bewitching girl in her tribe. Even now, in the open air, with her
cumbersome and shapeless fur coat and trousers and boots and vast hood, the
beauty of her face was at least apparent; but her figure had to be taken on
trust. Among all the guests who came and went, I had seen no girl at her
father's hospitable trough who could be called her equal. Yet she was not
spoiled. She was sweet and natural and sincere, and if she was aware that she
was a belle, there was nothing about her ways to show that she possessed that
knowledge.
She had been my daily
comrade for a week now, and the better I knew her the better I liked her. She
had been tenderly and carefully brought up, in an atmosphere of singularly rare
refinement for the polar regions, for her father was the most important man of
his tribe and ranked at the top of Esquimaux civilisation. I made long
dog-sledge trips across the mighty ice floes with Lasca—that was her name—and
found her company always pleasant and her conversation agreeable. I went
fishing with her, but not in her perilous boat: I merely followed along on the
ice and watched her strike her game with her fatally accurate spear. We went
sealing together; several times I stood by while she and the family dug blubber
from a stranded whale, and once I went part of the way when she was hunting a
bear, but turned back before the finish, because at bottom I am afraid of
bears.
However, she was ready to
begin her story, now, and this is what she said:
'Our tribe had always been
used to wander about from place to place over the frozen seas, like the other
tribes, but my father got tired of that, two years ago, and built this great
mansion of frozen snow-blocks—look at it; it is seven feet high and three or
four times as long as any of the others—and here we have stayed ever since. He
was very proud of his house, and that was reasonable, for if you have examined
it with care you must have noticed how much finer and completer it is than
houses usually are. But if you have not, you must, for you will find it has
luxurious appointments that are quite beyond the common. For instance, in that
end of it which you have called the “parlour,” the raised platform for the
accommodation of guests and the family at meals is the largest you have ever
seen in any house—is it not so?'
'Yes, you are quite right,
Lasca; it is the largest; we have nothing resembling it in even the finest
houses in the United States.' This admission made her eyes sparkle with pride
and pleasure. I noted that, and took my cue.
'I thought it must have
surprised you,' she said. 'And another thing; it is bedded far deeper in furs
than is usual; all kinds of furs—seal, sea-otter, silver-grey fox, bear,
marten, sable—every kind of fur in profusion; and the same with the ice-block
sleeping-benches along the walls which you call “beds.” Are your platforms and
sleeping-benches better provided at home?'
'Indeed, they are not,
Lasca—they do not begin to be.' That pleased her again. All she was thinking of
was the number of furs her aesthetic father took the trouble to keep on hand,
not their value. I could have told her that those masses of rich furs
constituted wealth—or would in my country—but she would not have understood
that; those were not the kind of things that ranked as riches with her people.
I could have told her that the clothes she had on, or the every-day clothes of
the commonest person about her, were worth twelve or fifteen hundred dollars,
and that I was not acquainted with anybody at home who wore twelve-hundred
dollar toilets to go fishing in; but she would not have understood it, so I
said nothing. She resumed:
'And then the slop-tubs. We
have two in the parlour, and two in the rest of the house. It is very seldom
that one has two in the parlour. Have you two in the parlour at home?'
The memory of those tubs
made me gasp, but I recovered myself before she noticed, and said with effusion:
'Why, Lasca, it is a shame
of me to expose my country, and you must not let it go further, for I am
speaking to you in confidence; but I give you my word of honour that not even
the richest man in the city of New York has two slop-tubs in his drawing-room.'
She clapped her fur-clad
hands in innocent delight, and exclaimed:
'Oh, but you cannot mean it,
you cannot mean it!'
'Indeed, I am in earnest,
dear. There is Vanderbilt. Vanderbilt is almost the richest man in the whole
world. Now, if I were on my dying bed, I could say to you that not even he has
two in his drawing-room. Why, he hasn't even one—I wish I may die in my tracks
if it isn't true.'
Her lovely eyes stood wide
with amazement, and she said, slowly, and with a sort of awe in her voice:
'How strange—how
incredible—one is not able to realise it. Is he penurious?'
'No—it isn't that. It isn't
the expense he minds, but—er—well, you know, it would look like showing off.
Yes, that is it, that is the idea; he is a plain man in his way, and shrinks from
display.'
'Why, that humility is right
enough,' said Lasca, 'if one does not carry it too far—but what does the place
look like?'
'Well, necessarily it looks
pretty barren and unfinished, but—'
'I should think so! I never
heard anything like it. Is it a fine house—that is, otherwise?'
'Pretty fine, yes. It is
very well thought of.'
The girl was silent awhile,
and sat dreamily gnawing a candle-end, apparently trying to think the thing
out. At last she gave her head a little toss and spoke out her opinion with
decision:
'Well, to my mind there's a
breed of humility which is itself a species of showing off when you get down to
the marrow of it; and when a man is able to afford two slop-tubs in his
parlour, and doesn't do it, it may be that he is truly humble-minded, but it's
a hundred times more likely that he is just trying to strike the public eye. In
my judgment, your Mr. Vanderbilt knows what he is about.'
I tried to modify this
verdict, feeling that a double slop-tub standard was not a fair one to try everybody
by, although a sound enough one in its own habitat; but the girl's head was
set, and she was not to be persuaded. Presently she said:
'Do the rich people, with
you, have as good sleeping-benches as ours, and made out of as nice broad
ice-blocks?'
'Well, they are pretty
good—good enough—but they are not made of ice-blocks.'
'I want to know! Why aren't
they made of ice-blocks?'
I explained the difficulties
in the way, and the expensiveness of ice in a country where you have to keep a
sharp eye on your ice-man or your ice-bill will weigh more than your ice. Then
she cried out:
'Dear me, do you buy your
ice?'
'We most surely do, dear.'
She burst into a gale of
guileless laughter, and said:
'Oh, I never heard of
anything so silly! My! there's plenty of it—it isn't worth anything. Why, there
is a hundred miles of it in sight, right now. I wouldn't give a fish-bladder
for the whole of it.'
'Well, it's because you
don't know how to value it, you little provincial muggings. If you had it in
New York in midsummer, you could buy all the whales in the market with it.'
She looked at me doubtfully,
and said:
'Are you speaking true?'
'Absolutely. I take my oath
to it.'
This made her thoughtful.
Presently she said, with a little sigh:
'I wish I could live there.'
I had merely meant to
furnish her a standard of values which she could understand; but my purpose had
miscarried. I had only given her the impression that whales were cheap and
plenty in New York, and set her mouth to watering for them. It seemed best to
try to mitigate the evil which I had done, so I said:
'But you wouldn't care for
whale-meat if you lived there. Nobody does.'
'What!'
'Indeed they don't.'
'Why don't they?'
'Wel-l-l, I hardly know.
It's prejudice, I think. Yes, that is it—just prejudice. I reckon somebody that
hadn't anything better to do started a prejudice against it, some time or
other, and once you get a caprice like that fairly going, you know it will last
no end of time.'
'That is true—perfectly
true,' said the girl, reflectively. 'Like our prejudice against soap, here—our
tribes had a prejudice against soap at first, you know.'
I glanced at her to see if
she was in earnest. Evidently she was. I hesitated, then said, cautiously:
'But pardon me. They had a
prejudice against soap? Had?'—with falling inflection.
'Yes—but that was only at
first; nobody would eat it.'
'Oh—I understand. I didn't
get your idea before.'
She resumed:
'It was just a prejudice.
The first time soap came here from the foreigners, nobody liked it; but as soon
as it got to be fashionable, everybody liked it, and now everybody has it that
can afford it. Are you fond of it?'
'Yes, indeed; I should die
if I couldn't have it—especially here. Do you like it?'
'I just adore it! Do you
like candles?'
'I regard them as an
absolute necessity. Are you fond of them?'
Her eyes fairly danced, and
she exclaimed:
'Oh! Don't mention it!
Candles!—and soap!—'
'And fish-interiors!—'
'And train-oil—'
'And slush!—'
'And whale-blubber!—'
'And carrion! and
sour-krout! and beeswax! and tar! and turpentine! and molasses! and—'
'Don't—oh, don't—I shall
expire with ecstasy!—'
'And then serve it all up in
a slush-bucket, and invite the neighbours and sail in!'
But this vision of an ideal
feast was too much for her, and she swooned away, poor thing. I rubbed snow in
her face and brought her to, and after a while got her excitement cooled down.
By-and-by she drifted into her story again:
'So we began to live here in
the fine house. But I was not happy. The reason was this: I was born for love:
for me there could be no true happiness without it. I wanted to be loved for
myself alone. I wanted an idol, and I wanted to be my idol's idol; nothing less
than mutual idolatry would satisfy my fervent nature. I had suitors in
plenty—in over-plenty, indeed—but in each and every case they had a fatal
defect: sooner or later I discovered that defect—not one of them failed to
betray it—it was not me they wanted, but my wealth.'
'Your wealth?'
'Yes; for my father is much
the richest man in this tribe—or in any tribe in these regions.'
I wondered what her father's
wealth consisted of. It couldn't be the house—anybody could build its mate. It
couldn't be the furs—they were not valued. It couldn't be the sledge, the dogs,
the harpoons, the boat, the bone fish-hooks and needles, and such things—no,
these were not wealth. Then what could it be that made this man so rich and
brought this swarm of sordid suitors to his house? It seemed to me, finally,
that the best way to find out would be to ask. So I did it. The girl was so manifestly
gratified by the question that I saw she had been aching to have me ask it. She
was suffering fully as much to tell as I was to know. She snuggled
confidentially up to me and said:
'Guess how much he is
worth—you never can!'
I pretended to consider the
matter deeply, she watching my anxious and labouring countenance with a
devouring and delighted interest; and when, at last, I gave it up and begged
her to appease my longing by telling me herself how much this polar Vanderbilt
was worth, she put her mouth close to my ear and whispered, impressively:
'Twenty-two fish-hooks—not
bone, but foreign—made out of real iron!'
Then she sprang back
dramatically, to observe the effect. I did my level best not to disappoint her.
I turned pale and murmured:
'Great Scott!'
'It's as true as you live,
Mr. Twain!'
'Lasca, you are deceiving
me—you cannot mean it.'
She was frightened and
troubled. She exclaimed:
'Mr. Twain, every word of it
is true—every word. You believe me—you do believe me, now don't you? Say you
believe me—do say you believe me!'
'I—well, yes, I do—I am
trying to. But it was all so sudden. So sudden and prostrating. You shouldn't
do such a thing in that sudden way. It—'
'Oh, I'm so sorry! If I had
only thought—'
'Well, it's all right, and I
don't blame you any more, for you are young and thoughtless, and of course you
couldn't foresee what an effect—'
'But oh, dear, I ought
certainly to have known better. Why—'
'You see, Lasca, if you had
said five or six hooks, to start with, and then gradually—'
'Oh, I see, I see—then
gradually added one, and then two, and then—ah, why couldn't I have thought of
that!'
'Never mind, child, it's all
right—I am better now—I shall be over it in a little while. But—to spring the
whole twenty-two on a person unprepared and not very strong anyway—'
'Oh, it was a crime! But you
forgive me—say you forgive me. Do!'
After harvesting a good deal
of very pleasant coaxing and petting and persuading, I forgave her and she was
happy again, and by-and-by she got under way with her narrative once more. I
presently discovered that the family treasury contained still another feature—a
jewel of some sort, apparently—and that she was trying to get around speaking
squarely about it, lest I get paralysed again. But I wanted to know about that
thing, too, and urged her to tell me what it was. She was afraid. But I
insisted, and said I would brace myself this time and be prepared, then the
shock would not hurt me. She was full of misgivings, but the temptation to
reveal that marvel to me and enjoy my astonishment and admiration was too
strong for her, and she confessed that she had it on her person, and said that
if I was sure I was prepared—and so on and so on—and with that she reached into
her bosom and brought out a battered square of brass, watching my eye anxiously
the while. I fell over against her in a quite well-acted faint, which delighted
her heart and nearly frightened it out of her, too, at the same time. When I
came to and got calm, she was eager to know what I thought of her jewel.
'What do I think of it? I
think it is the most exquisite thing I ever saw.'
'Do you really? How nice of
you to say that! But it is a love, now isn't it?'
'Well, I should say so! I'd
rather own it than the equator.'
'I thought you would admire
it,' she said. 'I think it is so lovely. And there isn't another one in all
these latitudes. People have come all the way from the open Polar Sea to look
at it. Did you ever see one before?'
I said no, this was the
first one I had ever seen. It cost me a pang to tell that generous lie, for I
had seen a million of them in my time, this humble jewel of hers being nothing
but a battered old New York Central baggage check.
'Land!' said I, 'you don't
go about with it on your person this way, alone and with no protection, not even
a dog?'
'Ssh! not so loud,' she
said. 'Nobody knows I carry it with me. They think it is in papa's treasury.
That is where it generally is.'
'Where is the treasury?'
It was a blunt question, and
for a moment she looked startled and a little suspicious, but I said:
'Oh, come, don't you be
afraid about me. At home we have seventy millions of people, and although I say
it myself that shouldn't, there is not one person among them all but would
trust me with untold fish-hooks.'
This reassured her, and she
told me where the hooks were hidden in the house. Then she wandered from her
course to brag a little about the size of the sheets of transparent ice that
formed the windows of the mansion, and asked me if I had ever seen their like
at home, and I came right out frankly and confessed that I hadn't, which
pleased her more than she could find words to dress her gratification in. It
was so easy to please her, and such a pleasure to do it, that I went on and
said—
'Ah, Lasca, you are a
fortunate girl!—this beautiful house, this dainty jewel, that rich treasure,
all this elegant snow, and sumptuous icebergs and limitless sterility, and
public bears and walruses, and noble freedom and largeness and everybody's
admiring eyes upon you, and everybody's homage and respect at your command
without the asking; young, rich, beautiful, sought, courted, envied, not a
requirement unsatisfied, not a desire ungratified, nothing to wish for that you
cannot have—it is immeasurable good-fortune! I have seen myriads of girls, but
none of whom these extraordinary things could be truthfully said but you alone.
And you are worthy—worthy of it all, Lasca—I believe it in my heart.'
It made her infinitely proud
and happy to hear me say this, and she thanked me over and over again for that
closing remark, and her voice and eyes showed that she was touched. Presently
she said:
'Still, it is not all
sunshine—there is a cloudy side. The burden of wealth is a heavy one to bear.
Sometimes I have doubted if it were not better to be poor—at least not inordinately
rich. It pains me to see neighbouring tribesmen stare as they pass by, and
overhear them say, reverently, one to another, “There—that is she—the
millionaire's daughter!” And sometimes they say sorrowfully, “She is rolling in
fish-hooks, and I—I have nothing.” It breaks my heart. When I was a child and
we were poor, we slept with the door open, if we chose, but now—now we have to
have a night-watchman. In those days my father was gentle and courteous to all;
but now he is austere and haughty and cannot abide familiarity. Once his family
were his sole thought, but now he goes about thinking of his fish-hooks all the
time. And his wealth makes everybody cringing and obsequious to him. Formerly
nobody laughed at his jokes, they being always stale and far-fetched and poor,
and destitute of the one element that can really justify a joke—the element of
humour; but now everybody laughs and cackles at these dismal things, and if any
fails to do it my father is deeply displeased, and shows it. Formerly his
opinion was not sought upon any matter and was not valuable when he volunteered
it; it has that infirmity yet, but, nevertheless, it is sought by all and
applauded by all—and he helps do the applauding himself, having no true
delicacy and a plentiful want of tact. He has lowered the tone of all our
tribe. Once they were a frank and manly race, now they are measly hypocrites,
and sodden with servility. In my heart of hearts I hate all the ways of
millionaires! Our tribe was once plain, simple folk, and content with the bone
fish-hooks of their fathers; now they are eaten up with avarice and would
sacrifice every sentiment of honour and honesty to possess themselves of the
debasing iron fish-hooks of the foreigner. However, I must not dwell on these
sad things. As I have said, it was my dream to be loved for myself alone.
'At last, this dream seemed
about to be fulfilled. A stranger came by, one day, who said his name was
Kalula. I told him my name, and he said he loved me. My heart gave a great
bound of gratitude and pleasure, for I had loved him at sight, and now I said
so. He took me to his breast and said he would not wish to be happier than he
was now. We went strolling together far over the ice-floes, telling all about
each other, and planning, oh, the loveliest future! When we were tired at last
we sat down and ate, for he had soap and candles and I had brought along some
blubber. We were hungry and nothing was ever so good.
'He belonged to a tribe
whose haunts were far to the north, and I found that he had never heard of my
father, which rejoiced me exceedingly. I mean he had heard of the millionaire,
but had never heard his name—so, you see, he could not know that I was the
heiress. You may be sure that I did not tell him. I was loved for myself at last,
and was satisfied. I was so happy—oh, happier than you can think!
'By-and-by it was towards
supper time, and I led him home. As we approached our house he was amazed, and
cried out:
'“How splendid! Is that your
father's?”
'It gave me a pang to hear
that tone and see that admiring light in his eye, but the feeling quickly
passed away, for I loved him so, and he looked so handsome and noble. All my
family of aunts and uncles and cousins were pleased with him, and many guests
were called in, and the house was shut up tight and the rag lamps lighted, and
when everything was hot and comfortable and suffocating, we began a joyous
feast in celebration of my betrothal.
'When the feast was over my
father's vanity overcame him, and he could not resist the temptation to show
off his riches and let Kalula see what grand good-fortune he had stumbled
into—and mainly, of course, he wanted to enjoy the poor man's amazement. I
could have cried—but it would have done no good to try to dissuade my father,
so I said nothing, but merely sat there and suffered.
'My father went straight to
the hiding-place in full sight of everybody, and got out the fish-hooks and
brought them and flung them scatteringly over my head, so that they fell in
glittering confusion on the platform at my lover's knee.
'Of course, the astounding
spectacle took the poor lad's breath away. He could only stare in stupid
astonishment, and wonder how a single individual could possess such incredible
riches. Then presently he glanced brilliantly up and exclaimed:
'“Ah, it is you who are the
renowned millionaire!”
'My father and all the rest
burst into shouts of happy laughter, and when my father gathered the treasure
carelessly up as if it might be mere rubbish and of no consequence, and carried
it back to its place, poor Kulala's surprise was a study. He said:
'“Is it possible that you
put such things away without counting them?”
'My father delivered a
vain-glorious horse-laugh, and said:
'“Well, truly, a body may
know you have never been rich, since a mere matter of a fish-hook or two is
such a mighty matter in your eyes.”
'Kalula was confused, and
hung his head, but said:
'“Ah, indeed, sir, I was
never worth the value of the barb of one of those precious things, and I have
never seen any man before who was so rich in them as to render the counting of
his hoard worth while, since the wealthiest man I have ever known, till now,
was possessed of but three.”
'My foolish father roared
again with jejune delight, and allowed the impression to remain that he was not
accustomed to count his hooks and keep sharp watch over them. He was showing
off, you see. Count them? Why, he counted them every day!
'I had met and got
acquainted with my darling just at dawn; I had brought him home just at dark,
three hours afterwards—for the days were shortening toward the six-months'
night at that time. We kept up the festivities many hours; then, at last, the
guests departed and the rest of us distributed ourselves along the walls on
sleeping-benches, and soon all were steeped in dreams but me. I was too happy,
too excited, to sleep. After I had lain quiet a long, long time, a dim form
passed by me and was swallowed up in the gloom that pervaded the farther end of
the house. I could not make out who it was, or whether it was man or woman. Presently
that figure or another one passed me going the other way. I wondered what it
all meant, but wondering did no good; and while I was still wondering I fell
asleep.
'I do not know how long I
slept, but at last I came suddenly broad awake and heard my father say in a
terrible voice, “By the great Snow God, there's a fish-hook gone!” Something
told me that that meant sorrow for me, and the blood in my veins turned cold.
The presentiment was confirmed in the same instant: my father shouted, “Up,
everybody, and seize the stranger!” Then there was an outburst of cries and
curses from all sides, and a wild rush of dim forms through the obscurity. I
flew to my beloved's help, but what could I do but wait and wring my hands?—he
was already fenced away from me by a living wall, he was being bound hand and
foot. Not until he was secured would they let me get to him. I flung myself
upon his poor insulted form and cried my grief out upon his breast while my
father and all my family scoffed at me and heaped threats and shameful epithets
upon him. He bore his ill usage with a tranquil dignity which endeared him to
me more than ever, and made me proud and happy to suffer with him and for him.
I heard my father order that the elders of the tribe be called together to try
my Kalula for his life.
'“What!” I said, “before any
search has been made for the lost hook?”
'“Lost hook!” they all
shouted, in derision; and my father added, mockingly, “Stand back, everybody,
and be properly serious—she is going to hunt up that lost hook: oh, without
doubt she will find it!”—whereat they all laughed again.
'I was not disturbed—I had
no fears, no doubts. I said:
'“It is for you to laugh
now; it is your turn. But ours is coming; wait and see.”
'I got a rag lamp. I thought
I should find that miserable thing in one little moment; and I set about that
matter with such confidence that those people grew grave, beginning to suspect
that perhaps they had been too hasty. But alas and alas!—oh, the bitterness of
that search! There was deep silence while one might count his fingers ten or
twelve times, then my heart began to sink, and around me the mockings began
again, and grew steadily louder and more assured, until at last, when I gave
up, they burst into volley after volley of cruel laughter.
'None will ever know what I
suffered then. But my love was my support and my strength, and I took my
rightful place at my Kalula's side, and put my arm about his neck, and
whispered in his ear, saying:
'“You are innocent, my
own—that I know; but say it to me yourself, for my comfort, then I can bear
whatever is in store for us.”
'He answered:
'“As surely as I stand upon
the brink of death at this moment, I am innocent. Be comforted, then, O bruised
heart; be at peace, O thou breath of my nostrils, life of my life!”
'“Now, then, let the elders
come!”—and as I said the words there was a gathering sound of crunching snow
outside, and then a vision of stooping forms filing in at the door—the elders.
'My father formally accused
the prisoner, and detailed the happenings of the night. He said that the
watchman was outside the door, and that in the house were none but the family
and the stranger. “Would the family steal their own property?” He paused. The
elders sat silent many minutes; at last, one after another said to his
neighbour, “This looks bad for the stranger”—sorrowful words for me to hear.
Then my father sat down. O miserable, miserable me! At that very moment I could
have proved my darling innocent, but I did not know it!
'The chief of the court
asked:
'“Is there any here to
defend the prisoner?”
'I rose and said:
'“Why should he steal that
hook, or any or all of them? In another day he would have been heir to the
whole!”
I stood waiting. There was a
long silence, the steam from the many breaths rising about me like a fog. At
last one elder after another nodded his head slowly several times, and
muttered, “There is force in what the child has said.” Oh, the heart-lift that
was in those words!—so transient, but, oh, so precious! I sat down.
'“If any would say further,
let him speak now, or after hold his peace,” said the chief of the court.
'My father rose and said:
'“In the night a form passed
by me in the gloom, going toward the treasury and presently returned. I think,
now, it was the stranger.”
'Oh, I was like to swoon! I
had supposed that that was my secret; not the grip of the great Ice God himself
could have dragged it out of my heart. The chief of the court said sternly to
my poor Kalula:
'“Speak!”
'Kalula hesitated, then
answered:
'“It was I. I could not
sleep for thinking of the beautiful hooks. I went there and kissed them and
fondled them, to appease my spirit and drown it in a harmless joy, then I put
them back. I may have dropped one, but I stole none.”
'Oh, a fatal admission to
make in such a place! There was an awful hush. I knew he had pronounced his own
doom, and that all was over. On every face you could see the words
hieroglyphed: “It is a confession!—and paltry, lame, and thin.”
'I sat drawing in my breath
in faint gasps—and waiting. Presently, I heard the solemn words I knew were
coming; and each word, as it came, was a knife in my heart:
'“It is the command of the
court that the accused be subjected to the trial by water.”
'Oh, curses be upon the head
of him who brought “trial by water” to our land! It came, generations ago, from
some far country that lies none knows where. Before that our fathers used
augury and other unsure methods of trial, and doubtless some poor guilty
creatures escaped with their lives sometimes; but it is not so with trial by
water, which is an invention by wiser men than we poor ignorant savages are. By
it the innocent are proved innocent, without doubt or question, for they drown;
and the guilty are proven guilty with the same certainty, for they do not
drown. My heart was breaking in my bosom, for I said, “He is innocent, and he
will go down under the waves and I shall never see him more.”
'I never left his side after
that. I mourned in his arms all the precious hours, and he poured out the deep
stream of his love upon me, and oh, I was so miserable and so happy! At last,
they tore him from me, and I followed sobbing after them, and saw them fling
him into the sea—then I covered my face with my hands. Agony? Oh, I know the
deepest deeps of that word!
'The next moment the people
burst into a shout of malicious joy, and I took away my hands, startled. Oh,
bitter sight—he was swimming! My heart turned instantly to stone, to ice. I
said, “He was guilty, and he lied to me!” I turned my back in scorn and went my
way homeward.
'They took him far out to
sea and set him on an iceberg that was drifting southward in the great waters.
Then my family came home, and my father said to me:
'“Your thief sent his dying
message to you, saying, 'Tell her I am innocent, and that all the days and all
the hours and all the minutes while I starve and perish I shall love her and
think of her and bless the day that gave me sight of her sweet face.'” Quite
pretty, even poetical!
'I said, “He is dirt—let me
never hear mention of him again.” And oh, to think—he was innocent all the
time!
'Nine months—nine dull, sad
months—went by, and at last came the day of the Great Annual Sacrifice, when
all the maidens of the tribe wash their faces and comb their hair. With the
first sweep of my comb out came the fatal fish-hook from where it had been all
those months nestling, and I fell fainting into the arms of my remorseful
father! Groaning, he said, “We murdered him, and I shall never smile again!” He
has kept his word. Listen; from that day to this not a month goes by that I do
not comb my hair. But oh, where is the good of it all now!'
So ended the poor maid's
humble little tale—whereby we learn that since a hundred million dollars in New
York and twenty-two fish-hooks on the border of the Arctic Circle represent the
same financial supremacy, a man in straitened circumstances is a fool to stay
in New York when he can buy ten cents' worth of fish-hooks and emigrate.
4.CHRISTIAN SCIENCE AND THE
BOOK OF MRS. EDDY
'It is the first time since the dawn-days of Creation that a Voice
has gone crashing through space with such placid and complacent
confidence and command.'
I
This last summer, when I was
on my way back to Vienna from the Appetite-Cure in the mountains, I fell over a
cliff in the twilight and broke some arms and legs and one thing or another,
and by good luck was found by some peasants who had lost an ass, and they
carried me to the nearest habitation, which was one of those large, low,
thatch-roofed farm-houses, with apartments in the garret for the family, and a
cunning little porch under the deep gable decorated with boxes of
bright-coloured flowers and cats; on the ground floor a large and light
sitting-room, separated from the milch-cattle apartment by a partition; and in
the front yard rose stately and fine the wealth and pride of the house, the
manure-pile. That sentence is Germanic, and shows that I am acquiring that sort
of mastery of the art and spirit of the language which enables a man to travel
all day in one sentence without changing cars.
There was a village a mile
away, and a horse-doctor lived there, but there was no surgeon. It seemed a bad
outlook; mine was distinctly a surgery case. Then it was remembered that a lady
from Boston was summering in that village, and she was a Christian Science
doctor and could cure anything. So she was sent for. It was night by this time,
and she could not conveniently come, but sent word that it was no matter, there
was no hurry, she would give me 'absent treatment' now, and come in the morning;
meantime she begged me to make myself tranquil and comfortable and remember
that there was nothing the matter with me. I thought there must be some
mistake.
'Did you tell her I walked
off a cliff seventy-five feet high?'
'Yes.'
'And struck a boulder at the
bottom and bounced?'
'Yes.'
'And struck another one and
bounced again?'
'Yes.'
'And struck another one and
bounced yet again?'
'Yes.'
'And broke the boulders?'
'Yes.'
'That accounts for it; she
is thinking of the boulders. Why didn't you tell her I got hurt, too?'
'I did. I told her what you
told me to tell her: that you were now but an incoherent series of compound
fractures extending from your scalp-lock to your heels, and that the comminuted
projections caused you to look like a hat-rack.'
'And it was after this that
she wished me to remember that there was nothing the matter with me?'
'Those were her words.'
'I do not understand it. I
believe she has not diagnosed the case with sufficient care. Did she look like
a person who was theorising, or did she look like one who has fallen off
precipices herself and brings to the aid of abstract science the confirmation
of personal experience?'
'Bitte?'
It was too large a contract
for the Stubenmadchen's vocabulary; she couldn't call the hand. I allowed the
subject to rest there, and asked for something to eat and smoke, and something
hot to drink, and a basket to pile my legs in, and another capable person to
come and help me curse the time away; but I could not have any of these things.
'Why?'
'She said you would need
nothing at all.'
'But I am hungry and
thirsty, and in desperate pain.'
'She said you would have
these delusions, but must pay no attention to them. She wants you to
particularly remember that there are no such things as hunger and thirst and
pain.'
'She does, does she?'
'It is what she said.'
'Does she seem o be in full
and functional possession of her intellectual plant, such as it is?'
'Bitte?'
'Do they let her run at
large, or do they tie her up?'
'Tie her up?'
'There, good-night, run
along; you are a good girl, but your mental Geschirr is not arranged for light
and airy conversation. Leave me to my delusions.'
II
It was a night of anguish,
of course—at least I supposed it was, for it had all the symptoms of it—but it
passed at last, and the Christian Scientist came, and I was glad. She was
middle-aged, and large and bony and erect, and had an austere face and a
resolute jaw and a Roman beak and was a widow in the third degree, and her name
was Fuller. I was eager to get to business and find relief, but she was
distressingly deliberate. She unpinned and unhooked and uncoupled her
upholsteries one by one, abolished the wrinkles with a flirt of her hand and
hung the articles up; peeled off her gloves and disposed of them, got a book
out of her hand-bag, then drew a chair to the bedside, descended into it
without hurry, and I hung out my tongue. She said, with pity but without
passion:
'Return it to its
receptacle. We deal with the mind only, not with its dumb servants.'
I could not offer my pulse,
because the connection was broken; but she detected the apology before I could
word it, and indicated by a negative tilt of her head that the pulse was
another dumb servant that she had no use for. Then I thought I would tell her
my symptoms and how I felt, so that she would understand the case; but that was
another inconsequence, she did not need to know those things; moreover, my
remark about how I felt was an abuse of language, a misapplication of terms—
'One does not feel,' she
explained; 'there is no such thing as feeling: therefore, to speak of a
non-existent thing as existent is a contradiction. Matter has no existence;
nothing exists but mind; the mind cannot feel pain, it can only imagine it.'
'But if it hurts, just the
same—'
'It doesn't. A thing which is
unreal cannot exercise the functions of reality. Pain is unreal; hence pain
cannot hurt.'
In making a sweeping gesture
to indicate the act of shooing the illusion of pain out of the mind, she raked
her hand on a pin in her dress, said 'Ouch!' and went tranquilly on with her
talk. 'You should never allow yourself to speak of how you feel, nor permit
others to ask you how you are feeling: you should never concede that you are
ill, nor permit others to talk about disease or pain or death or similar
non-existences in your preserve. Such talk only encourages the mind to continue
its empty imaginings.' Just at that point the Stubenmadchen trod on the cat's
tail, and the cat let fly a frenzy of cat-profanity. I asked with caution:
'Is a cat's opinion about
pain valuable?'
'A cat has no opinion;
opinions proceed from the mind only; the lower animals, being eternally
perishable, have not been granted mind; without mind opinion is impossible.'
'She merely imagined she
felt a pain—the cat?'
'She cannot imagine a pain,
for imagination is an effect of mind; without mind, there is no imagination. A
cat has no imagination.'
'Then she had a real pain?'
'I have already told you
there is no such thing as real pain.'
'It is strange and
interesting. I do wonder what was the matter with the cat. Because, there being
no such thing as real pain, and she not being able to imagine an imaginary
thing, it would seem that God in his Pity has compensated the cat with some
kind of a mysterious emotion useable when her tail is trodden on which for the
moment joins cat and Christian in one common brotherhood of—'
She broke in with an
irritated—
'Peace! The cat feels
nothing, the Christian feels nothing. Your empty and foolish imaginings are
profanation and blasphemy, and can do you an injury. It is wiser and better and
holier to recognise and confess that there is no such thing as disease or pain
or death.'
'I am full of imaginary
tortures,' I said, 'but I do not think I could be any more uncomfortable if
they were real ones. What must I do to get rid of them?'
'There is no occasion to get
rid of them, since they do not exist. They are illusions propagated by matter,
and matter has no existence; there is no such thing as matter.'
'It sounds right and clear,
but yet it seems in a degree elusive; it seems to slip through, just when you
think you are getting a grip on it.'
'Explain.'
'Well, for instance: if
there is no such thing as matter, how can matter propagate things?'
In her compassion she almost
smiled. She would have smiled if there were any such thing as a smile.
'It is quite simple,' she
said; 'the fundamental propositions of Christian Science explain it, and they
are summarised in the four following self-evident propositions: 1. God is All
in all. 2. God is good. Good is Mind. 3. God, Spirit, being all, nothing is
matter. 4. Life, God, omnipotent Good, deny death, evil sin, disease. There—now
you see.'
It seemed nebulous: it did
not seem to say anything about the difficulty in hand—how non-existent matter
can propagate illusions. I said, with some hesitancy:
'Does—does it explain?'
'Doesn't it? Even if read
backward it will do it.'
With a budding hope, I asked
her to do it backward.
'Very well. Disease sin evil
death deny Good omnipotent God life matter is nothing all being Spirit God Mind
is Good good is God all in All is God. There—do you understand now?
'It—it—well, it is plainer
than it was before; still—'
'Well?'
'Could you try it some more
ways?'
'As many as you like: it
always means the same. Interchanged in any way you please it cannot be made to
mean anything different from what it means when put in any other way. Because
it is perfect. You can jumble it all up, and it makes no difference: it always
comes out the way it was before. It was a marvellous mind that produced it. As
a mental tour de force it is without a mate, it defies alike the simple, the
concrete, and the occult.'
'It seems to be a corker.'
I blushed for the word, but
it was out before I could stop it.
'A what?'
'A—wonderful
structure—combination, so to speak, or profound thoughts—unthinkable ones—un—'
'It is true. Read backwards,
or forwards, or perpendicularly, or at any given angle, these four propositions
will always be found to agree in statement and proof.'
'Ah—proof. Now we are coming
at it. The statements agree; they agree with—with—anyway, they agree; I noticed
that; but what is it they prove—I mean, in particular?'
'Why, nothing could be
clearer. They prove: 1. GOD—Principle, Life, Truth, Love, Soul, Spirit, Mind.
Do you get that?'
'I—well, I seem to. Go on,
please.
'2. MAN—God's universal
idea, individual, perfect, eternal. Is it clear?'
'It—I think so. Continue.'
'3. IDEA—An image in Mind;
the immediate object of understanding. There it is—the whole sublime Arcana of
Christian Science in a nutshell. Do you find a weak place in it anywhere?'
'Well—no; it seems strong.'
'Very well. There is more.
Those three constitute the Scientific Definition of Immortal Mind. Next, we
have the Scientific Definition of Mortal Mind. Thus. FIRST DEGREE: Depravity.
1. Physical—Passions and appetites, fear, depraved will, pride, envy, deceit,
hatred, revenge, sin, disease, death.'
'Phantasms,
madam—unrealities, as I understand it.'
'Every one. SECOND DEGREE:
Evil Disappearing. 1. Moral—Honesty, affection, compassion, hope, faith, meekness,
temperance. Is it clear?'
'Crystal.'
'THIRD DEGREE: Spiritual
Salvation. 1. Spiritual—Faith, wisdom, power, purity, understanding, health,
love. You see how searchingly and co-ordinately interdependent and
anthropomorphous it all is. In this Third Degree, as we know by the revelations
of Christian Science, mortal mind disappears.'
'Not earlier?'
'No, not until the teaching
and preparation for the Third Degree are completed.'
'It is not until then that
one is enabled to take hold of Christian Science effectively, and with the
right sense of sympathy and kinship, as I understand you. That is to say, it
could not succeed during the process of the Second Degree, because there would
still be remains of mind left; and therefore—but I interrupted you. You were
about to further explain the good results proceeding from the erosions and
disintegrations effected by the Third Degree. It is very interesting: go on,
please.'
'Yes, as I was saying, in
this Third Degree mortal mind disappears. Science so reverses the evidence
before the corporeal human senses as to make this scriptural testimony true in
our hearts, “the last shall be first and the first shall be last,” that God and
His idea may be to us—what divinity really is, and must of necessity
be—all-inclusive.'
'It is beautiful. And with
that exhaustive exactness your choice and arrangement of words confirms and
establishes what you have claimed for the powers and functions of the Third
Degree. The Second could probably produce only temporary absence of mind, it is
reserved to the Third to make it permanent. A sentence framed under the
auspices of the Second could have a kind of meaning—a sort of deceptive
semblance of it—whereas it is only under the magic of the Third that that
defect would disappear. Also, without doubt, it is the Third Degree that
contributes another remarkable specialty to Christian Science: viz., ease and
flow and lavishness of words, and rhythm and swing and smoothness. There must
be a special reason for this?'
'Yes—God-all, all-God, good
Good, non-Matter, Matteration, Spirit, Bones, Truth.'
'That explains it.'
'There is nothing in
Christian Science that is not explicable; for God is one, Time is one,
Individuality is one, and may be one of a series, one of many, as an individual
man, individual horse; whereas God is one, not one of a series, but one alone
and without an equal.'
'These are noble thoughts.
They make one burn to know more. How does Christian Science explain the
spiritual relation of systematic duality to incidental reflection?'
'Christian Science reverses
the seeming relation of Soul and body—as astronomy reverses the human
perception of the movement of the solar system—and makes body tributary to
Mind. As it is the earth which is in motion, while the sun is at rest, though
in viewing the sun rise one finds it impossible to believe the sun not to be
really rising, so the body is but the humble servant of the restful Mind,
though it seems otherwise to finite sense; but we shall never understand this
while we admit that soul is in body, or mind in matter, and that man is
included in non-intelligence. Soul is God, unchangeable and eternal; and man
coexists with and reflects Soul, for the All-in-all is the Altogether, and the
Altogether embraces the All-one, Soul-Mind, Mind-Soul, Love, Spirit, Bones,
Liver, one of a series, alone and without an equal.'
(It is very curious, the
effect which Christian Science has upon the verbal bowels. Particularly the
Third Degree; it makes one think of a dictionary with the cholera. But I only
thought this; I did not say it.)
'What is the origin of
Christian Science? Is it a gift of God, or did it just happen?'
'In a sense, it is a gift of
God. That is to say, its powers are from Him, but the credit of the discovery
of the powers and what they are for is due to an American lady.'
'Indeed? When did this
occur?'
'In 1866. That is the
immortal date when pain and disease and death disappeared from the earth to
return no more for ever. That is, the fancies for which those terms stand,
disappeared. The things themselves had never existed; therefore as soon as it
was perceived that there were no such things, they were easily banished. The
history and nature of the great discovery are set down in the book here, and—'
'Did the lady write the
book?'
'Yes, she wrote it all,
herself. The title is “Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures”—for she
explains the Scriptures; they were not understood before. Not even by the
twelve Disciples. She begins thus—I will read it to you.'
But she had forgotten to
bring her glasses.
'Well, it is no matter,' she
said, 'I remember the words—indeed, all Christian Scientists know the book by
heart; it is necessary in our practice. We should otherwise make mistakes and
do harm. She begins thus: “In the year 1866 I discovered the Science of
Metaphysical Healing, and named it Christian Science.” And she says—quite
beautifully, I think—“Through Christian Science, religion and medicine are
inspired with a diviner nature and essence, fresh pinions are given to faith
and understanding, and thoughts acquaint themselves intelligently with God.”
Her very words.'
'It is elegant. And it is a
fine thought, too—marrying religion to medicine, instead of medicine to the
undertaker in the old way; for religion and medicine properly belong together, they
being the basis of all spiritual and physical health. What kind of medicine do
you give for the ordinary diseases, such as—'
'We never give medicine in
any circumstances whatever! We—'
'But, madam, it says—'
'I don't care what it says,
and I don't wish to talk about it.'
'I am sorry if I have
offended, but you see the mention seemed in some way inconsistent, and—'
'There are no
inconsistencies in Christian Science. The thing is impossible, for the Science
is absolute. It cannot be otherwise, since it proceeds directly from the
All-in-all and the Everything-in-Which, also Soul, Bones, Truth, one of a
series, alone and without equal. It is Mathematics purified from material dross
and made spiritual.'
'I can see that, but—'
'It rests upon the immovable
basis of an Apodictical Principle.'
The word flattened itself
against my mind trying to get in, and disordered me a little, and before I
could inquire into its pertinency, she was already throwing the needed light:
'This Apodictical Principle
is the absolute Principle of Scientific Mind-healing, the sovereign Omnipotence
which delivers the children of men from pain, disease, decay, and every ill
that flesh is heir to.'
'Surely not every ill, every
decay?'
'Every one; there are no
exceptions; there is no such thing as decay—it is an unreality, it has no
existence.'
'But without your glasses
your failing eyesight does not permit you to—'
'My eyesight cannot fail;
nothing can fail; the Mind is master, and the Mind permits no retrogression.'
She was under the inspiration
of the Third Degree, therefore there could be no profit in continuing this part
of the subject. I shifted to other ground and inquired further concerning the
Discoverer of the Science.
'Did the discovery come
suddenly, like Klondike, or after long study and calculation, like America?'
'The comparisons are not
respectful, since they refer to trivialities—but let it pass. I will answer in
the Discoverer's own words: “God had been graciously fitting me, during many
years, for the reception of a final revelation of the absolute Principle of
Scientific Mind-healing.”'
'Many years? How many?'
'Eighteen centuries!'
'All God, God-good,
good-God, Truth, Bones, Liver, one of a series alone and without equal—it is
amazing!'
'You may well say it, sir.
Yet it is but the truth. This American lady, our revered and sacred founder, is
distinctly referred to and her coming prophesied, in the twelfth chapter of the
Apocalypse; she could not have been more plainly indicated by St. John without
actually mentioning her name.'
'How strange, how
wonderful!'
'I will quote her own words,
for her “Key to the Scriptures:” “The twelfth chapter of the Apocalypse has a
special suggestiveness in connection with this nineteenth century.” There—do
you note that? Think—note it well.'
'But—what does it mean?'
'Listen, and you will know.
I quote her inspired words again: “In the opening of the Sixth Seal, typical of
six thousand years since Adam, there is one distinctive feature which has
special reference to the present age. Thus:
'“Revelation xii. 1. And
there appeared a great wonder in heaven—a woman clothed with the sun, and the
moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars.”
'That is our Head, our
Chief, our Discoverer of Christian Science—nothing can be plainer, nothing
surer. And note this:
'“Revelation xii. 6. And the
woman fled into the wilderness, where she had a place prepared of God.”
'That is Boston.'
'I recognise it, madam.
These are sublime things and impressive; I never understood these passages
before; please go on with the—with the—proofs.'
'Very well. Listen:
'“And I saw another mighty
angel come down from heaven, clothed with a cloud; and a rainbow was upon his
head, and his face was as it were the sun, and his feet as pillars of fire. And
he had in his hand a little book.”
'A little book, merely a
little book—could words be modester? Yet how stupendous its importance! Do you
know what book that was?'
'Was it—'
'I hold it in my
hand—“Christian Science”!'
'Love, Livers, Lights,
Bones, Truth, Kidneys, one of a series, alone and without equal—it is beyond
imagination and wonder!'
'Hear our Founder's eloquent
words: “Then will a voice from harmony cry, 'Go and take the little book; take
it and eat it up, and it shall make thy belly bitter; but it shall be in thy mouth
sweet as honey.' Mortal, obey the heavenly evangel. Take up Divine Science.
Read it from beginning to end. Study it, ponder it. It will be indeed sweet at
its first taste, when it heals you; but murmur not over Truth, if you find its
digestion bitter.” You now know the history of our dear and holy Science, sir,
and that its origin is not of this earth, but only its discovery. I will leave
the book with you and will go, now, but give yourself no uneasiness—I will give
you absent treatment from now till I go to bed.'
III
Under the powerful influence
of the near treatment and the absent treatment together, my bones were
gradually retreating inward and disappearing from view. The good word took a
brisk start, now, and went on quite swiftly. My body was diligently straining
and stretching, this way and that, to accommodate the processes of restoration,
and every minute or two I heard a dull click inside and knew that the two ends
of a fracture had been successfully joined. This muffled clicking and gritting and
grinding and rasping continued during the next three hours, and then
stopped—the connections had all been made. All except dislocations; there were
only seven of these: hips, shoulders, knees, neck; so that was soon over; one
after another they slipped into their sockets with a sound like pulling a
distant cork, and I jumped up as good as new, as to framework, and sent for the
horse-doctor.
I was obliged to do this
because I had a stomach-ache and a cold in the head, and I was not willing to
trust these things any longer in the hands of a woman whom I did not know, and
in whose ability to successfully treat mere disease I had lost all confidence.
My position was justified by the fact that the cold and the ache had been in
her charge from the first, along with the fractures, but had experienced not a
shade of relief; and indeed the ache was even growing worse and worse, and more
and more bitter, now, probably on account of the protracted abstention from
food and drink.
The horse-doctor came, a
pleasant man and full of hope and professional interest in the case. In the
matter of smell he was pretty aromatic, in fact quite horsey, and I tried to
arrange with him for absent treatment, but it was not in his line, so out of
delicacy I did not press it. He looked at my teeth and examined my hock, and
said my age and general condition were favourable to energetic measures;
therefore he would give me something to turn the stomach-ache into the botts
and the cold in the head into the blind staggers; then he should be on his own
beat and would know what to do. He made up a bucket of bran-mash, and said a
dipperful of it every two hours, alternated with a drench with turpentine and
axle-grease in it, would either knock my ailments out of me in twenty-four
hours or so interest me in other ways as to make me forget they were on the
premises. He administered my first dose himself, then took his leave, saying I
was free to eat and drink anything I pleased and in any quantity I liked. But I
was not hungry any more, and did not care for food.
I took up the 'Christian
Scientist' book and read half of it, then took a dipperful of drench and read
the other half. The resulting experiences were full of interest and adventure.
All through the rumblings and grindings and quakings and effervescings
accompanying the evolution of the ache into the botts and the cold into the
blind staggers I could note the generous struggle for mastery going on between
the mash and the drench and the literature; and often I could tell which was
ahead, and could easily distinguish the literature from the others when the
others were separate, though not when they were mixed; for when a bran-mash and
an eclectic drench are mixed together they look just like the Apodictical
Principle out on a lark, and no one can tell it from that. The finish was
reached at last, the evolutions were complete and a fine success; but I think
that this result could have been achieved with fewer materials. I believe the
mash was necessary to the conversion of the stomach-ache into the botts, but I
think one could develop the blind staggers out of the literature by itself;
also, that blind staggers produced in this way would be of a better quality and
more lasting than any produced by the artificial processes of a horse-doctor.
For of all the strange, and
frantic, and incomprehensible, and uninterpretable books which the imagination
of man has created, surely this one is the prize sample. It is written with a
limitless confidence and complacency, and with a dash and stir and earnestness
which often compel the effects of eloquence, even when the words do not seem to
have any traceable meaning. There are plenty of people who imagine they
understand the book; I know this, for I have talked with them; but in all cases
they were people who also imagined that there were no such things as pain,
sickness, and death, and no realities in the world; nothing actually existent
but Mind. It seems to me to modify the value of their testimony. When these
people talk about Christian Science they do as Mrs. Fuller did; they do not use
their own language, but the book's; they pour out the book's showy
incoherences, and leave you to find out later that they were not originating,
but merely quoting; they seem to know the volume by heart, and to revere it as they
would a Bible—another Bible, perhaps I ought to say. Plainly the book was
written under the mental desolations of the Third Degree, and I feel sure that
none but the membership of that Degree can discover meanings in it. When you
read it you seem to be listening to a lively and aggressive and oracular speech
delivered in an unknown tongue, a speech whose spirit you get but not the
particulars; or, to change the figure, you seem to be listening to a vigorous
instrument which is making a noise it thinks is a tune, but which to persons
not members of the band is only the martial tooting of a trombone, and merely
stirs the soul through the noise but does not convey a meaning.
The book's serenities of
self-satisfaction do almost seem to smack of a heavenly origin—they have no
blood-kin in the earth. It is more than human to be so placidly certain about
things, and so finely superior, and so airily content with one's performance.
Without ever presenting anything which may rightfully be called by the strong name
of Evidence, and sometimes without even mentioning a reason for a deduction at
all, it thunders out the startling words, 'I have Proved' so and so! It takes
the Pope and all the great guns of his church in battery assembled to
authoritatively settle and establish the meaning of a sole and single
unclarified passage of Scripture, and this at vast cost of time and study and
reflection, but the author of this work is superior to all that: she finds the
whole Bible in an unclarified condition, and at small expense of time and no
expense of mental effort she clarifies it from lid to lid, reorganises and
improves the meanings, then authoritatively settles and establishes them with
formulae which you cannot tell from 'Let there be light!' and 'Here you have
it!' It is the first time since the dawn-days of Creation that a Voice has gone
crashing through space with such placid and complacent confidence and command.
IV
A word upon a question of
authorship. Not that quite; but, rather, a question of emendation and revision.
We know that the Bible-Annex was not written by Mrs. Eddy, but was handed down
to her eighteen hundred years ago by the Angel of the Apocalypse; but did she
translate it alone, or did she have help? There seems to be evidence that she
had help. For there are four several copyrights on it—1875, 1885, 1890, 1894.
It did not come down in English, for in that language it could not have
acquired copyright—there were no copyright laws eighteen centuries ago, and in
my opinion no English language—at least up there. This makes it substantially
certain that the Annex is a translation. Then, was not the first translation
complete? If it was, on what grounds were the later copyrights granted?
I surmise that the first
translation was poor; and that a friend or friends of Mrs. Eddy mended its
English three times, and finally got it into its present shape, where the
grammar is plenty good enough, and the sentences are smooth and plausible
though they do not mean anything. I think I am right in this surmise, for Mrs.
Eddy cannot write English to-day, and this is argument that she never could. I
am not able to guess who did the mending, but I think it was not done by any
member of the Eddy Trust, nor by the editors of the 'Christian Science
Journal,' for their English is not much better than Mrs. Eddy's.
However, as to the main
point: it is certain that Mrs. Eddy did not doctor the Annex's English herself.
Her original, spontaneous, undoctored English furnishes ample proof of this.
Here are samples from recent articles from her unappeasable pen; double
columned with them are a couple of passages from the Annex. It will be seen
that they throw light. The italics are mine:
1. 'What plague spot, 'Therefore the efficient
or bacilli were (sic) gnawing remedy is to destroy the
(sic) at the heart of this patient's unfortunate belief,
metropolis... and bringing by both silently and audibly
it on bended knee? arguing the opposite facts in
Why, it was an institute that regard to harmonious being
had entered its vitals (sic) representing man as
that, among other things, healthful instead of diseased,
taught games,' et cetera. (P. and showing that it is
670, 'C.S.Journal,' article impossible for matter to suffer,
entitled 'A Narrative—by to feel pain or heat, to be
Mary Baker G. Eddy.') thirsty or sick.' (P. 375, Annex.)
2. 'Parks sprang up (sic)...
electric street cars run 'Man is never sick; for
(sic) merrily through several Mind is not sick, and matter
streets, concrete sidewalks cannot be. A false belief
and macadamised roads dotted is both the tempter and the
(sic) the place,' et cetera. tempted, the sin and the
(Ibid.) sinner, the disease and its
3. 'Shorn (sic) of its cause. It is well to be calm
suburbs it had indeed little in sickness; to be hopeful is
left to admire, save to (sic) still better; but to
such as fancy a skeleton understand that sickness is not
above ground breathing (sic) real, and that Truth can
slowly through a barren (sic) destroy it, is best of all, for
breast.' (Ibid.) it is the universal and perfect
remedy.' (Chapter xii.,
Annex.)
You notice the contrast
between the smooth, plausible, elegant, addled English of the doctored Annex
and the lumbering, ragged, ignorant output of the translator's natural,
spontaneous, and unmedicated penwork. The English of the Annex has been slicked
up by a very industrious and painstaking hand—but it was not Mrs. Eddy's.
If Mrs. Eddy really wrote or
translated the Annex, her original draft was exactly in harmony with the
English of her plague-spot or bacilli which were gnawing at the insides of the
metropolis and bringing its heart on bended knee, thus exposing to the eye the
rest of the skeleton breathing slowly through a barren breast. And it bore
little or no resemblance to the book as we have it now—now that the salaried
polisher has holystoned all of the genuine Eddyties out of it.
Will the plague-spot article
go into a volume just as it stands? I think not. I think the polisher will take
off his coat and vest and cravat and 'demonstrate over' it a couple of weeks
and sweat it into a shape something like the following—and then Mrs. Eddy will
publish it and leave people to believe that she did the polishing herself:
1. What injurious influence
was it that was affecting the city's morals? It was a social club which
propagated an interest in idle amusements, disseminated a knowledge of games,
et cetera.
2. By the magic of the new
and nobler influences the sterile spaces were transformed into wooded parks,
the merry electric car replaced the melancholy 'bus, smooth concrete the
tempestuous plank sidewalk, the macadamised road the primitive corduroy, et
cetera.
3. Its pleasant suburbs
gone, there was little left to admire save the wrecked graveyard with its
uncanny exposures.
The Annex contains one sole
and solitary humorous remark. There is a most elaborate and voluminous Index,
and it is preceded by this note:
'This Index will enable the
student to find any thought or idea contained in the book.'
V
No one doubts—certainly not
I—that the mind exercises a powerful influence over the body. From the
beginning of time, the sorcerer, the interpreter of dreams, the fortune-teller,
the charlatan, the quack, the wild medicine-man, the educated physician, the
mesmerist, and the hypnotist have made use of the client's imagination to help
them in their work. They have all recognised the potency and availability of
that force. Physicians cure many patients with a bread pill; they know that
where the disease is only a fancy, the patient's confidence in the doctor will
make the bread pill effective.
Faith in the doctor. Perhaps
that is the entire thing. It seems to look like it. In old times the King cured
the king's evil by the touch of the royal hand. He frequently made
extraordinary cures. Could his footman have done it? No—not in his own clothes.
Disguised as the King, could he have done it? I think we may not doubt it. I
think we may feel sure that it was not the King's touch that made the cure in
any instance, but the patient's faith in the efficacy of a King's touch.
Genuine and remarkable cures have been achieved through contact with the relics
of a saint. Is it not likely that any other bones would have done as well if
the substitution had been concealed from the patient? When I was a boy, a
farmer's wife who lived five miles from our village, had great fame as a
faith-doctor—that was what she called herself. Sufferers came to her from all
around, and she laid her hand upon them and said, 'Have faith—it is all that is
necessary,' and they went away well of their ailments. She was not a religious
woman, and pretended to no occult powers. She said that the patient's faith in
her did the work. Several times I saw her make immediate cures of severe
toothaches. My mother was the patient. In Austria there is a peasant who drives
a great trade in this sort of industry and has both the high and the low for
patients. He gets into prison every now and then for practising without a
diploma, but his business is as brisk as ever when he gets out, for his work is
unquestionably successful and keeps his reputation high. In Bavaria there is a
man who performed so many great cures that he had to retire from his profession
of stage-carpentering in order to meet the demand of his constantly increasing
body of customers. He goes on from year to year doing his miracles, and has
become very rich. He pretends to no religious helps, no supernatural aids, but
thinks there is something in his make-up which inspires the confidence of his
patients, and that it is this confidence which does the work and not some
mysterious power issuing from himself.
Within the last quarter of a
century, in America, several sects of curers have appeared under various names
and have done notable things in the way of healing ailments without the use of
medicines. There are the Mind Cure, the Faith Cure, the Prayer Cure, the
Mental-Science Cure, and the Christian-Science Cure; and apparently they all do
their miracles with the same old powerful instrument—the patient's imagination.
Differing names, but no difference in the process. But they do not give that
instrument the credit; each sect claims that its way differs from the ways of
the others.
They all achieve some cures,
there is no question about it; and the Faith Cure and the Prayer Cure probably
do no harm when they do no good, since they do not forbid the patient to help
out the cure with medicines if he wants to; but the others bar medicines, and
claim ability to cure every conceivable human ailment through the application
of their mental forces alone. They claim ability to cure malignant cancer, and
other affections which have never been cured in the history of the race. There
would seem to be an element of danger here. It has the look of claiming too
much, I think. Public confidence would probably be increased if less were claimed.
I believe it might be shown
that all the 'mind' sects except Christian Science have lucid intervals;
intervals in which they betray some diffidence, and in effect confess that they
are not the equals of the Deity; but if the Christian Scientist even stops with
being merely the equal of the Deity, it is not clearly provable by his
Christian-Science Amended Bible. In the usual Bible the Deity recognises pain,
disease, and death as facts, but the Christian Scientist knows better. Knows
better, and is not diffident about saying so.
The Christian Scientist was
not able to cure my stomach-ache and my cold; but the horse-doctor did it. This
convinces me that Christian Science claims too much. In my opinion it ought to
let diseases alone and confine itself to surgery. There it would have
everything its own way.
The horse-doctor charged me
thirty kreutzers, and I paid him; in fact I doubled it and gave him a shilling.
Mrs. Fuller brought in an itemised bill for a crate of broken bones mended in
two hundred and thirty-four places—one dollar per fracture.
'Nothing exists but Mind?'
'Nothing,' she answered.
'All else is substanceless, all else is imaginary.'
I gave her an imaginary
cheque, and now she is suing me for substantial dollars. It looks inconsistent.
VI
Let us consider that we are
all partially insane. It will explain us to each other, it will unriddle many
riddles, it will make clear and simple many things which are involved in
haunting and harassing difficulties and obscurities now.
Those of us who are not in
the asylum, and not demonstrably due there, are nevertheless no doubt insane in
one or two particulars—I think we must admit this; but I think that we are
otherwise healthy-minded. I think that when we all see one thing alike, it is
evidence that as regards that one thing, our minds are perfectly sound. Now
there are really several things which we do all see alike; things which we all
accept, and about which we do not dispute. For instance, we who are outside of
the asylum all agree that water seeks its level; that the sun gives light and
heat; that fire consumes; that fog is damp; that 6 times 6 are thirty-six; that
2 from 10 leave eight; that 8 and 7 are fifteen. These are perhaps the only
things we are agreed about; but although they are so few, they are of
inestimable value, because they make an infallible standard of sanity.
Whosoever accepts them we know to be substantially sane; sufficiently sane; in
the working essentials, sane. Whoever disputes a single one of them we know to
be wholly insane, and qualified for the asylum.
Very well, the man who
disputes none of them we concede to be entitled to go at large—but that is
concession enough; we cannot go any further than that; for we know that in all
matters of mere opinion that same man is insane—just as insane as we are; just
as insane as Shakespeare was, just as insane as the Pope is. We know exactly
where to put our finger upon his insanity; it is where his opinion differs from
ours.
That is a simple rule, and
easy to remember. When I, a thoughtful and unbiased Presbyterian, examine the
Koran, I know that beyond any question every Mohammedan is insane; not in all
things, but in religious matters. When a thoughtful and unbiased Mohammedan
examines the Westminster Catechism, he knows that beyond any question I am
spiritually insane. I cannot prove to him that he is insane, because you never
can prove anything to a lunatic—for that is a part of his insanity and the
evidence of it. He cannot prove to me that I am insane, for my mind has the
same defect that afflicts his. All democrats are insane, but not one of them
knows it; none but the republicans and mugwumps know it. All the republicans
are insane, but only the democrats and mugwumps can perceive it. The rule is
perfect; in all matters of opinion our adversaries are insane. When I look
around me I am often troubled to see how many people are mad. To mention only a
few:
The Atheist, The Shakers,
The Infidel, The Millerites,
The Agnostic, The Mormons,
The Baptist, The Laurence Oliphant
The Methodist, Harrisites,
The Catholic, and the other The Grand Lama's people,
115 Christian sects, the The Monarchists,
Presbyterian excepted, The Imperialists,
The 72 Mohammedan sects, The Democrats,
The Buddhist, The Republicans (but not
The Blavatsky-Buddhist, the Mugwumps),
The Nationalist, The Mind-Curists,
The Confucian, The Faith-Curists,
The Spiritualist, The Mental Scientists,
The 2,000 East Indian The Allopaths,
sects, The Homeopaths,
The Peculiar People, The Electropaths,
The Swedenborgians,
The—but there's no end to
the list; there are millions of them! And all insane; each in his own way;
insane as to his pet fad or opinion, but otherwise sane and rational.
This should move us to be
charitable toward one another's lunacies. I recognise that in his special
belief the Christian Scientist is insane, because he does not believe as I do;
but I hail him as my mate and fellow because I am as insane as he—insane from
his point of view, and his point of view is as authoritative as mine and worth
as much. That is to say, worth a brass farthing. Upon a great religious or
political question the opinion of the dullest head in the world is worth the
same as the opinion of the brightest head in the world—a brass farthing. How do
we arrive at this? It is simple: The affirmative opinion of a stupid man is
neutralised by the negative opinion of his stupid neighbour—no decision is
reached; the affirmative opinion of the intellectual giant Gladstone is
neutralised by the negative opinion of the intellectual giant Cardinal
Newman—no decision is reached. Opinions that prove nothing are, of course,
without value—any but a dead person knows that much. This obliges us to admit
the truth of the unpalatable proposition just mentioned above—that in disputed
matters political and religious one man's opinion is worth no more than his
peer's, and hence it follows that no man's opinion possesses any real value. It
is a humbling thought, but there is no way to get around it: all opinions upon
these great subjects are brass-farthing opinions.
It is a mere plain simple
fact—as clear and as certain as that 8 and 7 make fifteen. And by it we
recognise that we are all insane, as concerns those matters. If we were sane we
should all see a political or religious doctrine alike, there would be no
dispute: it would be a case of 8 and 7—just as it is in heaven, where all are
sane and none insane. There there is but one religion, one belief, the harmony
is perfect, there is never a discordant note.
Under protection of these
preliminaries I suppose I may now repeat without offence that the Christian
Scientist is insane. I mean him no discourtesy, and I am not charging—nor even
imagining—that he is insaner than the rest of the human race. I think he is
more picturesquely insane than some of us. At the same time, I am quite sure
that in one important and splendid particular he is saner than is the vast bulk
of the race.
Why is he insane? I told you
before: it is because his opinions are not ours. I know of no other reason, and
I do not need any other; it is the only way we have of discovering insanity
when it is not violent. It is merely the picturesqueness of his insanity that
makes it more interesting than my kind or yours. For instance, consider his
'little book'—the one described in the previous article; the 'little book'
exposed in the sky eighteen centuries ago by the flaming angel of the
Apocalypse and handed down in our day to Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy of New
Hampshire and translated by her, word for word, into English (with help of a
polisher), and now published and distributed in hundreds of editions by her at
a clear profit per volume, above cost, of 700 per cent.!—a profit which
distinctly belongs to the angel of the Apocalypse, and let him collect it if he
can; a 'little book' which the C.S. very frequently calls by just that name,
and always inclosed in quotation-marks to keep its high origin exultantly in
mind; a 'little book' which 'explains' and reconstructs and new-paints and
decorates the Bible and puts a mansard roof on it and a lightning-rod and all
the other modern improvements; a little book which for the present affects to
travel in yoke with the Bible and be friendly to it, and within half a century
will hitch it in the rear, and thenceforth travel tandem, itself in the lead,
in the coming great march of Christian Scientism through the Protestant
dominions of the planet.
Perhaps I am putting the
tandem arrangement too far away; perhaps five years might be nearer the mark
than fifty; for a Viennese lady told me last night that in the Christian
Science Mosque in Boston she noticed some things which seem to me to promise a
shortening of the interval; on one side there was a display of texts from the
New Testament, signed with the Saviour's initials, 'J.C.;' and on the opposite
side a display of texts from the 'little book' signed—with the author's mere
initials? No—signed with Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy's name in full. Perhaps the
Angel of the Apocalypse likes this kind of piracy. I made this remark lightly
to a Christian Scientist this morning, but he did not receive it lightly, but
said it was jesting upon holy things; he said there was no piracy, for the
angel did not compose the book, he only brought it—'God composed it.' I could
have retorted that it was a case of piracy just the same; that the displayed
texts should be signed with the Author's initials, and that to sign them with
the translator's train of names was another case of 'jesting upon holy things.'
However, I did not say these things, for this Scientist was a large person, and
although by his own doctrine we have no substance, but are fictions and
unrealities, I knew he could hit me an imaginary blow which would furnish me an
imaginary pain which could last me a week. The lady said that in that Mosque
there were two pulpits; in one of them was a man with the Former Bible, in the
other a woman with Mrs. Eddy's apocalyptic Annex; and from these books the man
and the woman were reading verse and verse about:
'Hungry ones throng to hear the Bible read in connection with the
text-book of Christian Science, “Science and Health, with Key to the
Scriptures,” by Mary Baker G. Eddy. These are our only preachers.
They are the word of God.'—Christian Science Journal, October
1898.
Are these things
picturesque? The Viennese lady told me that in a chapel of the Mosque there was
a picture or image of Mrs. Eddy, and that before it burns a never-extinguished
light. Is that picturesque? How long do you think it will be before the
Christian Scientist will be worshipping that image and praying to it? How long
do you think it will be before it is claimed that Mrs. Eddy is a Redeemer, a
Christ, or Christ's equal? Already her army of disciples speak of her
reverently as 'Our Mother.' How long will it be before they place her on the
steps of the Throne beside the Virgin—and later a step higher? First, Mary the
Virgin and Mary the Matron; later, with a change of Precedence, Mary the Matron
and Mary the Virgin. Let the artist get ready with his canvas and his brushes;
the new Renaissance is on its way, and there will be money in altar-canvases—a
thousand times as much as the Popes and their Church ever spent on the Old
Masters; for their riches were as poverty as compared with what is going to
pour into the treasure-chest of the Christian-Scientist Papacy by-and-by, let
us not doubt it. We will examine the financial outlook presently and see what
it promises. A favourite subject of the new Old Master will be the first verse
of the twelfth chapter of Revelation—a verse which Mrs. Eddy says (in her Annex
to the Scriptures) has 'one distinctive feature which has special reference to
the present age'—and to her, as is rather pointedly indicated:
'And there appeared a great wonder in heaven—a woman clothed with
the sun and the moon under her feet,' etc.
The woman clothed with the
sun will be a portrait of Mrs. Eddy.
Is it insanity to believe
that Christian Scientism is destined to make the most formidable show that any
new religion has made in the world since the birth and spread of Mohammedanism,
and that within a century from now it may stand second to Rome only, in numbers
and power in Christendom?
If this is a wild dream it
will not be easy to prove it is so just yet, I think. There seems argument that
it may come true. The Christian-Science 'boom' is not yet five years old; yet
already it has 500 churches and 1,000,000 members in America.
It has its start, you see,
and it is a phenomenally good one. Moreover, it is latterly spreading with a
constantly accelerating swiftness. It has a better chance to grow and prosper
and achieve permanency than any other existing 'ism;' for it has more to offer
than any other. The past teaches us that, in order to succeed, a movement like
this must not be a mere philosophy, it must be a religion; also, that it must
not claim entire originality, but content itself with passing for an
improvement on an existing religion, and show its hand later, when strong and
prosperous—like Mohammedanism.
Next, there must be
money—and plenty of it.
Next, the power and
authority and capital must be concentrated in the grip of a small and
irresponsible clique, with nobody outside privileged to ask questions or find
fault.
Next, as before remarked, it
must bait its hook with some new and attractive advantages over the baits
offered by the other religions.
A new movement equipped with
some of these endowments—like spiritualism, for instance—may count upon a
considerable success; a new movement equipped with the bulk of them—like
Mohammedanism, for instance—may count upon a widely extended conquest.
Mormonism had all the requisites but one—it had nothing new and nothing
valuable to bait with; and, besides, it appealed to the stupid and the ignorant
only. Spiritualism lacked the important detail of concentration of money and
authority in the hands of an irresponsible clique.
The above equipment is
excellent, admirable, powerful, but not perfect. There is yet another detail
which is worth the whole of it put together—and more; a detail which has never
been joined (in the beginning of a religious movement) to a supremely good
working equipment since the world began, until now: a new personage to worship.
Christianity had the Saviour, but at first and for generations it lacked money
and concentrated power. In Mrs. Eddy, Christian Science possesses the new
personage for worship, and in addition—here in the very beginning—a working
equipment that has not a flaw in it. In the beginning, Mohammedanism had no
money; and it has never had anything to offer its client but heaven—nothing
here below that was valuable. In addition to heaven hereafter, Christian
Science has present health and a cheerful spirit to offer—for cash—and in
comparison with this bribe all other this-world bribes are poor and cheap. You
recognise that this estimate is admissible, do you not?
To whom does Bellamy's
'Nationalism' appeal? Necessarily to the few: people who read and dream, and
are compassionate, and troubled for the poor and the hard-driven. To whom does
Spiritualism appeal? Necessarily to the few; its 'boom' has lasted for half a
century and I believe it claims short of four millions of adherents in America.
Who are attracted by Swedenborgianism and some of the other fine and delicate
'isms?' The few again: Educated people, sensitively organised, with superior
mental endowments, who seek lofty planes of thought and find their contentment
there. And who are attracted by Christian Science? There is no limit; its field
is horizonless; its appeal is as universal as is the appeal of Christianity
itself. It appeals to the rich, the poor, the high, the low, the cultured, the
ignorant, the gifted, the stupid, the modest, the vain, the wise, the silly,
the soldier, the civilian, the hero, the coward, the idler, the worker, the
godly, the godless, the freeman, the slave, the adult, the child; they who are
ailing, they who have friends that are ailing. To mass it in a phrase, its
clientele is the Human Race? Will it march? I think so.
VII
Remember its principal great
offer: to rid the Race of pain and disease. Can it do it? In large measure,
yes. How much of the pain and disease in the world is created by the
imaginations of the sufferers, and then kept alive by those same imaginations?
Four-fifths? Not anything short of that I should think. Can Christian Science
banish that four-fifths? I think so. Can any other (organised) force do it?
None that I know of. Would this be a new world when that was accomplished? And
a pleasanter one—for us well people, as well as for those fussy and fretting
sick ones? Would it seem as if there was not as much gloomy weather as there
used to be? I think so.
In the meantime would the
Scientist kill off a good many patients? I think so. More than get killed off now
by the legalised methods? I will take up that question presently.
At present I wish to ask you
to examine some of the Scientist's performances, as registered in his magazine,
'The Christian Science Journal'—October number, 1898. First, a Baptist clergyman
gives us this true picture of 'the average orthodox Christian'—and he could
have added that it is a true picture of the average (civilised) human being:
'He is a worried and fretted
and fearful man; afraid of himself and his propensities, afraid of colds and
fevers, afraid of treading on serpents or drinking deadly things.'
Then he gives us this
contrast:
'The average Christian
Scientist has put all anxiety and fretting under his feet. He does have a
victory over fear and care that is not achieved by the average orthodox
Christian.'
He has put all anxiety and
fretting under his feet. What proportion of your earnings or income would you
be willing to pay for that frame of mind, year in year out? It really outvalues
any price that can be put upon it. Where can you purchase it, at any outlay of
any sort, in any Church or out of it, except the Scientist's?
Well, it is the anxiety and
fretting about colds, and fevers, and draughts, and getting our feet wet, and
about forbidden food eaten in terror of indigestion, that brings on the cold
and the fever and the indigestion and the most of our other ailments; and so,
if the Science can banish that anxiety from the world I think it can reduce the
world's disease and pain about four-fifths.
In this October number many
of the redeemed testify and give thanks; and not coldly but with passionate
gratitude. As a rule they seem drunk with health, and with the surprise of it,
the wonder of it, the unspeakable glory and splendour of it, after a long sober
spell spent in inventing imaginary diseases and concreting them with
doctor-stuff. The first witness testifies that when 'this most beautiful Truth
first dawned on him' he had 'nearly all the ills that flesh is heir to;' that
those he did not have he thought he had—and thus made the tale about complete.
What was the natural result? Why, he was a dump-pit 'for all the doctors,
druggists, and patent medicines of the country.' Christian Science came to his
help, and 'the old sick conditions passed away,' and along with them the 'dismal
forebodings' which he had been accustomed to employ in conjuring up ailments.
And so he was a healthy and cheerful man, now, and astonished.
But I am not astonished, for
from other sources I know what must have been his method of applying Christian Science.
If I am in the right, he watchfully and diligently diverted his mind from
unhealthy channels and compelled it to travel in healthy ones. Nothing
contrivable by human invention could be more formidably effective than that, in
banishing imaginary ailments and in closing the entrances against subsequent
applicants of their breed. I think his method was to keep saying, 'I am well! I
am sound!—sound and well! well and sound! Perfectly sound, perfectly well! I
have no pain; there's no such thing as pain! I have no disease; there's no such
thing as disease! Nothing is real but Mind; all is Mind, All-Good, Good-Good,
Life, Soul, Liver, Bones, one of a series, ante and pass the buck!'
I do not mean that that was
exactly the formula used, but that it doubtless contains the spirit of it. The
Scientist would attach value to the exact formula, no doubt, and to the
religious spirit in which it was used. I should think that any formula that
would divert the mind from unwholesome channels and force it into healthy ones
would answer every purpose with some people, though not with all. I think it
most likely that a very religious man would find the addition of the religious
spirit a powerful reinforcement in his case.
The second witness testifies
that the Science banished 'an old organic trouble' which the doctor and the
surgeon had been nursing with drugs and the knife for seven years.
He calls it his 'claim.' A
surface-miner would think it was not his claim at all, but the property of the
doctor and his pal the surgeon—for he would be misled by that word, which is
Christian-Science slang for 'ailment.' The Christian Scientist has no ailment;
to him there is no such thing, and he will not use the lying word. All that
happens to him is, that upon his attention an imaginary disturbance sometimes
obtrudes itself which claims to be an ailment, but isn't.
This witness offers
testimony for a clergyman seventy years old who had preached forty years in a
Christian church, and has not gone over to the new sect. He was 'almost blind
and deaf.' He was treated by the C.S. method, and 'when he heard the voice of
Truth he saw spiritually.' Saw spiritually. It is a little indefinite; they had
better treat him again. Indefinite testimonies might properly be
waste-basketed, since there is evidently no lack of definite ones procurable,
but this C.S. magazine is poorly edited, and so mistakes of this kind must be
expected.
The next witness is a
soldier of the Civil War. When Christian Science found him, he had in stock the
following claims:
Indigestion,
Rheumatism,
Catarrh,
Chalky deposits in
Shoulder joints,
Arm joints,
Hand joints,
Atrophy of the muscles of
Arms,
Shoulders,
Stiffness of all those joints,
Insomnia,
Excruciating pains most of the time.
These claims have a very
substantial sound. They came of exposure in the campaigns. The doctors did all
they could, but it was little. Prayers were tried, but 'I never realised any
physical relief from that source.' After thirty years of torture he went to a
Christian Scientist and took an hour's treatment and went home painless. Two
days later he 'began to eat like a well man.' Then 'the claims vanished—some at
once, others more gradually;' finally, 'they have almost entirely disappeared.'
And—a thing which is of still greater value—he is now 'contented and happy.'
That is a detail which, as earlier remarked, is a Scientist-Church specialty.
With thirty-one years' effort the Methodist Church had not succeeded in
furnishing it to this harassed soldier.
And so the tale goes on.
Witness after witness bulletins his claims, declares their prompt abolishment,
and gives Mrs. Eddy's Discovery the praise. Milk-leg is cured; nervous
prostration is cured; consumption is cured; and St. Vitus's dance made a
pastime. And now and then an interesting new addition to the Science slang
appears on the page. We have 'demonstrations over' chilblains and such things.
It seems to be a curtailed way of saying 'demonstrations of the power of Christian-Science
Truth over the fiction which masquerades under the name of Chilblains.' The
children as well as the adults, share in the blessings of the Science. 'Through
the study of the “little book” they are learning how to be healthful, peaceful,
and wise.' Sometimes they are cured of their little claims by the professional
healer, and sometimes more advanced children say over the formula and cure
themselves.
A little Far-Western girl of
nine, equipped with an adult vocabulary, states her age and says, 'I thought I
would write a demonstration to you.' She had a claim derived from getting flung
over a pony's head and landed on a rock-pile. She saved herself from disaster
by remember to say 'God is All' while she was in the air. I couldn't have done
it. I shouldn't have even thought of it. I should have been too excited.
Nothing but Christian Science could have enabled that child to do that calm and
thoughtful and judicious thing in those circumstances. She came down on her
head, and by all the rules she should have broken it; but the intervention of
the formula prevented that, so the only claim resulting was a blackened eye.
Monday morning it was still swollen and shut. At school 'it hurt pretty
bad—that is, it seemed to.' So 'I was excused, and went down in the basement
and said, “Now I am depending on mamma instead of God, and I will depend on God
instead of mamma.”' No doubt this would have answered; but, to make sure, she
added Mrs. Eddy to the team and recited 'the Scientific Statement of Being,'
which is one of the principal incantations, I judge. Then 'I felt my eye
opening.' Why, it would have opened an oyster. I think it is one of the
touchingest things in child-history, that pious little rat down cellar pumping
away at the Scientific Statement of Being.
There is a page about
another good child—little Gordon. Little Gordon 'came into the world without
the assistance of surgery or anaesthetics.' He was a 'demonstration.' A
painless one; therefore his coming evoked 'joy and thankfulness to God and the
Discoverer of Christian Science.' It is a noticeable feature of this
literature—the so frequent linking together of the Two Beings in an equal bond;
also of Their Two Bibles. When little Gordon was two years old, 'he was playing
horse on the bed, where I had left my “little book.” I noticed him stop in his
play, take the book carefully in his little hands, kiss it softly, then look
about for the highest place of safety his arms could reach, and put it there.'
This pious act filled the mother 'with such a train of thought as I had never
experienced before. I thought of the sweet mother of long ago who kept things
in her heart,' etc. It is a bold comparison; however, unconscious profanations
are about as common in the mouths of the lay membership of the new Church as
are frank and open ones in the mouths of its consecrated chiefs.
Some days later, the family
library—Christian Science books—was lying in a deep-seated window. It was
another chance for the holy child to show off. He left his play and went there
and pushed all the books to one side except the Annex. 'It he took in both
hands, slowly raised it to his lips, then removed it carefully, and seated
himself in the window.' It had seemed to the mother too wonderful to be true,
that first time; but now she was convinced that 'neither imagination nor
accident had anything to do with it.' Later, little Gordon let the author of
his being see him do it. After that he did it frequently; probably every time
anybody was looking. I would rather have that child than a chromo. If this tale
has any object, it is to intimate that the inspired book was supernaturally
able to convey a sense of its sacred and awful character to this innocent
little creature without the intervention of outside aids. The magazine is not
edited with high-priced discretion. The editor has a claim, and he ought to get
it treated.
Among other witnesses, there
is one who had a 'jumping toothache,' which several times tempted her to
'believe that there was sensation in matter, but each time it was overcome by
the power of Truth.' She would not allow the dentist to use cocaine, but sat
there and let him punch and drill and split and crush the tooth, and tear and
slash its ulcerations, and pull out the nerve, and dig out fragments of bone;
and she wouldn't once confess that it hurt. And to this day she thinks it
didn't, and I have not a doubt that she is nine-tenths right, and that her
Christian Science faith did her better service than she could have gotten out
of cocaine.
There is an account of a boy
who got broken all up into small bits by an accident, but said over the
Scientific Statement of Being, or some of the other incantations, and got well
and sound without having suffered any real pain and without the intrusion of a
surgeon. I can believe this, because my own case was somewhat similar, as per
my former article.
Also there is an account of
the restoration to perfect health, in a single night, of a fatally injured
horse, by the application of Christian Science. I can stand a good deal, but I
recognise that the ice is getting thin here. That horse had as many as fifty
claims: how could he demonstrate over them? Could he do the All-Good,
Good-Good, Good-Gracious, Liver, Bones, Truth, All down but Nine, Set them up
on the Other Alley? Could he intone the Scientific Statement of Being? Now,
could he? Wouldn't it give him a relapse? Let us draw the line at horses.
Horses and furniture.
There is a plenty of other
testimonies in the magazine, but these quoted samples will answer. They show
the kind of trade the Science is driving. Now we come back to the question;
Does it kill a patient here and there and now and then? We must concede it.
Does it compensate for this? I am persuaded that it can make a plausible
showing in that direction. For instance: when it lays its hands upon a soldier
who has suffered thirty years of helpless torture and makes him whole in body
and mind, what is the actual sum of that achievement? This, I think: that it
has restored to life a subject who had essentially died ten deaths a year for
thirty years, and each of them a long and painful one. But for its interference
that man would have essentially died thirty times more, in the three years
which have since elapsed. There are thousand of young people in the land who
are now ready to enter upon a life-long death similar to that man's. Every time
the Science captures one of these and secures to him life-long immunity from
imagination-manufactured disease, it may plausibly claim that in his person it
has saved 300 lives. Meantime it will kill a man every now and then; but no
matter, it will still be ahead on the credit side.
VIII
'We consciously declare that “Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures,” was foretold as well as its author, Mary Baker Eddy, in
Revelation x. She is the “mighty angel,” or God's highest thought
to this age (verse 1), giving us the spiritual interpretation of the
Bible in the “little book open” (verse 2). Thus we prove that
Christian Science is the second coming of Christ—Truth—Spirit.'
—Lecture by Dr. George Tomkins, D.D., C.S.
There you have it in plain
speech. She is the mighty angel; she is the divinely and officially sent bearer
of God's highest thought. For the present, she brings the Second Advent. We
must expect that before she has been in her grave fifty years she will be
regarded by her following as having been herself the Second Advent. She is
already worshipped, and we must expect this feeling to spread territorially,
and also to deepen in intensity (1).
Particularly after her
death; for then, as anyone can foresee, Eddy-worship will be taught in the
Sunday-schools and pulpits of the cult. Already whatever she puts her
trade-mark on, though it be only a memorial spoon, is holy and is eagerly and
passionately and gratefully bought by the disciple, and becomes a fetish in his
house. I say bought, for the Boston Christian-Science Trust gives nothing away;
everything it has for sale. And the terms are cash; and not cash only but cash
in advance. Its god is Mrs. Eddy first, then the Dollar. Not a spiritual
Dollar, but a real one. From end to end of the Christian-Science literature not
a single (material) thing in the world is conceded to be real, except the
Dollar. But all through and through its advertisements that reality is eagerly
and persistently recognised. The hunger of the Trust for the Dollar, its
adoration of the Dollar, its lust after the Dollar, its ecstasy in the mere
thought of the Dollar—there has been nothing like it in the world in any age or
country, nothing so coarse, nothing so lubricous, nothing so bestial, except a
French novel's attitude towards adultery.
The Dollar is hunted down in
all sorts of ways; the Christian-Science Mother-Church and Bargain-Counter in
Boston peddles all kinds of spiritual wares to the faithful, always at
extravagant prices, and always on the one condition—cash, cash in advance. The
Angel of the Apocalypse could not go there and get a copy of his own pirated
book on credit. Many, many precious Christian-Science things are to be had
there—for cash: Bible Lessons; Church Manual; C.S. Hymnal; History of the
building of the Mother-Church; lot of Sermons; Communion Hymn, 'Saw Ye My
Saviour,' by Mrs. Eddy, half a dollar a copy, 'words used by special permission
of Mrs. Eddy.' Also we have Mrs. Eddy's and the Angel's little Bible-Annex in
eight styles of binding at eight kinds of war-prices: among these a sweet thing
in 'levant, divinity circuit, leather lined to edge, round corners, gold edge,
silk sewed, each, prepaid, $6,' and if you take a million you get them a
shilling cheaper—that is to say, 'prepaid, $5.75.' Also we have Mrs. Eddy's
'Miscellaneous Writings,' at noble big prices, the divinity-circuit style
heading the extortions, shilling discount where you take an edition. Next comes
'Christ and Christmas,' by the fertile Mrs. Eddy—a poem—I would God I could see
it—price $3, cash in advance. Then follow five more books by Mrs. Eddy at
highwaymen's rates, as usual, some of them in 'leatherette covers,' some of
them in 'pebbled cloth,' with divinity circuit, compensation balance, twin
screw, and the other modern improvements: and at the same bargain counter can
be had the 'Christian Science Journal.' I wish it were in refined taste to
apply a rudely and ruggedly descriptive epithet to that literary slush-bucket,
so as to give one an accurate idea of what it is like. I am moved to do it, but
I must not: it is better to be refined than accurate when one is talking about
a production like that.
Christian-Science literary
oleomargarine is a monopoly of the Mother Church Headquarters Factory in
Boston; none genuine without the trade-mark of the Trust. You must apply there,
and not elsewhere; and you pay your money before you get your soap-fat.
The Trust has still other
sources of income. Mrs. Eddy is president (and perhaps proprietor?) of the
Trust's Metaphysical College in Boston, where the student who has practised
C.S. healing during three years the best he knew how perfects himself in the
game by a two weeks' course, and pays one hundred dollars for it! And I have a
case among my statistics where the student had a three weeks' course and paid
three hundred for it.
The Trust does love the
Dollar when it isn't a spiritual one.
In order to force the sale
of Mrs. Eddy's Bible-Annex, no healer, Metaphysical College-bred or other, is
allowed to practise the game unless he possess a copy of that holy nightmare.
That means a large and constantly augmenting income for the Trust. No C.S.
family would consider itself loyal or pious or pain-proof without an Annex or
two in the house. That means an income for the Trust—in the near future—of
millions: not thousands—millions a year.
No member, young or old, of
a Christian-Scientist church can retain that membership unless he pay
'capitation tax' to the Boston Trust every year. That means an income for the
Trust—in the near future—of millions more per year.
It is a reasonably safe
guess that in America in 1910 there will be 10,000,000 Christian Scientists,
and 3,000,000 in Great Britain; that these figures will be trebled by 1920;
that in America in 1910 the Christian Scientists will be a political force, in
1920 politically formidable—to remain that, permanently. And I think it a
reasonable guess that the Trust (which is already in our day pretty brusque in
its ways) will then be the most insolent and unscrupulous and tyrannical
politico-religious master that has dominated a people since the palmy days of
the Inquisition. And a stronger master than the strongest of bygone times,
because this one will have a financial strength not dreamed of by any
predecessor; as effective a concentration of irresponsible power as any
predecessor had; in the railway, the telegraph, and the subsidised newspaper,
better facilities for watching and managing his empire than any predecessor has
had; and after a generation or two he will probably divide Christendom with the
Catholic Church.
The Roman Church has a
perfect organisation, and it has an effective centralisation of power—but not
of its cash. Its multitude of Bishops are rich, but their riches remain in
large measure in their own hands. They collect from 200,000,000 of people, but
they keep the bulk of the result at home. The Boston Pope of by-and-by will
draw his dollar-a-head capitation-tax from 300,000,000 of the human race, and
the Annex and the rest of his book-shop will fetch in double as much more; and
his Metaphysical Colleges, the annual pilgrimage to Mrs. Eddy's tomb, from all
over the world—admission, the Christian-Science Dollar (payable in
advance)—purchases of consecrated glass beads, candles, memorial spoons,
aureoled chromo-portraits and bogus autographs of Mrs. Eddy, cash offerings at
her shrine—no crutches of cured cripples received, and no imitations of
miraculously restored broken legs and necks allowed to be hung up except when
made out of the Holy Metal and proved by fire-assay; cash for miracles worked
at the tomb: these money-sources, with a thousand to be yet invented and
ambushed upon the devotee, will bring the annual increment well up above a billion.
And nobody but the Trust will have the handling of it. No Bishops appointed
unless they agree to hand in 90 per cent. of the catch. In that day the Trust
will monopolise the manufacture and sale of the Old and New Testaments as well
as the Annex, and raise their price to Annex rates, and compel the devotee to
buy (for even to-day a healer has to have the Annex and the Scriptures or he is
not allowed to work the game), and that will bring several hundred million
dollars more. In those days the Trust will have an income approaching
$5,000,000 a day, and no expenses to be taken out of it; no taxes to pay, and
no charities to support. That last detail should not be lightly passed over by
the reader; it is well entitled to attention.
No charities to support. No,
nor even to contribute to. One searches in vain the Trust's advertisements and
the utterances of its pulpit for any suggestion that it spends a penny on
orphans, widows, discharged prisoners, hospitals, ragged schools, night
missions, city missions, foreign missions, libraries, old people's homes, or
any other object that appeals to a human being's purse through his heart.(2)
I have hunted, hunted, and
hunted, by correspondence and otherwise, and have not yet got upon the track of
a farthing that the Trust has spent upon any worthy object. Nothing makes a
Scientist so uncomfortable as to ask him if he knows of a case where Christian
Science has spent money on a benevolence, either among its own adherents or
elsewhere. He is obliged to say no. And then one discovers that the person
questioned has been asked the question many times before, and that it is
getting to be a sore subject with him. Why a sore subject? Because he has
written his chiefs and asked with high confidence for an answer that will
confound these questioners—and the chiefs did not reply. He has written
again—and then again—not with confidence, but humbly, now, and has begged for
defensive ammunition in the voice of supplication. A reply does at last come—to
this effect: 'We must have faith in Our Mother, and rest content in the
conviction that whatever She(3) does with the money it is in accordance with
orders from Heaven, for She does no act of any kind without first
“demonstrating over” it.'
That settles it—as far as
the disciple is concerned. His Mind is entirely satisfied with that answer; he
gets down his Annex and does an incantation or two, and that mesmerises his
spirit and puts that to sleep—brings it peace. Peace and comfort and joy, until
some inquirer punctures the old sore again.
Through friends in America I
asked some questions, and in some cases got definite and informing answers; in
other cases the answers were not definite and not valuable. From the definite
answers I gather that the 'capitation-tax' is compulsory, and that the sum is
one dollar. To the question, 'Does any of the money go to charities?' the
answer from an authoritative source was: 'No, not in the sense usually
conveyed by this word.' (The italics are mine.) That answer is
cautious. But definite, I think—utterly and unassailably definite—although
quite Christian-scientifically foggy in its phrasing. Christian Science is
generally foggy, generally diffuse, generally garrulous. The writer was aware
that the first word in his phrase answered the question which I was asking, but
he could not help adding nine dark words. Meaningless ones, unless explained by
him. It is quite likely—as intimated by him—that Christian Science has invented
a new class of objects to apply the word charity to, but without an explanation
we cannot know what they are. We quite easily and naturally and confidently
guess that they are in all cases objects which will return five hundred per
cent. on the Trust's investment in them, but guessing is not knowledge; it is
merely, in this case, a sort of nine-tenths certainty deducible from what we
think we know of the Trust's trade principles and its sly and furtive and
shifty ways.
Sly? Deep? Judicious? The
Trust understands business. The Trust does not give itself away. It defeats all
the attempts of us impertinents to get at its trade secrets. To this day, after
all our diligence, we have not been able to get it to confess what it does with
the money. It does not even let its own disciples find out. All it says is,
that the matter has been 'demonstrated over.' Now and then a lay Scientist
says, with a grateful exultation, that Mrs. Eddy is enormously rich, but he
stops there; as to whether any of the money goes to other charities or not, he
is obliged to admit that he does not know. However, the Trust is composed of
human beings; and this justifies the conjecture that if it had a charity on its
list which it did not need to blush for, we should soon hear of it.
'Without money and without
price.' Those used to be the terms. Mrs. Eddy's Annex cancels them. The motto
of Christian Science is 'The labourer is worthy of his hire.' And now that it
has been 'demonstrated over,' we find its spiritual meaning to be, 'Do anything
and everything your hand may find to do; and charge cash for it, and collect
the money in advance.' The Scientist has on his tongue's end a cut-and-dried,
Boston-supplied set of rather lean arguments whose function is to show that it
is a Heaven-commanded duty to do this, and that the croupiers of the game have
no choice by to obey.
The Trust seems to be a
reincarnation. Exodus xxxii.4.
I have no reverence for Mrs.
Eddy and the rest of the Trust—if there is a rest—but I am not lacking in
reverence for the sincerities of the lay membership of the new Church. There is
every evidence that the lay members are entirely sincere in their faith, and I
think sincerity is always entitled to honour and respect, let the inspiration
of the sincerity be what it may. Zeal and sincerity can carry a new religion
further than any other missionary except fire and sword, and I believe that the
new religion will conquer the half of Christendom in a hundred years. I am not
intending this as a compliment to the human race, I am merely stating an
opinion. And yet I think that perhaps it is a compliment to the race. I keep in
mind that saying of an orthodox preacher—quoted further back. He conceded that
this new Christianity frees its possessor's life from frets, fears, vexations,
bitterness, and all sorts of imagination-propagated maladies and pains, and
fills his world with sunshine and his heart with gladness. If Christian
Science, with this stupendous equipment—and final salvation added—cannot win
half the Christian globe, I must be badly mistaken in the make-up of the human
race.
I think the Trust will be
handed down like the other papacy, and will always know how to handle its
limitless cash. It will press the button; the zeal, the energy, the sincerity,
the enthusiasm of its countless vassals will do the rest.
IX
The power which a man's
imagination has over his body to heal it or make it sick is a force which none
of us is born without. The first man had it, the last one will possess it. If
left to himself a man is most likely to use only the mischievous half of the
force—the half which invents imaginary ailments for him and cultivates them:
and if he is one of these very wise people he is quite likely to scoff at the
beneficent half of the force and deny its existence. And so, to heal or help
that man, two imaginations are required: his own and some outsider's. The
outsider, B, must imagine that his incantations are the healing power that is
curing A, and A must imagine that this is so. It is not so, at all; but no
matter, the cure is effected, and that is the main thing. The outsider's work
is unquestionably valuable; so valuable that it may fairly be likened to the
essential work performed by the engineer when he handles the throttle and turns
on the steam: the actual power is lodged exclusively in the engine, but if the
engine were left alone it would never start of itself. Whether the engineer be
named Jim, or Bob, or Tom, it is all one—his services are necessary, and he is
entitled to such wage as he can get you to pay. Whether he be named Christian
Scientist, or Mental Scientist, or Mind Curist, or Lourdes Miracle-Worker, or
King's-Evil Expert, it is all one,—he is merely the Engineer, he simply turns
on the same old steam and the engine does the whole work.
In the case of the
cure-engine it is a distinct advantage to clothe the engineer in religious
overalls and give him a pious name. It greatly enlarges the business, and does
no one any harm.
The Christian-Scientist
engineer drives exactly the same trade as the other engineers, yet he
out-prospers the whole of them put together. Is it because he has captured the
takingest name? I think that that is only a small part of it. I think that the
secret of his high prosperity lies elsewhere:
The Christian Scientist has
organised the business. Now that was certainly a gigantic idea. There is more
intellect in it than would be needed in the invention of a couple of millions
of Eddy Science-and-Health Bible Annexes. Electricity, in limitless volume, has
existed in the air and the rocks and the earth and everywhere since time
began—and was going to waste all the while. In our time we have organised that
scattered and wandering force and set it to work, and backed the business with
capital, and concentrated it in few and competent hands, and the results are as
we see.
The Christian Scientist has
taken a force which has been lying idle in every member of the human race since
time began, and has organised it, and backed the business with capital, and
concentrated it at Boston headquarters in the hands of a small and very
competent Trust, and there are results.
Therein lies the promise
that this monopoly is going to extend its commerce wide in the earth. I think
that if the business were conducted in the loose and disconnected fashion
customary with such things, it would achieve but little more than the modest
prosperity usually secured by unorganised great moral and commercial ventures;
but I believe that so long as this one remains compactly organised and closely
concentrated in a Trust, the spread of its dominion will continue.
VIENNA: May 1, 1899.
(1) After raising a dead
child to life, the disciple who did it writes an account of her performance, to
Mrs. Eddy, and closes it thus: 'My prayer daily is to be more spiritual, that I
may do more as you would have me do... and may we all love you more and so live
it that the world may know that the Christ is come.'—Printed in the Concord,
N.H., Independent Statesman, March 9, 1899. If this is no worship, it is a good
imitation of it.
(2) In the past two years
the membership of the Established Church of England have given voluntary contributions
amounting to $73,000,000 to the Church's benevolent enterprises. Churches that
give have nothing to hide.
(3) I may be introducing the
capital S a little early—still it is on its way.
5.IS HE LIVING OR IS HE
DEAD?
I was spending the month of
March 1892 at Mentone, in the Riviera. At this retired spot one has all the
advantages, privately, which are to be had publicly at Monte Carlo and Nice, a
few miles farther along. That is to say, one has the flooding sunshine, the
balmy air and the brilliant blue sea, without the marring additions of human
pow-wow and fuss and feathers and display. Mentone is quiet, simple, restful,
unpretentious; the rich and the gaudy do not come there. As a rule, I mean, the
rich do not come there. Now and then a rich man comes, and I presently got
acquainted with one of these. Partially to disguise him I will call him Smith.
One day, in the Hotel des Anglais, at the second breakfast, he exclaimed:
'Quick! Cast your eye on the
man going out at the door. Take in every detail of him.'
'Why?'
'Do you know who he is?'
'Yes. He spent several days
here before you came. He is an old, retired, and very rich silk manufacturer
from Lyons, they say, and I guess he is alone in the world, for he always looks
sad and dreamy, and doesn't talk with anybody. His name is Theophile Magnan.'
I supposed that Smith would
now proceed to justify the large interest which he had shown in Monsieur
Magnan, but, instead, he dropped into a brown study, and was apparently lost to
me and to the rest of the world during some minutes. Now and then he passed his
fingers through his flossy white hair, to assist his thinking, and meantime he
allowed his breakfast to go on cooling. At last he said:
'No, it's gone; I can't call
it back.'
'Can't call what back?'
'It's one of Hans Andersen's
beautiful little stories. But it's gone fro me. Part of it is like this: A
child has a caged bird, which it loves but thoughtlessly neglects. The bird
pours out its song unheard and unheeded; but, in time, hunger and thirst assail
the creature, and its song grows plaintive and feeble and finally ceases—the
bird dies. The child comes, and is smitten to the heart with remorse: then,
with bitter tears and lamentations, it calls its mates, and they bury the bird
with elaborate pomp and the tenderest grief, without knowing, poor things, that
it isn't children only who starve poets to death and then spend enough on their
funerals and monuments to have kept them alive and made them easy and
comfortable. Now—'
But here we were
interrupted. About ten that evening I ran across Smith, and he asked me up to
his parlour to help him smoke and drink hot Scotch. It was a cosy place, with
its comfortable chairs, its cheerful lamps, and its friendly open fire of
seasoned olive-wood. To make everything perfect, there was a muffled booming of
the surf outside. After the second Scotch and much lazy and contented chat,
Smith said:
'Now we are properly
primed—I to tell a curious history and you to listen to it. It has been a
secret for many years—a secret between me and three others; but I am going to
break the seal now. Are you comfortable?'
'Perfectly. Go on.'
Here follows what he told
me:
'A long time ago I was a
young artist—a very young artist, in fact—and I wandered about the country
parts of France, sketching here and sketching there, and was presently joined
by a couple of darling young Frenchmen who were at the same kind of thing that
I was doing. We were as happy as we were poor, or as poor as we were
happy—phrase it to suit yourself. Claude Frere and Carl Boulanger—these are the
names of those boys; dear, dear fellows, and the sunniest spirits that ever
laughed at poverty and had a noble good time in all weathers.
'At last we ran hard aground
in a Breton village, and an artist as poor as ourselves took us in and
literally saved us from starving—Francois Millet—'
'What! the great Francois
Millet?'
'Great? He wasn't any
greater than we were, then. He hadn't any fame, even in his own village; and he
was so poor that he hadn't anything to feed us on but turnips, and even the
turnips failed us sometimes. We four became fast friends, doting friends,
inseparables. We painted away together with all our might, piling up stock,
piling up stock, but very seldom getting rid of any of it. We had lovely times
together; but, O my soul! how we were pinched now and then!
'For a little over two years
this went on. At last, one day, Claude said:
'“Boys, we've come to the
end. Do you understand that?—absolutely to the end. Everybody has
struck—there's a league formed against us. I've been all around the village and
it's just as I tell you. They refuse to credit us for another centime until all
the odds and ends are paid up.”
'This struck us as cold.
Every face was blank with dismay. We realised that our circumstances were desperate,
now. There was a long silence. Finally, Millet said with a sigh:
'“Nothing occurs to
me—nothing. Suggest something, lads.”
'There was no response,
unless a mournful silence may be called a response. Carl got up, and walked
nervously up and down a while, then said:
'“It's a shame! Look at
these canvases: stacks and stacks of as good pictures as anybody in Europe
paints—I don't care who he is. Yes, and plenty of lounging strangers have said
the same—or nearly that, anyway.”
'“But didn't buy,” Millet said.
'“No matter, they said it;
and it's true, too. Look at your 'Angelus' there! Will anybody tell me—”
'“Pah, Carl—My 'Angelus!' I
was offered five francs for it.”
'“When?”
'“Who offered it?”
'“Where is he?”
'“Why didn't you take it?”
'“Come—don't all speak at
once. I thought he would give more—I was sure of it—he looked it—so I asked him
eight.”
'“Well—and then?”
'“He said he would call
again.”
'“Thunder and lightning!
Why, Francois—”
'“Oh, I know—I know! It was
a mistake, and I was a fool. Boys, I meant for the best; you'll grant me that,
and I—”
'“Why, certainly, we know
that, bless your dear heart; but don't you be a fool again.”
'“I? I wish somebody would
come along and offer us a cabbage for it—you'd see!”
'“A cabbage! Oh, don't name
it—it makes my mouth water. Talk of things less trying.”
'“Boys,” said Carl, “do
these pictures lack merit? Answer me that.”
'“No!”
'“Aren't they of very great
and high merit? Answer me that.”
'“Yes.”
'“Of such great and high
merit that, if an illustrious name were attached to them they would sell at
splendid prices. Isn't it so?”
'“Certainly it is. Nobody
doubts that.”
'“But—I'm not joking—isn't
it so?”
'“Why, of course it's so—and
we are not joking. But what of it. What of it? How does that concern us?”
'“In this way, comrades—we'll
attach an illustrious name to them!”
'The lively conversation
stopped. The faces were turned inquiringly upon Carl. What sort of riddle might
this be? Where was an illustrious name to be borrowed? And who was to borrow
it?
'Carl sat down, and said:
'“Now, I have a perfectly
serious thing to propose. I think it is the only way to keep us out of the
almshouse, and I believe it to be a perfectly sure way. I base this opinion
upon certain multitudinous and long-established facts in human history. I
believe my project will make us all rich.”
'“Rich! You've lost your
mind.”
'“No, I haven't.”
'“Yes, you have—you've lost
your mind. What do you call rich?”
'“A hundred thousand francs
apiece.”
'“He has lost his mind. I
knew it.”
'“Yes, he has. Carl, privation
has been too much for you, and—”
'“Carl, you want to take a
pill and get right to bed.”
'“Bandage him first—bandage
his head, and then—”
'“No, bandage his heels; his
brains have been settling for weeks—I've noticed it.”
'“Shut up!” said Millet,
with ostensible severity, “and let the boy have his say. Now, then—come out
with your project, Carl. What is it?”
'“Well, then, by way of
preamble I will ask you to note this fact in human history: that the merit of
many a great artist has never been acknowledged until after he was starved and
dead. This has happened so often that I make bold to found a law upon it. This
law: that the merit of every great unknown and neglected artist must and will
be recognised and his pictures climb to high prices after his death. My project
is this: we must cast lots—one of us must die.”
'The remark fell so calmly
and so unexpectedly that we almost forgot to jump. Then there was a wild chorus
of advice again—medical advice—for the help of Carl's brain; but he waited
patiently for the hilarity to calm down, and then went on again with his
project:
'“Yes, one of us must die,
to save the others—and himself. We will cast lots. The one chosen shall be
illustrious, all of us shall be rich. Hold still, now—hold still; don't
interrupt—I tell you I know what I am talking about. Here is the idea. During
the next three months the one who is to die shall paint with all his might,
enlarge his stock all he can—not pictures, no! skeleton sketches, studies,
parts of studies, fragments of studies, a dozen dabs of the brush on
each—meaningless, of course, but his, with his cipher on them; turn out fifty a
day, each to contain some peculiarity or mannerism easily detectable as
his—they're the things that sell, you know, and are collected at fabulous
prices for the world's museums, after the great man is gone; we'll have a ton
of them ready—a ton! And all that time the rest of us will be busy supporting
the moribund, and working Paris and the dealers—preparations for the coming
event, you know; and when everything is hot and just right, we'll spring the
death on them and have the notorious funeral. You get the idea?”
'“N-o; at least, not qu—”
'“Not quite? Don't you see?
The man doesn't really die; he changes his name and vanishes; we bury a dummy,
and cry over it, with all the world to help. And I—”
'But he wasn't allowed to
finish. Everybody broke out into a rousing hurrah of applause; and all jumped
up and capered about the room and fell on each other's necks in transports of
gratitude and joy. For hours we talked over the great plan, without ever
feeling hungry; and at last, when all the details had been arranged
satisfactorily, we cast lots and Millet was elected—elected to die, as we
called it. Then we scraped together those things which one never parts with
until he is betting them against future wealth—keepsake trinkets and
suchlike—and these we pawned for enough to furnish us a frugal farewell supper
and breakfast, and leave us a few francs over for travel, and a stake of
turnips and such for Millet to live on for a few days.
'Next morning, early, the
three of us cleared out, straightway after breakfast—on foot, of course. Each
of us carried a dozen of Millet's small pictures, purposing to market them.
Carl struck for Paris, where he would start the work of building up Millet's
name against the coming great day. Claude and I were to separate, and scatter
abroad over France.
'Now, it will surprise you
to know what an easy and comfortable thing we had. I walked two days before I
began business. Then I began to sketch a villa in the outskirts of a big
town—because I saw the proprietor standing on an upper veranda. He came down to
look on—I thought he would. I worked swiftly, intending to keep him interested.
Occasionally he fired off a little ejaculation of approbation, and by-and-by he
spoke up with enthusiasm, and said I was a master!
'I put down my brush,
reached into my satchel, fetched out a Millet, and pointed to the cipher in the
corner. I said, proudly:
'“I suppose you recognise
that? Well, he taught me! I should think I ought to know my trade!”
'The man looked guiltily
embarrassed, and was silent. I said sorrowfully:
'“You don't mean to intimate
that you don't know the cipher of Francois Millet!”
'Of course he didn't know
that cipher; but he was the gratefullest man you ever saw, just the same, for
being let out of an uncomfortable place on such easy terms. He said:
'“No! Why, it is Millet's,
sure enough! I don't know what I could have been thinking of. Of course I
recognise it now.”
'Next, he wanted to buy it;
but I said that although I wasn't rich I wasn't that poor. However, at last, I
let him have it for eight hundred francs.'
'Eight hundred!'
'Yes. Millet would have sold
it for a pork chop. Yes, I got eight hundred francs for that little thing. I
wish I could get it back for eighty thousand. But that time's gone by. I made a
very nice picture of that man's house and I wanted to offer it to him for ten
francs, but that wouldn't answer, seeing I was the pupil of such a master, so I
sold it to him for a hundred. I sent the eight hundred francs straight to
Millet from that town and struck out again next day.
'But I didn't walk—no. I
rode. I have ridden ever since. I sold one picture every day, and never tried
to sell two. I always said to my customer:
'“I am a fool to sell a
picture of Francois Millet's at all, for that man is not going to live three
months, and when he dies his pictures can't be had for love or money.”
'I took care to spread that
little fact as far as I could, and prepare the world for the event.
'I take credit to myself for
our plan of selling the pictures—it was mine. I suggested it that last evening
when we were laying out our campaign, and all three of us agreed to give it a
good fair trial before giving it up for some other. It succeeded with all of
us. I walked only two days, Claude walked two—both of us afraid to make Millet
celebrated too close to home—but Carl walked only half a day, the bright,
conscienceless rascal, and after that he travelled like a duke.
'Every now and then we got
in with a country editor and started an item around through the press; not an
item announcing that a new painter had been discovered, but an item which let
on that everybody knew Francois Millet; not an item praising him in any way,
but merely a word concerning the present condition of the “master”—sometimes
hopeful, sometimes despondent, but always tinged with fears for the worst. We
always marked these paragraphs, and sent the papers to all the people who had
bought pictures of us.
'Carl was soon in Paris and
he worked things with a high hand. He made friends with the correspondents, and
got Millet's condition reported to England and all over the continent, and
America, and everywhere.
'At the end of six weeks
from the start, we three met in Paris and called a halt, and stopped sending
back to Millet for additional pictures. The boom was so high, and everything so
ripe, that we saw that it would be a mistake not to strike now, right away,
without waiting any longer. So we wrote Millet to go to bed and begin to waste
away pretty fast, for we should like him to die in ten days if he could get
ready.
'Then we figured up and
found that among us we had sold eighty-five small pictures and studies, and had
sixty-nine thousand francs to show for it. Carl had made the last sale and the
most brilliant one of all. He sold the “Angelus” for twenty-two hundred francs.
How we did glorify him!—not foreseeing that a day was coming by-and-by when
France would struggle to own it and a stranger would capture it for five
hundred and fifty thousand, cash.
'We had a wind-up champagne
supper that night, and next day Claude and I packed up and went off to nurse
Millet through his last days and keep busybodies out of the house and send
daily bulletins to Carl in Paris for publication in the papers of several
continents for the information of a waiting world. The sad end came at last,
and Carl was there in time to help in the final mournful rites.
'You remember that great
funeral, and what a stir it made all over the globe, and how the illustrious of
two worlds came to attend it and testify their sorrow. We four—still
inseparable—carried the coffin, and would allow none to help. And we were right
about that, because it hadn't anything in it but a wax figure, and any other
coffin-bearers would have found fault with the weight. Yes, we same old four,
who had lovingly shared privation together in the old hard times now gone for
ever, carried the cof—'
'Which four?'
'We four—for Millet helped
to carry his own coffin. In disguise, you know. Disguised as a relative—distant
relative.'
'Astonishing!'
'But true just the same.
Well, you remember how the pictures went up. Money? We didn't know what to do
with it. There's a man in Paris to-day who owns seventy Millet pictures. He
paid us two million francs for them. And as for the bushels of sketches and
studies which Millet shovelled out during the six weeks that we were on the
road, well, it would astonish you to know the figure we sell them at
nowadays—that is, when we consent to let one go!'
'It is a wonderful history,
perfectly wonderful!'
'Yes—it amounts to that.'
'Whatever became of Millet?'
'Can you keep a secret?'
'I can.'
'Do you remember the man I
called your attention to in the dining room to-day? That was Francois Millet.'
'Great—'
'Scott! Yes. For once they
didn't starve a genius to death and then put into other pockets the rewards he
should have had himself. This song-bird was not allowed to pipe out its heart
unheard and then be paid with the cold pomp of a big funeral. We looked out for
that.'
6.MY DEBUT AS A LITERARY
PERSON
In those early days I had
already published one little thing ('The Jumping Frog') in an Eastern paper,
but I did not consider that that counted. In my view, a person who published
things in a mere newspaper could not properly claim recognition as a Literary
Person: he must rise away above that; he must appear in a magazine. He would
then be a Literary Person; also, he would be famous—right away. These two
ambitions were strong upon me. This was in 1866. I prepared my contribution,
and then looked around for the best magazine to go up to glory in. I selected
the most important one in New York. The contribution was accepted. I signed it
'MARK TWAIN;' for that name had some currency on the Pacific coast, and it was
my idea to spread it all over the world, now, at this one jump. The article
appeared in the December number, and I sat up a month waiting for the January
number; for that one would contain the year's list of contributors, my name
would be in it, and I should be famous and could give the banquet I was
meditating.
I did not give the banquet.
I had not written the 'MARK TWAIN' distinctly; it was a fresh name to Eastern
printers, and they put it 'Mike Swain' or 'MacSwain,' I do not remember which.
At any rate, I was not celebrated and I did not give the banquet. I was a
Literary Person, but that was all—a buried one; buried alive.
My article was about the
burning of the clipper-ship 'Hornet' on the line, May 3, 1866. There were
thirty-one men on board at the time, and I was in Honolulu when the fifteen
lean and ghostly survivors arrived there after a voyage of forty-three days in
an open boat, through the blazing tropics, on ten days' rations of food. A very
remarkable trip; but it was conducted by a captain who was a remarkable man,
otherwise there would have been no survivors. He was a New Englander of the
best sea-going stock of the old capable times—Captain Josiah Mitchell.
I was in the islands to
write letters for the weekly edition of the Sacramento 'Union,' a rich and
influential daily journal which hadn't any use for them, but could afford to
spend twenty dollars a week for nothing. The proprietors were lovable and
well-beloved men: long ago dead, no doubt, but in me there is at least one
person who still holds them in grateful remembrance; for I dearly wanted to see
the islands, and they listened to me and gave me the opportunity when there was
but slender likelihood that it could profit them in any way.
I had been in the islands
several months when the survivors arrived. I was laid up in my room at the
time, and unable to walk. Here was a great occasion to serve my journal, and I
not able to take advantage of it. Necessarily I was in deep trouble. But by
good luck his Excellency Anson Burlingame was there at the time, on his way to
take up his post in China, where he did such good work for the United States.
He came and put me on a stretcher and had me carried to the hospital where the
shipwrecked men were, and I never needed to ask a question. He attended to all
of that himself, and I had nothing to do but make the notes. It was like him to
take that trouble. He was a great man and a great American, and it was in his
fine nature to come down from his high office and do a friendly turn whenever
he could.
We got through with this
work at six in the evening. I took no dinner, for there was no time to spare if
I would beat the other correspondents. I spent four hours arranging the notes
in their proper order, then wrote all night and beyond it; with this result:
that I had a very long and detailed account of the 'Hornet' episode ready at
nine in the morning, while the other correspondents of the San Francisco
journals had nothing but a brief outline report—for they didn't sit up. The
now-and-then schooner was to sail for San Francisco about nine; when I reached
the dock she was free forward and was just casting off her stern-line. My fat
envelope was thrown by a strong hand, and fell on board all right, and my
victory was a safe thing. All in due time the ship reached San Francisco, but
it was my complete report which made the stir and was telegraphed to the New
York papers, by Mr. Cash; he was in charge of the Pacific bureau of the 'New
York Herald' at the time.
When I returned to
California by-and-by, I went up to Sacramento and presented a bill for general
correspondence at twenty dollars a week. It was paid. Then I presented a bill
for 'special' service on the 'Hornet' matter of three columns of solid
nonpareil at a hundred dollars a column. The cashier didn't faint, but he came
rather near it. He sent for the proprietors, and they came and never uttered a
protest. They only laughed in their jolly fashion, and said it was robbery, but
no matter; it was a grand 'scoop' (the bill or my 'Hornet' report, I didn't know
which): 'Pay it. It's all right.' The best men that ever owned a newspaper.
The 'Hornet' survivors
reached the Sandwich Islands the 15th of June. They were mere skinny skeletons;
their clothes hung limp about them and fitted them no better than a flag fits
the flag-staff in a calm. But they were well nursed in the hospital; the people
of Honolulu kept them supplied with all the dainties they could need; they
gathered strength fast, and were presently nearly as good as new. Within a
fortnight the most of them took ship for San Francisco; that is, if my dates
have not gone astray in my memory. I went in the same ship, a sailing-vessel.
Captain Mitchell of the 'Hornet' was along; also the only passengers the
'Hornet' had carried. These were two young men from Stamford,
Connecticut—brothers: Samuel and Henry Ferguson. The 'Hornet' was a clipper of
the first class and a fast sailer; the young men's quarters were roomy and
comfortable, and were well stocked with books, and also with canned meats and
fruits to help out the ship-fare with; and when the ship cleared from New York
harbour in the first week of January there was promise that she would make
quick and pleasant work of the fourteen or fifteen thousand miles in front of
her. As soon as the cold latitudes were left behind and the vessel entered
summer weather, the voyage became a holiday picnic. The ship flew southward
under a cloud of sail which needed no attention, no modifying or change of any
kind, for days together. The young men read, strolled the ample deck, rested
and drowsed in the shade of the canvas, took their meals with the captain; and
when the day was done they played dummy whist with him till bed-time. After the
snow and ice and tempests of the Horn, the ship bowled northward into summer weather
again, and the trip was a picnic once more.
Until the early morning of
the 3rd of May. Computed position of the ship 112 degrees 10 minutes longitude,
latitude 2 degrees above the equator; no wind, no sea—dead calm; temperature of
the atmosphere, tropical, blistering, unimaginable by one who has not been
roasted in it. There was a cry of fire. An unfaithful sailor had disobeyed the
rules and gone into the booby-hatch with an open light to draw some varnish
from a cask. The proper result followed, and the vessel's hours were numbered.
There was not much time to
spare, but the captain made the most of it. The three boats were
launched—long-boat and two quarter-boats. That the time was very short and the
hurry and excitement considerable is indicated by the fact that in launching
the boats a hole was stove in the side of one of them by some sort of
collision, and an oar driven through the side of another. The captain's first
care was to have four sick sailors brought up and placed on deck out of harm's
way—among them a 'Portyghee.' This man had not done a day's work on the voyage,
but had lain in his hammock four months nursing an abscess. When we were taking
notes in the Honolulu hospital and a sailor told this to Mr. Burlingame, the
third mate, who was lying near, raised his head with an effort, and in a weak
voice made this correction—with solemnity and feeling:
'Raising abscesses! He had a
family of them. He done it to keep from standing his watch.'
Any provisions that lay
handy were gathered up by the men and two passengers and brought and dumped on
the deck where the 'Portyghee' lay; then they ran for more. The sailor who was
telling this to Mr. Burlingame added:
'We pulled together
thirty-two days' rations for the thirty-one men that way.'
The third mate lifted his
head again and made another correction—with bitterness:
'The “Portyghee” et
twenty-two of them while he was soldiering there and nobody noticing. A damned
hound.'
The fire spread with great
rapidity. The smoke and flame drove the men back, and they had to stop their
incomplete work of fetching provisions, and take to the boats with only ten
days' rations secured.
Each boat had a compass, a
quadrant, a copy of Bowditch's 'Navigator,' and a Nautical Almanac, and the
captain's and chief mate's boats had chronometers. There were thirty-one men
all told. The captain took an account of stock, with the following result: four
hams, nearly thirty pounds of salt pork, half-box of raisins, one hundred
pounds of bread, twelve two-pound cans of oysters, clams, and assorted meats, a
keg containing four pounds of butter, twelve gallons of water in a forty-gallon
'scuttle-butt', four one-gallon demijohns full of water, three bottles of
brandy (the property of passengers), some pipes, matches, and a hundred pounds
of tobacco. No medicines. Of course the whole party had to go on short rations
at once.
The captain and the two
passengers kept diaries. On our voyage to San Francisco we ran into a calm in
the middle of the Pacific, and did not move a rod during fourteen days; this
gave me a chance to copy the diaries. Samuel Ferguson's is the fullest; I will
draw upon it now. When the following paragraph was written the doomed ship was
about one hundred and twenty days out from port, and all hands were putting in
the lazy time about as usual, as no one was forecasting disaster.
(Diary entry) May 2. Latitude 1 degree 28 minutes N., longitude 111
degrees 38 minutes W. Another hot and sluggish day; at one time,
however, the clouds promised wind, and there came a slight breeze
—just enough to keep us going. The only thing to chronicle to-day
is the quantities of fish about; nine bonitos were caught this
forenoon, and some large albacores seen. After dinner the first
mate hooked a fellow which he could not hold, so he let the line go
to the captain, who was on the bow. He, holding on, brought the
fish to with a jerk, and snap went the line, hook and all. We also
saw astern, swimming lazily after us, an enormous shark, which must
have been nine or ten feet long. We tried him with all sorts of
lines and a piece of pork, but he declined to take hold. I suppose
he had appeased his appetite on the heads and other remains of the
bonitos we had thrown overboard.
Next day's entry records the
disaster. The three boats got away, retired to a short distance, and stopped.
The two injured ones were leaking badly; some of the men were kept busy baling,
others patched the holes as well as they could. The captain, the two
passengers, and eleven men were in the long-boat, with a share of the
provisions and water, and with no room to spare, for the boat was only
twenty-one feet long, six wide, and three deep. The chief mate and eight men
were in one of the small boats, the second mate and seven men in the other. The
passengers had saved no clothing but what they had on, excepting their
overcoats. The ship, clothed in flame and sending up a vast column of black
smoke into the sky, made a grand picture in the solitudes of the sea, and hour
after hour the outcasts sat and watched it. Meantime the captain ciphered on
the immensity of the distance that stretched between him and the nearest
available land, and then scaled the rations down to meet the emergency; half a
biscuit for dinner; one biscuit and some canned meat for dinner; half a biscuit
for tea; a few swallows of water for each meal. And so hunger began to gnaw
while the ship was still burning.
(Diary entry) May 4. The ship burned all night very brightly, and
hopes are that some ship has seen the light and is bearing down upon
us. None seen, however, this forenoon, so we have determined to go
together north and a little west to some islands in 18 degrees or 19
degrees north latitude and 114 degrees to 115 degrees west
longitude, hoping in the meantime to be picked up by some ship. The
ship sank suddenly at about 5 A.M. We find the sun very hot and
scorching, but all try to keep out of it as much as we can.
They did a quite natural
thing now: waited several hours for that possible ship that might have seen the
light to work her slow way to them through the nearly dead calm. Then they gave
it up and set about their plans. If you will look at the map you will say that
their course could be easily decided. Albemarle Island (Galapagos group) lies
straight eastward nearly a thousand miles; the islands referred to in the diary
as 'some islands' (Revillagigedo Islands) lie, as they think, in some widely
uncertain region northward about one thousand miles and westward one hundred or
one hundred and fifty miles. Acapulco, on the Mexican coast, lies about
north-east something short of one thousand miles. You will say random rocks in
the ocean are not what is wanted; let them strike for Acapulco and the solid
continent. That does look like the rational course, but one presently guesses
from the diaries that the thing would have been wholly irrational—indeed,
suicidal. If the boats struck for Albemarle they would be in the doldrums all
the way; and that means a watery perdition, with winds which are wholly crazy,
and blow from all points of the compass at once and also perpendicularly. If
the boats tried for Acapulco they would get out of the doldrums when half-way
there—in case they ever got half-way—and then they would be in lamentable case,
for there they would meet the north-east trades coming down in their teeth, and
these boats were so rigged that they could not sail within eight points of the
wind. So they wisely started northward, with a slight slant to the west. They
had but ten days' short allowance of food; the long-boat was towing the others;
they could not depend on making any sort of definite progress in the doldrums,
and they had four or five hundred miles of doldrums in front of them yet. They
are the real equator, a tossing, roaring, rainy belt, ten or twelve hundred
miles broad, which girdles the globe.
It rained hard the first
night and all got drenched, but they filled up their water-butt. The brothers
were in the stern with the captain, who steered. The quarters were cramped; no
one got much sleep. 'Kept on our course till squalls headed us off.'
Stormy and squally the next
morning, with drenching rains. A heavy and dangerous 'cobbling' sea. One
marvels how such boats could live in it. Is it called a feat of desperate
daring when one man and a dog cross the Atlantic in a boat the size of a
long-boat, and indeed it is; but this long-boat was overloaded with men and
other plunder, and was only three feet deep. 'We naturally thought often of all
at home, and were glad to remember that it was Sacrament Sunday, and that
prayers would go up from our friends for us, although they know not our peril.'
The captain got not even a
cat-nap during the first three days and nights, but he got a few winks of sleep
the fourth night. 'The worst sea yet.' About ten at night the captain changed
his course and headed east-north-east, hoping to make Clipperton Rock. If he
failed, no matter; he would be in a better position to make those other
islands. I will mention here that he did not find that rock.
On May 8 no wind all day;
sun blistering hot; they take to the oars. Plenty of dolphins, but they
couldn't catch any. 'I think we are all beginning to realise more and more the
awful situation we are in.' 'It often takes a ship a week to get through the
doldrums; how much longer, then, such a craft as ours?' 'We are so crowded that
we cannot stretch ourselves out for a good sleep, but have to take it any way
we can get it.'
Of course this feature will
grow more and more trying, but it will be human nature to cease to set it down;
there will be five weeks of it yet—we must try to remember that for the
diarist; it will make our beds the softer.
May 9 the sun gives him a
warning: 'Looking with both eyes, the horizon crossed thus +.' 'Henry keeps
well, but broods over our troubles more than I wish he did.' They caught two
dolphins; they tasted well. 'The captain believed the compass out of the way,
but the long-invisible north star came out—a welcome sight—and endorsed the
compass.'
May 10, 'latitude 7 degrees
0 minutes 3 seconds N., longitude 111 degrees 32 minutes W.' So they have made
about three hundred miles of northing in the six days since they left the
region of the lost ship. 'Drifting in calms all day.' And baking hot, of
course; I have been down there, and I remember that detail. 'Even as the
captain says, all romance has long since vanished, and I think the most of us
are beginning to look the fact of our awful situation full in the face.' 'We
are making but little headway on our course.' Bad news from the rearmost boat:
the men are improvident; 'they have eaten up all of the canned meats brought
from the ship, and are now growing discontented.' Not so with the chief mate's
people—they are evidently under the eye of a man.
Under date of May 11:
'Standing still! or worse; we lost more last night than we made yesterday.' In
fact, they have lost three miles of the three hundred of northing they had so
laboriously made. 'The cock that was rescued and pitched into the boat while
the ship was on fire still lives, and crows with the breaking of dawn, cheering
us a good deal.' What has he been living on for a week? Did the starving men
feed him from their dire poverty? 'The second mate's boat out of water again, showing
that they over-drink their allowance. The captain spoke pretty sharply to
them.' It is true: I have the remark in my old note-book; I got it of the third
mate in the hospital at Honolulu. But there is not room for it here, and it is
too combustible, anyway. Besides, the third mate admired it, and what he
admired he was likely to enhance.
They were still watching
hopefully for ships. The captain was a thoughtful man, and probably did not
disclose on them that that was substantially a waste of time. 'In this latitude
the horizon is filled with little upright clouds that look very much like
ships.' Mr. Ferguson saved three bottles of brandy from his private stores when
he left the ship, and the liquor came good in these days. 'The captain serves
out two tablespoonfuls of brandy and water—half and half—to our crew.' He means
the watch that is on duty; they stood regular watches—four hours on and four
off. The chief mate was an excellent officer—a self-possessed, resolute, fine,
all-round man. The diarist makes the following note—there is character in it:
'I offered one bottle of brandy to the chief mate, but he declined, saying he
could keep the after-boat quiet, and we had not enough for all.'
HENRY FERGUSON'S DIARY TO
DATE, GIVEN IN FULL:
May 4, 5, 6, doldrums. May 7, 8, 9, doldrums. May 10, 11, 12,
doldrums. Tells it all. Never saw, never felt, never heard, never
experienced such heat, such darkness, such lightning and thunder,
and wind and rain, in my life before.
That boy's diary is of the
economical sort that a person might properly be expected to keep in such
circumstances—and be forgiven for the economy, too. His brother, perishing of
consumption, hunger, thirst, blazing heat, drowning rains, loss of sleep, lack
of exercise, was persistently faithful and circumstantial with his diary from
the first day to the last—an instance of noteworthy fidelity and resolution. In
spite of the tossing and plunging boat he wrote it close and fine, in a hand as
easy to read as print. They can't seem to get north of 7 degrees N.; they are
still there the next day:
(Diary entry) May 12. A good rain last night, and we caught a good
deal, though not enough to fill up our tank, pails, &c. Our object
is to get out of these doldrums, but it seems as if we cannot do it.
To-day we have had it very variable, and hope we are on the northern
edge, thought we are not much above 7 degrees. This morning we all
thought we had made out a sail; but it was one of those deceiving
clouds. Rained a good deal to-day, making all hands wet and
uncomfortable; we filled up pretty nearly all our water-pots,
however. I hope we may have a fine night, for the captain certainly
wants rest, and while there is any danger of squalls, or danger of
any kind, he is always on hand. I never would have believed that
open boats such as ours, with their loads, could live in some of the
seas we have had.
During the night, 12th-13th,
'the cry of A SHIP! brought us to our feet.' It seemed to be the glimmer of a
vessel's signal-lantern rising out of the curve of the sea. There was a season
of breathless hope while they stood watching, with their hands shading their
eyes, and their hearts in their throats; then the promise failed: the light was
a rising star. It is a long time ago—thirty-two years—and it doesn't matter
now, yet one is sorry for their disappointment. 'Thought often of those at home
to-day, and of the disappointment they will feel next Sunday at not hearing
from us by telegraph from San Francisco.' It will be many weeks yet before the
telegram is received, and it will come as a thunderclap of joy then, and with
the seeming of a miracle, for it will raise from the grave men mourned as dead.
'To-day our rations were reduced to a quarter of a biscuit a meal, with about
half a pint of water.' This is on May 13, with more than a month of voyaging in
front of them yet! However, as they do not know that, 'we are all feeling
pretty cheerful.'
In the afternoon of the 14th
there was a thunderstorm, 'which toward night seemed to close in around us on
every side, making it very dark and squally.' 'Our situation is becoming more
and more desperate,' for they were making very little northing 'and every day
diminishes our small stock of provisions.' They realise that the boats must
soon separate, and each fight for its own life. Towing the quarter-boats is a
hindering business.
That night and next day,
light and baffling winds and but little progress. Hard to bear, that persistent
standing still, and the food wasting away. 'Everything in a perfect sop; and
all so cramped, and no change of clothes.' Soon the sun comes out and roasts
them. 'Joe caught another dolphin to-day; in his maw we found a flying-fish and
two skipjacks.' There is an event, now, which rouses an enthusiasm of hope: a
land-bird arrives! It rests on the yard for awhile, and they can look at it all
they like, and envy it, and thank it for its message. As a subject of talk it
is beyond price—a fresh new topic for tongues tired to death of talking upon a
single theme: Shall we ever see the land again; and when? Is the bird from
Clipperton Rock? They hope so; and they take heart of grace to believe so. As
it turned out the bird had no message; it merely came to mock.
May 16, 'the cock still
lives, and daily carols forth his praise.' It will be a rainy night, 'but I do
not care if we can fill up our water-butts.'
On the 17th one of those
majestic spectres of the deep, a water-spout, stalked by them, and they
trembled for their lives. Young Henry set it down in his scanty journal with
the judicious comment that 'it might have been a fine sight from a ship.'
From Captain Mitchell's log
for this day: 'Only half a bushel of bread-crumbs left.' (And a month to wander
the seas yet.')
It rained all night and all
day; everybody uncomfortable. Now came a sword-fish chasing a bonito; and the
poor thing, seeking help and friends, took refuge under the rudder. The big
sword-fish kept hovering around, scaring everybody badly. The men's mouths
watered for him, for he would have made a whole banquet; but no one dared to
touch him, of course, for he would sink a boat promptly if molested. Providence
protected the poor bonito from the cruel sword-fish. This was just and right.
Providence next befriended the shipwrecked sailors: they got the bonito. This
was also just and right. But in the distribution of mercies the sword-fish
himself got overlooked. He now went away; to muse over these subtleties,
probably. The men in all the boats seem pretty well; the feeblest of the sick
ones (not able for a long time to stand his watch on board the ship) 'is
wonderfully recovered.' This is the third mate's detected 'Portyghee' that
raised the family of abscesses.
Passed a most awful night. Rained hard nearly all the time, and
blew in squalls, accompanied by terrific thunder and lightning from
all points of the compass.—Henry's Log.
Most awful night I ever witnessed.—Captain's Log.
Latitude, May 18, 11 degrees
11 minutes. So they have averaged but forty miles of northing a day during the
fortnight. Further talk of separating. 'Too bad, but it must be done for the
safety of the whole.' 'At first I never dreamed, but now hardly shut my eyes
for a cat-nap without conjuring up something or other—to be accounted for by
weakness, I suppose.' But for their disaster they think they would be arriving
in San Francisco about this time. 'I should have liked to send B—-the telegram
for her birthday.' This was a young sister.
On the 19th the captain called
up the quarter-boats and said one would have to go off on its own hook. The
long-boat could no longer tow both of them. The second mate refused to go, but
the chief mate was ready; in fact, he was always ready when there was a man's
work to the fore. He took the second mate's boat; six of its crew elected to
remain, and two of his own crew came with him (nine in the boat, now, including
himself). He sailed away, and toward sunset passed out of sight. The diarist
was sorry to see him go. It was natural; one could have better spared the
'Portyghee.' After thirty-two years I find my prejudice against this
'Portyghee' reviving. His very looks have long passed out of my memory; but no
matter, I am coming to hate him as religiously as ever. 'Water will now be a
scarce article, for as we get out of the doldrums we shall get showers only now
and then in the trades. This life is telling severely on my strength. Henry
holds out first-rate.' Henry did not start well, but under hardships he
improved straight along.
Latitude, Sunday, May 20, 12
degrees 0 minutes 9 seconds. They ought to be well out of the doldrums now, but
they are not. No breeze—the longed-for trades still missing. They are still
anxiously watching for a sail, but they have only 'visions of ships that come
to naught—the shadow without the substance.' The second mate catches a booby
this afternoon, a bird which consists mainly of feathers; 'but as they have no
other meat, it will go well.'
May 21, they strike the
trades at last! The second mate catches three more boobies, and gives the
long-boat one. Dinner 'half a can of mincemeat divided up and served around,
which strengthened us somewhat.' They have to keep a man bailing all the time;
the hole knocked in the boat when she was launched from the burning ship was
never efficiently mended. 'Heading about north-west now.' They hope they have
easting enough to make some of these indefinite isles. Failing that, they think
they will be in a better position to be picked up. It was an infinitely slender
chance, but the captain probably refrained from mentioning that.
The next day is to be an
eventful one.
(Diary entry) May 22. Last night wind headed us off, so that part
of the time we had to steer east-south-east and then
west-north-west, and so on. This morning we were all startled by a
cry of 'SAIL HO!' Sure enough, we could see it! And for a time we
cut adrift from the second mate's boat, and steered so as to
attract its attention. This was about half-past five A.M. After
sailing in a state of high excitement for almost twenty minutes we
made it out to be the chief mate's boat. Of course we were glad to
see them and have them report all well; but still it was a bitter
disappointment to us all. Now that we are in the trades it seems
impossible to make northing enough to strike the isles. We have
determined to do the best we can, and get in the route of vessels.
Such being the determination, it became necessary to cast off the
other boat, which, after a good deal of unpleasantness, was done,
we again dividing water and stores, and taking Cox into our boat.
This makes our number fifteen. The second mate's crew wanted to
all get in with us, and cast the other boat adrift. It was a very
painful separation.
So these isles that they
have struggled for so long and so hopefully have to be given up. What with
lying birds that come to mock, and isles that are but a dream, and 'visions of
ships that come to naught,' it is a pathetic time they are having, with much
heartbreak in it. It was odd that the vanished boat, three days lost to sight
in that vast solitude, should appear again. But it brought Cox—we can't be
certain why. But if it hadn't, the diarist would never have seen the land
again.
(Diary entry) Our chances as we go west increase in regard to being
picked up, but each day our scanty fare is so much reduced. Without
the fish, turtle, and birds sent us, I do not know how we should
have got along. The other day I offered to read prayers morning and
evening for the captain, and last night commenced. The men,
although of various nationalities and religions, are very attentive,
and always uncovered. May God grant my weak endeavour its issue!
Latitude, May 24, 14 degrees 18 minutes N. Five oysters apiece for
dinner and three spoonfuls of juice, a gill of water, and a piece of
biscuit the size of a silver dollar. 'We are plainly getting
weaker—God have mercy upon us all!' That night heavy seas break
over the weather side and make everybody wet and uncomfortable
besides requiring constant baling.
Next day 'nothing particular
happened.' Perhaps some of us would have regarded it differently. 'Passed a
spar, but not near enough to see what it was.' They saw some whales blow; there
were flying-fish skimming the seas, but none came aboard. Misty weather, with
fine rain, very penetrating.
Latitude, May 26, 15 degrees
50 minutes. They caught a flying-fish and a booby, but had to eat them raw.
'The men grow weaker, and, I think, despondent; they say very little, though.'
And so, to all the other imaginable and unimaginable horrors, silence is
added—the muteness and brooding of coming despair. 'It seems our best chance to
get in the track of ships with the hope that some one will run near enough to
our speck to see it.' He hopes the other boards stood west and have been picked
up. (They will never be heard of again in this world.)
(Diary entry) Sunday, May 27, Latitude 16 degrees 0 minutes 5
seconds; longitude, by chronometer, 117 degrees 22 minutes. Our
fourth Sunday! When we left the ship we reckoned on having about
ten days' supplies, and now we hope to be able, by rigid economy, to
make them last another week if possible.(1) Last night the sea was
comparatively quiet, but the wind headed us off to about
west-north-west, which has been about our course all day to-day.
Another flying-fish came aboard last night, and one more to-day
—both small ones. No birds. A booby is a great catch, and a good
large one makes a small dinner for the fifteen of us—that is, of
course, as dinners go in the 'Hornet's' long-boat. Tried this
morning to read the full service to myself, with the Communion, but
found it too much; am too weak, and get sleepy, and cannot give
strict attention; so I put off half till this afternoon. I trust
God will hear the prayers gone up for us at home to-day, and
graciously answer them by sending us succour and help in this our
season of deep distress.
The next day was 'a good day
for seeing a ship.' But none was seen. The diarist 'still feels pretty well,'
though very weak; his brother Henry 'bears up and keeps his strength the best
of any on board.' 'I do not feel despondent at all, for I fully trust that the
Almighty will hear our and the home prayers, and He who suffers not a sparrow
to fall sees and cares for us, His creatures.'
Considering the situation
and circumstances, the record for next day, May 29, is one which has a surprise
in it for those dull people who think that nothing but medicines and doctors
can cure the sick. A little starvation can really do more for the average sick
man than can the best medicines and the best doctors. I do not mean a
restricted diet; I mean total abstention from food for one or two days. I speak
from experience; starvation has been my cold and fever doctor for fifteen
years, and has accomplished a cure in all instances. The third mate told me in
Honolulu that the 'Portyghee' had lain in his hammock for months, raising his
family of abscesses and feeding like a cannibal. We have seen that in spite of
dreadful weather, deprivation of sleep, scorching, drenching, and all manner of
miseries, thirteen days of starvation 'wonderfully recovered' him. There were
four sailors down sick when the ship was burned. Twenty-five days of pitiless
starvation have followed, and now we have this curious record: 'All the men are
hearty and strong; even the ones that were down sick are well, except poor
Peter.' When I wrote an article some months ago urging temporary abstention
from food as a remedy for an inactive appetite and for disease, I was accused
of jesting, but I was in earnest. 'We are all wonderfully well and strong,
comparatively speaking.' On this day the starvation regime drew its belt a
couple of buckle-holes tighter: the bread ration was reduced from the usual
piece of cracker the size of a silver dollar to the half of that, and one meal
was abolished from the daily three. This will weaken the men physically, but if
there are any diseases of an ordinary sort left in them they will disappear.
Two quarts bread-crumbs left, one-third of a ham, three small cans
of oysters, and twenty gallons of water.—Captain's Log.
The hopeful tone of the
diaries is persistent. It is remarkable. Look at the map and see where the boat
is: latitude 16 degrees 44 minutes, longitude 119 degrees 20 minutes. It is
more than two hundred miles west of the Revillagigedo Islands, so they are
quite out of the question against the trades, rigged as this boat is. The
nearest land available for such a boat is the American group, six hundred and
fifty miles away, westward; still, there is no note of surrender, none even of
discouragement! Yet, May 30, 'we have now left: one can of oysters; three
pounds of raisins; one can of soup; one-third of a ham; three pints of
biscuit-crumbs.'
And fifteen starved men to
live on it while they creep and crawl six hundred and fifty miles. 'Somehow I
feel much encouraged by this change of course (west by north) which we have
made to-day.' Six hundred and fifty miles on a hatful of provisions. Let us be
thankful, even after thirty-two years, that they are mercifully ignorant of the
fact that it isn't six hundred and fifty that they must creep on the hatful,
but twenty-two hundred!
Isn't the situation romantic
enough just as it stands? No. Providence added a startling detail: pulling an
oar in that boat, for common seaman's wages, was a banished duke—Danish. We
hear no more of him; just that mention, that is all, with the simple remark
added that 'he is one of our best men'—a high enough compliment for a duke or
any other man in those manhood-testing circumstances. With that little glimpse
of him at his oar, and that fine word of praise, he vanishes out of our
knowledge for all time. For all time, unless he should chance upon this note
and reveal himself.
The last day of May is come.
And now there is a disaster to report: think of it, reflect upon it, and try to
understand how much it means, when you sit down with your family and pass your
eye over your breakfast-table. Yesterday there were three pints of
bread-crumbs; this morning the little bag is found open and some of the crumbs
are missing. 'We dislike to suspect any one of such a rascally act, but there
is no question that this grave crime has been committed. Two days will
certainly finish the remaining morsels. God grant us strength to reach the
American group!' The third mate told me in Honolulu that in these days the men
remembered with bitterness that the 'Portyghee' had devoured twenty-two days'
rations while he lay waiting to be transferred from the burning ship, and that
now they cursed him and swore an oath that if it came to cannibalism he should
be the first to suffer for the rest.
(Diary entry) The captain has lost his glasses, and therefore he
cannot read our pocket prayer-books as much as I think he would
like, though he is not familiar with them.
Further of the captain: 'He
is a good man, and has been most kind to us—almost fatherly. He says that if he
had been offered the command of the ship sooner he should have brought his two
daughters with him.' It makes one shudder yet to think how narrow an escape it
was.
The two meals (rations) a day are as follows: fourteen raisins and a
piece of cracker the size of a penny for tea; a gill of water, and a
piece of ham and a piece of bread, each the size of a penny, for
breakfast.—Captain's Log.
He means a penny in
thickness as well as in circumference. Samuel Ferguson's diary says the ham was
shaved 'about as thin as it could be cut.'
(Diary entry) June 1. Last night and to-day sea very high and
cobbling, breaking over and making us all wet and cold. Weather
squally, and there is no doubt that only careful management—with
God's protecting care—preserved us through both the night and the
day; and really it is most marvellous how every morsel that passes
our lips is blessed to us. It makes me think daily of the miracle
of the loaves and fishes. Henry keeps up wonderfully, which is a
great consolation to me. I somehow have great confidence, and hope
that our afflictions will soon be ended, though we are running
rapidly across the track of both outward and inward bound vessels,
and away from them; our chief hope is a whaler, man-of-war, or some
Australian ship. The isles we are steering for are put down in
Bowditch, but on my map are said to be doubtful. God grant they may
be there!
Hardest day yet.—Captain's Log.
Doubtful! It was worse than
that. A week later they sailed straight over them.
(Diary entry) June 2. Latitude 18 degrees 9 minutes. Squally,
cloudy, a heavy sea.... I cannot help thinking of the cheerful and
comfortable time we had aboard the 'Hornet.'
Two days' scanty supplies left—ten rations of water apiece and a
little morsel of bread. BUT THE SUN SHINES AND GOD IS MERCIFUL.
—Captain's Log.
(Diary entry) Sunday, June 3. Latitude 17 degrees 54 minutes.
Heavy sea all night, and from 4 A.M. very wet, the sea breaking
over us in frequent sluices, and soaking everything aft,
particularly. All day the sea has been very high, and it is a
wonder that we are not swamped. Heaven grant that it may go down
this evening! Our suspense and condition are getting terrible. I
managed this morning to crawl, more than step, to the forward end of
the boat, and was surprised to find that I was so weak, especially
in the legs and knees. The sun has been out again, and I have dried
some things, and hope for a better night.
June 4. Latitude 17 degrees 6 minutes, longitude 131 degrees 30
minutes. Shipped hardly any seas last night, and to-day the sea has
gone down somewhat, although it is still too high for comfort, as we
have an occasional reminder that water is wet. The sun has been out
all day, and so we have had a good drying. I have been trying for
the last ten or twelve days to get a pair of drawers dry enough to
put on, and to-day at last succeeded. I mention this to show the
state in which we have lived. If our chronometer is anywhere near
right, we ought to see the American Isles to-morrow or next day. If
there are not there, we have only the chance, for a few days, of a
stray ship, for we cannot eke out the provisions more than five or
six days longer, and our strength is failing very fast. I was much
surprised to-day to note how my legs have wasted away above my
knees: they are hardly thicker than my upper arm used to be. Still,
I trust in God's infinite mercy, and feel sure he will do what is
best for us. To survive, as we have done, thirty-two days in an
open boat, with only about ten days' fair provisions for thirty-one
men in the first place, and these divided twice subsequently, is
more than mere unassisted HUMAN art and strength could have
accomplished and endured.
Bread and raisins all gone.—Captain's Log.
Men growing dreadfully discontented, and awful grumbling and
unpleasant talk is arising. God save us from all strife of men; and
if we must die now, take us himself, and not embitter our bitter
death still more.—Henry's Log.
(Diary entry) June 5. Quiet night and pretty comfortable day,
though our sail and block show signs of failing, and need taking
down—which latter is something of a job, as it requires the
climbing of the mast. We also had news from forward, there being
discontent and some threatening complaints of unfair allowances,
etc., all as unreasonable as foolish; still, these things bid us be
on our guard. I am getting miserably weak, but try to keep up the
best I can. If we cannot find those isles we can only try to make
north-west and get in the track of Sandwich Island-bound vessels,
living as best we can in the meantime. To-day we changed to one
meal, and that at about noon, with a small ration or water at 8 or 9
A.M., another at 12 A.M., and a third at 5 or 6 P.M.
Nothing left but a little piece of ham and a gill of water, all
around.—Captain's Log.
They are down to one meal a
day now—such as it is—and fifteen hundred miles to crawl yet! And now the
horrors deepen, and, though they escaped actual mutiny, the attitude of the men
became alarming. Now we seem to see why that curious incident happened, so long
ago; I mean Cox's return, after he had been far away and out of sight several
days in the chief mate's boat. If he had not come back the captain and the two
young passengers might have been slain, now, by these sailors, who were
becoming crazed through their sufferings.
NOTE SECRETLY PASSED BY HENRY TO HIS BROTHER:
Cox told me last night that there is getting to be a good deal of
ugly talk among the men against the captain and us aft. They say
that the captain is the cause of all; that he did not try to save
the ship at all, nor to get provisions, and that even would not let
the men put in some they had; and that partiality is shown us in
apportioning our rations aft.... asked Cox the other day if he
would starve first or eat human flesh. Cox answered he would
starve.... then told him he would only be killing himself. If we
do not find those islands we would do well to prepare for anything.
.... is the loudest of all.
REPLY:
We can depend on... I think, and... and Cox, can we not?
SECOND NOTE:
I guess so, and very likely on...; but there is no telling... and
Cox are certain. There is nothing definite said or hinted as yet,
as I understand Cox; but starving men are the same as maniacs. It
would be well to keep a watch on your pistol, so as to have it and
the cartridges safe from theft.
Henry's Log, June 5. Dreadful forebodings. God spare us from all
such horrors! Some of the men getting to talk a good deal. Nothing
to write down. Heart very sad.
Henry's Log, June 6. Passed some sea-weed and something that looked
like the trunk of an old tree, but no birds; beginning to be afraid
islands not there. To-day it was said to the captain, in the
hearing of all, that some of the men would not shrink, when a man
was dead, from using the flesh, though they would not kill.
Horrible! God give us all full use of our reason, and spare us from
such things! 'From plague, pestilence, and famine; from battle and
murder, and from sudden death, good Lord, deliver us!'
(Diary entry) June 6. Latitude 16 degrees 30 minutes, longitude
(chron.) 134 degrees. Dry night and wind steady enough to require
no change in sail; but this A.M. an attempt to lower it proved
abortive. First the third mate tried and got up to the block, and
fastened a temporary arrangement to reeve the halyards through, but
had to come down, weak and almost fainting, before finishing; then
Joe tried, and after twice ascending, fixed it and brought down the
block; but it was very exhausting work, and afterward he was good
for nothing all day. The clue-iron which we are trying to make
serve for the broken block works, however, very indifferently, and
will, I am afraid, soon cut the rope. It is very necessary to get
everything connected with the sail in good easy running order before
we get too weak to do anything with it.
Only three meals left.—Captain's Log.
(Diary entry) June 7. Latitude 16 degrees 35 minutes N., longitude
136 degrees 30 minutes W. Night wet and uncomfortable. To-day
shows us pretty conclusively that the American Isles are not there,
though we have had some signs that looked like them. At noon we
decided to abandon looking any farther for them, and to-night haul a
little more northerly, so as to get in the way of Sandwich Island
vessels, which fortunately come down pretty well this way—say to
latitude 19 degrees to 20 degrees to get the benefit of the
trade-winds. Of course all the westing we have made is gain, and I
hope the chronometer is wrong in our favour, for I do not see how
any such delicate instrument can keep good time with the constant
jarring and thumping we get from the sea. With the strong trade we
have, I hope that a week from Sunday will put us in sight of the
Sandwich Islands, if we are not safe by that time by being picked
up.
It is twelve hundred miles
to the Sandwich Islands; the provisions are virtually exhausted, but not the
perishing diarist's pluck.
(Diary entry) My cough troubled me a good deal last night, and
therefore I got hardly any sleep at all. Still, I make out pretty
well, and should not complain. Yesterday the third mate mended the
block, and this P.M. the sail, after some difficulty, was got down,
and Harry got to the top of the mast and rove the halyards through
after some hardship, so that it now works easy and well. This
getting up the mast is no easy matter at any time with the sea we
have, and is very exhausting in our present state. We could only
reward Harry by an extra ration of water. We have made good time
and course to-day. Heading her up, however, makes the boat ship
seas and keeps us all wet; however, it cannot be helped. Writing is
a rather precarious thing these times. Our meal to-day for the
fifteen consists of half a can of 'soup and boullie'; the other half
is reserved for to-morrow. Henry still keeps up grandly, and is a
great favourite. God grant he may be spared.
A better feeling prevails among the men.—Captain's Log.
(Diary entry) June 9. Latitude 17 degrees 53 minutes. Finished
to-day, I may say, our whole stack of provisions.(2) We have only
left a lower end of a ham-bone, with some of the outer rind and
skin on. In regard to the water, however, I think we have got ten
days' supply at our present rate of allowance. This, with what
nourishment we can get from boot-legs and such chewable matter, we
hope will enable us to weather it out till we get to the Sandwich
Islands, or, sailing in the meantime in the track of vessels
thither bound, be picked up. My hope is in the latter, for in all
human probability I cannot stand the other. Still, we have been
marvellously protected, and God, I hope, will preserve us all in
His own good time and way. The men are getting weaker, but are
still quiet and orderly.
(Diary entry) Sunday, June 10. Latitude 18 degrees 40 minutes,
longitude 142 degrees 34 minutes. A pretty good night last night,
with some wettings, and again another beautiful Sunday. I cannot
but think how we should all enjoy it at home, and what a contrast is
here! How terrible their suspense must begin to be! God grant that
it may be relieved before very long, and He certainly seems to be
with us in everything we do, and has preserved this boat
miraculously; for since we left the ship we have sailed considerably
over three thousand miles, which, taking into consideration our
meagre stock of provisions, is almost unprecedented. As yet I do
not feel the stint of food so much as I do that of water. Even
Henry, who is naturally a good water-drinker, can save half of his
allowance from time to time, when I cannot. My diseased throat may
have something to do with that, however.
Nothing is now left which by
any flattery can be called food. But they must manage somehow for five days
more, for at noon they have still eight hundred miles to go. It is a race for
life now.
This is no time for comments
or other interruptions from me—every moment is valuable. I will take up the boy
brother's diary at this point, and clear the seas before it and let it fly.
HENRY FERGUSON'S LOG:
Sunday, June 10. Our ham-bone has given us a taste of food to-day,
and we have got left a little meat and the remainder of the bone for
tomorrow. Certainly, never was there such a sweet knuckle-one, or
one that was so thoroughly appreciated.... I do not know that I
feel any worse than I did last Sunday, notwithstanding the reduction
of diet; and I trust that we may all have strength given us to
sustain the sufferings and hardships of the coming week. We
estimate that we are within seven hundred miles of the Sandwich
Islands, and that our average, daily, is somewhat over a hundred
miles, so that our hopes have some foundation in reason. Heaven
send we may all live to see land!
June 11. Ate the meat and rind of our ham-bone, and have the bone
and the greasy cloth from around the ham left to eat to-morrow. God
send us birds or fish, and let us not perish of hunger, or be
brought to the dreadful alternative of feeding on human flesh! As I
feel now, I do not think anything could persuade me; but you cannot
tell what you will do when you are reduced by hunger and your mind
wandering. I hope and pray we can make out to reach the islands
before we get to this strait; but we have one or two desperate men
aboard, though they are quiet enough now. IT IS MY FIRM TRUST AND
BELIEF THAT WE ARE GOING TO BE SAVED.
All food gone.—Captain's Log.(3)
(Ferguson's log continues)
June 12. Stiff breeze, and we are fairly flying—dead ahead of it
—and toward the islands. Good hope, but the prospects of hunger are
awful. Ate ham-bone to-day. It is the captain's birthday; he is
fifty-four years old.
June 13. The ham-rags are not quite all gone yet, and the
boot-legs, we find, are very palatable after we get the salt out of
them. A little smoke, I think, does some little good; but I don't
know.
June 14. Hunger does not pain us much, but we are dreadfully weak.
Our water is getting frightfully low. God grant we may see land
soon! NOTHING TO EAT, but feel better than I did yesterday. Toward
evening saw a magnificent rainbow—THE FIRST WE HAD SEEN. Captain
said, 'Cheer up, boys; it's a prophecy—IT'S THE BOW OF PROMISE!'
June 15. God be for ever praised for His infinite mercy! LAND IN
SIGHT! rapidly neared it and soon were SURE of it.... Two noble
Kanakas swam out and took the boat ashore. We were joyfully
received by two white men—Mr. Jones and his steward Charley—and a
crowd of native men, women, and children. They treated us
splendidly—aided us, and carried us up the bank, and brought us
water, poi, bananas, and green coconuts; but the white men took care
of us and prevented those who would have eaten too much from doing
so. Everybody overjoyed to see us, and all sympathy expressed in
faces, deeds, and words. We were then helped up to the house; and
help we needed. Mr. Jones and Charley are the only white men here.
Treated us splendidly. Gave us first about a teaspoonful of spirits
in water, and then to each a cup of warm tea, with a little bread.
Takes EVERY care of us. Gave us later another cup of tea, and bread
the same, and then let us go to rest. IT IS THE HAPPIEST DAY OF MY
LIFE.... God in His mercy has heard our prayer.... Everybody is so
kind. Words cannot tell.
June 16. Mr. Jones gave us a delightful bed, and we surely had a
good night's rest; but not sleep—we were too happy to sleep; would
keep the reality and not let it turn to a delusion—dreaded that we
might wake up and find ourselves in the boat again.
It is an amazing adventure.
There is nothing of its sort in history that surpasses it in impossibilities
made possible. In one extraordinary detail—the survival of every person in the
boat—it probably stands alone in the history of adventures of its kinds.
Usually merely a part of a boat's company survive—officers, mainly, and other
educated and tenderly-reared men, unused to hardship and heavy labour; the
untrained, roughly-reared hard workers succumb. But in this case even the
rudest and roughest stood the privations and miseries of the voyage almost as
well as did the college-bred young brothers and the captain. I mean,
physically. The minds of most of the sailors broke down in the fourth week and
went to temporary ruin, but physically the endurance exhibited was astonishing.
Those men did not survive by any merit of their own, of course, but by merit of
the character and intelligence of the captain; they lived by the mastery of his
spirit. Without him they would have been children without a nurse; they would
have exhausted their provisions in a week, and their pluck would not have
lasted even as long as the provisions.
The boat came near to being
wrecked at the last. As it approached the shore the sail was let go, and came
down with a run; then the captain saw that he was drifting swiftly toward an
ugly reef, and an effort was made to hoist the sail again; but it could not be
done; the men's strength was wholly exhausted; they could not even pull an oar.
They were helpless, and death imminent. It was then that they were discovered
by the two Kanakas who achieved the rescue. They swam out and manned the boat,
and piloted her through a narrow and hardly noticeable break in the reef—the
only break in it in a stretch of thirty-five miles! The spot where the landing
was made was the only one in that stretch where footing could have been found
on the shore; everywhere else precipices came sheer down into forty fathoms of
water. Also, in all that stretch this was the only spot where anybody lived.
Within ten days after the
landing all the men but one were up and creeping about. Properly, they ought to
have killed themselves with the 'food' of the last few days—some of them, at
any rate—men who had freighted their stomachs with strips of leather from old
boots and with chips from the butter cask; a freightage which they did not get
rid of by digestion, but by other means. The captain and the two passengers did
not eat strips and chips, as the sailors did, but scraped the boot-leather and
the wood, and made a pulp of the scrapings by moistening them with water. The
third mate told me that the boots were old and full of holes; then added
thoughtfully, 'but the holes digested the best.' Speaking of digestion, here is
a remarkable thing, and worth noting: during this strange voyage, and for a
while afterward on shore, the bowels of some of the men virtually ceased from
their functions; in some cases there was no action for twenty and thirty days,
and in one case for forty-four! Sleeping also came to be rare. Yet the men did
very well without it. During many days the captain did not sleep at
all—twenty-one, I think, on one stretch.
When the landing was made,
all the men were successfully protected from over-eating except the
'Portyghee;' he escaped the watch and ate an incredible number of bananas: a
hundred and fifty-two, the third mate said, but this was undoubtedly an
exaggeration; I think it was a hundred and fifty-one. He was already nearly half
full of leather; it was hanging out of his ears. (I do not state this on the
third mate's authority, for we have seen what sort of a person he was; I state
it on my own.) The 'Portyghee' ought to have died, of course, and even now it
seems a pity that he didn't; but he got well, and as early as any of them; and
all full of leather, too, the way he was, and butter-timber and handkerchiefs
and bananas. Some of the men did eat handkerchiefs in those last days, also
socks; and he was one of them.
It is to the credit of the
men that they did not kill the rooster that crowed so gallantly mornings. He
lived eighteen days, and then stood up and stretched his neck and made a brave,
weak effort to do his duty once more, and died in the act. It is a picturesque
detail; and so is that rainbow, too—the only one seen in the forty-three
days,—raising its triumphal arch in the skies for the sturdy fighters to sail
under to victory and rescue.
With ten days' provisions
Captain Josiah Mitchell performed this memorable voyage of forty-three days and
eight hours in an open boat, sailing four thousand miles in reality and
thirty-three hundred and sixty by direct courses, and brought every man safe to
land. A bright, simple-hearted, unassuming, plucky, and most companionable man.
I walked the deck with him twenty-eight days—when I was not copying
diaries,—and I remember him with reverent honour. If he is alive he is
eighty-six years old now.
If I remember rightly,
Samuel Ferguson died soon after we reached San Francisco. I do not think he
lived to see his home again; his disease had been seriously aggravated by his
hardships.
For a time it was hoped that
the two quarter-boats would presently be heard of, but this hope suffered
disappointment. They went down with all on board, no doubt, not even sparing
that knightly chief mate.
The authors of the diaries
allowed me to copy them exactly as they were written, and the extracts that I
have given are without any smoothing over or revision. These diaries are finely
modest and unaffected, and with unconscious and unintentional art they rise
toward the climax with graduated and gathering force and swing and dramatic
intensity; they sweep you along with a cumulative rush, and when the cry rings
out at last, 'Land in sight!' your heart is in your mouth, and for a moment you
think it is you that have been saved. The last two paragraphs are not
improvable by anybody's art; they are literary gold; and their very pauses and
uncompleted sentences have in them an eloquence not reachable by any words.
The interest of this story
is unquenchable; it is of the sort that time cannot decay. I have not looked at
the diaries for thirty-two years, but I find that they have lost nothing in
that time. Lost? They have gained; for by some subtle law all tragic human
experiences gain in pathos by the perspective of time. We realize this when in
Naples we stand musing over the poor Pompeian mother, lost in the historic
storm of volcanic ashes eighteen centuries ago, who lies with her child gripped
close to her breast, trying to save it, and whose despair and grief have been
preserved for us by the fiery envelope which took her life but eternalized her
form and features. She moves us, she haunts us, she stays in our thoughts for
many days, we do not know why, for she is nothing to us, she has been nothing
to anyone for eighteen centuries; whereas of the like case to-day we should
say, 'Poor thing! it is pitiful,' and forget it in an hour.
(1) There are nineteen days
of voyaging ahead yet.—M.T.
(2) Six days to sail yet,
nevertheless.—M.T.
(3) It was at this time
discovered that the crazed sailors had gotten the delusion that the captain had
a million dollars in gold concealed aft, and they were conspiring to kill him
and the two passengers and seize it.—M.T.
7.AT THE APPETITE-CURE
This establishment's name is
Hochberghaus. It is in Bohemia, a short day's journey from Vienna, and being in
the Austrian Empire is of course a health resort. The empire is made up of
health resorts; it distributes health to the whole world. Its waters are all
medicinal. They are bottled and sent throughout the earth; the natives
themselves drink beer. This is self-sacrifice apparently—but outlanders who
have drunk Vienna beer have another idea about it. Particularly the Pilsner
which one gets in a small cellar up an obscure back lane in the First
Bezirk—the name has escaped me, but the place is easily found: You inquire for
the Greek church; and when you get to it, go right along by—the next house is
that little beer-mill. It is remote from all traffic and all noise; it is
always Sunday there. There are two small rooms, with low ceilings supported by
massive arches; the arches and ceilings are whitewashed, otherwise the rooms
would pass for cells in the dungeons of a bastile. The furniture is plain and
cheap, there is no ornamentation anywhere; yet it is a heaven for the
self-sacrificers, for the beer there is incomparable; there is nothing like it
elsewhere in the world. In the first room you will find twelve or fifteen
ladies and gentlemen of civilian quality; in the other one a dozen generals and
ambassadors. One may live in Vienna many months and not hear of this place; but
having once heard of it and sampled it, the sampler will afterward infest it.
However, this is all
incidental—a mere passing note of gratitude for blessings received—it has
nothing to do with my subject. My subject is health resorts. All unhealthy
people ought to domicile themselves in Vienna, and use that as a base, making
flights from time to time to the outlying resorts, according to need. A flight
to Marienbad to get rid of fat; a flight to Carlsbad to get rid of rheumatism;
a flight to Kalteneutgeben to take the water cure and get rid of the rest of
the diseases. It is all so handy. You can stand in Vienna and toss a biscuit
into Kaltenleutgeben, with a twelve-inch gun. You can run out thither at any
time of the day; you go by phenomenally slow trains, and yet inside of an hour
you have exchanged the glare and swelter of the city for wooded hills, and
shady forest paths, and soft cool airs, and the music of birds, and the repose
and the peace of paradise.
And there are plenty of
other health resorts at your service and convenient to get at from Vienna;
charming places, all of them; Vienna sits in the centre of a beautiful world of
mountains with now and then a lake and forests; in fact, no other city is so
fortunately situated.
There is an abundance of
health resorts, as I have said. Among them this place—Hochberghaus. It stands
solitary on the top of a densely wooded mountain, and is a building of great
size. It is called the Appetite Anstallt, and people who have lost their
appetites come here to get them restored. When I arrived I was taken by
Professor Haimberger to his consulting-room and questioned:
'It is six o'clock. When did
you eat last?'
'At noon.'
'What did you eat?'
'Next to nothing.'
'What was on the table?'
'The usual things.'
'Chops, chickens,
vegetables, and so on?'
'Yes; but don't mention
them—I can't bear it.'
'Are you tired of them?'
'Oh, utterly. I wish I might
never hear of them again.'
'The mere sight of food
offends you, does it?'
'More, it revolts me.'
The doctor considered
awhile, then got out a long menu and ran his eye slowly down it.
'I think,' said he, 'that
what you need to eat is—but here, choose for yourself.'
I glanced at the list, and
my stomach threw a hand-spring. Of all the barbarous lay-outs that were ever
contrived, this was the most atrocious. At the top stood 'tough, underdone,
overdue tripe, garnished with garlic;' half-way down the bill stood 'young cat;
old cat; scrambled cat;' at the bottom stood 'sailor-boots, softened with
tallow—served raw.' The wide intervals of the bill were packed with dishes
calculated to gag a cannibal. I said:
'Doctor, it is not fair to
joke over so serious a case as mine. I came here to get an appetite, not to
throw away the remnant that's left.'
He said gravely: 'I am not
joking; why should I joke?'
'But I can't eat these
horrors.'
'Why not?'
He said it with a naivete
that was admirable, whether it was real or assumed.
'Why not? Because—why,
doctor, for months I have seldom been able to endure anything more substantial
than omelettes and custards. These unspeakable dishes of yours—'
'Oh, you will come to like
them. They are very good. And you must eat them. It is a rule of the place, and
is strict. I cannot permit any departure from it.'
I said smiling: 'Well, then,
doctor, you will have to permit the departure of the patient. I am going.'
He looked hurt, and said in
a way which changed the aspect of things:
'I am sure you would not do
me that injustice. I accepted you in good faith—you will not shame that
confidence. This appetite-cure is my whole living. If you should go forth from
it with the sort of appetite which you now have, it could become known, and you
can see, yourself, that people would say my cure failed in your case and hence
can fail in other cases. You will not go; you will not do me this hurt.'
I apologised and said I
would stay.
'That is right. I was sure
you would not go; it would take the food from my family's mouths.'
'Would they mind that? Do
they eat these fiendish things?'
'They? My family?' His eyes
were full of gentle wonder. 'Of course not.'
'Oh, they don't! Do you?'
'Certainly not.'
'I see. It's another case of
a physician who doesn't take his own medicine.'
'I don't need it. It is six
hours since you lunched. Will you have supper now—or later?'
'I am not hungry, but now is
as good a time as any, and I would like to be done with it and have it off my
mind. It is about my usual time, and regularity is commanded by all the
authorities. Yes, I will try to nibble a little now—I wish a light
horsewhipping would answer instead.'
The professor handed me that
odious menu.
'Choose—or will you have it
later?'
'Oh, dear me, show me to my
room; I forgot your hard rule.'
'Wait just a moment before
you finally decide. There is another rule. If you choose now, the order will be
filled at once; but if you wait, you will have to await my pleasure. You cannot
get a dish from that entire bill until I consent.'
'All right. Show me to my
room, and send the cook to bed; there is not going to be any hurry.'
The professor took me up one
flight of stairs and showed me into a most inviting and comfortable apartment
consisting of parlour, bedchamber, and bathroom.
The front windows looked out
over a far-reaching spread of green glades and valleys, and tumbled hills
clothed with forests—a noble solitude unvexed by the fussy world. In the
parlour were many shelves filled with books. The professor said he would now leave
me to myself; and added:
'Smoke and read as much as
you please, drink all the water you like. When you get hungry, ring and give
your order, and I will decide whether it shall be filled or not. Yours is a
stubborn, bad case, and I think the first fourteen dishes in the bill are each
and all too delicate for its needs. I ask you as a favour to restrain yourself
and not call for them.'
'Restrain myself, is it?
Give yourself no uneasiness. You are going to save money by me. The idea of
coaxing a sick man's appetite back with this buzzard-fare is clear insanity.'
I said it with bitterness,
for I felt outraged by this calm, cold talk over these heartless new engines of
assassination. The doctor looked grieved, but not offended. He laid the bill of
fare of the commode at my bed's head, 'so that it would be handy,' and said:
'Yours is not the worst case
I have encountered, by any means; still it is a bad one and requires robust
treatment; therefore I shall be gratified if you will restrain yourself and
skip down to No. 15 and begin with that.'
Then he left me and I began
to undress, for I was dog-tired and very sleepy. I slept fifteen hours and woke
up finely refreshed at ten the next morning. Vienna coffee! It was the first
thing I thought of—that unapproachable luxury—that sumptuous coffee-house
coffee, compared with which all other European coffee and all American hotel
coffee is mere fluid poverty. I rang, and ordered it; also Vienna bread, that
delicious invention. The servant spoke through the wicket in the door and
said—but you know what he said. He referred me to the bill of fare. I allowed
him to go—I had no further use for him.
After the bath I dressed and
started for a walk, and got as far as the door. It was locked on the outside. I
rang, and the servant came and explained that it was another rule. The
seclusion of the patient was required until after the first meal. I had not
been particularly anxious to get out before; but it was different now. Being
locked in makes a person wishful to get out. I soon began to find it difficult
to put in the time. At two o'clock I had been twenty-six hours without food. I
had been growing hungry for some time; I recognised that I was not only hungry
now, but hungry with a strong adjective in front of it. Yet I was not hungry
enough to face the bill of fare.
I must put in the time
somehow. I would read and smoke. I did it; hour by hour. The books were all of
one breed—shipwrecks; people lost in deserts; people shut up in caved-in mines;
people starving in besieged cities. I read about all the revolting dishes that
ever famishing men had stayed their hunger with. During the first hours these
things nauseated me: hours followed in which they did not so affect me; still
other hours followed in which I found myself smacking my lips over some
tolerably infernal messes. When I had been without food forty-five hours I ran
eagerly to the bell and ordered the second dish in the bill, which was a sort
of dumplings containing a compost made of caviar and tar.
It was refused me. During the
next fifteen hours I visited the bell every now and then and ordered a dish
that was further down the list. Always a refusal. But I was conquering
prejudice after prejudice, right along; I was making sure progress; I was
creeping up on No. 15 with deadly certainty, and my heart beat faster and
faster, my hopes rose higher and higher.
At last when food had not
passed my lips for sixty hours, victory was mine, and I ordered No. 15:
'Soft-boiled spring
chicken—in the egg; six dozen, hot and fragrant!'
In fifteen minutes it was
there; and the doctor along with it, rubbing his hands with joy. He said with
great excitement:
'It's a cure, it's a cure! I
knew I could do it. Dear sir, my grand system never failed—never. You've got
your appetite back—you know you have; say it and make me happy.'
'Bring on your carrion—I can
eat anything in the bill!'
'Oh, this is noble, this is
splendid—but I knew I could do it, the system never fails. How are the birds?'
'Never was anything so
delicious in the world; and yet as a rule I don't care for game. But don't
interrupt me, don't—I can't spare my mouth, I really can't.'
Then the doctor said:
'The cure is perfect. There
is no more doubt nor danger. Let the poultry alone; I can trust you with a
beefsteak, now.'
The beefsteak came—as much
as a basketful of it—with potatoes, and Vienna bread and coffee; and I ate a
meal then that was worth all the costly preparation I had made for it. And
dripped tears of gratitude into the gravy all the time—gratitude to the doctor
for putting a little plain common-sense into me when I had been empty of it so
many, many years.
II
Thirty years ago Haimberger
went off on a long voyage in a sailing-ship. There were fifteen passengers on
board. The table-fare was of the regulation pattern of the day: At 7 in the
morning, a cup of bad coffee in bed; at 9, breakfast: bad coffee, with
condensed milk; soggy rolls, crackers, salt fish; at 1 P.M., luncheon: cold
tongue, cold ham, cold corned beef, soggy cold rolls, crackers; 5 P.M., dinner:
thick pea soup, salt fish, hot corned beef and sour kraut, boiled pork and
beans, pudding; 9 till 11 P.M., supper: tea, with condensed milk, cold tongue,
cold ham, pickles, sea-biscuit, pickled oysters, pickled pigs' feet, grilled
bones, golden buck.
At the end of the first week
eating had ceased, nibbling had taken its place. The passengers came to the
table, but it was partly to put in the time, and partly because the wisdom of
the ages commanded them to be regular in their meals. They were tired of the
coarse and monotonous fare, and took no interest in it, had no appetite for it.
All day and every day they roamed the ship half hungry, plagued by their
gnawing stomachs, moody, untalkative, miserable. Among them were three
confirmed dyspeptics. These became shadows in the course of three weeks. There
was also a bed-ridden invalid; he lived on boiled rice; he could not look at
the regular dishes.
Now came shipwrecks and life
in open boats, with the usual paucity of food. Provisions ran lower and lower.
The appetites improved, then. When nothing was left but raw ham and the ration
of that was down to two ounces a day per person, the appetites were perfect. At
the end of fifteen days the dyspeptics, the invalid, and the most delicate
ladies in the party were chewing sailor-boots in ecstasy, and only complaining
because the supply of them was limited. Yet these were the same people who
couldn't endure the ship's tedious corned beef and sour kraut and other
crudities. They were rescued by an English vessel. Within ten days the whole
fifteen were in as good condition as they had been when the shipwreck occurred.
'They had suffered no damage
by their adventure,' said the professor.
'Do you note that?'
'Yes.'
'Do you note it well?'
'Yes—I think I do.'
'But you don't. You
hesitate. You don't rise to the importance of it. I will say it again—with
emphasis—not one of them suffered any damage.'
'Now I begin to see. Yes, it
was indeed remarkable.'
'Nothing of the kind. It was
perfectly natural. There was no reason why they should suffer damage. They were
undergoing Nature's Appetite-Cure, the best and wisest in the world.'
'Is that where you got your
idea?'
'That is where I got it.'
'It taught those people a
valuable lesson.'
'What makes you think that?'
'Why shouldn't I? You seem
to think it taught you one.'
'That is nothing to the
point. I am not a fool.'
'I see. Were they fools?'
'They were human beings.'
'Is it the same thing?'
'Why do you ask? You know it
yourself. As regards his health—and the rest of the things—the average man is
what his environment and his superstitions have made him; and their function is
to make him an ass. He can't add up three or four new circumstances together
and perceive what they mean; it is beyond him. He is not capable of observing
for himself; he has to get everything at second-hand. If what are miscalled the
lower animals were as silly as man is, they would all perish from the earth in
a year.'
'Those passengers learned no
lesson, then?'
'Not a sign of it. They went
to their regular meals in the English ship, and pretty soon they were nibbling
again—nibbling, appetiteless, disgusted with the food, moody, miserable, half
hungry, their outraged stomachs cursing and swearing and whining and
supplicating all day long. And in vain, for they were the stomachs of fools.'
'Then, as I understand it,
your scheme is—'
'Quite simple. Don't eat
until you are hungry. If the food fails to taste good, fails to satisfy you,
rejoice you, comfort you, don't eat again until you are very hungry. Then it
will rejoice you—and do you good, too.'
'And I am to observe no
regularity, as to hours?'
'When you are conquering a
bad appetite—no. After it is conquered, regularity is no harm, so long as the
appetite remains good. As soon as the appetite wavers, apply the corrective
again—which is starvation, long or short according to the needs of the case.'
'The best diet, I suppose—I
mean the wholesomest—'
'All diets are wholesome.
Some are wholesomer than others, but all the ordinary diets are wholesome
enough for the people who use them. Whether the food be fine or coarse it will
taste good and it will nourish if a watch be kept upon the appetite and a
little starvation introduced every time it weakens. Nansen was used to fine
fare, but when his meals were restricted to bear-meat months at a time he
suffered no damage and no discomfort, because his appetite was kept at par
through the difficulty of getting his bear-meat regularly.'
'But doctors arrange
carefully considered and delicate diets for invalids.'
'They can't help it. The
invalid is full of inherited superstitions and won't starve himself. He
believes it would certainly kill him.'
'It would weaken him,
wouldn't it?'
'Nothing to hurt. Look at
the invalids in our shipwreck. They lived fifteen days on pinches of raw ham, a
suck at sailor-boots, and general starvation. It weakened them, but it didn't
hurt them. It put them in fine shape to eat heartily of hearty food and build
themselves up to a condition of robust health. But they did not know enough to
profit by that; they lost their opportunity; they remained invalids; it served
them right. Do you know the trick that the health-resort doctors play?'
'What is it?'
'My system disguised—covert
starvation. Grape-cure, bath-cure, mud-cure—it is all the same. The grape and
the bath and the mud make a show and do a trifle of the work—the real work is
done by the surreptitious starvation. The patient accustomed to four meals and
late hours—at both ends of the day—now consider what he has to do at a health
resort. He gets up at 6 in the morning. Eats one egg. Tramps up and down a
promenade two hours with the other fools. Eats a butterfly. Slowly drinks a
glass of filtered sewage that smells like a buzzard's breath. Promenades
another two hours, but alone; if you speak to him he says anxiously, “My
water!—I am walking off my water!—please don't interrupt,” and goes stumping
along again. Eats a candied roseleaf. Lies at rest in the silence and solitude
of his room for hours; mustn't read, mustn't smoke. The doctor comes and feels
of his heart, now, and his pulse, and thumps his breast and his back and his
stomach, and listens for results through a penny flageolet; then orders the
man's bath—half a degree, Reaumur, cooler than yesterday. After the bath
another egg. A glass of sewage at three or four in the afternoon, and promenade
solemnly with the other freaks. Dinner at 6—half a doughnut and a cup of tea.
Walk again. Half-past 8, supper—more butterfly; at 9, to bed. Six weeks of this
regime—think of it. It starves a man out and puts him in splendid condition. It
would have the same effect in London, New York, Jericho—anywhere.'
'How long does it take to
put a person in condition here?'
'It ought to take but a day
or two; but in fact it takes from one to six weeks, according to the character
and mentality of the patient.'
'How is that?'
'Do you see that crowd of
women playing football, and boxing, and jumping fences yonder? They have been
here six or seven weeks. They were spectral poor weaklings when they came. They
were accustomed to nibbling at dainties and delicacies at set hours four times
a day, and they had no appetite for anything. I questioned them, and then
locked them into their rooms—the frailest ones to starve nine or ten hours, the
others twelve or fifteen. Before long they began to beg; and indeed they
suffered a good deal. They complained of nausea, headache, and so on. It was
good to see them eat when the time was up. They could not remember when the
devouring of a meal had afforded them such rapture—that was their word. Now,
then, that ought to have ended their cure, but it didn't. They were free to go
to any meals in the house, and they chose their accustomed four. Within a day
or two I had to interfere. Their appetites were weakening. I made them knock
out a meal. That set them up again. Then they resumed the four. I begged them
to learn to knock out a meal themselves, without waiting for me. Up to a
fortnight ago they couldn't; they really hadn't manhood enough; but they were
gaining it, and now I think they are safe. They drop out a meal every now and
then of their own accord. They are in fine condition now, and they might safely
go home, I think, but their confidence is not quite perfect yet, so they are
waiting awhile.'
'Other cases are different?'
'Oh yes. Sometimes a man
learns the whole trick in a week. Learns to regulate his appetite and keep it
in perfect order. Learns to drop out a meal with frequency and not mind it.'
'But why drop the entire
meal out? Why not a part of it?'
'It's a poor device, and
inadequate. If the stomach doesn't call vigorously—with a shout, as you may
say—it is better not to pester it but just give it a real rest. Some people can
eat more meals than others, and still thrive. There are all sorts of people,
and all sorts of appetites. I will show you a man presently who was accustomed
to nibble at eight meals a day. It was beyond the proper gait of his appetite
by two. I have got him down to six a day, now, and he is all right, and enjoys
life. How many meals to you affect per day?'
'Formerly—for twenty-two years—a
meal and a half; during the past two years, two and a half: coffee and a roll
at 9, luncheon at 1, dinner at 7.30 or 8.'
'Formerly a meal and a
half—that is, coffee and a roll at 9, dinner in the evening, nothing between—is
that it?
'Yes.'
'Why did you add a meal?'
'It was the family's idea.
They were uneasy. They thought I was killing myself.'
'You found a meal and a half
per day enough, all through the twenty-two years?'
'Plenty.'
'Your present poor condition
is due to the extra meal. Drop it out. You are trying to eat oftener than your
stomach demands. You don't gain, you lose. You eat less food now, in a day, on
two and a half meals, than you formerly ate on one and a half.'
'True—a good deal less; for
in those olds days my dinner was a very sizeable thing.'
'Put yourself on a single
meal a day, now—dinner—for a few days, till you secure a good, sound, regular,
trustworthy appetite, then take to your one and a half permanently, and don't
listen to the family any more. When you have any ordinary ailment, particularly
of a feverish sort, eat nothing at all during twenty-four hours. That will cure
it. It will cure the stubbornest cold in the head, too. No cold in the head can
survive twenty-four hours' unmodified starvation.'
I know it. I have proved it many
a time.
8.CONCERNING THE JEWS
Some months ago I published
a magazine article(1) descriptive of a remarkable scene in the Imperial
Parliament in Vienna. Since then I have received from Jews in America several
letters of inquiry. They were difficult letters to answer, for they were not
very definite. But at last I have received a definite one. It is from a lawyer,
and he really asks the questions which the other writers probably believed they
were asking. By help of this text I will do the best I can to publicly answer
this correspondent, and also the others—at the same time apologising for having
failed to reply privately. The lawyer's letter reads as follows:
'I have read “Stirring Times in Austria.” One point in particular
is of vital import to not a few thousand people, including myself,
being a point about which I have often wanted to address a question
to some disinterested person. The show of military force in the
Austrian Parliament, which precipitated the riots, was not
introduced by any Jew. No Jew was a member of that body. No Jewish
question was involved in the Ausgleich or in the language
proposition. No Jew was insulting anybody. In short, no Jew was
doing any mischief toward anybody whatsoever. In fact, the Jews
were the only ones of the nineteen different races in Austria which
did not have a party—they are absolute non-participants. Yet in
your article you say that in the rioting which followed, all classes
of people were unanimous only on one thing, viz., in being against
the Jews. Now, will you kindly tell me why, in your judgment, the
Jews have thus ever been, and are even now, in these days of
supposed intelligence, the butt of baseless, vicious animosities?
I dare say that for centuries there has been no more quiet,
undisturbing, and well-behaving citizen, as a class, than that same
Jew. It seems to me that ignorance and fanaticism cannot alone
account for these horrible and unjust persecutions.
'Tell me, therefore, from your vantage point of cold view, what in
your mind is the cause. Can American Jews do anything to correct it
either in America or abroad? Will it ever come to an end? Will a
Jew be permitted to live honestly, decently, and peaceably like the
rest of mankind? What has become of the Golden Rule?'
I will begin by saying that
if I thought myself prejudiced against the Jew, I should hold it fairest to
leave this subject to a person not crippled in that way. But I think I have no
such prejudice. A few years ago a Jew observed to me that there was no
uncourteous reference to his people in my books, and asked how it happened. It
happened because the disposition was lacking. I am quite sure that (bar one) I
have no race prejudices, and I think I have no colour prejudices nor caste
prejudices nor creed prejudices. Indeed, I know it. I can stand any society.
All that I care to know is that a man is a human being—that is enough for me;
he can't be any worse. I have no special regard for Satan; but I can at least
claim that I have no prejudice against him. It may even be that I lean a little
his way, on account of his not having a fair show. All religions issue Bibles
against him, and say the most injurious things about him, but we never hear his
side. We have none but the evidence for the prosecution, and yet we have
rendered the verdict. To my mind, this is irregular. It is un-English; it is
un-American; it is French. Without this precedent Dreyfus could not have been
condemned. Of course Satan has some kind of a case, it goes without saying. It
may be a poor one, but that is nothing; that can be said about any of us. As
soon as I can get at the facts I will undertake his rehabilitation myself, if I
can find an unpolitic publisher. It is a thing which we ought to be willing to
do for any one who is under a cloud. We may not pay Satan reverence, for that
would be indiscreet, but we can at least respect his talents. A person who has
during all time maintained the imposing position of spiritual head of
four-fifths of the human race, and political head of the whole of it, must be
granted the possession of executive abilities of the loftiest order. In his
large presence the other popes and politicians shrink to midges for the
microscope. I would like to see him. I would rather see him and shake him by
the tail than any other member of the European Concert. In the present paper I
shall allow myself to use the word Jew as if it stood for both religion and race.
It is handy; and, besides, that is what the term means to the general world.
In the above letter one
notes these points:
1. The Jew is a well-behaved
citizen.
2. Can ignorance and
fanaticism alone account for his unjust treatment?
3. Can Jews do anything to
improve the situation?
4. The Jews have no party;
they are non-participants.
5. Will the persecution ever
come to an end?
6. What has become of the
Golden Rule?
Point No. 1.—We must grant
proposition No. 1, for several sufficient reasons. The Jew is not a disturber
of the peace of any country. Even his enemies will concede that. He is not a
loafer, he is not a sot, he is not noisy, he is not a brawler nor a rioter, he
is not quarrelsome. In the statistics of crime his presence is conspicuously
rare—in all countries. With murder and other crimes of violence he has but
little to do: he is a stranger to the hangman. In the police court's daily long
roll of 'assaults' and 'drunk and disorderlies' his name seldom appears. That
the Jewish home is a home in the truest sense is a fact which no one will
dispute. The family is knitted together by the strongest affections; its
members show each other every due respect; and reverence for the elders is an
inviolate law of the house. The Jew is not a burden on the charities of the
state nor of the city; these could cease from their functions without affecting
him. When he is well enough, he works; when he is incapacitated, his own people
take care of him. And not in a poor and stingy way, but with a fine and large
benevolence. His race is entitled to be called the most benevolent of all the
races of men. A Jewish beggar is not impossible, perhaps; such a thing may
exist, but there are few men that can say they have seen that spectacle. The
Jew has been staged in many uncomplimentary forms, but, so far as I know, no
dramatist has done him the injustice to stage him as a beggar. Whenever a Jew
has real need to beg, his people save him from the necessity of doing it. The
charitable institutions of the Jews are supported by Jewish money, and amply.
The Jews make no noise about it; it is done quietly; they do not nag and pester
and harass us for contributions; they give us peace, and set us an example—an
example which we have not found ourselves able to follow; for by nature we are
not free givers, and have to be patiently and persistently hunted down in the
interest of the unfortunate.
These facts are all on the
credit side of the proposition that the Jew is a good and orderly citizen.
Summed up, they certify that he is quiet, peaceable, industrious, unaddicted to
high crimes and brutal dispositions; that his family life is commendable; that
he is not a burden upon public charities; that he is not a beggar; that in
benevolence he is above the reach of competition. These are the very
quintessentials of good citizenship. If you can add that he is as honest as the
average of his neighbours—But I think that question is affirmatively answered
by the fact that he is a successful business man. The basis of successful
business is honesty; a business cannot thrive where the parties to it cannot
trust each other. In the matter of numbers the Jew counts for little in the
overwhelming population of New York; but that his honesty counts for much is
guaranteed by the fact that the immense wholesale business of Broadway, from
the Battery to Union Square, is substantially in his hands.
I suppose that the most
picturesque example in history of a trader's trust in his fellow-trader was one
where it was not Christian trusting Christian, but Christian trusting Jew. That
Hessian Duke who used to sell his subjects to George III. to fight George
Washington with got rich at it; and by-and-by, when the wars engendered by the
French Revolution made his throne too warm for him, he was obliged to fly the
country. He was in a hurry, and had to leave his earnings behind—$9,000,000. He
had to risk the money with some one without security. He did not select a
Christian, but a Jew—a Jew of only modest means, but of high character; a
character so high that it left him lonesome—Rothschild of Frankfort. Thirty
years later, when Europe had become quiet and safe again, the Duke came back
from overseas, and the Jew returned the loan, with interest added.(2)
The Jew has his other side.
He has some discreditable ways, though he has not a monopoly of them, because
he cannot get entirely rid of vexatious Christian competition. We have seen
that he seldom transgresses the laws against crimes of violence. Indeed, his
dealings with courts are almost restricted to matters connected with commerce.
He has a reputation for various small forms of cheating, and for practising
oppressive usury, and for burning himself out to get the insurance, and for
arranging cunning contracts which leave him an exit but lock the other man in,
and for smart evasions which find him safe and comfortable just within the
strict letter of the law, when court and jury know very well that he has
violated the spirit of it. He is a frequent and faithful and capable officer in
the civil service, but he is charged with an unpatriotic disinclination to
stand by the flag as a soldier—like the Christian Quaker.
Now if you offset these
discreditable features by the creditable ones summarised in a preceding
paragraph beginning with the words, 'These facts are all on the credit side,'
and strike a balance, what must the verdict be? This, I think: that, the merits
and demerits being fairly weighed and measured on both sides, the Christian can
claim no superiority over the Jew in the matter of good citizenship.
Yet in all countries, from
the dawn of history, the Jew has been persistently and implacably hated, and
with frequency persecuted.
Point No. 2.—'Can fanaticism
alone account for this?'
Years ago I used to think
that it was responsible for nearly all of it, but latterly I have come to think
that this was an error. Indeed, it is now my conviction that it is responsible
for hardly any of it.
In this connection I call to
mind Genesis, chapter xlvii.
We have all thoughtfully—or
unthoughtfully—read the pathetic story of the years of plenty and the years of
famine in Egypt, and how Joseph, with that opportunity, made a corner in broken
hearts, and the crusts of the poor, and human liberty—a corner whereby he took
a nation's money all away, to the last penny; took a nation's live stock all
away, to the last hoof; took a nation's land away, to the last acre; then took
the nation itself, buying it for bread, man by man, woman by woman, child by
child, till all were slaves; a corner which took everything, left nothing; a
corner so stupendous that, by comparison with it, the most gigantic corners in
subsequent history are but baby things, for it dealt in hundreds of millions of
bushels, and its profits were reckonable by hundreds of millions of dollars,
and it was a disaster so crushing that its effects have not wholly disappeared
from Egypt to-day, more than three thousand years after the event.
Is it presumably that the
eye of Egypt was upon Joseph the foreign Jew all this time? I think it likely.
Was it friendly? We must doubt it. Was Joseph establishing a character for his
race which would survive long in Egypt? and in time would his name come to be
familiarly used to express that character—like Shylock's? It is hardly to be
doubted. Let us remember that this was centuries before the Crucifixion?
I wish to come down eighteen
hundred years later and refer to a remark made by one of the Latin historians.
I read it in a translation many years ago, and it comes back to me now with
force. It was alluding to a time when people were still living who could have
seen the Saviour in the flesh. Christianity was so new that the people of Rome
had hardly heard of it, and had but confused notions of what it was. The
substance of the remark was this: Some Christians were persecuted in Rome
through error, they being 'mistaken for Jews.'
The meaning seems plain.
These pagans had nothing against Christians, but they were quite ready to
persecute Jews. For some reason or other they hated a Jew before they even knew
what a Christian was. May I not assume, then, that the persecution of Jews is a
thing which antedates Christianity and was not born of Christianity? I think
so. What was the origin of the feeling?
When I was a boy, in the
back settlements of the Mississippi Valley, where a gracious and beautiful
Sunday school simplicity and practicality prevailed, the 'Yankee' (citizen of
the New England States) was hated with a splendid energy. But religion had
nothing to do with it. In a trade, the Yankee was held to be about five times
the match of the Westerner. His shrewdness, his insight, his judgment, his
knowledge, his enterprise, and his formidable cleverness in applying these
forces were frankly confessed, and most competently cursed.
In the cotton States, after
the war, the simple and ignorant Negroes made the crops for the white planter
on shares. The Jew came down in force, set up shop on the plantation, supplied
all the negro's wants on credit, and at the end of the season was proprietor of
the negro's share of the present crop and of part of his share of the next one.
Before long, the whites detested the Jew, and it is doubtful if the negro loved
him.
The Jew is being legislated
out of Russia. The reason is not concealed. The movement was instituted because
the Christian peasant and villager stood no chance against his commercial
abilities. He was always ready to lend money on a crop, and sell vodka and
other necessities of life on credit while the crop was growing. When settlement
day came he owned the crop; and next year or year after he owned the farm, like
Joseph.
In the dull and ignorant
English of John's time everybody got into debt to the Jew. He gathered all
lucrative enterprises into his hands; he was the king of commerce; he was ready
to be helpful in all profitable ways; he even financed crusades for the rescue
of the Sepulchre. To wipe out his account with the nation and restore business
to its natural and incompetent channels he had to be banished the realm.
For the like reasons Spain
had to banish him four hundred years ago, and Austria about a couple of
centuries later.
In all the ages Christian
Europe has been obliged to curtail his activities. If he entered upon a
mechanical trade, the Christian had to retire from it. If he set up as a
doctor, he was the best one, and he took the business. If he exploited
agriculture, the other farmers had to get at something else. Since there was no
way to successfully compete with him in any vocation, the law had to step in
and save the Christian from the poor-house. Trade after trade was taken away from
the Jew by statute till practically none was left. He was forbidden to engage
in agriculture; he was forbidden to practise law; he was forbidden to practise
medicine, except among Jews; he was forbidden the handicrafts. Even the seats
of learning and the schools of science had to be closed against this tremendous
antagonist. Still, almost bereft of employments, he found ways to make money,
even ways to get rich. Also ways to invest his takings well, for usury was not
denied him. In the hard conditions suggested, the Jew without brains could not
survive, and the Jew with brains had to keep them in good training and well
sharpened up, or starve. Ages of restriction to the one tool which the law was
not able to take from him—his brain—have made that tool singularly competent;
ages of compulsory disuse of his hands have atrophied them, and he never uses
them now. This history has a very, very commercial look, a most sordid and
practical commercial look, the business aspect of a Chinese cheap-labour
crusade. Religious prejudices may account for one part of it, but not for the
other nine.
Protestants have persecuted
Catholics, but they did not take their livelihoods away from them. The
Catholics have persecuted the Protestants with bloody and awful bitterness, but
they never closed agriculture and the handicrafts against them. Why was that?
That has the candid look of genuine religious persecution, not a trade-union
boycott in a religious dispute.
The Jews are harried and
obstructed in Austria and Germany, and lately in France; but England and
America give them an open field and yet survive. Scotland offers them an
unembarrassed field too, but there are not many takers. There are a few Jews in
Glasgow, and one in Aberdeen; but that is because they can't earn enough to get
away. The Scotch pay themselves that compliment, but it is authentic.
I feel convinced that the
Crucifixion has not much to do with the world's attitude toward the Jew; that
the reasons for it are older than that event, as suggested by Egypt's experience
and by Rome's regret for having persecuted an unknown quantity called a
Christian, under the mistaken impression that she was merely persecuting a Jew.
Merely a Jew—a skinned eel who was used to it, presumably. I am persuaded that
in Russia, Austria, and Germany nine-tenths of the hostility to the Jew comes
from the average Christian's inability to compete successfully with the average
Jew in business—in either straight business or the questionable sort.
In Berlin, a few years ago,
I read a speech which frankly urged the expulsion of the Jews from Germany; and
the agitator's reason was as frank as his proposition. It was this: that
eighty-five percent of the successful lawyers of Berlin were Jews, and that
about the same percentage of the great and lucrative businesses of all sorts in
Germany were in the hands of the Jewish race! Isn't it an amazing confession?
It was but another way of saying that in a population of 48,000,000, of whom
only 500,000 were registered as Jews, eighty-five per cent of the brains and
honesty of the whole was lodged in the Jews. I must insist upon the honesty—it
is an essential of successful business, taken by and large. Of course it does
not rule out rascals entirely, even among Christians, but it is a good working
rule, nevertheless. The speaker's figures may have been inexact, but the motive
of persecution stands out as clear as day.
The man claimed that in
Berlin the banks, the newspapers, the theatres, the great mercantile, shipping,
mining, and manufacturing interests, the big army and city contracts, the
tramways, and pretty much all other properties of high value, and also the
small businesses, were in the hands of the Jews. He said the Jew was pushing
the Christian to the wall all along the line; that it was all a Christian could
do to scrape together a living; and that the Jew must be banished, and
soon—there was no other way of saving the Christian. Here in Vienna, last
autumn, an agitator said that all these disastrous details were true of
Austria-Hungary also; and in fierce language he demanded the expulsion of the
Jews. When politicians come out without a blush and read the baby act in this
frank way, unrebuked, it is a very good indication that they have a market back
of them, and know where to fish for votes.
You note the crucial point
of the mentioned agitation; the argument is that the Christian cannot compete
with the Jew, and that hence his very bread is in peril. To human beings this
is a much more hate-inspiring thing than is any detail connected with religion.
With most people, of a necessity, bread and meat take first rank, religion
second. I am convinced that the persecution of the Jew is not due in any large
degree to religious prejudice.
No, the Jew is a
money-getter; and in getting his money he is a very serious obstruction to less
capable neighbours who are on the same quest. I think that that is the trouble.
In estimating worldly values the Jew is not shallow, but deep. With precocious
wisdom he found out in the morning of time that some men worship rank, some
worship heroes, some worship power, some worship God, and that over these
ideals they dispute and cannot unite—but that they all worship money; so he
made it the end and aim of his life to get it. He was at it in Egypt thirty-six
centuries ago; he was at it in Rome when that Christian got persecuted by
mistake for him; he has been at it ever since. The cost to him has been heavy;
his success has made the whole human race his enemy—but it has paid, for it has
brought him envy, and that is the only thing which men will sell both soul and
body to get. He long ago observed that a millionaire commands respect, a
two-millionaire homage, a multi-millionaire the deepest deeps of adoration. We
all know that feeling; we have seen it express itself. We have noticed that
when the average man mentions the name of a multi-millionaire he does it with
that mixture in his voice of awe and reverence and lust which burns in a
Frenchman's eye when it falls on another man's centime.
Point No. 4—'The Jews have
no party; they are non-participants.'
Perhaps you have let the
secret out and given yourself away. It seems hardly a credit to the race that
it is able to say that; or to you, sir, that you can say it without remorse;
more, that you should offer it as a plea against maltreatment, injustice, and
oppression. Who gives the Jew the right, who gives any race the right, to sit
still in a free country, and let somebody else look after its safety? The
oppressed Jew was entitled to all pity in the former times under brutal autocracies,
for he was weak and friendless, and had no way to help his case. But he has
ways now, and he has had them for a century, but I do not see that he has tried
to make serious use of them. When the Revolution set him free in France it was
an act of grace—the grace of other people; he does not appear in it as a
helper. I do not know that he helped when England set him free. Among the
Twelve Sane Men of France who have stepped forward with great Zola at their
head to fight (and win, I hope and believe(3)) the battle for the most
infamously misused Jew of modern times, do you find a great or rich or
illustrious Jew helping? In the United States he was created free in the
beginning—he did not need to help, of course. In Austria and Germany and France
he has a vote, but of what considerable use is it to him? He doesn't seem to
know how to apply it to the best effect. With all his splendid capacities and
all his fat wealth he is to-day not politically important in any country. In
America, as early as 1854, the ignorant Irish hod-carrier, who had a spirit of
his own and a way of exposing it to the weather, made it apparent to all that
he must be politically reckoned with; yet fifteen years before that we hardly
knew what an Irishman looked like. As an intelligent force and numerically, he
has always been away down, but he has governed the country just the same. It
was because he was organised. It made his vote valuable—in fact, essential.
You will say the Jew is
everywhere numerically feeble. That is nothing to the point—with the Irishman's
history for an object-lesson. But I am coming to your numerical feebleness
presently. In all parliamentary countries you could no doubt elect Jews to the
legislatures—and even one member in such a body is sometimes a force which counts.
How deeply have you concerned yourselves about this in Austria, France, and
Germany? Or even in America, for that matter? You remark that the Jews were not
to blame for the riots in this Reichsrath here, and you add with satisfaction
that there wasn't one in that body. That is not strictly correct; if it were,
would it not be in order for you to explain it and apologise for it, not try to
make a merit of it? But I think that the Jew was by no means in as large force
there as he ought to have been, with his chances. Austria opens the suffrage to
him on fairly liberal terms, and it must surely be his own fault that he is so
much in the background politically.
As to your numerical
weakness. I mentioned some figures awhile ago—500,00—as the Jewish population
of Germany. I will add some more—6,000,000 in Russia, 5,000,000 in Austria,
250,000 in the United States. I take them from memory; I read them in the
'Encyclopaedia Brittannica' ten or twelve years ago. Still, I am entirely sure
of them. If those statistics are correct, my argument is not as strong as it
ought to be as concerns America, but it still has strength. It is plenty strong
enough as concerns Austria, for ten years ago 5,000,000 was nine per cent of
the empire's population. The Irish would govern the Kingdom of Heaven if they
had a strength there like that.
I have some suspicions; I
got them at second-hand, but they have remained with me these ten or twelve
years. When I read in the 'E.B.' that the Jewish population of the United
States was 250,000 I wrote the editor, and explained to him that I was
personally acquainted with more Jews than that in my country, and that his
figures were without a doubt a misprint for 25,000,000. I also added that I was
personally acquainted with that many there; but that was only to raise his
confidence in me, for it was not true. His answer miscarried, and I never got
it; but I went around talking about the matter, and people told me they had
reason to suspect that for business reasons many Jews whose dealings were
mainly with the Christians did not report themselves as Jews in the census. It
looked plausible; it looks plausible yet. Look at the city of New York; and
look at Boston, and Philadelphia, and New Orleans, and Chicago, and Cincinnati,
and San Francisco—how your race swarms in those places!—and everywhere else in
America, down to the least little village. Read the signs on the marts of
commerce and on the shops; Goldstein (gold stone), Edelstein (precious stone),
Blumenthal (flower-vale), Rosenthal (rose-vale), Veilchenduft (violent odour),
Singvogel (song-bird), Rosenzweig (rose branch), and all the amazing list of
beautiful and enviable names which Prussia and Austria glorified you with so
long ago. It is another instance of Europe's coarse and cruel persecution of
your race; not that it was coarse and cruel to outfit it with pretty and
poetical names like those, but it was coarse and cruel to make it pay for them
or else take such hideous and often indecent names that to-day their owners
never use them; or, if they do, only on official papers. And it was the many,
not the few, who got the odious names, they being too poor to bribe the
officials to grant them better ones.
Now why was the race
renamed? I have been told that in Prussia it was given to using fictitious
names, and often changing them, so as to beat the tax-gatherer, escape military
service, and so on; and that finally the idea was hit upon of furnishing all
the inmates of a house with one and the same surname, and then holding the
house responsible right along for those inmates, and accountable for any
disappearances that might occur; it made the Jews keep track of each other, for
self-interest's sake, and saved the Government the trouble(4).
If that explanation of how
the Jews of Prussia came to be renamed is correct, if it is true that they
fictitiously registered themselves to gain certain advantages, it may possibly
be true that in America they refrain from registered themselves as Jews to fend
off the damaging prejudices of the Christian customer. I have no way of knowing
whether this notion is well founded or not. There may be other and better ways
of explaining why only that poor little 250,000 of our Jews got into the
'Encyclopaedia'. I may, of course, be mistaken, but I am strongly of the
opinion that we have an immense Jewish population in America.
Point No. 3—'Can Jews do
anything to improve the situation?'
I think so. If I may make a
suggestion without seeming to be trying to teach my grandmother to suck eggs, I
will offer it. In our days we have learned the value of combination. We apply
it everywhere—in railway systems, in trusts, in trade unions, in Salvation
Armies, in minor politics, in major politics, in European Concerts. Whatever
our strength may be, big or little, we organise it. We have found out that that
is the only way to get the most out of it that is in it. We know the weakness
of individual sticks, and the strength of the concentrated faggot. Suppose you
try a scheme like this, for instance. In England and America put every Jew on
the census-book as a Jew (in case you have not been doing that). Get up
volunteer regiments composed of Jews solely, and when the drum beats, fall in
and go to the front, so as to remove the reproach that you have few Massenas
among you, and that you feed on a country but don't like to fight for it. Next,
in politics, organise your strength, band together, and deliver the
casting-vote where you can, and, where you can't, compel as good terms as
possible. You huddle to yourselves already in all countries, but you huddle to
no sufficient purpose, politically speaking. You do not seem to be organised,
except for your charities. There you are omnipotent; there you compel your due
of recognition—you do not have to beg for it. It shows what you can do when you
band together for a definite purpose.
And then from America and
England you can encourage your race in Austria, France, and Germany, and
materially help it. It was a pathetic tale that was told by a poor Jew a
fortnight ago during the riots, after he had been raided by the Christian
peasantry and despoiled of everything he had. He said his vote was of no value
to him, and he wished he could be excused from casting it, for indeed, casting
it was a sure damage to him, since, no matter which party he voted for, the
other party would come straight and take its revenge out of him. Nine per cent
of the population, these Jews, and apparently they cannot put a plank into any
candidate's platform! If you will send our Irish lads over here I think they
will organise your race and change the aspect of the Reichsrath.
You seem to think that the
Jews take no hand in politics here, that they are 'absolutely
non-participants.' I am assured by men competent to speak that this is a very
large error, that the Jews are exceedingly active in politics all over the
empire, but that they scatter their work and their votes among the numerous
parties, and thus lose the advantages to be had by concentration. I think that
in America they scatter too, but you know more about that than I do.
Speaking of concentration,
Dr. Herzl has a clear insight into the value of that. Have you heard of his
plan? He wishes to gather the Jews of the world together in Palestine, with a
government of their own—under the suzerainty of the Sultan, I suppose. At the
Convention of Berne, last year, there were delegates from everywhere, and the
proposal was received with decided favour. I am not the Sultan, and I am not
objecting; but if that concentration of the cunningest brains in the world were
going to be made in a free country (bar Scotland), I think it would be politic
to stop it. It will not be well to let that race find out its strength. If the
horses knew theirs, we should not ride any more.
Point No. 5.—'Will the
persecution of the Jews ever come to an end?'
On the score of religion, I
think it has already come to an end. On the score of race prejudice and trade,
I have the idea that it will continue. That is, here and there in spots about
the world, where a barbarous ignorance and a sort of mere animal civilisation
prevail; but I do not think that elsewhere the Jew need now stand in any fear
of being robbed and raided. Among the high civilisations he seems to be very
comfortably situated indeed, and to have more than his proportionate share of
the prosperities going. It has that look in Vienna. I suppose the race
prejudice cannot be removed; but he can stand that; it is no particular matter.
By his make and ways he is substantially a foreigner wherever he may be, and
even the angels dislike a foreigner. I am using this world foreigner in the
German sense—stranger. Nearly all of us have an antipathy to a stranger, even
of our own nationality. We pile grip-sacks in a vacant seat to keep him from
getting it; and a dog goes further, and does as a savage would—challenges him
on the spot. The German dictionary seems to make no distinction between a
stranger and a foreigner; in its view a stranger is a foreigner—a sound
position, I think. You will always be by ways and habits and predilections
substantially strangers—foreigners—wherever you are, and that will probably
keep the race prejudice against you alive.
But you were the favourites
of Heaven originally, and your manifold and unfair prosperities convince me
that you have crowded back into that snug place again. Here is an incident that
is significant. Last week in Vienna a hailstorm struck the prodigious Central
Cemetery and made wasteful destruction there. In the Christian part of it,
according to the official figures, 621 window-panes were broken; more than 900
singing-birds were killed; five great trees and many small ones were torn to
shreds and the shreds scattered far and wide by the wind; the ornamental plants
and other decorations of the graces were ruined, and more than a hundred
tomb-lanterns shattered; and it took the cemetery's whole force of 300
labourers more than three days to clear away the storm's wreckage. In the
report occurs this remark—and in its italics you can hear it grit its Christian
teeth: '...lediglich die israelitische Abtheilung des Friedhofes vom
Hagelwetter ganzlich verschont worden war.' Not a hailstone hit the Jewish
reservation! Such nepotism makes me tired.
Point No. 6.—'What has
become of the Golden Rule?'
It exists, it continues to
sparkle, and is well taken care of. It is Exhibit A in the Church's assets, and
we pull it out every Sunday and give it an airing. But you are not permitted to
try to smuggle it into this discussion, where it is irrelevant and would not
feel at home. It is strictly religious furniture, like an acolyte, or a
contribution-plate, or any of those things. It has never intruded into
business; and Jewish persecution is not a religious passion, it is a business
passion.
To conclude.—If the
statistics are right, the Jews constitute but one per cent of the human race.
It suggests a nebulous dim puff of star-dust lost in the blaze of the Milky
Way. Properly the Jew ought hardly to be heard of; but he is heard of, has
always been heard of. He is as prominent on the planet as any other people, and
his commercial importance is extravagantly out of proportion to the smallness
of his bulk. His contributions to the world's list of great names in
literature, science, art, music, finance, medicine, and abstruse learning are
also away out of proportion to the weakness of his numbers. He has made a
marvellous fight in this world, in all the ages; and has done it with his hands
tied behind him. He could be vain of himself, and be excused for it. The
Egyptian, the Babylonian, and the Persian rose, filled the planet with sound
and splendour, then faded to dream-stuff and passed away; the Greek and the
Roman followed, and made a vast noise, and they are gone; other peoples have
sprung up and held their torch high for a time, but it burned out, and they sit
in twilight now, or have vanished. The Jew saw them all, beat them all, and is
now what he always was, exhibiting no decadence, no infirmities of age, no
weakening of his parts, no slowing of his energies, no dulling of his alert and
aggressive mind. All things are mortal to the Jew; all other forces pass, but
he remains. What is the secret of his immortality?
Postscript—THE JEW AS
SOLDIER
When I published the above
article in 'Harper's Monthly,' I was ignorant—like the rest of the Christian
world—of the fact that the Jew had a record as a soldier. I have since seen the
official statistics, and I find that he furnished soldiers and high officers to
the Revolution, the War of 1812, and the Mexican War. In the Civil War he was
represented in the armies and navies of both the North and the South by 10 per
cent of his numerical strength—the same percentage that was furnished by the
Christian populations of the two sections. This large fact means more than it
seems to mean; for it means that the Jew's patriotism was not merely level with
the Christian's, but overpassed it. When the Christian volunteer arrived in
camp he got a welcome and applause, but as a rule the Jew got a snub. His
company was not desired, and he was made to feel it. That he nevertheless
conquered his wounded pride and sacrificed both that and his blood for his flag
raises the average and quality of his patriotism above the Christian's. His
record for capacity, for fidelity, and for gallant soldiership in the field is
as good as any one's. This is true of the Jewish private soldiers and of the
Jewish generals alike. Major-General O. O. Howard speaks of one of his Jewish
staff officers as being 'of the bravest and best;' of another—killed at
Chancellorsville—as being 'a true friend and a brave officer;' he highly praises
two of his Jewish brigadier-generals; finally, he uses these strong words:
'Intrinsically there are no more patriotic men to be found in the country than
those who claim to be of Hebrew descent, and who served with me in parallel
commands or more directly under my instructions.'
Fourteen Jewish Confederate
and Union families contributed, between them, fifty-one soldiers to the war.
Among these, a father and three sons; and another, a father and four sons.
In the above article I was neither able to endorse nor repel the common
reproach that the Jew is willing to feed upon a country but not to fight
for it, because I did not know whether it was true or false. I supposed it
to be true, but it is not allowable to endorse wandering maxims upon
supposition—except when one is trying to make out a case. That slur
upon the Jew cannot hold up its head in presence of the figures of the War
Department. It has done its work, and done it long and faithfully, and
with high approval: it ought to be pensioned off now, and retired from
active service.
(1) See 'Stirring Times in
Austria,' in this volume.
(2) Here is another piece of
picturesque history; and it reminds us that shabbiness and dishonesty are not
the monopoly of any race or creed, but are merely human:
'Congress has passed a bill
to pay $379.56 to Moses Pendergrass, of Libertyville, Missouri. The story of
the reason of this liberality is pathetically interesting, and shows the sort
of pickle that an honest man may get into who undertakes to do an honest job of
work for Uncle Sam. In 1886 Moses Pendergrass put in a bid for the contract to
carry the mail on the route from Knob Lick to Libertyville and Coffman, thirty
miles a day, from July 1, 1887, for one year. He got the postmaster at Knob
Lick to write the letter for him, and while Moses intended that his bid should
be $400, his scribe carelessly made it $4. Moses got the contract, and did not
find out about the mistake until the end of the first quarter, when he got his
first pay. When he found at what rate he was working he was sorely cast down,
and opened communication with the Post Office Department. The department
informed his that he must either carry out his contract or throw it up, and
that if he threw it up his bondsman would have the pay the Government $1,459.85
damages. So Moses carried out his contract, walked thirty miles every week-day
for a year, and carried the mail, and received for his labour $4, or, to be
accurate, $6.84; for, the route being extended after his bid was accepted, his
pay was proportionately increased. Now, after ten years, a bill was finally
passed to pay to Moses the difference between what he earned in that unlucky
year and what he received.'
The 'Sun,' which tells the above
story, says that bills were introduced in three or four Congresses for Moses'
relief, and that committees repeatedly investigated his claim.
It took six Congresses,
containing in their persons the compressed virtues of 70,000,000 of people, and
cautiously and carefully giving expression to those virtues in the fear of God
and the next election, eleven years to find out some way to cheat a fellow
Christian out of about $13 on his honestly executed contract, and out of nearly
$300 due him on its enlarged terms. And they succeeded. During the same time
they paid out $1,000,000,000 in pensions—a third of it unearned and undeserved.
This indicates a splendid all-round competency in theft, for it starts with
farthings, and works its industries all the way up to ship-loads. It may be
possible that the Jews can beat this, but the man that bets on it is taking
chances.
(3) The article was written
in the summer of 1898.
(4) In Austria the renaming
was merely done because the Jews in some newly-acquired regions had no
surnames, but were mostly named Abraham and Moses, and therefore the
tax-gatherer could tell t'other from which, and was likely to lose his reason
over the matter. The renaming was put into the hands of the War Department, and
a charming mess the graceless young lieutenants made of it. To them a Jew was
of no sort of consequence, and they labeled the race in a way to make the
angels weep. As an example, take these two: Abraham Bellyache and Schmul
Godbedamned—Culled from 'Namens Studien,' by Karl Emil Fransos.
9.FROM THE 'LONDON TIMES' OF 1904
Correspondence
of the 'London Times' Chicago, April 1, 1904.
I resume by cable-telephone
where I left off yesterday. For many hours now, this vast city—along with the
rest of the globe, of course—has talked of nothing but the extraordinary
episode mentioned in my last report. In accordance with your instructions, I
will now trace the romance from its beginnings down to the culmination of
yesterday—or today; call it which you like. By an odd chance, I was a personal
actor in a part of this drama myself. The opening scene plays in Vienna. Date,
one o'clock in the morning, March 31, 1898. I had spent the evening at a social
entertainment. About midnight I went away, in company with the military
attaches of the British, Italian, and American embassies, to finish with a late
smoke. This function had been appointed to take place in the house of
Lieutenant Hillyer, the third attache mentioned in the above list. When we
arrived there we found several visitors in the room; young Szczepanik;(1) Mr.
K., his financial backer; Mr. W., the latter's secretary; and Lieutenant
Clayton, of the United States Army. War was at that time threatening between
Spain and our country, and Lieutenant Clayton had been sent to Europe on
military business. I was well acquainted with young Szczepanik and his two
friends, and I knew Mr. Clayton slightly. I had met him at West Point years
before, when he was a cadet. It was when General Merritt was superintendent. He
had the reputation of being an able officer, and also of being quick-tempered
and plain-spoken.
This smoking-party had been
gathered together partly for business. This business was to consider the
availability of the telelectroscope for military service. It sounds oddly
enough now, but it is nevertheless true that at that time the invention was not
taken seriously by any one except its inventor. Even his financial supporter
regarded it merely as a curious and interesting toy. Indeed, he was so
convinced of this that he had actually postponed its use by the general world
to the end of the dying century by granting a two years' exclusive lease of it
to a syndicate, whose intent was to exploit it at the Paris World's Fair. When
we entered the smoking-room we found Lieutenant Clayton and Szczepanik engaged
in a warm talk over the telelectroscope in the German tongue. Clayton was
saying:
'Well, you know my opinion
of it, anyway!' and he brought his fist down with emphasis upon the table.
'And I do not value it,'
retorted the young inventor, with provoking calmness of tone and manner.
Clayton turned to Mr. K.,
and said:
'I cannot see why you are
wasting money on this toy. In my opinion, the day will never come when it will
do a farthing's worth of real service for any human being.'
'That may be; yes, that may
be; still, I have put the money in it, and am content. I think, myself, that it
is only a toy; but Szczepanik claims more for it, and I know him well enough to
believe that he can see father than I can—either with his telelectroscope or
without it.'
The soft answer did not cool
Clayton down; it seemed only to irritate him the more; and he repeated and
emphasised his conviction that the invention would never do any man a
farthing's worth of real service. He even made it a 'brass' farthing, this time.
Then he laid an English farthing on the table, and added:
'Take that, Mr. K., and put
it away; and if ever the telelectroscope does any man an actual service—mind, a
real service—please mail it to me as a reminder, and I will take back what I
have been saying. Will you?'
'I will,' and Mr. K. put the
coin in his pocket.
Mr. Clayton now turned
toward Szczepanik, and began with a taunt—a taunt which did not reach a finish;
Szczepanik interrupted it with a hardy retort, and followed this with a blow.
There was a brisk fight for a moment or two; then the attaches separated the
men.
The scene now changes to
Chicago. Time, the autumn of 1901. As soon as the Paris contract released the
telelectroscope, it was delivered to public use, and was soon connected with the
telephonic systems of the whole world. The improved 'limitless-distance'
telephone was presently introduced, and the daily doings of the globe made
visible to everybody, and audibly discussible, too, by witnesses separated by
any number of leagues.
By-and-by Szczepanik arrived
in Chicago. Clayton (now captain) was serving in that military department at
the time. The two men resumed the Viennese quarrel of 1898. On three different
occasions they quarrelled, and were separated by witnesses. Then came an interval
of two months, during which time Szczepanik was not seen by any of his friends,
and it was at first supposed that he had gone off on a sight seeing tour and
would soon be heard from. But no; no word came from him. Then it was supposed
that he had returned to Europe. Still, time drifted on, and he was not heard
from. Nobody was troubled, for he was like most inventors and other kinds of
poets, and went and came in a capricious way, and often without notice.
Now comes the tragedy. On
December 29, in a dark and unused compartment of the cellar under Captain
Clayton's house, a corpse was discovered by one of Clayton's maid-servants.
Friends of deceased identified it as Szczepanik's. The man had died by
violence. Clayton was arrested, indicted, and brought to trial, charged with
this murder. The evidence against him was perfect in every detail, and
absolutely unassailable. Clayton admitted this himself. He said that a
reasonable man could not examine this testimony with a dispassionate mind and
not be convinced by it; yet the man would be in error, nevertheless. Clayton
swore that he did not commit the murder, and that he had had nothing to do with
it.
As your readers will
remember, he was condemned to death. He had numerous and powerful friends, and
they worked hard to save him, for none of them doubted the truth of his
assertion. I did what little I could to help, for I had long since become a
close friend of his, and thought I knew that it was not in his character to
inveigle an enemy into a corner and assassinate him. During 1902 and 1903 he
was several times reprieved by the governor; he was reprieved once more in the
beginning of the present year, and the execution day postponed to March 31.
The governor's situation has
been embarrassing, from the day of the condemnation, because of the fact that
Clayton's wife is the governor's niece. The marriage took place in 1899, when
Clayton was thirty-four and the girl twenty-three, and has been a happy one.
There is one child, a little girl three years old. Pity for the poor mother and
child kept the mouths of grumblers closed at first; but this could not last for
ever—for in America politics has a hand in everything—and by-and-by the
governor's political opponents began to call attention to his delay in allowing
the law to take its course. These hints have grown more and more frequent of
late, and more and more pronounced. As a natural result, his own party grew
nervous. Its leaders began to visit Springfield and hold long private
conferences with him. He was now between two fires. On the one hand, his niece
was imploring him to pardon her husband; on the other were the leaders,
insisting that he stand to his plain duty as chief magistrate of the State, and
place no further bar to Clayton's execution. Duty won in the struggle, and the
Governor gave his word that he would not again respite the condemned man. This
was two weeks ago. Mrs. Clayton now said:
'Now that you have given
your word, my last hope is gone, for I know you will never go back from it. But
you have done the best you could for John, and I have no reproaches for you.
You love him, and you love me, and we know that if you could honourable save
him, you would do it. I will go to him now, and be what help I can to him, and
get what comfort I may out of the few days that are left to us before the night
comes which will have no end for me in life. You will be with me that day? You
will not let me bear it alone?'
'I will take you to him
myself, poor child, and I will be near you to the last.'
By the governor's command,
Clayton was now allowed every indulgence he might ask for which could interest
his mind and soften the hardships of his imprisonment. His wife and child spent
the days with him; I was his companion by night. He was removed from the narrow
cell which he had occupied during such a dreary stretch of time, and given the
chief warden's roomy and comfortable quarters. His mind was always busy with
the catastrophe of his life, and with the slaughtered inventor, and he now took
the fancy that he would like to have the telelectroscope and divert his mind
with it. He had his wish. The connection was made with the international
telephone-station, and day by day, and night by night, he called up one corner
of the globe after another, and looked upon its life, and studied its strange
sights, and spoke with its people, and realised that by grace of this
marvellous instrument he was almost as free as the birds of the air, although a
prisoner under locks and bars. He seldom spoke, and I never interrupted him when
he was absorbed in this amusement. I sat in his parlour and read, and smoked,
and the nights were very quiet and reposefully sociable, and I found them
pleasant. Now and then I would her him say 'Give me Yedo;' next, 'Give me
Hong-Kong;' next, 'Give me Melbourne.' And I smoked on, and read in comfort,
while he wandered about the remote underworld, where the sun was shining in the
sky, and the people were at their daily work. Sometimes the talk that came from
those far regions through the microphone attachment interested me, and I
listened.
Yesterday—I keep calling it
yesterday, which is quite natural, for certain reasons—the instrument remained
unused, and that also was natural, for it was the eve of the execution day. It
was spent in tears and lamentations and farewells. The governor and the wife
and child remained until a quarter-past eleven at night, and the scenes I
witnessed were pitiful to see. The execution was to take place at four in the
morning. A little after eleven a sound of hammering broke out upon the still
night, and there was a glare of light, and the child cried out, 'What is that,
papa?' and ran to the window before she could be stopped and clapped her small
hands and said, 'Oh, come and see, mamma—such a pretty thing they are making!'
The mother knew—and fainted. It was the gallows!
She was carried away to her
lodging, poor woman, and Clayton and I were alone—alone, and thinking,
brooding, dreaming. We might have been statues, we sat so motionless and still.
It was a wild night, for winter was come again for a moment, after the habit of
this region in the early spring. The sky was starless and black, and a strong
wind was blowing from the lake. The silence in the room was so deep that all
outside sounds seemed exaggerated by contrast with it. These sounds were
fitting ones: they harmonised with the situation and the conditions: the boom
and thunder of sudden storm-gusts among the roofs and chimneys, then the dying
down into moanings and wailings about the eaves and angles; now and then a gnashing
and lashing rush of sleet along the window-panes; and always the muffled and
uncanny hammering of the gallows-builders in the court-yard. After an age of
this, another sound—far off, and coming smothered and faint through the riot of
the tempest—a bell tolling twelve! Another age, and it was tolled again.
By-and-by, again. A dreary long interval after this, then the spectral sound
floated to us once more—one, two three; and this time we caught our breath;
sixty minutes of life left!
Clayton rose, and stood by
the window, and looked up into the black sky, and listened to the thrashing
sleet and the piping wind; then he said: 'That a dying man's last of earth
should be—this!' After a little he said: 'I must see the sun again—the sun!'
and the next moment he was feverishly calling: 'China! Give me China—Peking!'
I was strangely stirred, and
said to myself: 'To think that it is a mere human being who does this
unimaginable miracle—turns winter into summer, night into day, storm into calm,
gives the freedom of the great globe to a prisoner in his cell, and the sun in
his naked splendour to a man dying in Egyptian darkness.'
I was listening.
'What light! what
brilliancy! what radiance!... This is Peking?'
'Yes.'
'The time?'
'Mid-afternoon.'
'What is the great crowd
for, and in such gorgeous costumes? What masses and masses of rich colour and
barbaric magnificence! And how they flash and glow and burn in the flooding
sunlight! What is the occasion of it all?'
'The coronation of our new
emperor—the Czar.'
'But I thought that that was
to take place yesterday.'
'This is yesterday—to you.'
'Certainly it is. But my
mind is confused, these days: there are reasons for it.... Is this the
beginning of the procession?'
'Oh, no; it began to move an
hour ago.'
'Is there much more of it
still to come?'
'Two hours of it. Why do you
sigh?'
'Because I should like to
see it all.'
'And why can't you?'
'I have to go—presently.'
'You have an engagement?'
After a pause, softly:
'Yes.' After another pause: 'Who are these in the splendid pavilion?'
'The imperial family, and
visiting royalties from here and there and yonder in the earth.'
'And who are those in the
adjoining pavilions to the right and left?'
'Ambassadors and their
families and suites to the right; unofficial foreigners to the left.'
'If you will be so good, I—'
Boom! That distant bell
again, tolling the half-hour faintly through the tempest of wind and sleet. The
door opened, and the governor and the mother and child entered—the woman in
widow's weeds! She fell upon her husband's breast in a passion of sobs, and I—I
could not stay; I could not bear it. I went into the bedchamber, and closed the
door. I sat there waiting—waiting—waiting, and listening to the rattling sashes
and the blustering of the storm. After what seemed a long, long time, I heard a
rustle and movement in the parlour, and knew that the clergyman and the sheriff
and the guard were come. There was some low-voiced talking; then a hush; then a
prayer, with a sound of sobbing; presently, footfalls—the departure for the
gallows; then the child's happy voice: 'Don't cry now, mamma, when we've got
papa again, and taking him home.'
The door closed; they were
gone. I was ashamed: I was the only friend of the dying man that had no spirit,
no courage. I stepped into the room, and said I would be a man and would
follow. But we are made as we are made, and we cannot help it. I did not go.
I fidgeted about the room
nervously, and presently went to the window and softly raised it—drawn by that
dread fascination which the terrible and the awful exert—and looked down upon
the court-yard. By the garish light of the electric lamps I saw the little
group of privileged witnesses, the wife crying on her uncle's breast, the
condemned man standing on the scaffold with the halter around his neck, his
arms strapped to his body, the black cap on his head, the sheriff at his side
with his hand on the drop, the clergyman in front of him with bare head and his
book in his hand.
'I am the resurrection and
the life—'
I turned away. I could not listen;
I could not look. I did not know whither to go or what to do. Mechanically and
without knowing it, I put my eye to that strange instrument, and there was
Peking and the Czar's procession! The next moment I was leaning out of the
window, gasping, suffocating, trying to speak, but dumb from the very imminence
of the necessity of speaking. The preacher could speak, but I, who had such
need of words—'And may God have mercy upon your soul. Amen.'
The sheriff drew down the
black cap, and laid his hand upon the lever. I got my voice.
'Stop, for God's sake! The
man is innocent. Come here and see Szczepanik face to face!'
Hardly three minutes later
the governor had my place at the window, and was saying:
'Strike off his bonds and
set him free!'
Three minutes later all were
in the parlour again. The reader will imagine the scene; I have no need to
describe it. It was a sort of mad orgy of joy.
A messenger carried word to
Szczepanik in the pavilion, and one could see the distressed amazement in his
face as he listened to the tale. Then he came to his end of the line, and
talked with Clayton and the governor and the others; and the wife poured out
her gratitude upon him for saving her husband's life, and in her deep
thankfulness she kissed him at twelve thousand miles' range.
The telelectroscopes of the
world were put to service now, and for many hours the kings and queens of many
realms (with here and there a reporter) talked with Szczepanik, and praised
him; and the few scientific societies which had not already made him an
honorary member conferred that grace upon him.
How had he come to disappear
from among us? It was easily explained. He had not grown used to being a
world-famous person, and had been forced to break away from the lionising that
was robbing him of all privacy and repose. So he grew a beard, put on coloured
glasses, disguised himself a little in other ways, then took a fictitious name,
and went off to wander about the earth in peace.
Such is the tale of the
drama which began with an inconsequential quarrel in Vienna in the spring of
1898, and came near ending as a tragedy in the spring of 1904.
Mark Twain.
II
Correspondence of the
'London Times' Chicago, April 5, 1904
To-day, by a clipper of the
Electric Line, and the latter's Electric Railway connections, arrived an
envelope from Vienna, for Captain Clayton, containing an English farthing. The
receiver of it was a good deal moved. He called up Vienna, and stood face to
face with Mr. K., and said:
'I do not need to say
anything: you can see it all in my face. My wife has the farthing. Do not be
afraid—she will not throw it away.'
M.T.
III
Correspondence of the
'London Times' Chicago, April 23, 1904
Now that the after
developments of the Clayton case have run their course and reached a finish, I
will sum them up. Clayton's romantic escape from a shameful death steeped all
this region in an enchantment of wonder and joy—during the proverbial nine
days. Then the sobering process followed, and men began to take thought, and to
say: 'But a man was killed, and Clayton killed him.' Others replied: 'That is
true: we have been overlooking that important detail; we have been led away by
excitement.'
The telling soon became
general that Clayton ought to be tried again. Measures were taken accordingly,
and the proper representations conveyed to Washington; for in America under the
new paragraph added to the Constitution in 1889, second trials are not State
affairs, but national, and must be tried by the most august body in the
land—the Supreme Court of the United States. The justices were therefore
summoned to sit in Chicago. The session was held day before yesterday, and was
opened with the usual impressive formalities, the nine judges appearing in
their black robes, and the new chief justice (Lemaitre) presiding. In opening
the case the chief justice said:
'It is my opinion that this
matter is quite simple. The prisoner at the bar was charged with murdering the
man Szczepanik; he was tried for murdering the man Szczepanik; he was fairly
tried and justly condemned and sentenced to death for murdering the man
Szczepanik. It turns out that the man Szczepanik was not murdered at all. By
the decision of the French courts in the Dreyfus matter, it is established
beyond cavil or question that the decisions of courts are permanent and cannot
be revised. We are obliged to respect and adopt this precedent. It is upon
precedents that the enduring edifice of jurisprudence is reared. The prisoner
at the bar has been fairly and righteously condemned to death for the murder of
the man Szczepanik, and, in my opinion, there is but one course to pursue in
the matter: he must be hanged.'
Mr. Justice Crawford said:
'But, your Excellency, he
was pardoned on the scaffold for that.'
'The pardon is not valid,
and cannot stand, because he was pardoned for killing Szczepanik, a man whom he
had not killed. A man cannot be pardoned for a crime which he has not
committed; it would be an absurdity.'
'But, your Excellency, he
did kill a man.'
'That is an extraneous
detail; we have nothing to do with it. The court cannot take up this crime
until the prisoner has expiated the other one.'
Mr. Justice Halleck said:
'If we order his execution,
your Excellency, we shall bring about a miscarriage of justice, for the
governor will pardon him again.'
'He will not have the power.
He cannot pardon a man for a crime which he has not committed. As I observed
before, it would be an absurdity.'
After a consultation, Mr.
Justice Wadsworth said:
'Several of us have arrived
at the conclusion, your Excellency, that it would be an error to hang the
prisoner for killing Szczepanik, instead of for killing the other man, since it
is proven that he did not kill Szczepanik.'
'On the contrary, it is
proven that he did kill Szczepanik. By the French precedent, it is plain that we
must abide by the finding of the court.'
'But Szczepanik is still
alive.'
'So is Dreyfus.'
In the end it was found
impossible to ignore or get around the French precedent. There could be but one
result: Clayton was delivered over for the execution. It made an immense
excitement; the State rose as one man and clamored for Clayton's pardon and
retrial. The governor issued the pardon, but the Supreme Court was in duty
bound to annul it, and did so, and poor Clayton was hanged yesterday. The city
is draped in black, and, indeed, the like may be said of the State. All America
is vocal with scorn of 'French justice,' and of the malignant little soldiers
who invented it and inflicted it upon the other Christian lands.
(1) Pronounced
(approximately) Shepannik.
10.ABOUT PLAY-ACTING
I
I have a project to suggest.
But first I will write a chapter of introduction.
I have just been witnessing
a remarkable play, here at the Burg Theatre in Vienna. I do not know of any
play that much resembles it. In fact, it is such a departure from the common
laws of the drama that the name 'play' doesn't seem to fit it quite snugly.
However, whatever else it may be, it is in any case a great and stately
metaphysical poem, and deeply fascinating. 'Deeply fascinating' is the right
term: for the audience sat four hours and five minutes without thrice breaking
into applause, except at the close of each act; sat rapt and silent—fascinated.
This piece is 'The Master of Palmyra.' It is twenty years old; yet I doubt if
you have ever heard of it. It is by Wilbrandt, and is his masterpiece and the
work which is to make his name permanent in German literature. It has never
been played anywhere except in Berlin and in the great Burg Theatre in Vienna.
Yet whenever it is put on the stage it packs the house, and the free list is
suspended. I know people who have seem it ten times; they know the most of it
by heart; they do not tire of it; and they say they shall still be quite
willing to go and sit under its spell whenever they get the opportunity.
There is a dash of
metempsychosis in it—and it is the strength of the piece. The play gave me the
sense of the passage of a dimly connected procession of dream-pictures. The
scene of it is Palmyra in Roman times. It covers a wide stretch of time—I don't
know how many years—and in the course of it the chief actress is reincarnated
several times: four times she is a more or less young woman, and once she is a
lad. In the first act she is Zoe—a Christian girl who has wandered across the
desert from Damascus to try to Christianise the Zeus-worshipping pagans of
Palmyra. In this character she is wholly spiritual, a religious enthusiast, a
devotee who covets martyrdom—and gets it.
After many years she appears
in the second act as Phoebe, a graceful and beautiful young light-o'-love from
Rome, whose soul is all for the shows and luxuries and delights of this life—a
dainty and capricious feather-head, a creature of shower and sunshine, a
spoiled child, but a charming one. In the third act, after an interval of many
years, she reappears as Persida, mother of a daughter who is in the fresh bloom
of youth. She is now a sort of combination of her two earlier selves: in
religious loyalty and subjection she is Zoe: in triviality of character and
shallowness of judgement—together with a touch of vanity in dress—she is
Phoebe.
After a lapse of years she
appears in the fourth act as Nymphas, a beautiful boy, in whose character the
previous incarnations are engagingly mixed.
And after another stretch of
years all these heredities are joined in the Zenobia of the fifth act—a person
of gravity, dignity, sweetness, with a heart filled with compassion for all who
suffer, and a hand prompt to put into practical form the heart's benignant
impulses.
There are a number of
curious and interesting features in this piece. For instance, its hero,
Appelles, young, handsome, vigorous, in the first act, remains so all through
the long flight of years covered by the five acts. Other men, young in the
first act, are touched with gray in the second, are old and racked with
infirmities in the third; in the fourth, all but one are gone to their long
home, and this one is a blind and helpless hulk of ninety or a hundred years.
It indicates that the stretch of time covered by the piece is seventy years or more.
The scenery undergoes decay, too—the decay of age assisted and perfected by a
conflagration. The fine new temples and palaces of the second act are by-and-by
a wreck of crumbled walls and prostrate columns, mouldy, grass-grown, and
desolate; but their former selves are still recognisable in their ruins. The
ageing men and the ageing scenery together convey a profound illusion of that
long lapse of time: they make you live it yourself! You leave the theatre with
the weight of a century upon you.
Another strong effect:
Death, in person, walks about the stage in every act. So far as I could make
out, he was supposably not visible to any excepting two persons—the one he came
for and Appelles. He used various costumes: but there was always more black
about them than any other tint; and so they were always sombre. Also they were
always deeply impressive and, indeed, awe-inspiring. The face was not subjected
to changes, but remained the same first and last—a ghastly white. To me he was
always welcome, he seemed so real—the actual Death, not a play-acting
artificiality. He was of a solemn and stately carriage; and he had a deep
voice, and used it with a noble dignity. Wherever there was a turmoil of
merry-making or fighting or feasting or chaffing or quarreling, or a gilded
pageant, or other manifestation of our trivial and fleeting life, into it
drifted that black figure with the corpse-face, and looked its fateful look and
passed on; leaving its victim shuddering and smitten. And always its coming
made the fussy human pack seem infinitely pitiful and shabby, and hardly worth
the attention of either saving or damning.
In the beginning of the
first act the young girl Zoe appears by some great rocks in the desert, and
sits down exhausted, to rest. Presently arrive a pauper couple stricken with
age and infirmities; and they begin to mumble and pray to the Spirit of Life,
who is said to inhabit that spot. The Spirit of Life appears; also
Death—uninvited. They are (supposably) invisible. Death, tall, black-robed, corpse-faced,
stands motionless and waits. The aged couple pray to the Spirit of Life for a
means to prop up their existence and continue it. Their prayer fails. The
Spirit of Life prophesies Zoe's martyrdom; it will take place before night.
Soon Appelles arrives, young and vigorous and full of enthusiasm: he has led a
host against the Persians and won the battle; he is the pet of fortune, rich,
honoured, believed, 'Master of Palmyra'. He has heard that whoever stretches
himself out on one of those rocks there and asks for a deathless life can have
his wish. He laughs at the tradition, but wants to make the trial anyway. The
invisible Spirit of Life warns him! 'Life without end can be regret without
end.' But he persists: let him keep his youth, his strength, and his mental
faculties unimpaired, and he will take all the risks. He has his desire.
From this time forth, act
after act, the troubles and sorrows and misfortunes and humiliations of life
beat upon him without pity or respite; but he will not give up, he will not
confess his mistake. Whenever he meets Death he still furiously defies him—but
Death patiently waits. He, the healer of sorrows, is man's best friend: the
recognition of this will come. As the years drag on, and on, and on, the
friends of the Master's youth grow old; and one by one they totter to the
grave: he goes on with his proud fight, and will not yield. At length he is
wholly alone in the world; all his friends are dead; last of all, his darling
of darlings, his son, the lad Nymphas, who dies in his arms. His pride is
broken now; and he would welcome Death, if Death would come, if Death would
hear his prayers and give him peace. The closing act is fine and pathetic.
Appelles meets Zenobia, the helper of all who suffer, and tells her his story, which
moves her pity. By common report she is endowed with more than earthly powers;
and since he cannot have the boon of death, he appeals to her to drown his
memory in forgetfulness of his griefs—forgetfulness 'which is death's
equivalent'. She says (roughly translated), in an exaltation of compassion:
'Come to me!
Kneel; and may the power be granted me
To cool the fires of this poor tortured brain,
And bring it peace and healing.'
He kneels. From her hand,
which she lays upon his head, a mysterious influence steals through him; and he
sinks into a dreamy tranquility.
'Oh, if I could but so drift
Through this soft twilight into the night of peace,
Never to wake again!
(Raising his hand, as if in
benediction.)
O mother earth, farewell!
Gracious thou were to me. Farewell!
Appelles goes to rest.'
Death appears behind him and
encloses the uplifted hand in his. Appelles shudders, wearily and slowly turns,
and recognises his life-long adversary. He smiles and puts all his gratitude
into one simple and touching sentence, 'Ich danke dir,' and dies.
Nothing, I think, could be
more moving, more beautiful, than this close. This piece is just one long,
soulful, sardonic laugh at human life. Its title might properly be 'Is Life a
Failure?' and leave the five acts to play with the answer. I am not at all sure
that the author meant to laugh at life. I only notice that he has done it.
Without putting into words any ungracious or discourteous things about life,
the episodes in the piece seem to be saying all the time, inarticulately: 'Note
what a silly poor thing human life is; how childish its ambitions, how
ridiculous its pomps, how trivial its dignities, how cheap its heroisms, how
capricious its course, how brief its flight, how stingy in happinesses, how
opulent in miseries, how few its prides, how multitudinous its humiliations,
how comic its tragedies, how tragic its comedies, how wearisome and monotonous
its repetition of its stupid history through the ages, with never the introduction
of a new detail; how hard it has tried, from the Creation down, to play itself
upon its possessor as a boon and has never proved its case in a single
instance!'
Take note of some of the
details of the piece. Each of the five acts contains an independent tragedy of
its own. In each act someone's edifice of hope, or of ambition, or of
happiness, goes down in ruins. Even Appelles' perennial youth is only a long
tragedy, and his life a failure. There are two martyrdoms in the piece; and
they are curiously and sarcastically contrasted. In the first act the pagans
persecute Zoe, the Christian girl, and a pagan mob slaughters her. In the
fourth act those same pagans—now very old and zealous—are become Christians,
and they persecute the pagans; a mob of them slaughters the pagan youth,
Nymphas, who is standing up for the old gods of his fathers. No remark is made
about this picturesque failure of civilisation; but there it stands, as an
unworded suggestion that civilisation, even when Christianised, was not able
wholly to subdue the natural man in that old day—just as in our day the
spectacle of a shipwrecked French crew clubbing women and children who tried to
climb into the lifeboats suggests that civilisation has not succeeded in
entirely obliterating the natural man even yet. Common sailors a year ago, in
Paris, at a fire, the aristocracy of the same nation clubbed girls and women
out of the way to save themselves. Civilisation tested at top and bottom both,
you see. And in still another panic of fright we have this same tough
civilisation saving its honour by condemning an innocent man to multiform
death, and hugging and whitewashing the guilty one.
In the second act a grand
Roman official is not above trying to blast Appelles' reputation by falsely charging
him with misappropriating public moneys. Appelles, who is too proud to endure
even the suspicion of irregularity, strips himself to naked poverty to square
the unfair account, and his troubles begin: the blight which is to continue and
spread strikes his life; for the frivolous, pretty creature whom he brought
from Rome has no taste for poverty and agrees to elope with a more competent
candidate. Her presence in the house has previously brought down the pride and
broken the heart of Appelles' poor old mother; and her life is a failure. Death
comes for her, but is willing to trade her for the Roman girl; so the bargain
is struck with Appelles, and the mother is spared for the present.
No one's life escapes the
blight. Timoleus, the gay satirist of the first two acts, who scoffed at the
pious hypocrisies and money-grubbing ways of the great Roman lords, is grown
old and fat and blear-eyed and racked with disease in the third, has lost his
stately purities, and watered the acid of his wit. His life has suffered
defeat. Unthinkingly he swears by Zeus—from ancient habit—and then quakes with
fright; for a fellow-communicant is passing by. Reproached by a pagan friend of
his youth for his apostasy, he confesses that principle, when unsupported by an
assenting stomach, has to climb down. One must have bread; and 'the bread is
Christian now.' Then the poor old wreck, once so proud of his iron rectitude,
hobbles away, coughing and barking.
In that same act Appelles
give his sweet young Christian daughter and her fine young pagan lover his
consent and blessing, and makes them utterly happy—for five minutes. Then the
priest and the mob come, to tear them apart and put the girl in a nunnery; for
marriage between the sects is forbidden. Appelles' wife could dissolve the
rule; and she wants to do it; but under priestly pressure she wavers; then,
fearing that in providing happiness for her child she would be committing a sin
dangerous to her own, she goes over to the opposition, and throws the casting
vote for the nunnery. The blight has fallen upon the young couple, and their
life is a failure.
In the fourth act, Longinus,
who made such a prosperous and enviable start in the first act, is left alone
in the desert, sick, blind, helpless, incredibly old, to die: not a friend left
in the world—another ruined life. And in that act, also, Appelles' worshipped
boy, Nymphas, done to death by the mob, breathes out his last sigh in his
father's arms—one more failure. In the fifth act, Appelles himself dies, and is
glad to do it; he who so ignorantly rejoiced, only four acts before, over the
splendid present of an earthly immortality—the very worst failure of the lot!
II
Now I approach my project.
Here is the theatre list for Saturday, May 7, 1898, cut from the advertising
columns of a New York paper:
(graphic here)
Now I arrive at my project,
and make my suggestion. From the look of this lightsome feast, I conclude that
what you need is a tonic. Send for 'The Master of Palmyra.' You are trying to
make yourself believe that life is a comedy, that its sole business is fun,
that there is nothing serious in it. You are ignoring the skeleton in your
closet. Send for 'The Master of Palmyra.' You are neglecting a valuable side of
your life; presently it will be atrophied. You are eating too much mental
sugar; you will bring on Bright's disease of the intellect. You need a tonic;
you need it very much. Send for 'The Master of Palmyra.' You will not need to
translate it; its story is as plain as a procession of pictures.
I have made my suggestion.
Now I wish to put an annex to it. And that is this: It is right and wholesome
to have those light comedies and entertaining shows; and I shouldn't wish to
see them diminished. But none of us is always in the comedy spirit; we have our
graver moods; they come to us all; the lightest of us cannot escape them. These
moods have their appetites—healthy and legitimate appetites—and there ought to
be some way of satisfying them. It seems to me that New York ought to have one
theatre devoted to tragedy. With her three millions of population, and seventy
outside millions to draw upon, she can afford it, she can support it. America
devotes more time, labour, money and attention to distributing literary and
musical culture among the general public than does any other nation, perhaps;
yet here you find her neglecting what is possibly the most effective of all the
breeders and nurses and disseminators of high literary taste and lofty
emotion—the tragic stage. To leave that powerful agency out is to haul the
culture-wagon with a crippled team. Nowadays, when a mood comes which only
Shakespeare can set to music, what must we do? Read Shakespeare ourselves!
Isn't it pitiful? It is playing an organ solo on a jew's-harp. We can't read.
None but the Booths can do it.
Thirty years ago Edwin Booth
played 'Hamlet' a hundred nights in New York. With three times the population,
how often is 'Hamlet' played now in a year? If Booth were back now in his
prime, how often could he play it in New York? Some will say twenty-five
nights. I will say three hundred, and say it with confidence. The tragedians
are dead; but I think that the taste and intelligence which made their market
are not.
What has come over us
English-speaking people? During the first half of this century tragedies and great
tragedians were as common with us as farce and comedy; and it was the same in
England. Now we have not a tragedian, I believe, and London, with her fifty
shows and theatres, has but three, I think. It is an astonishing thing, when
you come to consider it. Vienna remains upon the ancient basis: there has been
no change. She sticks to the former proportions: a number of rollicking
comedies, admirably played, every night; and also every night at the Burg
Theatre—that wonder of the world for grace and beauty and richness and
splendour and costliness—a majestic drama of depth and seriousness, or a
standard old tragedy. It is only within the last dozen years that men have
learned to do miracles on the stage in the way of grand and enchanting scenic
effects; and it is at such a time as this that we have reduced our scenery
mainly to different breeds of parlours and varying aspects of furniture and
rugs. I think we must have a Burg in New York, and Burg scenery, and a great
company like the Burg company. Then, with a tragedy-tonic once or twice a
month, we shall enjoy the comedies all the better. Comedy keeps the heart
sweet; but we all know that there is wholesome refreshment for both mind and
heart in an occasional climb among the solemn pomps of the intellectual
snow-summits built by Shakespeare and those others. Do I seem to be preaching?
It is out of my line: I only do it because the rest of the clergy seem to be on
vacation.
11.TRAVELLING WITH A
REFORMER
Last spring I went out to
Chicago to see the Fair, and although I did not see it my trip was not wholly
lost—there were compensations. In New York I was introduced to a Major in the
regular army who said he was going to the Fair, and we agreed to go together. I
had to go to Boston first, but that did not interfere; he said he would go
along and put in the time. He was a handsome man and built like a gladiator.
But his ways were gentle, and his speech was soft and persuasive. He was
companionable, but exceedingly reposeful. Yes, and wholly destitute of the sense
of humour. He was full of interest in everything that went on around him, but
his serenity was indestructible; nothing disturbed him, nothing excited him.
But before the day was done
I found that deep down in him somewhere he had a passion, quiet as he was—a
passion for reforming petty public abuses. He stood for citizenship—it was his
hobby. His idea was that every citizen of the republic ought to consider
himself an unofficial policeman, and keep unsalaried watch and ward over the
laws and their execution. He thought that the only effective way of preserving
and protecting public rights was for each citizen to do his share in preventing
or punishing such infringements of them as came under his personal notice.
It was a good scheme, but I
thought it would keep a body in trouble all the time; it seemed to me that one
would be always trying to get offending little officials discharged, and
perhaps getting laughed at for all reward. But he said no, I had the wrong
idea: that there was no occasion to get anybody discharged; that in fact you
mustn't get anybody discharged; that that would itself be a failure; no, one
must reform the man—reform him and make him useful where he was.
'Must one report the
offender and then beg his superior not to discharge him, but reprimand him and
keep him?'
'No, that is not the idea;
you don't report him at all, for then you risk his bread and butter. You can
act as if you are going to report him—when nothing else will answer. But that's
an extreme case. That is a sort of force, and force is bad. Diplomacy is the
effective thing. Now if a man has tact—if a man will exercise diplomacy—'
For two minutes we had been
standing at a telegraph wicket, and during all this time the Major had been
trying to get the attention of one of the young operators, but they were all
busy skylarking. The Major spoke now, and asked one of them to take his
telegram. He got for reply:
'I reckon you can wait a
minute, can't you?' And the skylarking went on.
The Major said yes, he was
not in a hurry. Then he wrote another telegram:
'President Western Union Tel. Co.:
'Come and dine with me this evening. I can tell you how business is
conducted in one of your branches.'
Presently the young fellow
who had spoken so pertly a little before reached out and took the telegram, and
when he read it he lost colour and began to apologise and explain. He said he
would lose his place if this deadly telegram was sent, and he might never get
another. If he could be let off this time he would give no cause of complaint
again. The compromise was accepted.
As we walked away, the Major
said:
'Now, you see, that was
diplomacy—and you see how it worked. It wouldn't do any good to bluster, the
way people are always doing. That boy can always give you as good as you send,
and you'll come out defeated and ashamed of yourself pretty nearly always. But
you see he stands no chance against diplomacy. Gentle words and diplomacy—those
are the tools to work with.'
'Yes, I see: but everybody
wouldn't have had your opportunity. It isn't everybody that is on those
familiar terms with the President of the Western Union.'
'Oh, you misunderstand. I
don't know the President—I only use him diplomatically. It is for his good and
for the public good. There's no harm in it.'
I said with hesitation and
diffidence:
'But is it ever right or
noble to tell a lie?'
He took no note of the
delicate self-righteousness of the question, but answered with undisturbed
gravity and simplicity:
'Yes, sometimes. Lies told
to injure a person and lies told to profit yourself are not justifiable, but
lies told to help another person, and lies told in the public interest—oh,
well, that is quite another matter. Anybody knows that. But never mind about
the methods: you see the result. That youth is going to be useful now, and
well-behaved. He had a good face. He was worth saving. Why, he was worth saving
on his mother's account if not his own. Of course, he has a mother—sisters,
too. Damn these people who are always forgetting that! Do you know, I've never
fought a duel in my life—never once—and yet have been challenged, like other
people. I could always see the other man's unoffending women folks or his
little children standing between him and me. They hadn't done anything—I
couldn't break their hearts, you know.'
He corrected a good many
little abuses in the course of the day, and always without friction—always with
a fine and dainty 'diplomacy' which left no sting behind; and he got such
happiness and such contentment out of these performances that I was obliged to
envy him his trade—and perhaps would have adopted it if I could have managed
the necessary deflections from fact as confidently with my mouth as I believe I
could with a pen, behind the shelter of print, after a little practice.
Away late that night we were
coming up-town in a horse-car when three boisterous roughs got aboard, and
began to fling hilarious obscenities and profanities right and left among the
timid passengers, some of whom were women and children. Nobody resisted or
retorted; the conductor tried soothing words and moral suasion, but the toughs
only called him names and laughed at him. Very soon I saw that the Major
realised that this was a matter which was in his line; evidently he was turning
over his stock of diplomacy in his mind and getting ready. I felt that the
first diplomatic remark he made in this place would bring down a landslide of
ridicule upon him, and maybe something worse; but before I could whisper to him
and check him he had begun, and it was too late. He said, in a level and
dispassionate tone:
'Conductor, you must put
these swine out. I will help you.'
I was not looking for that.
In a flash the three roughs plunged at him. But none of them arrived. He
delivered three such blows as one could not expect to encounter outside the
prize-ring, and neither of the men had life enough left in him to get up from
where he fell. The Major dragged them out and threw them off the car, and we
got under way again.
I was astonished: astonished
to see a lamb act so; astonished at the strength displayed, and the clean and
comprehensive result; astonished at the brisk and business-like style of the
whole thing. The situation had a humorous side to it, considering how much I
had been hearing about mild persuasion and gentle diplomacy all day from this
pile-driver, and I would have liked to call his attention to that feature and
do some sarcasms about it; but when I looked at him I saw that it would be of
no use—his placid and contented face had no ray of humour in it; he would not
have understood. When we left the car, I said:
'That was a good stroke of
diplomacy—three good strokes of diplomacy, in fact.'
'That? That wasn't
diplomacy. You are quite in the wrong. Diplomacy is a wholly different thing.
One cannot apply it to that sort; they would not understand it. No, that was
not diplomacy; it was force.'
'Now that you mention it,
I—yes, I think perhaps you are right.'
'Right? Of course I am
right. It was just force.'
'I think, myself, it had the
outside aspect of it. Do you often have to reform people in that way?'
'Far from it. It hardly ever
happens. Not oftener than once in half a year, at the outside.'
'Those men will get well?'
'Get well? Why, certainly
they will. They are not in any danger. I know how to hit and where to hit. You
noticed that I did not hit them under the jaw. That would have killed them.'
I believed that. I
remarked—rather wittily, as I thought—that he had been a lamb all day, but now
had all of a sudden developed into a ram—battering-ram; but with dulcet
frankness and simplicity he said no, a battering-ram was quite a different
thing, and not in use now. This was maddening, and I came near bursting out and
saying he had no more appreciation of wit than a jackass—in fact, I had it
right on my tongue, but did not say it, knowing there was no hurry and I could
say it just as well some other time over the telephone.
We started to Boston the
next afternoon. The smoking compartment in the parlour-car was full, and he
went into the regular smoker. Across the aisle in the front seat sat a meek,
farmer-looking old man with a sickly pallor in his face, and he was holding the
door open with his foot to get the air. Presently a big brakeman came rushing
through, and when he got to the door he stopped, gave the farmer an ugly scowl,
then wrenched the door to with such energy as to almost snatch the old man's
boot off. Then on he plunged about his business. Several passengers laughed,
and the old gentleman looked pathetically shamed and grieved.
After a little the conductor
passed along, and the Major stopped him and asked him a question in his
habitually courteous way:
'Conductor, where does one
report the misconduct of a brakeman? Does one report to you?'
'You can report him at New
Haven if you want to. What has he been doing?'
The Major told the story.
The conductor seemed amused. He said, with just a touch of sarcasm in his bland
tones:
'As I understand you, the
brakeman didn't say anything?'
'No, he didn't say
anything.'
'But he scowled, you say?'
'Yes.'
'And snatched the door loose
in a rough way?'
'Yes.'
'That's the whole business,
is it?'
'Yes, that is the whole of
it.'
The conductor smiled
pleasantly, and said:
'Well, if you want to report
him, all right, but I don't quite make out what it's going to amount to. You'll
say—as I understand you—that the brakeman insulted this old gentleman. They'll
ask you what he said. You'll say he didn't say anything at all. I reckon
they'll say, How are you going to make out an insult when you acknowledge
yourself that he didn't say a word?'
There was a murmur of
applause at the conductor's compact reasoning, and it gave him pleasure—you
could see it in his face. But the Major was not disturbed. He said:
'There—now you have touched
upon a crying defect in the complaint system. The railway officials—as the public
think and as you also seem to think—are not aware that there are any insults
except spoken ones. So nobody goes to headquarters and reports insults of
manner, insults of gesture, look, and so forth; and yet these are sometimes
harder to bear than any words. They are bitter hard to bear because there is
nothing tangible to take hold of; and the insulter can always say, if called
before the railway officials, that he never dreamed of intending any offence.
It seems to me that the officials ought to specially and urgently request the
public to report unworded affronts and incivilities.'
The conductor laughed, and
said:
'Well, that would be
trimming it pretty fine, sure!'
'But not too fine, I think.
I will report this matter at New Haven, and I have an idea that I'll be thanked
for it.'
The conductor's face lost
something of its complacency; in fact, it settled to a quite sober cast as the
owner of it moved away. I said:
'You are not really going to
bother with that trifle, are you?'
'It isn't a trifle. Such
things ought always to be reported. It is a public duty and no citizen has a
right to shirk it. But I sha'n't' have to report this case.'
'Why?'
'It won't be necessary.
Diplomacy will do the business. You'll see.'
Presently the conductor came
on his rounds again, and when he reached the Major he leaned over and said:
'That's all right. You
needn't report him. He's responsible to me, and if he does it again I'll give
him a talking to.'
The Major's response was
cordial:
'Now that is what I like!
You mustn't think that I was moved by any vengeful spirit, for that wasn't the
case. It was duty—just a sense of duty, that was all. My brother-in-law is one
of the directors of the road, and when he learns that you are going to reason
with your brakeman the very next time he brutally insults an unoffending old
man it will please him, you may be sure of that.'
The conductor did not look
as joyous as one might have thought he would, but on the contrary looked sickly
and uncomfortable. He stood around a little; then said:
'I think something ought to
be done to him now. I'll discharge him.'
'Discharge him! What good
would that do? Don't you think it would be better wisdom to teach him better
ways and keep him?'
'Well, there's something in
that. What would you suggest?'
'He insulted the old
gentleman in presence of all these people. How would it do to have him come and
apologise in their presence?'
'I'll have him here right
off. And I want to say this: If people would do as you've done, and report such
things to me instead of keeping mum and going off and blackguarding the road,
you'd see a different state of things pretty soon. I'm much obliged to you.'
The brakeman came and
apologised. After he was gone the Major said:
'Now you see how simple and
easy that was. The ordinary citizen would have accomplished nothing—the
brother-in-law of a director can accomplish anything he wants to.'
'But are you really the
brother-in-law of a director?'
'Always. Always when the
public interests require it. I have a brother-in-law on all the
boards—everywhere. It saves me a world of trouble.'
'It is a good wide
relationship.'
'Yes. I have over three
hundred of them.'
'Is the relationship never
doubted by a conductor?'
'I have never met with a
case. It is the honest truth—I never have.'
'Why didn't you let him go
ahead and discharge the brakeman, in spite of your favourite policy. You know
he deserved it.'
The Major answered with
something which really had a sort of distant resemblance to impatience:
'If you would stop and think
a moment you wouldn't ask such a question as that. Is a brakeman a dog, that
nothing but dogs' methods will do for him? He is a man and has a man's fight
for life. And he always has a sister, or a mother, or wife and children to
support. Always—there are no exceptions. When you take his living away from him
you take theirs away too—and what have they done to you? Nothing. And where is
the profit in discharging an uncourteous brakeman and hiring another just like
him? It's unwisdom. Don't you see that the rational thing to do is to reform
the brakeman and keep him? Of course it is.'
Then he quoted with
admiration the conduct of a certain division superintendent of the Consolidated
road, in a case where a switchman of two years' experience was negligent once
and threw a train off the track and killed several people. Citizens came in a
passion to urge the man's dismissal, but the superintendent said:
'No, you are wrong. He has
learned his lesson, he will throw no more trains off the track. He is twice as
valuable as he was before. I shall keep him.'
We had only one more
adventure on the train. Between Hartford and Springfield the train-boy came
shouting with an armful of literature, and dropped a sample into a slumbering
gentleman's lap, and the man woke up with a start. He was very angry, and he
and a couple of friends discussed the outrage with much heat. They sent for the
parlour-car conductor and described the matter, and were determined to have the
boy expelled from his situation. The three complainants were wealthy Holyoke
merchants, and it was evident that the conductor stood in some awe of them. He
tried to pacify them, and explained that the boy was not under his authority,
but under that of one of the news companies; but he accomplished nothing.
Then the Major volunteered
some testimony for the defence. He said:
'I saw it all. You gentlemen
have not meant to exaggerate the circumstances, but still that is what you have
done. The boy has done nothing more than all train-boys do. If you want to get
his ways softened down and his manners reformed, I am with you and ready to
help, but it isn't fair to get him discharged without giving him a chance.'
But they were angry, and
would hear of no compromise. They were well acquainted with the President of
the Boston and Albany, they said, and would put everything aside next day and
go up to Boston and fix that boy.
The Major said he would be
on hand too, and would do what he could to save the boy. One of the gentlemen
looked him over and said:
'Apparently it is going to
be a matter of who can wield the most influence with the President. Do you know
Mr. Bliss personally?'
The Major said, with
composure:
'Yes; he is my uncle.'
The effect was satisfactory.
There was an awkward silence for a minute or more; then the hedging and the
half-confessions of over-haste and exaggerated resentment began, and soon
everything was smooth and friendly and sociable, and it was resolved to drop
the matter and leave the boy's bread and butter unmolested.
It turned out as I had
expected: the President of the road was not the Major's uncle at all—except by
adoption, and for this day and train only.
We got into no episodes on
the return journey. Probably it was because we took a night train and slept all
the way.
We left New York Saturday
night by the Pennsylvania road. After breakfast the next morning we went into
the parlour-car, but found it a dull place and dreary. There were but few
people in it and nothing going on. Then we went into the little smoking
compartment of the same car and found three gentlemen in there. Two of them
were grumbling over one of the rules of the road—a rule which forbade
card-playing on the trains on Sunday. They had started an innocent game of
high-low-jack and had been stopped. The Major was interested. He said to the
third gentleman:
'Did you object to the
game?'
'Not at all. I am a Yale
professor and a religious man, but my prejudices are not extensive.'
Then the Major said to the
others:
'You are at perfect liberty
to resume your game, gentlemen; no one here objects.'
One of them declined the
risk, but the other one said he would like to begin again if the Major would
join him. So they spread an overcoat over their knees and the game proceeded.
Pretty soon the parlour-car conductor arrived, and said, brusquely:
'There, there, gentlemen,
that won't do. Put up the cards—it's not allowed.'
The Major was shuffling. He
continued to shuffle, and said:
'By whose order is it
forbidden?'
'It's my order. I forbid
it.'
The dealing began. The Major
asked:
'Did you invent the idea?'
'What idea?'
'The idea of forbidding
card-playing on Sunday.'
'No—of course not.'
'Who did?'
'The company.'
'Then it isn't your order,
after all, but the company's. Is that it?'
'Yes. But you don't stop
playing! I have to require you to stop playing immediately.'
'Nothing is gained by hurry,
and often much is lost. Who authorised the company to issue such an order?'
'My dear sir, that is a
matter of no consequence to me, and—'
'But you forget that you are
not the only person concerned. It may be a matter of consequence to me. It is,
indeed, a matter of very great importance to me. I cannot violate a legal
requirement of my country without dishonouring myself; I cannot allow any man
or corporation to hamper my liberties with illegal rules—a thing which railway
companies are always trying to do—without dishonouring my citizenship. So I
come back to that question: By whose authority has the company issued this
order?'
'I don't know. That's their
affair.'
'Mine, too. I doubt if the
company has any right to issue such a rule. This road runs through several
States. Do you know what State we are in now, and what its laws are in matters
of this kind?'
'Its laws do not concern me,
but the company's orders do. It is my duty to stop this game, gentlemen, and it
must be stopped.'
'Possibly; but still there
is no hurry. In hotels they post certain rules in the rooms, but they always
quote passages from the State law as authority for these requirements. I see
nothing posted here of this sort. Please produce your authority and let us
arrive at a decision, for you see yourself that you are marring the game.'
'I have nothing of the kind,
but I have my orders, and that is sufficient. They must be obeyed.'
'Let us not jump to
conclusions. It will be better all around to examine into the matter without
heat or haste, and see just where we stand before either of us makes a
mistake—for the curtailing of the liberties of a citizen of the United States
is a much more serious matter than you and the railroads seem to think, and it
cannot be done in my person until the curtailer proves his right to do so.
Now—'
'My dear sir, will you put
down those cards?'
'All in good time, perhaps.
It depends. You say this order must be obeyed. Must. It is a strong word. You
see yourself how strong it is. A wise company would not arm you with so drastic
an order as this, of course, without appointing a penalty for its infringement.
Otherwise it runs the risk of being a dead letter and a thing to laugh at. What
is the appointed penalty for an infringement of this law?'
'Penalty? I never heard of
any.'
'Unquestionably you must be
mistaken. Your company orders you to come here and rudely break up an innocent
amusement, and furnishes you no way to enforce the order! Don't you see that
that is nonsense? What do you do when people refuse to obey this order? Do you
take the cards away from them?'
'No.'
'Do you put the offender off
at the next station?'
'Well, no—of course we
couldn't if he had a ticket.'
'Do you have him up before a
court?'
The conductor was silent and
apparently troubled. The Major started a new deal, and said:
'You see that you are
helpless, and that the company has placed you in a foolish position. You are
furnished with an arrogant order, and you deliver it in a blustering way, and
when you come to look into the matter you find you haven't any way of enforcing
obedience.'
The conductor said, with
chill dignity:
'Gentlemen, you have heard
the order, and my duty is ended. As to obeying it or not, you will do as you
think fit.' And he turned to leave.
'But wait. The matter is not
yet finished. I think you are mistaken about your duty being ended; but if it
really is, I myself have a duty to perform yet.'
'How do you mean?'
'Are you going to report my
disobedience at headquarters in Pittsburg?'
'No. What good would that
do?'
'You must report me, or I
will report you.'
'Report me for what?'
'For disobeying the
company's orders in not stopping this game. As a citizen it is my duty to help
the railway companies keep their servants to their work.'
'Are you in earnest?'
'Yes, I am in earnest. I
have nothing against you as a man, but I have this against you as an
officer—that you have not carried out that order, and if you do not report me I
must report you. And I will.'
The conductor looked
puzzled, and was thoughtful a moment; then he burst out with:
'I seem to be getting myself
into a scrape! It's all a muddle; I can't make head or tail of it; it never
happened before; they always knocked under and never said a word, and so I
never saw how ridiculous that stupid order with no penalty is. I don't want to
report anybody, and I don't want to be reported—why, it might do me no end of
harm! No do go on with the game—play the whole day if you want to—and don't
let's have any more trouble about it!'
'No, I only sat down here to
establish this gentleman's rights—he can have his place now. But before you go
won't you tell me what you think the company made this rule for? Can you
imagine an excuse for it? I mean a rational one—an excuse that is not on its
face silly, and the invention of an idiot?'
'Why, surely I can. The
reason it was made is plain enough. It is to save the feelings of the other
passengers—the religious ones among them, I mean. They would not like it to
have the Sabbath desecrated by card-playing on the train.'
'I just thought as much.
They are willing to desecrate it themselves by travelling on Sunday, but they
are not willing that other people—'
'By gracious, you've hit it!
I never thought of that before. The fact is, it is a silly rule when you come
to look into it.'
At this point the train
conductor arrived, and was going to shut down the game in a very high-handed
fashion, but the parlour-car conductor stopped him, and took him aside to
explain. Nothing more was heard of the matter.
I was ill in bed eleven days
in Chicago and got no glimpse of the Fair, for I was obliged to return East as
soon as I was able to travel. The Major secured and paid for a state-room in a
sleeper the day before we left, so that I could have plenty of room and be
comfortable; but when we arrived at the station a mistake had been made and our
car had not been put on. The conductor had reserved a section for us—it was the
best he could do, he said. But Major said we were not in a hurry, and would
wait for the car to be put on. The conductor responded, with pleasant irony:
'It may be that you are not
in a hurry, just as you say, but we are. Come, get aboard, gentlemen, get
aboard—don't keep us waiting.'
But the Major would not get
aboard himself nor allow me to do it. He wanted his car, and said he must have
it. This made the hurried and perspiring conductor impatient, and he said:
'It's the best we can do—we
can't do impossibilities. You will take the section or go without. A mistake
has been made and can't be rectified at this late hour. It's a thing that
happens now and then, and there is nothing for it but to put up with it and
make the best of it. Other people do.'
'Ah, that is just it, you
see. If they had stuck to their rights and enforced them you wouldn't be trying
to trample mine underfoot in this bland way now. I haven't any disposition to
give you unnecessary trouble, but it is my duty to protect the next man from
this kind of imposition. So I must have my car. Otherwise I will wait in
Chicago and sue the company for violating its contract.'
'Sue the company?—for a
thing like that!'
'Certainly.'
'Do you really mean that?'
'Indeed, I do.'
The conductor looked the
Major over wonderingly, and then said:
'It beats me—it's
bran-new—I've never struck the mate to it before. But I swear I think you'd do
it. Look here, I'll send for the station-master.'
When the station-master came
he was a good deal annoyed—at the Major, not at the person who had made the
mistake. He was rather brusque, and took the same position which the conductor
had taken in the beginning; but he failed to move the soft-spoken artilleryman,
who still insisted that he must have his car. However, it was plain that there
was only one strong side in this case, and that that side was the Major's. The
station-master banished his annoyed manner, and became pleasant and even
half-apologetic. This made a good opening for a compromise, and the Major made
a concession. He said he would give up the engaged state-room, but he must have
a state-room. After a deal of ransacking, one was found whose owner was
persuadable; he exchanged it for our section, and we got away at last. The
conductor called on us in the evening, and was kind and courteous and obliging,
and we had a long talk and got to be good friends. He said he wished the public
would make trouble oftener—it would have a good effect. He said that the
railroads could not be expected to do their whole duty by the traveller unless
the traveller would take some interest in the matter himself.
I hoped that we were done
reforming for the trip now, but it was not so. In the hotel car, in the
morning, the Major called for broiled chicken. The waiter said:
'It's not in the bill of
fare, sir; we do not serve anything but what is in the bill.'
'That gentleman yonder is
eating a broiled chicken.'
'Yes, but that is different.
He is one of the superintendents of the road.'
'Then all the more must I
have broiled chicken. I do not like these discriminations. Please hurry—bring
me a broiled chicken.'
The waiter brought the
steward, who explained in a low and polite voice that the thing was
impossible—it was against the rule, and the rule was rigid.
'Very well, then, you must
either apply it impartially or break it impartially. You must take that
gentleman's chicken away from him or bring me one.'
The steward was puzzled, and
did not quite know what to do. He began an incoherent argument, but the
conductor came along just then, and asked what the difficulty was. The steward
explained that here was a gentleman who was insisting on having a chicken when
it was dead against the rule and not in the bill. The conductor said:
'Stick by your rules—you
haven't any option. Wait a moment—is this the gentleman?' Then he laughed and
said: 'Never mind your rules—it's my advice, and sound: give him anything he
wants—don't get him started on his rights. Give him whatever he asks for; and
it you haven't got it, stop the train and get it.'
The Major ate the chicken,
but said he did it from a sense of duty and to establish a principle, for he
did not like chicken.
I missed the Fair it is
true, but I picked up some diplomatic tricks which I and the reader may find
handy and useful as we go along.
12.DIPLOMATIC PAY AND
CLOTHES
VIENNA, January 5—I find in
this morning's papers the statement that the Government of the United States
has paid to the two members of the Peace Commission entitled to receive money
for their services 100,000 dollars each for their six weeks' work in Paris.
I hope that this is true. I
will allow myself the satisfaction of considering that it is true, and of
treating it as a thing finished and settled.
It is a precedent; and ought
to be a welcome one to our country. A precedent always has a chance to be
valuable (as well as the other way); and its best chance to be valuable (or the
other way) is when it takes such a striking form as to fix a whole nation's
attention upon it. If it come justified out of the discussion which will
follow, it will find a career ready and waiting for it.
We realise that the edifice
of public justice is built of precedents, from the ground upward; but we do not
always realise that all the other details of our civilisation are likewise
built of precedents. The changes also which they undergo are due to the
intrusion of new precedents, which hold their ground against opposition, and
keep their place. A precedent may die at birth, or it may live—it is mainly a
matter of luck. If it be imitated once, it has a chance; if twice a better
chance; if three times it is reaching a point where account must be taken of
it; if four, five, or six times, it has probably come to stay—for a whole
century, possibly. If a town start a new bow, or a new dance, or a new
temperance project, or a new kind of hat, and can get the precedent adopted in
the next town, the career of that precedent is begun; and it will be unsafe to
bet as to where the end of its journey is going to be. It may not get this
start at all, and may have no career; but, if a crown prince introduce the
precedent, it will attract vast attention, and its chances for a career are so
great as to amount almost to a certainty.
For a long time we have been
reaping damage from a couple of disastrous precedents. One is the precedent of
shabby pay to public servants standing for the power and dignity of the
Republic in foreign lands; the other is a precedent condemning them to exhibit
themselves officially in clothes which are not only without grace or dignity,
but are a pretty loud and pious rebuke to the vain and frivolous costumes worn
by the other officials. To our day an American ambassador's official costume
remains under the reproach of these defects. At a public function in a European
court all foreign representatives except ours wear clothes which in some way
distinguish them from the unofficial throng, and mark them as standing for
their countries. But our representative appears in a plain black swallow-tail,
which stands for neither country, nor people. It has no nationality. It is
found in all countries; it is as international as a night-shirt. It has no
particular meaning; but our Government tries to give it one; it tries to make
it stand for Republican Simplicity, modesty and unpretentiousness. Tries, and
without doubt fails, for it is not conceivable that this loud ostentation of
simplicity deceives any one. The statue that advertises its modesty with a
fig-leaf really brings its modesty under suspicion. Worn officially, our
nonconforming swallow-tail is a declaration of ungracious independence in the
matter of manners, and is uncourteous. It says to all around: 'In Rome we do
not choose to do as Rome does; we refuse to respect your tastes and your
traditions; we make no sacrifices to anyone's customs and prejudices; we yield
no jot to the courtesies of life; we prefer our manners, and intrude them
here.'
That is not the true American
spirit, and those clothes misrepresent us. When a foreigner comes among us and
trespasses against our customs and our code of manners, we are offended, and
justly so; but our Government commands our ambassadors to wear abroad an
official dress which is an offence against foreign manners and customers; and
the discredit of it falls upon the nation.
We did not dress our public
functionaries in undistinguished raiment before Franklin's time; and the change
would not have come if he had been an obscurity. But he was such a colossal
figure in the world that whatever he did of an unusual nature attracted the
world's attention, and became a precedent. In the case of clothes, the next
representative after him, and the next, had to imitate it. After that, the
thing was custom; and custom is a petrifaction: nothing but dynamite can
dislodge it for a century. We imagine that our queer official costumery was
deliberately devised to symbolise our Republican Simplicity—a quality which we
have never possessed, and are too old to acquire now, if we had any use for it
or any leaning toward it. But it is not so; there was nothing deliberate about
it; it grew naturally and heedlessly out of the precedent set by Franklin.
If it had been an
intentional thing, and based upon a principle, it would not have stopped where
it did: we should have applied it further. Instead of clothing our admirals and
generals, for courts-martial and other public functions, in superb dress
uniforms blazing with colour and gold, the Government would put them in
swallow-tails and white cravats, and make them look like ambassadors and
lackeys. If I am wrong in making Franklin the father of our curious official
clothes, it is no matter—he will be able to stand it.
It is my opinion—and I make
no charge for the suggestion—that, whenever we appoint an ambassador or a
minister, we ought to confer upon him the temporary rank of admiral or general,
and allow him to wear the corresponding uniform at public functions in foreign
countries. I would recommend this for the reason that it is not consonant with
the dignity of the United States of America that her representative should
appear upon occasions of state in a dress which makes him glaringly
conspicuous; and that is what his present undertaker-outfit does when it
appears, with its dismal smudge, in the midst of the butterfly splendours of a
Continental court. It is a most trying position for a shy man, a modest man, a
man accustomed to being like other people. He is the most striking figure
present; there is no hiding from the multitudinous eyes. It would be funny, if
it were not such a cruel spectacle, to see the hunted creature in his solemn
sables scuffling around in that sea of vivid colour, like a mislaid
Presbyterian in perdition. We are all aware that our representative's dress
should not compel too much attention; for anybody but an Indian chief knows
that that is a vulgarity. I am saying these things in the interest of our
national pride and dignity. Our representative is the flag. He is the Republic.
He is the United States of America. And when these embodiments pass by, we do
not want them scoffed at; we desire that people shall be obliged to concede
that they are worthily clothed, and politely.
Our Government is oddly
inconsistent in this matter of official dress. When its representative is a
civilian who has not been a solider, it restricts him to the black swallow-tail
and white tie; but if he is a civilian who has been a solider, it allows him to
wear the uniform of his former rank as an official dress. When General Sickles
was minister to Spain, he always wore, when on official duty, the dress uniform
of a major-general. When General Grant visited foreign courts, he went
handsomely and properly ablaze in the uniform of a full general, and was introduced
by diplomatic survivals of his own Presidential Administration. The latter, by
official necessity, went in the meek and lowly swallow-tail—a deliciously
sarcastic contrast: the one dress representing the honest and honourable
dignity of the nation; the other, the cheap hypocrisy of the Republican
Simplicity tradition. In Paris our present representative can perform his
official functions reputably clothed; for he was an officer in the Civil War.
In London our late ambassador was similarly situated; for he, also, was an
officer in the Civil War. But Mr. Choate must represent the Great Republic—even
at official breakfasts at seven in the morning—in that same old funny
swallow-tail.
Our Government's notions
about proprieties of costume are indeed very, very odd—as suggested by that
last fact. The swallow-tail is recognised the world over as not wearable in the
daytime; it is a night-dress, and a night-dress only—a night-shirt is not more
so. Yet, when our representative makes an official visit in the morning, he is
obliged by his Government to go in that night-dress. It makes the very
cab-horses laugh.
The truth is, that for
awhile during the present century, and up to something short of forty years
ago, we had a lucid interval, and dropped the Republican Simplicity sham, and
dressed our foreign representatives in a handsome and becoming official
costume. This was discarded by-and-by, and the swallow-tail substituted. I
believe it is not now known which statesman brought about this change; but we
all know that, stupid as he was as to diplomatic proprieties in dress, he would
not have sent his daughter to a state ball in a corn-shucking costume, nor to a
corn-shucking in a state-ball costume, to be harshly criticised as an
ill-mannered offender against the proprieties of custom in both places. And we
know another thing, viz. that he himself would not have wounded the tastes and
feelings of a family of mourners by attending a funeral in their house in a
costume which was an offence against the dignities and decorum prescribed by
tradition and sanctified by custom. Yet that man was so heedless as not to
reflect that all the social customs of civilised peoples are entitled to
respectful observance, and that no man with a right spirit of courtesy in him
ever has any disposition to transgress these customs.
There is still another
argument for a rational diplomatic dress—a business argument. We are a trading
nation; and our representative is a business agent. If he is respected,
esteemed, and liked where he is stationed, he can exercise an influence which
can extend our trade and forward our prosperity. A considerable number of his
business activities have their field in his social relations; and clothes which
do not offend against local manners and customers and prejudices are a valuable
part of his equipment in this matter—would be, if Franklin had died earlier.
I have not done with gratis
suggestions yet. We made a great deal of valuable advance when we instituted
the office of ambassador. That lofty rank endows its possessor with several
times as much influence, consideration, and effectiveness as the rank of
minister bestows. For the sake of the country's dignity and for the sake of her
advantage commercially, we should have ambassadors, not ministers, at the great
courts of the world.
But not at present salaries!
No; if we are to maintain present salaries, let us make no more ambassadors;
and let us unmake those we have already made. The great position, without the
means of respectably maintaining it—there could be no wisdom in that. A foreign
representative, to be valuable to his country, must be on good terms with the
officials of the capital and with the rest of the influential folk. He must
mingle with this society; he cannot sit at home—it is not business, it butters
no commercial parsnips. He must attend the dinners, banquets, suppers, balls,
receptions, and must return these hospitalities. He should return as good as he
gets, too, for the sake of the dignity of his country, and for the sake of
Business. Have we ever had a minister or an ambassador who could do this on his
salary? No—not once, from Franklin's time to ours. Other countries understand
the commercial value of properly lining the pockets of their representatives;
but apparently our Government has not learned it. England is the most
successful trader of the several trading nations; and she takes good care of
the watchmen who keep guard in her commercial towers. It has been a long time,
now, since we needed to blush for our representatives abroad. It has become
custom to send our fittest. We send men of distinction, cultivation,
character—our ablest, our choicest, our best. Then we cripple their efficiency
through the meagreness of their pay. Here is a list of salaries for English and
American ministers and ambassadors:
City Salaries
American English
Paris $17,500 $45,000
Berlin 17,500 40,000
Vienna 12,000 40,000
Constantinople 10,000 40,000
St. Petersburg 17,500 39,000
Rome 12,000 35,000
Washington — 32,500
Sir Julian Pauncefote, the
English ambassador at Washington, has a very fine house besides—at no damage to
his salary.
English ambassadors pay no
house rent; they live in palaces owned by England. Our representatives pay
house-rent out of their salaries. You can judge by the above figures what kind
of houses the United States of America has been used to living in abroad, and
what sort of return-entertaining she has done. There is not a salary in our
list which would properly house the representative receiving it, and, in
addition, pay $3,000 toward his family's bacon and doughnuts—the strange but
economical and customary fare of the American ambassador's household, except on
Sundays, when petrified Boston crackers are added.
The ambassadors and ministers
of foreign nations not only have generous salaries, but their Governments
provide them with money wherewith to pay a considerable part of their
hospitality bills. I believe our Government pays no hospitality bills except
those incurred by the navy. Through this concession to the navy, that arm is
able to do us credit in foreign parts; and certainly that is well and politic.
But why the Government does not think it well and politic that our diplomats
should be able to do us like credit abroad is one of those mysterious
inconsistencies which have been puzzling me ever since I stopped trying to
understand baseball and took up statesmanship as a pastime.
To return to the matter of
house-rent. Good houses, properly furnished, in European capitals, are not to
be had at small figures. Consequently, our foreign representatives have been
accustomed to live in garrets—sometimes on the roof. Being poor men, it has
been the best they could do on the salary which the Government has paid them.
How could they adequately return the hospitalities shown them? It was
impossible. It would have exhausted the salary in three months. Still, it was
their official duty to entertain their influentials after some sort of fashion;
and they did the best they could with their limited purse. In return for
champagne they furnished lemonade; in return for game they furnished ham; in
return for whale they furnished sardines; in return for liquors they furnished
condensed milk; in return for the battalion of liveried and powdered flunkeys
they furnished the hired girl; in return for the fairy wilderness of sumptuous
decorations they draped the stove with the American flag; in return for the
orchestra they furnished zither and ballads by the family; in return for the
ball—but they didn't return the ball, except in cases where the United States
lived on the roof and had room.
Is this an exaggeration? It
can hardly be called that. I saw nearly the equivalent of it, a good many years
ago. A minister was trying to create influential friends for a project which
might be worth ten millions a year to the agriculturists of the Republic; and
our Government had furnished him ham and lemonade to persuade the opposition
with. The minister did not succeed. He might not have succeeded if his salary
had been what it ought to have been—$50,000 or $60,00 a year—but his chances
would have been very greatly improved. And in any case, he and his dinners and
his country would not have been joked about by the hard-hearted and pitied by
the compassionate.
Any experienced 'drummer'
will testify that, when you want to do business, there is no economy in ham and
lemonade. The drummer takes his country customer to the theatre, the opera, the
circus; dines him, wines him, entertains him all the day and all the night in luxurious
style; and plays upon his human nature in all seductive ways. For he knows, by
old experience, that this is the best way to get a profitable order out of him.
He has this reward. All Governments except our own play the same policy, with
the same end in view; and they, also, have their reward. But ours refuses to do
business by business ways, and sticks to ham and lemonade. This is the most
expensive diet known to the diplomatic service of the world.
Ours is the only country of
first importance that pays its foreign representatives trifling salaries. If we
were poor, we could not find great fault with these economies, perhaps—at least
one could find a sort of plausible excuse for them. But we are not poor; and
the excuse fails. As shown above, some of our important diplomatic
representatives receive $12,000; others, $17,500. These salaries are all ham
and lemonade, and unworthy of the flag. When we have a rich ambassador in
London or Paris, he lives as the ambassador of a country like ours ought to live,
and it costs him $100,000 a year to do it. But why should we allow him to pay
that out of his private pocket? There is nothing fair about it; and the
Republic is no proper subject for any one's charity. In several cases our
salaries of $12,000 should be $50,000; and all of the salaries of $17,500 ought
to be $75,000 or $100,000, since we pay no representative's house-rent. Our
State Department realises the mistake which we are making, and would like to
rectify it, but it has not the power.
When a young girl reaches
eighteen she is recognised as being a woman. She adds six inches to her skirt,
she unplaits her dangling braids and balls her hair on top of her head, she
stops sleeping with her little sister and has a room to herself, and becomes in
many ways a thundering expense. But she is in society now; and papa has to
stand it. There is no avoiding it. Very well. The Great Republic lengthened her
skirts last year, balled up her hair, and entered the world's society. This
means that, if she would prosper and stand fair with society, she must put
aside some of her dearest and darlingest young ways and superstitions, and do
as society does. Of course, she can decline if she wants to; but this would be
unwise. She ought to realise, now that she has 'come out,' that this is a right
and proper time to change a part of her style. She is in Rome; and it has long
been granted that when one is in Rome it is good policy to do as Rome does. To
advantage Rome? No—to advantage herself.
If our Government has really
paid representatives of ours on the Paris Commission $100,000 apiece for six
weeks' work, I feel sure that it is the best cash investment the nation has
made in many years. For it seems quite impossible that, with that precedent on
the books, the Government will be able to find excuses for continuing its
diplomatic salaries at the present mean figure.
P.S.—VIENNA, January 10.—I
see, by this morning's telegraphic news, that I am not to be the new ambassador
here, after all. This—well, I hardly know what to say. I—well, of course, I do
not care anything about it; but it is at least a surprise. I have for many
months been using my influence at Washington to get this diplomatic see
expanded into an ambassadorship, with the idea, of course th—But never mind.
Let it go. It is of no consequence. I say it calmly; for I am calm. But at the
same time—However, the subject has no interest for me, and never had. I never
really intended to take the place, anyway—I made up my mind to it months and
months ago, nearly a year. But now, while I am calm, I would like to say
this—that so long as I shall continue to possess an American's proper pride in
the honour and dignity of his country, I will not take any ambassadorship in
the gift of the flag at a salary short of $75,000 a year. If I shall be charged
with wanting to live beyond my country's means, I cannot help it. A country
which cannot afford ambassador's wages should be ashamed to have ambassadors.
Think of a
Seventeen-thousand-five-hundred-dollar ambassador! Particularly for America.
Why it is the most ludicrous spectacle, the most inconsistent and incongruous
spectacle, contrivable by even the most diseased imagination. It is a
billionaire in a paper collar, a king in a breechclout, an archangel in a tin
halo. And, for pure sham and hypocrisy, the salary is just the match of the
ambassador's official clothes—that boastful advertisement of a Republican
Simplicity which manifests itself at home in Fifty-thousand-dollar salaries to
insurance presidents and railway lawyers, and in domestic palaces whose
fittings and furnishings often transcend in costly display and splendour and
richness the fittings and furnishings of the palaces of the sceptred masters of
Europe; and which has invented and exported to the Old World the palace-car,
the sleeping-car, the tram-car, the electric trolley, the best bicycles, the
best motor-cars, the steam-heater, the best and smartest systems of electric
calls and telephonic aids to laziness and comfort, the elevator, the private
bath-room (hot and cold water on tap), the palace-hotel, with its multifarious
conveniences, comforts, shows, and luxuries, the—oh, the list is interminable!
In a word, Republican Simplicity found Europe with one shirt on her back, so to
speak, as far as real luxuries, conveniences, and the comforts of life go, and
has clothed her to the chin with the latter. We are the lavishest and showiest
and most luxury-loving people on the earth; and at our masthead we fly one true
and honest symbol, the gaudiest flag the world has ever seen. Oh, Republican
Simplicity, there are many, many humbugs in the world, but none to which you
need take off your hat!
13.LUCK
(NOTE.—This is not a fancy
sketch. I got it from a clergyman who was an instructor at Woolwich forty years
ago, and who vouched for its truth.—M.T.)
It was at a banquet in
London in honour of one of the two or three conspicuously illustrious English
military names of this generation. For reasons which will presently appear, I
will withhold his real name and titles, and call him Lieutenant-General Lord
Arthur Scoresby, V.C., K.C.B., etc., etc., etc. What a fascination there is in
a renowned name! There sat the man, in actual flesh, whom I had heard of so
many thousands of times since that day, thirty years before, when his name shot
suddenly to the zenith from a Crimean battle-field, to remain for ever
celebrated. It was food and drink to me to look, and look, and look at that
demigod; scanning, searching, noting: the quietness, the reserve, the noble
gravity of his countenance; the simple honesty that expressed itself all over
him; the sweet unconsciousness of his greatness—unconsciousness of the hundreds
of admiring eyes fastened upon him, unconsciousness of the deep, loving,
sincere worship welling out of the breasts of those people and flowing toward
him.
The clergyman at my left was
an old acquaintance of mine—clergyman now, but had spent the first half of his
life in the camp and field, and as an instructor in the military school at
Woolwich. Just at the moment I have been talking about, a veiled and singular
light glimmered in his eyes, and he leaned down and muttered confidentially to
me—indicating the hero of the banquet with a gesture,—'Privately—his glory is
an accident—just a product of incredible luck.'
This verdict was a great
surprise to me. If its subject had been Napoleon, or Socrates, or Solomon, my
astonishment could not have been greater.
Some days later came the
explanation of this strange remark, and this is what the Reverend told me.
About forty years ago I was
an instructor in the military academy at Woolwich. I was present in one of the
sections when young Scoresby underwent his preliminary examination. I was
touched to the quick with pity; for the rest of the class answered up brightly
and handsomely, while he—why, dear me, he didn't know anything, so to speak. He
was evidently good, and sweet, and lovable, and guileless; and so it was
exceedingly painful to see him stand there, as serene as a graven image, and
deliver himself of answers which were veritably miraculous for stupidity and
ignorance. All the compassion in me was aroused in his behalf. I said to
myself, when he comes to be examined again, he will be flung over, of course;
so it will be simple a harmless act of charity to ease his fall as much as I
can.
I took him aside, and found
that he knew a little of Caesar's history; and as he didn't know anything else,
I went to work and drilled him like a galley-slave on a certain line of stock
questions concerning Caesar which I knew would be used. If you'll believe me,
he went through with flying colours on examination day! He went through on that
purely superficial 'cram', and got compliments, too, while others, who knew a
thousand times more than he, got plucked. By some strangely lucky accident—an
accident not likely to happen twice in a century—he was asked no question
outside of the narrow limits of his drill.
It was stupefying. Well,
although through his course I stood by him, with something of the sentiment
which a mother feels for a crippled child; and he always saved himself—just by
miracle, apparently.
Now of course the thing that
would expose him and kill him at last was mathematics. I resolved to make his
death as easy as I could; so I drilled him and crammed him, and crammed him and
drilled him, just on the line of questions which the examiner would be most
likely to use, and then launched him on his fate. Well, sir, try to conceive of
the result: to my consternation, he took the first prize! And with it he got a
perfect ovation in the way of compliments.
Sleep! There was no more
sleep for me for a week. My conscience tortured me day and night. What I had
done I had done purely through charity, and only to ease the poor youth's
fall—I never had dreamed of any such preposterous result as the thing that had
happened. I felt as guilty and miserable as the creator of Frankenstein. Here
was a wooden-head whom I had put in the way of glittering promotions and
prodigious responsibilities, and but one thing could happen: he and his
responsibilities would all go to ruin together at the first opportunity.
The Crimean war had just
broken out. Of course there had to be a war, I said to myself: we couldn't have
peace and give this donkey a chance to die before he is found out. I waited for
the earthquake. It came. And it made me reel when it did come. He was actually
gazetted to a captaincy in a marching regiment! Better men grow old and gray in
the service before they climb to a sublimity like that. And who could ever have
foreseen that they would go and put such a load of responsibility on such green
and inadequate shoulders? I could just barely have stood it if they had made
him a cornet; but a captain—think of it! I thought my hair would turn white.
Consider what I did—I who so
loved repose and inaction. I said to myself, I am responsible to the country
for this, and I must go along with him and protect the country against him as
far as I can. So I took my poor little capital that I had saved up through
years of work and grinding economy, and went with a sigh and bought a cornetcy
in his regiment, and away we went to the field.
And there—oh dear, it was
awful. Blunders? why, he never did anything but blunder. But, you see, nobody
was in the fellow's secret—everybody had him focused wrong, and necessarily
misinterpreted his performance every time—consequently they took his idiotic
blunders for inspirations of genius; they did honestly! His mildest blunders
were enough to make a man in his right mind cry; and they did make me cry—and
rage and rave too, privately. And the thing that kept me always in a sweat of
apprehension was the fact that every fresh blunder he made increased the lustre
of his reputation! I kept saying to myself, he'll get so high that when
discovery does finally come it will be like the sun falling out of the sky.
He went right along up, from
grade to grade, over the dead bodies of his superiors, until at last, in the
hottest moment of the battle of... down went our colonel, and my heart jumped
into my mouth, for Scoresby was next in rank! Now for it, said I; we'll all
land in Sheol in ten minutes, sure.
The battle was awfully hot;
the allies were steadily giving way all over the field. Our regiment occupied a
position that was vital; a blunder now must be destruction. At this critical
moment, what does this immortal fool do but detach the regiment from its place
and order a charge over a neighbouring hill where there wasn't a suggestion of
an enemy! 'There you go!' I said to myself; 'this is the end at last.'
And away we did go, and were
over the shoulder of the hill before the insane movement could be discovered
and stopped. And what did we find? An entire and unsuspected Russian army in
reserve! And what happened? We were eaten up? That is necessarily what would
have happened in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred. But no; those Russians
argued that no single regiment would come browsing around there at such a time.
It must be the entire English army, and that the sly Russian game was detected
and blocked; so they turned tail, and away they went, pell-mell, over the hill
and down into the field, in wild confusion, and we after them; they themselves
broke the solid Russia centre in the field, and tore through, and in no time
there was the most tremendous rout you ever saw, and the defeat of the allies
was turned into a sweeping and splendid victory! Marshal Canrobert looked on,
dizzy with astonishment, admiration, and delight; and sent right off for
Scoresby, and hugged him, and decorated him on the field in presence of all the
armies!
And what was Scoresby's blunder
that time? Merely the mistaking his right hand for his left—that was all. An
order had come to him to fall back and support our right; and instead he fell
forward and went over the hill to the left. But the name he won that day as a
marvellous military genius filled the world with his glory, and that glory will
never fade while history books last.
He is just as good and sweet
and lovable and unpretending as a man can be, but he doesn't know enough to
come in when it rains. He has been pursued, day by day and year by year, by a
most phenomenal and astonishing luckiness. He has been a shining soldier in all
our wars for half a generation; he has littered his military life with
blunders, and yet has never committed one that didn't make him a knight or a
baronet or a lord or something. Look at his breast; why, he is just clothed in
domestic and foreign decorations. Well, sir, every one of them is a record of
some shouting stupidity or other; and, taken together, they are proof that the
very best thing in all this world that can befall a man is to be born lucky.
14.THE CAPTAIN'S STORY
There was a good deal of
pleasant gossip about old Captain 'Hurricane' Jones, of the Pacific Ocean—peace
to his ashes! Two or three of us present had known him; I, particularly well,
for I had made four sea-voyages with him. He was a very remarkable man. He was
born on a ship; he picked up what little education he had among his ship-mates;
he began life in the forecastle, and climbed grade by grade to the captaincy.
More than fifty years of his sixty-five were spent at sea. He had sailed all
oceans, seen all lands, and borrowed a tint from all climates. When a man has
been fifty years at sea, he necessarily knows nothing of men, nothing of the
world but its surface, nothing of the world's thought, nothing of the world's
learning but it's A B C, and that blurred and distorted by the unfocussed
lenses of an untrained mind. Such a man is only a gray and bearded child. That
is what old Hurricane Jones was—simply an innocent, lovable old infant. When
his spirit was in repose he was as sweet and gentle as a girl; when his wrath
was up he was a hurricane that made his nickname seem tamely descriptive. He
was formidable in a fight, for he was of powerful build and dauntless courage.
He was frescoed from head to heel with pictures and mottoes tattooed in red and
blue India ink. I was with him one voyage when he got his last vacant space
tattooed; this vacant space was around his left ankle. During three days he
stumped about the ship with his ankle bare and swollen, and this legend
gleaming red and angry out from a clouding of India ink: 'Virtue is its own
R'd.' (There was a lack of room.) He was deeply and sincerely pious, and swore
like a fish-woman. He considered swearing blameless, because sailors would not
understand an order unillumined by it. He was a profound Biblical scholar—that
is, he thought he was. He believed everything in the Bible, but he had his own
methods of arriving at his beliefs. He was of the 'advanced' school of thinkers,
and applied natural laws to the interpretation of all miracles, somewhat on the
plan of the people who make the six days of creation six geological epochs, and
so forth. Without being aware of it, he was a rather severe satirist on modern
scientific religionists. Such a man as I have been describing is rabidly fond
of disquisition and argument; one knows that without being told it.
One trip the captain had a
clergyman on board, but did not know he was a clergyman, since the passenger
list did not betray the fact. He took a great liking to this Rev. Mr. Peters,
and talked with him a great deal: told him yarns, gave him toothsome scraps of
personal history, and wove a glittering streak of profanity through his
garrulous fabric that was refreshing to a spirit weary of the dull neutralities
of undecorated speech. One day the captain said, 'Peters, do you ever read the
Bible?'
'Well—yes.'
'I judge it ain't often, by
the way you say it. Now, you tackle it in dead earnest once, and you'll find
it'll pay. Don't you get discouraged, but hang right on. First you won't
understand it; but by-and-by things will begin to clear up, and then you
wouldn't lay it down to—eat.'
'Yes, I have heard that
said.'
'And it's so too. There
ain't a book that begins with it. It lays over 'em all, Peters. There's some
pretty tough things in it—there ain't any getting around that—but you stick to
them and think them out, and when once you get on the inside everything's plain
as day.'
'The miracles, too,
captain?'
'Yes, sir! the miracles,
too. Every one of them. Now, there's that business with the prophets of Baal;
like enough that stumped you?'
'Well, I don't know but—'
'Own up, now; it stumped
you. Well, I don't wonder. You hadn't any experience in ravelling such things
out, and naturally it was too many for you. Would you like to have me explain
that thing to you, and show you how to get at the meat of these matters?'
'Indeed, I would, captain,
if you don't mind.'
Then the captain proceeded
as follows: 'I'll do it with pleasure. First, you see, I read and read, and
thought and thought, till I got to understand what sort of people they were in
the old Bible times, and then after that it was clear and easy. Now, this was
the way I put it up, concerning Isaac(1) and the prophets of Baal. There was
some mighty sharp men amongst the public characters of that old ancient day,
and Isaac was one of them. Isaac had his failings—plenty of them, too; it ain't
for me to apologise for Isaac; he played a cold deck on the prophets of Baal,
and like enough he was justifiable, considering the odds that was against him.
No, all I say is, 't' wa'n't any miracle, and that I'll show you so's 't you
can see it yourself.
'Well, times had been
getting rougher and rougher for prophets—that is, prophets of Isaac's denomination.
There were four hundred and fifty prophets of Baal in the community, and only
one Presbyterian; that is, if Isaac was a Presbyterian, which I reckon he was,
but it don't say. Naturally, the prophets of Baal took all the trade. Isaac was
pretty low spirited, I reckon, but he was a good deal of a man, and no doubt he
went a-prophesying around, letting on to be doing a land-office business, but
't' wa'n't any use; he couldn't run any opposition to amount to anything.
By-and-by things got desperate with him; he sets his head to work and thinks it
all out, and then what does he do? Why he begins to throw out hints that the
other parties are this and that and t'other,—nothing very definite, may be, but
just kind of undermining their reputation in a quiet way. This made talk, of
course, and finally got to the King. The King asked Isaac what he meant by his
talk. Says Isaac, “Oh, nothing particular; only, can they pray down fire from
heaven on an altar? It ain't much, maybe, your majesty, only can they do it?
That's the idea.” So the King was a good deal disturbed, and he went to the
prophets of Baal, and they said, pretty airy, that if he had an altar ready,
they were ready; and they intimated he better get it insured, too.
'So next morning all the
Children of Israel and their parents and the other people gathered themselves
together. Well, here was that great crowd of prophets of Baal packed together
on one side, and Isaac walking up and down all alone on the other, putting up
his job. When time was called, Isaac let on to be comfortable and indifferent;
told the other team to take the first innings. So they went at it, the whole
four hundred and fifty, praying around the altar, very hopefully, and doing
their level best. They prayed an hour—two hours—three hours—and so on, plumb
till noon. It wa'n't any use; they hadn't took a trick. Of course they felt
kind of ashamed before all those people, and well they might. Now, what would a
magnanimous man do? Keep still, wouldn't he? Of course. What did Isaac do? He
graveled the prophets of Baal every way he could think of. Says he, “You don't
speak up loud enough; your god's asleep, like enough, or may be he's taking a
walk; you want to holler, you know,” or words to that effect; I don't recollect
the exact language. Mind I don't apologise for Isaac; he had his faults.
'Well, the prophets of Baal
prayed along the best they knew how all the afternoon, and never raised a
spark. At last, about sundown, they were all tuckered out, and they owned up
and quit.
'What does Isaac do, now? He
steps up and says to some friends of his, there, “Pour four barrels of water on
the altar!” Everybody was astonished; for the other side had prayed at it dry,
you know, and got whitewashed. They poured it on. Says he, “Heave on four more
barrels.” Then he says, “Heave on four more.” Twelve barrels, you see,
altogether. The water ran all over the altar, and all down the sides, and
filled up a trench around it that would hold a couple of hogsheads—“measures,”
it says: I reckon it means about a hogshead. Some of the people were going to
put on their things and go, for they allowed he was crazy. They didn't know
Isaac. Isaac knelt down and began to pray: he strung along, and strung along,
about the heathen in distant lands, and about the sister churches, and about
the state and the country at large, and about those that's in authority in the
government, and all the usual programme, you know, till everybody had got tired
and gone to thinking about something else, and then, all of a sudden, when
nobody was noticing, he outs with a match and rakes it on the under side of his
leg, and pff! up the whole thing blazes like a house afire! Twelve barrels of
water? Petroleum, sir, PETROLEUM! that's what it was!'
'Petroleum, captain?'
'Yes, sir; the country was
full of it. Isaac knew all about that. You read the Bible. Don't you worry
about the tough places. They ain't tough when you come to think them out and
throw light on them. There ain't a thing in the Bible but what is true; all you
want is to go prayerfully to work and cipher out how 'twas done.'
(1) This is the captain's
own mistake.
15.STIRRING TIMES IN AUSTRIA
I. THE GOVERNMENT IN THE
FRYING-PAN.
Here in Vienna in these
closing days of 1897 one's blood gets no chance to stagnate. The atmosphere is
brimful of political electricity. All conversation is political; every man is a
battery, with brushes overworn, and gives out blue sparks when you set him
going on the common topic. Everybody has an opinion, and lets you have it frank
and hot, and out of this multitude of counsel you get merely confusion and
despair. For no one really understands this political situation, or can tell
you what is going to be the outcome of it.
Things have happened here
recently which would set any country but Austria on fire from end to end, and
upset the Government to a certainty; but no one feels confident that such
results will follow here. Here, apparently, one must wait and see what will
happen, then he will know, and not before; guessing is idle; guessing cannot
help the matter. This is what the wise tell you; they all say it; they say it
every day, and it is the sole detail upon which they all agree.
There is some approach to
agreement upon another point: that there will be no revolution. Men say: 'Look
at our history, revolutions have not been in our line; and look at our
political map, its construction is unfavourable to an organised uprising, and
without unity what could a revolt accomplish? It is disunion which has held our
empire together for centuries, and what it has done in the past it may continue
to do now and in the future.'
The most intelligible sketch
I have encountered of this unintelligible arrangement of things was contributed
to the 'Traveller's Record' by Mr. Forrest Morgan, of Hartford, three years ago.
He says:
'The Austro-Hungarian Monarchy is the patchwork-quilt, the Midway
Plaisance, the national chain-gang of Europe; a state that is not a
nation, but a collection of nations, some with national memories and
aspirations and others without, some occupying distinct provinces
almost purely their own, and others mixed with alien races, but each
with a different language, and each mostly holding the others
foreigners as much as if the link of a common government did not
exist. Only one of its races even now comprises so much as
one-fourth of the whole, and not another so much as one-sixth; and
each has remained for ages as unchanged in isolation, however
mingled together in locality, as globules of oil in water. There
is nothing else in the modern world that is nearly like it, though
there have been plenty in past ages; it seems unreal and impossible
even though we know it is true; it violates all our feeling as to
what a country should be in order to have a right to exist; and it
seems as though it was too ramshackle to go on holding together any
length of time. Yet it has survived, much in its present shape, two
centuries of storms that have swept perfectly unified countries
from existence and others that have brought it to the verge of
ruin, has survived formidable European coalitions to dismember it,
and has steadily gained force after each; forever changing in its
exact make-up, losing in the West but gaining in the East, the
changes leave the structure as firm as ever, like the dropping off
and adding on of logs in a raft, its mechanical union of pieces
showing all the vitality of genuine national life.'
That seems to confirm and justify
the prevalent Austrian faith that in this confusion of unrelated and
irreconcilable elements, this condition of incurable disunion, there is
strength—for the Government. Nearly every day some one explains to me that a
revolution would not succeed here. 'It couldn't, you know. Broadly speaking,
all the nations in the empire hate the Government—but they all hate each other
too, and with devoted and enthusiastic bitterness; no two of them can combine;
the nation that rises must rise alone; then the others would joyfully join the
Government against her, and she would have just a fly's chance against a
combination of spiders. This Government is entirely independent. It can go its
own road, and do as it pleases; it has nothing to fear. In countries like England
and America, where there is one tongue and the public interests are common, the
Government must take account of public opinion; but in Austria-Hungary there
are nineteen public opinions—one for each state. No—two or three for each
state, since there are two or three nationalities in each. A Government cannot
satisfy all these public opinions; it can only go through the motions of
trying. This Government does that. It goes through the motions, and they do not
succeed; but that does not worry the Government much.'
The next man will give you
some further information. 'The Government has a policy—a wise one—and sticks to
it. This policy is—tranquillity: keep this hive of excitable nations as quiet
as possible; encourage them to amuse themselves with things less inflammatory
than politics. To this end it furnishes them an abundance of Catholic priests
to teach them to be docile and obedient, and to be diligent in acquiring
ignorance about things here below, and knowledge about the kingdom of heaven,
to whose historic delights they are going to add the charm of their society
by-and-by; and further—to this same end—it cools off the newspapers every
morning at five o'clock, whenever warm events are happening.' There is a censor
of the press, and apparently he is always on duty and hard at work. A copy of
each morning paper is brought to him at five o'clock. His official wagons wait
at the doors of the newspaper offices and scud to him with the first copies
that come from the press. His company of assistants read every line in these
papers, and mark everything which seems to have a dangerous look; then he
passes final judgment upon these markings. Two things conspire to give to the
results a capricious and unbalanced look: his assistants have diversified
notions as to what is dangerous and what isn't; he can't get time to examine
their criticisms in much detail; and so sometimes the very same matter which is
suppressed in one paper fails to be damned in another one, and gets published
in full feather and unmodified. Then the paper in which it was suppressed
blandly copies the forbidden matter into its evening edition—provokingly giving
credit and detailing all the circumstances in courteous and inoffensive
language—and of course the censor cannot say a word.
Sometimes the censor sucks
all the blood out of a newspaper and leaves it colourless and inane; sometimes
he leaves it undisturbed, and lets it talk out its opinions with a frankness
and vigour hardly to be surpassed, I think, in the journals of any country. Apparently
the censor sometimes revises his verdicts upon second thought, for several
times lately he has suppressed journals after their issue and partial
distribution. The distributed copies are then sent for by the censor and
destroyed. I have two of these, but at the time they were sent for I could not
remember what I had done with them.
If the censor did his work
before the morning edition was printed, he would be less of an inconvenience
than he is; but, of course, the papers cannot wait many minutes after five
o'clock to get his verdict; they might as well go out of business as do that;
so they print and take their chances. Then, if they get caught by a
suppression, they must strike out the condemned matter and print the edition
over again. That delays the issue several hours, and is expensive besides. The
Government gets the suppressed edition for nothing. If it bought it, that would
be joyful, and would give great satisfaction. Also, the edition would be
larger. Some of the papers do not replace the condemned paragraphs with other
matter; they merely snatch them out and leave blanks behind—mourning blanks,
marked 'Confiscated'.
The Government discourages
the dissemination of newspaper information in other ways. For instance, it does
not allow newspapers to be sold on the streets: therefore the newsboy is
unknown in Vienna. And there is a stamp duty of nearly a cent upon each copy of
a newspaper's issue. Every American paper that reaches me has a stamp upon it,
which has been pasted there in the post-office or downstairs in the hotel
office; but no matter who put it there, I have to pay for it, and that is the
main thing. Sometimes friends send me so many papers that it takes all I can
earn that week to keep this Government going.
I must take passing notice of
another point in the Government's measures for maintaining tranquillity.
Everybody says it does not like to see any individual attain to commanding
influence in the country, since such a man can become a disturber and an
inconvenience. 'We have as much talent as the other nations,' says the citizen,
resignedly, and without bitterness, 'but for the sake of the general good of
the country, we are discouraged from making it over-conspicuous; and not only
discouraged, but tactfully and skillfully prevented from doing it, if we show
too much persistence. Consequently we have no renowned men; in centuries we
have seldom produced one—that is, seldom allowed one to produce himself. We can
say to-day what no other nation of first importance in the family of Christian
civilisations can say—that there exists no Austrian who has made an enduring
name for himself which is familiar all around the globe.
Another helper toward
tranquillity is the army. It is as pervasive as the atmosphere. It is
everywhere. All the mentioned creators, promoters, and preservers of the public
tranquillity do their several shares in the quieting work. They make a restful
and comfortable serenity and reposefulness. This is disturbed sometimes for a
little while: a mob assembles to protest against something; it gets
noisy—noisier—still noisier—finally too noisy; then the persuasive soldiery
comes charging down upon it, and in a few minutes all is quiet again, and there
is no mob.
There is a Constitution and
there is a Parliament. The House draws its membership of 425 deputies from the
nineteen or twenty states heretofore mentioned. These men represent peoples who
speak eleven different languages. That means eleven distinct varieties of
jealousies, hostilities, and warring interests. This could be expected to
furnish forth a parliament of a pretty inharmonious sort, and make legislation
difficult at times—and it does that. The Parliament is split up into many
parties—the Clericals, the Progressists, the German Nationalists, the Young
Czechs, the Social Democrats, the Christian Socialists, and some others—and it
is difficult to get up working combinations among them. They prefer to fight
apart sometimes.
The recent troubles have
grown out of Count Badeni's necessities. He could not carry on his Government
without a majority vote in the House at his back, and in order to secure it he
had to make a trade of some sort. He made it with the Czechs—the Bohemians. The
terms were not easy for him: he must issue an ordinance making the Czech tongue
the official language in Bohemia in place of the German. This created a storm.
All the Germans in Austria were incensed. In numbers they form but a fourth
part of the empire's population, but they urge that the country's public
business should be conducted in one common tongue, and that tongue a world
language—which German is.
However, Badeni secured his
majority. The German element in Parliament was apparently become helpless. The
Czech deputies were exultant.
Then the music began.
Badeni's voyage, instead of being smooth, was disappointingly rough from the
start. The Government must get the Ausgleich through. It must not fail.
Badeni's majority was ready to carry it through; but the minority was
determined to obstruct it and delay it until the obnoxious Czech-language
measure should be shelved.
The Ausgleich is an
Adjustment, Arrangement, Settlement, which holds Austria and Hungary together.
It dates from 1867, and has to be renewed every ten years. It establishes the
share which Hungary must pay toward the expenses of the imperial Government.
Hungary is a kingdom (the Emperor of Austria is its King), and has its own
Parliament and governmental machinery. But it has no foreign office, and it has
no army—at least its army is a part of the imperial army, is paid out of the
imperial treasury, and is under the control of the imperial war office.
The ten-year arrangement was
due a year ago, but failed to connect. At least completely. A year's compromise
was arranged. A new arrangement must be effected before the last day of this
year. Otherwise the two countries become separate entities. The Emperor would
still be King of Hungary—that is, King of an independent foreign country. There
would be Hungarian custom-houses on the Austrian border, and there would be a
Hungarian army and a Hungarian foreign office. Both countries would be weakened
by this, both would suffer damage.
The Opposition in the House,
although in the minority, had a good weapon to fight with in the pending
Ausgleich. If it could delay the Ausgleich a few weeks, the Government would
doubtless have to withdraw the hated language ordinance or lose Hungary.
The Opposition began its
fight. Its arms were the Rules of the House. It was soon manifest that by
applying these Rules ingeniously it could make the majority helpless, and keep
it so as long as it pleased. It could shut off business every now and then with
a motion to adjourn. It could require the ayes and noes on the motion, and use
up thirty minutes on that detail. It could call for the reading and verification
of the minutes of the preceding meeting, and use up half a day in that way. It
could require that several of its members be entered upon the list of permitted
speakers previously to the opening of a sitting; and as there is no time-limit,
further delays could thus be accomplished.
These were all lawful
weapons, and the men of the Opposition (technically called the Left) were
within their rights in using them. They used them to such dire purpose that all
parliamentary business was paralysed. The Right (the Government side) could
accomplish nothing. Then it had a saving idea. This idea was a curious one. It
was to have the President and the Vice-Presidents of the Parliament trample the
Rules under foot upon occasion!
This, for a profoundly
embittered minority constructed out of fire and gun-cotton! It was time for
idle strangers to go and ask leave to look down out of a gallery and see what
would be the result of it.
II. A MEMORABLE SITTING.
And now took place that
memorable sitting of the House which broke two records. It lasted the best part
of two days and a night, surpassing by half an hour the longest sitting known
to the world's previous parliamentary history, and breaking the long-speech
record with Dr. Lecher's twelve-hour effort, the longest flow of unbroken talk
that ever came out of one mouth since the world began.
At 8.45 on the evening of
the 28th of October, when the House had been sitting a few minutes short of ten
hours, Dr. Lecher was granted the floor. It was a good place for theatrical
effects. I think that no other Senate House is so shapely as this one, or so
richly and showily decorated. Its plan is that of an opera-house. Up toward the
straight side of it—the stage side—rise a couple of terraces of desks for the
ministry, and the official clerks or secretaries—terraces thirty feet long, and
each supporting about half a dozen desks with spaces between them. Above these
is the President's terrace, against the wall. Along it are distributed the
proper accommodations for the presiding officer and his assistants. The wall is
of richly coloured marble highly polished, its paneled sweep relieved by fluted
columns and pilasters of distinguished grace and dignity, which glow softly and
frostily in the electric light. Around the spacious half-circle of the floor
bends the great two-storied curve of the boxes, its frontage elaborately
ornamented and sumptuously gilded. On the floor of the House the 425 desks
radiate fanwise from the President's tribune.
The galleries are crowded on
this particular evening, for word has gone about that the Ausgleich is before
the House; that the President, Ritter von Abrahamowicz, has been throttling the
Rules; that the Opposition are in an inflammable state in consequence, and that
the night session is likely to be of an exciting sort.
The gallery guests are
fashionably dressed, and the finery of the women makes a bright and pretty show
under the strong electric light. But down on the floor there is no costumery.
The deputies are dressed in
day clothes; some of the clothes neat and trim, others not; there may be three
members in evening dress, but not more. There are several Catholic priests in
their long black gowns, and with crucifixes hanging from their necks. No member
wears his hat. One may see by these details that the aspects are not those of
an evening sitting of an English House of Commons, but rather those of a
sitting of our House of Representatives.
In his high place sits the
President, Abrahamowicz, object of the Opposition's limitless hatred. He is
sunk back in the depths of his arm-chair, and has his chin down. He brings the
ends of his spread fingers together, in front of his breast, and reflectively
taps them together, with the air of one who would like to begin business, but
must wait, and be as patient as he can. It makes you think of Richelieu. Now
and then he swings his head up to the left or to the right and answers
something which some one has bent down to say to him. Then he taps his fingers
again. He looks tired, and maybe a trifle harassed. He is a gray-haired, long,
slender man, with a colourless long face, which, in repose, suggests a
death-mask; but when not in repose is tossed and rippled by a turbulent smile
which washes this way and that, and is not easy to keep up with—a pious smile,
a holy smile, a saintly smile, a deprecating smile, a beseeching and
supplicating smile; and when it is at work the large mouth opens, and the
flexible lips crumple, and unfold, and crumple again, and move around in a
genial and persuasive and angelic way, and expose large glimpses of the teeth;
and that interrupts the sacredness of the smile and gives it momentarily a
mixed worldly and political and satanic cast. It is a most interesting face to
watch. And then the long hands and the body—they furnish great and frequent
help to the face in the business of adding to the force of the statesman's
words.
To change the tense. At the
time of which I have just been speaking the crowds in the galleries were gazing
at the stage and the pit with rapt interest and expectancy. One half of the
great fan of desks was in effect empty, vacant; in the other half several
hundred members were bunched and jammed together as solidly as the bristles in
a brush; and they also were waiting and expecting. Presently the Chair
delivered this utterance:
'Dr. Lecher has the floor.'
Then burst out such another
wild and frantic and deafening clamour as has not been heard on this planet
since the last time the Comanches surprised a white settlement at night. Yells
from the Left, counter-yells from the Right, explosions of yells from all sides
at once, and all the air sawed and pawed and clawed and cloven by a writhing
confusion of gesturing arms and hands. Out of the midst of this thunder and
turmoil and tempest rose Dr. Lecher, serene and collected, and the providential
length of him enabled his head to show out of it. He began his twelve-hour
speech. At any rate, his lips could be seen to move, and that was evidence. On
high sat the President, imploring order, with his long hands put together as in
prayer, and his lips visibly but not hearably speaking. At intervals he grasped
his bell and swung it up and down with vigour, adding its keen clamour to the
storm weltering there below.
Dr. Lecher went on with his
pantomime speech, contented, untroubled. Here and there and now and then
powerful voices burst above the din, and delivered an ejaculation that was
heard. Then the din ceased for a moment or two, and gave opportunity to hear
what the Chair might answer; then the noise broke out again. Apparently the
President was being charged with all sorts of illegal exercises of power in the
interest of the Right (the Government side): among these, with arbitrarily
closing an Order of Business before it was finished; with an unfair
distribution of the right to the floor; with refusal of the floor, upon quibble
and protest, to members entitled to it; with stopping a speaker's speech upon
quibble and protest; and with other transgressions of the Rules of the House.
One of the interrupters who made himself heard was a young fellow of slight
build and neat dress, who stood a little apart from the solid crowd and leaned
negligently, with folded arms and feet crossed, against a desk. Trim and
handsome; strong face and thin features; black hair roughed up; parsimonious moustache;
resonant great voice, of good tone and pitch. It is Wolf, capable and
hospitable with sword and pistol; fighter of the recent duel with Count Badeni,
the head of the Government. He shot Badeni through the arm and then walked over
in the politest way and inspected his game, shook hands, expressed regret, and
all that. Out of him came early this thundering peal, audible above the storm:
'I demand the floor. I wish
to offer a motion.'
In the sudden lull which
followed, the President answered, 'Dr. Lecher has the floor.'
Wolf. 'I move the close of
the sitting!'
P. 'Representative Lecher
has the floor.' (Stormy outburst from the Left—that is, the Opposition.)
Wolf. 'I demand the floor
for the introduction of a formal notion. (Pause). Mr. President, are you going
to grant it, or not? (Crash of approval from the Left.) I will keep on
demanding the floor till I get it.'
P. 'I call Representative
Wolf to order. Dr. Lecher has the floor.'
Wolf. 'Mr. President, are
you going to observe the Rules of this House?' (Tempest of applause and
confused ejaculations from the Left—a boom and roar which long endured, and
stopped all business for the time being.)
Dr. von Pessler. 'By the
Rules motions are in order, and the Chair must put them to vote.'
For answer the President
(who is a Pole—I make this remark in passing) began to jangle his bell with
energy at the moment that that wild pandemonium of voices broke out again.
Wolf (hearable above the
storm). 'Mr. President, I demand the floor. We intend to find out, here and now,
which is the hardest, a Pole's skull or a German's!'
This brought out a perfect
cyclone of satisfaction from the Left. In the midst of it someone again moved
an Adjournment. The President blandly answered that Dr. Lecher had the floor.
Which was true; and he was speaking, too, calmly, earnestly, and
argumentatively; and the official stenographers had left their places and were
at his elbows taking down his words, he leaning and orating into their ears—a
most curious and interesting scene.
Dr. von Pessler (to the
Chair). 'Do not drive us to extremities!'
The tempest burst out again:
yells of approval from the Left, catcalls and ironical laughter from the Right.
At this point a new and most effective noise-maker was pressed into service.
Each desk has an extension, consisting of a removable board eighteen inches
long, six wide, and a half-inch thick. A member pulled one of these out and
began to belabour the top of his desk with it. Instantly other members followed
suit, and perhaps you can imagine the result. Of all conceivable rackets it is
the most ear-splitting, intolerable, and altogether fiendish.
The persecuted President
leaned back in his chair, closed his eyes, clasped his hands in his lap, and a
look of pathetic resignation crept over his long face. It is the way a country
schoolmaster used to look in days long past when he had refused his school a
holiday and it had risen against him in ill-mannered riot and violence and
insurrection. Twice a motion to adjourn had been offered—a motion always in order
in other Houses, and doubtless so in this one also. The President had refused
to put these motions. By consequence, he was not in a pleasant place now, and
was having a right hard time. Votes upon motions, whether carried or defeated,
could make endless delay, and postpone the Ausgleich to next century.
In the midst of these
sorrowful circumstances and this hurricane of yells and screams and satanic
clatter of desk-boards, Representative Dr. Kronawetter unfeelingly reminds the
Chair that a motion has been offered, and adds: 'Say yes, or no! What do you
sit there for, and give no answer?'
P. 'After I have given a
speaker the floor, I cannot give it to another. After Dr. Lecher is through, I
will put your motion.' (Storm of indignation from the Left.)
Wolf (to the Chair).
'Thunder and lightning! look at the Rule governing the case!'
Kronawetter. 'I move the
close of the sitting! And I demand the ayes and noes!'
Dr. Lecher. 'Mr. President,
have I the floor?'
P. 'You have the floor.'
Wolf (to the Chair, in a
stentorian voice which cleaves its way through the storm). 'It is by such
brutalities as these that you drive us to extremities! Are you waiting till
someone shall throw into your face the word that shall describe what you are
bringing about?(1) (Tempest of insulted fury from the Right.) Is that what you
are waiting for, old Grayhead?' (Long-continued clatter of desk-boards from the
Left, with shouts of 'The vote! the vote!' An ironical shout from the Right,
'Wolf is boss!')
Wolf keeps on demanding the
floor for his motion. At length—
P. 'I call Representative
Wolf to order! Your conduct is unheard of, sir! You forget that you are in a
parliament; you must remember where you are, sir.' (Applause from the Right.
Dr. Lecher is still peacefully speaking, the stenographers listening at his
lips.)
Wolf (banging on his desk
with his desk-board). 'I demand the floor for my motion! I won't stand this
trampling of the Rules under foot—no, not if I die for it! I will never yield.
You have got to stop me by force. Have I the floor?'
P. 'Representative Wolf,
what kind of behaviour is this? I call you to order again. You should have some
regard for your dignity.'
Dr. Lecher speaks on. Wolf
turns upon him with an offensive innuendo.
Dr. Lecher. 'Mr. Wolf, I beg
you to refrain from that sort of suggestions.' (Storm of hand-clapping from the
Right.)
This was applause from the
enemy, for Lecher himself, like Wolf, was an Obstructionist.
Wolf growls to Lecher, 'You
can scribble that applause in your album!'
P. 'Once more I call
Representative Wolf to order! Do not forget that you are a Representative,
sir!'
Wolf (slam-banging with his
desk-board). 'I will force this matter! Are you going to grant me the floor, or
not?'
And still the
sergeant-at-arms did not appear. It was because there wasn't any. It is a
curious thing, but the Chair has no effectual means of compelling order.
After some more
interruptions:
Wolf (banging with his
board). 'I demand the floor. I will not yield!'
P. 'I have no recourse
against Representative Wolf. In the presence of behaviour like this it is to be
regretted that such is the case.' (A shout from the Right, 'Throw him out!')
It is true he had no
effective recourse. He had an official called an 'Ordner,' whose help he could
invoke in desperate cases, but apparently the Ordner is only a persuader, not a
compeller. Apparently he is a sergeant-at-arms who is not loaded; a good enough
gun to look at, but not valuable for business.
For another twenty or thirty
minutes Wolf went on banging with his board and demanding his rights; then at
last the weary President threatened to summon the dread order-maker. But both
his manner and his words were reluctant. Evidently it grieved him to have to
resort to this dire extremity. He said to Wolf, 'If this goes on, I shall feel
obliged to summon the Ordner, and beg him to restore order in the House.'
Wolf. 'I'd like to see you
do it! Suppose you fetch in a few policemen too! (Great tumult.) Are you going
to put my motion to adjourn, or not?'
Dr. Lecher continues his
speech. Wolf accompanies him with his board-clatter.
The President despatches the
Ordner, Dr. Lang (himself a deputy), on his order-restoring mission. Wolf, with
his board uplifted for defence, confronts the Ordner with a remark which Boss
Tweed might have translated into 'Now let's see what you are going to do about
it!' (Noise and tumult all over the House.)
Wolf stands upon his rights,
and says he will maintain them until he is killed in his tracks. Then he
resumes his banging, the President jangles his bell and begs for order, and the
rest of the House augments the racket the best it can.
Wolf. 'I require an
adjournment, because I find myself personally threatened. (Laughter from the
Right.) Not that I fear for myself; I am only anxious about what will happen to
the man who touches me.'
The Ordner. 'I am not going
to fight with you.'
Nothing came of the efforts
of the angel of peace, and he presently melted out of the scene and
disappeared. Wolf went on with his noise and with his demands that he be
granted the floor, resting his board at intervals to discharge criticisms and
epithets at the Chair. Once he reminded the Chairman of his violated promise to
grant him (Wolf) the floor, and said, 'Whence I came, we call promise-breakers
rascals!' And he advised the Chairman to take his conscience to bed with him
and use it as a pillow. Another time he said that the Chair was making itself
ridiculous before all Europe. In fact, some of Wolf's language was almost
unparliamentary. By-and-by he struck the idea of beating out a tune with his
board. Later he decided to stop asking for the floor, and to confer it upon
himself. And so he and Dr. Lecher now spoke at the same time, and mingled their
speeches with the other noises, and nobody heard either of them. Wolf rested himself
now and then from speech-making by reading, in his clarion voice, from a
pamphlet.
I will explain that Dr.
Lecher was not making a twelve-hour speech for pastime, but for an important
purpose. It was the Government's intention to push the Ausgleich through its
preliminary stages in this one sitting (for which it was the Order of the Day),
and then by vote refer it to a select committee. It was the Majority's
scheme—as charged by the Opposition—to drown debate upon the bill by pure
noise—drown it out and stop it. The debate being thus ended, the vote upon the
reference would follow—with victory for the Government. But into the
Government's calculations had not entered the possibility of a single-barrelled
speech which should occupy the entire time-limit of the setting, and also get
itself delivered in spite of all the noise. Goliath was not expecting David.
But David was there; and during twelve hours he tranquilly pulled statistical,
historical, and argumentative pebbles out of his scrip and slung them at the
giant; and when he was done he was victor, and the day was saved.
In the English House an
obstructionist has held the floor with Bible-readings and other outside
matters; but Dr. Lecher could not have that restful and recuperative
privilege—he must confine himself strictly to the subject before the House.
More than once, when the President could not hear him because of the general
tumult, he sent persons to listen and report as to whether the orator was
speaking to the subject or not.
The subject was a peculiarly
difficult one, and it would have troubled any other deputy to stick to it three
hours without exhausting his ammunition, because it required a vast and
intimate knowledge—detailed and particularised knowledge—of the commercial,
railroading, financial, and international banking relations existing between
two great sovereignties, Hungary and the Empire. But Dr. Lecher is President of
the Board of Trade of his city of Brunn, and was master of the situation. His
speech was not formally prepared. He had a few notes jotted down for his
guidance; he had his facts in his head; his heart was in his work; and for
twelve hours he stood there, undisturbed by the clamour around him, and with
grace and ease and confidence poured out the riches of his mind, in closely
reasoned arguments, clothed in eloquent and faultless phrasing.
He is a young man of
thirty-seven. He is tall and well-proportioned, and has cultivated and
fortified his muscle by mountain-climbing. If he were a little handsomer he
would sufficiently reproduce for me the Chauncey Depew of the great New England
dinner nights of some years ago; he has Depew's charm of manner and graces of
language and delivery.
There was but one way for
Dr. Lecher to hold the floor—he must stay on his legs. If he should sit down to
rest a moment, the floor would be taken from him by the enemy in the Chair.
When he had been talking three or four hours he himself proposed an
adjournment, in order that he might get some rest from his wearing labours; but
he limited his motion with the condition that if it was lost he should be
allowed to continue his speech, and if it was carried he should have the floor
at the next sitting. Wolf was now appeased, and withdrew his own
thousand-times-offered motion, and Dr. Lecher's was voted upon—and lost. So he
went on speaking.
By one o'clock in the
morning, excitement and noise-making had tired out nearly everybody but the
orator. Gradually the seats of the Right underwent depopulation; the occupants
had slipped out to the refreshment-rooms to eat and drink, or to the corridors
to chat. Some one remarked that there was no longer a quorum present, and moved
a call of the House. The Chair (Vice-President Dr. Kramarz) refused to put it
to vote. There was a small dispute over the legality of this ruling, but the
Chair held its ground.
The Left remained on the
battle-field to support their champion. He went steadily on with his speech;
and always it was strong, virile, felicitous, and to the point. He was earning
applause, and this enabled his party to turn that fact to account. Now and then
they applauded him a couple of minutes on a stretch, and during that time he
could stop speaking and rest his voice without having the floor taken from him.
At a quarter to two a member
of the Left demanded that Dr. Lecher be allowed a recess for rest, and said
that the Chairman was 'heartless.' Dr. Lecher himself asked for ten minutes.
The Chair allowed him five. Before the time had run out Dr. Lecher was on his
feet again.
Wolf burst out again with a
motion to adjourn. Refused by the Chair. Wolf said the whole Parliament wasn't
worth a pinch of powder. The Chair retorted that that was true in a case where
a single member was able to make all parliamentary business impossible. Dr.
Lecher continued his speech.
The members of the Majority
went out by detachments from time to time and took naps upon sofas in the
reception-rooms; and also refreshed themselves with food and drink—in
quantities nearly unbelievable—but the Minority stayed loyally by their
champion. Some distinguished deputies of the Majority stayed by him too,
compelled thereto by admiration of his great performance. When a man has been
speaking eight hours, is it conceivable that he can still be interesting, still
fascinating? When Dr. Lecher had been speaking eight hours he was still
compactly surrounded by friends who would not leave him, and by foes (of all
parties) who could not; and all hung enchanted and wondering upon his words,
and all testified their admiration with constant and cordial outbursts of
applause. Surely this was a triumph without precedent in history.
During the twelve-hour
effort friends brought to the orator three glasses of wine, four cups of
coffee, and one glass of beer—a most stingy re-enforcement of his wasting
tissues, but the hostile Chair would permit no addition to it. But, no matter,
the Chair could not beat that man. He was a garrison holding a fort, and was
not to be starved out.
When he had been speaking
eight hours his pulse was 72; when he had spoken twelve, it was 100.
He finished his long speech
in these terms, as nearly as a permissibly free translation can convey them:
'I will now hasten to close
my examination of the subject. I conceive that we of the Left have made it
clear to the honourable gentlemen of the other side of the House that we are
stirred by no intemperate enthusiasm for this measure in its present shape....
'What we require, and shall
fight for with all lawful weapons, is a formal, comprehensive, and definitive
solution and settlement of these vexed matters. We desire the restoration of
the earlier condition of things; the cancellation of all this incapable
Government's pernicious trades with Hungary; and then—release from the sorry
burden of the Badeni ministry!
'I voice the hope—I know not
if it will be fulfilled—I voice the deep and sincere and patriotic hope that
the committee into whose hands this bill will eventually be committed will take
its stand upon high ground, and will return the Ausgleich-Provisorium to this
House in a form which shall make it the protector and promoter alike of the
great interests involved and of the honour of our fatherland.' After a pause,
turning towards the Government benches: 'But in any case, gentlemen of the
Majority, make sure of this: henceforth, as before, you find us at our post.
The Germans of Austria will neither surrender nor die!'
Then burst a storm of
applause which rose and fell, rose and fell, burst out again and again and
again, explosion after explosion, hurricane after hurricane, with no apparent promise
of ever coming to an end; and meantime the whole Left was surging and weltering
about the champion, all bent upon wringing his hand and congratulating him and
glorifying him.
Finally he got away, and
went home and ate five loaves and twelve baskets of fish, read the morning
papers, slept three hours, took a short drive, then returned to the House, and
sat out the rest of the thirty-three-hour session.
To merely stand up in one
spot twelve hours on a stretch is a feat which very few men could achieve; to
add to the task the utterance of a hundred thousand words would be beyond the
possibilities of the most of those few; to superimpose the requirement that the
words should be put into the form of a compact, coherent, and symmetrical
oration would probably rule out the rest of the few, bar Dr. Lecher.
III.—CURIOUS PARLIAMENTARY
ETIQUETTE.
In consequence of Dr.
Lecher's twelve-hour speech and the other obstructions furnished by the
Minority, the famous thirty-three-hour sitting of the House accomplished nothing.
The Government side had made a supreme effort, assisting itself with all the
helps at hand, both lawful and unlawful, yet had failed to get the Ausgleich
into the hands of a committee. This was a severe defeat. The Right was
mortified, the Left jubilant.
Parliament was adjourned for
a week—to let the members cool off, perhaps—a sacrifice of precious time; for
but two months remained in which to carry the all-important Ausgleich to a
consummation.
If I have reported the
behaviour of the House intelligibly, the reader has been surprised by it, and
has wondered whence these law-makers come and what they are made of; and he has
probably supposed that the conduct exhibited at the Long Sitting was far out of
the common, and due to special excitement and irritation. As to the make-up of
the House, it is this: the deputies come from all the walks of life and from
all the grades of society. There are princes, counts, barons, priests,
peasants, mechanics, labourers, lawyers, judges, physicians, professors, merchants,
bankers, shopkeepers. They are religious men, they are earnest, sincere,
devoted, and they hate the Jews. The title of Doctor is so common in the House
that one may almost say that the deputy who does not bear it is by that reason
conspicuous. I am assured that it is not a self-granted title, and not an
honorary one, but an earned one; that in Austria it is very seldom conferred as
a mere compliment; that in Austria the degrees of Doctor of Music, Doctor of
Philosophy, and so on, are not conferred by the seats of learning; and so, when
an Austrian is called Doctor, it means that he is either a lawyer or a
physician, and that he is not a self-educated man, but is college-bred, and has
been diplomaed for merit.
That answers the question of
the constitution of the House. Now as to the House's curious manners. The
manners exhibited by this convention of Doctors were not at that time being
tried as a wholly new experiment. I will go back to a previous sitting in order
to show that the deputies had already had some practice.
There had been an incident.
The dignity of the House had been wounded by improprieties indulged in in its
presence by a couple of the members. This matter was placed in the hands of a
committee to determine where the guilt lay and the degree of it, and also to
suggest the punishment. The chairman of the committee brought in his report. By
this it appeared that in the course of a speech, Deputy Schrammel said that
religion had no proper place in the public schools—it was a private matter. Whereupon
Deputy Gregorig shouted, 'How about free love!'
To this, Deputy Iro flung
out this retort: 'Soda-water at the Wimberger!'
This appeared to deeply
offend Deputy Gregorig, who shouted back at Iro, 'You cowardly blatherskite,
say that again!'
The committee had sat three
hours. Gregorig had apologised. Iro explained that he didn't say anything about
soda-water at the Wimberger. He explained in writing, and was very explicit: 'I
declare upon my word of honour that I did not say the words attributed to me.'
Unhappily for his word of
honour, it was proved by the official stenographers and by the testimony of
several deputies that he did say them.
The committee did not
officially know why the apparently inconsequential reference to soda-water at
the Wimberger should move Deputy Gregorig to call the utterer of it a cowardly
blatherskite; still, after proper deliberation, it was of the opinion that the
House ought to formally censure the whole business. This verdict seems to have
been regarded as sharply severe. I think so because Deputy Dr. Lueger,
Burgermeister of Vienna, felt it a duty to soften the blow to his friend
Gregorig by showing that the soda-water remark was not so innocuous as it might
look; that, indeed, Gregorig's tough retort was justifiable—and he proceeded to
explain why. He read a number of scandalous post-cards which he intimated had
proceeded from Iro, as indicated by the handwriting, though they were
anonymous. Some of them were posted to Gregorig at his place of business and
could have been read by all his subordinates; the others were posted to
Gregorig's wife. Lueger did not say—but everybody knew—that the cards referred
to a matter of town gossip which made Mr. Gregorig a chief actor in a tavern
scene where siphon-squirting played a prominent and humorous part, and wherein
women had a share.
There were several of the
cards; more than several, in fact; no fewer than five were sent in one day. Dr.
Lueger read some of them, and described others. Some of them had pictures on
them; one a picture of a hog with a monstrous snout, and beside it a squirting
soda-siphon; below it some sarcastic doggerel.
Gregorig dealt in shirts,
cravats, etc. One of the cards bore these words: 'Much-respected Deputy and
collar-sewer—or stealer.'
Another: 'Hurrah for the
Christian-Social work among the women-assemblages! Hurrah for the
soda-squirter!' Comment by Dr. Lueger: 'I cannot venture to read the rest of
that one, nor the signature, either.'
Another: 'Would you mind
telling me if....' Comment by Dr. Lueger: 'The rest of it is not properly
readable.'
To Deputy Gregorig's wife:
'Much-respected Madam Gregorig,—The undersigned desires an invitation to the
next soda-squirt.' Comment by Dr. Lueger: 'Neither the rest of the card nor the
signature can I venture to read to the House, so vulgar are they.'
The purpose of this card—to
expose Gregorig to his family—was repeated in others of these anonymous
missives.
The House, by vote, censured
the two improper deputies.
This may have had a
modifying effect upon the phraseology of the membership for a while, and upon
its general exuberance also, but it was not for long. As has been seen, it had
become lively once more on the night of the Long Sitting. At the next sitting
after the long one there was certainly no lack of liveliness. The President was
persistently ignoring the Rules of the House in the interest of the government
side, and the Minority were in an unappeasable fury about it. The ceaseless din
and uproar, the shouting and stamping and desk-banging, were deafening, but
through it all burst voices now and then that made themselves heard. Some of
the remarks were of a very candid sort, and I believe that if they had been
uttered in our House of Representatives they would have attracted attention. I
will insert some samples here. Not in their order, but selected on their
merits:
Mr. Mayreder (to the
President). 'You have lied! You conceded the floor to me; make it good, or you
have lied!'
Mr. Glockner (to the
President). 'Leave! Get out!'
Wolf (indicating the
President). 'There sits a man to whom a certain title belongs!'
Unto Wolf, who is
continuously reading, in a powerful voice, from a newspaper, arrive these
personal remarks from the Majority: 'Oh, shut your mouth!' 'Put him out!' 'Out
with him!' Wolf stops reading a moment to shout at Dr. Lueger, who has the
floor but cannot get a hearing, 'Please, Betrayer of the People, begin!'
Dr. Lueger, 'Meine Herren—'
('Oho!' and groans.)
Wolf. 'That's the holy light
of the Christian Socialists!'
Mr. Kletzenbauer (Christian
Socialist). 'Dam—nation! Are you ever going to quiet down?'
Wolf discharges a galling
remark at Mr. Wohlmeyer.
Wohlmeyer (responding). 'You
Jew, you!'
There is a moment's lull,
and Dr. Lueger begins his speech. Graceful, handsome man, with winning manners
and attractive bearing, a bright and easy speaker, and is said to know how to
trim his political sails to catch any favouring wind that blows. He manages to
say a few words, then the tempest overwhelms him again.
Wolf stops reading his paper
a moment to say a drastic thing about Lueger and his Christian-Social pieties,
which sets the C.S.S. in a sort of frenzy.
Mr. Vielohlawek. 'You leave
the Christian Socialists alone, you word-of-honour-breaker! Obstruct all you
want to, but you leave them alone! You've no business in this House; you belong
in a gin-mill!'
Mr. Prochazka. 'In a
lunatic-asylum, you mean!'
Vielohlawek. 'It's a pity
that such a man should be leader of the Germans; he disgraces the German name!'
Dr. Scheicher. 'It's a shame
that the like of him should insult us.'
Strohbach (to Wolf).
'Contemptible cub—we will bounce thee out of this!' (It is inferable that the
'thee' is not intended to indicate affection this time, but to re-enforce and
emphasise Mr. Storhbach's scorn.)
Dr. Scheicher. 'His insults
are of no consequence. He wants his ears boxed.'
Dr. Lueger (to Wolf). 'You'd
better worry a trifle over your Iro's word of honour. You are behaving like a
street arab.'
Dr. Scheicher. 'It is
infamous!'
Dr. Lueger. 'And these
shameless creatures are the leaders of the German People's Party!'
Meantime Wolf goes whooping
along with his newspaper readings in great contentment.
Dr. Pattai. 'Shut up! Shut
up! Shut up! You haven't the floor!'
Strohbach. 'The miserable
cub!'
Dr. Lueger (to Wolf, raising
his voice strenuously above the storm). 'You are a wholly honourless street
brat!' (A voice, 'Fire the rapscallion out!' But Wolf's soul goes marching
noisily on, just the same.)
Schonerer (vast and
muscular, and endowed with the most powerful voice in the Reichsrath; comes
ploughing down through the standing crowds, red, and choking with anger; halts
before Deputy Wohlmeyer, grabs a rule and smashes it with a blow upon a desk,
threatens Wohlmeyer's face with his fist, and bellows out some personalities,
and a promise). 'Only you wait—we'll teach you!' (A whirlwind of offensive
retorts assails him from the band of meek and humble Christian Socialists
compacted around their leader, that distinguished religious expert, Dr. Lueger,
Burgermeister of Vienna. Our breath comes in excited gasps now, and we are full
of hope. We imagine that we are back fifty years ago in the Arkansas
Legislature, and we think we know what is going to happen, and are glad we
came, and glad we are up in the gallery, out of the way, where we can see the
whole thing and yet not have to supply any of the material for the inquest.
However, as it turns out, our confidence is abused, our hopes are misplaced.)
Dr. Pattai (wildly excited).
'You quiet down, or we shall turn ourselves loose! There will be cuffing of
ears!'
Prochazka (in a fury).
'No—not ear boxing, but genuine blows!'
Vieholawek. 'I would rather
take my hat off to a Jew than to Wolf!'
Strohbach (to Wolf). 'Jew
flunky! Here we have been fighting the Jews for ten years, and now you are
helping them to power again. How much do you get for it?'
Holansky. 'What he wants is
a strait-jacket!'
Wolf continues his reading.
It is a market report now.
Remark flung across the
House to Schonerer: 'Die Grossmutter auf dem Misthaufen erzeugt worden!'
It will be judicious not to
translate that. Its flavour is pretty high, in any case, but it becomes
particularly gamy when you remember that the first gallery was well stocked
with ladies.
Apparently it was a great
hit. It fetched thunders of joyous enthusiasm out of the Christian Socialists,
and in their rapture they flung biting epithets with wasteful liberality at
specially detested members of the Opposition; among others, this one at
Schonerer, 'Bordell in der Krugerstrasse!' Then they added these words, which they
whooped, howled, and also even sang, in a deep-voiced chorus: 'Schmul Leeb
Kohn! Schmul Leeb Kohn! Schmul Leeb Kohn!' and made it splendidly audible above
the banging of desk-boards and the rest of the roaring cyclone of fiendish
noises. (A gallery witticism comes flitting by from mouth to mouth around the
great curve: 'The swan-song of Austrian representative government!' You can
note its progress by the applausive smiles and nods it gets as it skims along.)
Kletzenbauer. 'Holofernes,
where is Judith?' (Storm of laughter.)
Gregorig (the
shirt-merchant). 'This Wolf-Theatre is costing 6,000 florins!'
Wolf (with sweetness).
'Notice him, gentlemen; it is Mr. Gregorig.' (Laughter.)
Vieholawek (to Wolf). 'You
Judas!'
Schneider. 'Brothel-knight!'
Chorus of Voices.
'East-German offal tub!'
And so the war of epithets
crashes along, with never-diminishing energy, for a couple of hours.
The ladies in the gallery
were learning. That was well; for by-and-by ladies will form a part of the
membership of all the legislatures in the world; as soon as they can prove
competency they will be admitted. At present, men only are competent to
legislate; therefore they look down upon women, and would feel degraded if they
had to have them for colleagues in their high calling.
Wolf is yelling another
market report now.
Gessman. 'Shut up, infamous
louse-brat!'
During a momentary lull Dr.
Lueger gets a hearing for three sentences of his speech. They demand and
require that the President shall suppress the four noisiest members of the
Opposition.
Wolf (with a that-settles-it
toss of the head). 'The shifty trickster of Vienna has spoken!'
Iro belonged to Schonerer's
party. The word-of-honour incident has given it a new name. Gregorig is a
Christian Socialist, and hero of the post-cards and the Wimberger
soda-squirting incident. He stands vast and conspicuous, and conceited and
self-satisfied, and roosterish and inconsequential, at Lueger's elbow, and is
proud and cocky to be in such a great company. He looks very well indeed;
really majestic, and aware of it. He crows out his little empty remark, now and
then, and looks as pleased as if he had been delivered of the Ausgleich.
Indeed, he does look notably fine. He wears almost the only dress vest on the
floor; it exposes a continental spread of white shirt-front; his hands are
posed at ease in the lips of his trousers pockets; his head is tilted back
complacently; he is attitudinising; he is playing to the gallery. However, they
are all doing that. It is curious to see. Men who only vote, and can't make
speeches, and don't know how to invent witty ejaculations, wander about the
vacated parts of the floor, and stop in a good place and strike
attitudes—attitudes suggestive of weighty thought, mostly—and glance furtively
up at the galleries to see how it works; or a couple will come together and
shake hands in an artificial way, and laugh a gay manufactured laugh, and do
some constrained and self-conscious attitudinising; and they steal glances at
the galleries to see if they are getting notice. It is like a
scene on the stage—by-play by minor actors at the back while the stars do the
great work at the front. Even Count Badeni attitudinises for a moment; strikes
a reflective Napoleonic attitude of fine picturesqueness—but soon thinks better
of it and desists. There are two who do not attitudinise—poor harried and
insulted President Abrahamowicz, who seems wholly miserable, and can find no
way to put in the dreary time but by swinging his bell and discharging
occasional remarks which nobody can hear; and a resigned and patient priest,
who sits lonely in a great vacancy on Majority territory and munches an apple.
Schonerer uplifts his
fog-horn of a voice and shakes the roof with an insult discharged at the
Majority.
Dr. Lueger. 'The Honourless
Party would better keep still here!'
Gregorig (the echo, swelling
out his shirt-front). 'Yes, keep quiet, pimp!'
Schonerer (to Lueger).
'Political mountebank!'
Prochazka (to Schonerer).
'Drunken clown!'
During the final hour of the
sitting many happy phrases were distributed through the proceedings. Among them
were these—and they are strikingly good ones:
'Blatherskite!'
'Blackguard!'
'Scoundrel!'
'Brothel-daddy!'
This last was the
contribution of Dr. Gessman, and gave great satisfaction. And deservedly. It
seems to me that it was one of the most sparkling things that was said during
the whole evening.
At half-past two in the
morning the House adjourned. The victory was with the Opposition. No; not quite
that. The effective part of it was snatched away from them by an unlawful
exercise of Presidential force—another contribution toward driving the
mistreated Minority out of their minds.
At other sittings of the
parliament, gentlemen of the Opposition, shaking their fists toward the
President, addressed him as 'Polish Dog'. At one sitting an angry deputy turned
upon a colleague and shouted, '—————!'
You must try to imagine what
it was. If I should offer it even in the original it would probably not get by
the editor's blue pencil; to offer a translation would be to waste my ink, of
course. This remark was frankly printed in its entirety by one of the Vienna
dailies, but the others disguised the toughest half of it with stars.
If the reader will go back
over this chapter and gather its array of extraordinary epithets into a bunch
and examine them, he will marvel at two things: how this convention of
gentlemen could consent to use such gross terms; and why the users were allowed
to get out the place alive. There is no way to understand this strange
situation. If every man in the House were a professional blackguard, and had
his home in a sailor boarding-house, one could still not understand it; for,
although that sort do use such terms, they never take them. These men are not
professional blackguards; they are mainly gentlemen, and educated; yet they use
the terms, and take them too. They really seem to attach no consequence to
them. One cannot say that they act like schoolboys; for that is only almost
true, not entirely. Schoolboys blackguard each other fiercely, and by the hour,
and one would think that nothing would ever come of it but noise; but that
would be a mistake. Up to a certain limit the result would be noise only, but,
that limit overstepped, trouble would follow right away. There are certain
phrases—phrases of a peculiar character—phrases of the nature of that reference
to Schonerer's grandmother, for instance—which not even the most spiritless
schoolboy in the English-speaking world would allow to pass unavenged. One
difference between schoolboys and the law-makers of the Reichsrath seems to be
that the law-makers have no limit, no danger-line. Apparently they may call
each other what they please, and go home unmutilated.
Now, in fact, they did have
a scuffle on two occasions, but it was not on account of names called. There
has been no scuffle where that was the cause.
It is not to be inferred
that the House lacks a sense of honour because it lacks delicacy. That would be
an error. Iro was caught in a lie, and it profoundly disgraced him. The House
cut him, turned its back upon him. He resigned his seat; otherwise he would
have been expelled. But it was lenient with Gregorig, who had called Iro a
cowardly blatherskite in debate. It merely went through the form of mildly
censuring him. That did not trouble Gregorig.
The Viennese say of
themselves that they are an easy-going, pleasure-loving community, making the
best of life, and not taking it very seriously. Nevertheless, they are grieved
about the ways of their Parliament, and say quite frankly that they are ashamed.
They claim that the low condition of the parliament's manners is new, not old.
A gentleman who was at the head of the government twenty years ago confirms
this, and says that in his time the parliament was orderly and well-behaved. An
English gentleman of long residence here endorses this, and says that a low
order of politicians originated the present forms of questionable speech on the
stump some years ago, and imported them into the parliament.(2) However, some
day there will be a Minister of Etiquette and a sergeant-at-arms, and then
things will go better. I mean if parliament and the Constitution survive the
present storm.
IV.—THE HISTORIC CLIMAX
During the whole of November
things went from bad to worse. The all-important Ausgleich remained hard aground,
and could not be sparred off. Badeni's government could not withdraw the
Language Ordinance and keep its majority, and the Opposition could not be
placated on easier terms. One night, while the customary pandemonium was
crashing and thundering along at its best, a fight broke out. It was a surging,
struggling, shoulder-to-shoulder scramble. A great many blows were struck.
Twice Schonerer lifted one of the heavy ministerial fauteuils—some say with one
hand—and threatened members of the Majority with it, but it was wrenched away
from him; a member hammered Wolf over the head with the President's bell, and
another member choked him; a professor was flung down and belaboured with fists
and choked; he held up an open penknife as a defence against the blows; it was
snatched from him and flung to a distance; it hit a peaceful Christian
Socialist who wasn't doing anything, and brought blood from his hand. This was
the only blood drawn. The men who got hammered and choked looked sound and well
next day. The fists and the bell were not properly handled, or better results
would have been apparent. I am quite sure that the fighters were not in
earnest.
On Thanksgiving Day the
sitting was a history-making one. On that day the harried, bedevilled, and
despairing government went insane. In order to free itself from the thraldom of
the Opposition it committed this curiously juvenile crime; it moved an
important change of the Rules of the House, forbade debate upon the motion, put
it to a stand-up vote instead of ayes and noes, and then gravely claimed that
it had been adopted; whereas, to even the dullest witness—if I without
immodesty may pretend to that place—it was plain that nothing legitimately to
be called a vote had been taken at all.
I think that Saltpeter never
uttered a truer thing than when he said, 'Whom the gods would destroy they
first make mad.' Evidently the government's mind was tottering when this bald
insult to the House was the best way it could contrive for getting out of the
frying-pan.
The episode would have been
funny if the matter at stake had been a trifle; but in the circumstances it was
pathetic. The usual storm was raging in the House. As usual, many of the
Majority and the most of the Minority were standing up—to have a better chance
to exchange epithets and make other noises. Into this storm Count Falkenhayn
entered, with his paper in his hand; and at once there was a rush to get near
him and hear him read his motion. In a moment he was walled in by listeners.
The several clauses of his motion were loudly applauded by these allies, and as
loudly disapplauded—if I may invent a word—by such of the Opposition as could
hear his voice. When he took his seat the President promptly put the
motion—persons desiring to vote in the affirmative, stand up! The House was
already standing up; had been standing for an hour; and before a third of it
had found out what the President had been saying, he had proclaimed the
adoption of the motion! And only a few heard that. In fact, when that House is
legislating you can't tell it from artillery practice.
You will realise what a
happy idea it was to side-track the lawful ayes and noes and substitute a
stand-up vote by this fact: that a little later, when a deputation of deputies
waited upon the President and asked him if he was actually willing to claim
that that measure had been passed, he answered, 'Yes—and unanimously.' It shows
that in effect the whole House was on its feet when that trick was sprung.
The 'Lex Falkenhayn,' thus
strangely born, gave the President power to suspend for three days any deputy
who should continue to be disorderly after being called to order twice, and it
also placed at his disposal such force as might be necessary to make the
suspension effective. So the House had a sergeant-at-arms at last, and a more
formidable one, as to power, than any other legislature in Christendom had ever
possessed. The Lex Falkenhayn also gave the House itself authority to suspend
members for thirty days.
On these terms the Ausgleich
could be put through in an hour—apparently. The Opposition would have to sit
meek and quiet, and stop obstructing, or be turned into the street, deputy
after deputy, leaving the Majority an unvexed field for its work.
Certainly the thing looked
well. The government was out of the frying-pan at last. It congratulated
itself, and was almost girlishly happy. Its stock rose suddenly from less than
nothing to a premium. It confessed to itself, with pride, that its Lex
Falkenhayn was a master-stroke—a work of genius.
However, there were doubters—men
who were troubled, and believed that a grave mistake had been made. It might be
that the Opposition was crushed, and profitably for the country, too; but the
manner of it—the manner of it! That was the serious part. It could have
far-reaching results; results whose gravity might transcend all guessing. It
might be the initial step toward a return to government by force, a restoration
of the irresponsible methods of obsolete times.
There were no vacant seats
in the galleries next day. In fact, standing-room outside the building was at a
premium. There were crowds there, and a glittering array of helmeted and
brass-buttoned police, on foot and on horseback, to keep them from getting too
much excited. No one could guess what was going to happen, but every one felt
that something was going to happen, and hoped he might have a chance to see it,
or at least get the news of it while it was fresh.
At noon the House was
empty—for I do not count myself. Half an hour later the two galleries were
solidly packed, the floor still empty. Another half-hour later Wolf entered and
passed to his place; then other deputies began to stream in, among them many
forms and faces grown familiar of late. By one o'clock the membership was
present in full force. A band of Socialists stood grouped against the
ministerial desks, in the shadow of the Presidential tribune. It was observable
that these official strongholds were now protected against rushes by bolted
gates, and that these were in ward of servants wearing the House's livery. Also
the removable desk-boards had been taken away, and nothing left for disorderly
members to slat with.
There was a pervading,
anxious hush—at least what stood very well for a hush in that House. It was
believed by many that the Opposition was cowed, and that there would be no more
obstruction, no more noise. That was an error.
Presently the President
entered by the distant door to the right, followed by Vice-President Fuchs, and
the two took their way down past the Polish benches toward the tribune.
Instantly the customary storm of noises burst out, and rose higher and higher,
and wilder and wilder, and really seemed to surpass anything that had gone
before it in that place. The President took his seat and begged for order, but
no one could hear him. His lips moved—one could see that; he bowed his body
forward appealingly, and spread his great hand eloquently over his breast—one
could see that; but as concerned his uttered words, he probably could not hear
them himself. Below him was that crowd of two dozen Socialists glaring up at
him, shaking their fists at him, roaring imprecations and insulting epithets at
him. This went on for some time. Suddenly the Socialists burst through the
gates and stormed up through the ministerial benches, and a man in a red cravat
reached up and snatched the documents that lay on the President's desk and
flung them abroad. The next moment he and his allies were struggling and
fighting with the half-dozen uniformed servants who were there to protect the
new gates. Meantime a detail of Socialists had swarmed up the side steps and
overflowed the President and the Vice, and were crowding and shouldering and
shoving them out of the place. They crowded them out, and down the steps and
across the House, past the Polish benches; and all about them swarmed hostile
Poles and Czechs, who resisted them. One could see fists go up and come down,
with other signs and shows of a heady fight; then the President and the Vice
disappeared through the door of entrance, and the victorious Socialists turned
and marched back, mounted the tribune, flung the President's bell and his
remaining papers abroad, and then stood there in a compact little crowd, eleven
strong, and held the place as if it were a fortress. Their friends on the floor
were in a frenzy of triumph, and manifested it in their deafening way. The
whole House was on its feet, amazed and wondering.
It was an astonishing
situation, and imposingly dramatic. Nobody had looked for this. The unexpected
had happened. What next? But there can be no next; the play is over; the grand
climax is reached; the possibilities are exhausted; ring down the curtain.
Not yet. That distant door
opens again. And now we see what history will be talking of five centuries
hence: a uniformed and helmeted battalion of bronzed and stalwart men marching
in double file down the floor of the House—a free parliament profaned by an
invasion of brute force!
It was an odious
spectacle—odious and awful. For one moment it was an unbelievable thing—a thing
beyond all credibility; it must be a delusion, a dream, a nightmare. But no, it
was real—pitifully real, shamefully real, hideously real. These sixty policemen
had been soldiers, and they went at their work with the cold unsentimentality
of their trade. They ascended the steps of the tribune, laid their hands upon
the inviolable persons of the representatives of a nation, and dragged and
tugged and hauled them down the steps and out at the door; then ranged
themselves in stately military array in front of the ministerial estrade, and
so stood.
It was a tremendous episode.
The memory of it will outlast all the thrones that exist to-day. In the whole
history of free parliaments the like of it had been seen but three times
before. It takes its imposing place among the world's unforgettable things. It
think that in my lifetime I have not twice seen abiding history made before my
eyes, but I know that I have seen it once.
Some of the results of this
wild freak followed instantly. The Badeni government came down with a crash;
there was a popular outbreak or two in Vienna; there were three or four days of
furious rioting in Prague, followed by the establishing there of martial law;
the Jews and Germans were harried and plundered, and their houses destroyed; in
other Bohemian towns there was rioting—in some cases the Germans being the
rioters, in others the Czechs—and in all cases the Jew had to roast, no matter
which side he was on. We are well along in December now;(3) the next new
Minister-President has not been able to patch up a peace among the warring
factions of the parliament, therefore there is no use in calling it together
again for the present; public opinion believes that parliamentary government
and the Constitution are actually threatened with extinction, and that the permanency
of the monarchy itself is a not absolutely certain thing!
Yes, the Lex Falkenhayn was
a great invention, and did what was claimed for it—it got the government out of
the frying-pan.
(1) That is, revolution.
(2) 'In that gracious bygone
time when a mild and good-tempered spirit was the atmosphere of our House, when
the manner of our speakers was studiously formal and academic, and the storms
and explosions of to-day were wholly unknown,' etc.—Translation of the opening
remark of a leading article in this morning's 'Neue Freie Presse,' December 1.
(3) It is the 9th.—M.T.
16.PRIVATE HISTORY OF THE
'JUMPING FROG' STORY
Five or six years ago a lady
from Finland asked me to tell her a story in our Negro dialect, so that she
could get an idea of what that variety of speech was like. I told her one of
Hopkinson Smith's Negro stories, and gave her a copy of 'Harper's Monthly'
containing it. She translated it for a Swedish newspaper, but by an oversight
named me as the author of it instead of Smith. I was very sorry for that,
because I got a good lashing in the Swedish press, which would have fallen to
his share but for that mistake; for it was shown that Boccaccio had told that
very story, in his curt and meagre fashion, five hundred years before Smith
took hold of it and made a good and tellable thing out of it.
I have always been sorry for
Smith. But my own turn has come now. A few weeks ago Professor Van Dyke, of
Princeton, asked this question:
'Do you know how old your
“Jumping Frog” story is?'
And I answered:
'Yes—forty-five years. The
thing happened in Calaveras County, in the spring of 1849.'
'No; it happened earlier—a
couple of thousand years earlier; it is a Greek story.'
I was astonished—and hurt. I
said:
'I am willing to be a
literary thief if it has been so ordained; I am even willing to be caught
robbing the ancient dead alongside of Hopkinson Smith, for he is my friend and
a good fellow, and I think would be as honest as any one if he could do it
without occasioning remark; but I am not willing to antedate his crimes by
fifteen hundred years. I must ask you to knock off part of that.'
But the professor was not
chaffing: he was in earnest, and could not abate a century. He offered to get
the book and send it to me and the Cambridge text-book containing the English
translation also. I thought I would like the translation best, because Greek
makes me tired. January 30th he sent me the English version, and I will
presently insert it in this article. It is my 'Jumping Frog' tale in every
essential. It is not strung out as I have strung it out, but it is all there.
To me this is very curious
and interesting. Curious for several reasons. For instance:
I heard the story told by a
man who was not telling it to his hearers as a thing new to them, but as a
thing which they had witnessed and would remember. He was a dull person, and
ignorant; he had no gift as a story-teller, and no invention; in his mouth this
episode was merely history—history and statistics; and the gravest sort of
history, too; he was entirely serious, for he was dealing with what to him were
austere facts, and they interested him solely because they were facts; he was
drawing on his memory, not his mind; he saw no humour in his tale, neither did
his listeners; neither he nor they ever smiled or laughed; in my time I have
not attended a more solemn conference. To him and to his fellow gold-miners
there were just two things in the story that were worth considering. One was
the smartness of its hero, Jim Smiley, in taking the stranger in with a loaded
frog; and the other was Smiley's deep knowledge of a frog's nature—for he knew
(as the narrator asserted and the listeners conceded) that a frog likes shot
and is always ready to eat it. Those men discussed those two points, and those
only. They were hearty in their admiration of them, and none of the party was
aware that a first-rate story had been told in a first-rate way, and that it
was brimful of a quality whose presence they never suspected—humour.
Now, then, the interesting
question is, did the frog episode happen in Angel's Camp in the spring of '49,
as told in my hearing that day in the fall of 1865? I am perfectly sure that it
did. I am also sure that its duplicate happened in Boeotia a couple of thousand
years ago. I think it must be a case of history actually repeating itself, and
not a case of a good story floating down the ages and surviving because too
good to be allowed to perish.
I would now like to have the
reader examine the Greek story and the story told by the dull and solemn
Californian, and observe how exactly alike they are in essentials.
17.(Translation.)
THE ATHENIAN AND THE
FROG.(1)
An Athenian once fell in
with a Boeotian who was sitting by the road-side looking at a frog. Seeing the
other approach, the Boeotian said his was a remarkable frog, and asked if he
would agree to start a contest of frogs, on condition that he whose frog jumped
farthest should receive a large sum of money. The Athenian replied that he
would if the other would fetch him a frog, for the lake was near. To this he
agreed, and when he was gone the Athenian took the frog, and, opening its
mouth, poured some stones into its stomach, so that it did not indeed seem
larger than before, but could not jump. The Boeotian soon returned with the
other frog, and the contest began. The second frog first was pinched, and
jumped moderately; then they pinched the Boeotian frog. And he gathered himself
for a leap, and used the utmost effort, but he could not move his body the
least. So the Athenian departed with the money. When he was gone the Boeotian,
wondering what was the matter with the frog, lifted him up and examined him.
And being turned upside down, he opened his mouth and vomited out the stones.
And here is the way it
happened in California:
FROM 'THE CELEBRATED JUMPING
FROG OF CALAVERAS COUNTY'
Well, thish-yer Smiley had
rat-tarriers and chicken cocks, and tom-cats, and all of them kind of things,
till you couldn't rest, and you couldn't fetch nothing for him to bet on but
he'd match you. He ketched a frog one day, and took him home, and said he
cal'lated to educate him; and so he never done nothing for three months but set
in his back yard and learn that frog to jump. And you bet you he did learn him,
too. He'd give him a little punch behind, and the next minute you'd see that
frog whirling in the air like a doughnut—see him turn one summerset, or maybe a
couple if he got a good start, and come down flat-footed and all right, like a
cat. He got him up so in the matter of ketching flies, and kep'him in practice
so constant, that he'd nail a fly every time as fur as he could see him. Smiley
said all a frog wanted was education, and he could do 'most anything—and I
believe him. Why, I've seen him set Dan'l Webster down here on this flor—Dan'l
Webster was the name of the frog—and sing out, 'Flies, Dan'l, flies!' and
quicker'n you could wink he'd spring straight up and snake a fly off'n the
counter there, and flop down on the floor ag'in as solid as a gob of mud, and
fall to scratching the side of his head with his hind foot as indifferent as if
he hadn't no idea he'd been doin' any more'n any frog might do. You never see a
frog so modest and straightfor'ard as he was, for all he was so gifted. And
when it come to fair and square jumping on a dead level, he could get over more
ground at one straddle than any animal of his breed you ever see. Jumping on a
dead level was his strong suit, you understand; and when it came to that,
Smiley would ante up money on him as long as he had a red. Smiley was monstrous
proud of his frog, and well he might be, for fellers that had travelled and
been everywheres all said he laid over any frog that ever they see.
Well, Smiley kep' the beast
in a little lattice box, and he used to fetch him down-town sometimes and lay
for a bet. One day a feller—a stranger in the camp, he was—come acrost him with
his box, and says:
'What might it be that
you've got in the box?'
And Smiley says, sorter
indifferent-like, 'It might be a parrot, or it might be a canary, maybe, but
it's ain't—it's only just a frog.'
And the feller took it, and
looked at it careful, and turned it round this way and that, and says, 'H'm—so
'tis. Well, what's he good for?'
'Well,' Smiley says, easy
and careless, 'he's good enough for one thing, I should judge—he can outjump
any frog in Calaveras County.'
The feller took the box
again and took another long, particular look, and give it back to Smiley, and
says, very deliberate, 'Well,' he says, 'I don't see no p'ints about that frog
that's any better'n any other frog.'
'Maybe you don't,' Smiley
says. 'Maybe you understand frogs and maybe you don't understand 'em; maybe
you've had experience, and maybe you ain't only a amature, as it were. Anyways,
I've got my opinion, and I'll resk forty dollars that he can outjump any frog
in Calaveras County.'
And the feller studies a
minute, and then says, kinder sad like, 'Well, I'm only a stranger here, and I
ain't got no frog, but if I had a frog I'd bet you.'
And then Smiley says:
'That's all right—that's all right; if you'll hold my box a minute, I'll go and
get you a frog.' And so the feller took the box and put up his forty dollars
along with Smiley's and set down to wait.
So he set there a good while
thinking and thinking to hisself, and then he got the frog out and prized his
mouth open and took a teaspoon and filled him full of quail shot—filled him
pretty near up to his chin—and set him on the floor. Smiley he went to the
swamp and slopped around in the mud for a long time, and finally he ketched a
frog and fetched him in and give him to this feller, and says:
'Now, if you're ready, set
him alongside of Dan'l, with his fore-paws just even with Dan'l's, and I'll
give the word.' Then he says, 'One—two—three—git!' and him and the feller
touched up the frogs from behind, and the new frog hopped off lively; but Dan'l
give a heave, and hysted up his shoulders—so—like a Frenchman, but it warn't no
use—he couldn't budge; he was planted as solid as a church, and he couldn't no
more stir than if he was anchored out. Smiley was a good deal surprised, and he
was disgusted, too, but he didn't have no idea what the matter was, of course.
The feller took the money
and started away; and when he was going out at the door he sorter jerked his
thumb over his shoulder—so—at Dan'l, and says again, very deliberate: 'Well,'
he says, 'I don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any better'n any other
frog.'
Smiley he stood scratching
his head and looking down at Dan'l a long time, and at last he says, 'I do
wonder what in the nation that frog throw'd off for—I wonder if there ain't
something the matter with him—he 'pears to look mighty baggy, somehow.' And he
ketched Dan'l by the nape of the neck, and hefted him, and says, 'Why, blame my
cats if he don't weigh five pound!' and turned him upside down, and he belched
out a double handful of shot. And then he see how it was, and he was the
maddest man—he set the frog down and took out after that feeler, but he never
ketched him.
The resemblances are
deliciously exact. There you have the wily Boeotain and the wily Jim Smiley
waiting—two thousand years apart—and waiting, each equipped with his frog and
'laying' for the stranger. A contest is proposed—for money. The Athenian would
take a chance 'if the other would fetch him a frog'; the Yankee says: 'I'm only
a stranger here, and I ain't got a frog; but if I had a frog I'd bet you.' The
wily Boeotian and the wily Californian, with that vast gulf of two thousand
years between, retire eagerly and go frogging in the marsh; the Athenian and
the Yankee remain behind and work a best advantage, the one with pebbles, the
other with shot. Presently the contest began. In the one case 'they pinched the
Boeotian frog'; in the other, 'him and the feller touched up the frogs from
behind.' The Boeotian frog 'gathered himself for a leap' (you can just see
him!), but 'could not move his body in the least'; the Californian frog 'give a
heave, but it warn't no use—he couldn't budge.' In both the ancient and the
modern cases the strangers departed with the money. The Boeotian and the
Californian wonder what is the matter with their frogs; they lift them and
examine; they turn them upside down and out spills the informing ballast.
Yes, the resemblances are
curiously exact. I used to tell the story of the 'Jumping Frog' in San
Francisco, and presently Artemus Ward came along and wanted it to help fill out
a little book which he was about to publish; so I wrote it out and sent it to
his publisher, Carleton; but Carleton thought the book had enough matter in it,
so he gave the story to Henry Clapp as a present, and Clapp put it in his
'Saturday Press,' and it killed that paper with a suddenness that was beyond
praise. At least the paper died with that issue, and none but envious people
have ever tried to rob me of the honour and credit of killing it. The 'Jumping
Frog' was the first piece of writing of mine that spread itself through the
newspapers and brought me into public notice. Consequently, the 'Saturday
Press' was a cocoon and I the worm in it; also, I was the gay-coloured literary
moth which its death set free. This simile has been used before.
Early in '66 the 'Jumping
Frog' was issued in book form, with other sketches of mine. A year or two later
Madame Blanc translated it into French and published it in the 'Revue des Deux
Mondes,' but the result was not what should have been expected, for the 'Revue'
struggled along and pulled through, and is alive yet. I think the fault must
have been in the translation. I ought to have translated it myself. I think so
because I examined into the matter and finally retranslated the sketch from the
French back into English, to see what the trouble was; that is, to see just
what sort of a focus the French people got upon it. Then the mystery was
explained. In French the story is too confused and chaotic and unreposeful and
ungrammatical and insane; consequently it could only cause grief and
sickness—it could not kill. A glance at my retranslation will show the reader
that this must be true.
18.(My Retranslation.)
THE FROG JUMPING OF THE COUNTY OF CALAVERAS
Eh bien! this Smiley
nourished some terriers a rats, and some cocks of combat, and some cats, and
all sorts of things: and with his rage of betting one no had more of repose. He
trapped one day a frog and him imported with him (et l'emporta chez lui) saying
that he pretended to make his education. You me believe if you will, but during
three months he not has nothing done but to him apprehend to jump (apprendre a
sauter) in a court retired of her mansion (de sa maison). And I you respond
that he have succeeded. He him gives a small blow by behind, and the instant
after you shall see the frog turn in the air like a grease-biscuit, make one
summersault, sometimes two, when she was well started, and refall upon his feet
like a cat. He him had accomplished in the art of to gobble the flies (gober
des mouches), and him there exercised continually—so well that a fly at the
most far that she appeared was a fly lost. Smiley had custom to say that all
which lacked to a frog it was the education, but with the education she could
do nearly all—and I him believe. Tenez, I him have seen pose Daniel Webster
there upon this plank—Daniel Webster was the name of the frog—and to him sing,
'Some flies, Daniel, some flies!'—in a fash of the eye Daniel had bounded and
seized a fly here upon the counter, then jumped anew at the earth, where he
rested truly to himself scratch the head with his behind-foot, as if he no had
not the least idea of his superiority. Never you not have seen frog as modest,
as natural, sweet as she was. And when he himself agitated to jump purely and
simply upon plain earth, she does more ground in one jump than any beast of his
species than you can know.
To jump plain—this was his
strong. When he himself agitated for that Smiley multiplied the bets upon her
as long as there to him remained a red. It must to know, Smiley was monstrously
proud of his frog, and he of it was right, for some men who were travelled, who
had all seen, said that they to him would be injurious to him compare to
another frog. Smiley guarded Daniel in a little box latticed which he carried
bytimes to the village for some bet.
One day an individual
stranger at the camp him arrested with his box and him said:
'What is this that you have
then shut up there within?'
Smiley said, with an air
indifferent:
'That could be a paroquet,
or a syringe (ou un serin), but this no is nothing of such, it not is but a
frog.'
The individual it took, it
regarded with care, it turned from one side and from the other, then he said:
'Tiens! in effect!—At what
is she good?'
'My God!' responded Smiley,
always with an air disengaged, 'she is good for one thing, to my notice (a mon
avis), she can better in jumping (elle peut batter en sautant) all frogs of the
county of Calaveras.'
The individual retook the
box, it examined of new longly, and it rendered to Smiley in saying with an air
deliberate:
'Eh bien! I no saw not that
that frog had nothing of better than each frog.' (Je ne vois pas que cette
grenouille ait rien de mieux qu'aucune grenouille.) (If that isn't grammar gone
to seed, then I count myself no judge.—M.T.)
'Possible that you not it
saw not,' said Smiley; 'possible that you—you comprehend frogs; possible that
you not you there comprehend nothing; possible that you had of the experience,
and possible that you not be but an amateur. Of all manner (de toute maniere) I
bet forty dollars that she batter in jumping no matter which frog of the
country of Calaveras.'
The individual reflected a
second, and said like sad:
'I not am but a stranger
here, I no have not a frog; but if I of it had one, I would embrace the bet.'
'Strong, well!' respond
Smiley; 'nothing of more facility. If you will hold my box a minute, I go you
to search a frog (j'irai vous chercher.)'
Behold, then, the individual
who guards the box, who puts his forty dollars upon those of Smiley, and who
attends (et qui attendre). He attended enough longtimes, reflecting all solely.
And figure you that he takes Daniel, him opens the mouth by force and with a
teaspoon him fills with shot of the hunt, even him fills just to the chin, then
he him puts by the earth. Smiley during these times was at slopping in a swamp.
Finally he trapped (attrape) a frog, him carried to that individual, and said:
'Now if you be ready, put
him all against Daniel, with their before-feet upon the same line, and I give
the signal'—then he added: 'One, two three—advance!'
Him and the individual
touched their frogs by behind, and the frog new put to jump smartly, but Daniel
himself lifted ponderously, exhalted the shoulders thus, like a Frenchman—to
what good? He could not budge, he is planted solid like a church, he not
advance no more than if one him had put at the anchor.
Smiley was surprised and
disgusted, but he not himself doubted not of the turn being intended (mais il
ne se doutait pas du tour bien entendre). The indidivual empocketed the silver,
himself with it went, and of it himself in going is that he no gives not a jerk
of thumb over the shoulder—like that—at the poor Daniel, in saying with his air
deliberate—(L'individu empoche l'argent, s'en va et en s'en allant est-ce qu'il
ne donne pas un coup de pouce pas-dessus l'epaule, comme ca, au pauvre Daniel,
en disant de son air delibere).
'Eh bien! I no see not that
that frog has nothing of better than another.'
Smiley himself scratched longtimes
the head, the eyes fixed upon Daniel, until that which at last he said:
'I me demand how the devil
it makes itself that this beast has refused. Is it that she had something? One
would believe that she is stuffed.'
He grasped Daniel by the
skin of the neck, him lifted and said:
'The wolf me bite if he no
weigh not five pounds.'
He him reversed and the
unhappy belched two handfuls of shot (et le malheureux, etc.). When Smiley
recognised how it was, he was like mad. He deposited his frog by the earth and
ran after that individual, but he not him caught never.
It may be that there are
people who can translate better than I can, but I am not acquainted with them.
So ends the private and
public history of the Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, an incident which has
this unique feature about it—that it is both old and new, a 'chestnut' and not
a 'chestnut;' for it was original when it happened two thousand years ago, and
was again original when it happened in California in our own time.
P.S.
London, July, 1900.—Twice,
recently, I have been asked this question:
'Have you seen the Greek
version of the “Jumping Frog”?'
And twice I have
answered—'No.'
'Has Professor Van Dyke seen
it?'
'I suppose so.'
'Then you supposition is at
fault.'
'Why?'
'Because there isn't any
such version.'
'Do you mean to intimate
that the tale is modern, and not borrowed from some ancient Greek book.'
'Yes. It is not permissible
for any but the very young and innocent to be so easily beguiled as you and Van
Dyke have been.'
'Do you mean that we have
fallen a prey to our ignorance and simplicity?'
'Yes. Is Van Dyke a Greek
scholar?'
'I believe so.'
'Then he knew where to find
the ancient Greek version if one existed. Why didn't he look? Why did he jump
to conclusions?'
'I don't know. And was it
worth the trouble, anyway?'
As it turns out, now, it was
not claimed that the story had been translated from the Greek. It had its place
among other uncredited stories, and was there to be turned into Greek by
students of that language. 'Greek Prose Composition'—that title is what made
the confusion. It seemed to mean that the originals were Greek. It was not well
chosen, for it was pretty sure to mislead.
Thus vanishes the Greek
Frog, and I am sorry: for he loomed fine and grand across the sweep of the
ages, and I took a great pride in him.
M.T.
(1) Sidgwick, Greek Prose
Composition, page 116
19.MY MILITARY CAMPAIGN
You have heard from a great
many people who did something in the war; is it not fair and right that you
listen a little moment to one who started out to do something in it, but
didn't? Thousands entered the war, got just a taste of it, and then stepped out
again, permanently. These, by their very numbers, are respectable, and are
therefore entitled to a sort of voice—not a loud one, but a modest one; not a
boastful one, but an apologetic one. They ought not to be allowed much space
among better people—people who did something—I grant that; but they ought at
least to be allowed to state why they didn't do anything, and also to explain
the process by which they didn't do anything. Surely this kind of light must
have a sort of value.
Out West there was a good
deal of confusion in men's minds during the first months of the great trouble—a
good deal of unsettledness, of leaning first this way, then that, then the
other way. It was hard for us to get our bearings. I call to mind an instance
of this. I was piloting on the Mississippi when the news came that South
Carolina had gone out of the Union on December 20, 1860. My pilot-mate was a
New Yorker. He was strong for the Union; so was I. But he would not listen to
me with any patience; my loyalty was smirched, to his eye, because my father
had owned slaves. I said, in palliation of this dark fact, that I had heard my
father say, some years before he died, that slavery was a great wrong, and that
he would free the solitary Negro he then owned if he could think it right to
give away the property of the family when he was so straitened in means. My
mate retorted that a mere impulse was nothing—anybody could pretend to a good
impulse; and went on decrying my Unionism and libelling my ancestry. A month
later the secession atmosphere had considerably thickened on the Lower
Mississippi, and I became a rebel; so did he. We were together in New Orleans,
January 26, when Louisiana went out of the Union. He did his full share of the
rebel shouting, but was bitterly opposed to letting me do mine. He said that I
came of bad stock—of a father who had been willing to set slaves free. In the
following summer he was piloting a Federal gun-boat and shouting for the Union
again, and I was in the Confederate army. I held his note for some borrowed
money. He was one of the most upright men I ever knew; but he repudiated that
note without hesitation, because I was a rebel, and the son of a man who had
owned slaves.
In that summer—of 1861—the
first wash of the wave of war broke upon the shores of Missouri. Our State was
invaded by the Union forces. They took possession of St. Louis, Jefferson
Barracks, and some other points. The Governor, Claib Jackson, issued his
proclamation calling out fifty thousand militia to repel the invader.
I was visiting in the small
town where my boyhood had been spent—Hannibal, Marion County. Several of us got
together in a secret place by night and formed ourselves into a military
company. One Tom Lyman, a young fellow of a good deal of spirit but of no
military experience, was made captain; I was made second lieutenant. We had no
first lieutenant; I do not know why; it was long ago. There were fifteen of us.
By the advice of an innocent connected with the organisation, we called
ourselves the Marion Rangers. I do not remember that any one found fault with
the name. I did not; I thought it sounded quite well. The young fellow who
proposed this title was perhaps a fair sample of the kind of stuff we were made
of. He was young, ignorant, good-natured, well-meaning, trivial, full of
romance, and given to reading chivalric novels and singing forlorn
love-ditties. He had some pathetic little nickel-plated aristocratic instincts,
and detested his name, which was Dunlap; detested it, partly because it was
nearly as common in that region as Smith, but mainly because it had a plebeian
sound to his ear. So he tried to ennoble it by writing it in this way: d'Unlap.
That contented his eye, but left his ear unsatisfied, for people gave the new
name the same old pronunciation—emphasis on the front end of it. He then did
the bravest thing that can be imagined—a thing to make one shiver when one
remembers how the world is given to resenting shams and affectations; he began
to write his name so: d'Un Lap. And he waited patiently through the long storm
of mud that was flung at this work of art, and he had his reward at last; for
he lived to see that name accepted, and the emphasis put where he wanted it, by
people who had known him all his life, and to whom the tribe of Dunlaps had
been as familiar as the rain and the sunshine for forty years. So sure of
victory at last is the courage that can wait. He said he had found, by consulting
some ancient French chronicles, that the name was rightly and originally
written d'Un Lap; and said that if it were translated into English it would
mean Peterson: Lap, Latin or Greek, he said, for stone or rock, same as the
French Pierre, that is to say, Peter; d', of or from; un, a or one; hence d'Un
Lap, of or from a stone or a Peter; that is to say, one who is the son of a
stone, the son of a Peter—Peterson. Our militia company were not learned, and
the explanation confused them; so they called him Peterson Dunlap. He proved
useful to us in his way; he named our camps for us, and he generally struck a
name that was 'no slouch,' as the boys said.
That is one sample of us.
Another was Ed Stevens, son of the town jeweller,—trim-built, handsome, graceful,
neat as a cat; bright, educated, but given over entirely to fun. There was
nothing serious in life to him. As far as he was concerned, this military
expedition of ours was simply a holiday. I should say that about half of us
looked upon it in the same way; not consciously, perhaps, but unconsciously. We
did not think; we were not capable of it. As for myself, I was full of
unreasoning joy to be done with turning out of bed at midnight and four in the
morning, for a while; grateful to have a change, new scenes, new occupations, a
new interest. In my thoughts that was as far as I went; I did not go into the
details; as a rule one doesn't at twenty-five.
Another sample was Smith,
the blacksmith's apprentice. This vast donkey had some pluck, of a slow and
sluggish nature, but a soft heart; at one time he would knock a horse down for
some impropriety, and at another he would get homesick and cry. However, he had
one ultimate credit to his account which some of us hadn't: he stuck to the
war, and was killed in battle at last.
Jo Bowers, another sample,
was a huge, good-natured, flax-headed lubber; lazy, sentimental, full of
harmless brag, a grumbler by nature; an experienced, industrious, ambitious,
and often quite picturesque liar, and yet not a successful one, for he had had
no intelligent training, but was allowed to come up just any way. This life was
serious enough to him, and seldom satisfactory. But he was a good fellow,
anyway, and the boys all liked him. He was made orderly sergeant; Stevens was
made corporal.
These samples will
answer—and they are quite fair ones. Well, this herd of cattle started for the
war. What could you expect of them? They did as well as they knew how, but
really what was justly to be expected of them? Nothing, I should say. That is
what they did.
We waited for a dark night,
for caution and secrecy were necessary; then, toward midnight, we stole in
couples and from various directions to the Griffith place, beyond the town;
from that point we set out together on foot. Hannibal lies at the extreme
south-eastern corner of Marion County, on the Mississippi River; our objective
point was the hamlet of New London, ten miles away, in Ralls County.
The first hour was all fun,
all idle nonsense and laughter. But that could not be kept up. The steady
trudging came to be like work; the play had somehow oozed out of it; the
stillness of the woods and the sombreness of the night began to throw a
depressing influence over the spirits of the boys, and presently the talking
died out and each person shut himself up in his own thoughts. During the last
half of the second hour nobody said a word.
Now we approached a log
farm-house where, according to report, there was a guard of five Union
soldiers. Lyman called a halt; and there, in the deep gloom of the overhanging
branches, he began to whisper a plan of assault upon that house, which made the
gloom more depressing than it was before. It was a crucial moment; we realised,
with a cold suddenness, that here was no jest—we were standing face to face with
actual war. We were equal to the occasion. In our response there was no
hesitation, no indecision: we said that if Lyman wanted to meddle with those
soldiers, he could go ahead and do it; but if he waited for us to follow him,
he would wait a long time.
Lyman urged, pleaded, tried
to shame us, but it had no effect. Our course was plain, our minds were made
up: we would flank the farmhouse—go out around. And that is what we did. We
turned the position.
We struck into the woods and
entered upon a rough time, stumbling over roots, getting tangled in vines, and
torn by briers. At last we reached an open place in a safe region, and sat
down, blown and hot, to cool off and nurse our scratches and bruises. Lyman was
annoyed, but the rest of us were cheerful; we had flanked the farm-house, we
had made our first military movement, and it was a success; we had nothing to
fret about, we were feeling just the other way. Horse-play and laughing began
again; the expedition was become a holiday frolic once more.
Then we had two more hours
of dull trudging and ultimate silence and depression; then, about dawn, we
straggled into New London, soiled, heel-blistered, fagged with our little
march, and all of us except Stevens in a sour and raspy humour and privately
down on the war. We stacked our shabby old shot-guns in Colonel Ralls's barn,
and then went in a body and breakfasted with that veteran of the Mexican War.
Afterwards he took us to a distant meadow, and there in the shade of a tree we
listened to an old-fashioned speech from him, full of gunpowder and glory, full
of that adjective-piling, mixed metaphor, and windy declamation which was
regarded as eloquence in that ancient time and that remote region; and then he
swore us on the Bible to be faithful to the State of Missouri and drive all
invaders from her soil, no matter whence they might come or under what flag
they might march. This mixed us considerably, and we could not make out just
what service we were embarked in; but Colonel Ralls, the practised politician
and phrase-juggler, was not similarly in doubt; he knew quite clearly that he
had invested us in the cause of the Southern Confederacy. He closed the
solemnities by belting around me the sword which his neighbour, colonel Brown,
had worn at Buena Vista and Molino del Rey; and he accompanied this act with
another impressive blast.
Then we formed in line of
battle and marched four miles to a shady and pleasant piece of woods on the
border of the far-reached expanses of a flowery prairie. It was an enchanting
region for war—our kind of war.
We pierced the forest about
half a mile, and took up a strong position, with some low, rocky, and wooded
hills behind us, and a purling, limpid creek in front. Straightway half the
command were in swimming, and the other half fishing. The ass with the French
name gave this position a romantic title, but it was too long, so the boys
shortened and simplified it to Camp Ralls.
We occupied an old
maple-sugar camp, whose half-rotted troughs were still propped against the
trees. A long corn-crib served for sleeping quarters for the battalion. On our
left, half a mile away, was Mason's farm and house; and he was a friend to the
cause. Shortly after noon the farmers began to arrive from several directions,
with mules and horses for our use, and these they lent us for as long as the
war might last, which they judged would be about three months. The animals were
of all sizes, all colours, and all breeds. They were mainly young and frisky,
and nobody in the command could stay on them long at a time; for we were town
boys, and ignorant of horsemanship. The creature that fell to my share was a
very small mule, and yet so quick and active that it could throw me without
difficulty; and it did this whenever I got on it. Then it would bray—stretching
its neck out, laying its ears back, and spreading its jaws till you could see
down to its works. It was a disagreeable animal, in every way. If I took it by
the bridle and tried to lead it off the grounds, it would sit down and brace
back, and no one could budge it. However, I was not entirely destitute of
military resources, and I did presently manage to spoil this game; for I had
seen many a steam-boat aground in my time, and knew a trick or two which even a
grounded mule would be obliged to respect. There was a well by the corn-crib;
so I substituted thirty fathom of rope for the bridle, and fetched him home
with the windlass.
I will anticipate here
sufficiently to say that we did learn to ride, after some days' practice, but
never well. We could not learn to like our animals; they were not choice ones,
and most of them had annoying peculiarities of one kind or another. Stevens's
horse would carry him, when he was not noticing, under the huge excrescences
which form on the trunks of oak-trees, and wipe him out of the saddle; in this
way Stevens got several bad hurts. Sergeant Bowers's horse was very large and
tall, with slim, long legs, and looked like a railroad bridge. His size enabled
him to reach all about, and as far as he wanted to, with his head; so he was
always biting Bowers's legs. On the march, in the sun, Bowers slept a good
deal; and as soon as the horse recognised that he was asleep he would reach
around and bite him on the leg. His legs were black and blue with bites. This
was the only thing that could ever make him swear, but this always did;
whenever the horse bit him he always swore, and of course Stevens, who laughed
at everything, laughed at this, and would even get into such convulsions over
it as to lose his balance and fall off his horse; and then Bowers, already
irritated by the pain of the horse-bite, would resent the laughter with hard
language, and there would be a quarrel; so that horse made no end of trouble
and bad blood in the command.
However, I will get back to
where I was—our first afternoon in the sugar-camp. The sugar-troughs came very
handy as horse-troughs, and we had plenty of corn to fill them with. I ordered
Sergeant Bowers to feed my mule; but he said that if I reckoned he went to war
to be dry-nurse to a mule, it wouldn't take me very long to find out my
mistake. I believed that this was insubordination, but I was full of
uncertainties about everything military, and so I let the thing pass, and went
and ordered Smith, the blacksmith's apprentice, to feed the mule; but he merely
gave me a large, cold, sarcastic grin, such as an ostensibly seven-year-old
horse gives you when you lift his lip and find he is fourteen, and turned his
back on me. I then went to the captain, and asked if it was not right and
proper and military for me to have an orderly. He said it was, but as there was
only one orderly in the corps, it was but right that he himself should have
Bowers on his staff. Bowers said he wouldn't serve on anybody's staff; and if
anybody thought he could make him, let him try it. So, of course, the thing had
to be dropped; there was no other way.
Next, nobody would cook; it
was considered a degradation; so we had no dinner. We lazied the rest of the
pleasant afternoon away, some dozing under the trees, some smoking cob-pipes
and talking sweethearts and war, some playing games. By late supper-time all
hands were famished; and to meet the difficulty all hands turned to, on an
equal footing, and gathered wood, built fires, and cooked the meal. Afterward
everything was smooth for a while; then trouble broke out between the corporal
and the sergeant, each claiming to rank the other. Nobody knew which was the
higher office; so Lyman had to settle the matter by making the rank of both
officers equal. The commander of an ignorant crew like that has many troubles
and vexations which probably do not occur in the regular army at all. However,
with the song-singing and yarn-spinning around the camp-fire, everything
presently became serene again; and by-and-by we raked the corn down level in
one end of the crib, and all went to bed on it, tying a horse to the door, so
that he would neigh if any one tried to get in.(1)
We had some horsemanship
drill every forenoon; then, afternoons, we rode off here and there in squads a
few miles, and visited the farmers' girls, and had a youthful good time, and
got an honest good dinner or supper, and then home again to camp, happy and
content.
For a time, life was idly
delicious, it was perfect; there was nothing to mar it. Then came some farmers
with an alarm one day. They said it was rumoured that the enemy were advancing
in our direction, from over Hyde's prairie. The result was a sharp stir among
us, and general consternation. It was a rude awakening from our pleasant
trance. The rumour was but a rumour—nothing definite about it; so, in the
confusion, we did not know which way to retreat. Lyman was for not retreating
at all, in these uncertain circumstances; but he found that if he tried to
maintain that attitude he would fare badly, for the command were in no humour
to put up with insubordination. So he yielded the point and called a council of
war—to consist of himself and the three other officers; but the privates made
such a fuss about being left out, that we had to allow them to remain, for they
were already present, and doing the most of the talking too. The question was,
which way to retreat; but all were so flurried that nobody seemed to have even
a guess to offer. Except Lyman. He explained in a few calm words, that inasmuch
as the enemy were approaching from over Hyde's prairie, our course was simple:
all we had to do was not to retreat toward him; any other direction would
answer our needs perfectly. Everybody saw in a moment how true this was, and
how wise; so Lyman got a great many compliments. It was now decided that we
should fall back upon Mason's farm.
It was after dark by this
time, and as we could not know how soon the enemy might arrive, it did not seem
best to try to take the horses and things with us; so we only took the guns and
ammunition, and started at once. The route was very rough and hilly and rocky,
and presently the night grew very black and rain began to fall; so we had a
troublesome time of it, struggling and stumbling along in the dark; and soon
some person slipped and fell, and then the next person behind stumbled over him
and fell, and so did the rest, one after the other; and then Bowers came with
the keg of powder in his arms, whilst the command were all mixed together, arms
and legs, on the muddy slope; and so he fell, of course, with the keg, and this
started the whole detachment down the hill in a body, and they landed in the
brook at the bottom in a pile, and each that was undermost pulling the hair and
scratching and biting those that were on top of him; and those that were being
scratched and bitten, scratching and biting the rest in their turn, and all
saying they would die before they would ever go to war again if they ever got
out of this brook this time, and the invader might rot for all they cared, and
the country along with them—and all such talk as that, which was dismal to hear
and take part in, in such smothered, low voices, and such a grisly dark place
and so wet, and the enemy maybe coming any moment.
The keg of powder was lost,
and the guns too; so the growling and complaining continued straight along
whilst the brigade pawed around the pasty hillside and slopped around in the
brook hunting for these things; consequently we lost considerable time at this;
and then we heard a sound, and held our breath and listened, and it seemed to
be the enemy coming, though it could have been a cow, for it had a cough like a
cow; but we did not wait, but left a couple of guns behind and struck out for
Mason's again as briskly as we could scramble along in the dark. But we got
lost presently among the rugged little ravines, and wasted a deal of time
finding the way again, so it was after nine when we reached Mason's stile at
last; and then before we could open our mouths to give the countersign, several
dogs came bounding over the fence, with great riot and noise, and each of them
took a soldier by the slack of his trousers and began to back away with him. We
could not shoot the dogs without endangering the persons they were attached to;
so we had to look on, helpless, at what was perhaps the most mortifying
spectacle of the civil war. There was light enough, and to spare, for the
Masons had now run out on the porch with candles in their hands. The old man
and his son came and undid the dogs without difficulty, all but Bowers's; but
they couldn't undo his dog, they didn't know his combination; he was of the
bull kind, and seemed to be set with a Yale time-lock; but they got him loose
at last with some scalding water, of which Bowers got his share and returned
thanks. Peterson Dunlap afterwards made up a fine name for this engagement, and
also for the night march which preceded it, but both have long ago faded out of
my memory.
We now went into the house,
and they began to ask us a world of questions, whereby it presently came out
that we did not know anything concerning who or what we were running from; so
the old gentleman made himself very frank, and said we were a curious breed of
soldiers, and guessed we could be depended on to end up the war in time,
because no Government could stand the expense of the shoe-leather we should
cost it trying to follow us around. 'Marion Rangers! good name, b'gosh!' said
he. And wanted to know why we hadn't had a picket-guard at the place where the
road entered the prairie, and why we hadn't sent out a scouting party to spy
out the enemy and bring us an account of his strength, and so on, before
jumping up and stampeding out of a strong position upon a mere vague rumour—and
so on, and so forth, till he made us all feel shabbier than the dogs had done,
and not half so enthusiastically welcome. So we went to bed shamed and
low-spirited; except Stevens. Soon Stevens began to devise a garment for Bowers
which could be made to automatically display his battle-scars to the grateful,
or conceal them from the envious, according to his occasions; but Bowers was in
no humour for this, so there was a fight, and when it was over Stevens had some
battle-scars of his own to think about.
Then we got a little sleep.
But after all we had gone through, our activities were not over for the night;
for about two o'clock in the morning we heard a shout of warning from down the
lane, accompanied by a chorus from all the dogs, and in a moment everybody was
up and flying around to find out what the alarm was about. The alarmist was a
horseman who gave notice that a detachment of Union soldiers was on its way
from Hannibal with orders to capture and hang any bands like ours which it
could find, and said we had no time to lose. Farmer Mason was in a flurry this
time, himself. He hurried us out of the house with all haste, and sent one of
his negroes with us to show us where to hide ourselves and our tell-tale guns
among the ravines half a mile away. It was raining heavily.
We struck down the lane,
then across some rocky pasture-land which offered good advantages for
stumbling; consequently we were down in the mud most of the time, and every
time a man went down he blackguarded the war, and the people who started it,
and everybody connected with it, and gave himself the master dose of all for
being so foolish as to go into it. At last we reached the wooded mouth of a
ravine, and there we huddled ourselves under the streaming trees, and sent the
negro back home. It was a dismal and heart-breaking time. We were like to be
drowned with the rain, deafened with the howling wind and the booming thunder,
and blinded by the lightning. It was indeed a wild night. The drenching we were
getting was misery enough, but a deeper misery still was the reflection that
the halter might end us before we were a day older. A death of this shameful
sort had not occurred to us as being among the possibilities of war. It took
the romance all out of the campaign, and turned our dreams of glory into a
repulsive nightmare. As for doubting that so barbarous an order had been given,
not one of us did that.
The long night wore itself
out at last, and then the negro came to us with the news that the alarm had
manifestly been a false one, and that breakfast would soon be ready.
Straightway we were light-hearted again, and the world was bright, and life as
full of hope and promise as ever—for we were young then. How long ago that was!
Twenty-four years.
The mongrel child of
philology named the night's refuge Camp Devastation, and no soul objected. The
Masons gave us a Missouri country breakfast, in Missourian abundance, and we
needed it: hot biscuits; hot 'wheat bread' prettily criss-crossed in a lattice
pattern on top; hot corn pone; fried chicken; bacon, coffee, eggs, milk,
buttermilk, etc.;—and the world may be confidently challenged to furnish the
equal to such a breakfast, as it is cooked in the South.
We stayed several days at
Mason's; and after all these years the memory of the dullness, the stillness
and lifelessness of that slumberous farm-house still oppresses my spirit as
with a sense of the presence of death and mourning. There was nothing to do,
nothing to think about; there was no interest in life. The male part of the
household were away in the fields all day, the women were busy and out of our
sight; there was no sound but the plaintive wailing of a spinning-wheel,
forever moaning out from some distant room—the most lonesome sound in nature, a
sound steeped and sodden with homesickness and the emptiness of life. The
family went to bed about dark every night, and as we were not invited to
intrude any new customs, we naturally followed theirs. Those nights were a
hundred years long to youths accustomed to being up till twelve. We lay awake
and miserable till that hour every time, and grew old and decrepit waiting
through the still eternities for the clock-strikes. This was no place for town
boys. So at last it was with something very like joy that we received news that
the enemy were on our track again. With a new birth of the old warrior spirit,
we sprang to our places in line of battle and fell back on Camp Ralls.
Captain Lyman had taken a
hint from Mason's talk, and he now gave orders that our camp should be guarded
against surprise by the posting of pickets. I was ordered to place a picket at
the forks of the road in Hyde's prairie. Night shut down black and threatening.
I told Sergeant Bowers to go out to that place and stay till midnight; and,
just as I was expecting, he said he wouldn't do it. I tried to get others to
go, but all refused. Some excused themselves on account of the weather; but the
rest were frank enough to say they wouldn't go in any kind of weather. This
kind of thing sounds odd now, and impossible, but it seemed a perfectly natural
thing to do. There were scores of little camps scattered over Missouri where
the same thing was happening. These camps were composed of young men who had
been born and reared to a sturdy independence, and who did not know what it
meant to be ordered around by Tom, Dick, and Harry, whom they had known familiarly
all their lives, in the village or on the farm. It is quite within the
probabilities that this same thing was happening all over the South. James
Redpath recognised the justice of this assumption, and furnished the following
instance in support of it. During a short stay in East Tennessee he was in a
citizen colonel's tent one day, talking, when a big private appeared at the
door, and without salute or other circumlocution said to the colonel:
'Say, Jim, I'm a-goin' home
for a few days.'
'What for?'
'Well, I hain't b'en there
for a right smart while, and I'd like to see how things is comin' on.'
'How long are you going to
be gone?'
''Bout two weeks.'
'Well don't be gone longer
than that; and get back sooner if you can.'
That was all, and the
citizen officer resumed his conversation where the private had broken it off.
This was in the first months of the war, of course. The camps in our part of
Missouri were under Brigadier-General Thomas H. Harris. He was a townsman of
ours, a first-rate fellow, and well liked; but we had all familiarly known him
as the sole and modest-salaried operator in our telegraph office, where he had
to send about one dispatch a week in ordinary times, and two when there was a
rush of business; consequently, when he appeared in our midst one day, on the
wing, and delivered a military command of some sort, in a large military
fashion, nobody was surprised at the response which he got from the assembled
soldiery:
'Oh, now, what'll you take
to don't, Tom Harris!'
It was quite the natural
thing. One might justly imagine that we were hopeless material for war. And so
we seemed, in our ignorant state; but there were those among us who afterward
learned the grim trade; learned to obey like machines; became valuable
soldiers; fought all through the war, and came out at the end with excellent
records. One of the very boys who refused to go out on picket duty that night,
and called me an ass for thinking he would expose himself to danger in such a
foolhardy way, had become distinguished for intrepidity before he was a year
older.
I did secure my picket that
night—not by authority, but by diplomacy. I got Bowers to go, by agreeing to
exchange ranks with him for the time being, and go along and stand the watch
with him as his subordinate. We stayed out there a couple of dreary hours in
the pitchy darkness and the rain, with nothing to modify the dreariness but
Bowers's monotonous growlings at the war and the weather; then we began to nod,
and presently found it next to impossible to stay in the saddle; so we gave up
the tedious job, and went back to the camp without waiting for the relief
guard. We rode into camp without interruption or objection from anybody, and
the enemy could have done the same, for there were no sentries. Everybody was
asleep; at midnight there was nobody to send out another picket, so none was
sent. We never tried to establish a watch at night again, as far as I remember,
but we generally kept a picket out in the daytime.
In that camp the whole
command slept on the corn in the big corn-crib; and there was usually a general
row before morning, for the place was full of rats, and they would scramble
over the boys' bodies and faces, annoying and irritating everybody; and now and
then they would bite some one's toe, and the person who owned the toe would
start up and magnify his English and begin to throw corn in the dark. The ears
were half as heavy as bricks, and when they struck they hurt. The persons
struck would respond, and inside of five minutes every man would be locked in a
death-grip with his neighbour. There was a grievous deal of blood shed in the
corn-crib, but this was all that was spilt while I was in the war. No, that is
not quite true. But for one circumstance it would have been all. I will come to
that now.
Our scares were frequent.
Every few days rumours would come that the enemy were approaching. In these
cases we always fell back on some other camp of ours; we never stayed where we
were. But the rumours always turned out to be false; so at last even we began
to grow indifferent to them. One night a negro was sent to our corn-crib with
the same old warning: the enemy was hovering in our neighbourhood. We all said
let him hover. We resolved to stay still and be comfortable. It was a fine
warlike resolution, and no doubt we all felt the stir of it in our veins—for a
moment. We had been having a very jolly time, that was full of horse-play and
school-boy hilarity; but that cooled down now, and presently the fast-waning
fire of forced jokes and forced laughs died out altogether, and the company
became silent. Silent and nervous. And soon uneasy—worried—apprehensive. We had
said we would stay, and we were committed. We could have been persuaded to go,
but there was nobody brave enough to suggest it. An almost noiseless movement
presently began in the dark, by a general and unvoiced impulse. When the
movement was completed, each man knew that he was not the only person who had
crept to the front wall and had his eye at a crack between the logs. No, we
were all there; all there with our hearts in our throats, and staring out
toward the sugar-troughs where the forest foot-path came through. It was late,
and there was a deep woodsy stillness everywhere. There was a veiled moonlight,
which was only just strong enough to enable us to mark the general shape of
objects. Presently a muffled sound caught our ears, and we recognised it as the
hoof-beats of a horse or horses. And right away a figure appeared in the forest
path; it could have been made of smoke, its mass had so little sharpness of
outline. It was a man on horseback; and it seemed to me that there were others
behind him. I got hold of a gun in the dark, and pushed it through a crack
between the logs, hardly knowing what I was doing, I was so dazed with fright.
Somebody said 'Fire!' I pulled the trigger. I seemed to see a hundred flashes
and hear a hundred reports, then I saw the man fall down out of the saddle. My
first feeling was of surprised gratification; my first impulse was an
apprentice-sportsman's impulse to run and pick up his game. Somebody said,
hardly audibly, 'Good—we've got him!—wait for the rest.' But the rest did not
come. There was not a sound, not the whisper of a leaf; just perfect stillness;
an uncanny kind of stillness, which was all the more uncanny on account of the
damp, earthy, late-night smells now rising and pervading it. Then, wondering,
we crept stealthily out, and approached the man. When we got to him the moon
revealed him distinctly. He was lying on his back, with his arms abroad; his
mouth was open and his chest heaving with long gasps, and his white shirt-front
was all splashed with blood. The thought shot through me that I was a murderer;
that I had killed a man—a man who had never done me any harm. That was the
coldest sensation that ever went through my marrow. I was down by him in a
moment, helplessly stroking his forehead; and I would have given anything
then—my own life freely—to make him again what he had been five minutes before.
And all the boys seemed to be feeling in the same way; they hung over him, full
of pitying interest, and tried all they could to help him, and said all sorts
of regretful things. They had forgotten all about the enemy; they thought only
of this one forlorn unit of the foe. Once my imagination persuaded me that the
dying man gave me a reproachful look out of his shadowy eyes, and it seemed to
me that I would rather he had stabbed me than done that. He muttered and
mumbled like a dreamer in his sleep, about his wife and child; and I thought
with a new despair, 'This thing that I have done does not end with him; it
falls upon them too, and they never did me any harm, any more than he.'
In a little while the man
was dead. He was killed in war; killed in fair and legitimate war; killed in
battle, as you might say; and yet he was as sincerely mourned by the opposing
force as if he had been their brother. The boys stood there a half hour
sorrowing over him, and recalling the details of the tragedy, and wondering who
he might be, and if he were a spy, and saying that if it were to do over again
they would not hurt him unless he attacked them first. It soon came out that
mine was not the only shot fired; there were five others—a division of the
guilt which was a grateful relief to me, since it in some degree lightened and
diminished the burden I was carrying. There were six shots fired at once; but I
was not in my right mind at the time, and my heated imagination had magnified
my one shot into a volley.
The man was not in uniform,
and was not armed. He was a stranger in the country; that was all we ever found
out about him. The thought of him got to preying upon me every night; I could
not get rid of it. I could not drive it away, the taking of that unoffending
life seemed such a wanton thing. And it seemed an epitome of war; that all war
must be just that—the killing of strangers against whom you feel no personal
animosity; strangers whom, in other circumstances, you would help if you found
them in trouble, and who would help you if you needed it. My campaign was
spoiled. It seemed to me that I was not rightly equipped for this awful
business; that war was intended for men, and I for a child's nurse. I resolved
to retire from this avocation of sham soldiership while I could save some
remnant of my self-respect. These morbid thoughts clung to me against reason;
for at bottom I did not believe I had touched that man. The law of
probabilities decreed me guiltless of his blood; for in all my small experience
with guns I had never hit anything I had tried to hit, and I knew I had done my
best to hit him. Yet there was no solace in the thought. Against a diseased
imagination, demonstration goes for nothing.
The rest of my war
experience was of a piece with what I have already told of it. We kept
monotonously falling back upon one camp or another, and eating up the country—I
marvel now at the patience of the farmers and their families. They ought to
have shot us; on the contrary, they were as hospitably kind and courteous to us
as if we had deserved it. In one of these camps we found Ab Grimes, an Upper
Mississippi pilot, who afterwards became famous as a dare-devil rebel spy,
whose career bristled with desperate adventures. The look and style of his
comrades suggested that they had not come into the war to play, and their deeds
made good the conjecture later. They were fine horsemen and good
revolver-shots; but their favourite arm was the lasso. Each had one at his
pommel, and could snatch a man out of the saddle with it every time, on a full
gallop, at any reasonable distance.
In another camp the chief
was a fierce and profane old blacksmith of sixty, and he had furnished his
twenty recruits with gigantic home-made bowie-knives, to be swung with the two
hands, like the machetes of the Isthmus. It was a grisly spectacle to see that
earnest band practising their murderous cuts and slashes under the eye of that
remorseless old fanatic.
The last camp which we fell
back upon was in a hollow near the village of Florida, where I was born—in
Monroe County. Here we were warned, one day, that a Union colonel was sweeping
down on us with a whole regiment at his heels. This looked decidedly serious.
Our boys went apart and consulted; then we went back and told the other
companies present that the war was a disappointment to us and we were going to
disband. They were getting ready, themselves, to fall back on some place or
other, and were only waiting for General Tom Harris, who was expected to arrive
at any moment; so they tried to persuade us to wait a little while, but the
majority of us said no, we were accustomed to falling back, and didn't need any
of Tom Harris's help; we could get along perfectly well without him and save
time too. So about half of our fifteen, including myself, mounted and left on
the instant; the others yielded to persuasion and stayed—stayed through the
war.
An hour later we met General
Harris on the road, with two or three people in his company—his staff,
probably, but we could not tell; none of them was in uniform; uniforms had not
come into vogue among us yet. Harris ordered us back; but we told him there was
a Union colonel coming with a whole regiment in his wake, and it looked as if
there was going to be a disturbance; so we had concluded to go home. He raged a
little, but it was of no use; our minds were made up. We had done our share;
had killed one man, exterminated one army, such as it was; let him go and kill
the rest, and that would end the war. I did not see that brisk young general
again until last year; then he was wearing white hair and whiskers.
In time I came to know that
Union colonel whose coming frightened me out of the war and crippled the
Southern cause to that extent—General Grant. I came within a few hours of
seeing him when he was as unknown as I was myself; at a time when anybody could
have said, 'Grant?—Ulysses S. Grant? I do not remember hearing the name
before.' It seems difficult to realise that there was once a time when such a
remark could be rationally made; but there was, and I was within a few miles of
the place and the occasion too, though proceeding in the other direction.
The thoughtful will not
throw this war-paper of mine lightly aside as being valueless. It has this
value: it is a not unfair picture of what went on in many and many a militia
camp in the first months of the rebellion, when the green recruits were without
discipline, without the steadying and heartening influence or trained leaders;
when all their circumstances were new and strange, and charged with exaggerated
terrors, and before the invaluable experience of actual collision in the field
had turned them from rabbits into soldiers. If this side of the picture of that
early day has not before been put into history, then history has been to that
degree incomplete, for it had and has its rightful place there. There was more
Bull Run material scattered through the early camps of this country than
exhibited itself at Bull Run. And yet it learned its trade presently, and
helped to fight the great battles later. I could have become a soldier myself,
if I had waited. I had got part of it learned; I knew more about retreating
than the man that invented retreating.
(1) It was always my
impression that that was what the horse was there for, and I know that it was
also the impression of at least one other of the command, for we talked about
it at the time, and admired the military ingenuity of the device; but when I
was out West three years ago I was told by Mr. A. G. Fuqua, a member of our
company, that the horse was his, that the leaving him tied at the door was a
matter of mere forgetfulness, and that to attribute it to intelligent invention
was to give him quite too much credit. In support of his position, he called my
attention to the suggestive fact that the artifice was not employed again. I
had not thought of that before.
20.MEISTERSCHAFT
IN THREE ACTS (1)
DRAMATIS PERSONAE:
MR. STEPHENSON. MARGARET STEPHENSON.
GEORGE FRANKLIN. ANNIE STEPHENSON.
WILLIAM JACKSON. MRS. BLUMENTHAL, the Wirthin.
GRETCHEN, Kellnerin
ACT I. SCENE I.
Scene of the play, the
parlour of a small private dwelling in a village. (MARGARET discovered
crocheting—has a pamphlet.)
MARGARET. (Solus.) Dear,
dear! it's dreary enough, to have to study this impossible German tongue: to be
exiled from home and all human society except a body's sister in order to do
it, is just simply abscheulich. Here's only three weeks of the three months
gone, and it seems like three years. I don't believe I can live through it, and
I'm sure Annie can't. (Refers to her book, and rattles through, several times,
like one memorising:) Entschuldigen Sie, mein Herr, konnen Sie mir vielleicht
sagen, um wie viel Uhr der erste Zug nach Dresden abgeht? (Makes mistakes and
corrects them.) I just hate Meisterschaft! We may see people; we can have
society; yes, on condition that the conversation shall be in German, and in
German only—every single word of it! Very kind—oh, very! when neither Annie nor
I can put two words together, except as they are put together for us in
Meisterschaft or that idiotic Ollendorff! (Refers to book, and memorises: Mein
Bruder hat Ihren Herrn Vater nicht gesehen, als er gestern in dem Laden des
deutschen Kaufmannes war.) Yes, we can have society, provided we talk German.
What would conversation be like! If you should stick to Meisterschaft, it would
change the subject every two minutes; and if you stuck to Ollendorff, it would
be all about your sister's mother's good stocking of thread, or your
grandfather's aunt's good hammer of the carpenter, and who's got it, and there
an end. You couldn't keep up your interest in such topics. (Memorising: Wenn
irgend moglich—mochte ich noch heute Vormittag Geschaftsfreunde zu treffen.) My
mind is made up to one thing: I will be an exile, in spirit and in truth: I
will see no one during these three months. Father is very ingenious—oh, very!
thinks he is, anyway. Thinks he has invented a way to force us to learn to
speak German. He is a dear good soul, and all that; but invention isn't his
fach'. He will see. (With eloquent energy.) Why, nothing in the world shall—Bitte,
konnen Sie mir vielleicht sagen, ob Herr Schmidt mit diesem Zuge angekommen
ist? Oh, dear, dear George—three weeks! It seems a whole century since I saw
him. I wonder if he suspects that I—that I—care for him—j-just a wee, wee bit?
I believe he does. And I believe Will suspects that Annie cares for him a
little, that I do. And I know perfectly well that they care for us. They agree
with all our opinions, no matter what they are; and if they have a prejudice,
they change it, as soon as they see how foolish it is. Dear George! at first he
just couldn't abide cats; but now, why now he's just all for cats; he fairly
welters in cats. I never saw such a reform. And it's just so with all his
principles: he hasn't got one that he had before. Ah, if all men were like him,
this world would—(Memorising: Im Gegentheil, mein Herr, dieser Stoff ist sehr
billig. Bitte, sehen Sie sich nur die Qualitat an.) Yes, and what did they go
to studying German for, if it wasn't an inspiration of the highest and purest sympathy?
Any other explanation is nonsense—why, they'd as soon have thought of studying
American history.
(Turns her back, buries
herself in her pamphlet, first memorising aloud, until Annie enters, then to
herself, rocking to and fro, and rapidly moving her lips, without uttering a
sound.)
Enter ANNIE, absorbed in her
pamphlet—does not at first see MARGARET.
ANNIE. (Memorising: Er liess
mich gestern fruh rufen, und sagte mir dass er einen sehr unangenehmen Brief
von Ihrem Lehrer erhalten hatte. Repeats twice aloud, then to herself, briskly
moving her lips.)
M. (Still not seeing her
sister.) Wie geht es Ihrem Herrn Schwiegervater? Es freut mich sehr dass Ihre
Frau Mutter wieder wohl ist. (Repeats. Then mouths in silence.)
A. (Repeats her sentence a
couple of times aloud; then looks up, working her lips, and discovers
Margaret.) Oh, you here? (Running to her.) O lovey-dovey, dovey-lovey, I've got
the gr-reatest news! Guess, guess, guess! You'll never guess in a hundred
thousand million years—and more!
M. Oh, tell me, tell me,
dearie; don't keep me in agony.
A. Well I will.
What—do—you—think? They're here!
M. Wh-a-t! Who? When? Which?
Speak!
A. Will and George!
M. Annie Alexandra Victoria
Stephenson, what do you mean?
A. As sure as guns!
M. (Spasmodically embracing
and kissing her.) 'Sh! don't use such language. O darling, say it again!
A. As sure as guns!
M. I don't mean that! Tell
me again, that—
A. (Springing up and
waltzing about the room.) They're here—in this very village—to learn German—for
three months! Es sollte mich sehr freuen wenn Sie—
M. (Joining in the dance.)
Oh, it's just too lovely for anything! (Unconsciously memorising:) Es ware mir
lieb wenn Sie morgen mit mir in die Kirche gehen konnten, aber ich kann selbst
nicht gehen, weil ich Sonntags gewohnlich krank bin. Juckhe!
A. (Finishing some
unconscious memorising.)—morgen Mittag bei mir speisen konnten. Juckhe! Sit
down and I'll tell you all I've heard. (They sit.) They're here, and under that
same odious law that fetters us—our tongues, I mean; the metaphor's faulty, but
no matter. They can go out, and see people, only on condition that they hear
and speak German, and German only.
M. Isn't—that—too lovely!
A. And they're coming to see
us!
M. Darling! (Kissing her.)
But are you sure?
A. Sure as guns—Gatling
guns!
M. 'Sh! don't, child, it's
schrecklich! Darling—you aren't mistaken?
A. As sure as g—batteries!
(They jump up and dance a moment—then—)
M. (With distress.) But,
Annie dear!—we can't talk German—and neither can they!
A. (Sorrowfully.) I didn't think
of that.
M. How cruel it is! What can
we do?
A. (After a reflective
pause, resolutely.) Margaret—we've got to.
M. Got to what?
A. Speak German.
M. Why, how, child?
A. (Contemplating her
pamphlet with earnestness.) I can tell you one thing. Just give me the blessed
privilege: just hinsetzen Will Jackson here in front of me, and I'll talk
German to him as long as this Meisterschaft holds out to burn.
M. (Joyously.) Oh, what an
elegant idea! You certainly have got a mind that's a mine of resources, if ever
anybody had one.
A. I'll skin this
Meisterschaft to the last sentence in it!
M. (With a happy idea.) Why
Annie, it's the greatest thing in the world. I've been all this time struggling
and despairing over these few little Meisterschaft primers: but as sure as you
live, I'll have the whole fifteen by heart before this time day after
to-morrow. See if I don't.
A. And so will I; and I'll
trowel in a layer of Ollendorff mush between every couple of courses of
Meisterschaft bricks. Juckhe!
M. Hoch! hoch! hoch!
A. Stoss an!
M. Juckhe! Wir werden gleich
gute deutsche Schulerinnen werden! Juck—
A. —he!
M. Annie, when are they
coming to see us? To-night?
A. No.
M. No? Why not? When are
they coming? What are they waiting for? The idea! I never heard of such a thing!
What do you—
A. (Breaking in.) Wait,
wait, wait! give a body a chance. They have their reasons.
M. Reasons?—what reasons?
A. Well, now, when you stop
and think, they're royal good ones. They've got to talk German when they come,
haven't they? Of course. Well, they don't know any German but Wie befinden Sie
sich, and Haben Sie gut geschlafen, and Vater unser, and Ich trinke lieber Bier
als Wasser, and a few little parlour things like that; but when it comes to
talking, why, they don't know a hundred and fifteen German words, put them all
together.
M. Oh, I see.
A. So they're going to
neither eat, sleep, smoke, nor speak the truth till they've crammed home the
whole fifteen Meisterschafts auswendig!
M. Noble hearts!
A. They've given themselves
till day after to-morrow, half-past 7 P.M., and then they'll arrive here
loaded.
M. Oh, how lovely, how
gorgeous, how beautiful! Some think this world is made of mud; I think it's
made of rainbows. (Memorising.) Wenn irgend moglich, so mochte ich noch heute
Vormittag dort ankommen, da es mir sehr daran gelegen ist—Annie, I can learn it
just like nothing!
A. So can I. Meisterschaft's
mere fun—I don't see how it ever could have seemed difficult. Come! We can't be
disturbed here; let's give orders that we don't want anything to eat for two
days; and are absent to friends, dead to strangers, and not at home even to
nougat peddlers—
M. Schon! and we'll lock
ourselves into our rooms, and at the end of two days, whosoever may ask us a
Meisterschaft question shall get a Meisterschaft answer—and hot from the bat!
BOTH. (Reciting in unison.)
Ich habe einen Hut fur meinen Sohn, ein Paar Handschuhe fur meinen Bruder, und
einen Kamm fur mich selbst gekauft. (Exeunt.)
Enter Mrs. BLUMENTHAL, the
Wirthin.
WIRTHIN. (Solus.) Ach, die
armen Madchen, sie hassen die deutsche Sprache, drum ist es ganz und gar
unmoglich dass sie sie je lernen konnen. Es bricht mir ja mein Herz ihre Kummer
uber die Studien anzusehen.... Warum haben sie den Entchluss gefasst in ihren
Zimmern ein Paar Tagezu bleiben?... Ja—gewiss—das versteht sich; sie sind
entmuthigt—arme Kinder!(A knock at the door.) Herein!
Enter GRETCHEN with card.
GR. Er ist schon wieder da,
und sagt dass er nur Sie sehen will. (Hands the card.) Auch-WIRTHIN. Gott im
Himmel—der Vater der Madchen? (Puts the card in her pocket.) Er wunscht die
Tochter nicht zu treffen? Ganz recht; also, Du schweigst.
GR. Zu Befehl. WIRTHIN. Lass
ihn hereinkommen.
GR. Ja, Frau Wirthin! (Exit
GRETCHEN.)
WIRTHIN. (Solus.) Ah—jetzt
muss ich ihm die Wahrheit offenbaren.
Enter Mr. STEPHENSON.
STEPHENSON. Good-morning,
Mrs. Blumenthal—keep your seat, keep your seat, please. I'm only here for a
moment—merely to get your report, you know. (Seating himself.) Don't want to
see the girls—poor things, they'd want to go home with me. I'm afraid I
couldn't have the heart to say no. How's the German getting along?
WIRTHIN. N-not very well; I
was afraid you would ask me that. You see, they hate it, they don't take the
least interest in it, and there isn't anything to incite them to an interest,
you see. And so they can't talk at all.
S. M-m. That's bad. I had an
idea that they'd get lonesome, and have to seek society; and then, of course,
my plan would work, considering the cast-iron conditions of it.
WIRTHIN. But it hasn't, so
far. I've thrown nice company in their way—I've done my very best, in every way
I could think of—but it's no use; they won't go out, and they won't receive
anybody. And a body can't blame them; they'd be tongue-tied—couldn't do
anything with a German conversation. Now, when I started to learn German—such
poor German as I know—the case was very different: my intended was a German. I
was to live among Germans the rest of my life; and so I had to learn. Why,
bless my heart! I nearly lost the man the first time he asked me—I thought he
was talking about the measles. They were very prevalent at the time. Told him I
didn't want any in mine. But I found out the mistake, and I was fixed for him
next time.... Oh yes, Mr. Stephenson, a sweetheart's a prime incentive.
S. (Aside.) Good soul! she
doesn't suspect that my plan is a double scheme—includes a speaking knowledge
of German, which I am bound they shall have, and the keeping them away from
those two young fellows—though if I had known that those boys were going off for
a year's foreign travel, I—however, the girls would never learn that language
at home; they're here, and I won't relent—they've got to stick the three months
out. (Aloud.) So they are making poor progress? Now tell me—will they learn
it—after a sort of fashion, I mean—in three months?
WIRTHIN. Well, now, I'll
tell you the only chance I see. Do what I will, they won't answer my German
with anything but English; if that goes on, they'll stand stock-still. Now I'm
willing to do this: I'll straighten everything up, get matters in smooth
running order, and day after to-morrow I'll go to bed sick, and stay sick three
weeks.
S. Good! You are an angel? I
see your idea. The servant girl—
WIRTHIN. That's it; that's
my project. She doesn't know a word of English. And Gretchen's a real good
soul, and can talk the slates off a roof. Her tongue's just a flutter-mill.
I'll keep my room—just ailing a little—and they'll never see my face except
when they pay their little duty-visits to me, and then I'll say English
disorders my mind. They'll be shut up with Gretchen's windmill, and she'll just
grind them to powder. Oh, they'll get a start in the language—sort of a one,
sure's you live. You come back in three weeks.
S. Bless you, my Retterin!
I'll be here to the day! Get ye to your sick-room—you shall have treble pay.
(Looking at watch.) Good! I can just catch my train. Leben Sie wohl! (Exit.)
WIRTHIN. Leben Sie wohl!
mein Herr!
ACT II. SCENE I.
Time, a couple of days
later. The girls discovered with their work and primers.
ANNIE. Was fehlt der
Wirthin?
MARGARET. Das weiss ich
nicht. Sie ist schon vor zwei Tagen ins Bett gegangen—
A. My! how fliessend you
speak!
M. Danke schon—und sagte
dass sie nicht wohl sei.
A. Good? Oh no, I don't mean
that! no—only lucky for us—glucklich, you know I mean because it'll be so much
nicer to have them all to ourselves.
M. Oh, naturlich! Ja! Dass
ziehe ich durchaus vor. Do you believe your Meisterschaft will stay with you,
Annie?
A. Well, I know it is with
me—every last sentence of it; and a couple of hods of Ollendorff, too, for
emergencies. Maybe they'll refuse to deliver—right off—at first, you know—der
Verlegenheit wegen—aber ich will sie spater herausholen—when I get my hand
in—und vergisst Du das nicht!
M. Sei nicht grob, Liebste.
What shall we talk about first—when they come?
A. Well—let me see. There's
shopping—and—all that about the trains, you know—and going to church—and—buying
tickets to London, and Berlin, and all around—and all that subjunctive stuff
about the battle in Afghanistan, and where the American was said to be born,
and so on—and—and ah—oh, there's so many things—I don't think a body can choose
beforehand, because you know the circumstances and the atmosphere always have
so much to do in directing a conversation, especially a German conversation,
which is only a kind of an insurrection, anyway. I believe it's best to just
depend on Prov—(Glancing at watch, and gasping.)—half-past—seven!
M. Oh, dear, I'm all of a
tremble! Let's get something ready, Annie! (Both fall nervously to reciting):
Entschuldigen Sie, mein Herr, konnen Sie mir vielleicht sagen wie ich nach dem
norddeutschen Bahnhof gehe? (They repeat it several times, losing their grip
and mixing it all up.)
BOTH. Herein! Oh, dear! O
der heilige—
Enter GRETCHEN.
GRETCHEN (Ruffled and
indignant.) Entschuldigen Sie, meine gnadigsten Fraulein, es sind zwei junge
rasende Herren draussen, die herein wollen, aber ich habe ihnen geschworen
dass—(Handing the cards.)
M. Due liebe Zeit, they're
here! And of course down goes my back hair! Stay and receive them, dear, while
I—(Leaving.)
A. I—alone? I won't! I'll go
with you! (To GR.) Lassen Sie die Herren naher treten; und sagen Sie ihnen dass
wir gleich zuruckkommen werden. (Exit.)
GR. (Solus.) Was! Sie freuen
sich daruber? Und ich sollte wirklich diese Blodsinnigen, dies grobe Rindvieh
hereinlassen? In den hulflosen Umstanden meiner gnadigen jungen Damen?—Unsinn!
(Pause—thinking.) Wohlan! Ich werde sie mal beschutzen! Sollte man nicht
glauben, dass sie einen Sparren zu viel hatten? (Tapping her skull
significantly.) Was sie mir doch Alles gesagt haben! Der Eine: Guten Morgen!
wie geht es Ihrem Herrn Schwiegervater? Du liebe Zeit! Wie sollte ich einen
Schwiegervater haben konnen! Und der Andere: 'Es thut mir sehr leid dass Ihrer
Herr Vater meinen Bruder nicht gesehen hat, als er doch gestern in dem Laden
des deutschen Kaufmannes war!' Potztausendhimmelsdonnerwetter! Oh, ich war ganz
rasend! Wie ich aber rief: 'Meine Herren, ich kenne Sie nicht, und Sie kennen
meinen Vater nicht, wissen Sie, denn er ist schon lange durchgebrannt, und geht
nicht beim Tage in einen Laden hinein, wissen Sie—und ich habe keinen
Schwiegervater, Gott sei Dank, werde auch nie einen kriegen, werde uberhaupt,
wissen Sie, ein solches Ding nie haben, nie dulden, nie ausstehen: warum
greifen Sie ein Madchen an, das nur Unschuld kennt, das Ihnen nie Etwas zu
Leide gethan hat?' Dann haben sie sich beide die Finger in die Ohren gesteckt
und gebetet: 'Allmachtiger Gott! Erbarme Dich unser?' (Pauses.) Nun, ich werde
schon diesen Schurken Einlass gonnen, aber ich werde ein Auge mit ihnen haben,
damit sie sich nicht wie reine Teufel geberden sollen. (Exit, grumbling and
shaking her head.)
Enter WILLIAM and GEORGE.
W. My land, what a girl! and
what an incredible gift of gabble!—kind of patent climate-proof
compensation-balance self-acting automatic Meisterschaft—touch her button, and
br-r-r! away she goes!
GEO. Never heard anything
like it; tongue journalled on ball-bearings! I wonder what she said; seemed to
be swearing, mainly.
W. (After mumbling
Meisterschaft a while.) Look here, George, this is awful—come to think—this
project: we can't talk this frantic language.
GEO. I know it, Will, and it
is awful; but I can't live without seeing Margaret—I've endured it as long as I
can. I should die if I tried to hold out longer—and even German is preferable
to death.
W. (Hesitatingly.) Well, I
don't know; it's a matter of opinion.
GEO. (Irritably.) It isn't a
matter of opinion either. German is preferable to death.
W. (Reflectively.) Well, I
don't know—the problem is so sudden—but I think you may be right: some kinds of
death. It is more than likely that a slow, lingering—well, now, there in Canada
in the early times a couple of centuries ago, the Indians would take a
missionary and skin him, and get some hot ashes and boiling water and one thing
and another, and by-and-by that missionary—well, yes, I can see that,
by-and-by, talking German could be a pleasant change for him.
GEO. Why, of course. Das
versteht sich; but you have to always think a thing out, or you're not
satisfied. But let's not go to bothering about thinking out this present
business; we're here, we're in for it; you are as moribund to see Annie as I am
to see Margaret; you know the terms: we've got to speak German. Now stop your
mooning and get at your Meisterschaft; we've got nothing else in the world.
W. Do you think that'll see
us through?
GEO. Why it's got to.
Suppose we wandered out of it and took a chance at the language on our own
responsibility, where the nation would we be! Up a stump, that's where. Our
only safety is in sticking like wax to the text.
W. But what can we talk
about?
GEO. Why, anything that
Meisterschaft talks about. It ain't our affair.
W. I know; but Meisterschaft
talks about everything.
GEO. And yet don't talk
about anything long enough for it to get embarrassing. Meisterschaft is just
splendid for general conversation.
W. Yes, that's so; but it's
so blamed general! Won't it sound foolish?
GEO. Foolish! Why, of
course; all German sounds foolish.
W. Well, that is true; I
didn't think of that.
GEO. Now, don't fool around
any more. Load up; load up; get ready. Fix up some sentences; you'll need them
in two minutes now. (They walk up and down, moving their lips in dumb-show
memorising.)
W. Look here—when we've said
all that's in the book on a topic, and want to change the subject, how can we
say so?—how would a German say it?
GEO. Well, I don't know. But
you know when they mean 'Change cars,' they say Umsteigen. Don't you reckon
that will answer?
W. Tip-top! It's short and
goes right to the point; and it's got a business whang to it that's almost
American. Umsteigen!—change subject!—why, it's the very thing!
GEO. All right, then, you
umsteigen—for I hear them coming.
Enter the girls.
A. to W. (With solemnity.)
Guten Morgen, mein Herr, es freut mich sehr, Sie zu sehen.
W. Guten Morgen, mein
Fraulein, es freut mich sehr Sie zu sehen.
(MARGARET and GEORGE repeat
the same sentences. Then, after an embarrassing silence, MARGARET refers to her
book and says:)
M. Bitte, meine Herren,
setzen Sie sich.
THE GENTLEMEN. Danke
schon.(The four seat themselves in couples, the width of the stage apart, and
the two conversations begin. The talk is not flowing—at any rate at first;
there are painful silences all along. Each couple worry out a remark and a
reply: there is a pause of silent thinking, and then the other couple deliver
themselves.)
W. Haben Sie meinen Vater in
dem Laden meines Bruders nicht gesehen?
A. Nein, mein Herr, ich habe
Ihren Herrn Vater in dem Laden Ihres Herrn Bruders nicht gesehen.
GEO. Waren Sie gestern Abend
im Koncert, oder im Theater?
M. Nein, ich war gestern
Abend nicht im Koncert, noch im Theater, ich war gestern Abend zu
Hause.(General break-down—long pause.)
W. Ich store doch nicht
etwa?
A. Sie storen mich durchaus
nicht.
GEO. Bitte, lassen Sie sich
nicht von mir storen.
M. Aber ich bitte Sie, Sie
storen mich durchaus nicht.
W. (To both girls.) Wenn wir
Sie storen so gehen wir gleich wieder.
A. O, nein! Gewiss, nein!
M. Im Gegentheil, es freut uns
sehr, Sie zu sehen, alle beide.
W. Schon!
GEO. Gott sei dank!
M. (Aside.) It's just
lovely!
A. (Aside.) It's like a
poem. (Pause.)
W. Umsteigen!
M. Um—welches?
W. Umsteigen.
GEO. Auf English, change
cars—oder subject.
BOTH GIRLS. Wie schon!
W. Wir haben uns die
Freiheit genommen, bei Ihnen vorzusprechen.
A. Sie sind sehr gutig.
GEO. Wir wollten uns
erkundigen, wie Sie sich befanden.
M. Ich bin Ihnen sehr
verbunden—meine Schwester auch.
W. Meine Frau lasst sich
Ihnen bestens empfehlen.
A. Ihre Frau?
W. (Examining his book.)
Vielleicht habe ich mich geirrt. (Shows the place.) Nein, gerade so sagt das
Buch.
A. (Satisfied.) Ganz recht.
Aber—
W. Bitte empfehlen Sie mich
Ihrem Herrn Bruder.
A. Ah, das ist viel
besser—viel besser. (Aside.) Wenigstens es ware viel besser wenn ich einen
Bruder hatte.
GEO. Wie ist es Ihnen
gegangen, seitdem ich das Vergnugen hatte, Sie anderswo zu sehen?
M. Danke bestens, ich
befinde mich gewohnlich ziemlich wohl.
(GRETCHEN slips in with a
gun, and listens.)
GEO. (Still to Margaret.)
Befindet sich Ihre Frau Gemahlin wohl?
GR. (Raising hands and
eyes.) Frau Gemahlin—heiliger Gott! (Is like to betray herself with her
smothered laughter, and glides out.)
M. Danke sehr, meine Frau
ist ganz wohl. (Pause.)
W. Durfen wir
vielleicht—umsteigen?
THE OTHERS. Gut!
GEO. (Aside.) I feel better,
now. I'm beginning to catch on. (Aloud.) Ich mochte gern morgen fruh einige
Einkaufe machen und wurde Ihnen seht verbunden sein, wenn Sie mir den Gefallen
thaten, mir die Namen der besten hiesigen Firmen aufzuschreiben.
M. (Aside.) How sweet!
W. (Aside.) Hang it, I was
going to say that! That's one of the noblest things in the book.
A. Ich mochte Ihnen gern
begleiten, aber es ist mir wirklich heute Morgen ganz unmoglich auszugehen.
(Aside.) It's getting as easy as 9 times 7 is 46.
M. Sagen Sie dem
Brieftrager, wenn's gefallig ist, er, mochte Ihnen den eingeschriebenen Brief
geben lassen.
W. Ich wurde Ihnen sehr
verbunden sein, wenn Sie diese Schachtel fur mich nach der Post tragen wurden,
da mir sehr daran liegt einen meiner Geschaftsfreunde in dem Laden des
deutschen Kaufmanns heute Abend treffen zu konnen. (Aside.) All down but nine;
set'm up on the other alley!
A. Aber, Herr Jackson! Sie
haven die Satze gemischt. Es ist unbegreiflich wie Sie das haben thun konnen.
Zwischen Ihrem ersten Theil und Ihrem letzten Theil haben Sie ganz funfzig
Seiten ubergeschlagen! Jetzt bin ich ganz verloren. Wie kann man reden, wenn
man seinen Platz durchaus nicht wieder finden kann?
W. Oh, bitte, verzeihen Sie;
ich habe das wirklich nicht beabsichtigt.
A. (Mollified.) Sehr wohl,
lassen Sie gut sein. Aber thun Sie es nicht wieder. Sie mussen ja doch
einraumen, das solche Dinge unertragliche Verwirrung mit sich fuhren.
(GRETCHEN slips in again
with her gun.)
W. Unzweifelhaft haben Sic
Recht, meine holdselige Landsmannin.... Umsteigen!
(As GEORGE gets fairly into
the following, GRETCHEN draws a bead on him, and lets drive at the close, but
the gun snaps.)
GEO. Glauben Sie dass ich
ein hubsches Wohnzimmer fur mich selbst und ein kleines Schlafzimmer fur meinen
Sohn in diesem Hotel fur funfzehn Mark die Woche bekommen kann, oder, wurden
Sie mir rathen, in einer Privatwohnung Logis zu nehmen? (Aside.) That's a
daisy!
GR. (Aside.) Schade! (She
draws her charge and reloads.)
M. Glauben Sie nicht Sie
werden besser thun bei diesem Wetter zu Hause zu bleiben?
A. Freilich glaube ich, Herr
Franklin, Sie werden sich erkalten, wenn Sie bei diesem unbestandigen Wetter
ohne Ueberrock ausgehen.
GR. (Relieved—aside.) So?
Man redet von Ausgehen. Das klingt schon besser. (Sits.)
W. (To A.) Wie theuer haben
Sie das gekauft? (Indicating a part of her dress.)
A. Das hat achtzehn Mark
gekostet.
W. Das ist sehr theuer.
GEO. Ja, obgleich dieser
Stoff wunderschon ist und das Muster sehr geschmackvoll und auch das
Vorzuglichste dass es in dieser Art gibt, so ist es doch furchtbat theuer fur
einen solcehn Artikel.
M. (Aside.) How sweet is
this communion of soul with soul!
A. Im Gegentheil, mein Herr,
das ist sehr billig. Sehen Sie sich nur die Qualitat an.
(They all examine it.)
GEO. Moglicherweise ist es
das allerneuste das man in diesem Stoff hat; aber das Muster gefallt mir nicht.
(Pause.)
W. Umsteigen!
A. Welchen Hund haben Sie?
Haben Sie den hubschen Hund des Kaufmanns, oder den hasslichen Hund der
Urgrossmutter des Lehrlings des bogenbeinigen Zimmermanns?
W. (Aside.) Oh, come, she's
ringing in a cold deck on us: that's Ollendorff.
GEO. Ich habe nicht den Hund
des—des—(Aside.) Stuck! That's no Meisterschaft; they don't play fair. (Aloud.)
Ich habe nicht den Hund des—des—In unserem Buche leider, gibt es keinen Hund;
daher, ob ich auch gern von solchen Thieren sprechen mochte, ist es mir doch
unmoglich, weil ich nicht vorbereitet bin. Entschuldigen Sie, meine Damen.
GR. (Aside) Beim Teufel, sie
sind alle blodsinnig geworden. In meinem Leben habe ich nie ein so narrisches,
verfluchtes, verdammtes Gesprach gehort.
W. Bitte, umsteigen.
(Run the following rapidly
through.)
M. (Aside.) Oh, I've flushed
an easy batch! (Aloud.) Wurden Sie mir erlauben meine Reisetasche heir
hinzustellen?
GR. (Aside.) Wo ist seine
Reisetasche? Ich sehe keine.
W. Bitte sehr.
GEO. Ist meine Reisetasche
Ihnen im Wege?
GR. (Aside.) Und wo ist
seine Reisetasche?
A. Erlauben Sie mir Sie von
meiner Reisetasche zu bereien.
GR. (Aside.) Du Esel!
W. Ganz und gar nicht. (To
Geo.) Es ist sehr schwul in diesem Coupe.
GR. (Aside.) Coupe.
GEO. Sie haben Recht.
Erlauben Sie mir, gefalligst, das Fenster zu offnen. Ein wenig Luft wurde uns
gut thun.
M. Wir fahren sehr rasch.
A. Haben Sie den Namen jener
Station gehort?
W. Wie lange halten wir auf
dieser Station an?
GEO. Ich reise nach Dresden,
Schaffner. Wo muss ich umsteigen?
GR. (Aside.) Sie sind ja
alle ganz und gar verruckt. Man denke sich sie glauben dass sie auf der
Eisenbahn reisen.
GEO. (Aside, to William.)
Now brace up; pull all your confidence together, my boy, and we'll try that
lovely goodbye business a flutter. I think it's about the gaudiest thing in the
book, if you boom it right along and don't get left on a base. It'll impress
the girls. (Aloud.) Lassen Sie uns gehen: es ist schon sehr spat, und ich muss
morgen ganz fruh aufstehen.
GR. (Aside—grateful.) Gott
sei Dank dass sie endlich gehen.
(Sets her gun aside.)
W. (To Geo.) Ich danke Ihnen
hoflichst fur die Ehre die Sie mir erweisen, aber ich kann nicht langer
bleiben.
GEO. (To W.) Entschuldigen
Sie mich gutigst, aber ich kann wirklich nicht langer bleiben.
(GRETCHEN looks on
stupefied.)
W. (To Geo.) Ich habe schon
eine Einladung angenommen; ich kann wirklich nicht langer bleiben.
(GRETCHEN fingers her gun
again.)
GEO. (To W.) Ich muss gehen.
W. (To GEO.) Wie! Sie wollen
schon wieder gehen? Sie sind ja eben erst gekommen.
M. (Aside.) It's just music!
A. (Aside.) Oh, how lovely
they do it!
GEO. (To W.) Also denken Sie
doch noch nicht an's Gehen.
W. (To Geo.) Es thut mir
unendlich leid, aber ich muss nach Hause. Meine Frau wird sich wundern, was aus
mir geworden ist.
GEO. (To W.) Meine Frau hat
keine Ahnung wo ich bin: ich muss wirklich jetzt fort.
W. (To Geo.) Dann will ich
Sie nicht langer aufhalten; ich bedaure sehr dass Sie uns einen so kurzen
Besuch gemacht haben.
GEO. (To W.) Adieu—auf recht
baldiges Wiedersehen.
W. UMSTEIGNEN!
(Great hand-clapping from
the girls.)
M. (Aside.) Oh, how perfect!
how elegant!
A. (Aside.) Per-fectly
enchanting!
JOYOUS CHORUS. (All) Ich
habe gehabt, du hast gehabt, er hat gehabt, wir haben gehabt, ihr habet gehabt,
sie haben gehabt.
(GRETCHEN faints, and
tumbles from her chair, and the gun goes off with a crash. Each girl,
frightened, seizes the protecting hand of her sweetheart. GRETCHEN scrambles
up. Tableau.)
W. (Takes out some
money—beckons Gretchen to him. George adds money to the pile.) Hubsches Madchen
(giving her some of the coins), hast Du etwas gesehen?
GR. (Courtesy—aside.) Der
Engel! (Aloud—impressively.) Ich habe nichts gesehen.
W. (More money.) Hast Du
etwas gehort?
GR. Ich habe nichts gehort.
W. (More money.) Und morgen?
GR. Morgen—ware es
nothig—bin ich taub und blind.
W. Unvergleichbares Madchen!
Und (giving the rest of the money) darnach?
GR. (Deep courtesy—aside.)
Erzengel! (Aloud.) Darnach, mein gnadgister, betrachten Sie mich also
taub—blind—todt!
ALL. (In chorus—with
reverent joy.) Ich habe gehabt, du hast gehabt, er hat gehabt, wir haben
gehabt, ihr habet gehabt, sie haben gehabt!
ACT III.
Three weeks
later.
SCENE I.
Enter GRETCHEN, and puts her
shawl on a chair. Brushing around with the traditional feather-duster of the
drama. Smartly dressed, for she is prosperous.
GR. Wie hatte man sich das
vorstellen konnen! In nur drei Wochen bin ich schon reich geworden! (Gets out
of her pocket handful after handful of silver, which she piles on the table,
and proceeds to repile and count, occasionally ringing or biting a piece to try
its quality.) Oh, dass (with a sigh) die Frau Wirthin nur ewig krank bliebe!...
Diese edlen jungen Manner—sie sind ja so liebenswurdig! Und so fleissig!—und so
treu! Jeden Morgen kommen sie gerade um drei Viertel auf neun; und plaudern und
schwatzen, und plappern, und schnattern, die jungen Damen auch; um Schlage
zwolf nehmen sie Abschied; um Sclage eins kommen sie schon wieder, und plauden
und schwatzen und plappern und schnattern; gerade um sechs Uhr nehmen sie
wiederum Abschied; um halb acht kehren sie noche'mal zuruck, und plaudern und
schwatzen und plappern und schnattern bis zehn Uhr, oder vielleicht ein Viertel
nach, falls ihre Uhren nach gehen (und stets gehen sie nach am Ende des
Besuchs, aber stets vor Beginn desselben), und zuweilen unterhalten sich die
jungen Leute beim Spazierengehen; und jeden Sonntag gehen sie dreimal in die
Kirche; und immer plaudern sie, und schwatzen und plappern und schnattern bis
ihnen die Zahne aus dem Munde fallen. Und ich? Durch Mangel an Uebung, ist mir
die Zunge mit Moos belegt worden! Freilich ist's mir eine dumme Zei gewesen.
Aber—um Gotteswillen, was geht das mir an? Was soll ich daraus machen? Taglich
sagt die Frau Wirthin, 'Gretchen' (dumb-show of paying a piece of money into
her hand), 'du bist eine der besten Sprach—Lehrerinnen der Welt!' Act, Gott!
Und taglich sagen die edlen jungen Manner, 'Gretchen, liebes Kind'
(money-paying again in dumb-show—three coins), 'bleib' taub—blind—todt!' und so
bleibe ich.... Jetzt wird es ungefahr neun Uhr sein; bald kommen sie vom
Spaziergehen zuruck. Also, es ware gut dass ich meinem eigenen Schatz einen
Besuch abstatte und spazieren gehe.
(Dons her shawl. Exit. L.)
Enter WIRTHIN. R.
WIRTHIN. That was Mr.
Stephenson's train that just came in. Evidently the girls are out walking with
Gretchen;—can't find them, and she doesn't seem to be around. (A ring at the
door.) That's him. I'll go see. (Exit. R.)
Enter STEPHENSON and
WIRTHIN. R.
S. Well, how does sickness
seem to agree with you?
WIRTHIN. So well that I've
never been out of my room since, till I heard your train come in.
S. Thou miracle of fidelity!
Now I argue from that, that the new plan is working.
WIRTHIN. Working? Mr.
Stephenson, you never saw anything like it in the whole course of your life!
It's absolutely wonderful the way it works.
S. Succeeds? No—you don't
mean it.
WIRTHIN. Indeed I do mean
it. I tell you, Mr. Stephenson, that plan was just an inspiration—that's what
it was. You could teach a cat German by it.
S. Dear me, this is noble
news! Tell me about it.
WIRTHIN. Well, it's all
Gretchen—ev-ery bit of it. I told you she was a jewel. And then the sagacity of
that child—why, I never dreamed it was in her. Sh-she, 'Never you ask the young
ladies a question—never let on—just keep mum—leave the whole thing to me,'
sh-she.
S. Good! And she justified,
did she?
WIRTHIN. Well, sir, the
amount of German gabble that that child crammed into those two girls inside the
next forty-eight hours—well, I was satisfied! So I've never asked a
question—never wanted to ask any. I've just lain curled up there, happy. The
little dears! they've flitted in to see me a moment, every morning and noon and
supper-time; and as sure as I'm sitting here, inside of six days they were
clattering German to me like a house afire!
S. Sp-lendid, splendid!
WIRTHIN. Of course it ain't
grammatical—the inventor of the language can't talk grammatical; if the dative
didn't fetch him the accusative would; but it's German all the same, and don't
you forget it!
S. Go on—go on—this is
delicious news—
WIRTHIN. Gretchen, she says
to me at the start, 'Never you mind about company for 'em,' sh-she—'I'm company
enough.' And I says, 'All right—fix it your own way, child;' and that she was
right is shown by the fact that to this day they don't care a straw for any
company but hers.
S. Dear me; why, it's
admirable!
WIRTHIN. Well, I should
think so! They just dote on that hussy—can't seem to get enough of her.
Gretchen tells me so herself. And the care she takes of them! She tells me that
every time there's a moonlight night she coaxes them out for a walk; and if a
body can believe her, she actually bullies them off to church three times every
Sunday!
S. Why, the little
dev—missionary! Really, she's a genius!
WIRTHIN. She's a bud, I tell
you! Dear me, how she's brought those girls' health up! Cheeks?—just roses.
Gait?—they walk on watch-springs! And happy?—by the bliss in their eyes, you'd
think they're in Paradise! Ah, that Gretchen! Just you imagine our trying to
achieve these marvels!
S. You're right—every time.
Those girls—why, all they'd have wanted to know was what we wanted done, and
then they wouldn't have done it—the mischievous young rascals!
WIRTHIN. Don't tell me?
Bless you, I found that out early—when I was bossing.
S. Well, I'm im-mensely
pleased. Now fetch them down. I'm not afraid now. They won't want to go home.
WIRTHIN. Home! I don't
believe you could drag them away from Gretchen with nine span of horses. But if
you want to see them, put on your hat and come along; they're out somewhere
trapseing along with Gretchen. (Going.)
S. I'm with you—lead on.
WIRTHIN. We'll go out the
side door. It's towards the Anlage. (Exit both. L.)
Enter GEORGE and MARGARET.
R. Her head lies upon his shoulder, his arm is about her waist; they are
steeped in sentiment.
M. (Turning a fond face up
at him.) Du Engel!
GEO. Liebste!
M. Oh, das Liedchen dass Du
mir gewidmet hast—es ist so schon, so wunderschon. Wie hatte ich je geahnt dass
Du ein Poet warest!
GEO. Mein Schatzchen!—es ist
mir lieb wenn Dir die Kleinigkeit gefallt.
M. Ah, es ist mit der
zartlichsten Musik gefullt—klingt ja so suss und selig—wie das Flustern des
Sommerwindes die Abenddammerung hindurch. Wieder—Theuerste!—sag'es wieder.
GEO. Du bist wie eine
Blume!—So schon und hold und rein—Ich schau' Dich an, und WehmuthSchleicht mir
ins Herz hinein. Mir ist als ob ich die HandeAufs Haupt Dir legen sollt',
Betend, dass Gott Dich erhalte, So rein und schon und hold.
M. A-ch! (Dumb-show
sentimentalisms.) Georgie—
GEO. Kindchen!
M. Warum kommen sie nicht?
GEO. Das weiss ich gar
night. Sie waren—
M. Es wird spat. Wir mussen
sie antreiben. Komm!
GEO. Ich glaube sie werden
recht bald ankommen, aber—(Exit both. L.)
Enter GRETCHEN, R., in a
state of mind. Slumps into a chair limp with despair.
GR. Ach! was wird jetzt aus
mir werden! Zufallig habe ich in der Ferne den verdammten Papa gesehen!—und die
Frau Wirthin auch! Oh, diese Erscheinung—die hat mir beinahe das Leben
genommen. Sie suchen die jungen Damen—das weiss ich wenn sie diese und die
jungen Herren zusammen fanden—du heileger Gott! Wenn das gescheiht, waren wir
Alle ganz und gar verloren! Ich muss sie gleich finden, und ihr eine Warnung
geben! (Exit. L.)
Enter ANNIE and WILL, R.,
posed like the former couple and sentimental.
A. Ich liebe Dich schon so
sehr—Deiner edlen Natur wegen. Dass du dazu auch ein Dichter bist!—ach, mein
Leben ist ubermassig reich geworden! Wer hatte sich doch einbilden konnen dass
ich einen Mann zu einem so wunderschonen Gedicht hatte begeistern konnen?
W. Liebste! Es ist nur eine
Kleinigkeit.
A. Nein, nein, es ist ein
echtes Wunder! Sage es noch einmal—ich flehe Dich an.
W. Du bist wie eine
Blume!—So schon und hold und rein—Ich schau' Dich an, und WehmuthSchleicht mir
ins Herz hinein. Mir ist als ob ich die HandeAufs Haupt Dir legen sollt',
Betend, dass Gott Dich erhalt, So rein und schon und hold.
A. Ach, es ist
himmlisch—einfach himmlisch. (Kiss.) Schreibt auch George Gedicht?
W. Oh, ja—zuweilen.
A. Wie schon!
W. (Aside.) Smouches 'em,
same as I do! It was a noble good idea to play that little thing on her. George
wouldn't ever think of that—somehow he never had any invention.
A. (Arranging chairs.) Jetzt
will ich bei Dir sitzen bleiben, und Du—
W. (They sit.) Ja—und ich—
A. Du wirst mir die alte
Geschichte, die immer neu bleibt, noch wieder erzahlen.
W. Zum Beispiel, dass ich
Dich liebe!
A. Wieder!
W. Ich—sie kommen!
Enter GEORGE and MARGARET.
A. Das macht nichts. Fortan!
(GEORGE unties M.'s bonnet. She reties his cravat—interspersings of love-pats,
etc., and dumb show of love-quarrellings.)
W. Ich liebe Dich.
A. Ach! Noch einmal!
W. Ich habe Dich vom Herzen
lieb.
A. Ach! Abermals!
W. Bist Du denn noch nicht
satt?
A. Nein! (The other couple
sit down, and MARGARET begins a retying of the cravat. Enter the WIRTHIN and
STEPHENSON, he imposing silence with a sign.) Mich hungert sehr, ich verhungre!
W. Oh, Du armes Kind! (Lays
her head on his shoulder. Dumb-show between STEPHENSON and WIRTHIN.) Und
hungert es nicht mich? Du hast mir nicht einmal gesagt—
A. Dass ich Dich liebe? Mein
Eigener! (Frau WIRTHIN threatens to faint—is supported by STEPHENSON.) Hore
mich nur an: Ich liebe Dich, ich liebe Dich—
Enter GRETCHEN.
GR. (Tears her hair.) Oh,
dass ich in der Holle ware!
M. Ich liebe Dich, ich liebe
Dich! Ah, ich bin so glucklich dass ich nicht schlafen kann, nicht lesen kann,
nicht reden kann, nicht—
A. Und ich! Ich bin auch so
glucklich dass ich nicht speisen kann, nicht studieren, arbeiten, denken,
schreiben—
S. (To Wirthin—aside.) Oh,
there isn't any mistake about it—Gretchen's just a rattling teacher!
WIRTHIN. (To
Stephenson—aside.) I'll skin her alive when I get my hands on her!
M. Komm, alle Verliebte!
(They jump up, join hands, and sing in chorus—) Du, Du, wie ich Dich liebe, Du,
Du, liebest auch mich! Die, die zartlichsten Triebe—
S. (Stepping forward.) Well!
(The girls throw themselves upon his neck with enthusiasm.)
THE GIRLS. Why, father!
S. My darlings! (The young
men hesitate a moment, they then add their embrace, flinging themselves on
Stephenson's neck, along with the girls.)
THE YOUNG MEN. Why, father!
S. (Struggling.) Oh, come,
this is too thin!—too quick, I mean. Let go, you rascals!
GEO. We'll never let go till
you put us on the family list.
M. Right! hold to him!
A. Cling to him, Will!
(GRETCHEN rushes in and joins the general embrace, but is snatched away by the
WIRTHIN, crushed up against the wall, and threatened with destruction.)
S. (Suffocating.) All right,
all right—have it your own way, you quartette of swindlers!
W. He's a darling! Three
cheers for papa!
EVERYBODY. (Except
Stephenson, who bows with hand on heart) Hip—hip—hip: hurrah, hurrah, hurrah!
GR. Der Tiger—ah-h-h!
WIRTHIN. Sei ruhig, you
hussy!
S. Well, I've lost a couple
of precious daughters, but I've gained a couple of precious scamps to fill up
the gap with; so it's all right. I'm satisfied, and everybody's forgiven—(With
mock threats at Gretchen.)
W. Oh, wir werden fur Dich
sorgen—dur herrliches Gretchen!
GR. Danke schon!
M. (To Wirthin.) Und fur Sie
auch; denn wenn Sie nicht so freundlich gewesen waren, krank zu werden, wie
waren wir je so glucklich geworden wie jetzt?
WIRTHIN. Well, dear, I was
kind, but I didn't mean it. But I ain't sorry—not one bit—that I ain't.
(Tableau.)
S. Come, now, the situation
is full of hope, and grace, and tender sentiment. If I had in the least poetic
gift, I know I could improvise under such an inspiration (each girl nudges her
sweetheart) something worthy to—to—Is there no poet among us? (Each youth turns
solemnly his back upon the other, and raises his hands in benediction over his
sweetheart's bowed head.)
BOTH YOUTHS AT ONCE. Mir ist
als ob ich die HandeAufs Haupt Dir legen sollt'—(They turn and look
reproachfully at each other—the girls contemplate them with injured surprise.)
S. (Reflectively.) I think
I've heard that before somewhere.
WIRTHIN. (Aside.) Why, the
very cats in Germany know it!
(Curtain.)
(1) (EXPLANATORY.) I regard the idea of this
play as a valuable invention. I call it the Patent Universally-Applicable
Automatically Adjustable Language Drama. This indicates that it is adjustable
to any tongue, and performable in any tongue. The English portions of the play
are to remain just as they are, permanently; but you change the foreign
portions to any language you please, at will. Do you see? You at once have the
same old play in a new tongue. And you can keep changing it from language to
language, until your private theatrical pupils have become glib and at home in
the speech of all nations. Zum Beispiel, suppose we wish to adjust the play to
the French tongue. First, we give Mrs. Blumenthal and Gretchen French names.
Next, we knock the German Meisterschaft sentences out of the first scene, and
replace them with sentences from the French Meisterschaft—like this, for
instance: 'Je voudrais faire des emplettes ce matin; voulez-vous avoir
l'obligeance de venir avec moi chez le tailleur francais?' And so on. Wherever
you find German, replace it with French, leaving the English parts undisturbed.
When you come to the long conversation in the second act, turn to any pamphlet
of your French Meisterschaft, and shovel in as much French talk on any subject
as will fill up the gaps left by the expunged German. Example—page 423, French
Meisterschaft: On dirait qu'il va faire chaud. J'ai chaud. J'ai extremement
chaud. Ah! qu'il fait chaud! Il fait une chaleur etouffante! L'air est brulant.
Je meurs de chaleur. Il est presque impossible de supporter la chaleur. Cela
vous fait transpirer. Mettons-nous a l'ombre. Il fait du vent. Il fait un vent
froid. Il fait un tres agreable pour se promener aujourd'hui. And so on, all
the way through. It is very easy to adjust the play to any desired language.
Anybody can do it.
21.MY BOYHOOD DREAMS
The dreams of my boyhood?
No, they have not been realised. For all who are old, there is something
infinitely pathetic about the subject which you have chosen, for in no
greyhead's case can it suggest any but one thing—disappointment. Disappointment
is its own reason for its pain: the quality or dignity of the hope that failed
is a matter aside. The dreamer's valuation of the thing lost—not another
man's—is the only standard to measure it by, and his grief for it makes it
large and great and fine, and is worthy of our reverence in all cases. We
should carefully remember that. There are sixteen hundred million people in the
world. Of these there is but a trifling number—in fact, only thirty-eight
millions—who can understand why a person should have an ambition to belong to
the French army; and why, belonging to it, he should be proud of that; and why,
having got down that far, he should want to go on down, down, down till he
struck the bottom and got on the General Staff; and why, being stripped of this
livery, or set free and reinvested with his self-respect by any other quick and
thorough process, let it be what it might, he should wish to return to his
strange serfage. But no matter: the estimate put upon these things by the
fifteen hundred and sixty millions is no proper measure of their value: the
proper measure, the just measure, is that which is put upon them by Dreyfus,
and is cipherable merely upon the littleness or the vastness of the
disappointment which their loss cost him. There you have it: the measure of the
magnitude of a dream-failure is the measure of the disappointment the failure
cost the dreamer; the value, in others' eyes, of the thing lost, has nothing to
do with the matter. With this straightening out and classification of the
dreamer's position to help us, perhaps we can put ourselves in his place and
respect his dream—Dreyfus's, and the dreams our friends have cherished and
reveal to us. Some that I call to mind, some that have been revealed to me, are
curious enough; but we may not smile at them, for they were precious to the
dreamers, and their failure has left scars which give them dignity and pathos.
With this theme in my mind, dear heads that were brown when they and mine were
young together rise old and white before me now, beseeching me to speak for
them, and most lovingly will I do it. Howells, Hay, Aldrich, Matthews,
Stockton, Cable, Remus—how their young hopes and ambitions come flooding back
to my memory now, out of the vague far past, the beautiful past, the lamented
past! I remember it so well—that night we met together—it was in Boston, and
Mr. Fiends was there, and Mr. Osgood, Ralph Keeler, and Boyle O'Reilly, lost to
us now these many years—and under the seal of confidence revealed to each other
what our boyhood dreams had been: dreams which had not as yet been blighted,
but over which was stealing the grey of the night that was to come—a night
which we prophetically felt, and this feeling oppressed us and made us sad. I
remember that Howells's voice broke twice, and it was only with great
difficulty that he was able to go on; in the end he wept. For he had hoped to
be an auctioneer. He told of his early struggles to climb to his goal, and how
at last he attained to within a single step of the coveted summit. But there
misfortune after misfortune assailed him, and he went down, and down, and down,
until now at last, weary and disheartened, he had for the present given up the
struggle and become the editor of the Atlantic Monthly. This was in 1830.
Seventy years are gone since, and where now is his dream? It will never be
fulfilled. And it is best so; he is no longer fitted for the position; no one
would take him now; even if he got it, he would not be able to do himself
credit in it, on account of his deliberateness of speech and lack of trained
professional vivacity; he would be put on real estate, and would have the pain
of seeing younger and abler men intrusted with the furniture and other such
goods—goods which draw a mixed and intellectually low order of customers, who
must be beguiled of their bids by a vulgar and specialised humour and sparkle,
accompanied with antics. But it is not the thing lost that counts, but only the
disappointment the loss brings to the dreamer that had coveted that thing and
had set his heart of hearts upon it, and when we remember this, a great wave of
sorrow for Howells rises in our breasts, and we wish for his sake that his fate
could have been different. At that time Hay's boyhood dream was not yet past
hope of realisation, but it was fading, dimming, wasting away, and the wind of
a growing apprehension was blowing cold over the perishing summer of his life.
In the pride of his young ambition he had aspired to be a steamboat mate; and
in fancy saw himself dominating a forecastle some day on the Mississippi and
dictating terms to roustabouts in high and wounding terms. I look back now,
from this far distance of seventy years, and note with sorrow the stages of
that dream's destruction. Hay's history is but Howells's, with differences of
detail. Hay climbed high toward his ideal; when success seemed almost sure, his
foot upon the very gang-plank, his eye upon the capstan, misfortune came and
his fall began. Down—down—down—ever down: Private Secretary to the President;
Colonel in the field; Charge d'Affaires in Paris; Charge d'Affaires in Vienna;
Poet; Editor of the Tribune; Biographer of Lincoln; Ambassador to England; and
now at last there he lies—Secretary of State, Head of Foreign Affairs. And he has
fallen like Lucifer, never to rise again. And his dream—where now is his dream?
Gone down in blood and tears with the dream of the auctioneer. And the young
dream of Aldrich—where is that? I remember yet how he sat there that night
fondling it, petting it; seeing it recede and ever recede; trying to be
reconciled and give it up, but not able yet to bear the thought; for it had
been his hope to be a horse-doctor. He also climbed high, but, like the others,
fell; then fell again, and yet again, and again and again. And now at last he
can fall no further. He is old now, he has ceased to struggle, and is only a
poet. No one would risk a horse with him now. His dream is over. Has any
boyhood dream ever been fulfilled? I must doubt it. Look at Brander Matthews. He
wanted to be a cowboy. What is he to-day? Nothing but a professor in a
university. Will he ever be a cowboy? It is hardly conceivable. Look at
Stockton. What was Stockton's young dream? He hoped to be a barkeeper. See
where he has landed. Is it better with Cable? What was Cable's young dream? To
be ring-master in the circus, and swell around and crack the whip. What is he
to-day? Nothing but a theologian and novelist. And Uncle Remus—what was his
young dream? To be a buccaneer. Look at him now. Ah, the dreams of our youth,
how beautiful they are, and how perishable! The ruins of these
might-have-beens, how pathetic! The heart-secrets that were revealed that night
now so long vanished, how they touch me as I give them voice! Those sweet
privacies, how they endeared us to each other! We were under oath never to tell
any of these things, and I have always kept that oath inviolate when speaking
with persons whom I thought not worthy to hear them. Oh, our lost Youth—God
keep its memory green in our hearts! for Age is upon us, with the indignity of
its infirmities, and Death beckons!
22.TO THE ABOVE OLD PEOPLE
Sleep! for the Sun that scores another Day
Against the Tale allotted You to stay,
Reminding You, is Risen, and now
Serves Notice—ah, ignore it while You stay!
The chill Wind blew, and those who stood before
The Tavern murmured, 'Having drunk his Score,
Why tarries He with empty Cup? Behold,
The Wine of Youth once poured, is poured no more
'Come, leave the Cup, and on the Winter's Snow
Your Summer Garment of Enjoyment throw:
Your Tide of Life is ebbing fast, and it,
Exhausted once, for You no more shall flow.'
While yet the Phantom of false Youth was mine,
I heard a Voice from out the Darkness whine,
'O Youth, O whither gone? Return,
And bathe my Age in thy reviving Wine.'
In this subduing Draught of tender green
And kindly Absinth, with its wimpling Sheen
Of dusky half-lights, let me drown
The haunting Pathos of the Might-Have-Been.
For every nickeled Joy, marred and brief,
We pay some day its Weight in golden Grief
Mined from our Hearts. Ah, murmur not—
From this one-sided Bargain dream of no Relief!
The Joy of Life, that streaming through their Veins
Tumultuous swept, falls slack—and wanes
The Glory in the Eye—and one by one
Life's Pleasures perish and make place for Pains.
Whether one hide in some secluded Nook—
Whether at Liverpool or Sandy Hook—
'Tis one. Old Age will search him out—and
He—He—He—when ready will know where to look.
From Cradle unto Grave I keep a House
OF Entertainment where may drowse
Bacilli and kindred Germs—or feed—or breed
Their festering Species in a deep Carouse.
Think—in this battered Caravanserai,
Whose Portals open stand all Night and Day,
How Microbe after Microbe with his Pomp
Arrives unasked, and comes to stay.
Our ivory Teeth, confessing to the Lust
Of masticating, once, now own Disgust
Of Clay-Plug'd Cavities—full soon our Snags
Are emptied, and our Mouths are filled with Dust.
Our Gums forsake the Teeth and tender grow,
And fat, like over-riped Figs—we know
The Sign—the Riggs' Disease is ours, and we
Must list this Sorrow, add another Woe;
Our Lungs begin to fail and soon we Cough,
And chilly Streaks play up our Backs, and off
Our fever'd Foreheads drips an icy Sweat—
We scoffered before, but now we may not scoff.
Some for the Bunions that afflict us prate
Of Plasters unsurpassable, and hate
To Cut a corn—ah cut, and let the Plaster go,
Nor murmur if the Solace come too late.
Some for the Honours of Old Age, and some
Long for its Respite from the Hum
And Clash of sordid Strife—O Fools,
The Past should teach them what's to Come:
Lo, for the Honours, cold Neglect instead!
For Respite, disputatious Heirs a Bed
Of Thorns for them will furnish. Go,
Seek not Here for Peace—but Yonder—with the Dead.
For whether Zal and Rustam heed this Sign,
And even smitten thus, will not repine,
Let Zal and Rustam shuffle as they may,
The Fine once levied they must Cash the Fine.
O Voices of the Long Ago that were so dear!
Fall'n Silent, now, for many a Mould'ring Year,
O whither are ye flown? Come back,
And break my heart, but bless my grieving ear.
Some happy Day my Voice will Silent fall,
And answer not when some that love it call:
Be glad for Me when this you note—and think
I've found the Voices lost, beyond the Pall.
So let me grateful drain the Magic Bowl
That medicines hurt Minds and on the Soul
The Healing of its Peace doth lay—if then
Death claim me—Welcome be his Dole!
SANNA, SWEDEN, September
15th.
Private.—If you don't know
what Riggs's Disease of the Teeth is, the dentist will tell you. I've had
it—and it is more than interesting. —M.T.
EDITORIAL NOTE
Fearing that there might be
some mistake, we submitted a proof of this article to the (American) gentlemen
named in it, and asked them to correct any errors of detail that might have
crept in among the facts. They reply with some asperity that errors cannot
creep in among facts where there are no facts for them to creep in among; and
that none are discoverable in this article, but only baseless aberrations of a
disordered mind. They have no recollection of any such night in Boston, nor
elsewhere; and in their opinion there was never any such night. They have met
Mr. Twain, but have had the prudence not to intrust any privacies to
him—particularly under oath; and they think they now see that this prudence was
justified, since he has been untrustworthy enough to even betray privacies
which had no existence. Further, they think it a strange thing that Mr. Twain,
who was never invited to meddle with anybody's boyhood dreams but his own, has
been so gratuitously anxious to see that other people's are placed before the
world that he has quite lost his head in his zeal and forgotten to make any
mention of his own at all. Provided we insert this explanation, they are
willing to let his article pass; otherwise they must require its suppression in
the interest of truth.
P.S.—These replies having
left us in some perplexity, and also in some fear lest they distress Mr. Twain
if published without his privity, we judged it but fair to submit them to him
and give him an opportunity to defend himself. But he does not seem to be
troubled, or even aware that he is in a delicate situation. He merely says: 'Do
not worry about those former young people. They can write good literature, but
when it comes to speaking the truth, they have not had my training.—MARK
TWAIN.' The last sentence seems obscure, and liable to an unfortunate
construction. It plainly needs refashioning, but we cannot take the
responsibility of doing it.—EDITOR.
23.IN MEMORIAM
OLIVIA
SUSAN CLEMENS
DIED AUGUST 18, 1896; AGED
24
In a fair valley—oh, how long ago, how long ago!—
Where all the broad expanse was clothed in vines,
And fruitful fields and meadows starred with flowers,
And clear streams wandered at their idle will;
And still lakes slept, their burnished surfaces
A dream of painted clouds, and soft airs
Went whispering with odorous breath,
And all was peace—in that fair vale,
Shut from the troubled world, a nameless hamlet drowsed.
Hard by, apart, a temple stood;
And strangers from the outer world
Passing, noted it with tired eyes,
And seeing, saw it not:
A glimpse of its fair form—an answering momentary thrill—
And they passed on, careless and unaware.
They could not know the cunning of its make;
They could not know the secret shut up in its heart;
Only the dwellers of the hamlet knew;
They knew that what seemed brass was gold;
What marble seemed, was ivory;
The glories that enriched the milky surfaces—
The trailing vines, and interwoven flowers,
And tropic birds a-wing, clothed all in tinted fires—
They knew for what they were, not what they seemed:
Encrustings all of gems, not perishable splendours of the brush.
They knew the secret spot where one must stand—
They knew the surest hour, the proper slant of sun—
To gather in, unmarred, undimmed,
The vision of the fane in all its fairy grace,
A fainting dream against the opal sky.
And more than this. They knew
That in the temple's inmost place a spirit dwelt,
Made all of light!
For glimpses of it they had caught
Beyond the curtains when the priests
That served the altar came and went.
All loved that light and held it dear
That had this partial grace;
But the adoring priests alone who lived
By day and night submerged in its immortal glow
Knew all its power and depth, and could appraise the loss
If it should fade and fail and come no more.
All this was long ago—so long ago!
The light burned on; and they that worshipped it,
And they that caught its flash at intervals and held it dear,
Contented lived in its secure possession. Ah,
How long ago it was!
And then when they
Were nothing fearing, and God's peace was in the air,
And none was prophesying harm,
The vast disaster fell:
Where stood the temple when the sun went down
Was vacant desert when it rose again!
Ah yes! 'Tis ages since it chanced!
So long ago it was,
That from the memory of the hamlet-folk the Light has passed—
They scarce believing, now, that once it was,
Or if believing, yet not missing it,
And reconciled to have it gone.
Not so the priests! Oh, not so
The stricken ones that served it day and night,
Adoring it, abiding in the healing of its peace:
They stand, yet, where erst they stood
Speechless in that dim morning long ago;
And still they gaze, as then they gazed,
And murmur, 'It will come again;
It knows our pain—it knows—it knows—
Ah surely it will come again.
S.L.C.
LAKE LUCERNE, August 18, 1897.
Comments
Post a Comment