Classic Audiobook Collection - Bill Nye and Boomerang by Bill Nye ~ Full Audiobook [comedy]
Episode Date: February 20, 2024Bill Nye and Boomerang by Bill Nye audiobook. Genre: comedy In Bill Nye and Boomerang, 19th-century American humorist Bill Nye (not the modern science communicator) invites listeners into a fast-talk...ing, tall-tale West where newspapers are born in livery-stable lofts, mining camps breed unlikely philosophy, and one long-suffering mule becomes a legend. Anchored by Nye's affectionate, outrageous dedication to his mule Boomerang, this collection stitches together comic sketches, mock-epics, and frontier anecdotes that move from dusty Wyoming streets to the odd corners of everyday American life. Nye casts himself as a sharp-eyed narrator and accidental ringmaster, juggling miners, townsfolk, would-be entrepreneurs, and assorted self-important characters, all while Boomerang drifts in and out like a deadpan co-star. The central struggle is not a single mystery to solve, but a constant attempt to wrest meaning, dignity, and a paycheck out of a world that refuses to behave logically. With punchy satire, playful exaggeration, and a fondness for skewering pomposity, Nye turns small setbacks into grand comic disasters and ordinary observations into social commentary. The result is a lively snapshot of frontier attitudes and American absurdity, powered by a voice that treats hardship, hype, and human folly as equal opportunities for laughter. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 000 (00:01:17) Chapter 001 (00:03:18) Chapter 002 (00:05:34) Chapter 003 (00:13:25) Chapter 004 (00:20:55) Chapter 005 (00:25:39) Chapter 006 (00:32:40) Chapter 007 (00:36:45) Chapter 008 (00:42:03) Chapter 009 (00:49:36) Chapter 010 (00:52:27) Chapter 011 (00:57:31) Chapter 012 (01:00:53) Chapter 013 (01:02:04) Chapter 014 (01:05:22) Chapter 015 (01:08:24) Chapter 016 (01:09:17) Chapter 017 (01:11:06) Chapter 018 (01:12:26) Chapter 019 (01:15:14) Chapter 020 (01:17:30) Chapter 021 (01:19:56) Chapter 022 (01:22:08) Chapter 023 (01:27:35) Chapter 024 (01:28:48) Chapter 025 (01:35:09) Chapter 026 (01:38:00) Chapter 027 (01:40:30) Chapter 028 (01:43:01) Chapter 029 (01:44:54) Chapter 030 (01:48:25) Chapter 031 (01:53:22) Chapter 032 (01:56:42) Chapter 033 (02:00:10) Chapter 034 (02:03:12) Chapter 035 (02:06:55) Chapter 036 (02:13:15) Chapter 037 (02:16:22) Chapter 038 (02:21:44) Chapter 039 (02:25:53) Chapter 040 (02:26:58) Chapter 041 (02:31:27) Chapter 042 (02:37:54) Chapter 043 (02:50:02) Chapter 044 (02:55:15) Chapter 045 (03:08:34) Chapter 046 (03:14:38) Chapter 047 (03:18:03) Chapter 048 (03:20:35) Chapter 049 (03:34:12) Chapter 050 (03:42:42) Chapter 051 (03:53:45) Chapter 052 (03:59:54) Chapter 053 (04:06:00) Chapter 054 (04:09:50) Chapter 055 (04:16:24) Chapter 056 (04:22:01) Chapter 057 (04:27:14) Chapter 058 (04:33:17) Chapter 059 (04:36:47) Chapter 060 (04:40:41) Chapter 061 (04:45:04) Chapter 062 (04:48:58) Chapter 063 (04:54:10) Chapter 064 (04:59:55) Chapter 065 (05:03:06) Chapter 066 (05:04:59) Chapter 067 (05:08:35) Chapter 068 (05:10:06) Chapter 069 (05:11:51) Chapter 070 (05:16:33) Chapter 071 (05:28:25) Chapter 072 (05:35:42) Chapter 073 (05:39:27) Chapter 074 (05:45:28) Chapter 075 (05:48:21) Chapter 076 (05:51:25) Chapter 077 (05:58:07) Chapter 078 (06:01:56) Chapter 079 (06:05:39) Chapter 080 (06:12:01) Chapter 081 (06:17:59) Chapter 082 Max Character Limit reached Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems, by Bill Nye.
To my Mule Boomerang, whose bright smile haunts me still, and whose low, mellow notes are ever sounding in my ears,
to whom I owe all that I am as a great man, and whose presence has inspired me ever and anon throughout the years that are gone.
this volume, this coronet of sparkling literary gems, as it were,
this wreath of fragrant forget-me-nots and meekai Johnny jump-ups,
with all its wealth of rare tropical blossoms and high-priced exotics,
is cheerfully and even hilariously dedicated by the author.
End of Chapter Zero
Chapter 1 of Bill Nayan Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Apology
In my boudoir, November 17th, 1880,
Belford, Clark, and Company, gentlemen,
In reply to your favor of the 22nd Ultimo,
I herewith transmit the material necessary for a medium-sized volume of my chance,
and unique writings.
The matter has been arranged rather hurriedly,
and no doubt in classifying this rectangular mass of soul.
I have selected some little epics and ethereal flights of fancy,
which are not as good as others that I have left out.
But my only excuse is this.
The literary world has been compelled to yield up first one
well-known historical or scientific work,
and then another,
careful investigation having shown that they were unrelated.
This left suffering humanity almost destitute of a reliable work to which it could turn in its hour of great need.
So I've been compelled to hurry more than I wanted to.
It affords me great pleasure, however, to know what a feeling of blessed rest and childlike confidence and assurance
and some more things of that nature will follow the publication of this work.
Print the book in large course type so that the old
people can get a chance at it. It will reconcile them to death, perhaps. Then sell it at a
moderate price. It is really priceless in value, but put it within the reach of all, and then
turn it loose without a word of warning. The author, Laramie City, Wyoming.
End of Chapter 1. Chapter 2 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recordings in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Apostrophe to an orphan mule.
O lonely, gentle, unobtrusive mule, thou standest idly against the azure sky,
and sweetly sadly singeth like a hired man.
Who taught thee thus to warble in the noontide heat,
and wrestle with thy deep corroding grief and joyless,
wo? Who taught thy simple heart, its pent up wildly warring waste of wanton woe, to carroll forth
upon the silent air? I chide thee not, because thy song is fraught with grief-em-bittered monotone and
joyless minor chords of wild imported melody, for thou art restless, woe be girt, encompassed roundabout
with gloom, thou timid, trusting orphan mule? Few joys indeed are thine. Thou, thou'y joys indeed are thine.
Thou thrice-stricken, madly mournful melancholy mule,
And he alone, who strews thy pathway with his cold remains,
Can give thee recompense of lemmoncally woe.
He who hath sought to steer thy limber, yielding tail,
For nence to thy crupper band,
Hath given thee joy, and he alone.
Tis true, he may have shot athwart the zodiac,
And looking o'er the outer walls upon the new Jerusalem,
have uttered vain regrets.
Thou reckest not, O orphan mule,
for it hath given thee joy,
and bound about thy bursting heart,
and held thy tottering reason to its throne.
Sing on, O mule,
and warble in the twilight gray,
unchidden by the heartless throng,
sing of thy parents on thy father's side,
yearn for the days now past and gone,
for he who pens these halting,
limping lines to thee,
Doth bid thee yarn and yearn and yearn.
End of chapter two.
Chapter 3 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A miner's meeting, my mine, a mirage on the plains.
Camp on the New Jerusalem Mine, May 28th, 8.
I write this letter in great haste, as I have just returned from the new carbonite discoveries
and haven't any surplus time left. While I was there, a driving snowstorm raged on the mountains,
and slowly melting made the yellow ochre into tough plastic clay which adhered to my boots
to such an extent that before I knew it, my delicately arched feet were as large as a bale of hay,
with about the same symmetrical outlines.
A miners meeting was held there Wednesday evening,
and a district to be called Mill Creek District was formed,
being 15 miles each way.
The Nellas cabin or ranch is situated in the center of the district.
I presided over the meeting to give it in an air of terror and gloom.
It was very impressive.
There was hardly a dry eye in the house as I was led to the chair by two old miners.
I seated myself behind the flower barrel, and pounding on the head of the barrel with a pick handle,
I called the august assemblage to order.
Snuffing the candle with my fingers in a graceful and pleasing style,
and wiping the black off on my pants, I said,
Gentlemen of the Convention, in your selection of a chairman, I detect it once your mental acumen and intelligent foresight.
While you feel confident that in the rose-colored future,
prosperity is in store for you, you still remember that now you look to capital for the immediate
development of your district. I am free to state that, although I have been but a few hours in your
locality, I am highly gratified with your appearance, and I cheerfully assure you that the coffers
which I command are at your disposal. In me, you behold, a capitalist who proposes to develop the
country, regardless of expense. I also recognize your good sense in selecting an old miner and
mineral expert to preside over your meeting, although it may require something of a mental
strain for your chairman to detect the difference between porphyry and perdition, yet in the actual
practical workings of a mining camp, he feels that he is equal to any emergency. After the band
plays something soothing, and the chaplain has drawn up a short petition to the throne of grace.
I shall be glad to know the pleasure of the meeting.
Round after round of applause greeted this little jam of oratory.
A small boy gathered up the bouquets and filed them with its secretary
when the meeting proceeded with its work.
Most of the delegates came instructed,
and therefore the business was soon transacted.
I located a claim called the Boomerang.
I named it after my favorite mule.
I call my mule Boomerang because he has such an eccentric orbit,
and no one can tell just when he will clash with some other heavenly body.
He has a sigh like the long-drawn breath of a foghorn.
He likes to come to my tent in the morning about daylight
and sigh in my ear before I am awake.
He is a highly amusing little cuss,
and it tickles him a good deal to pour about 13 and a half gallons of his melody
into my ear while I am dreaming, sweetly dreaming.
He enjoys my look of pleasant,
rise when I wake up. He would cheerfully pour more than thirteen and a half gallons of sigh into my ear,
but that is all my ear will hold. There is nothing small about Boomerang. He is generous to a fault,
and lavishes his low, sad, tremulous wail on everyone who has time to listen to it.
Those who have never been wakened from a sweet, sweet dream by the low, sad wail of a narrow-gauge
mule, so close to the ear that the warm breath of the songster can be felt on the cheek,
do not know what it is to be loved by a patient, faithful, dumb animal.
The first time he rendered this voluntary for my benefit, I rose in my wrath and some other
clothes, and went out and shot him. I discharged every chamber of my revolver into his carcass,
and went back to bed to wait till it got lighter. In a couple of hours, I arose and went
out to bury Boomerang. The remains were off about 20 yards eating bunch grass. In the gloom and
uncertainty of night, I had shot six shots into an old windlass near a deserted shaft. Boomerang and I
get along first rate together. When I am lonesome, I shoot at him, and when he is lonesome,
he comes up and lays his head across my shoulder and looks at me with great soulful eyes
and sings to me.
On our way in from the mines,
we saw one of those beautiful sights
so common in this high altitude
and clear atmosphere.
It was a mirage.
In the party were a lawyer,
a United States official,
a banker, and myself.
The other three members of the quartet,
aside from myself,
are very modest men
and do not wish to have their names mentioned.
They were very particular about it,
and I have respected their wishes.
Whatever Mr. Blake, Snow, or Ivinson asked me to do, I will always do cheerfully.
But we were speaking about the mirage.
Across to the northeast, our attention was at first attracted by a rank of gray towers growing taller and taller
till their heads were lifted into the sky above, while at their feet there soon appeared a glassy lake in which was reflected the outlines of the massive gray walls above.
It was a beautiful sight.
The picture was as still and lovely to look upon as a schoolma'am.
We all went into raptures.
It looked like some beautiful scene in Palestine, at least Snow said so,
and he has read a book about Palestine and ought to know.
There was a silence in the air which seemed to indicate the deserted sepulchre of other days,
and the grim ruins towering above the depths of clear waters on whose surface was mirrored
the visage of the rocks and towers on their banks, all spoke of repose and decay, and the silent,
stately tread of relentless years. By and by, from out the gray background of the picture,
there stole the wild, tremulous, heartbroken wail of a mule. It seemed to jar upon the surroundings
and clash harshly against our sensitive natures. Some one of the party swore a little. Then another
one came to the front and took the job off his hands. We all joined,
in a gentlemanly kind of way in condemning the mule for his lack of tact, to say the least.
All at once, the line of magnificent ruins shortened and became reduced in height.
They changed their positions and moved off to the left,
and our dream had melted into the matter-of-fact scene of 22 immigrant wagons
drawn by rat-tailed mules and driven by long-haired Mormons,
with the dirt and bacon rinds of prehistoric times adhering to them everywhere.
What a veil of tears this is anyway.
We are only marching toward the tomb, after all.
We should learn a valuable lesson from this, and never tell a lie.
End of Chapter 3.
Chapter 4 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or The Tale of a Meek-Eyed Mule, and some other literary gems, by Bill Nye.
This Librevok's recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The true story of Damon and Pithias, chapter 1.
The romantic story of Damon and Pithias, which has been celebrated in verse and song for over 2,000 years,
is supposed to have originated during the reign of Dionysius I.
Or Dionysius the Elder, as he was also called, who resigned about 350 years BC.
He must have been called the Elder, more for a joke than anything else,
as he was by inclination a Unitarian,
although he was never a member of any church whatever,
and was in fact the wickedest man in all Syracuse.
Dionysius arose to the throne from the ranks
and used to call himself a self-made man.
He was tyrannical, severe, and selfish,
as all self-made men are.
Self-made men are very prone to usurp the prerogative of the Almighty
and overwork themselves.
They are not satisfied with a position of division superintendent of creation,
but they want to be most worthy high grand muck-a-muck of the entire ranch,
or their lives are gloomy fizzles.
Dionysius was indeed so odious and so overbearing toward his subjects
that he lived in constant fear of assassination at their hands.
This fear robbed him of his rest and rendered life a dreary waste to the tyrannical king.
He lived in constant dread that each previous moment would be followed by the succeeding one.
He would eat a hearty supper and retire to rest,
but the night would be cursed with horrid dreams of the Skithians and white river Utes,
peeling off his epidermis and throwing him into a boiling cauldron with red pepper and other counter-irritants,
while they danced the Highland fling around this royal barbecue.
Even his own wife and children were forbidden to enter his presence
for fear that they would put barn arsenic in the Blancmange,
or Cosgrove arsenic in the pancakes,
or Paris green in the pie.
During his reign he had constructed an immense subterranean cavernous arrangement
called the ear of Dionysius because it resembled in shape and general telephonic power
to human ear.
It was the largest ear on record.
One day, the workman expressed the desire to erect a similar ear of tin or galvanized iron
on old dye himself.
Someone blowed on him and the next morning his head was thumping about in the waste paper
basket at the general office.
When one of the king's subject, who thought he was solid with the administration, would say,
Beyond the possibility of a doubt, your most serene highness is the kind and loving guardian of
his people and the idol of his subjects, his royal tallness would say,
What you've given us, do you wish to play the most sublime overseer of the universe and
general ticket agent, plenty potentiary for a Chinaman?
Ha, you cannot fill up the King of Syracuse with Taffy.
Then he would order the chief executioner
to run the man through the royal sausage grinder
and throw him into the Mediterranean.
And this way, the sausage grinder was kept running night and day,
and the chief engineer who run the machine
made double time every month.
Chapter 2. I will now bring in Damon and Pithias.
Damon and Pithias were named after a popular secret organization
because they were so solid on each other.
They thought more of one another than anybody.
They borrowed chewing tobacco and were always sociable and pleasant.
They slept together and unitedly stood off the landlady from month to month in the most cheerful and harmonious manner.
If Pythias snored in the night like the blast of a foghorn,
Damon did not get mad and kick him in the stomach as some would.
He gently but firmly took him by the nose and lifted him up and down
to the merry rhythm of the babies in our block.
They loved one another end season and out of season.
Their affection was like the soft bloom on the nose of a Wyoming legislator.
It never grew pale or wilted. It was always there.
If Damon were at the bat, Pithias was on deck.
If Damon went to a church fair and invited starvation,
Pithias would go too and vote on the handsomest baby
till the First National Bank of Syracuse would refuse to honor his checks.
But one day, Damon got too much budge
and told the venerable and colossal old royal bummer of Syracuse what he thought of him.
Then Dionysius told the chief engineer of the sausage grinder to turn on steam and prepare for business.
But Damon thought of Pythius and how Pythias hadn't so much to live for as he had,
and he made a compromise by offering to put Pythias in soak,
while the only genuine Damon went to see his girl who lived at Albany.
Three days were given him to get around and redeem Pythius,
and if he failed, his friend would go to Prithius,
protest. Chapter 3. We will now suppose three days to have elapsed since the preceding chapter.
A large party of enthusiastic citizens of Syracuse are gathered around the grandstand,
and Pythias is on the platform, cheerfully taken off his coat. Nearby stands a man with a broadax.
The Syracuse silver cornet band has just played, it's funny when you feel that way,
and the chaplain has made a long prayer, Pithias sliding a trade dollar into his hand,
and whispering to him to give him his money's worth.
The Declaration of Independence has been read,
and the man on the left is running his thumb playfully
over the edge of his meat axe.
Pithius takes off his collar and tie,
swearing softly to himself at his miserable luck.
Chapter 4. It is now the proper time to throw in the solitary horsemen.
The horizontal bars of golden light from the setting sun gleam and glitter
from the dome of the courthouse,
and bathe the green plains of Syracuse,
with mellow splendor.
The billowy piles of fleecy bronze
and the eastern sky
look soft and yielding like a Sarah Bernhardt.
The lowing herd winds slowly over the lee
and all nature seems oppressed
with the solemn hush and stillness
of the surrounding and engulfing horror.
The solitary horsemen
has seen coming along the Albany and Syracuse toll road.
He jabs the Mexican spurs
into the foamy flank of his noble cayuse plug
and the lash of the court
as it moves through the air is singing a merry song.
Damon has been delayed by road agents and washouts, and he is a little behind time.
Besides, he fooled a little too long and dallied in Albany with his fair gazelle.
But he is making up time now, and he sails into the jailyard just in time to take his part.
He and Pythias fall into each other's arms, borrow a chew of fine cut from each other,
and weep to slow music.
Dionysius comes before the curtain, bows, and says the exercises will be able to
be postponed. He orders the band to play something soothing, gives Damon the appointment of
superintendent of public instruction, and Pythias the Syracuse Post Office, and everything is
lovely. Orchestra plays something touchful. Curtain comes down. Kino. In Hoc usufruct,
Nooks Vomaka Est. End of Chapter 4. Chapter 5 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Sad Memories of the Dead Year.
It is with the deepest regret that I write in advance of the obituary of the year 1879,
and pay a last tribute to another landmark in our history before it be consigned to the boundless realms of the past.
I do not write this as an item of local interest because the year will fold
its icy limbs and died about the same time to the people of the east as to us.
The limit of totality will strike us about the same. But I write of the last moments of 1879,
as the subject seems to me. The year now nearly gone has been fraught with almost innumerable
blessings. None of us can look back over it without remembering many moments of pleasure.
With what unalloyed bliss at this moment comes back to me the memory of that rich golden day of summer
when the first watermelon built the town, and I mortgaged my little home and bought it.
Then also I called to mine the day when the first strawberries began to be convalescent and were able to be out,
and how 40 or 50 of our leading businessmen formed a joint stock company and bought a whole box.
Ah, life gives no richer recompense for its numberless ills than the proud moments when one buys the first box of unhappy, dyspeptic berries of this,
season and then compromises with one's creditors at ten cents on the dollar.
Then followed the ripe and radiant days of the Indian summer
when the peaks of the distant mountains that bound the horizon
melt away into the soft, warm sky,
and the only sound that breaks the stillness is the merry round delay of the John Rabbit
softly cooing to his mate.
It is the choice season of the year when there is a solemn hush resting over the whole
broad universe, a stillness like that which falls upon a peasant's
when the e-string of the leading violin dissolves partnership and hits the bass violinist in the eye.
There are indeed many things for which we individually and as a people should be devoutly thankful.
Think, for instance, how many Indians along our frontier have escaped violent deaths.
Consider for a moment how a long and bloody war has been avoided by the more gentle sway of peace.
See how the olive branch waves, where a few months ago, the toxin of war,
war echoed from the rugged hills of the west. The saber now hangs idly in its sheath,
and the alarms of war have petered out. See what a kind and considerate policy toward the
wild, untutored savage will do toward promoting the advance of universal civilization.
By means of the Boston Peace Plan, the opera and pin-pool and other adjuncts of wealth and
refinement will be placed within the reach of the most illiterate and worthless sons of the forest.
It is true we are looked upon by other nations
As the Republic with a warm molasses-pultus Indian policy
But right and softness and gentleness have overcome brute force and might
We of the West are too apt to be violent and radical in our treatment of the Indian
When he kills our family, all the family we have got, perhaps, too,
And leaves us a lonely widower with the graves of our mangled household to remember him by
We are too prone to be bitter and say mean hateful things about it.
him and run him down and destroy his boom. We do not stop to consider that this is all the fun he
has. We should learn to control ourselves and look upon the Indian as a diamond in the rough.
That's the way I do. I look upon color row as a regular cohenure. If he were only polished,
I would be willing to polish him too if I had time and felt strong enough. I would hold his
nose against an emery wheel or something of that kind very cheerfully if my time were not all taken
up. But I have wandered away from what I was going to say relative to the old year, and drifted
into the Indian question, thus crowding out many sweet little things, which I had mapped out to
say, of the snowy winding sheet which shrouds the dying year, and some more things of that
kind, touching and beautiful in the extreme. I have allowed other matters to take the place of
these little poetical passages and make a dull, prosy article of what I had intended to construct into a frail
and beautiful fabric with slender pinnacles, sublime arches, and Queen Anne Woodshed.
End of Chapter 5. Chapter 6 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Libervox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley.
Here we come, here we come, here we come, here we come. Bill Nye's 13th, Grand Sains.
semi-annual farewell circus and hippodrome.
Liver pad, the man-eating lion, liver-pad.
He eats nothing but fresh Ohio men.
Do not fail to see our mammoth Street Parade,
the Grand Oriental and Princely Pageant,
over nine miles in length, and don't you forget it.
It has been pronounced by the crowned heads of the world
to be the most scrumptious, mighty, and magnificent confederation of wonders.
nights in full panoply, ladies without any panoply on,
endless ranks of gold bedizant cages,
Rescherchet chariots, boss camels, with or without humps,
cages of mammoth reptilian angleworms,
lions stuffed with baled hay,
petrified circus chokes, preserved seats,
gazelle-like elephants, and a bang-up outfit generally.
It is well worth a journey of 100 miles to see a lot of,
alone, our mammoth band chariot, flecked with burnished gold, and costing $250 per fleck,
we will not be outflect. Bear in mind the time and place, Granite Canyon, August 14th,
afternoon and evening, with grand matinee for bald-headed men at 5 p.m. each day.
The famous Trakeen stallion, boomerang. I challenge the world to produce the equal of this
highly intellectual and amusing little cuss.
He stands on four feet at one in the same time in the mammoth pavilion,
and at one price of admission,
eating out of the hand with the utmost docility and reckless abandon.
Boomerang is the only living performing trick stallion ever born in captivity.
My mammoth electric light!
In connection with the untold and priceless splendor of the glittering pageant,
I will introduce the dynamo, hydrophosphatic periard.
a hillian electric light, in comparison with which the midday sun looks like a convalescent white
bean. In brilliancy and refulgent splendor, it without doubt lays over and
everlastingly knocks the socks off all other lights now in the known world. This statement,
I am prepared to back up with the necessary COPEX. The wonderful tattooed steer from
stinking water. If not exactly as represented, your money will be refunded to you as you, as you
pass out the door. This costly and truly picturesque queen and steer was secured at great cost to the
management and will positively appear every day in the regular program and within the mammoth pavilion.
If he does not in every respect do as I advertise and with one hand tied behind him, I will be
responsible. The Royal Mexican plug, Billy English, and the truly remarkable mule with a genuine
camel's hair tail, Winfield Scott Hancock. These animals, with almost human intelligence,
walk around the ring stepping first on one foot and then on the other. They have been
procured at enormous expense and may be found only with my stupendous aggregation of trained
animals. They represent the perfect pyramid at each performance as represented in the above
engraving. The steer, which performs upon the flying trapeze and horizontal bar,
The only steer that has ever successfully enacted the aerial dive or eagle swoop.
The wonderful performing steers, Azel, is the only one-horned, one-eared, and bob-tailed steer
ever-born in captivity. This steer is found alone with Bill Nye's great cast-iron hippodrome
and 27-carat utopian giganticum. The press cordially invited. I extend to the members of the press
everywhere a most hearty invitation. They will be furnished with luxuriant reclining chairs,
porcelain, cuspidores, and gold toothpicks to pick out the fragments of lemonade from their
pearly teeth. A special clown will be devoted to the members of the press. A guide will have
charge of visiting journalists to show them the curiosities and see that they do not forget
and carry anything away. Members of the press will be allowed to sit on the top seats and let their
feet hang down. Do not fool with the animals. Press comments. The Owl Town Bunghole says,
No living man has ever heretofore dared to perform all he advertised. Bill Nye certainly
has secured the most wonderful and costly galaxy of arrenic talent in the most perfect and
oriental conglomeration of grand, gloomy and peculiar zoological specimens from the four
corners of the globe. The editor and his 19 children, with his wife and hired girl,
were passed in yesterday by the handsome and gentlemanly, modest, and ladylike proprietor
of Bill Nye's ownest-owned and simultaneous world-renowned hippodrome and menagerie.
A card. A report has been set in circulation, probably by some unprincipled rival showman,
to the effect that I will not exhibit with my entire show at Granite Canyon, but that the main show will be
divided, the famous Trekin, stallion, boomerang going to Greeley,
the Royal Mexican plug, Billy English going to Whiskey Flat,
the mammoth reptilian angleworm, go into last chance,
the famous trick-mule, Winfield Scott Hancock, going to Thai City,
while the balance of the show would appear at Granite Canyon.
I pronounce this in all similar reports the most flagrant, lying, canards,
as I shall not only appear at Granite Canyon with my entire aggregation of my own
and only jam-up and scrumptious show and North American boss and Supreme Oriental and colossal menagerie
that at all points where I have advertised to appear. I make no show, but I can buy and sell
every show on the road before breakfast, and don't you forget it. I travel on my own special train,
and regular passenger and express trains are held while I have the ride away with my elegant
drawing room and palace cars for the animals, and colossal silver chariots for the
men. I exhibit also under my acres and acres of canvas, and two bits will admit you to all
parts of the show. Special trains will run to and from Granite Canyon on the day of the show
at regular rates. Simultaneously yours. Bill Nye. End of Chapter 6. Chapter 7 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or The Tale of a Meek-Eyed Mule, and some other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Libreau
recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Letter from Paris. Paris May 30, 1878. I am going to rest myself by writing a few pages in the
language spoken in the United States, for I am tired of the infernal lingo of this God-forsaken
country and feel like talking in my own mother tongue and on some other subject than the
exposition. I have very foolishly tried to talk a little of this tongue,
destroying French, but my teeth are so loose now that I'm going to let them tighten up again
before I try it anymore. Day before yesterday, it was very warm, and I asked two or three friends
to step into a big drugstore on the Rue de la Sitting Bull to get a glass of soda. I don't remember
the names of these streets, so in some cases I give them Wyoming names. I think the man who kept
the place probably came from Canada. Most of all the people in Paris are.
Canadians. He came forward and had a slight attack of Delirum Tremens and said,
Zeevulivu a la Boomerang? I patted the soda fountain and said,
No, not so bad as that, if you please. Just squeeze a little of your truck into a tumbler
and flavor it to suit the boys. As for myself, I will take about two fingers of bug juice
in mind to sweeten my breath. But he didn't understand me. His parents had neglected his
education, no doubt, and got him a job in a drug store. So I said,
Look here, you frog-hunting, red-headed communist. I will give you just five minutes to
fix up my beverage, and if you will put a little tangle foot into it, I will pay you.
Otherwise, I will pick up a pound weight and paralyze you. Now you understand.
Flavor it with spirituous frumenti, old rye, benzene, bay rum, anything.
Parley vu, i pluribusunum, si sempre go bra.
Do you understand that?
But he didn't understand it, so I had to kill him.
I am having him stuffed.
The taxidermist who is doing the job lives down on the Rue de la crazy woman's fork.
I think that it's the name of the Rue that he lives on.
Paris is quite an old town.
It is older and wicketer than Cheyenne, I think, but I may be prejudiced against the place.
It is very warm here this summer, and there are good many odors that I don't know the names of.
It is a great National Congress of rare imported smells.
I have detected and catalogued 1,350 out of a possible 1,400.
I have not enjoyed the exposition so much as I thought I was going to,
partly because it has been so infernally hot,
and partly because I have been a little homesick.
I was very homesick on board ship, very homesick indeed.
About all the amusement that we had crossing the wide waste of waters
was to go and lean over the ship's railing by the hour
and telescope the duodenum into the esophagus.
I used to stand that way and look down into the dark green depths of old ocean
and wonder what mysterious secrets were hidden beneath the green cold waves
and the wide rushing waste of swirling foamy waters.
I learned to love this weird picture at last
and used to go out on deck every morning
and swap my breakfast to this priceless panorama
for the privilege of watching it all day.
I can't say that I hanker very much for a life on the ocean wave.
I'm trying to arrange it so as to go home by land.
I think I can make up for the additional expense in food.
I bought more condemned sustenance
and turned it over to the Atlantic Ocean for inspection
than I have eaten since I came here.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of Bill Nyan Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule.
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Prehistoric crockery
During my rambles through the Madison Bow Range of the Rocky Mountains recently,
I was shown by an old frontiersman, a mound which, although worn down somewhat,
torn to pieces by the buffalo, the antelope, and the coyote,
still bore the appearance of having been at one time very large and high.
This, I was told, had no doubt been the burial place of some ancient tribe or race of men,
the cemetery perhaps of a nation now unknown.
Here in the heart of a new world where men who had known the region for 15 or 20 years are now called old-timers,
where new discoveries have been made within my own recollection,
we found the sepulchre of a nation that was old when the pilgrims landed on the shores of Columbia.
I am something of an antiquarian with all my new number.
charms, and I resolved to excavate at this spot and learn the hidden secrets of those people
who lived when our earth was young. I started to dig into the vast sarcophagus. The ground was very hard.
The more I worked, the more I felt that I was desecrating the burial place of a mighty race of men,
now powerless to defend themselves against the vandal hands that sought to mar their eternal slumber.
I resolved to continue my researches, according to the vicarious plan.
I secured the services of a hardened soulless hireling,
who did not wot of the solemn surroundings and who could dig faster than I could.
He proceeded with the excavation business while I sought a shady dell where I could weep alone.
It was a solemn thought indeed.
I murmured softly to myself.
The knights are dust, their swords are rust, their souls are rust, their souls,
are with the saints we trust. Just then a woodtick ran up one of my alabastered limbs about nine feet,
made a location, and began to do some work on it under the United States mining laws.
I removed him by force and submitted him to the dry crushing process between a piece of
mycaceous slate and a fragment of deodorized copper-stained manganese. But we were speaking of
the Aztecs, not the woodticks. Nothing on earth is old save by comparison.
The air we breathe, in which we are pleased to call fresh air, is only so comparatively.
It is the same old air.
As a recent air, it is not so fresh as silver threads among the gold.
It has been in one form and another through the ever-shifting ages all along the steady march of tireless time,
but it is the same old union of various gaseous elements floating through space,
only remodeled for the spring trade.
All we see or hear or feel is old.
Truth itself is old. Old and falling into disuse, too.
Outside of what I am using in my business, perhaps, not over two or three bales are now on the market.
Here in the primeval solitude, undisturbed by the foot of man,
I had found the crumbling remnants of those who once walked the earth in their might
and vaunted their strength among the powers of their world.
No doubt they had experienced the first wild thrill of all-powerful love
and thought that it was a new thing.
They had known with mingled pain and pleasure
when they struggled feebly against the omnipotent sway of consuming passion
that they were mashed,
and they flattered themselves that they were the first
and all the illimitable range of relentless years
who had been fortunate enough to get hold of the genuine thing.
All others had been base imitations.
Here, perhaps, on this very spot, the Aztec youth with a bright-eyed maiden on his arm,
had pledged lifelong fidelity to her shrine, and in the midnight silence had stolen away from her
with a pang of vigorous regret, followed by the sobs of his soul's idol in the demoralizing,
lead and reign of buckshot, with the compliments and best wishes of the old man.
While I was meditating upon these things, a glad shout from the scene of operations attracted my attention.
I rose and went to the scene of excavation and found, to my unspeakable astonishment and pleasure,
that the man had unearthed a large Queen Anne tear jug, with Etruscan work upon the exterior.
It was simply one of the old-fashioned single-barreled tear jugs made for a one-eyed man to cry into.
The vessel was about 18 inches in height by five or six inches in diameter, and similar to the cut above.
The graceful yet perhaps severe pottery of the Aztecs convinces me
that they were fully abreast of the present century
and their knowledge of the arts and sciences.
Space will not admit of an extended description of this ancient tear cooler,
but I'm still continuing the antiquarian researchers, vicariously, of course,
and will give this subject more attention during the summer.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9 of Bill Nyan Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Liberbox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Suggestions for a School of Journalism
A number of friends, having personally asked me to express an opinion
upon the matter of an established school of journalism
as spoken of by ex-Mayor Henry C. Robinson of Hartford, Connecticut,
and many more through the West who are strangers to me personally,
having written me to give my views upon the subject,
I have consented insofar that I will undertake a simple synopsis
of what the course should embrace.
I most heartily endorse the movement,
if it may be called such at this early stage.
Knowing a little of the intricacies of this branch of the profession,
I'm going to state fully my belief as to its importance
and the necessity for a thorough training upon it.
We meet almost everywhere,
newspaper men who are totally unfitted for the High Office of Public Educators through the all-powerful
press. The woods is full of them. We know that not one out of a thousand of those who are today
classified as journalists is fit for that position. I know that to be the case because people tell me so.
I cannot call to mine today in all my wide journalistic acquaintance a solitary man who has not
been pronounced an ass by one or more of my fellow men.
This is indeed a terrible state of affairs.
In many instances, these harsh criticisms are made by those who do not know,
without submitting themselves to a tremendous mental strain,
the difference between a lower-case cue and the old Calvinistic doctrine of unanimous damnation.
But that makes no difference.
The true journalist should strive to please the masses.
He should make his whole life a study of human nature and an earnest effort
to serve the great reading world collectively and individually.
This requires a man, of course, with similar characteristics
and the same general information possessed by the Almighty,
but who would be willing to work at a much more moderate salary.
The reader will instantly see how difficult it is to obtain this class of men,
outside of the mental giant who writes these lines and two or three others, perhaps.
But never mind.
I leave a grateful world to say that.
while I map out a plan for the ambitious young journalist
who might be entering upon the broad arena of newspaperdom
and preparing himself at a regularly established school for that purpose.
Let the first two years be devoted to meditation and prayer.
This will prepare the young editor for the surprise and consequent profanity
which in a few years he may experience when he finds in his boss editorial
that God is spelled with a little G,
and the peroration of the article has been taken out and careful,
locked up between a death notice and the announcement of the birth of a cross-eyed infant.
The ensuing five years should be sent and becoming familiar with the surprising and mirth-provoking
orthography of the English language. Then would follow three years devoted to practice with
dumbbells, sandbags, and slung shots, in order to become an athlete. I have found in my own
journalistic history more cause for regret will remind neglect of this branch than any other. I'm a pretty
good runner, but aside from that, I regret
to say that as an athlete, I am
not a dazzling success.
The above course of intermediate training
would fit the student to
enter upon the regular curriculum.
Then set aside
10 years for learning the typographical
art perfectly, so
that when visitors wish to look at the
composing room and ask the editor
to explain the use of the hellbox,
he will not have to blush and tell
a gauzy lie about its being
a composing stick.
Let the young journalists study the mysteries of typesetting,
distributing, press work, galleys, italic, shooting sticks, type lice,
and other mechanical implements of the printer's department.
Five years should be spent in learning to properly read and correct proof,
as well as how to mark it on the margin like a Chinese map of the Gunnison country.
At least 15 years should then be devoted to the study of American politics and the whole civil service.
This time could be.
be extended five years with great profit to the careful student, who wishes, of course, to know thoroughly
the names and records of all public men, together with the relative political strength of each party.
He should then take a medical course and learn how to bind up contusions, apply Arnica,
court plaster, or bandages, plug up bullet holes, and prospect through the human system for buckshot.
The reason of this course which should embrace five years of close study is apparent to the thinking mind
10 years should then be devoted to the study of law.
No thorough metropolitan editor wants to enter upon his profession
without knowing the difference between a writ of mandamus and other styles of profanity.
He should thoroughly understand the entire system of American jurisprudence
and be as familiar with the more recent decisions of the courts as New York people are
with the semi-annual letter of Governor Seymour declining the presidency.
The student will, by this time, begin to see that.
see what is required of him, and will enter with greater zeal upon his adopted profession.
He will now enter upon a theological course of ten years. He can then write a telling editorial
on the great question of what we shall do to be saved without mixing up Calvin and Tom Paine with
Judas Ascariat and Ben Butler. The closing ten years of the regular course might be profitably used
in learning a practical knowledge of cutting cordwood, baking beans, making shirts,
lecturing, turning double handsprings, preaching the gospel, learning how to make a good adhesive paste
that will not sour on hot weather, learning the art of scissors grinding, punctuation, capitalization,
prosody, plain sewing, music, dancing, sculpting, etiquette, how to win the affections of the opposite
sex, the Ten Commandments, Every Man His Own Teacher on the Violin, Croquet, Rules of the Prize Ring,
parlor magic, civil engineering, decorative art,
calcemining, bicycling, baseball, hydraulics,
botany, poker, calisthenics, high low jack,
international law, pharaoh, rhetoric, 15-ball pool,
drawing and painting, mule-skinned, vocal music,
horsemanship, plustering, bullwacking, etc., etc., etc.
At the age of 95, the student will have lost that wild,
reckless and impulsive style so common among younger and less experienced journalists.
He will emerge from the school with a light heart and a knowledge box loaded up to the muzzle
with the most useful information.
The heyday and springtime of life will of course be passed,
but the graduate will have nothing to worry him anymore,
except the horrible question which is ever rising up before the journalist
as to whether he shall put his money into government, 4%,
or purchase real estate in some growing town.
End of Chapter 9. Chapter 10 of Bill Nyan Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Fragrant Mormon
On Tuesday morning I went down to the depot to see a large train of ten cars loaded with imported Mormons.
I'm not very familiar with the workings of the Church of Latter-day Saints,
but I went down to see the 350 proselytes on their way to their adopted home.
I went simply out of curiosity.
Now my curiosity is satisfied.
I haven't got to look at a Mormon train again,
and it fills my heart with a nameless joy about the size of an elephant's lip
to think that I haven't got to do this anymore.
All through the bright years of promise yet to come,
I need not ever go out of my way to look at it,
these chosen people. When I was a boy, I had two terrible obstacles to overcome, and I have dreaded
them all my life until very recently. One was to eat a chunk of Limburger cheese, and the other
was to look at a Mormon emigrant train. After I visited the train, I thought I might as well go and
tackle the Limburger cheese and be out of my misery. I did so, and the cheese actually tasted
like a California pear and smelled like the adder of roses. It seemed to take the taste of the
Mormons out of my mouth. I sometimes look at a carload of Montana cattle or Western sheep,
and they seem to be a good deal travel worn and out of repair, but they are pure as the beautiful
snow in comparison to what I saw Tuesday morning. Along the Union Pacific track on either side,
the green grass and mountain flowers looked up into the glad sunlight, took one good smell, and
died. Cattle were driven off the range and the corpses of Overland tramps were strewn along the wake
of this train like the sands of the sea. Deacon Bullard, Joe Arthur, Timberline Jones, and myself
went over together. Deacon Bullard thought that the party was from Poland and went through the train
inquiring for a man named Orlando Standemoff. I claimed that they were Scandinavians,
and I followed him through the cars asking for a man named Tuchort Kettle Sun and numerous other son.
Neither of us were successful.
One of these Mormons was overtaken near Point of Rocks
with an irresistible desire to change his socks,
no poetry intended,
and before the brakeman could lariat him and kill him, he had done so.
The Union Pacific will abandon this part of the road now
and leave this point several miles away
rather than spend two millions of dollars for disinfectants.
End of Chapter 10
Chapter 11 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or The Tale of a Meekide Mule and Some Other Literary Gems, by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Recollections of the Opera
Most everyone thinks that I don't know much about music and the opera, but this is not the case.
I am very enthusiastic over this class of entertainment, and I will take the liberty to trespass upon the
and patience of my readers for a few moments, while I speak briefly, but graphically, on this
subject. A few evenings ago, I had the pleasure of listening to the rendition of the Bohemian
girl by Emmett Abbott entered troupe at the Grand Opera House. I was a little late, but the
manager had saved me a pleasant seat where I could alternately look at the stage and out through
the skylight into the clear autumn sky. The plot of the play seemed to be that Arlene, a nice
little chunk of a girl is stolen by a band of gypsies, owned and operated by Devil's Hoof,
who looks some like Othello and some like sitting bull. Arlene grows up among the gypsies and falls
in love with Thaddeus. Thaddeus was played by Brignoli. Brignoli was named after a thoroughbred
horse. Arlene falls asleep in the gypsy camp and dreams a little Majolica dream, which she tells
to Thaddeus. She says that she dreamed that she dwelt
in marble halls and kept a girl and had a pretty fly time generally. But after all she said,
it tickled her more to know that Thaddeus loved her still the same. And she kept saying this to him
in G, and up on the upper register, and down on the second added line below, and crescendo and
diminuendo and duy decimo, forward and back, and swing opposite lady to place till I would have
given a thousand shares paid up non-accessible stock in the boomerang if I could have been Thad.
Brignoli, however, did not enter into the spirit of the thing.
He made me mad, and if it hadn't been for him, I would have put on my hat and gone home.
He'd look like the man who first discovered and introduced buck beer into the country.
She would come and put her sunny head up against his cardigan jacket
and put one white arm on each shoulder and sing like a bobbolink
and tell him how all fired glad she was that he was still solid.
I couldn't help thinking how small a salary I would be.
willing to play Thaddeus for, but he stood there like a basewood man with Tobius movement,
and stuck his arms out like a sore toe and told her an F that he felt greatly honored by her
attention and hoped someday to be able to retaliate, or words to that effect. I don't want any
trouble with Brignoli, of course, but I am confident I can lick him with one hand tied behind me,
and although I seek no quarrel with him, he knows my post office address, and I can mop the North
American continent with his remains, and don't you forget it. After a while, the gypsy queen,
who is jealous of Arlene, puts up a job on her to get her arrested, and she is brought up before her
father, who is a justice to the peace for that precinct, and he gives her $25 in trimmings or 30 days in the
best deal. By and by, however, he catches sight of her arm and recognizes her by a large red goddess of
liberty tattooed on it, and he remits the fine and charges up the costs to the county.
Her father wants her to marry a newspaper man and live in affluence, but Arlene still hankers for
Thad and turns her back in the oriental magnificence of life with a journalist. But Thaddeus is poor.
All he seems to have is what he can gather from the community after office hours, and the chickens
begin to roost high, and he is despondent, apparently. Just as Arlene is going to,
to marry the newspaper man, according to the wishes of her paw, Thaddeus sails in with an appointment
as notary public, bearing the governor's big seal upon it, and Arlene pitches into the old man and
plays it pretty fine on him until he relents, and she marries Thadius, and they go to housekeeping
over on the west side, and he makes a bushel of money as notary public, and everybody sings,
and the band plays, and she is hisn, and he is heron. There is a good deal. There is a good deal,
a singing in this opera. Most everybody sings. I like good singing myself. Emma Abbott certainly
warbles first rate, and her lovemaking takes me back to the halicon days and I cared more for the
forbidding future of my mustache and less for meal time than I do now. But Brignolle is no singer,
according to my aesthetic taste. He sings like a man who hasn't taken out his second papers yet,
and his stomach is too large. He gets in the way, and Arlene has to go around it and lean up on
his flank when she wants to put her head on his breast.
End of Chapter 11.
Chapter 12 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A Sunny Little Incident
Thursday evening, and company with a friend,
I rode up into the city on the Rock Island train,
and was agreeably surprised by seeing a rocky mountain.
mountain man, a few seats ahead, sitting with a lady who seemed to be very much in love with him,
and he was trying the best he knew to outgush her. Now the gentleman's wife was at home in Wyoming
and blissful ignorance of all this business while he was ostensibly buying his fall and winter stock
of goods in Chicago. The most obtuse observer could see that the companion of this man was not his
wife, for she was gentle toward him, and looked lovingly in his eyes. Everyone in the car,
laid aside all other business and watched the performance.
Then I whispered to my friend and said,
"'That is not the wife of that man.
I can tell by the way they look into the depths of each other's eyes
and ignore the other passengers.
I'll bet ten dollars he has seven children and a wife at home right now.
Isn't it scandalous?'
"'You can't always tell that way,' said my friend.
"'I've seen people who had been married twenty years
who are just as loving and spoony as that.'
He was biting a little, so I kept at him till he put up the $10 and agreed to leave it with the man himself.
It was taking an advantage of my friend, of course, but he had played a miserable joke on me only a few days before.
So I covered the $10 and walking up to the man.
I slapped him on the shoulder and said,
Hello, George, how do you think you feel?
He looked around surprised and amazed, as I knew he would be, but he wouldn't let on that he knew me.
So I slapped him on the shoulder again and gurgled a low musical laugh that welled up from the merry depths of my joyous nature and filled the car full of glad and childlike melody.
My friend came forward and said,
Mr. Van Horn, let me make you acquainted with Mr. Nye of Wyoming, who lives in a wild country where everyone goes up to everyone else and says,
hello, George or Jim, no matter whether he is acquainted or not.
He mustn't pay any attention to it at all.
he don't mean anything by it. It is his way. It was Mr. Van Horn who had lived in Illinois
for 35 years and had been married 10 years to the lady who sat with him. That evening, my friend and I
went to Hulies to see Robson and Crane in the Comedy of Errors. The play is supposed to be funny.
Several people laughed at the performance at various stages, but I did not. For just as I would get
to feeling comfortable, the man who sat next to me and who claimed to be a friend,
of mine would lean over and say,
Hello, George, how do you think you feel?
Then he would burst forth into the coarsest and most vulgar laughter.
How few people there are in the world who seem to thoroughly understand the eternal
fitness of things, and how many there are who laugh gaily on in the presence of those
who suffer in silence, and with superhuman strength stifle their corroding woe.
End of Chapter 12.
Chapter 13 of Bill Nyan Boomerang, or the
the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
He rewarded her. A noble, generous-hearted man in Cheyenne lost $250 on Saturday at the Key City
House, and an honest chambermaid found it in his room. The warm heart of the band swelled
with gratitude and seemed to reach out after all mankind that he might in some way assist
them with the $250 which was lost and was found again. So he fell on the neck of the chambermaid,
and while his tears took the starch out of her linen collar, he put his hand in his pocket,
and found her a counterfeit 25-cent scrip. Take this, he said, between his sobs,
virtue is its own reward. Do not use it unwisely, but put it into Laramie County bonds,
where thieves cannot corrupt, nor moths break through and gnaw the corners off.
End of Chapter 13
Chapter 14 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Modern Parlor Stove
In view of the new and apparently complex improvements in heating stoves
and the difficulty of readily operating them successfully,
a word or two as to their correct management may not be
of place at this time. Sometimes since, having worn out my old stove and thrown it aside,
I purchased a new one called the Fearfully and Wonderfully Made. It had been highly spoken of by a friend,
so I set it up in the parlor, turned on steam, threw the throttle wide open, and waited to see
how it would operate. At the first stroke of the piston, I saw that something was wrong with
a reversible turbine wheel, and I heard a kind of grating sound, no doubt,
caused by the rubbing of the northeast trunnion on the faceplate of the ratchet slide.
Being utterly ignorant of the workings of the stove,
I attempted to remedy this trouble without first reversing the boomerang,
and in a few moments the gas accumulated so rapidly that the crosshead gave way,
and the right ventricle of the buffer beam was blown higher than Gilroy's kite,
carrying with it the saddle plate, bull wheel, and monkey wrench.
Of course it was very careless to overlook what the merest schoolboy up,
to know, for not only were all these parts of the stove a total wreck, but the crank arbor,
walking beam, and throat latch were twisted out of shape, and so mixed up with a feed cam,
tumbling rod, thumb-screw, dial plate, and colic indicator that I was obliged to send for a
practical engineer at an expense of $150 with board and traveling expenses to come and fix it up.
Now, there is nothing more simple than the operation of one of these stoves with the most ordinary
common sense. At first, before starting your fire, see that the oblique diaphragm and eccentric
shaft are in their true position, then step to the rear of the stove, and reverse the guide plate,
say three-quarters of an inch, force the stretcher bar forward and loosen the gangplank. After this,
start your fire, throw open that lemon squeezer, and right oblique hydraulic, see that the tapeworm
pinion and Aurora Borealis are well-oiled, bring the roe the road.
Pottery Pitman forward until it corresponds with the main top mizzen, let go the smokestack,
horizontal duodenum, thoroughbrace, and breechpin, and as the stove begins to get underway,
you can slide forward the camera, see that the ramrod is in its place,
unscrew the cerebellum, allow the water gauge to run up to about 75 degrees in the shade,
keep your eye on the usufruct, and the stove cannot fail to give satisfaction.
The fearfully and wonderfully made may not be a cheap or durable stove,
but for simplicity and beauty of execution,
she seems to excel and lay over and everlastingly get away with all other stoves
by a very large majority.
End of Chapter 14.
Chapter 15 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or The Tale of a Meek-Eyed Mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox Recordings in the Public Domain,
read by Dale Barkley.
Remarks to originators. It is the wild delight which comes with the glad moment of discovery and the feeling that he is treading on unexplored ground that thrills the genius, whether he be a writer, a speaker, an inventor of electric light, or the man who first gets the idea for a new style of suspender.
Thinks how Carl Schurts must have broken forth into a grand piano voluntary when he knew for a dead moral certainty that he had struck a new leaf.
in the Indian policy. It was the sweet feeling of newness, such as we feel when for the first time
we put on a new rough flannel undershirt, and it occupies our attention all the time, and brings us to the
scratch. Think how the 2,571 originators of beautiful snow must have felt when they woke up in the night
and composed 17 or 18 stanzas of it with the mercury at 43 degrees below par.
Think how Franklin must have felt when he invented electricity,
and knew that he had at last found something
that could be used in sending cipher dispatches over the country.
Think how Hayes must have danced the Highland Flang
around the executive mansion
when the first idea of civil service reform
dashed like a sheet of lightning through his brain.
These are only a few isolated illustrations of the unalloyed joy of discovery.
They go to show, however, that the true genius
and the true originator, whether he be simply the first man to work the vein of an idea,
or the inventor of a patent safety pin, is the man who makes the world better.
He is the boss. He is the man to whom we look for delightful surprises and pleasant items of the world's progress.
Then do not be discouraged, ye who linger along the worn-out ruts where others have traveled.
Brace up and press onward. Perhaps you may invent a new style of spelling, or
something unique in the line of profanity. Do not lose hope. Hope on, hope ever. Give your attention to the
matter of improving the average Indian editorial. Or if you cannot do even this, go into your laboratory
and work nights till you invent a deadly poison that will knock the immortal soul out of the average
bed bug, or produce a frightful mortality among cockroaches, or book agents, or some other
annoying insect.
Invent a directory or a glittering falsehood or a napkin ring or a dog collar or a corkscrew.
Do something, no matter how small, for the advancement of civilization.
End of Chapter 15.
Chapter 16 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or The Tale of a Meekide Mule and Some Other Literary Gems
by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Queer
An exchange says that the people of that locality
were considerably excited the other day
over a three-cornered dog fight that occurred there.
This is not surprising.
Had it been simply a combat between oblong or rectangular dogs
or even a short but commonplace fight
between rhomohedral or octagonal dogs,
it would not have attracted any attention.
But an engagement between triangular dogs
is something that calls forth our wonder and surprise.
End of Chapter 16.
Chapter 17 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Sick Semper Gloria House Plant
Evidently, it is an ill wind that blows nobody good,
although this severe weather froze up the water,
water barrel and doubles the coal bill, I am filled with a great large feeling of gratitude and
pleasure this evening for the last pale house plant, which for two or three weeks has been
sighing for immortality. Last night about midnight got all the immortality it wanted, and this morning,
no doubt, it is blooming in the New Jerusalem. I'm glad it will bloom somewhere, never got up
steam enough to bloom here. The head of the house thought he heard the rustle of wings in the still
hours of night, and a rising in all the voluptuous sweep of his night robe, and with the clear white
beams of the winter moon and lighting up the angles and gothic architecture of his picturesque proportions,
he stepped to the bedside of the sickly little thing to ask if there was anything he could do,
any last words that the little plant would like to have preserved, or anything of the kind,
but it was too late. John Frost had been there and touched the little thing with his icy finger,
and all was still.
The agricultural editor breathed the sigh of relief
and went back to rest,
neglecting to awaken the other members of the house
because he did not want a scene.
Anyone desiring a medium-sized flower pot,
as good as new,
can obtain one at this office very reasonably.
End of Chapter 17.
Chapter 18 of Bill Nayan Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule
and some other literary gems.
by Bill Nye. This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
How to Tell. For the benefit of my readers, many of whom are not what might be called
practical newspaper men and women, I will say that if your time is very precious,
and life is too short for you to fool away your evenings reading local advertisements,
and you are at times engraved out as to what is advertisement and what is news,
just cast your eye to the bottom of the article,
and if there is a footnote,
which says,
TY4, F-R-I-T-U-3-D-P-A-M-P-A-M-R-J-R-N-E-R-J-E-R-J-5-T-F,
or something of that stripe,
you may safely say that no matter how much confidence
you may have had in the editor up to that date,
The article with a footnote of that kind is published from a purely mercenary motive,
and the editor may or may not endorse the sentiments therein enunciated.
End of Chapter 18.
Chapter 19 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or The Tale of a Meek-Eyed Mule, and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Biography of Color Row
Brigadier General William H. Collarrow was born on the frontier in July 1824 of poor but honest parents.
Early in 1843, he obtained the appointment to West Point through the influence of his congressman.
While at West Point, he was the leader of the Young Men's Christian Association, and now if the army officers knew the grips,
passwords, and signals of the association, and would use them, much good might be accomplished in
bringing the general to terms, as he still respects the organization.
But most of the army officers are a little rusty in the secret work of the YMCA.
Lieutenant Colorow, after graduating at the head of his class,
came West to engage in the scalp trade, in which he has been very successful.
Colorow's great oriental hair-raiser and scalp agitator is known and respected all over the civilized world.
He has also held the position of Master of Transportation on the airline route from Colorado to Kingdom Come.
His promotion has been rapid and his career has been filled with wonderful incidents.
General Colorow is not above the medium height.
He wears his hair straight and parted in the middle, a habit he contracted while at West Point.
He sometimes parts the white man's hair in the middle also.
He does it with his little hatchet.
He is rather inclined to the brunette order of architecture with Gothic nose, East Lake Jaws, and ears of the Queen Anne's style.
His hair is turning gray and his faces burned and specked with powder, caused by an explosion which came near terminating an eventful career.
Brigadier General Colorow owns considerable stock in some of the best North Park mines.
Occasionally, he goes out to the park to see how these mines are panning out.
Then the miners, out of respect for his feelings, leave the mines and come into town to see what is the latest news from the front.
Some of the miners have neglected to come in at times when the general was visiting the mines.
They are there yet.
I have a mine out there, but I'm getting along first rate without it,
and I have been thinking that when the general celebrates his silver wedding,
I will send up this mine to his residence, wrapped up in a clean napkin, with his monogram worked on it.
End of Chapter 19
Chapter 20 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Diary of a saucy Young Thing
It may be wrong to publish the contents of a diary,
but the following notes in a new diary found yesterday are too good to lose.
January 1, 1877.
Today is New Year's Day.
Last night was Sunday night.
I remember it distinctly.
George and I watched the old year out and the new year end.
George is awful kind-hearted.
He has quit using tobacco on my account.
He hasn't taken a chew this year.
January 3rd.
I didn't get time to write anything yesterday.
January 4th.
This is Thursday.
Day after tomorrow will be Saturday.
The next day will be Sunday.
January 8th.
George was here last evening. I found some tobacco in his overcoat. Can he be deceiving me? Oh, what false hearts men have. We had popcorn last evening. George and I ate a milk pan full. He says popcorn seems to supply a want, long felt. I don't know where he heard that. January 9th, another long week before the blessed rest and quiet of the Sabbath. I met George yesterday near the post office.
and he didn't laugh as he once laughed.
I wonder what makes him so sad.
Maybe it's going without tobacco, or perhaps it's a boil.
Oh, what a world of woe.
January 10th.
George is trying to raise a mustache.
It looks like a Norwegian's eyebrow.
It is genuine camel's hair.
George's mother treats him unkindly because he has pearl powder on his coat sleeves Monday morning.
Four more days, and the peace and quiet of the Sabbath will be here.
I am a great admirer of Sunday.
January 11th.
Today is Thursday.
Oh, Pasha, I can't keep a diary.
End of Chapter 20.
Chapter 21 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Liber Vox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Killing Off the James Boys
Now that a terrible mortality,
has again broken out among the James Boys, it is but justice to a family who have received
so many gratuitous obituary notices to say that the James Boys are still alive and enjoying
a reasonable amount of health and strength. Although the papers are generally agreed upon the
statement that they are more or less dead, yet in a few days the telegraph will announce their
death again. They are dying on every hand. Hardly a summer Zephyr stirs the waving grass
that it does not bear upon its wings the dying groan of the James Boys.
Every blast of winter howls the requiem of a James Boy.
James Boys have died in Texas and in Minnesota, in New England, and on the Pacific Coast.
They have been yielding up the ghost whenever they had a leisure moment.
They would rob a bank or a printing office or some other place where wealth is known to be stored,
and then they would die.
When business was very active, one of the brothers would stay at home
and attend to work, while the other would go and lay down his life.
Whenever the yellow fever let up a little, the grim destroyer would go for a James boy
and send him to his long home.
The men who have personally and individually killed the James boys from time to time
contemplate holding a grand mass meeting and forming a new national party.
This will no doubt be the governing party next year.
Let us institute a reform.
Let us ignore the death of every plug who claims to be.
be a James boy unless he identifies himself. Let us examine the matter and see if the trademark is on
every wrapper or blown in the bottle before we fill the air with woe and bust the broad canopy of
heaven wide open with our lamentations over the untimely death of the James boys. If we succeed in
standing them off while they live, we can afford to control our grief and silently battle with our
emotions when they are still in death, until we know we are snorting and bellowing.
over the correct corpse.
End of Chapter 21.
Chapter 22 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley.
A Relic
The Hutchinson family gave a concert last evening
at the Methodist Church,
according to advertisement,
and were greeted with a fair house.
The entertainment did not awaken very loud applause,
not very much of it. The songs were not new. Many of them I had almost forgotten, but they were
trotted out last evening and driven around the track in pretty fair time. The fresh little quartet
entitled Tommy Don't Go was brought forward during the entertainment. I could see that this
song has failed very much since I last met it. Its teeth are falling out and it is getting very
bald-headed. It will probably make two or three more grand farewell concerts and then it will be
found dead in its bed some morning before breakfast. Silver threads among the gold was omitted from the
program. The old Melodian that I remember was rickety and out of repair when I was a prattling infant
was on the stage last evening. It is about the size of a mouth organ, but the tone is not as clear.
It is getting wheezy and a short breath shows that it is beginning to feel the infirmities of age.
The pumping arrangement makes more noise than the music, and something is the man.
matter with the exhaust pipe. But when the old man opened the throttle and gave her sand,
she would make a good deal of racket for such a little thing. After the concert was over,
Mr. Hutchinson rolled up the Melodian in his pocket handkerchief and took it home.
Take the entertainment up one side and down the other. I was not much tickled with it.
For those who'd like to drift back into the musty centuries gone by and shake hands with
the skeletons of forgotten ages, it is all right. But the time has come when a time has come when a
troop cannot travel upon anything but true merit, and the public require that those who ask for
money shall give some kind of an equivalent.
End of Chapter 22.
Chapter 23 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule, and some other
literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Some reasons why I can't be an Indian agent.
I see by the Western press that my name has been suggested to the Secretary of the Interior
as a suitable one for the appointment of Indian agent at the Uncompagre Agency to succeed Barry,
and while I must express my grateful acknowledgement for the apparent faith and childlike confidence
reposed in me by the people of Colorado, I must gently but firmly decline the proffered distinction.
In the first place, my other duties will not admit of it.
time is very much occupied at present in my journalistic work, and should there be a falling off in my
chaste and picturesque contributions to the press, the great surging world of literature would be surprised
and grieved. Again, I could not entirely lay aside this class of work anyway, even were I to
accept the position, and as I cannot write without being wrapped in the most opaque gloom and perfect
calm, I would be annoyed, I know, by the war-whoops of the savage when he got to play in croquet in
the front yard. And whenever he got to shooting at me through the window while I was composing a poem,
I am perfectly positive that I would get restless, and the divine aphlatus would cease to give down.
The true poet loves seclusion and soothing rest. That is the secret of his even numbers and smooth
cadences. Look at Dryden and Walt Whitman and Milton and Burns and the sweet singer of Michigan.
What could any of them have done with the houseful of children of the forest who were hankering for a
fresh pail of gore for lunch? Further than this, I have not that gentle magnetic power over the
untutored savage that some have. I am agitated all the time by a nervous dread that if I go
near him, I may lose my self-command and kill him. I would lose my temper someday when I felt
irritable, I'm afraid, and shoot into a drove of them and mangled them horribly if they refused to dig
the potatoes or got rebellious and wouldn't do the fall plowing. Then I would have to hunt up a suitable
military post, 200 or 300 miles away, and stay there till the popular feeling in the tribe had
cooled down a little. Then again, the Utes would invite me to attend the regular social
hops during the winter, and I would know what to do, for it would be bad policy to refuse,
and yet I don't know the first figure of the war dance. I danced like a club-footed camel anyway,
and when I got mixed up in the scalp dance, the floor manager would get mad at me, probably,
and chop some large, irregular notches in me with a broad axe. Then their costumes are so low-necked
and so exceedingly dress, and everything is so all-fired decollette, whatever that is, I would probably
insist on wearing a liver pad on a chillblane, and they wouldn't dance with me all the evening,
and I would be a wallflower, and they would call me a perfect dud, and would laugh at the way my liver pad
was cut, and I would go home and cry myself to sleep over the whole miserable affair,
so that perhaps it would be just as well to plug along as I am, and not get ambitious.
The life of the ostensible humorist may not be so fraught with untrammeled nature and sylvan
retreats and wild picturesque canyons and bosquidels and things of that kind, but it is cheering
and comforting to put your hand on the top of your head and feel that it is still on deck,
and although wealth may not come pouring in upon you in such an irresistible torrent as you may
desire, you know that if you can get enough to eat from day to day and dodge the vigilance
committee and the celluloid pie, you are comparatively safe. Besides all this, I'm afraid I am not
and proper spiritual shape to go among the Indians. Suppose that on some softened, mellow,
autumnal day, they were all clustered about me with the bacon, grease, and war paint on every
childlike countenance, and while I stood there in the midst of all the autumn splendor with
the woods clothed and all the gorgeous apparel of the deceased year, telling them of the
beauties of industry and peace and the glad, unfettered life of the buckwheat promoter, or while I read
a passage of scripture to them and was explaining it, and they were looking at it, and they were
looking up into my face with their great fawn-like eyes. All at once, one of them should playfully
shoot my wife, all the wife I had, too, or my hired girl. The chances are about even that I would
throw down the Bible and fly into an ungovernable rage and swear and be just as harsh and rude
and unreasonable as I could be. Then, after I had hammered the immortal soul of the entire tribe,
and my wrath had spanned itself, I would probably bitterly regret.
at all. Oh, it's of no use. I can't accept a position. I've been in the habit of swearing at the
spring poet, and the constant reader too long, and I know just as well as anyone how it unfits me
for every walk of life that requires meekness and gentle Christian forbearance.
End of Chapter 23
Chapter 24 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary
gems by Bill Nye. This Libervox recording is in the public domain. Read by Dale Barkley.
The picnic snoozers lament. Gently lay aside the picnic for its usefulness is oar, and the winter
style of misery stands and knocks upon your door. Lariat, the lonely oyster drifting on some
foreign shore, Zion needs him in her business. She can use him oar and oar. Bring along the lonely
oyster with the winter style of gloom and the supper for the pastor with its victims for the tomb.
Cast the pudding for the pastor with its double iron door, it will gather in the pastor for the bright
and shining shore. Put away the little picnic till the coming of the spring.
Useless now the swaying hammock and the idle picnic swing. Put away the pickled spider and the
cold-pressed picnic fly, and the decorated trousers with their wealth of custard pie.
End of Chapter 24.
Chapter 25 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Bellius Nye and Boomerang in the gold mines.
Whenever the cares of life weigh too heavily upon me, and the unwee which comes to those who have more wealth and they know what to do with, settles down upon me, and I get weary of sense.
civilization, I like to load up my narrow-gauge mule boomerang and take a trip into the mountains.
I call my mule boomerang because I never know where he is going to strike. He is a perpetual
surprise to me in this respect. A protracted acquaintance with him, however, has taught me to stand in front
of him when I address him, for the recoil of boomerang is very disastrous. Boomerang is much
below the medium height, with a sad, far-away look in his eye. He has an expression of woe and
disappointment and gloom, because life has been to him a series of blasted hopes and shattered
ambitions. In his youth, he yearned to be the trick-mule of a circus, and though he fitted himself for
that profession, he finds himself in the decline of life with his bright anticipations nothing
but a vast and robust ruin. About all the relaxation he has is to induce some trusting stranger
to caress his favorite chillblane,
and then he kicks the confiding stranger so high
that he can count the lampposts on the streets of the New Jerusalem.
When Boomerang and I visit a mining camp,
the supplies of giant powder and other combustibles are removed
to some old shaft and placed under a strong guard.
In one or two instances, where this precaution was not taken,
the side of the camp is now a desolate, barren waste,
occupied by the prairie dog and the jackrabbit.
When Boomerang finds a nitroglycerin can in the heart of a flourishing camp,
and has room to throw himself,
he can arrange a larger engagement for the coroner than any mule I ever saw.
There is a new camp in the valley of the Big Laramie River
near the dividing line between Wyoming and Colorado.
A few weeks ago, the murmur of the rapid river down the canyon
and the cheerful solo of the coyote alone were heard.
Now, several hundred anxious excited miners are prospecting
for gold, and the tent town grows apace. Up and down the sides of the river, and over the side of the
mountain, every little way and notice greets the eye announcing that the undersigned claim,
1,500 feet in length by 300 feet, and width upon, the load known as the Popper's Dream,
or the Blue Tail Fly, or the Blind Tom, or the Captain Kid, or the pigeon-toed peat,
with all the dips, spurs, angles, gold and silver-bearing rock on earth, therein.
contained. I have a claim further on in the North Park of Colorado. I've always felt a little
delicate about working it because heretofore several gentlemen from the Ute Reservation on White
River have claimed it. They are the same parties who got into a little difficulty with Agent Meeker
and killed him. Of course these parties are not bona fide citizens of the United States and therefore
cannot hold my claim under the mining law, but I have not as yet raised the point with them.
they would go over into the park for rest and recreation, I would respect their feelings and withdraw.
I didn't know, but they might have some private business which they did not wish me to overhear,
so I came away. Once I came away in the night. It is cooler traveling in the night and does not
attract so much attention. Last summer, Antelope and his band came over into the park and told the
miners that he would give them one sleep to get out of there. I told them that I didn't care much for sleep
anyhow, and I would struggle along somehow till I got home. I told him that my constitution
would stand at first rate without rest, and I felt as though my business in town might be suffering
in my absence. So I went home. The mine is there yet, but I would sell it very reasonably,
very reasonably indeed. I do not apprehend any trouble from the Indians, but I have lost my interest in
mines to some extent. The Indians are not all treacherous and bloodthirsty as some would suppose,
Only the live ones are that way.
Wooden Indians are also to be relied on.
In digging an irrigating ditch on the Laramie Plains last summer,
the skeleton of an Indian chief was plowed up.
I went to look at him.
He had no doubt been dead many years,
but in the dry alkaline divide in an elevation of nearly 8,000 feet above sea level,
his skull had been preserved pretty well.
I took it in my hand and looked it over and shook the sand out of it
and convinced myself that life was extinct.
An Indian is not always dead when he has that appearance.
I always feel a little timid till I see his scapula and ribs and shin bones
mixed up so that Gabriel would rather arrange a 15 puzzle
than to fix up an Indian out of the wreck.
Then I have the most childlike faith and confidence in him.
When some avenging fate overtakes a yute and knocks him into pie
and thus makes a pie-yut out of him
and flattens him out like a postage-stitch-stitching.
and pulverizes him and runs him over the amalgator and assays him so that he lies in the retort like a sedlets powder,
then I feel that I can trust him. I do not care then how much the cold world may scoff at him.
Prior to that, I am very reserved and very reticent.
That is why I presented my mind to the Ute Nation as a slight token of my respect and esteem.
Then I went away. I did not hurry much, but I had every inducement and encouragement to reach home,
at the earliest possible moment, and the result was very gratifying, very much so indeed.
I left my gun in ammunition, but it did not matter. It wasn't a very good gun anyhow.
I do not need it. Anyone going into the park this summer can have it. It is standing behind
the door of the cabin between the piano and the what-not.
End of Chapter 26 of Bill Nyan Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Two great men.
Mr. Thompson, Secretary of the Navy, passed through here on his way to San Francisco
on Wednesday evening with his party.
In company with Delegate Downey, Judge Blair, and United States Marshal Schnitger,
I went into the secretary's special car and talked with him while the train stopped here.
The other members of the party did most of the talking,
and I eloquently sat on the back of a chair
and whistle a few bars from a little operetta
that I am having cast at a rolling mill.
I'm not very hilarious in the presence of great men.
I'm not so much at home in their society
as I am in my own quiet little boudoir
with one leg over the piano
and the other tangled up among the $2,500 lace curtains
and Majolica dogs.
By and by I thought that I had better show the secretary
that I knew more than the casual observer would suppose,
and I said, Mr. Thompson, how's your Navy looking this summer? Have you shared your ironclad
rams yet? And if so, what will the clip average, do you think? He laughed a merry,
rippling laugh, and said if he were at home, he would swear that he was in the presence of the
mental giant William G. Le Duc. I was very much pleased with the secretary. This will
ensure the brilliant success of his western trip. He paid the Laramie Plains a high compliment,
said they were greener and the grass was far superior to that of any part of the country through which he had passed.
He said he was as positive of Garfield's election as he was of reaching San Francisco
and chatted pleasantly upon the general topics of the day.
I could see that he was accustomed to the very best society,
for he stood there in the blinding glare of my dazzling beauty,
as self-possessed and cool as though he were at home talking with Ben Butler and Conkling and Carpenter
and other rising young men.
There is a striking resemblance between the secretary and myself.
We are both tall and slender with roguish eyes and white hair.
His, however, is white from age, and is a kind of blueish white.
Mine is white because it never had moral courage or strength of character enough to be any other color.
It also has more of a lemon-colored tinge to it than the secretaries has.
We resemble each other in several more respects.
One is that we are both United States officials.
He is a member of the cabinet, and I am a United States Commissioner.
We are both great men, but I have succeeded better in keeping it a profound secret than he has.
End of Chapter 26.
Chapter 27 of Bill Nye and Boomerane, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barter.
Dirty Murphy
On Thursday, a man known by the Castilian Gnome de Plume of Dirty Murphy
was engaged in digging out a frozen water pipe in front of the New York House
when the glowing inspiration came upon him that the frozen earth could be blasted
much easier than it could be dug, so he drilled a hole down to the pipe and put in a shot
preparatory to lifting a large portion of the universe out by the roots and laying bare the
foundations of the earth. John Humphner, the ramrod of the New York House, feared that the
explosion might break the large French plate-glass windows of his palatial hotel, and so put a
wash-tub over the blast. What the exact notion of Mr. Humphner was relative to the result in this
case, I am unable to say, but when the roar of the universal convulsion had died away,
and the result was examined by Mr. Humphner and the Count de Dirty Murphner, and the Count de
Dirty Murphy, they looked surprised. Instead of blowing out a large tract of land and laying
bare the entire water and gas system of the city, the blast blew out like a sick firecracker with a loose
fuse, and taking the wash-tub with it sailed away into the realms of space. It crashed through the
Milky Way and passed on in its mad flight into the boundless stretch of the unknown. Those who saw
the affair, and had no interest in the wash-tub, enjoyed it very much. But to the incorporators and bondholders
who held the controlling interests in the tub, the whole thing seemed a hollow mockery and a desolate,
dreary waste. Don Miguel de Dirty Murphy swooned on the spot. The hose has been playing on him
ever since, but he has not returned to consciousness. The later geological formations have been
washed away, and it is thought that by working a night shift, prehistoric and volcanic and crustaceans
will be removed, so that the pores may be opened and life and animation return, but it is a long,
tedious job, and the superintendent is beginning to despair.
End of Chapter 27.
Chapter 28 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule, and some other literary gems
by Bill Nye.
Suburvaox recordings in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A Rocky Mountain Sunset.
Speaking of the hours of closing day reminds me that we have recently witnessed some of the most
brilliant and beautiful sunsets here that I have ever seen.
Injustice to Wyoming, I will say that she certainly deserves a word for the gorgeous
splendor of her summer sunset skies.
The air is perfectly pure, and at that hour the sighing Zephyr seems to have
side about all it wants to and dies away to rest. The pulse of tired nature is almost still,
and the luxurious sense of rest is upon the face of the silent world. The god of day
drops slowly down the crimson west, as though he reluctantly bade adieu to the grassy plains
and rugged hills. Anon the golden bars of resplendent light are shot across the deep blue of heaven.
The fleecy clouds are tipped and bordered with pale gold, while the heavy billows of bronze
are floating in a mighty ocean of the softest azure.
The blue grows deeper and the gold more dazzling.
The scarlet becomes intensified,
and the softened east takes up to magnificent reflection.
The hills and mountains are bathed in the beams of this Occidental Splendor,
and the landscape adorns itself in honor of nature's most wonderful diurnal spectacle.
It is certainly the boss.
These mountains sunsets in the pure, clear air of Wyoming and
Colorado, as thrilling triumphs of natural loveliness, most unquestionably take the cake.
The Italian sunset is a good fair average sunset, but the admission is too high. It also lacks
expression, an en bon point, whatever that may be. May it be it is not ambon point, which it lacks,
but it is something of that nature. These beautiful sights awake the poet's soul within me,
and on one occasion I wrote a little ode or apostrophe to the sun,
set, which was as sweet a little thing as I ever saw in the English language.
But the taxidermist spoiled it. He left it out in the hot sun while he was stuff in a sage hand,
and the poor little thing seemed to wilt and retire from the public gaze.
End of Chapter 28.
Chapter 29 of Bill Nyan Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Temperature of the Bumblebee. A recent article on bees says,
If you have noticed bees very closely, you may have seen that they are not all alike in size.
I have noticed bees very closely indeed during my life. In fact, I have several times been
thrown into immediate juxtaposition with them, and have had a great many opportunities to
observe their ways, and I am free to say that I have not been so forcibly struck with a difference in
their size as the noticeable difference in their temperature. I remember at one time of sitting by a hive
watching the habits of the bees and thinking how industrious they were, and what a wide difference there is
between the toilsome life of the little insect and the enervating, aimless, idle, and luxurious
life of the newspaper man when an impulsive little bee lit in my hair. He seemed to be feverish.
Wherever he settled down, he seemed to leave a hot place. I learned afterward that he was a
it was a new kind of bee called the anti-clinker base burner bee. Oh yes, I have studied the ways of the
bee very closely. He is supposed to improve each shining hour. That's the great objection I have to
him. The bee has been thrown up to me a great deal during my life, and the comparison was not
flattering. It has been intimated that I resembled the bee that sits on the piazza of the hive
all summer and picks his teeth, while the rest are getting in honey and beeswax for the winter
campaign. End of Chapter 29. Chapter 30 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed
mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Librovox recording is in the public domain, read by
Dale Barkley. Drawbacks of Public Life. I always like to tell anything that has the general effect of
turning the laugh on me, because then I know there will be no hard feelings. It is very difficult to
select anyone who will stand publicity when that publicity is more amusing to the average reader than to the
chief actor. Every little while, I run out of men who enjoy being written about in my chaste and
cheerful vein. Then I have to come forward and take this position myself. It is not egotism,
as some might suppose. It is unselfishness and a manly feeling of self-saciness. And a manly feeling of self-saception.
sacrifice. Last year, I consented to read the Declaration of Independence, as my share of the program,
partially out of gallantry toward the goddess of liberty, and partly to get a ride with the chaplain,
an orator of the day, through the principal streets behind the band. It was a very proud moment
for me. I felt as though I was holding up one corner of the national fabric myself, and I naturally
experienced a pardonable pride about it. I sat in the carriage with a compiled
laws of Wyoming under my arm, and looked like Daniel Webster wrapped in a large bale of
holy calm. At the grounds, I found that most everybody was on the speakers' stand, and the audience
was represented by a helpless and unhappy minority. At a Fourth of July celebration, it is wonderful
how many great men there are and how they swarm on the speakers' platform. Then there are generally
about 13 venerable gentlemen
who do not pretend to be great,
but they cannot hear very well,
so they get on the speakers stand
to hear the same blood-curdling statements
that they have heard for a thousand years.
While I was reading the little burst of humor
known as the Declaration,
the staging gave way
under the accumulated weight
of the fourth infantry band
and several hundred great men
who had invited themselves to sit on the platform.
The chaplain fell on top of me
and the orator of the day on top of him.
A pitcher of ice water tipped over on me,
and the water ran down my back.
A piece of scantling and an alto horn took me across the cerebellum,
and as often as I tried to get up and throw off the chaplain
an orator of the day and fourth infantry band,
the greased pig, which had been shut up under the stand temporarily,
would run between my legs and throw me down again.
I never knew the reading of the Declaration of Independence to have such a telling effect.
I went home without witnessing the closing exercises.
I did not ride home in the carriage.
I told the committee that some poor, decrepit old woman might ride home in my place.
I needed exercise and an opportunity to commune with myself.
As I walked home by an unfrequented way,
I thought of the growth and grandeur of the Republic
and how I could get rid of lard that had been wiped on my clothes by the oleogenius pig.
This year, when the committee asked me to read the declaration,
I said pleasantly, but firmly, that I would probably be busy on that day, soaking my head,
and therefore would have to decline.
End of Chapter 30.
Chapter 31 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley
The glad free life of the miner
In the spring, the young man's fancy
lightly turns to thoughts of love.
He also looks forward to some means
by which he can earn the bread and oleomargarine
on which he can subsist.
There are several ways of doing this.
Some take to agriculture and spend
the long days of golden summer
among the clover blossoms of the meadow,
raking hay and hornets into large wind-rose
while they sniff the refreshing odor
of the mignonette and the morning glory.
and the boiling soft soap and potato bugs that have been mashed into the sweet by and by.
Others, by a straightforward course, become truthful newspaper men,
and amass untold wealth as funny men.
Others proclaim the glad news of salvation, at so much a proclaim.
Perhaps, however, the most exciting way to become wealthy in a speedy manner,
and in a surprising style, is that of the miner.
He buys some bacon and tobacco and flour and whiskey,
and a pick and some chewing tobacco, and a shovel and some whiskey, and an axe and some smoking
tobacco and matches, and whiskey and blankets and giant powder, and goes to the mountains to get
wealthy. He works all day hard, walking up hill and down across ravines and rocky gulches,
weary but happy and confident, till night comes down upon him, and he goes home to camp,
and around the fire he enters the free-for-all-lying match, and tired as he gets away,
with a prize for scrub lying.
I have met miners who would, with a little chance,
hold a pretty even race against the great stalwart army of journalists.
I do not say this intending to reflect upon the noble profession of mining,
but I have been taught to respect the pleasing lie which is told in a harmless way
to cheer the great surging mass of humanity
who get tired of the same old truths that have been handed down from generation to generation.
One man who ran against me for Justice of the Peace two years ago, and who therefore got left,
is now independent, having sold out a prospect inside of town for a good figure,
well, I plug along and tell the truth and have nothing under the broad-blue dome of heaven
but $150 per month and my virtue. Of course virtue is its own reward,
but how little of glad, unfettered mirthfulness it yields. Sometimes I wish I had a little
looser notions about what is right and what is wrong. But it is too late now. I have become so hardened
in these upright ways that when I do wrong, it pretty near kills me. This summer, however, I will get me
a little blue jackass and put a sawbuck on his back, and pack some select oysters and gumdrops,
and an upright piano, and a hammock, and some sheet music, and a camera, and some ice and frosted
cake, and a Brussels carpet, and a tent on his back, and I will high me to the minds, and I will high me to the
minds, join the big stampede, fall down a prospect hole, 200 feet deep, and my faithful jackass will
pull me out, and I shall nearly freeze to death nights and starve to death days, and I will have
lots of fun. I like the glad-free mountain life. I have tried it. Once I went out to the mountains
and slept on the lap of Mother Earth, that is, I advertised to sleep, but I couldn't quite catch on.
I lay on my back till 2 o'clock a.m. looking up into the clear blue ether while the stars above were twinkling.
After they had about twinkled themselves out, I concluded I would not try to woo the drowsy god anymore.
I got up and made a pint of coffee and drank it so hot that the elementary canal was rolled together like a scroll.
It felt as though I had swallowed a large slice of melted perdition, but it didn't warm me up any.
Then I went up the mountain five miles to see the sunrise.
In about four hours it rose.
So did the coffee that I drank at two o'clock.
Somehow the sunrise didn't seem to cheer me.
It looked murky and muddy.
All nature seemed to be shrouded and gloom.
There is more gloom turned loose there than I have ever seen.
I wanted to go home.
I needed someone to pity me and love me a great deal.
I needed rest, an entire change of scene.
I went away from there because the association
were not pleasant, roughing it doesn't seem to do me the required amount of good. I am too frail.
I need more of the comforts of civilization and less wealth of wild majestic scenery. I find that my
nature needs very little awe-inspiring grandeur and a good deal of woven wire mattress and nutritious,
digestible food. End of Chapter 31. Chapter 32 of Bill Nyan Boomerang, or the tale of a meekide
Mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Some thoughts of childhood.
Childhood is the glad spring time of life.
It is then that the seeds of future greatness, or startling mediocrity, are sown.
If a boy has marked out a glowing future as an intellectual giant, it is during these early
years of his growth that he gets some pine knots to burn in the evening, whereby he can read
Herbert Spencer in the Greek grammar, so that when he is in good society, he can say things that
nobody can understand. This gives him an air of mysterious greatness which soaks into those with whom
he comes in contact and makes them respectful and unhappy while in his presence. Boys who intend to be
railroad men should early begin to look about them for some desirable method of expunging two
or three fingers in one thumb. Most boys can do this without difficulty, trying to pick a card out of a job
breast when it is in operation is a good way. Most job presses feel gloomy and unhappy until they
have eaten the fingers off two or three boys. Then they go on with their work cheerfully and even
hilariously. Boys who intend to lead an irreproachable life and be foremost in every good word and work
should take unusual precautions to secure perfect health and longevity. Good boys never know when
they are safe. Statistics show that the ratio of good boys who die compared to bad ones
is simply appalling.
There are only 39 good boys left as we go to press,
and they are not feeling very well either.
The bad ones are all alive and very active.
The boy who stole my coal shovel last spring
and went out into the graveyard and dug into a grave to find Easter eggs
is the picture of health.
He ought to live a long time yet,
for he is in very poor shape to be ushered in before the bar of judgment.
When I was a child, I was different from other boys in many respects.
I was always looking about to see what good I could do.
I am that way yet.
If my little brother wanted to go in swimming, contrary to orders,
I was not strong enough to prevent him,
but I would go in with him and save him from a watery grave.
I went in the water thousands of times that way,
and as a result, he is alive today.
But he is ungrateful.
He hardly ever mentions it now,
but he remembers the Gordian knots that I tied in his shirts.
He speaks of them frequently.
This shows the ingratitude and natural depravity of the human heart.
Ah, what recompense have wealth and position for the unalloyed joys of childhood,
and how gladly today, as I sit in the midst of my oriental splendor and costly magnificence,
and thoughtfully run my fingers through my infrequent bangs,
would I give it all, wealth, position, and fame,
for one balmy, breezy day gathered from the mellow haze of the long ago,
when I stood full knee-deep in the lukewarm,
pool near my suburban home in the quiet dell and allowed the yielding and soothing mud and meek-eyed
polywogs to squirt up between my dimpled toes. End of Chapter 32. Chapter 33 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Libervox recording
is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley. The New Adjustable Campaign Song. I'd
Big leave at this time to present to the public, a melodious gem of song, which I am positive cannot fail to give satisfaction.
It will withstand the rigors of our mountain climb as well as the heat and moisture of a lower altitude.
It is purely unpartisan, although it may be easily changed to any shade of political opinion.
It is cheap, portable, and durable, and filled with little pathetic passages that will add greatly to the enthusiasm of presidential contests.
It is true that some harsh criticism has been called down upon this little chunk of crystallized melody,
as I may be pardoned for calling it, and it has been suggested that it is too much fraught with a gentle,
soothing sense of vacuity, and that there is nothing in it particularly one way or the other.
This, I admit, to be in a measure true. There is nothing in it as a poem,
but it must be borne in mind that this is not a poem. It is a campaign song.
Campaign songs never have anything in them. They don't have to.
Editorials and speeches have to express human ideas and little suggestions of original horse sense,
but the campaign song is generally distinguished by a wild, tumultuous torrent of attenuated space.
They are like the sons of great men.
We do not expect any show of Herculean intellectual acumen from them.
Directions. Set up the song with the feed bar down and Pittman reversed.
Then turn the thumb to the thumb.
screw that holds the asterisks in place, take them out, and lay them away in the upper case,
an improper compartment. Next, set up desirable candidate, unless you can get candidate,
to set them up himself, slug the standing galley, oil the crosshead, upset the tripod,
loosen the crown sheet a little, so that the obvious duplex will work easily in the lallygagg
eccentric, and turn on steam. Should the box in which the lowercase candidates are stored get hot,
sponge off and lubricate with castor oil, antifat, and borax in equal parts.
Keep this song in a cool place.
Air, rally round the flag boys.
Oh, we'll gather from the hillsides, we'll gather from the glen,
shouting the battle cry of hum-hmm-hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm, hmm.
And we'll round up our voters, our brave and trusty men,
shouting the battle cry of hum-hmm-hmm-hmm.
Chorus.
Oh, our candidate forever, te doodle daddy A, down with old.
old, hum-hum-o-foodle-diddy-do and we'll whoop-de-do-do, fall de ad-an-addeny, and don't you never forget it.
Oh, we'll meet the craven foe on the fall election day, shouting the battle cry of
and we'll try to let him know that we're going to have our way, shouting the battle cry of
hum-hmm-hmm, chorus, oh, our candidate forever, etc.
Oh, we're the people's friends, as I'll plainly see, shouting the battle cry of
and we'll whoop-de-dood-do with our big majority,
and don't you never forget it.
Chorus, over Candidate Forever, etc.
End of Chapter 33.
Chapter 34 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley.
Sitting down on a venerable joke.
Near St. Paul,
on the Sioux City Road, I met the ever-present man from Leadville again.
I had met him before on every division of every railroad that I had traveled over,
but I nodded to him, and he began to tell me all about Leadville.
He saw that I looked sad, and he cheered me up with little prehistoric jokes
that an antiquarian had given him years ago.
Finally, he said,
Ledville is mighty cold, it has such an all-fired altitude.
The summer is very short and unreliable,
and the wintered long and severe.
An old miner over in California Gulch got off a pretty good joke about the climate there.
A friend asked him about the seasons at Leadville, and he said that there they had nine months
winter and three months late in the fall.
Then he looked around to see me fall to pieces with mirth, but I restrained myself and said,
You will please excuse me for not laughing at that joke.
I cannot do it.
It is too sacred.
Do you think I would laugh at the bones of the pilgrim fathers? Where are they? Or burst into wild hilarity over the grave of Noah and his family? No, sir. Their age and antiquity protect them. That is the way with your Phoenician joke. Another reason why I cannot laugh at it is this. I am not a very easy and extemporaneous laugher anyway. I am generally shrouded in gloom, especially when I am in hot pursuit of a wild and skittish joke for my own use.
It takes a good, fair, average joke that hasn't been used much to make me laugh easy.
Besides, I have used up the fund of laugh that I had laid aside for that particular joke.
It has, in fact, overdrawn some now and is behind.
I do not wish to entrench on the fund that I have concluded to offer as a purse for young jokes
that have never made it in three minutes.
I want to encourage green jokes, too, that have never trotted and harnessed before.
and besides, I must insist on using my scanty fund of laugh on jokes of the 19th century.
I have got to draw the line somewhere.
If I were making a collection of antique jokes of the vintage of 1400 years BC
or arranging and classifying little bon motes of the time of Cleopatra or King Solomon,
I would give you a handsome sum for this one of yours,
but I'm just trying to worry along and pay expenses and trying to be polite to everyone I meet
and laughing at lots of things that I don't want to laugh at, and I'm going to quit it.
That is why I have met your little witticism with cold and heartless gravity.
End of Chapter 34
Chapter 35 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A Hair-Breat The Scape
Today I got shaved at a barber shop where I begged the operator to kill me and put me out of my misery.
I have been accustomed to gentle care and thoughtfulness at home, and my barber at Laramie
handles me with the utmost tenderness. I was therefore poorly prepared to meet the man who this
morning filled my soul with woe. I know that I have not deserved this, for while others have
berated the poor barber and swore about his bad breath and never any clatter and as general
heartlessness, I have never said anything that was not filled with childlike trust and hearty
goodwill toward him. I have called the attention to the public to the fact that sometimes
customers had bad breath and were restless and mean while being operated on, and then when
they are all fixed up nicely, they put their hats on and light a cigar and hold up their
finger to the weary barber, and tell him that they will see him more subsequently. Now, however,
I feel differently. This barber no doubt had never heard.
heard of me. He no doubt thought I was an ordinary plug who didn't know anything about luxury.
I shall mark a copy of this paper and send it to him. Then while he is reading it, I'll steal up behind
him with a pick handle and kill him. I want him to be reading this when I kill him because it will
assist the coroner in arriving at the immediate cause of his death. The first whiff I took of this man's
breath, I knew that he was Rums maniac. He had the Jim James in an advanced stage.
Now I don't object to being shaved by a barber who is socially drunk,
but when the mad glitter of the maniac is in his eye,
and I can see that he is debating the question of whether he will cut my head off
and let it drop over the back of the chair, or choke me to death with a lather brush,
it makes me nervous and fidgety.
This man made up his mind three times that he would kill me,
and someone came in just in time to save me.
His chair was near a window, and there was a hole in the blind,
so that when he was shaving the off side of my face,
he would turn my head over in such a position
that I could look up into the middle of the sun.
My attention had never before been called to the appearance of the sun
as it looks to the naked eye, and I was a good deal surprised.
The more I looked into the very center of the great orb of day,
the more I was filled with wonder at the might and power that could create it.
I began to pine for death immediately
so that I could be far away among the heavenly bodies
and in a land where no barber with the delirium triangles can ever enter.
This barber held my head down so that the sun could shine into my darkened understanding
until I felt that my brain had melted and was floating around
and swashing about in my skull like warm butter.
His hand was very unsteady too.
I lost faith in him on the start when he cut off a mole under my chin
and threw it into the spittoon.
I did not care very particularly for the mole,
and did not need it particularly, but at the same time I had not decided to take it off at that time.
In fact, I had worn it so long that I had become attached to it.
It had also become attached to me.
That is why I could not restrain my tears when the barber cut it off
and then stepped back to the other end of the room to see how I looked without it.
End of Chapter 35.
Chapter 36 of Bill Nyan Boomerang, or the tale of a meekide mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Myself, Dr. Talmadge, and other divines.
September 5th, 1880.
I am beginning today to keep a diary.
It is not an agreeable task,
but I feel that the wild, glad bursts of unfettered thought,
which surged through my ponderous mind,
ought to be embalmed in eligible characters,
and passed down to posterity.
The thought may arise in the mind of the reader
that this is taking a low and contemptible advantage of a posterity
that never in word or deed ever harmed me,
but I care not.
Other able men have perpetrated their diaries upon me
when I was not in a condition to help myself,
and now that I can hand down and transmit to nations yet unborn
the same great heritage unimpaired,
there is a sweet consciousness of a revenge that has been fully glutted.
Today, I have been to church.
I do not speak of it as remarkable at all, for wherever I am, whether at home or abroad,
my first thought is, where will I find a sanctuary?
The minister was quite classical, and he pumped the congregation so full of heathen mythology
that he came very near forgetting that he had a word to say on behalf of Christianity as the advance agent of Zion.
I do not wish to say one word that would sound like irreverence toward the cause which this man undertook to
represent, but I want to jot down a little thought or two relative to this exponent, so that I may
be placed squarely upon the record. I have often thought, when I have watched this class of ministers
with one hand resting in a graceful and negligent posture on the altar rail, while the self-conscious
demosthenes reeled off a Fourth of July prayer to the miserable, wretched, and undone sinners before him,
how God has said that he is a jealous God. And I have wondered if these prayers arranged with great
care to meet the criticism of the worshippers, and with an offhand disregard to the feelings of the
almighty, that is very cool and very refreshing indeed, whether they ever lay hold of the throne of
grace or not, and whether they ever lift up mankind or make the world better.
Speaking of divines reminds me of the very pleasant trip I had over the Union Pacific on my way east
with Brother Talmadge. I call him Brother Talmadge because he called me brother occasionally.
he no doubt thought that in different walks of life perhaps, but working in the same direction,
we were both laboring to make the world better.
Brother Talmadge, General Crook, myself, and two or three other eminent men together occupied the sleeper Boise City.
Brother Talmadge and I one day were seized with the same irresistible desire at the same moment
to change our shirts.
He was a little nearer the washroom than I was, so he got there first, and we stood up together
smiling at each other sweetly, with a clean shirt in our hands, and didn't know exactly how to
express ourselves. I was the first to speak. I told the doctor that it was of no consequence
particularly, and I would wait. He said, no, I must not wait for him, and insisted so cordially
on my coming in there that we went in together and tackled the mysteries of our toilette at the
same time. It was pretty tough on me, for I had been accustomed while peeling off a damp shirt
to go through a few little vocal exercises and dance around on one leg and howl. Going from the
mountains of Wyoming down into the tropical heat of Nebraska made me perspire a good deal, and nothing
but the firm and irresistible restraint thrown about me by an eminent divine kept me from swearing.
But the doctor did not get mad. When he shoved his bald head into his shirt, a large smile
was on his face, and when it emerged at the top and he waved his arms above his head and struggled
to climb up into the shirt so that he could look out over the battlements, he was still smiling.
He was not only smiling, but he was smiling a good deal. Those who have seen Dr. Talmadge smile
know how he throws his whole soul into it. If I could jam my head up through a wilderness of
shirt and starch and saw off my windpipe as I looked out over the billowy buttonless mass
and still smile, as Dr. Talmadge does, I would give all my broad possessions in a moment.
This offer will hold good, up to the 15th.
We got quite sociable and cordial toward the clothes,
and I got the doctor to reach up as far as he could on my spinal column
and bring down the refractory end of a suspender.
Then I retaliated by going down into his true inwardness after a color button that had dropped into oblivion.
While he was smiling with that glad-free smile of his,
which he takes along with him instead of baggage,
he told me a pretty good thing on the editor of the Herald of Salt Lake.
He told it to me in confidence, he said,
because he knew he could rely on a newspaper man.
Then he laughed and seemed to think it was a good joke.
It seems that when Dr. Talmage was in Salt Lake,
the Tribune published what purported to be an interview
between a reporter of that paper and the Brooklyn Divine.
Shortly afterward, and while Dr. T. was in San Francisco,
he received a letter from the editor of the Herald
and a marked copy of the paper
giving the doctor a very flattering notice.
In his letter, the editor said,
I enclose a clipping from the Tribune
purporting to be an interview between yourself
and a reporter of that paper.
Will you be kind enough to write me,
whether it is or is not genuine?
The doctor looked the clipping carefully over,
and as it was nothing but a blood-curdling account
of the merits of Day's kidney pad,
he had no hesitancy in pronouncing the alleged
interview a fraud. Still, he never wrote the editor of the herald, and he no doubt still wonders why
it is that Dr. Talmich don't come forward and state the facts, so that the Gentile Tribune may be
shown up. The doctor says that too much care cannot be used by the editor who wields the shears
not to get his editorials mixed up with patent medicine advertisements.
End of Chapter 36. Chapter 37 of Bill Nyan Boomerang, or the take of the take
of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Fine cut is a means of grace.
The amateur tobacco-chewer, many times through lack of consideration,
allows himself to be forced into very awkward and unpleasant positions.
As a fair sample of the perils to which the young and inexperienced
masticator of the weed is subjected, the following may be given.
A few sabbaths ago, a young man who was attending divine worship up on Piety Avenue concluded,
as the sermon was about one-half done and didn't seem to get very exciting, that he would take a chew of tobacco.
He wasn't a handsome chewer, and while he was sliding the weed out of his pocket and getting it behind his handkerchief and working it into his mouth,
he looked as though he might be robbing a blind woman of her last copper.
Then when he got it into his mouth and tried to look pious and anxious about the welfare of his never-dying soul,
the chew in his mouth felt as big as a magnolia ham.
Being new in the business, the salivary glands were so surprised that they began to secrete at a remarkable rate.
The young man got alarmed. He wanted to spit. His eyes began to hang out on his cheek,
and still the salivary glands continued to give down. He thought about spitting in his handkerchief or his hat,
but neither seemed to answer the purpose.
He was getting wild.
He thought of swallowing it, but he knew that his stomach wasn't large enough.
In his madness, he resolved that he would let drive down the aisle when the pastor looked the other way.
He waited till the divine threw his eyes toward heaven, and then he shut his eyes and turned loose.
An old gentleman, about three pews down the aisle, yawned at that moment and threw his open hand out into the aisle in such a manner as to catch the contribution without any loss to speak of.
He did not put his hand out for that purpose and did not seem to want it, but he got it all right.
He seemed to feel hurt about something.
He looked like a man who has suddenly lost faith in humanity and become soured, as it were.
Some who sat near him said he swore.
Anyway, he lost the threat of the discourse.
That part of the sermon he now says is a blank to him.
It is several blanks.
He called upon blank to everlasting blank, such a blankety blank, blank, idiotic blank fool as the young man was.
meantime the young man has quit the use of tobacco he did not know at first whether to swear off or kill himself the other day he said only two weeks ago i stood up and said proudly i am a
today praise me to redeeming grace i am not a chewer this joke for the first few days will have to be watered very carefully and wrapped in a california blanket for it is not strong at all however if it can be worked through the cold weather
It is no slouch of a joke.
End of Chapter 37.
Chapter 38 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meekide mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley.
The weather and some other things.
Sometimes I wish that Wyoming had more vegetation,
and less Qatar, more of bloom and summer and fragrance,
and less Christmas and New Year's through the summer.
I like the clear bracing air of 7,500 feet above the civilized world,
but I get weary of putting on and taking off my buffalo overcoat for meals all through dog days.
I yearn for a land where a man can take off his ulster and overshoes
while he delivers a Fourth of July oration without flying into the face of Providence and dying of pneumonia.
Perhaps I am unreasonable, but I can't help it.
I have my own peculiar notions and I am not to blame for them.
As I write these lines, I look out across the wide sweep of brownish-grey plains dotted here and there with ranches and defunct buffalo craniums,
and I see shutting down over the sides of the abrupt mountains and meeting the foothills a white mist which melts into the gray sky.
It is a snowstorm in the mountains.
I saw this with wonder and admiration for the first two or three million times,
when it became a matter of daily occurrence as a wanderer curiosity, it was below mediocrity.
Last July a snowstorm gathered one afternoon
And fell among the foothills
And whitened the whole line to within four or five miles of town
And it certainly was a peculiar freak of nature
But it convinced me that whatever enterprises I might launch into here
I would not try to raise oranges and figs
Until the isothermal line should meet with a change of heart
I have just been reading Colonel Downey's poem
It is very good what there is of it
But somehow we lay aside the congressional record
wishing that there had been more of it.
Just as we get interested and carried away with it,
having read the first five or six thousand words,
it comes to an abrupt termination.
I have often wished that I could write poetry.
It would do me a heap of good.
I would like to write a little book of poems
with a blue cover and beveled edges and an index to it.
It would tickle me pretty near to death.
But I can't seem to do it.
When I write a poem and devote a good deal of study and thought to it,
and get it to suit me the great seething mass of humanity, regardless of my feelings,
get down on the grass and yell and hoot and kick up the green sward
and whoop at the idea of culling that poetry.
It hurts me and grieves me and has a tendency to sour my disposition,
so that when a really deserving poet comes to the front,
I have in the good nature and sweetness of disposition to enter dispassionately upon the subject
and say a kind word where I ought to.
But I will say, of Colonel Downey's poem,
that it certainly has great depth and width and length,
and as you go on, it seems to broaden out and extend farther on
and cover more ground and take in more territory,
branch out, and widen and lay hold of great tracts of thought,
and open up new fields and fresh pastures,
and make homestead claims, and enter large desert land tracks,
and prove up under the Timber Culture Act and the Bounty Land Act
and throw open the Indian Reservation to settlement.
The matter of decorating the Capitol with sacred subjects is one which would receive the hearty approval of all the people of the country,
and I often wish that the Colonel had alluded to it in his poem.
I have some curiosity to know what his ideas are on that point.
I, for one, would be glad to see appropriate paintings of scriptural subjects decorating the walls of our national capital,
and have often been on the verge of offering to do it at my own expense.
A cheerful painting to adorn the walls back of the speaker's desk
would be a study by some great artist
representing Samson,
mashing the Philistines with the jawbone of an ass.
It would be historical and also symbolical,
but principally symbolical.
Then another painting might be executed
representing Balaam's ass delivering a speech on the Indian question.
It would take first rate when visitors from abroad
made a flying trip to Washington during the summer
and missed seeing Wade Hampton and felt disappointed,
they could go and see Balaam's ass and go home with their curiosity gratified.
I've seen a very spirited painting somewhere.
I think it was at the Louvre or the Vatican or Fort Collins
by either Michael Angelo or Raphael or Eli Perkins,
which represented Joseph presenting a portion of his ulster overcoat to Potipers' wife
and lighting out for the Cairo in Palestine 11 o'clock train with a great deal of earnestness.
This would be a good painting to hang on the walls of the Capitol,
dedicated to Ben Hill and some other congressional soiled doves.
Then there are some simpler subjects which might be worked up
and hung in the congressional nursery to please the children
until the session closed for the day,
and their miscellaneous dads came to carry them home.
I can think a lot's a nice subject for a painter to paint
or a sculptor to sculpt if I were to give my attention to it,
but I haven't the time.
End of Chapter 38
Chapter 39 of Bill Nyan Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Parable of the Unjust Steward
Now there was a certain rich man in those days who kept a large inn on the American plan
and the Hajaira from other lands over against Cubzel and Eder and Reckinridge and Kina and Georgetown and Demona
and Kedish and Roaring Forks and Hedor and Ithnan and the Gunnison country and Ziff
and Tellam and Silvercliff and Beuloth and Hadata and even beyond Hazar, Gada and Buena Vista,
was exceedingly simultaneous.
And throughout the country roundabout was there never before and Hajairaira that seemed to
harjira the same hajira with which this hajira did hajira and behold the inn was overrun day by day with pilgrims who journeyed thither with shekels and scrip and pieces of silver and the innkeeper said unto himself go too and he was very wroth insomuch that he tore his beard and swore a large dark blue oath about the size of man's hand for behold the innkeeper gat not the shekels and he wist not why it was now it was so that in the end
inn was one Kino El Faro, the steward, and he stood behind the tablets wherein the pilgrims
did write the names of themselves and their wives and their sons and their daughters. And
Kino El Farrow wore purple and fine linen, and fared sumptuously every day, and he drank the wines of one
mum, and they were extra dry, and so even was Kino El Farrow from the rising of the sun until the
going down thereof. And behold, one day the innkeeper took a large tumble even unto himself,
and also unto the racket of Kino El Faro, the son of Ahaz Ben Bunko.
And he said unto Kino,
Give an account of thy stewardship that thou mayest be no longer steward.
And Kino El Faro cried with a loud voice,
and wept and fell down, and rose up, and went unto his place.
And he looked into the mirror, and patted the soap-lock on his brow,
and he saw that he was fairer to look upon.
But he was exceedingly sorrowful, and he said,
What shall I do?
For my lord takeeth away the stewardship, and verily it was exeatingly,
good thing to have. Alas, I know not what to do. I cannot get a position as mining expert,
and to beg, I am ashamed. I am resolved what I will do. And he smiled unto himself, and the breadth of
the smile was even six cubits from one end thereof, even unto the other. So he called unto himself
one of his lord's debtors, and he said, how much to oest thou my lord? And he said,
even for seven days food and lodging at $3.50 per day, together with my reckoning at the bar,
manning the thirty pieces of silver of the denomination known as the dollar, even of our dads.
And the steward said unto him, take thy bill quickly, and write fifteen. And it was so.
And he said unto another, how much oweest thou, my lord? And he answered him and said fifty pieces of silver.
And the steward said unto him, take thy bill and write twenty-five, and it was so. And be
And behold, these two guests of the inn were solid with Kino El Faro from that hour.
And when Kino El Farrow received the Oriental Grand Bounce from the innkeeper,
the guests of the inn, to whom Kino had shown mercy,
procured him a pass over the road, and they whiled away the hours with Kino El Farrow,
and he did teach them some pleasant games.
And when the even was come, he went his way unto Kansas City,
and they with whom he had abode, wot not how it was, for they were penniless.
And Kinoel Pharaoh abode long in the land over against St. Louis,
and he was steward in one of the great inns for many years,
and he wore good clothes day by day and waxed fat,
and he rested his stomach on the counter,
and he said to himself, ha, ha, ha.
End of Chapter 39.
Chapter 40 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley
Ode to Spring
Fantasia for the Bass Drum
Adapted from the German
by William J von Naidja
In the days of laughing springtime
comes the mild-eyed sorrel cow
with bald-headed patches on her
poor and lousy I allow
and she waddles through your garden
or the radish beds I trow
Then the red-nosed wild-eyed orphan
With his cyclopede ye
Hise him to the rural district
with more or less alacrity, and he showeth up its merits to the bright eternity.
How the bumble be doth bumble, bumbling in the fragrant air,
bumbling with his little bumbler till he climbs the golden stair,
then the angels will provide him with another bumble lair.
End of Chapter 40.
Chapter 41 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meekide mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public tomm.
Maine, read by Dale Barkley.
The Parable of the Prodigal Son.
Now there was a certain man who had two sons, and the younger of them said to his father,
Father, give me the portion of goods that falleth to me.
And he divided unto him his living, and the younger son purchased himself an oil-cloth
grip sack and gat him out of that country.
And it came to pass that he journeyed even unto buckskin in the land that lieeth over against
Leadville.
and when he was come nigh unto the gates of the city he heard music and dancing and he gat him into that place and when he arose and went his way a hireling at the gate smote upon him with a slung shot of great potency and the younger son wist not how it was
now in the second watch of the night he arose and he was alone and the pieces of gold and silver were gone and it was so and he arose and sat down and rent his clothes and threw ashes and dust upon himself
and he went and joined himself unto a citizen of that country and he sent him down into a prospect shaft for to dig and he had never before dug wherefore when he spat upon his hands and lay hold of that long-handled shovel wherewith they were wont to shovel he struck his elbow upon the
on the wall of the shaft wherein he stood,
and he poured the earth and the broken rocks over against the back of his neck,
and he waxed exceeding wrath.
And he tried even yet again, and behold, the handle or the shovel became tangled between his legs,
and he filled his ear nigh unto full of decomposed slate,
and the porphyry which is in that region roundabout.
And he wist not why it was so.
Now, after many days, the shovelers with their shovels,
and the pickers with their picks, and the blasters with their blasts,
and the hoisters with their hoists banded themselves together, and each said to his fellow,
Go too, let us strike, and they stroke. And they that strike were as the sands of the sea for
multitude, and they were terrible as an army with banners. And they blew upon the ram's horn and the cornet and
sackbutt and the alto horn and the flute and the bass drum. Now it came to pass that the younger son
joined not with them, which did strike, neither went he out to his work, nor on the highway,
at any time they that did strike should fall upon him and flatten him out and send him even unto his home packed an ice which is after the fashion of that people and he began to be in want and he went and joined himself unto a citizen of that country and he sent him into the lunchroom to feed tourists and he would fain have filled himself up with the adamantine cookies and the indestructible pie and vulcanized sandwiches which the tourists did eat and no man gave unto him and when he came to himself he
said, how many hired servants hath my father on the farm with bread enough and despair, and I perish with
hunger? And he resigned his position in the lunch business, and arose and went unto his father.
But when he was yet a great way off, he telegraphed to his father to kill the old cow and make
marry, for behold he had struck it rich, and the old man paid for the telegram. Now the elder son
was in the north field, ploughing with a pair of bulky mules, and when he came and drew nigh to the house,
He heard music and dancing, and he couldn't seem to watch why these things were thus.
And he took the hired girl by the ear, and led her away and asked her,
"'Wence cometh this unseemly hilarity!'
And she smote him with the palm of her hand, and said,
"'This thy brother hath come, that was dead and is alive again, and they began to have a high old time.
And the elder son kicked, even as the government mule kicketh, and he was hot under the collar,
and he gathered up an armful of profanity and flung it in among the,
the guests, and gat him up and girded his loins and lit out. And he gat him to unlearned in the
law, and he replevied the entire ranch whereon they were, together with all in singular the heredititaments,
write, title, franchise, estate, both in law and in equity, together with all dips, spurs,
angles, crooks, variations, leads, mains of gold or silver ore, millsites, dam sites, flumes,
and each and every of them firmly by these presents.
it was so.
End of Chapter 41.
Chapter 42 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Indian and the Everlasting Gospel
William Henry Kersaich's D.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Dear Sir, your esteemed favor of the 25th instant is a
at hand, asking me to throw some light upon a few Indian conundrums propounded by you.
I thank you most heartily for the unfaltering trust in me expressed by your letter.
One of my most serious difficulties through life has been a growing tendency on the part of mankind
to refuse to trust me as I deserved. It has placed me in an extremely awkward position several
times, but your letter is trust and reliance and childish faith personified.
You have done wisely in writing to me for my views on this important national question,
and I give them to you cheerfully and even hilariously. If they were all the views I had,
it would be the same. I would squeeze along without any, rather than refuse you.
First, I agree with you and your ideas relative to the cause of failure on the part of the
Peace Commission. It was not calculated.
to soothe the ruffled spirits of the hostiles and produce in their breasts a feeling of rest and friendship and repose,
but it was more in the nature of an arrogant demand for those who had in an unguarded moment snuffed out the light of the White River agent and the employees.
This was not right or even courteous on the part of the commission.
You seem to understand the wants and needs of the Indian more fully than any man with whom I am acquainted.
By your letter I see at a glance that you are the man to deal with them.
You shall be agent at White River hereafter.
I will use my influence for your appointment.
If you think I have no influence with the administration, you are exceedingly off.
The emoluments of the office are not large, but what you lack and money will be made up to you in attention.
You will get tons and tons of Indian affection.
For every dollar that you would receive from the government,
you would get $11.50 worth of childlike trust and clinging affection.
You could also write religious articles for the Western press
and blow in a good mini-scads that way.
By working that scheme judiciously,
I have amassed quite a little fortune myself.
Your leisure time could be filled up by organizing temples of honor,
subordinate granges, etc.,
or you could get in an evening now and then playing a social game of draw poker with your charge.
They are all you will find more interested in draw than they are in the Trinity.
You can also hoe potatoes and do good.
If time still hung heavy on your hands, you could devote it to constructing a sheet-iron roof for your scalp.
When the Utes came in from the warpath, foot sore and weary,
you could go about from lodge to lodge and nurse them and read the scriptures to them
drive away the blue-tailed fly and other domestic insects,
and lull the suffering savage to rest with coronation and other soothing melodies.
But I must pass on to your next question.
Second, there have been several methods proposed for civilizing the wandering tribes
of the house of stand up and eat a raw dog,
but few of them, I fear, will meet with your approval.
My own plan is called the Minnesota Plan.
It was an experiment used on the soon.
nation at one time in its history, and consisted in placing the Indians upon a large, elevated
platform, and so arranging a fragment of lariat that in case the platform gave way,
the lariat would support the performer by the neck. The Indian is generally stolid and
indifferent to pain, but you give him a fall of seven and a half feet, allowing him to catch by his
neck, and it is fun to see him try to kick a large piece out of the firmament. The Indian, when called on to
make the opening speech at a country fair does not make any demonstrations, but place him on one of
these slide-of-hand scaffolds and let the bottom drop out, and he makes some of the most powerful
and expressive gestures. Third, I am not prepared to answer fully your third question, as I haven't
the statistics where I can lay my hand on them. I think, however, that the denominations are about
equally divided among the Indians. Color Row is a Presbyterian. U-Ray is a member
of the Dutch Reformed Church, while Jack is a close communion Baptist. A few of them are regular attendance
upon divine worship. At some of the Ute Church, as I am told, very frequently there are not enough
present for a quorum, especially during the busy season when they are gathering the fall crops of scalps.
Fourth, as to the time which would be required to bring the entire outfit into the fold,
I am a little unsettled as to the correct estimate. It might take some time. The road
might be blockaded, you know, or something of that kind, or some old buck might stampede and
take up a good deal of time. At least, I would not advise you to hold your breath while listening
for their glad hallelujahs to the throne. They might miss the connections in some way, and you
would get very purple around the gills. However, do not get discouraged. Keep up your lick. Ride on and
speak on for this oppressed people. They deserve it. They have brought it on themselves. Get
some more do-faced idiots to unite with you in writing up the Indian question. It will be a good thing.
Write to the Indians themselves personally. Of course it will be a horrible death for them to die,
but they have richly merited it. Do not write to me again, however, I am not strong anyway,
and I need rest. If you could, therefore, direct your remarks to the Utes themselves,
and keep it up during the cold weather while they are hungry and weak, you will probably use up nearly all of them.
If you will do so, I will see that the people of the West
clubbed together and give you a nice gold-headed cane.
End of Chapter 42.
Chapter 43 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley.
The Muse! Criticism on the works of the Sweet Singer of Michigan.
Through the courtesy of a popular young lady of Chicago, who recognizes struggling genius at all times,
I have been permitted to carefully read and enjoy the lays of the sweet singer of Michigan,
and I ask the reader to come with me a few moments into the great field of literature,
while we flit from flower to flower on the wings of the muse.
There are a few indeed of us who do not love the heaven-born music of true poetry.
Hardened indeed must he be whose soul.
soul is dead to the glad song of the true poet, and we can but pity the gross, brutal nature which
refuses to throb and burn with spiritual fire lighted with culls from the altar of the gods.
I speak only for myself when I say that seven or eight twangs of the liar stir my impressible
nature so that I rise above the cares and woes of this earthly life, and I paw the ground,
and yearn for the unernerable, and howl.
Julia A. Moore, better known as the sweet singer of Michigan, was born sometime previous to the opening of this chapter of poor but honest parents, and although she couldn't have custard pie and frosted cake every day, she was middling chipper, as appears by a little poem in the collection, entitled The Author's Early Life, in which she says,
my heart was gay and happy. This was ever in my mind. There's better days at coming, and I hope
someday to find myself capable of composing. It was my heart's delight to compose on a sentimental
subject if it came in my mind just right. This would show that the muse was getting in its work,
as I might say, even while yet Julia was a little nut-brown maid trudging along to school
with bare feet that looked like the back of a warty toad.
In my visions I see her now, standing in front of the teacher's desk,
soaking the first three joints of her thumb in her rosebud mouth,
and trying to work her off-toe into a knot-hole in the floor,
while outside the turtle dove and the masculine Michigan mule
softly coo to their mates.
A portrait of the author appears on the cover of the little volume.
It is a very striking face.
There are lines of care about the master.
mouth, that is, part way around the mouth. They did not reach all the way around because they
didn't have time. Lines of care are willing to do anything that is reasonable, but they can't reach
around the North Park without getting fatigued. These lines of care and pain looked to the student
of physiognomy as though the author had lost a good deal of sleep trying to compose obituary poems.
The brow is slightly drawn, too, as though her corns might be hurting her. Julia wears her hair
plain like Alfred Tennyson and sitting bowl. It hangs down her back and perfect abandon and wild
profusion, shedding bears' oil over the collar of her Delane dress, regardless of expense. I cannot illustrate
or describe the early vision of dimpled loveliness which Julia presented in her childhood
better than by giving a little gem from my infant days. When I was a little infant and I lay in
mother's arms, then I felt the gentle pressure of a loving mother's arms. Go to sleep, my little baby,
go to sleep, Mama would say, oh, will not my little baby go to sleep for ma today? When I read this
little thing the other day, it broke me all up, took me back to my childhood days when I lay in my little
trundle bed and was wakeful and had a raging thirst in so much that I used to want a drink of water every
15 seconds. Mama didn't ask if I would go to sleep for Ma today. She used to turn the bedclothes
back over the footboard so that she could have plenty of sea room, and then she would take an old
sewing machine belt, and it would sigh through the agitated air for a few moments pretty plenty,
till the writer of these lines would conclude to sob himself to sleep, and anon through the night
he would dream that he had backed up against the hill smelting works. That's the kind of go-to-sleep for Ma today
that comes up vividly to my mind.
But I must give another stanza error to you from Julia's collection
as showing how this gifted writer can with a word dispel the chilling temperature of December
and run the thermometer up to 100 degrees in the shade.
I will quote from the death of Little Henry.
It was on the 11th of December on a cold and windy day
just at the close of evening when the sunlight fades away.
Little Henry, he was dying, in his little crib.
he lay, with the soft winds around him sighing from early morn till close of day.
One of Julia's poems opens out in such a cheerful, pleasant way that I wish I could give it all,
but space forbids. She tunes her liars so that it will mash all right, and then says,
Come, all kind friends, both far and near, oh come and see what you can hear.
Then she proceeds to slaughter someone. In looking over her poems, one is struck with a terrible
mortality which they show.
Julia is worse than a gatling gun.
I have counted 21 killed and nine wounded in the small volume which she has given to the public.
In giving the circumstances which attended the death of one of her subjects
and the economical principles of the deceased, she says,
And he was sick and very bad.
Poor boy, he thought no doubt.
If he came home in a smoking car, his money would hold out.
He started to come back alone.
He came one third, though.
way. One evening, in the car alone, his spirit fled away. That's the way Julia kills off a young man
just as we get interested in him. You just begin to like one of her heroes or heroines, and
Julia proceeds to lay said hero or heroine out colder than a wedge. A sad, sad thing, which goes
to the tune of Belle Mahone, starts out as follows. Once there lived a lady fair, with black eyes and
curly hair. She has left this world of care, sweet Carrie Monroe. To which I have added in my poor
weak way, she could not her sorrows bear, for she was a dumpling rare. She has clumbed the golden
stair, sweet Carrie Monroe. It was indeed a day of gloom when we gathered in her room,
while she cantered up the flume, sweet Carrie Monroe. I will give but one more example of Julia's
exquisite word painting, and then after a word or two relative to her style generally, I will close.
After speaking tearfully of her life as a child, she says,
My childhood days have passed and gone, and it fills my heart with pain,
to think that youth will never more return to me again.
And now, kind friends, what I have wrote, I hope you will pass over,
and not criticize, as some have done, hitherto here before.
I know that it ill becomes me to assume the prerogative of criticizing a poet's style,
or even to suggest any improvements,
but sometimes an outsider may be able to stand off, as it were,
and see little defects in a masterpiece which the author cannot see.
My idea would be to take these poems and remove the crown sheet,
then put in new running gear, upset and bush the pitman,
calcamine the boilerplate, drill new holes in the eccentric,
rim out the gas pipe, raise the posterior eccentric to a level with the gangplank,
slide the ashpan forward of the monkey wrench, securing it by drawbars to the top gallant
mizzen. Then, throwing open the condenser and allowing the cerebellum to rest firmly against the
vicarious wippitywops, fair time may be made on a gentle grade. If I were to suggest anything
further, it would be that Julia have entire change of air and surroundings. Michigan is too
healthy for an ambitious obituary poet. She naturally has too much time on her hands. Let her go into
the yellow fever districts next summer where she can work in two or three of her cheerful little
funeral odes every morning before breakfast. That's the place for her. It may kill her, but if it should,
we will trust in Providence to raise up some inspired idiot to take her place. We will struggle along
anyway with George Francis Train and Denise Kearney and Dr. Mary Walker, even if Julia joins
the glad throng of poets who let their hair grow long and kick up their heels in the green fields of Eden.
One more suggestion, which will I know be accepted as coming from one who never says anything but in
the kindest spirit. I think that Julia takes advantage of her poetic license. A poetic license, as I
understand it, simply allows the poet to jump the 15 over the 14 in order to bring in the proper rhyme,
but it does not allow the writer to usurp the management of the entire system of world.
and introduced dog days and ice cream between Christmas and New Year.
It does not in any way allow the contractor of prize funeral puffs
to sandwich a tropical evening with the scent of orange blossom and mignonette
in between two December days in Michigan
that would freeze the lightning rods off the houses
and when the owners of cast iron dogs have to bring them in
and stand them behind the parlor stove.
Julia can't fool me much on a Michigan winter.
when the seductive breath from the north comes sowing across Lake Superior, red-dilent with the blossom rock of the copper mines and dead cranberry vines and slippery elmbark, the poet or poetess who could maliciously crawl into a buffalo overcoat and ride a dirge that worked in sighing soft winds, just for the benefit of one whose spirit is in a land where houseplants never freeze, should have no poetic license. I would be in favor of having such license revoked, or raising the price of
so high that none but good, reliable, square-toed poets could practice.
I would suggest $500 per year for poets driving one horse and dealing in native poems on
death spring, beautiful snow, etc., etc., $1,000 per year for two-horse, platform spring poets,
retailers of imported poems, and $1,500 per year for poets who do a general business
in manufactured Havana poems or native rappers with Havana fillers.
We have too many poets in our glorious republic who ought to be peeling the epidermis off a bull train,
and too many poetesses who would succeed better boiling soap grease or spiking a six-by-eight patch
on the quarter-deck of a faithful husband's overalls.
I do not refer entirely to Julia in the last few lines, for Julia is not deserving of such criticism.
She was never intended to do the drudgery of housework.
She is too frail.
She couldn't cook because her cake would be sad.
and her soft, wavy hair, like the mane of a cayuse plug, would get in the codfish balls and cling to the butter.
No, Julia, you don't look like a woman whose career as a housewife would be a success.
From the mournful look in your limpid eye, I would say that your lignum-vete bread and celluloid custard pie
and indestructible waffles and fireproof pancakes and burglar-proof chicken pie would give you away.
Your mind would be far away in the poet's realm, and you had put shoe-blacking in the blanc-mange,
and silver-gloss starch in the tea, and cod liver oil in the sponge-cake.
So, Julia, you may continue, right along as you are doing.
It don't do much harm, and no doubt it does you a heap of good.
End of Chapter 43.
Chapter 44 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary
Gems by Bill Nye. This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Shoeing a Bronco
Recently, I have taken a little recreation when I felt despondent by witnessing the difficult
and dangerous feat of shoeing a bronco. Whenever I get low-spirited and feel that a critical
public don't appreciate my wonderful genius as a spring poet, I go around to Brown and
Poole's blacksmith shop on A Street and watch them shoe a vicious bronco. I always go back to the
office cheered and soothed and better prepared to fight the battle of life. They have a new rig now
for this purpose. It consists of two broad cinches which together cover the thorax and abdomen of the
bronco, to the ends of which, the cinches I mean, are attached ropes, four and number which each
pass over a pulley above the animal, and then her wrapped about a windlass. The Broncos led to the
proper position, like a young man who is going to have a photograph taken. The cinches slipped under his
body and attached to the ropes. Then the man at the wheel makes two or three turns in rapid succession.
The Bronco is seen to hump himself, like the boss camel of the grand aggregation of living
wonders. He grunts a good deal and switches his tail, while the ropes continue to work in the
pulleys, and the man at the capstan spits on his hands and rolls up on the wheel.
After a while, the bronco hangs from the ceiling, like a discouraged dishrag, and after trying
for two or three hundred times unsuccessfully to kick a hole in the starry firmament, he
yields and hangs at half-mast while the blacksmith shoes him.
Yesterday I felt as though I must see something cheerful, and so I went over to watch a bronco
getting his shoes on for the roundup.
I was fortunate. They led up a quiet, gentlemanly appearing plug with all the weary, despondent
air of a disappointed bronco who has had aspirations for being a circus horse and has got left.
When they put the cinches around him, he sighed as though his heart would break,
and his great, soulful eyes were wet with tears. One man said it was a shame to put a gentle pony
into a sling like that in order to shoe him, and the general feeling seemed to be that a great wrong
was being perpetrated.
Gradually the ropes tightened on him,
and his abdomen began to disappear.
He rose till he looked like a dead dog
that had been fished out of the river with a grappling iron.
Then he gave a grunt that shook the walls of the firmament,
and he reached out about five yards
till his hind feet felt off a greaser's eye,
and with an athletic movement,
he jumped through the sling and lit on the blacksmith's forge
with his head about three feet up the chimney.
He proceeded then to do some extra ground and lofty tumbling and kicking.
A large anvil was held up for him to kick till he tired himself out,
and then the blacksmith put a fire in burglar-proof safe over his head and shot him.
The Broncos was full of spirit, and although docile under ordinary circumstances,
he will at times get enthusiastic and do things which he afterwards, in his sober moments, bitterly regrets.
Some broncos have formed the habit of bucking.
They do not all buck, only those that are alive do so.
When they are dead, they are more subdued and gentle.
A bronco often becomes so attached to his master
that he will lay down his life if necessary,
his master's life, I mean.
When a bronco comes up to me and lays his head over my shoulder
and asks me to scratch his chill-blane for him,
I always excuse myself on the ground that I have a family
depended on me, and furthermore that I am a United States Commissioner, and to a certain extent
the government hinges on me. Think what a ghastly hole there would be in the official staff of the
Republic, if I were launched into eternity now when good men are so scarce. Some days I worry a good
deal over this question. Suppose that some unprincipled political enemy who wanted to be
United States Commissioner or notary public in my place should assassinate me.
Lots of people never see this.
They see how smoothly the machinery of government moves along,
and they do not dream of possible harm.
They do not know how quick she might slip a cog,
or the eccentric get jammed through the indicator.
If some evening when I am at the opera house or the minstrel show,
the assassin should steal up on me and shoot a large irregular aperture into my cerebellum.
This may not happen, of course,
but I suggest it, so that the public will, as it were,
throw its protecting arms about me and not neglect me while I am alive.
End of Chapter 44.
Chapter 45 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Pumpkin Jam, or the tale of a busted jackass rock-rock-ass rock.
Rabbit. Chapter 1. Pumpkin Jim. It was evening in the mountains. The Golden God of Day was gliding
slowly adown the Crimson West. Here and there, the Cerulean Dome was flecked with snowy clouds.
The flecks were visible to the naked eye. Meanwhile, the Golden God of Day, herein before referred to,
continued to glide down the crimson west with about the same symmetrical glide. It had done so
on several occasions previous to the opening of this story.
The Katie did was singing sleepily in the long grass,
and the grizzly bear was trilling between eleven trills on the still air.
It was a spot where the foot of man had never trod,
and the undisturbed temple of nature with its hallowed hush and never-ending repose.
The lofty pines were swaying softly to and fro in the gentle breeze of evening,
and the babbling brook went babbling along down its rocky bed
in the bottom of the canyon with a merry bab.
All at once, like a flash of dazzling light,
a noble youth came slowly down the mountainside,
riding an ambling palfrey of the narrow-gauge variety
with a paint-brush tail on him,
that is, the palfrey, of course.
The palfrey was a delicate buckskin color,
with high intellectual ears and Roman nose.
In crossing the stream, the Palfrey stubbed his toe
and fell on his noble rider, breaking the man's leg in three places,
and jamming one of his ribs through the liver and into the ground,
thus pinning him to the earth and preventing him from rising.
The buckskin Palfrey, with almost human foresight and wonderful intelligence,
found a soft place in the grassy bottom and lay down.
There in the slanting rays of the declining sun,
and stretched out upon the sedgy brink of the clear mountain stream,
far from the reach of man and miles beyond the outer land of civilization,
lay pumpkin jim, the yipping, yelling yahoo of dirty woman's ranch.
He lay there, partially submerged in the stream,
and partially in the clear, bracing atmosphere.
Wild-eyed and beautiful, he lay there,
looking up into the glad realms of space,
with that murderous glitter in his eye that wins a woman's love,
and the sympathy of kind-hearted philanthropists.
Occasionally he would raise his broken limb and try to use it,
but it generally wilted and drooped like the leg of a rag doll.
Then he would struggle to raise himself up and drag his body out upon the bank,
but the broken rib would tear out large chunks of his liver
and make him feel wretched and unhappy.
Curses upon thee, thou basin treacherous mule, he murmured brokenly,
by my beard thou hast poorly repaid me for my unremitting kindness to thee. Ah, alack, alack, alack. He was just about to alack some more when a mellow, girlish voice came floating down the gulch and fell in large fragments near where he lay. He gathered up some of the chunks of melody to see what the song might be. It was that wonderful masterpiece of Mozart's when Johnny comes marching home. Then he said,
swooned. The gurgling brook still continued to gurg. We will let it gurg.
Chapter 2. Geraldine Carbeline O'Toole. The melodious voice referred to in the preceding chapter
was owned and operated by Geraldine Carbeline O'Toole, the heroine of this classic tale.
Anon she came down the valley like a thing of life. The limber sunbonnet, which she wore, had
drifted to leeward and revealed her Grecian profile
and peeled nose. All at once, her faun-like eyes fell upon the prostrate figure, pale and still,
and its toes turned toward the center of the zodiac. A wild, frightened look came into her starry eyes,
and a ghastly pallor overspread her young face, throwing her intellectual freckles into strong relief.
She stole forward and looked at the pale face of Pumpkin Jim as it lay upturned with the rosebud mouth slightly ajar,
like the mouth of the Mississippi River.
Then she stooped, and dipping up some of the clear, cold water in his hat,
poured it into the rosy mouth.
Slowly it trickled down his throat,
and the wild panic and surprise, created in his stomach by the novel fluid,
brought him speedily to consciousness.
Where am I, and whence cometh this burning sensation in my liver?
Faintly murmured Pumpkin Jim.
Me thought some new and peculiar beverage didst cool my fervous.
parching throat. Hist, said Geraldine, you must not excite yourself. You must brace up.
Everything depends upon your keeping quiet, instead of tearing up the ground with your broken rib.
And whence comest thou, O beauteous vision, with the Aurora Borealis hair?
Didst I not tell thee, said Geraldine, that thou mustest not converse, but remain quiet?
Let it suffice, however, that I strayed away from a Sabbath school picnic at Cheyenne, and have
wandered on carelessly for several hundred miles,
Wotting not whence I wist.
By this time the day god, which we left gliding slowly
down the crimson west, had glowed down the crimson west,
according to advertisement, and the solemn hush of night was coming on,
broken anon by the long-drawn shriek of the mountain lion,
or the peeling of the thunder, which also reverberated anon
through the otherwise solemn hush of night.
Darkness came on apace.
It would be folly to attempt to prevent it, so we will let it come on apace.
Chapter 3. Startling Revelations. We will now suppose 24 hours to have passed since the scenes
narrated in the last chapter. The gloaming is beginning to gloom. It began to look as though
if something were not done for Pumpkin Jim pretty previously, he would pass with a gentle gliding
movement up the flume. He was growing fainter hour by hour.
and the extreme torpidity of his liver gave rise to grave apprehensions on the part of his gentle guardian.
His leg also gave him extreme pain and caused for uneasiness to say the least.
It had swollen to about the size of a flower barrel and was still swelling as we go to press.
He opened his eyes with a low moan and looked up into the limber sunbonnet.
Beautious one with the ethereal brow, he began, but Geraldine blushed and bade him lead.
up. Gentle lady, he began again, I am aware that the crisis is near, unless I have helped very soon,
in some form or other, I shall have clom the golden stair. Already the circulation is impaired,
and the transverse duplex has ceased to vibrate. Disillusion is coming on. My pulse grows feebler
hour by hour, and I feel that another morning sun will find only my earthly tenement here.
My spirit will have won its way to the round.
of eternal day.
Oh, do not talk that way, sobbed Geraldine, filling her apron full of large, irregular fragments
of grief.
It cannot, must not be.
Do not be overconfident, said Pumpkin, Jim.
Few men would have lived as I have with a rib running through the center of the liver,
and into the ground for nine or ten inches without great difficulty.
The secret of my power of endurance, I will, however, confide to you, as this may be positively,
my last appearance. My true name is not Pumpkin Jim. That is only a nom de plume. My sure enough name is
Jesse James. That is the secret of my longevity. I have been killed a great deal. I have lost my life in
almost every state in the Union. At first it used to make me gloomy and taciturn to be killed so much,
but latterly I became very much pleased and flattered by this attention. It is sad to think,
however, that after being killed by some of our most prominent men,
I should at last yield up the ghost in a lonely canyon
at the urgent solicitation of a narrow-gauge mule.
But enough, it is useless to repine.
All that I am kicking about is that after dying in so many different styles
and in such desirable conditions,
surrounded by all the comforts of civilization,
and getting a large amount of a newspaper space
and having a patent-medicine portrait of myself published in the papers,
I should succumb to the death-dealing jackass in the solitude of the mountains.
I cannot die again, however, without telling you of my love.
I might occupy your time by telling you of my long and glittering career of crime,
but it would take too long.
I have nothing to lay at your feet but my untarnished record as a highway robber
and my all-consuming love.
It would ease the pain of my dying hour if you were to say to me that you return to my love.
Our hero then fell back upon the mossy bank and gasped for breath,
while to all appearances the last moments of Pumpkin Jim had come.
It was a trying time for a young thing like Geraldine to pass through.
She stooped over him and fanned him with her sunbonnet
and whispered a few low musical words in his ear.
That did the business.
Chapter 4.
All's well that ends well.
The magic words that Geraldine emptied,
in the pumpkin James's ear, roused him, and his eyes opened with their old diabolical light.
A slight grating sound was heard. It was the broken bone of our hero's off-limm coming back into
its place and reuniting. Then his rib came back out of the ground and waltzed into him.
His liver healed up, and he arose and sat in the moonlight. His first words were,
Ah, Geraldine, you have brought me back to life. Now, would you please look around and see if there
is any cold pie in the house, my very onest own? This seemed to indicate that he had not fully recovered
his mental faculties, as the most accessible cold pie was 327 miles from where they then were,
and in a direct line. Geraldine, however, set herself at once about procuring food for her soul's
idle. Taking some salt, she went out along the wooded slope to find a jackrabbit, on whose tail
she could throw the salt, thus securing him as an easy prey.
She soon scared up one with a broken leg.
Most all of my gentle, refined and intellectual readers of the Rocky Mountains
have frightened from his lair at some time or other, a jackrabbit with a broken leg.
Jack rabbits with shattered limbs are very common in the West.
Geraldine followed hopefully on, uphill and down, over low parks covered with bunch grass,
across little mountain streams, through long stretches of grease wood and sagebrush,
starting the owl from some blasted pine tree, or frightening the smiling coyote from his course,
onward and ever onward, she flew like a hunted fawn.
Her every motion was grace and poetry itself.
The limber sunbonnet flopped to and fro with a merry runic flop,
but the crippled John Rabbit did not tarry.
For an invalid he seemed to make very fair time.
Occasionally he would look around over his shoulder and laugh a merry taunting laugh.
Then he would give his attention to getting over the ground.
Geraldine got mad and resolved to overtake her game and meet out to him a horrible death.
Now then she would wildly throw a lump of salt in the direction of the fleeing rabbit,
but it always failed to connect.
It was indeed an exciting chase, and, in fact, is yet,
for as we go to press, Geraldine is still madly pursuing the ostensibly disabled.
jackrabbit, with a handful of common table salt poised in the air, ready to throw upon the
tail of her rapidly retreating adversary. Jesse James, alias Pumpkin Jim, waited a reasonable length of
time for the return of Geraldine, but as she cometh not, he said, he arose and bestriding his
narrow-gauge mule, he rode away. He readily laid down his life again, wherever he went,
and although he died a miserable death in almost every corner of the earth,
he never more met Geraldine Carbeline O'Toole,
the Italian Countess, to whom he was betrothed.
It is thought that she chased the crippled jackrabbit into the realms of space.
End of Chapter 46 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the publication,
Public Domain, read by Dale Barkley.
William Nye and the heathen Chinese.
The subject of agriculture, which really lies nearest my heart of anything I can think of,
naturally brings to the front the Oriental Buckwheater.
The Chinaman, as an agriculturalist, is generally successful in a small way, and I love to
watch him work.
Whenever I get bilious and need exercise, I go over to the south end of town, and
and vicariously hoe radishes for an hour or two till the pores are open,
and I feel that delightful languor and the chastened sense of hunger and honesty,
which comes to the man who is not afraid to toil.
There is a feeling now, too prevalent among our American people,
that the Chinaman should be driven away,
but I do not join in the popular cry because I enjoy him too much,
and he soothes me and cheers me when all the earth seems filled with woe.
My favorite Oriental onion promoter is called Too Long.
This, however, was a piece of side-splitting mirth on the part of his parents,
for, as a matter of fact, he is too short.
He is considerably bronzed by the action of the sun and his out-of-door pursuits,
so that his complexion has that radiant olive tinge that we see on the canvas-covered ham.
I go over to Toulog's farm, in Sherrod's alky addition to Laramie,
when I feel that office work does not give me the physical exercise that I need,
and I lean over the fence and tell too long my experience with club-footed parsnips
and early-fried potatoes. At first he used to listen to me with his mouth open
so that you could throw a Mason and Hamlin organ into it. Now he don't seem to pay much attention
to what I say to him. This shows that the Chinaman cannot keep pace with the rapid strides
now being made by American agriculture.
One day last week I had lost my appetite
and needed active bodily exertion,
so I strolled over to the rat-eaters' rural retreat
to watch too long a few hours
and see if I couldn't get up an appetite.
The wind was blowing pretty fresh,
as it sometimes does in this lovely climb,
and too long was trying to hold down some vulcanized rubber beets
and moss-aggot asparagus.
He wasn't succeeding very well.
Well, for just as he would get the beats driven into the ground securely,
the Zephyr would spring up from the south
and blow the moss-aggot asparagus all over the military reservation.
Then, while he would be giving his attention to the asparagus,
the wailing winds would blow down his fence
and turn the tail of Toulog's morning wrapper over his head
and leave his spinal column sticking up into the summer sky.
It seemed to be a bad day for agriculture,
and too long would alternately uncork some brocaded profanity, and then chase his hat, or do up his hair in a fresh Grecian coil.
I leaned over the fence, and laughing a low gurgling laugh, I said,
Too long, you must learn to control your fiendish temper.
Agriculture requires patience and serenity of disposition.
You must always be cheerful and gentle.
Always be pleasant and amiable in your home life.
When the mountain wind uncoils your back hair and you cannot hold down the flap of your dressing sack,
you must not get mad and swear, but fill the air with merry laughter, just as Confucius used to do.
Be a philosopher, and frown down these little annoyances.
Now when I was propagating my scotch-planned summer squashes,
the squash bugs got in one morning before breakfast and ate the vines.
Soon after that, I tried a new kind of fireproof squash with a hunting-ympers.
case on it. But the squash bugs took a spade and pried open the hunting case and ate the supreme
stuffing out of every individual squash. I then tried the Bessemer steel squash, with plaster of Paris
works inside, but the irrigation was defective, and it never matured. But did I forget myself and swear
like a guinea hen the way you do? Did I break forth into petulant remarks and lower myself in
the estimation of my neighbors? Not to any remarkable degree.
I went to the stockholders of the Pioneer Canal Company and said,
Here, gentlemen, I am an inexperienced agriculturalist, and I do not succeed.
Nothing grows under my watchful care but the speckled squash bug and the fresh water-cut worm.
You are old, horny-handed sons of toil and practical tillers of the soil.
What shall I do?
Then the secretary called a meeting of the stockholders, and the matter was discussed.
The general custodian of peculiar seeds and rare bulbs was ordered to select certain seeds from the bureau and give them to me for trial.
Among these were the seeds of the early dwarf salad oil vine, the northern spy horse radish, the black and tan lima bean, the non-explosive codfish ball, the soda water melon, the grammatical sugar beet, and the anti-cut worm asbestos string bean.
These have all grown well and thrived when my neighbors, who are too proud to ask advice, have failed.
I shall this year raise, no doubt, enough of the non-explosive codfish ball alone,
to place me far beyond the reach of want.
But too long is a thousand years behind the great irresistible tide of progress,
and will cling to his celluloid beets and cottonwood cucumbers for ages yet to come.
End of Chapter 46.
Chapter 47 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Hong Lee's Grand Benefit at Leadville
It will be remembered that about nine months ago, Hong Lee resolved to establish a branch laundry and shirt-destroying establishment at Leadville,
with the main office and general headquarters at Laramie.
All at once, he came back and seemed to be satisfied at the old stand,
so I would ask him his opinion of the future of the carbonate camp.
Hong Lee had just tied his hair up in a Grecian coil
and secured it in a mass of shining braids as I came in,
and was giving some orders as to the day's work.
One employee was just completing his devotions to a cross-eyed god in one corner,
and another was squirting water out of his mouth like an oriental street sprinkler,
over the spotless front of a white shirt.
Hong Lee asked me to sit down on the ironing table and make myself at home.
I asked him how trade was and a few other unimportant questions,
and then asked him what he thought of Leadville.
I cannot give the conversation in the exact language in which it was given,
as I am not up in Pigeon English.
He said he went over to Leadville,
thinking that at $4.25 per dozen,
he could work up a good business and wear a brocated,
overshirt and slashed sleeves and Peking trimmings. Trade was a little dull here, and he had
more Chinaman than he could use, so he had concluded to establish a branch outfit at Leadville
and make some scads. I asked him why he did not remain at the camp and go through the program.
He said that the general feeling in Leadville was not friendly to the Chinaman. People did not meet him
with a brass band, and the mayor didn't tender him the freedom of the city. On the contrary,
They seemed cold and distant toward him.
By and by they clubbed together and came to call on him.
They were very attentive then, very much so.
Some had shotguns to fire salutes with,
and others had large clotheslines in their hands.
Hong Lee felt proud to be so much thought of
and was preparing an impromptu speech on orange paper with a marking brush
when the chairman came and told him that a few American citizens had come,
hoping to be of use to him and learning the ways of the city.
then they took him out to the public square where hong lee supposed that he was to make his speech and they proceeded to kick him into the most shapeless mass they kicked him into a globular form and then flattened him out after which they knocked him into a rhomboid
this change was followed by thumping him into an isosceles triangle when he looked more like a bundle of old clothes than a chinaman they took him with a pair of tongs and threw him over the battlements
Hong Lee returned to consciousness and murmured,
Where am I?
Or words to that effect.
A noble mule skinner passing by,
touched him up with the hot end of his mule whip,
and showed him the route to Denver.
Hong Lee says now,
be it ever so humble,
there's no place like home.
End of Chapter 47.
Chapter 48 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gentlemen.
by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley.
You foo.
She is rather below the medium height,
and her gate is the easy, gliding movement
of a club-footed guinea pig.
She is a mouth like a whipper will,
and when she laughed at some little bon moat,
such as I am always getting off,
her upper lip was thrown back over her head
till it caught on a large celestial hairpin,
and her attendant had to go up there
with a monkey wrench and unfastinate. It was the most heavenly smile I ever saw. It had so much
depth and soul to it. I felt flattered, of course, but I was more guarded in my remarks after that.
The Chinese, as a nation, cannot grapple with our American style of joke. They are not strong enough.
Yu Fu was held here on a telegram from Denver until Monday, when she was released on Rit of habeas corpus.
I went up to see how the writ would work on a China woman.
At first it didn't seem to catch on,
but after a while it began to work on her all right,
and eventually turned her loose.
But I wouldn't be a habeas corpus for $2 per day and bored.
After being released on the writ,
there being no warrant at that time,
counsel told Ah Say, who had Yu Fu in charge,
that the best thing for him to do
would be to light out with great vehemence for some foreign strand,
as the Denver officer would be here Monday evening with the required documents to take Yu Fu back to Denver.
She was therefore taken to the palatial residence of Hong Lee on 2nd near A Street,
where she was rigged up in man's attire, but Sheriff Boswell stepped in,
and through the gauzy disguise he discovered Yu Fu.
He arrested her.
She was bathed in tears.
It was the first bath she ever had.
He took her and held her, figuratively speaking.
until another telegram announced that the requisition of the governor was countermanded,
and U-Food lit out for her destination.
I shall write a little novelette next summer, with his tale as a foundation,
and it will be a good thing.
I am having the cuts made now at a shoemaker's shop here in town.
End of Chapter 48.
Chapter 49 of Bill Nyan Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems.
by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Lop-beard lovers of the Little Laramie, Chapter 1, a tale of love and parental cussedness.
The scene opens with the landscape, in the foreground stands a house, but there are no
honeysuckles or Johnny jump-ups clambering over the door, there are no columbines or bittersweets
or bachelor's buttons, clinging lovingly to the eaves and filling the air with fragrance.
The reason for this is that it is too early in the spring for Columbines and Johnny Jump-ups
at the time when our story opens, and they wouldn't grow in that locality without irrigation anyway.
That is the reason that these little adjuncts do not appear in the landscape.
But the scene is nevertheless worthy of a painter.
The house especially ought to be painted and a light coat of the same
article on the front gate would improve its appearance materially. In the door of the cottage
stands a damsel, whose natural loveliness is enhanced 30 or 40% by a large oroid chain, which
encircles her swan-like throat, and as she shades her eyes with her alabaster hand, the gleam of
a gutta-percha ring on her front finger tells the casual observer that she is engaged. While she
is shading her eyes from the blinding glare of the orb of day, the aforesaid orb of day
keeps right on setting, according to advertisement, and at last disappears behind the snowy range,
lighting up as it does so, the fleecy clouds and turning them into gold, figuratively speaking,
making the picture one of surpassing loveliness. But what does she care for a thirteen-dollar sunset,
or the low, sad wail of the sage-hound, far up the canyon as it calls to its mate? And,
What does she care for the purple landscape and the mournful sigh of the new milch cow, which is born to her over the great divide?
She don't care as scent.
Chapter 2
It is now the proper time to bring in the solitary horseman.
He is seen riding a mouse-colored bronco on a smooth canter, and from his uneasiness in the saddle,
it is evident that he has been riding a long time and that it doesn't agree with him.
He has been attending the spring meeting of the Rocky Mountain Roundup.
He takes a benevolent chew of tobacco, looks at his cylinder escapement watch,
and plunges his huge Mexican spurs into the panting sides of his bronco steed.
The ambitious steed rears forward and starts away into the gathering gloom at the rate of 21 miles and 21 days,
while a bitter oath escapes from the clenched teeth and foam-flected lips of the pigeon-toed rider.
But stay, let us catch a rapid outline of a solitary horseman, for he is the affiancéed lover.
and soft-eyed gazelle of Luella Frauseltop, the queen of the skim milk ranch.
He is evidently a man of, say, 20 summers with a sinister expression to the large, ambitious,
imported Italian mouth.
A broad-brimmed white hat with a scarlet flannel band protects his gothic features from the
burning sun, and a pale brown ducking suit envelopes his lithe form.
A horse-haired lariat hangs at his saddlebow, and the faintest of his furtops.
suspicion of a downy mustache on his chiseled upper lip is just beginning to ooze out into the air as if ashamed of itself.
It is one of those silky mustaches, a kind of cross between blonde and brindle, which mean well enough, but never amount to anything.
His eyes are fierce and restless, with short, expressive white eyelashes, and his nose is short but wide out,
gradually melting away into his bronzed and stalwart cheeks,
like a dish of ice cream before a Sabbath school picnic.
Such is the rough sketch of Pigeon Toed Pete,
the swain who had stolen away the heart of Luella Frausel Top,
the queen of the skim milk ranch.
He isn't handsome, but he is very good,
and he loves the fair Luella with a great deal of diligence,
although her parents are averse to the match,
for we might as well inform the sagacious and handsome reader
that her parents are Presbyterians, whereas the hero of this blood-curdling tale is a hard-shell Baptist.
Thus are two hearts doomed to love in vain.
Chapter 3. During all this time that we have been going on with the preceding chapter,
Luella has been standing in the door looking away to the eastward,
a soiled gingham apron thrown over her head, and a dreamy, far-away look in her mournful sorrel eyes.
Suddenly, there breaks on her finely-moulded and flexible ear, the sound of a horse's hoof.
Aha, she murmurs, hissed, it is him.
Blast his picture.
Why didn't he have some style about him and get here on time?
And she impatiently mashes a huge mosquito that is fastened on her swarthy arm.
Anyone could see as she stood there that she was mad.
She didn't really have any cause for it, but she was an only child,
and accustomed to being petted and humored.
and lying in bed till half-past ten.
This had made her high-spirited,
and she occasionally turned loose with the first thing that came to hand.
You're a fine-haired snoozer from Bitter Creek, ain't you?
said the pale flower of Skim Milk Ranch,
as the solitary horseman alighted from his panting steed,
and threw his arms about her with a great song-vroid.
In what respect, said Pigeon-toed Pete,
as he held her from him and looked lovingly down into her deep sorrel eyes,
"'Oh, fairest of thy sect,' he continued as he took out his quid of tobacco,
preparatory to planting a long, wide, passionate kiss on her burning cheek,
"'You wot not what you fain would say.
"'The way was long, my ambling steed as a ring bone on the off leg,
"'and thou chidest me thy erring swain without a cause.'
He knew that she would pitch into him,
"'so he had this little impromptu speech all committed to memory.
"'She pillowed her sunny head on his panting breast for an hour.
hour or so, and shed eleven or eight happy tears. Oh, lodestar of my existence, and soother of my
every sorrow, said he with a charming naivete, wilt thou fly with me tonight to some adjacent
justice of the peace, and be my skipful gazelle, my little neblous ultra, my own magnum bonum,
and mulctum in parvo, so to speak. Leave your Presbyterian parents to run the ranch and fly with me.
You shall never want for anything.
You shall never put your dimpled hands in dishwater or wring out your own clothes.
I will get you a new rosewood washing machine.
And when your slightest look indicates that you want $40 or $50 for pin money,
I will make out a check for that amount.
He had just finished his little harang, whatever that is,
and was putting in a few choice gestures
when the old man came around from behind the rainwater barrel with a shotgun
and told the impassioned Swain that he had better skip.
He told the ardent admirer of Luella that he had better not linger to any great extent,
as he set it in his quiet but firm way, at the same time fondling the lock on his shotgun,
the lover lingered not, but hide him away to his neighing steed and lightly springing into the saddle,
was soon lost to the sight. We will leave him on the road for a short time.
Chapter 4
We will now suppose a period of three years to have passed.
Luella had been sent to visit her friends in southern Iowa,
partly to assuage her grief and partly to save expenses,
for she was a hearty eater.
Here she met a young man named Rufus G. Hopper,
who fell in love with her about the first hard work he did,
and when, metaphorically speaking,
he laid his 40-acre homestead with its wealth of grasshopper eggs at her feet,
she capitulated and became hisn, and he became heron.
Thus these two erstwhile,
lovers of the long ago had become separated, and the fair queen of the skim milk ranch had taken
a change of venue with her affections. Still all seemed to be well to the casual observer,
although at times her eyes had that faraway look of those who are crossed in love or whose
livers are out of order. Was it the fleeing vision of the absent lover, or had she eaten
something that didn't agree with her? Ah, who shall say that at times there did not flash across her
mind, the fact that she had sacrificed herself on the altar of Mammon, and given her rich love
in exchange for forty acres of government land. But the time drew nigh for the celebration of the
nuptials, and still no tidings of the absent lover. Near and near came the 4th of July the day set
apart for the wedding, and still in the dark, mysterious bosom of the unknown, lurked the absent
swain. Star, star, star, star, star, star, star, star, star, star. These stars, star, star, star, star. These stars,
The stars indicate the number of days which we must now suppose to have passed,
and the glad day of the nation's rejoicing is at hand.
The loud-mouthed canon proclaims, for the 100th time,
that in the little revolutionary scrimmage of 1776,
our forefathers got away with the persimmons.
Flags wave, bands play, and crackers explode,
and scare the teams from the country.
Fair rustic maids are seen on every hand with their good clothes on,
and farmers' sons walk up and down the street,
asking the price of watermelons and soda water.
By and by the band comes down street,
playing Old Zip Koon, with variations.
The procession begins to form and point toward the grandstand,
where the Declaration of Independence will be read to the admiring audience,
and lemonade retailed at five cents a glass.
But who are the couple who sit on the front seat near the speakers' stand,
listening with rapt attention to the new and blood-curdling romance
entitled the Declaration of Independence?
It is Luella and her brand-new husband.
The casual observer can discover that, by the way he smokes a cheap cigar in her face
and allows the fragrant smoke from the five-cent Havana to drift into her sorrel eyes.
All at once, the band strikes up the operatic strain of Captain Jinks,
and as the sad melody dies away in the distance,
a young man steps proudly forth at the conclusion of the president's introductory speech
and in a low musical voice
begins to set forth the wrongs
visited on the Pilgrim Fathers
and to dish up the bones of
G. Washington and T. Jefferson
in various styles.
What is it about the classic mouth
with its charming naivete
and the amber tinge
lurking about its roguish outlines
which awakens the old thrill in Luella's heart
and causes the vital current to recede
from its accustomed channels
and leave her face like marble
save where here and there a large freckle stands out in bold relief.
It is the mouth of pigeon-toed peat.
Those same Gothic features stand out before her, and she knows him in a moment.
It is true he had colored his mustache, and he wore a stand-up collar,
but it was the same form, the same low, musical, squeaky voice,
and the same large intellectual ears, which she remembered so well.
It appeared that he had been to the Gunnison country,
and having manifested considerable originality and genius as a bullwacker,
had secured steady employment and large wages,
being a man with a ready command of choice and elegant profanity
and an irresistible way of appealing to the wants of a sluggish animal.
Taking his spare change, he had invested it in handmade sour mash corn juice,
which he retailed it from 25 to 50 cents for glass.
Rainwater, being plenty, the margin was large,
and his profits highly satisfactory.
In this way, he had managed to get together some cash,
and was at once looked upon as a leading capitalist,
and a man on whom rested the future prosperity of the country.
He wore moss-aggot sleeve buttons and carried a stem-winding watch.
He looked indeed like a thing of life,
and as he closed with some stirring quotation from Martin F. Tupper,
amid the crash of applause,
the band struck up the oratorio of,
Whoop him up, Liza Jane,
and the audience dispersed to witness a game of baseball. Luella took her husband's arm,
climbed into the lumber wagon, and rode home with a great grief in her heart. Had she deferred
her wedding for only a few short hours, the course of her whole life would have been entirely
changed, and instead of plotting her weary way through the long, tedious years as Mrs. Hopper
making rag carpets during the winter and smashing the voracious potato bug during the summer,
she might have been interested in a carbonate bonanza,
or in checked stockings, and low-necked shoes.
There are two large, limpid tears standing in her sorrel eyes as the curtain falls on this story,
and her lips move involuntarily as she murmurs that little couplet from Milton.
I feel kind of sad and bilious because my heart keeps sighing, it couldn't was.
End of Chapter 49.
of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain. Read by Dale Barclay.
Speech of Spartacus, adapted from the original, especially for this work. It had been a day of
triumph in Capua. Lentulus, returning with victorious eagles, had aroused the populace
with the sports of the amphitheatre, to an extent hitherto unknown.
even in that luxurious city.
A large number of people from the rural districts had been in town to watch the conflict in the arena
and to listen with awe and veneration to the infirm and decrepit ring jokes.
The shouts of revelry had died away.
The last loiterer had retired from the free lunch counter,
and the lights in the palace of the victor were extinguished.
The moon piercing the tissue of fleecy clouds
tipped the dark waters of the tiber with a wavy tremulous.
light. The dark-browed Roman soldier moved on his homeward way, the sidewalk occasionally
flying up and hitting him in the back. No sound was heard save the low sob of some retiring wave,
as it told its story to the smooth pebbles of the beach. Or the unrelenting bootjack struck
the high board fence in the backyard, just missing the Roman Tomcat in his mad flight,
and then always still is the breast when the spirit has departed. Anon the Roman snore
would steal upon the deathly silence and then die away like the sow of a summer breeze.
In the green room of the amphitheater, the little band of gladiators were assembled.
The foam of conflict yet lingered on their lips, the scowl of battle yet hung upon their brows,
and the large knobs on their classic profiles indicated that it had been a busy day with them.
There was an embarrassing silence of about five minutes when Spartacus, borrowing a chew of tobacco from
Tropholiatum Aurelius, stepped forth, and thus addressed them.
Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen, you call me chief, and you do well to call him,
Chief, who for 12 long years has met in the arena every shape of man or beast that the broad
empire of Rome could furnish, and yet has never lowered his arm.
I do not say this to brag, however, but simply to show that I am the star-thumper of the
entire outfit. If there be one among you who can say that ever in public fire,
or private brawl, my actions did belie my words, let him stand forth and say it, and I will spread
him around over the arena till the coroner will have to gather him up with a blotting paper. If there be three
in all your company dare face me on the bloody sands, let them come, and I will construct upon their
physiognomy such cupolas and royal cornices and Corinthian capitals and tablatures that their own mothers
would pass them by in the broad light of high noon, unrecognized. And yet I was not,
always thus, a hired butcher, the savage chief of still more savage man. My ancestors came from
old Sparta, the county seat of Marcus Aurelius County, and settled among the vine-clad hills
and cotton groves of Circella. My early life ran quiet as the clear brook by which I sported.
Aside from the gentle patter of the maternal slipper on my overalls, everything moved along with me
like the silent, oliginous flow of the ordinary goose grease.
My boyhood was one long, happy summer day.
We stole the Roman musk melon and put split sticks on the tail of the Roman dog,
and life was one continuous hallelujah.
When at noon I led the sheep beneath the shade and played the sweet by and by on my shepherd's flute,
there was another Spartan youth, the son of a neighbor, to join me in the pastime.
We led our flocks to the same pasture,
and together picked the large red ants out of our indestructible sandwiches.
One evening, after the sheep had been driven into the corral,
and we were all seated beneath the persimmon tree that shaded our humble cottage,
my grandsire, an old man, was telling of Marathon and Luetra and George Francis Train
and Dr. Mary Walker and other great men,
and how a little band of Spartans under Sitting Bull had withstood the entire regular army.
I did not then know what war was, but my name.
cheek burned. I knew not why, and I thought what a glorious thing it would be to leave the
reservation and go on the warpath. But my mother kissed my throbbing temples and made me go soak my
head and think no more of those old tales and savage wars. That very night, the Romans landed on
our coasts. They pillaged the whole country, burned the agency buildings, demolished the ranch,
rode off the stock, tore down the smokehouse, and rode their war-horses over the cucumber vines.
Today I killed a man in the arena, and when I broke his helmet clasps and looked upon him,
behold, he was my friend.
Same sweet smile was on his face that I had known when in an adventurous boyhood
we bathed in the glassy lake by our Spartan home, and he had tied my shirt into 1,752 dangerous and difficult knots.
He knew me, smiled some more, said ta-ta, and ascended the golden stair.
I begged of the praetor that I might be allowed.
to bear away the body and have it packed in ice and shipped to his friends near Sillah,
but he couldn't see it. I, upon my bended knees, amidst the dust and blood of the arena,
I begged this poor boon, and the praetor answered, Let the carrion rot. There are no noble men,
but Romans and Ohio men. Let the show go on. Bring in the bobtail lion from Ebisinia.
And the assembled maids and matrons and the rabble shouted in derision and told me to
brace up, and have some style about my clothes, and to give it to us easy, with other Roman flings
which I do not now call to mind. And so must you, fellow gladiators, and so must I, die like dogs.
Tomorrow we are billed to appear at the Coliseum at Rome, and reserved seats are being sold
at the corner of third and course streets for our moral and instructive performance, while I am
speaking to you. You stand here like giants as ye are, but tomorrow some Roman Adonis with
the sealskin cap, will pat your red brawn and bet his cestresses upon your blood.
O Rome, Rome, thou hast been indeed a tender nurse to me.
Thou hast given to that gentle, timid shepherd lad, who never knew a harsher tone than a flute note,
muscles of iron, and a heart like the adamantine lemon pie of the railroad lunchroom.
Thou hast taught him to drive his sword through plated mail and links of rugged brass,
and warm it in the palpitating gizzard of his foe,
and to gaze into the glaring eyeballs of the fierce Numidian lion,
even as the smooth-cheeked Roman senator looks into the laughing eyes of the girls in the Treasury Department.
And he shall pay thee back till thy rushing tiber is red as frothing wine,
and in its deepest ooze thy life-blood lies curdled.
You doubtless hear the gentle murmur of my bazoo.
Hark, hear ye y'on lion roaring in his den,
"'Tis three days since he tasted flesh,
"'but tomorrow he will have Gladiator on toast,
"'and don't you forget it!
"'And he will fling your vertebrae about his cage
"'like the tar-pitcher of a champion nine.
"'If you are brutes, then stand here like fat oxen
"'waiting for the butcher's knife.
"'If you are men, arise and follow me,
"'strike down the warden and the turnkey,
"'overpower the police, and cut for the tall timber.
"'We will break through the city gate,
"'capture the war-horse of the drunken Roman,
flee away to the lava beds and there do bloody work, as did our sires at Old Thermopylae,
scalp the western-bound emigrant, and make the hen-roosts around Capua look sick.
O comrades, warriors, gladiators, if we be men, let us die like men, beneath the blue sky,
and by the still waters, and be buried according to Gunter,
instead of having our shin bones polished off by Numidian lions,
amid the groans and hisses of a snide Roman populace.
End of Chapter 50.
Chapter 51 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevok's recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Correspondence.
Dals of the St. Croix, September 8th, 1880.
Yesterday we steamed up this beautiful river from stillwater,
and as I write, our boat is moored at the head of navigation
with the mighty perpendicular walls of the St. Croix,
shutting in the grassy waters below.
While 100 yards above us, the foaming torrent
is dashing against the invincible fortress
of smooth moss-grown rocks with here and there
a somber pine or graceful spruce
clinging to a jutting shelf,
midway between the clear, calm sky above, and the roaring, angry flood beneath.
Most everyone has heard of the wonderful dows of the St. Croix. They are not, however, the sole feature of the locality entitled to notice.
I consider the entire picture between still water and the falls, one of surpassing loveliness.
At this season of the year, the high gray walls on either side of the lake and river are clad in garments of green,
and gold, which mock the pen of the poet, and strike the beholder dumb, as he stands in the
royal presence of autumn. The deep green of the stately pine stands side by side with the golden
glory of the poplar, and here and there the brazen billows and royal coloring of maple and oak,
the hectic flush upon the features of the dying year, are spread out between the silent sky
and the sandy beach, while softly mirrored in the glassy white, and the glassy white, and the glassy
the whole broad picture, colored by a mighty master hand, and with the myriad dyes from
nature's inexhaustible laboratory lies repeated, the echo of a thrilling vision.
There are two rival steamers plying on the upper St. Croix. I did not remember their names
because they charged me full fare both ways. I can see that my memory is failing a little every day,
and I'm getting more and more prone to forget those who do not recognize my innate and
spontaneous greatness at a glance and extend the usual courtesies.
When we came down, we towed a wheat barge loaded with 21,000 bushels of wheat,
and it was pretty difficult most of the way.
The opposition boat went up the night before
and had taken up the water with a blotting paper
so that every little while I had to roll up my pants about nine feet
and go out into the channel and luff up on the starboard watch of the barge
with a Jenny pole and bring her too so that she could find moisture.
Then I had a good deal of fun going ashore after ferns when the boat was aground.
While the crew went aft and close-reefed the smokestack and hauled aback the top gallant
or sidetracked the weed barge, my wife would send me ashore to gather maidenhair ferns
and soft velvety mosses and sad yearnful wood ticks.
Oh, how I love to crawl around through the oven.
underbrush and tear my clothes and wilt my collar and gather samples of lichens and ferns
and baled hay and caterpillars to decorate my western home. At first I thought I would not mention
the little domestic cloud that has shot to thwart my sky, but I cannot smother it in my own breast
any longer. St. Croix Falls is on the Wisconsin side of the river, and Taylor's Falls on the
Minnesota side. They are connected by a toll bridge which charges you one and a half cents each way
for passage. One can stand halfway across this bridge and see up and down the river, with the
devil's armchair it is right and the dowls that is left. After supper, I took a couple of my
friends down to the bridge, and without letting them know the treat that I had in store for them,
I went up to the gatekeeper and paid for all three of us both ways. Then I told them to enjoy. Then I told them to
enjoy themselves. It was a novel treat, perhaps, to throw open a toll bridge to the enjoyment of
one's friends, but I did it with that utter disregard of expense, which has characterized my
mining developments in the Rocky Mountains. Then I took the boys over across the river and gave
them the freedom of St. Croix Falls. Judding out into the river south of Osceola is a high,
rocky promontory called Cedar Point. Lonely and proud like a sentinel of the forgotten past,
there stands a tall cedar tree on this natural battlement, devoid of foliage for some distance up the trunk.
This tree was the old mark that stood upon the dividing line between the Chippewa and Sioux territory.
Below it, in the water-worn rock, is a large semicircle, made by the action of the river,
and this it was stated had been the footprint of the horse upon which the
the great spirit had ridden across the stream when he drew the line between these two mighty
nations and set the tree upon it to show his children the boundary between their respective territories.
This was the Indian Mason and Dixon's line.
What a wild, weird suggestion of the crude legislation and amateur statesmanship of these two nations
rises up before me as I write,
and how I yearn to go into the details and try to enter the free-for-all contest
and match a bobtail Caucasian lie against these moss-grown prevarications of the Red Man.
At Stillwater, my first wild impulse was to visit the state penitentiary.
When I go into a new place, I register my name at the most expensive hotel,
and after visiting the newspaper offices, I hunt up the penitentiary, if there be one,
and if not, I go to the cooler.
I do not go there under duress, as the facetious reader might suggest,
but I go there voluntarily to see how the criminal business of the place is looking.
We went to the warden's office and talked with him a little while,
showed him that we were not loaded with giant powder and cross-cut saws,
and then we were placed in charge of an usher
and sent through the building to view the mighty manufacturing interests
that are carried on inside,
where the striped criminals, silently and doggedly,
are moving about at their varied occupations.
After a while I got gloomy,
began to whistle one of my tearful refrains in gee.
The usher told me to please put up my whistle, and I did so,
partly to gratify him, and partly because he had a temporary advantage over me.
Most everyone who has heard me whistle seems glad that his lines have fallen in such pleasant places,
but this man, as I afterward learned, did not know the first principle of music.
He groped along through life without knowing the difference between a symphony and B
and the low sad song of the Twilight Cat.
Pretty soon we came to three men whose faces attracted my attention.
They were the younger brothers.
Their faces were easy of identification
from the resemblance to woodcuts published at the time of their capture.
I stood silently looking at them for some time.
Their countenances are a study for the reader of human character.
Sullen, grim, and depraved,
they impressed the beholder with their utter scorn
for the laws and usages of the land.
I asked the usher if I guessed right,
but he turned away, told me it was against the rules of the institution,
to point out anyone to visitors,
or identify the convicts in any way.
Then I knew that I was right, because he was so reserved.
I gave one of the men my card,
and entered into a conversation with him.
It wasn't much of a conversation, however,
because the usher broke in on me and shut me off, as it were.
The description that I have given of the younger brothers in this letter is not overful,
owing partly to the fact that the usher wouldn't let me be as sociable with them as I wanted to be,
and partly because I afterward discovered, casually, that they were not the younger brothers.
Speaking of convicts reminds me of my experience with a poor, ignorant man at Laramie,
the creature of circumstances who was sentenced to three years in the territorial penitentiary
for stealing a pair of flea-bitten broncos.
He was convicted mainly on the testimony of a man
who was afterwards sent up for the same offense,
and it was the general belief that the first-named man
was entirely innocent.
He was trusted about the penitentiary at all times
and allowed to go outside the walls without guard,
but never betrayed the trust reposed in him.
I went to him and talked with him.
His spirits and health were broken,
and he told me with tears in his eyes
that he hoped only for a merciful death to end his sufferings.
While acting as guard to a party of convicts outside one day,
they fell upon him and nearly killed him with a huge stone,
and then leaving him, bleeding, and insensible.
He cannot tell of his sufferings without crying.
I undertook to enlist sympathy for him,
and when I told his tale of misfortune to the governor and authorities
in that thrilling way of mine,
I had no difficulty in securing his pardon.
He came to my office and sobbed out his gratitude
until I told him it was of no consequence
and begged him not to mention it,
although it was the proudest moment of my life.
He went to work for a citizen of Laramie
with the old, industrious, patient air,
and I pointed him out with pride to my friends,
as a man whom I had rescued and brought back to a useful life.
One morning, however, before the pale dawn
and streaked the eastern sky,
he took his employer's team
and what money there was in the house
and struck out for the Gunnison country.
He did not know anything about mining,
but he had such implicit confidence in himself
that he started out alone
and without letters of introduction
to leading men in that country.
There's a good thing that he did have perfect confidence in himself,
for no one else had much confidence in him after that.
During that day a good many of my friends came around to see me.
I didn't know I had so many friends.
They all seemed to be in first-rate spirits.
They seemed glad to see me and laughed a good deal.
Sometimes I couldn't see what they were laughing at,
for my horizon was shrouded in gloom.
It don't take much to make some people laugh.
I've never felt perfectly at ease with Governor Thayer since that.
I know that he regards me as a confederate with that man,
and he thinks that I got part of the money realized from the sale of that team,
but I didn't.
If it were the last statement I should make on earth,
I would still say, as heaven is my witness,
that I have never realized a single dollar from the sale of that team.
End of Chapter 51.
Chapter 52 of Bill Nye and Boomerang were the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
He went out west for his health.
In my capacity of Justice of the Peace and General Wholesale and Retail dealer
and fresh new-laid equity and even-handed justice,
I often meet with those who have seen better days,
and who through the ever-changing fortunes of the West
have fallen lower and lower in the social scale
until they stand up and are assessed as common drunks or vags
or assault and batteries,
with that natural and easy grace,
which comes only to those who have been before the public in that capacity,
so numerously, that it has seized to indicate itself
by the usual embarrassment of the amateur.
Perhaps no surging sentiments of pity
have stirred my very soul during my official career,
like those that throbbed wildly athwart my system a few days ago.
It was a case of the most bitter disappointment of a young life.
A youth from Chicago came to me near the close of day.
I was just about to lock up the judicial scales for the evening
and secure the doors of the archives,
preparatory to going out and shaking the mayor for the lemonade,
after which I intended to breathe in a little fresh atmosphere
and go home to dinner.
It had been a hard day in the Temple of Justice that day,
and the court was weary.
It had dealt out even-handed justice at regular rates since early morning,
at so much per deal, till fatigue was beginning to show itself
in the lines upon the broad white brow.
Therefore, when a halting step was heard on the stair,
There was a low murmur on the part of the court
and a half-surprised moan
that sounded like the tail end of an affidavit.
The young man who entered the hallowed presence
of eternal justice
and the all-pervading and dazzling beauty of the court
in its shirt-sleeves
was of about medium stature
with shoes cut decollette
and Roman-striped socks
clocked with brocaded straw-colored silk.
He wore an ecru-colored straw hat
with navy blue brocaded band and necktie of old gold,
with poca dots of Humberta and Cardinal,
interspersed with embroidered horseshoe and stirrup,
and co-cherre sollel and ultramarine.
His hair was dark and oleagenus,
and his shirt was cream-colored ground
with narrow baby blue stripes,
cutaway collar, and cuffs that extended out into space.
He also had some other clothes on.
But overall, in pervading the entire man,
was the look of hopelessness and corroding grief.
With all his good clothes on, he was a hollow mockery,
for his eyes were heavy with woe.
The nose also was heavy with woe.
This feature, in fact, was more appropriately draped in token of its sadness
than any of the rest.
Few noses are so expressive of a general and incurable gloom as this one was.
It had evidently at one time been a glad, joyous, and buoyant nose,
but now it was despondent and low-spirited.
There was a look of goneness and utter desolation about it.
They would stir the better impulses of the most heartless.
The feature had evidently tried to centralize itself, but had failed.
Here and there, narrow strips of court plaster had gone out after it and tried to win it back,
but they had not succeeded.
I said,
Mr. there seems to be a panic among your nose.
It's none of my business, of course, but
couldn't you get a brass band and call it together?
Then you could hold a meeting and decide whether it had better resume or not.
The gentleman from Chicago went through the motions of wiping the wide waist and howling desolation
where his once joyous nose had been, and then putting away the plum-colored silk handkerchief
with the orange border.
He said,
Squire, I have been grossly deceived.
You see and me the victim of a base misrepresentation.
In Chicago this season of the year is extremely unhealthy.
The intense hot weather carries away the innocent and the good,
and I feared that my turn would come soon.
I heard of the salubrious climb of your mountain city,
where the days are filled with gladness,
and the burning heat of the mighty city by the inland sea never comes.
I came here two brief days ago,
and you can see with the naked eye what the result has been.
It is not gratifying.
The climate may in the abstract be all right.
right, but there are certain sudden and wonderful atmospheric changes that I cannot account for,
and they are very disastrous. I was sitting in a second street saloon today, talking about
matters and things, when the conversation turned on physical strength. One thing led to another,
and finally I made a little humorous remark to a young man there, which remark I've made in
Chicago many times without disastrous results, but the air clouded up all of a sudden, and in the
darkness, I could see Roman candles going off, and pinwheels and high-priced rockets and blue lights,
etc. Shortly after that, I gathered up what fragments of my face I could find, went down to the
doctor's office. He held an inquest on my nose, and I paid for it. I shall go back to Chicago
tomorrow. I shall not be as handsome as I was, but I have gained a good deal of information about
the broad and beautiful West, which is priceless in value to me.
I wish to say was this. If you see fit to mention this matter to the public, tone it down as
much as possible, and say that for a bilious nervous temperament, perhaps the air here is too
bracing. I have considered his sensitive feelings, and have tried to give the above
account in fair and impartial terms. End of Chapter 52.
Chapter 53 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A Quiet Little Wedding Without Any Frills
Another class of those who frequent the Temple of Justice includes those who are in search of matrimony and reduced rates.
I remember one unostentatious little wedding,
took place at the general headquarters of municipal jurisprudence over which I preside,
and during the earlier history of my reign. It was quite a success in a small way. I had just
moved into the office and had been engaged that morning and putting up a stove. The stove had
seemed reluctant, and as my assistant was sociably drunk, I had not succeeded very well.
The pipe didn't seem to be harmonious, and the effort to bring about a union between the
discordant elements, had not, up to the time of which I speak, produced any very gratifying results.
I had reached down into the elbow of the pipe several times to see how it felt down there,
and after satisfying my morbid curiosity in that respect, I had yielded to a wild and uncontrollable
desire to scratch my nose with the same hand. This had given me an air of intense sadness and opaque
gloom. I stood on the top of a step-ladder, trying to make the end of a six-inch joint of pipe
go into the end of a five-inch joint when the groom entered. He wanted to know if he could see the
general manager, and I told him he could if he had a piece of smoked glass and a $5 promissory note
executed by old man spinner. Then he told me how he was fixed. He desired a small package of
connubial bliss and without delay. The necessary preliminaries were arranged. The groom made an extempore
effort to spit in the mosaic cuspidor, but was only partially successful, put on his hat and went out
in search of Juliet. She was very unique in her style and entirely free from any effort to appear to the
best advantage. She wore her hair plain a la sitting bowl. It had been banged, but not with any great degree of
system or accuracy.
Probably it had been done with a pinking iron or a pair of ice tongs by an amateur banger.
She looked some like Mrs. Bender, only younger and more queenly, perhaps.
She swept into the arena with the symmetrical movement and careless grace of a hired man,
only her steps were longer and less methodical.
Both bride and groom had come through with a band of emigrants from Kansas,
and therefore they were out of swallow-tail coats and orange-bloters.
There was no airy tool and shimmering satin or broadcloth and spikedail coat in the procession,
at least there was none visible to the court.
The groom was bronzed and bearded like a pard, whatever that is,
and wore a pair of brown duck overalls, caught back with copper rivets,
and held in place by a lonely suspender.
He also wore a hickory shirt with stripes running vertically.
His hair looked like burnished gold, only he hadn't burnished it much,
since he left Kansas.
The entire immigrant train dropped in one by one to witness the ceremony
and seemed impressed with the overshadowing and awe-inspiring nature of the surroundings.
One by one they filed in, and making their little contribution to the Mosaic Cuspidor,
they leaned themselves up against the wall and wrapped themselves in thought.
I bandaged my finger, which I had skinned some and putting the stove together,
wiped off what soot and ashes I had about my person and thought I would not need,
and boldly solidified these two young hearts.
Ceremony was not very impressive, but it did the required amount of damage.
That was all that was necessary.
The applicants seemed to miss the wedding march and some other little preparatory arrangements,
which I had overlooked, but I apologized to them afterward and told them that when times picked up a little,
and I got established, and the new fee bill went into operation, I would attend to these things.
The wedding presents were not numerous, but they were useful and showed the good sense of the donors.
The bride's mother gave her one of the splint bottom chairs that one always sees tied to the rear of every well-regulated emigrant wagon,
and her father gave her a cream-colored dog with one eye knocked out.
With his overflowing wealth of flea-bitten dogs, he might have done much better by her than he did,
but he said he would wait a few years, and if she were poor enough to need more dogs,
he would not be parsimonious.
The young couple went up on Coyote Creek and went to housekeeping,
and years have gone by since without word from them.
In the turmoil and hurry of life, I had almost forgotten them until Cole's Circus was in town the other day.
brought them to light. They had done well in the dog business and had succeeded in promoting the
growth of a new kind of meek and lowly dog with sore places on him for homeless and orphan flies.
They also had several children with reddish hair and large wilted ears. The youngest one was
quite young and cried when the Calliope burst into a wild rhapsody of Nancy Lee. When I saw
the family, the mother was eagerly watching the parade and at the same
time trying to broil the baby's nose in the sun. It was almost done when I was called away by
other business, so I cannot say positively whether the child was taken home rare or well done.
End of Chapter 53. Chapter 54 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and
some other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale
Barclay. Thoughts on spring. Spring is the most joyful season of the year. The little brooklets are
released from their icy fetters and go laughing and rippling along their winding way. The birds begin to
sing in the budding branches and the soft south wind calls forth the green grass. The husbandman
then goes forth to dig the horseradish for his frugal meal. He also jabs his finger into the
rosebud mouth of the wild-eyed calf and proceeds to wean him from the gentle cow.
The cowboy goes forth humming a jocund to lay. So does the hen. Boys should not go near the
hen while she is occupied with her tuneful lay. She might seize them by the off ear and bear them
away to her den and feed them to her young. The hen rises early in the morning so as to catch
the swift-footed angleworm as he flits from flower to flower. The angleworm,
cannot bite. In the spring, the young man's fancy turns to thoughts of love. Love is a good thing.
The picnic plant will soon lift its little head to the sunshine, and the picnic manager will go out
and survey the country to find where the most god-forsaken places are, and then he will get up an
excursion to some of these picturesque mud holes and sandpiles, and the man who swore last year that
he would never go to another picnic will pass.
up some mustard and bay rum and pickles and glycerin and a laprobe and some camphor
and a spyglass and some court plaster. And he will heave a sigh and go out to the glens and
rural retreats and fill his skin full of tolu rock and rye and hatred toward all mankind
and he will skin his hands and try to rub the downy fluff and bloom from a cactus
by sitting down on it. I have attended picnics regular
for nearly ten years now, and I'm a man of a good deal of firmness, too,
but I cannot hold a cactus down on the ground with my entire weight,
any better than when I first began,
and I feel that I am getting farther and farther from redeeming grace.
With the approach of spring, the correspondence between myself and Mr. Lee Duck
begins to get more brisk also.
He writes me under date of March 20th,
saying that he is preparing for a more vigorous can
campaign this summer than ever before. He thinks the clip from his Cotswold hydraulic rams will
exceed that of any previous year. He will also experiment in a scientific manner to perfect
the laying a fancy Easter porcelain and decorated china eggs by Cochin China Fowls. If they cannot
manage it, he will try some experiments on the eggplant. Mr. Lee Duck is a man who is not easily
discouraged by small obstacles. He will watch the habits of the grasshopper and curculeo and bedbug
also with great assiduity. I have begged him to transfer the bed bug to the Indian department.
He always regards my suggestions very favorably because, as he says, I am so practical.
We are going to devote a part of the summer to grafting the saddle rock oyster on the vegetable
oyster plant and will spare no pains to secure an inland oyster that will stand this dry air
and high, rigorous climate. End of Chapter 54. Chapter 55 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or the tale of
a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Librovox recording is in the public
domain, read by Dale Barkley. The same old thing. Recently, I have had the
pleasure of acting as chief mourner at a mountain picnic. This subject has been pretty well
represented in romance and song already, but I venture to give my experience as being a little
out of the ordinary. The joy which is experienced in the glad, free life of the picnaker is
always before the picnic. On the evening before he makes the excursion, he is too full of sacred
pleasure and lavender-colored tranquility for anything. He glides about the house softly warbling to
himself the fragment of some tender love song while he packs the corkscrews and matches and
other vegetables for the morrow. I was placed in command of a party of ladies who had everything
arranged so that all I needed to do would be to get into the buggy and drive to the mountains,
eat my lunch, and drive back again. I like to go with a party of ladies because they never make
suggestions about the route or how to drive. They are just as full of gentle trust and childlike
confidence and questions as they can be.
They get the lunch ready and get into the buggy and keep thinking of things they have forgotten
till they get 400 miles from home, and they sing little pieces of old songs and won't let the
great horrid man in charge of the excursion have any lunch when he gets hungry because they
are hunting for a romantic spot beneath the boughs of a magnificent elm, while every sane man in the
territory knows that there isn't an elm big or little within 1,432.5 miles.
We went up in the mountains because we wanted to go where it would be cool.
As a search for a cool resort, this picnic of ours was the most brilliant success.
We kept going up at an angle of 45 degrees from the time we left home until we had to get out
and walk to keep warm.
We got into one of the upper strata of clouds and a cold mist mixed with fragments of
ice cream and large chunks of hail and misery about the size of a burglar-proof safe came
gathering over us. Then we camped in the middle of the mountain storm, and the various
ladies sat down on their feet, and put the lap robes over them and looked reproachfully at me.
We hovered around under the buggy, and two or three little half-grown parasols, and watched
the storm. It was a glorious spectacle to the thinking mind. They began to abuse me because I did not
make a circus of myself and thus drive away the despair and misery of the occasion.
They had brought me along, it seemed, because I was such an amusing little cuss.
It made me a good deal sadder than I would have been otherwise.
Here in the midst of a wild and bitter mountain storm, so thick that you couldn't see
20 yards away, with nothing to eat but some marble cake soaked in vinegar,
and a piece of cold tongue with a red ant on it, I was expected to make a hippodrome,
a negro minstrel show of myself.
I burst into tears and tried to sit on my feet as the ladies did.
I couldn't do it so simultaneously and so extemporaneously as it were as they could.
I had to take them by sections and sit on them.
My feet are not large, but at the same time, I cannot hover over them both at the same time.
Dear Reader, did you ever sit amidst the silence and solitude of the mountains
and feel the hailstones rolling down your back, melting and soothing you,
and filling your heart with great surging thoughts of the sweet by-and-by,
and death and the grave, and other mirth-provoking topics.
We had now been about 200 years without food, it seemed to me,
and I mildly suggested that I would like something to eat
rather than die of starvation in the midst of plenty,
but the ladies wouldn't give me so much as a Sam Handwich to preserve my life.
They told me to smoke if I felt that I must have nourishment,
and coldly refused to let me say,
sample the pickled spiders and cold-pressed flies. So in the midst of all this prepared food,
I had to go out into the sagebrush and eat raw grasshoppers and greasewood. By and by,
when we concluded that we had seen about all the mountain storm we needed in our business and didn't
pine for any more hailstones and dampness, we hitched up again and started home. Then we got lost.
The ladies felt indignant, but I was delighted. I never was so lost in all my life. When I
was asked where I thought I was, I could cheerfully reply that I didn't know, and that would stop
the conversation for as much as two minutes. The beauty of being lost is that you are all the time
seeing new objects. There is a charm of novelty about being lost that one does not fully understand
until he has been there, so to speak. When I would say that I didn't know where the road led to
that we were traveling, one of the party would suggest with mingled bitterness and regret that
we had better turned back. Then I would turn back. Then I would turn back.
I turned back. I turned back 17 times at the request of various members of the party for whom I had and still have the most unbounded respect.
Finally, we got so accustomed to the various objects along this line of travel that we pined for a change.
Then we drove ahead a little farther and found the road. It had been there all the time. It is there yet.
I never had so much fun in all my life. It don't take much to please me, however. I'm of a cheerful disposition anyhow.
Some of the ladies brought home columbines that had been drowned.
Others brought home beautiful green mosses with red bugs in them.
And others brought home lichens and ferns and neuralgia.
I didn't bring anything home.
I was glad to get home myself and know that I was all there.
I took the lunch basket and examined it.
It looked sick and unhappy.
First I thought I would pick the red ants out of the lunch.
Then I thought it would save time to pick the lunch out of the red ants.
And finally, I thought I would compromise by throwing the whole thing into the alley.
I am now preparing a work to be called The Picnicer's Guide, or Starvation Made Easy and Even Desirable.
It will supply a want long felt, and will be within the reach of all.
End of Chapter 55.
Chapter 56 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Veteran Who Died While Getting His Pension
Many years ago, when business in my office was not very rushing,
and time hung heavy on my hands before I had attempted journalism
and no dream of my present dazzling literary success had entered my mind,
I rashly offered to assist applicants for pensions
in attracting the attention of the general government at so much per head.
one hot day in july while i sat in my office killing flies with an elastic band and wondering if my minds would ever be quoted in the market a middle-aged man came in and spitting calmly into the porcelain cuspidor began to tell me about his service as a soldier
and how he was wounded and wished to secure a pension he said that several attorneys had already tried to procure one for him but had failed to do so giving up in despair i examined the wound which consisted
of a large hole in the skull,
caused by a gunshot wound.
He was almost entirely prevented by this wound
from obtaining a livelihood,
because he is liable at any moment
to fall insensible to the ground
as the result of exercise or work.
I told him that I would snatch a few moments
from my arduous duties
and proceed to do as he requested me.
Then I began a very brisk correspondence
with the Interior Department.
I would write to the Commissioner of Pensions
in my vivacious but firm manner,
and he would send me back a humorous little circular,
showing me that I had been too hasty and premature.
I never got mad or forgot myself,
but began a little farther back in the history of the world
and gradually led up to the war of the rebellion.
In reply, the commissioner would write back to me
that my chronological table was at fault,
and I would cheerfully correct the error and proceed.
At this time, however, my client became a little bit
despondent, several years having elapsed since we began our task. So to my other labors I had to add
that of cheering up the applicant. Time dragged its slow length along. Months succeeded months,
and the years sped on. The interior department never forgot me. Every little while I would get a
printed circular boiling over with mirth and filled with the most delightful conundrums relative
to the late unpleasantness. These conundrums, I would have my
client answer and swear to every time, although I could see that he was failing, mentally, and physically.
He would come into my office almost every day, and silently raise his right hand, and with uncovered
head stand there in a reverent attitude for me to swear him to something. Sometimes I had nothing
for him to swear to, and then I would make him take the oath of allegiance and send him away.
I wanted to keep him loyal if I could, whether he got his pension or not.
The last work had been nearly completed, and the claim had been turned over to the Surgeon General's office,
when the applicant yielded to the crumbling effect of relentless time and took to his bed.
It was a sad moment for me.
I could not keep back the silent tears, and I saw the old man lying there so still and so helpless,
and remembered how rosy and strong and happy he looked years and years ago when he first asked me to apply for his pension.
I wrote the department that if the claims could be passed upon soon,
I would keep my client up on stimulants a short time,
but that he was failing fast.
Then I went to the bedside of the old man and watched him tenderly.
When he saw me come into his room, although he could not talk anymore,
he would feebly raise his right hand,
and I would swear him to support the Constitution of the United States,
and then he would be easier.
It seemed to me like a ghastly joke,
for the old man to swear he would support the Constitution of the United States
when he couldn't begin to support his own constitution.
But I never mentioned it to him.
At last, the blow fell.
The surgeon general wrote me that,
owing to the lack of clerical aid in that office,
and a failure of Congress to make any appropriation for that purpose,
he was behind hand
and could not possibly reach the claim referred to
before the close of the following year.
Then the old man passed into the great untried realm of the hereafter, but he was prepared.
With the aid of the government, I had given him an idea of eternity and its vastness, which could
not fail to be of priceless benefit to him.
After the government had used this pension money as long as it needed it, and was, so to speak,
once more on its feet, the money was sent, and the old man's great grandchildren got it,
and purchased a lawnmower, a Mexican hairless dog, and some other necessaries of life with it.
I am now out of the pension business. It is a good thing, for I find that I am too impatient to attend to it.
I am too anxious for tangible results in the near future. My desire to accomplish anything speedily
is too violent and too previous.
End of Chapter 56
Chapter 57 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Gingerbread poems and cold-pickled facts.
In an old number of Harper's Magazine
will be found a little poem upon the subject of Joseph,
the chief of the Nez Pierce's.
There is a kind of mellow and subdued,
heroic light cast over the final defeat of this great North American horse thief,
which is in perfectly pleasing harmony with the New England idea of the noble, unfettered relic of
a defunct race. This soft-voiced poet, who probably knows about as much of the true
Occidental pig-stealer as the latter does about the electoral college, starts out this little
brass-mounted epic in the following elegant style of prevarication. From the north of the north
Southern desolation comes the cry of exultation. It has ended, he has yielded, and the stubborn
fight is won. Let the nation in its glory bow with shame before the story of the hero it has
ruined and the evil it has done. It is too true that here in the Wild West people haven't
the advantages that are accorded to the East and in our uncouth ignorance and meager
facilities for obtaining information, we are no doubt too prone to ascribe to the hostile
inebriate of the planes, a character which does not compare very favorably with the boss
hero in the poem, here too attached in marked Exhibit A. But the people on the frontier should
not set themselves up to judge what they know nothing of. Why should frontiersmen, without
colleges, without observatories, without telescopes or logarithms, or protoplasms,
or spectroscopes or heliotropes, how should they, I ask, who can lay no claim to anything,
but that they are poor, unsophisticated grasshopper sufferers,
with nothing to refer to but the naked facts,
the ruins of their desolated homes and the ghastly mutilated corpses of their wives and children,
try to compete with the venerable philosophers who live where the patent office reports are made,
and within the shadow of the building in which the illustrated police gazette
and other such reliable authorities have their birth,
in which are illustrated with graphic skill the Indian raids of the border,
using the same old cut which is taken from the death of Captain Cook
to illustrate every Indian outbreak from Nebraska to Oregon.
Is it nothing forsooth for a nomadic race of buffalo slayers
and maple sugar makers and cranberry pickers
to rise from the dust and learn to love the wise institutions of a free government,
to lay aside the old hickory bow of the original red man and take up the improved breech-loader,
to take kindly to mixed drinks and Sabbath school picnics and temperance lectures and baseball matches,
to live contentedly about the agencies playing poker for the whiskeys during the cold and cruel winter,
then when the glad song of the Robin awakes the echoes in spring,
and the air is filled with a thousand nameless odors, among which may be detected,
the balmy breath of the government sock,
to high him away to the valleys with his fishing rod and flies and other curious insects,
or to spend the glorious days of midsummer at the camp meeting or the horse race?
We can never know how his poor heart must burn to kick off his box-toed boots
and throw aside his dress coat and suspenders
and gallop over the green hills and kick up his heels and whoop and yell
and tear out the tongues of a few white women and be able.
sociable. They are indeed the nation's wards, a little frisky and playful at times, to be sure,
but we must overlook that. There can be no reason nor justice in forbidding these freeborn
descendants of these mighty races, the inalienable right to lock up their front doors at the
agency, and put the key in their pockets, and light out if they wish to across the country,
spreading gory desolation along their trail, eating the farmer's hard-earned store, pillaging as home,
murdering his household, burning his crops, riding their war horses over his watermelon vines,
eating his winter preserves, scalping the hired man, and wearing away the farmer's red flannel undershirt,
wrong side too, and wrong side up if they want to.
And if any ignorant upstart of the frontier who feels a little sore over the loss of his family
undertakes to defraud these wild free sons of the forest of any or all of their rights,
Let the lop-eared, slab-sided, knock-kneed, cross-eyed, spavined, lantern-jawed, sway-backed, mangy, flannel-mouthed poet of the educated and refined East write poetry about him, till he is glad to apologize.
End of Chapter 57.
Chapter 58 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley.
Origin of Beautiful Snow
The following letters from Captain Jack,
relative to the expedition under his charge,
sent out for the purpose of bringing in the murdering group of Utes,
against whom the government seems to maintain a feeling,
if not of enmity, at least of coolness and perhaps unfriendliness.
The Indian is not generally supposed to be a humorist
or inclined to be facetious,
but the letter below would seem to indicate that their
is, at the least, a kind of grim, rough, uncouth attempt on his part to make a paragrapher of
himself. I am not at liberty to give my reasons to the public for the publication of this letter,
nor even the manner of securing it. Those to whom my word has been passed relative to a strict
secrecy on my part and the above connection shall not be betrayed. Friends who know me are aware
that my word is as good as my bond, and even better than my promissory note.
On the wing, February 1, 1880.
Dear Sir, I have a little leisure in which to write of our journey,
and we'll dictate this letter to an amanuensis.
Amenuensis is a Ute word, but you will understand it in this connection.
It does not mean anything wrong.
We find much snow through the mountains, which impedes our progress very materially.
We crossed a canyon yesterday where there was a good deal.
I should think there might be 1,500 feet in depth of it.
It filled the canyon up full and bulged up 10 or 15 feet above the sides.
I composed a short poem about it.
I knew that it was wrong to do so, but almost everyone else has composed a poem on the beautiful snow.
Then why should I, although I have not taken out my naturalization papers,
be denied the sweet solace of song?
I said,
Oh, drifted whiteness covering the fair face of nature,
pure as the sigh of a blessed spirit on the eternal shores,
you glitter in the summer sun considerable.
My mortal ken seems weak and helpless in the midst of your dazzling splendor,
and I would hide my diminished head like surf,
unclothed in presence of his mighty king.
You lie engulfed within the cold embrace of rocky walls and giant cliffs.
You spread out your white mantle and enwrapped the whole broad universe
and a portion of York State.
You seem content, resting in silent whiteness
on the frozen breast of the cold dead earth.
You think, apparently, that you are middling white,
but once I was in the same condition.
I was pure as the beautiful snow, but I fell.
It was a right smart fall, too.
It churned me up a good deal
and nearly knocked the supreme duplex
from its intellectual throne.
It occurred in Washington, D.C.
But thou snow, lying so spotless
On the frozen earth,
As I remarked before,
Thou hast indeed a soft, soft thing.
Thou comest down like the silent movements of a specter,
And thy fall upon the earth is like the tread of those
Who walk the shores of immortality.
You lie around all winter drawing your annuities till spring,
And then the soft breath from the south with touch-saductive bids you go,
And you light out with more or less alacrifice,
Then rest, oh, no, where thou hast settled down, secure in conscious purity, avoid so far as possible the capital of a republic, and the blessing of yours truly will settle down upon you like a hired man.
There are no doubt some little irregularities about this poem, but I scratched it off one night in camp when my chillblains were hurting me and itching so that I had to write a poem or swear a good deal.
We have not seen anything as yet to shoot at.
That is, of course, I referred to what we came here for.
I shot at what I thought to be Douglas the other day,
but it turned out to be an old Indian,
who was out skirmishing around after cotton tails for his dinner.
I snuffed his light out, however.
By this time he is chasing cotton tails in a better, brighter sphere,
where the wicked cease from troubling,
and life is one prolonged Fourth of July.
Occasionally, we see a squaw and shooter just for practice.
I'm getting so I'm pretty good on a wheel and fire.
Douglas ought to be easy to identify, however, at a great distance, for his features are peculiar.
He has a large nose. It is like a premium summer squash, only larger.
I don't think I ever saw such a wealth of nose as his.
Napoleon used to say that a large nose is indicative of strong character.
According to this rule, Douglas must have a character stronger than an eight-mule team.
We starved out early tomorrow and hope to back.
something, but it cannot tell how we will make it. I will report as soon as I get to where there is a
telegraph. I do not allow any reporters along with me. A great many of them wanted to go along with me
for the excitement. I told them, however, that I could furnish the press with such reports as I saw fit to
furnish, and I did not want to take a young man away from the haunts of civilization and waltz them
around among the hills of Colorado, for it isn't so much of a success as an editorial picnic after all.
I often wish that I could run down to dinner as I did at Washington and eat all I need.
I also yearn for the hot scotch and the spiced rum of the pale face
and the scotch-plad lemon pie and the indestructible Blanc Mange
and the buckwheat cakes like doormats that I got at Washington.
But I must attend to the business of the great father
and prepare the remains which he requires for his grand Indian funeral.
Till then, adieu, Jack.
End of Chapter 58
Chapter 59 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley
Ute Eloquence
Speech of Old Man Colorow
at an old settlers' reunion in North Park, Colorado.
The following short oration,
delivered by Colorow in the North Park,
I send in as a sort of companion piece to the letter written by Jack and given in this work.
Few people actually know the true spirit of Greek and Roman oratory
that still lingers about the remnants of this people, now nearly driven from the face of the earth.
I have never seen this speech in print, and I give it so that the youth of the 19th century may commit it to memory
and declave it on the regular public school speech day.
Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen, warriors, we are but a little band of American citizens
encircled by a horde of pale-faced usurpers.
Where years agone, in primeval forests, the swift foot of the young Indian followed the deer
through shimmering light beneath the broad boughs of the spreading tree,
the white man, in his light summer suit, with its pale-faced squaw, is playing croquet,
and we stand idly by and allow it.
Where erst the hum of the arrow, as it sped to its mark, was heard upon the summer air,
and the panting hunter in Boschie Dell quenched his parched lips at the bubbling spring,
the white man has erected a huge wigwam and enclosed the spring,
and people from the land of the rising sun come to gain their health and the vigor of their youth.
Men come to this place and limp around in the haunts of the red man with crutches and cork legs and liver pads.
Things are not precisely as they formally were.
They have changed.
There seems to be a new administration.
We are not apparently in the ascendancy to any great extent.
Above the hallowed graves of our ancestors, the buckwheater hose the cross-eyed potato
and mashes the immortal soul out of the speckled squash bug.
The sacred dust of our forefathers is nourishing the roots of the Siberian crabapple tree
and the early Scandinavian turnip.
Our sun is set. Our race is run. We had better select a small hole in the earth into which we may crawl, and then draw it in after us and tuck it carefully about us. These mountains are ours. These plains are ours. Hours through all time to come. We need them in our business. The wail of departed spirits is on the winds that blow over this wide free land. The tears of departed heroes of our people fall in the raindrops, for their land is given away.
Today I look upon the sad wreck of a great people, and I ask you to go with me, and with our
united hearts blood, win back the fair domain. Let two or three able-bodied warriors follow me
and hold my coat while I mash the white-livered snipe off the lowlands beyond recognition.
Let us steal in upon the frontier while the regular army has gone to his dinner and get a few
Caucasians for breakfast. Arise, e Goths, and gluts your ire.
applause
End of Chapter 59
Chapter 60
of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye
This Librevox recording is in the public domain
Read by Dale Barkley
The Aged Indians Lament
Copyrighted all rights reserved
Warriors
I am an aged hemlock
The Mountain Wind sigh among my withered limbs
a few more suns, and I shall fall amid the solemn hush of the forest, and my place will be vacant.
I shall tread the walks of the happy hunting grounds, and sing glad hallelujahs, where the worm
dieth not, and the firewater is not quenched.
Once I was the pride of my tribe and the swift foot of the prairie.
I stood with my brethren like the towering oak, and my prowess was known throughout my nation.
Now I bow to the wintry blast
And hump myself
With a vigorous and unanimous hump
My eagle eyes dimmed
The fleetness of my limbs is gone
The vigor of my youth is past
I do not shout now to my warriors
For the cliffs and rocks refuse to answer back my cry
And it sinks away like the sad moan
Of the low-grade refractory mule
When my brethren go forth
To shoot the swift-footed ranch man
as he gambols on the hillsides, I cower above the campfire and rub mutton tallow on my favorite
chill blaine through the still watches of the night. Warriors, I yearn for immortality. The White
Father has said that over yonder, the life is one of uninterrupted editorial excursions. No
inflammatory rheumatism can ever enter there. I want to be a copper-colored angel and outfly the
boss angel of the entire outfit. I want to see
Hokohannas and other great men who have clombed the golden stare.
I want something to eat so as to surprise my stomach.
I want a long period of rest and soul-destroying inactivity.
Warriors, my sun is set.
I have lost my grip.
My features are sharpened by age,
and one by one my white teeth have resigned till but two are left,
and they do not seem to mash by an overwhelming majority.
I cannot masticate buffalo.
tripe, or even relish my tarantula on toast, as I once could.
My twilight is fading into evening, and the day is gone.
I hear the crickets chirp in the dead grass, and I know that the night is at hand.
Far away upon the gentle winds, I hear the soft cooing of the Colorado Tomcat,
and the thump of the stove lid as it misses the cat and strikes with a hollow, mournful sound
against the corral.
A few more moons, and you will meet, but you will meet.
miss me. There will be one vacant chair. The veal cutlet and the watermelon of the palaface
hold out no inducements to me. The circus and the ice cream festival will miss me, for I shall be far
away in the ether blue, where the wicked seas from troubling, and the weary are at rest. I shall be
reveling in more eternal rest than I know what to do with. Farewell, my warriors. Make my humble
grave low in the valley, where the wild columbine and the Rocky Mountain flee can clamber over my last
resting place, and carve upon the slab above my head, the name of mini-conjo precipitinux
kwanatukakaska, Hamazaki Sanapaka, kan kakakakaska, the cross-eyed caterpillar who walks on his
hind legs and howls like the pale-faced papoos, who advertises to hold down the blonde bumblebee.
Chapter 60
Chapter 61 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or The Tale of a Meek-Eyed Mule, and Some Other Literary Gems
by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
How a Mining Stampede Breaks Out. Dear Reader, shall I give you a few symptoms of the mining
epidemic in mountain towns? All right, I will, anyhow. Symptum 1. A long-haired man has seen
pounding up a piece of quartz about the size of a man's hand.
Symptom two. Two men meander up to him and ask him where he got it.
Symptom three. The long-haired man looks down into the mortar and lies gently to the inquiring
minds who linger near. Symptom four. More men come around. The long-haired man gets a
gold pan and doubles himself up over the ditch and begins to pan. Symptom five.
Two hundred more men come out of saloons and other mercantile establishments and join the throng.
Symptom six. The long-haired man gets down to black sand and shows several colors about the size of a blue jays ear.
Symptoms seven times. Several solitary horsemen start out with some pack mules and blank location notices and valley tan.
The plot deepens. The telegraph gets run.
Red hot. Men who have been impugnious for low these many years come around to pay some old bills.
Poor men buy spotted dogs and gold-headed canes. Stingy men get reckless and buy the first
box of strawberries without asking the price. I have caught the epidemic myself. I am getting
reckless. Instead of turning my last summer lavender pants high inside before and removing the
ham sandwich lithograph on the front breadth, I have purchased
a new pair. I never experienced such a wild, glad feeling of perfect abandon. I go to church and
chip in for the heathen, perfectly regardless of expense. If Zion languishes, I come forward and
throw in the small currency with a lavish hand. Banks, offices, hotels, saloons, and private
residences show specimens of quartz, carrying free gold and carbonates, hard, soft and medium soft,
with iron protoxide of nitrogen,
rhomohedral glucose indications of valedictory
and free-milling oxide of antifat in abundance.
Nellis, who lives near the Mill Creek carbonate claims,
came into town the other day to get an injunction against the miners
so that he could injunct them from prospecting in his cellar
and staking his pie-plant bed.
When he goes out after dark to drive the cow out of his turnip patch,
He falls over a stake every little while with a notice tacked on it,
which sets forth that the undersigned, vis-a-vis Johnny come lately,
Joe Newbegin, Shoe Fly Smith, and Union Forever Dandelion,
claim 1,500 feet in length by 600 feet in width for mineral purposes on this claim
to be known as the gal with the skim milk eye,
together with all dips, spurs, angles, or variations, gold, silver, or other precious metals,
therein contained. Mr. Nellis says he is glad to see a boom. At first he did all he could to make it
pleasant for prospectors. But lately, he thinks that their sociability has become too earnest and too
simultaneous. I told him that the only way I could see to avoid losing his grip, and having his
string beans dug up prematurely, was to stake the entire ranch as a placer claim, buy him a
gatling gun that would shoot the large size of buckshot, and then trust in the mysterious movements
of an overruling providence. I do not know whether he took my advice or not, but I am looking
anxiously along the Mill Creek Road every day for a six-mule team loaded with disorganized remains
and driven by a man who looks as though he had glutted his vengeance and had two or three
gluts left over on his hands. End of Chapter 61.
Chapter 62 of Bill Dian Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary
by Bill Nye. This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Great Rocky Mountain Reunion of Yaller Dogs. Secretary Spates, the silver-tongued
orator and gilt-edged mouth organ of Wyoming, acting general superintendent and governor
extraordinary of Wyoming, expressed a wish the other day for a dog. He had a light yellow cane
and wanted a dog to match. He said that he wanted some
to love. If he could wake up in the stillness of the night and hear his faithful dog
fighting flees and licking his chops and coughing, he, the secretary, would feel as though he was
beloved at least by one. Some friends thought it would be a pleasant thing to surprise Mr. Spates
with a dog. So they procured a duplicate key to his room and organized themselves into a dog
vigilance committee. There were several yellow dogs around Cheyenne that were not in use,
and their owners consented to part with them and try to control their grief while they worried along from day to day without them.
These dogs were collected and placed in the secretary's room.
Throwing a heterogeneous mass of dogs together in that way,
and all of them total strangers to each other,
in the natural course of things, creates something of a disturbance,
and that was the result in this case.
When the secretary arrived, the dogs were holding a session with closed doors.
The presiding officer had lost control,
and a surging crowd of yellow dogs at the floor.
Only one dog was accepted.
He was struggling with all his strength
against the most colossal attack of colic
that ever convulsed a pale yellow dog.
Just as he would get to feeling kind of comfortable,
a spasm would catch him on the starboard quarter
and his back would hump itself like a 1,000-legged worm,
and with such force as to thump the floor
with a stumpy tail of the demoralized dog
and jar the bric-a-brac on the brackets and what-nots
of the Secretary of Wyoming Territory.
Just then, the Secretary arrived.
He was whistling a trill or two
from the Turkish patrol
when he got within earshot of the convention.
Several people met him
and asked what was going on up in his room.
The Secretary blushed and said
he guessed there was nothing out of character
and wondered if someone was putting up
a conkling story on him to kill a spate's boom.
When he got to the door and went in,
37 dogs ran between his left,
legs and went out the door with a good deal of intensity. More of them would have run between the
secretary's legs, but they couldn't all make it. Mr. Spates was mad. He felt hurt and grieved. The dogs had
jumped on the bed and torn the pillow shams into minute bandages and wiped their feet on the cover lid.
They had licked the blacking off his boots and eaten his toilet soap. One of them had tried on the
secretary's dressing gown, but it was not large enough, and he had taken it off in a good deal of
a hurry. Long after it was supposed that the last dog had gone out, yellow dogs of different
degrees of yellowishness and moving in irregular orbits would be thrown from the secretary's room
with great force. Some of them were killed, while others were painfully injured. It is said that
there are fewer yellow dogs in Cheyenne now than there used to be, and those that are there
are more subdued and reserved and taciturn and skinned on the back than they used to be, while the
secretary has a far away look in his eye, like a man who has trusted humanity once too often,
and been everlastingly and unanimously left.
End of Chapter 62
Chapter 63 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary
gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
What Woman's Suffrage is done for Wyoming?
Some testimonials, and one thing in another.
The managing editor of a Boston paper is getting material together relative to the practical
workings of women's suffrage, and as Wyoming is at present working a scheme of that kind,
he wants an answer to the following questions.
One, has it been of real benefit to the territory?
Two, if so, what has it accomplished?
Three, how does it affect education, morals, courts,
etc. 4. What proportion of the women vote?
Answers
1. Yes, it has indeed been of real benefit to the territory in many ways.
Until woman suffrage came among us, life was a drag,
a monotonous sameness and simultaneous continuousness.
Now it is not that way.
Woman comes forward with her ballot and puts new life into the flagging energies of the great
political circles.
She purifies the political atmosphere and comes to the polls with her suffrage done up in a little wad,
and rammed down into her glove, and redeems the country.
Two, it has accomplished more than the great outside world wots of.
Philosophers and statesmen may think that they wot, but they don't, not a watt.
To others outside of Wyoming, women's suffrage is a mellow dream,
but here it is a continuous mellow yielding reality.
We know what we are talking about.
We are acquainted with a lady who came here with a light of immortality shining in her eye,
and the music of the spheres was singing in her ears.
She was apparently on her last limbs, if we may be allowed that expression.
But woman suffrage came to her with healing on its wings,
and the rose of health again bloomed on her cheek,
and her appetite came back like the famine in Ireland.
Now she wrestles with the cast-iron Majolica ware of the kitchen during the day,
and in the evening works a cross-eyed elephant on a burlaps tidy,
and talks about the re-monetization of the currency.
Without attempting to answer the last two questions in a short article like this,
we will simply give a few certificates and testimonials of those who have tried it.
Prairie Dog Ranch, January 3, 1880,
Dear Sir, I take great pleasure in bearing testimony to the
efficacy of woman's suffrage. It is indeed a boon to thousands. I was troubled in the east,
beyond measure, with an ingrowing nail on the most extensive toe. It caused me great pain and
annoyance. I was compelled to do my work, wearing an old gum overshoe of my husband's. Since using
woman's suffrage only a few months, my toes entirely well, and I now wear my husband's
fine boots with perfect ease. As a remedy for ingrowing nails, I can safely recommend
the woman's suffrage Sassafras Olson.
Miner's Delight, January 23, 1880.
Dear Sir, two year ago, my wife fell down into an old cellar and drove her variloyed through the
cerebellum. I thought she was a goner. I was then living in the South West potion of
Njiani. I moved to where I now am leaving several unsettled accounts where I lived.
but I would do almost anything to recover my wife's health.
She tried woman's sufferings and can now lick me with one hand tied behind her.
I owe everything to the free use of the female ballot.
So goodbye at present.
Union Forever McGilligan
Rahide, February 2, 1880.
Dear sir, I came to Wyoming one year ago today.
At that time I only weighed 153 pounds.
and felt all the time as though I might die.
I was a walking skeleton.
Coyotes followed me when I went away from the house.
My husband told me to try woman to suffrage.
I did so.
I have now run up to my old weight of 213 pounds,
and I feel that with a proper care and rest,
and rich, wholesome diet,
I may be spared to my husband and family till next spring.
I am now joyful and happy.
I go about my work all day,
singing old Zip Koon and other plaintive melodies.
After using woman suffrage two days,
I sat up in a rocking chair and ate one and three-fourths mince pies.
Then I worried down a sugar-cured ham and have been gaining ever since.
Ah, it is a pleasant thing to come back to life and its joys again.
Yours truly, Ethel Lillian Kersikes.
End of Chapter 63.
Chapter 64 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or The Tale of a Meek-Eyed Mule, and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Portuguese without a master.
I'm spending my leisure moments these days studying the Portuguese language.
It is not very generally used, it is true, but I might meet a Portuguese someday who wanted to hold a conversation with me very much,
and I would feel more at ease if I could speak the language with elegance and precision.
I am working at the task silently and earnestly without a master,
and I am sometimes a little mystified by the startling and original exhibitions of imported syntax
and etymology as shown in the English translations given in the book which I am studying.
It is a kind of Portuguese primer, designed and constructed by Jose de Fonseca and Pedro Carolino,
and although the Portuguese part of it seems to be all right,
I am at times a little annoyed at the novel arrangement of the English translations.
The authors and the preface seem to convey the impression
that other compilers and writers who have attempted this thing
have not seemed to meet the demands of the times.
But Mr. Fonseca and Carolino intimate that they have supplied a want long felt,
and they seem tickled almost to death
over the fact that they have the bulge on their predecessors.
In their apparently modest way, they say,
The works which we are conferring for this labor found use us for nothing,
but those who were publishing to Portugal or out,
they were most all composed for some foreign or some national,
acquainted in the spirit of both languages.
It was resulting from that carelessness to rest these works
fill of imperfections and anomalies of style and idiotisms
for this language, in spite of the infinite typographical fault,
which sometimes invert the sense of the periods.
Parties who have become cloyed with a spicy fragrance of 15
might find pleasing diversion in the foregoing sentence.
It is quaint and unique in its style,
and although I consider it perfectly original,
I am led to believe that there are little poetic gems from Walt Whitman in it.
Further on, the authors in poetic prose say,
We expect them, who the little book for the care what we wrote him
and for her typographical perfection,
that may be worth the acceptation of the studious persons
and especially of the youth,
at which we dedicate him particularly.
Ah, how well those dark-eyed dwellers in perpetual summer
know how to inspire even the dull and commonplace sentences of a preface
with a living, breathing soul.
How the threadbare language of apology and modest braggadocio
used by the hesitating but puffed-up author ever since the first work published my
Moses, is made to submit to the tropical influence of sunny Portugal, and comes forth breathing
the seductive odors of that glad climb where the poet's song of undying love to the dark-eyed
made is ever throbbing and passionate pulsations upon the perfumed air. But I must give a Portuguese
translation rendered back in English of the well-known anecdote told on the physician, who
didn't take his own medicine. A physician, 80 years of age, had enjoyed of a health
unalterable. Their friends did him of it compliments every days. Mr. Doctor, they said to him,
you are admirable man, what you make then for to bear as well. I will tell you it, gentlemen,
he has answered them, and I exhort you in same time at to follow my example. I live of the product
of my ordering without take any remedy who I command to my six. One fault with American wit,
and my estimation is its coarseness and lack of polish.
I have mentioned it a great many times and wept over it in extreme sorrow.
Here, however, we have it down fine.
The Portuguese joke is no doubt the most mirth-provoking
and at the same time the most refined and delicate joke now made.
We send our manufacturers to all foreign countries
to successfully compete with theirs,
but our joke can never hold up its head
and ask for the award or bronze medal
where these Portuguese rib-ticklers and buttonhole busters and suspender wrenchers
are allowed to compete for the free for all prizes.
The Portuguese joke with facings of same held in place with bias folds of something else
is really the most rich charche joke now in the market.
Americans may for years to come be able to furnish a good fair Stoga joke
that will do to stub around home with,
but they cannot design a joke that will do to dress up in and wear on great occasions.
The low-neck, Oxford-Tai, Portuguese burst of humor, hand-sowed with sole leather counter and steel shank,
and with the name of the author blown in the bottle, is bound to command the highest market price for a century or more to come.
We may command the smoking car and Congress trade, but Portugal must furnish the easy, riding, gentle, picnic, and croquet joke,
and may be also fed to invalids with a spoon.
A friend of mine who had been sick for nine years
took a Portuguese joke that I gave him right out of the can
without diluting it, and by that means
gradually led up to fricasseed oatmeal gruel,
stuffed with sawdust and other rich dishes.
It saved his life, but his intellect is impaired
so that he don't know a calcium light
from the splendor of the New Jerusalem.
End of Chapter 64
Chapter 65 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or The Tale of a Meekide Mule and Some Other Literary Gems by Bill Nye.
This Liber Vox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Rocky Mountain Hog
In speaking of the domestic and useful animals of Laramie, it would not be right to overlook the hog.
I do not allude to him as useful at all, but he is very domestic.
He is more so than the people seem to demand.
I never saw hogs with such a strong domestic tendency as the Laramie hogs have.
They have a deep and abiding love for home, all of them, and they don't care whose home it is either.
There is a tremendous pressure of hog to the square inch here.
The town is filled with homeless, unhappy, and starving hogs.
They run between your legs during the day and stand in your front yard and squeal during the night.
Most of them are orphans.
When Thanksgiving comes, it will bring no joy to the day.
to them. It will be like any other day. About all the fun they have is to root a gate off the
hinges and then run off with a tablecloth in their mouths. We should not be too severe, however,
on the hog. What means has he of knowing that there is a city ordinance against his running about
town? Kind reader, do you think the innocent little hog would openly violate a law of the land if he
knew of its existence? Certainly not. It is pardonable ignorance on the part of the hog, the same as it is
with the Indian, which causes him to break over the statutes and ordinances of his country.
Our plan, therefore, is to civilize the hog.
Build churches and schoolhouses for him.
Educate him and teach him the ways of industry.
Put a spade and a plow at his disposal and teach him to till the soil.
The natural impulses of the hog are good, but he has been imposed upon by dishonest white men.
Long before man came with his modern appliances, the hog was here.
He owned the land and used it to raise acorns and grub worms on.
But the white man has entered on the fair domain, and regardless of his solemn treaties,
has taken this land and asks that the hog, the original owner of the soil,
shall be penned up in a little reservation ten feet by twelve, made of cheap pine slabs.
Every principle of right and justice and equity and humanity
cries out against this tyrannical action on the part of the white man.
men who had scorned to do a dishonorable act ordinarily
snatch the broad lands that were formerly owned by the hog away from him
and deliberately go to raising wheat on them.
This is not right.
We should remember that the hog has certain rights
which we are bound to respect.
Did you ever stop to think, dear reader,
that the hog of the present day
is but a poor degraded specimen
of the true Aboriginal hog
before civilization had encroached upon him?
Then do not join.
the popular cry against him. Once he was pure as the beautiful snow.
End of Chapter 65. Chapter 66 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read
by Dale Barkley. The Buckness wherewith the Buck Beer Bucketh.
Buck Beer is demoralizing in its tendency when it moveth its
self aright, it layeth hold of the intellect and twisteth it out of shape.
My son, go not with them who go to seek buck beer, for at the last it stingeth like
the brocaded hornet with the red-hot narrative, and kicketh like the caleric mule.
Who hath woe? Who hath babbling? Who hath redness of eyes? He that goeth to seek the schooner
of buck beer? Who hath sorrow? Who striveth when the middle watch of the night hath come,
to wind up the clock with the fifteen puzzle.
He that kicketh against the buck beer and geteth left.
Verily, the buckness of the buck beer bucketh with a mighty buck,
insomuch that the buck-e riseth at the noon hour with a head that compasseth the town roundabout,
and the swellness thereof waxeth more and more, even from Dan to beer, Sheba.
Current joke in the Holy Land.
Who clamoreth with a loud voice and sayeth,
verily am not i a bad man who is he that walketh unsteadily and singeth unto himself the bright angels are waiting for me who woteth not even a fractional wot but seteth his chronometer with the wooden watch of the watchmaker and by means of a toothbrush go to is it not he who bangeth his intellect fernenced the buck beer even unto the eleventh hour
End of Chapter 66.
Chapter 67 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Billius Nye and the Amateur Stage
A great portion of my time at present is taken up in preparations for my appearance in a few weeks on the amateur stage.
excursion trains will run from Denver on this occasion, and no pains will be spared to make the grand spectacular hoodoo one long to be remembered.
Whenever any society or association desires to make a few thousand dollars for the relief of knock-kneed payouts,
or to purchase liver pads for a pecunius Senegambians, it only has to advertise that I am to appear on the amateur stage in a heavy part.
I am not a brilliant success in the say-wilt-be-mine part,
just as I get the harrowing up close to me near the footlights
and begin to hugger a little as I would at home,
and I temporarily forget that a thousand eyes are upon me,
comes over me that my wife is in the audience
and does not seem to enjoy the play.
This throws a large $4-dollar gloom over the entire surroundings,
and I seem to lose my grip, so to speak.
Many years ago when I was young,
and as one might say in the heyday,
of vigorous manhood, and had an appetite like a P.K. Dedrick perpetual haypress,
I consented to take a leading part, and although I could generally worry through a little light
comedy, I had not then learned how rough and uncouth I appeared as the heavy lover.
I therefore consented to hug a beautiful young thing before 500 people, and in the full glare
of the footlights whom I would not have dared to wink at in her father's parlor at midnight,
with a lamp turned clear down. I have an easy gliding. I have an easy glider of the footlights. I have an easy glider
stage gate that is something between a pace and a rack. It is full of the very poetry of motion.
I racked up to the heroine at the proper time and told her how I loved her and how I was
tearing me all to pieces and so forth. Just as I was coming to the grand flourish, however,
I forgot a word. While I was thinking that up, the remainder of the speech slowly drifted away to
where I couldn't get at it. To add to the general hilarity of the occasion, the stage manager,
who was furnishing at that moment some pale blue lightning and distant thunder,
and who happened to be drunk, threw in a heavy snowstorm that should have gone into another piece.
I stood there waiting, trying to think of my part, about 30 years, I should think.
Anyway, the snow got knee-deep, and the heroin excused herself and went away to warm her feet.
She told me to call her up by telephone when I could think of my piece.
I thought the audience would be mad and mobbed me, but it didn't.
there seemed to be a general good feeling and harmony all the way through.
I told them that I could not call to mind the exact words of my part,
but if those present would like to hear a little poem that had gone around to the press a good deal,
in which I composed myself entitled The Burial of Sir John Moore,
I would render it in my own choice and happy style.
It is not a humorous poem, but the audience seemed to think it was,
for all the way through from the time the procession started out with Sir John until he was planted,
everybody was tickled nearly to death.
Now I do not take the part of the leading lover anymore.
The awkward young man who carries dead bodies off the stage is good enough for me.
End of Chapter 67.
Chapter 68 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A Journalistic Correction
office of the meek-eyed tarantula. We have, it appears, at something casually in our kind-hearted way,
that the sensitive Slim Town harmonica has taken to heart and feels badly over,
so we will try as far as possible to place ourselves in a correct position.
We spoke of the harmonica in connection with another subject, which we took the liberty to ride upon,
and did so simply with the idea of using the harmonica as a simile.
We find, however, that we were wrong. The harmonica is,
not a simile, on the contrary, it is a parabola. It is a base inferior isosceles, and its
editor is nothing but a cosmopolitan, hypotenuse. And if he wants to take it up, we may be found
at our office at any time between the hours of AM and PM. We were wrong in speaking of the harmonica
as a comparison or a simile, but we want it distinctly understood, that we know what the harmonica
and its editor are, and we are not afraid to say so either. They are very. They are
pre-adamite vicarious isotherms, and we think that it is time the people of the West were
apprised of that fact, too.
End of Chapter 68.
Chapter 69 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meekide mule, and some other literary gems
by Bill Nye.
This Liber Vox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Bankrupt Sale of Literary Gems, Office of the Mormon Bazoo.
Little boys who are required by their teacher to write compositions at school
can save a great deal of unnecessary worry and anxiety
by calling on the editor of this paper
and glancing over the holiday stock of second-hand poems and essays,
debating clubs and juvenile lyceums supplied at a large reduction.
The following are a few selections with price.
Old age, a poem written in red ink, price ten cents.
The dog, blank verse.
written on a fool's cap with a hard pencil, five cents.
Who will love me all the while?
A tale, price three cents per pound.
Hold me in your clean wide arms, song and dance,
by the author of A Beautiful Snow,
price very reasonable, it must be sold.
She ain't no longer mine, nor I ain't Hearn,
or the sad story of two sundered hearts,
spruce gum and licorice taken in exchange for this piece.
God, his attributes and peculiarities,
will be sold at a cent and a half per pound or traded for a tin dipper for the office.
Give us a call before purchasing elsewhere.
The stock on hand must be disposed of in order to give place to the new stock of odes and sonnets on spring
and contributions on the violet and the skipful lamb.
End of Chapter 60 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Thoughts on marriage.
Marriage is to a man at once the happiest and saddest event of his life.
He quits all the companions and associations of his youth and becomes the chief attraction of a new home.
Every former ties loosened.
The spring of every hope and action is to be changed, and yet he flees with joy to the untrodden paths before him.
then woe to the woman who can blight such joyful anticipations and wreck the bright hopes of the trusting,
faithful, fragrant, masculine blossom, and bang his head against the sink and throw him under
the cooking range and kick him into a three-cornered mass and then sit down on him.
Little do women realize that all a man needs under the broad cerulean dome of heaven is love and
bored and clothes. Love is his life. If some woman or other don't.
love him and love him like a hired man, he pines away and eventually climbs the golden stair.
Man is born with strong yearnings for the unernerable, and he does not care so much for wealth as he
does for someone who will love him under all circumstances and in all conditions.
If women would spend their evenings at home with their husbands, they would see a marked change
in the brightness of their homes. Too many sad-eyed men are wearing away their lives at home alone.
would that I had a pen of fire to write in letters of living light,
the ignominy, and contumily, and some more things like that,
the names of which have escaped my memory,
that are today being visited upon my sex.
Remember that your husband has the most delicate sensibilities
and keenly feels your coldness and neglect.
The former may be remedied by toasting the feet over a brisk fire before going to bed,
but the latter can only be remedied by a total reform on your part.
Think what you promised is,
parents when you sued for his hand. Think how his friends and several girls to whom he had at different
times been engaged came to you with tears in their eyes and besought you not to be unkind to him.
Do these things ever occur to you as you throw him over the card table and mop the floor with his
remains? Do you ever feel the twinges of remorse after you have put an octagonal head on him
for not wiping the dishes dryer? Think what a luxurious home you took him from and how his mother used to
polish his boots and take care of him, and then consider what drudgery you subject him to now.
Think what pain it must cause him when you growl and swear at him.
Perhaps when you went away to your work you did not leave him wood and coal and water.
Does he ever murmur or repine at your neglect?
Ah, if wives knew the wealth of warm and true affection locked up in the bosoms of their husbands
and would draw it out instead of allowing the hired girl to get all the benefit,
what had changed there would be in this earth of ours?
But they never do until the companion of their joys and sorrows
has winged his way to the evergreen shore
and takes charge of the heavenly orchestra.
And then for about two weeks,
you will see a violently red proboscis glimmering and sparkling
under a costly black veil,
after which the good qualities of the deceased
will be preserved in alcohol,
to be thrown up to number two in the bright days to come.
Then, in conclusion,
wives in Israel and other railroad towns,
love your husbands while it is yet day.
Give him your confidence.
If your act of corn manifests a wish to leave the reservation,
go to your husband with it.
Lean on him.
He will be your solid Muldoon.
He will get an old wood rasp and make that corn look sick.
He is only waiting for your confidence and your trust.
Tell him your business affairs and he will help you out.
He will, no doubt, offer to go without help in the house
in order to economize,
and he will think of numberless other little ways.
to save money. Do as we have told you, and you will never regret it. Your lives will then be one
great combination of rare and beautiful dissolving views. You will journey down the pathway of
your earthly existence with the easy, poetical glide of the fat man who steps on the treacherous
orange peel. Your last days will be surrounded with a halo of love, and as your eyes get dim
with age and one by one your teeth drop out, you can say with pride that you have never, never
gone back on your solid pard.
End of Chapter 70.
Chapter 71 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley.
A Ute Presidential Convention
The presidential conventions of last summer
and their attendant excitement,
personal bitterness, and political sharpness
have called to my mind an occurrence in the history of a nation of whose politics and whose statesmanship
the civilized world knows but little. Much has been said pro and con relative to the Indian
character in general, and recently of the Ute nation in particular, but those who knew the least
have been most willing to shed information right and left, and to beam down upon the great reading
world with the effulgence of the average cultivated lunatic. I do not intend at this time,
to enlarge upon the question of Western intolerance and Eastern hero worship, as applied to the
Indian nation, but simply to remark in my own gentle, soothing style that those who know the Indian best
have the least respect and veneration for him. At some other time, I may say something relative to the
Indian's home life, an attempt to show that while he appears in his public career to great
advantage, both as a general and as a statesman, he is prone, like other great men, to little
domestic irregularities. At this time, however, I intend simply to give some particulars of the
great convention of 1875, which have never been brought to the eye of the reading public.
In the autumn of the above year, at that delightful season when the maple turns to crimson and
the sassafras to gold, when the soft and mellow light of the declining year,
sheds a subdued splendor of misty, dreamy langor over the snow-clad mountains and wooded canyons of Colorado.
When the deep green of the mountain pine is darkly outlined against the pale gold of the poplar and the cottonwood and the willow,
the chairman of the Republican Central Committee of the Ute Nation issued a call for a mammoth convention
to be held at Hot Sulphur Springs for the purpose of nominating a candidate for head chief to succeed Ula,
whose term of office had expired by reason of his having violated the provisions of his first general order,
in which he had pronounced himself as a champion of civil service reform.
The day for the Grand Convention had arrived and hot sulfur springs had become all at once,
a lively bustling city.
From every point of the compass came the wild shouts of the gathering delegates
with their credentials in one pocket and their patriotism in pint bottles in the other.
The convention was called to order and affected a permanent organization by electing Chavano as permanent chairman.
Chavano rose with stately gravity, bowed to the assembled convention, and walked to the platform, escorted by his trainer.
He gracefully removed a quid of partially amasticated government-plugged tobacco, and laying it carefully on the speaker's desk, said,
Warriors of the Ute Nation and Gentlemen of the Convention,
we are gathered once more amid the solemn silence of the mountains
and under the dying leaves of the forest
to nominate a candidate to serve as executive of the Ute Nation.
Ula, the medicine man for this moon, who had hoped to be here
and who had his impromptu speech written for this occasion,
will not be able to attend.
I had hoped to see him here that he might act as secretary,
but last evening he was shot by request.
It seems that he had diagnosed the case of Prairie Dog, the son of Coyote,
and had pronounced it to be a membranous croup.
But the coroner's inquest developed the fact that Prairie Dog had climbed the golden stair
the victim to a can of concentrated lie.
A mighty nation whose numbers are as the sands of the sea
can afford to let its medicine men fool around with its people
and experiment with them till they meander up the flume,
but the eut nation is not large. It is a mere handful. We have only enough for a quorum,
and we cannot use any of them for scientific experiments. That is why Ula is on the evergreen shore,
instead of acting as our secretary today. At the request of the sorrowing friends of Prairie Dog,
the medicine man's license was revoked, and Ula was fixed up for an extempore shot pouch,
so another person will have to act as your secretary. Warriors, I do not wish to
to trespass on your time. You have selected me as your chairman, and I thank you for the honor.
We are now a small and powerless nation. Our war cry is answered by the hilarious laughter of our foes.
Once we were great. Our hunting grounds were without limit, and our villages were as the leaves of the
forest. Today the white man plants his Swedish turnips above the graves of our ancestors. We are the
orphaned children of a great people, and our son is set. Once we were wealthy and powerful,
Now we are poor and weak, and our wives cannot keep a hired girl.
Why do the whales of our people echo among the canyons and desolated villages?
Why are we left to mourn the loss of our wild horses,
and why are our own hillsides dotted with the locations and prospect holes of the pale face?
Who is at fault that the graves of our fathers are staked as the gilt edge,
or the bullion load, or the lucky sow, or the calamity jane,
or the cross-eyed Hannah with a cork limb.
I charge these woes of our people upon the pure-oile policy and fire-water reign
of a democratic administration over the nation.
Defening cheers!
Warriors and gentlemen of the convention, I have only one more word to say.
I ask that the rotten fabric of the Ula, Bourbon, dyed in the wool administration
be overturned, that peace and prosperity may once more smile upon us.
In conclusion, I would ask you,
the further pleasure of the convention.
A brorious applause, the audience joining in,
Old John Brownie had a little engine.
A committee on credentials was then selected,
consisting of five members,
of which Buffalo Tripe was chairman.
An adjournment to the following day at 10 a.m.
was next taken by the convention.
The delegates were formally invited
by the proprietor of the Jack Rabbit House
to attend a little social walk-around
and select scalp dance on the following evening.
At the appointed hour,
the convention was called to order by the chair, and a report from the Committee on Credentials was called for.
Buffalo Tripe, on behalf of the committee, submitted the report that the delegates present were all entitled to seats,
except that Dead Man's Canyon had a double delegation.
The report of the Committee on Credentials was accepted, and the committee discharged.
The Chair then selected a new committee to examine the two delegations from Dead Man's Canyon,
and instructed it to report adversely on the drunkest one.
This was regarded as a victory for the friends of Ure, the favorite son from Stray Horse Gulch.
Nominations then being in order, the silver-tongued cactus plant from Middle Park,
arose majestically and said,
Mr. Chairman and gentlemen of the convention,
our people have called us to do their work around the council fire and name for them a chief.
Loud cheers.
They'd look to us today for the assurance of their future prosperity.
We stand in the moccasins of mighty men to be.
with our tribes. Let us not betray their confidence. Let us be able to return to our squaws and
papooses with the smile of the great father upon us. Applaus. It is a solemn moment for our whole
nation and the silence of a mighty forest amid the gathering storm is upon us. Mr. Chairman,
I have the pleasure of nominating for our executive, Ure, the man who never told a lie.
Thunders of applause and wild demonstrations throughout the entire wigwam. After the excitement
had died away, Honpaw snuck a Montegob, which in the ut-tongue-tongue
with the patent liver pad, arose, and laying aside a chew of tobacco about the size of an early
rose potato, said, Mr. Chairman, and delegates of the convention, I wish to put in nomination
today, Douglas, the amusing little cuss from stinking water. Cheers. I nominate him because he is
a dark horse. As a candidate, he is extremely brunette. His record is also on that order.
I think he will run, as I may say, like a bay steer in the cucumber patch.
He is the swift foot of the prairie, and the mountain Zephyr of Cheyenne cannot overtake him.
He is also intellectual, and has written several little gems on spring.
He is a philosopher, a scholar, and a judge of whiskey.
He will harmonize the disaffected elements of our tribe and secure the German vote.
Douglas has a staving war record, and is lazy and shiftless enough to command the respect and esteem of the entire.
nation. The crisis seems to demand a standard bearer who will meet the cunning of the pale face
with the cunning of the red man, and I therefore make this nomination in order that I may go to my
camp in the Gunnison country, feeling that I have done my duty by calling the attention of my people
to a man who is well calculated to lead us to success. Douglas has filled almost every position
of trust or profit in our nation. He has held nearly every office within the gift of the people
from watermelon-stealer Extraordinary,
up to most supreme bartender of the nation,
and he has never betrayed a trust.
I therefore do myself the great honor
to place his name in nomination,
cheers and bass-drum solo.
No more names were placed in nomination,
and shortly afterward,
the convention had declared its preference
for U-Re as its candidate.
He was called upon at his room by a committee
and serenaded at the Jack Rabbit House
by a large band with torchlight procession.
On being called out, Ure made a very short speech as follows.
Warriors and fellow citizens of Indian descent,
I thank you for the honor you have conferred upon me today,
and promise, if elected, to do all that I have agreed to do,
besides what I may hereafter agree to do.
I hope you'll excuse me for making a long speech
as I am very worn out with my labors in securing this unexpected nomination.
I also have an engagement to speak before the Young Men's Christian Association tomorrow,
and also to address the Pocahontas Lodge of Good Templars the day following.
I am very much overcome with surprise this nomination having come entirely unsought
and compelled thus to receive a nomination forced upon me,
together with the mental strain and constant worry necessary on my part,
to bring about this gratifying result,
you will not be surprised that I thus abruptly close my remarks and bid you good-night.
This speech was greeted with round after round of applause,
after which Douglas was called for by his friends. He did not meet with any great degree of success,
for when he undertook to inhale a full breath and start his speech, the friends of the regular
nominee would present him with some antique eggs of the vintage of 49, and Douglas had to adjourn
and rinse his mouth out with government whiskey. This occasioned delay and annoyance.
The delegates tripped the light fantastic till toward morning and then retired. In the afternoon,
when they all arose with a light, maroon taste in their mouths,
told the gentlemanly proprietor of the Jack Rabbit House
to charge their respective bills to the government,
mounted their horses, and the most harmonious convention known to the world
had become a matter of history.
End of Chapter 71.
Chapter 72 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
by Dale Barkley
The club-footed lover of Paiute Pass,
a tale of love and cold pison.
Chapter the first
Many years ago, when Wyoming was new
and infested with the bear, the bunco-steerer,
the buffalo, and the bold bad man,
a little circumstance occurred there,
which is worthy of notice,
and as it has never appeared in the newspapers,
I give it as near as my memory
will serve me in the narrative.
When Wyoming was a wilderness,
and before the civilizing influence of the legislature and Patty's lottery had toned down the
rough outlines of the young Commonwealth, there lived over on Horse Creek, a ranchman
whom we will call Henry Ward Beecher, as a kind of nom de corral, as it were.
Henry Ward Beecher was a bachelor, and lived by himself. He did not know the loving influences
and gentle yearnfulness of woman's society. His life was a howling wilderness, a wide waste of
loneliness and wretchedness because he was unmated.
Henry Ward Beecher did not know the pleasure of rising in the night,
entangling his feet up in a corset lying on the floor,
or brushing his bald head in the morning with a hairbrush so full of long, silky hairs
that they would wind around his nose and tickle his bald head
till he would wish he was dead.
He was alone amid the solitude of the mountains, with no companion but a low-grade refractory mule
and a flea-bitten, ecru-colored mongrel dog with one eye knocked out.
Henry thought, as year succeeded year,
that he would make a change and throw more joy into his humble life in some way or another,
but he was making money and kept busy all the time so that he neglected it.
Finally, one day in spring, there came to the ranch day Henry Ward Beecher,
a man from Ohio named Obie Joyful Jenkins.
He had come west, hoping to get a situation as a president of a bank,
on the strength of being an Ohio man, but most all the banks seemed to have all the presidents
they needed, so that Obie Joyful concluded to compromise the matter and heard sheep at
$25 per month and bored. He struck Henry Ward Beecher and made a trade with him.
Chapter the twice
The two men soon became quite friendly, owing to their isolated condition and told each other
all their family secrets. Henry told Obie Joyful how his grandfather was
hung, and Obie Joyful told Henry how he loved a girl in Ohio named O'Leander McTod,
and how he was going to send for her and marry her, as soon as he could raise the scads to
bring her west. Time flew on, and at last Obie Joyful had saved up the collateral necessary to send
for his soul's idol. He wrote to her, enclosing a post-office money order for the amount
necessary to pay emigrant fare to the railroad terminus, and also to buy lignum-vete cookies and
fireproof pie at the lunch counters along the road. About the day on which O'Leander McTod would
naturally arrive at the ranch, Obie Joyful was sent up on stinking water to round up a bunch of sheep
that had escaped and bring them back to the fold. Then Henry Ward Beecher, shaved himself,
put warm tallow on his boots, swept out the cabin for the first time in 19 years,
and waited for events to shape themselves.
Chapter 3 times.
The orb of day rode slowly adown the crimson west.
The snow-clad mountain stood leaning against the purple sky.
They had done so on several occasions before.
A woman, on an ambling palfrey of the Cayuse denomination,
rode down the mountain path to the cabin and alighted.
henry ward beecher came to the door with some hesitation and no suspenders is o be joyful me truant love an inmate of this rural retreat said a young sweet voice that sounded like the melody of a shingle-mill
nay by my hallow dome he ist not gentle lady on yester morn i did give him the grand bounce and now he hath joined a hold-up outfit at the overland stage route it pains me to tell you this sad sad news for i wot te art the dansel who
who erst was mashed on Obie Joyful.
But I cannot tell a lie, he is unworthy of you,
and a cross-eyed, spavined, snipe of the desert,
don't you forget it.
Then Oliander lifted up her voice to an elevation of about 14,000 feet
above the level of the sea, and she wap, with an exceeding great weep.
Chapter four times.
Henry Ward Beecher led her weep till her surcharged orbs and ceased to give down,
and then he brought out some valley tan that,
he had in the house for medicinal purposes and comforted her. Then they got acquainted. They sat in the
gloaming, and Henry Ward Beecher turned the gas partly off, and held the hand of oleander,
and told her that, Oh, Be joyful, had been a humorist on an Ohio paper, and otherwise destroyed the
prospects of the absent lover in the eyes of Miss McTod. They looked into each other's eyes and knew
that they were solid pards from that moment. Shortly afterward, they rode away to the nearest just
of the peace, about 223 miles off, and were married. Then they went home. Obie Joyful was there.
Hugh is also healed, but H.W.B. got the drop on him. Then Obie Joyful seemed filled with disgust,
and he seemed oppressed and filled with nameless forebodings. He seemed to lose faith in mankind,
also to some extent in womankind. He seemed to think that love wasn't exactly what it was
represented to him by the agent. It didn't seem to be.
seemed to be full weight, and there wasn't a prize in each and every package, as he had been
led to suppose. He then presented a bill to Henry Ward Beecher for $49.53, freight charges on
O'Leander McTod, but H.W.B. swore with a great blood-curdling, three-cornered oath that he
would not pay it. That night, Obie Joyful Jenkins procured some poison and stole away to a quiet
place, and wrote a note to tell his friends when they found his body why he had taken.
in his own life. Then he commended his soul to Providence, poured out a glass of whiskey, thought he would
try it without the poison first. The draft revived him. He changed his mind and put the poison in Henry
Ward Beecher's whiskey, stole HWB's narrow-gauge mule boomerang, and lit out for the North Park.
This is a true story. If the gentle reader has doubts about it, I will produce the meal boomerang,
which is now in my possession and in a good state of preservation.
Hereafter, in order to save time and annoyance to my readers,
true stories over my signature will be marked with a star, thus.
Asterisk.
End of Chapter 72.
Chapter 73 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of amic-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Automatic Liar.
Laramie City, August 23rd.
He came in gently but firmly and felt in his pocket for something.
Finally, he found what looked a little like an egg-beater,
and some like a new kind of speed indicator.
I want to show you, he said kindly,
an office dial to hang on your door,
so that when you are away your clients will know where you are and when you will return.
For instance, by turning the thumb-screw,
the dial will show, at court, at dinner, at supper, at bank, at post office, etc., etc., etc., with the time you will return.
There are 64 combinations which cover all cases of this kind necessary for the man of business,
and it is no doubt the greatest achievement of mechanical ingenuity price, $1.50.
No, said Mr. Bidoff more than he could shaw.
there are 27 reasons why it would not be advisable for me to purchase your automatic bulletin.
Firstly, I have but one client, and he cannot read.
He would only come and look at the indicator and kick it all the pieces and swear and go away.
Secondly, your machine is incomplete anyway.
The inventor has signally failed to meet the popular want.
It would only be an aggravation to the average attorney.
I can think of a hundred things that ought to be added to a truthful indicator.
supposing that I have gone to the circus or to a meeting of the vestry, or suppose I am drunk, or at a reunion of the YMCA,
we're out to eat a clove with a member of the bar, or at a camp meeting, or putting up the clothes line at home,
or going still further, suppose I am wringing out the clothes, or setting bread, or taking a bath,
or wrestling with the delirium tremens, or toning down a rebellious corn,
or putting Paris green on my squash bugs, or inspecting,
microscopically the homeopathic fragment of ice that the kind-hearted ice man has prescribed for me.
Or, going still further into detail, supposing that I am dead and cannot state with any degree
of accuracy, where I am, or when I shall return. Do you suppose that I would herald a glittering
$1.50 lie to the world by saying that I was at the barbershop and would be back at $10.30?
Do you think I would pay $1.50 for a machine to vicariously proclaim to the broad universe,
that I was at the bank when I have no business with the bank?
Do you suppose that I would advertise that I was at the post office,
when I was at the beer garden,
or assert that I was at the courthouse when, as a matter of fact,
I was at that moment having a preparation of lemon peel
and other chemicals arranged for myself and another invalid
in a cool retreat downtown.
No, sir, I spurn you in your cast-iron prevaricator.
I promised my dying mother, who afterwards recovered,
that I would never lie by machinery.
If I cannot lie enough to keep up with the growing demand,
I will resign like a man
and not call to my aid a cheap Jim Crow hand-me-down liar
costing a dollar fifty only.
Always do right, and then you will never be put to shame.
If you wish, you can leave the hall door ajar
as you go out the main entrance.
Exeunt Advance Agent at Upper Left Hand Entrance,
orchestra playing something soft and yielding.
End of Chapter 73
Chapter 74 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
Or the Tale of a Meekide Mule and Some Other Literary Gems by Bill Nye
This Libervox recording is in the public domain
Read by Dale Barkley
Some Post Office Fains
The official count shows that only two and one-half percent
Of those who go to the post office transact their business
And then go away
The other 97 and one-half percent
do various things to cheer up the postmaster and make him earn his money and wish that he had died
when he was teething. They also make it exceedingly interesting for the other two and one-half percent.
When I go to the post office, there is always one man who meets me at the door
and pours out a large, rippling laugh into my face,
flavored with old beer and the fragrances of a Royal Havana cabbage-leaf cigar that he is sucking.
If he cannot be present himself, he is vicariously undone.
He asks me if my circus was a financial success and how my custard pie plants are doing,
and then fills the sultry air with another gurgling laugh preserved in alcohol.
I like to smell a hearty laugh laden with second-hand whiskey.
It revives me and intoxicates me.
Still, I'm trying not to become a helpless slave to the appetite for strong drink in this form.
There are other forms of intemperance that are more seductive than this one.
There's also a boy who never had any male and whose relatives never had any male,
and they couldn't read it if they did.
And if someone read it to them, they couldn't answer it.
He was always there, too.
When he sees me, he hails me with a glad smile of recognition.
Comes up to me and stands on my toes,
and it's just as sociable and artless and trusting and alive with childish glee
and incurable cussedness as he can be.
He stirs me up with his elbows and crawls through between my legs,
until the mail is open, and then he wedges himself in front of my box that I can't get the key into it.
Someday, when the janitor sweeps out the post office, he will find a short suspender and a lock of brindle hair
and a handful of large freckles, and he will wonder what it means. It will be what I am going to leave of that boy
for the coroner to operate on. Then there are two boys who come to the box delivery to settle
in difficulties that arise during the day. They fight long and hard,
but a permanent peace is never declared.
It is only temporary, and the next day the old feud is ripe again,
and they fight it all over once more.
There is also an amusing party who cheerfully stands up against the boxes
and reads his letters and laughs when he finds something facetious
or swears when the letter don't suit him.
He also announces to the bystanders who each letter is from
and seems to think the great throbbing world is standing with bated breath,
quivering with anxiety, to know where there is stooping.
sister in Arkansas has successfully acquired triplets this year, are only twins.
This, however, is an error for the great throbbing world with characteristic selfishness,
don't care of brass-mounted continental one way or the other. One day this man got a letter
with a mourning envelope, and I heaved a sigh of relief. For, thought I, he will go away and be
alone with its great grief. But he did not. He stood up manfully and controlled his emotions through
at all, and when he got through, he broke into the old silvery laugh.
It seems that his brother in Oregon had run out of yellow envelopes and had filled the one with
a black border, unusually full of convulsive mirth. What a world of bitter disappointment this
is, anyhow. Then there is the woman who playfully stands at the general delivery window and
gleefully sticks her fangs out into the subsequent week, and skittishly chides the clerk
because he doesn't get her a letter, and he good-naturedly tells her, as he is
done daily for seven years, that he will write her one tomorrow. Then she reluctantly goes home
to get rested so that she can come again and stand there the next day. Then comes the literary
cuss, who takes a weekly paper from Vermont with a patent inside to it. He reads it with the
purest unselfishness to me and points out the fresh new-laid jokes that one always finds in
the enterprising paper with a patent digestion. He also explains the jokes to me so that I need not
grope along through life and hopeless ignorance of what is going on all about me.
There is a woman, too, comes to the window and lavishly buys a three-cent stamp and runs out her
tongue and hangs it over the stamp clerk's shoulder and lays the stamp back against the glottis
and moistens it and has to run her skinny finger down her turkey-gobbler neck to rescue it,
and then she pastes it on the upper left-hand corner of the envelope, and asks the clerk to be sure
and see that it goes. She then
thoughtfully tells him who it is to go to
and gives a short biography
of the Sendee. There
could be no doubt that some women are more
capable of doing certain kinds of business
than men are. All classes
of business requiring careful and
minute explanations and concise
and exhaustive directions
can be better attended to by this
class of women. They
enter joyfully upon the task of shedding
collateral information in a way
that would appall a man
and when they confide in you, you know that they are not keeping anything back.
You almost wish sometimes that they would keep back a little of it and not rob themselves.
Still, perhaps it is better that this class of women is not trusted with any great amount of business,
for life is so brief, so evanescent, and so transitory.
It is but a step from the cradle to the grave anyway,
and if a man stands on one leg an hour and then on the other an hour,
listening to extensive information every time he sells a stamp,
he will die with his ambitions unfruitioned.
End of Chapter 75 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librovoc's recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Agriculture at an altitude of 7,500 feet.
I herewith acknowledge the receipt of two bags of cane seed from the agricultural department.
Mr. Lee Duck is always thinking of me and evidently knew that I was yearning for some cane seed.
It will grow luxuriantly here on the spinal column of the American continent,
where winter lingers in the lap of spring till after the 4th of July.
William says that this breed of sugar cane originated in Minnesota
and is claimed to have been the result of accidental hybridization.
I shall not allow anything of this kind myself if I can buy the most tireless watchfulness avoid it.
Accidental hybridization is what is demoralizing the sugar cane of the whole country.
I shall plant this seed and drills two feet apart,
mulching with rich top dressing of retired gumboots and dead cats.
I will then wait till the plant is germinated and appears above the surface.
when I shall remove the boots and dead cats and rub the plants with a Turkish towel to promote a healthy circulation.
Then next fall, while others have sneered at me and called me a horny-handed buckwheater from the rural districts,
are running up heavy bills for groceries, I will go out into my molasses orchard and pick a milkpan full of granulated sugar from my trees
or shell out enough maple sugar for breakfast at a slight cost and with the blessed consciousness
that I did it all myself.
William is going to send me some more seeds that he thinks will do well in this tropical climate.
If he could send me something that would be more hardy like the early Swedish lemon squeezer
or the mammoth custard pie plant or the northern spy cucumber tree,
my reports to the department would be more cheerful than they are,
but where plants have to wear their heavy California underclothes all through August,
they get discouraged, and prefer to bloom in the sweet fields of Eden.
Last year I tried the hotbed process, but it was not a signal success.
This summer I shall use the hotbed as an ice cream freezer.
It wanted to act in that capacity last summer,
but I had a freezer that did very well,
so I foolishly used the hotbed to assist the plants,
although I know of several days in mid-summer,
when my cabbage plants had to get out of that hot bed
and run up and down the garden walk to keep their feet from freezing.
End of Chapter 75.
Chapter 76 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevux's recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Gentle Youth from Ladville
In addition to the other attractions about the depot, the old museum of curiosities from the Rocky Mountains has been reopened.
I like to go down and listen to the remarks of the overland passenger relative to these articles.
There were two stuffed coyotes chained to the door, one on each side, and it amuses me to see a solicitous parent nearly yank his little son to pieces for going so near these ferocious animals.
The coyotes look very lifelike and show their teeth a good deal,
but it breaks a man all up when he finds that their digestive apparatus
has been replaced with sawdust and plaster of Paris.
After a coyote gets to patting himself out with baled hay and cotton so as to look plump,
he loses his elasticity of spirits and we cease to respect him.
Sometimes a tourist asks if these coyotes are prairie dogs.
A few days ago, a man from Michigan, who has been here,
here two weeks and wears a large buckskin patch where it will do the most good, and it was very
bitter in his remarks about tender feet, was standing at the depot when a young man, evidently
from a theological seminary, came along from the train whistling, what a friend we have in Jesus.
He walked up to the Michigan man who began to look fierce and timidly asked if he would tell
him all about the coyote. The Michigan man, who never had seen a live coyote in his life,
volunteered to tell him some of the finest decorated lies
with Venetian blinds and other trimmings to them,
while the young man stood there in open-mouthed wonder,
with daylight visible between his legs as high as the fifth rib.
Never saw such a picture of rapt attention in my life.
As he became more interested,
the Michigan man warmed up to his work
and lied to this guileless youth
till the perspiration rolled down his face.
As the train started out,
the delegate to the young man's Christianist
ask the Michigan man for his address.
I want the address of some good, earnest liar, he said,
one who can lie by the day or by the job and endure the strain.
I want a man to enter the field for the championship of America.
Any communication you may wish to make will reach me at Leadville, Colorado.
I have been in the Rocky Mountains ever since I was three years old
and have lived for weeks with no other diet but coyote on toast
and raw Michigan man.
He waved his hand at the Michigan man
and said,
If I don't see you again,
hello, and he was gone.
How many such little episodes we experience
on our journey to the tomb.
End of Chapter 76.
Chapter 77 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
read by Dale Barkley.
A snide journalist.
Recent occurrences here have seemed to absolutely demand
that something be said relative to newspaper men.
During my residence here, I have been brought face to face
with more fraud journalists than ever before,
and I am forced to lift up my voice against it.
I have met the ordinary tramp who is pleased and happy
if he be allowed to eat cold grub
and sleep beneath the twinkling stars,
but the newspaper tramp is,
meaner, more self-assumed, and has brighter prospects for perdition than all the rest.
He stands out ahead of the rank-and-file of tramps as a kind of major general tramp,
fearless and self-reliant. He fills the nobility of the profession of journalism,
and indeed it is a calling, of which its followers may well be proud,
but the snide representative of the press is too proud. He puts on too many frills.
Perhaps I am too easily picked up in this manner.
But I cannot help sympathizing with deserving newspaper men who lack many of the comforts of life.
I have been there.
I know what it is to battle with a cold world and wrestle with hunger.
But now in the midst of prosperity, my heart goes out for these vagrants in such a way that,
just as I begin to get affluent, I find some subject for my charity, and I have to begin over again.
On Monday last, a young man with a hopeful light in his eye, alighted from the eastern-bound train,
and going into the Thornburg house, registered his name,
at least we will play that it was his name,
for no one else has since called in to claim it.
We will call him Brown as a matter of convenience.
His front name, as I afterward learned, was Ward.
I might say that, in putting this report together,
another Ward has been heard from,
but I leave that for the docile reader to do as he or she may see fit.
Mr. Brown then proceeded to get acquainted with the people of Laramie
and be sociable. He was not so reticent as some prominent newspaper men are, but seemed to be the
rollicking jovial kind. He said that he was the traveling correspondent of the Salt Lake Tribune,
and also represented the Louisville Courier Journal. I wondered at the time, what in the name of all
that was handsome the Courier Journal wanted to pay a man and send him to the front for, with Laramie
City as his objective point. By and by, he crossed my path and made himself known, said he knew
me by reputation, and then I began to get alarmed. I was afraid he was a detective. But he wasn't.
I drew him out on the subject of Harry Waterson. He knew Hank. knew him well. It slept with him.
He and Hank had been drunk together several times. Then I felt proud. He was an intimate friend
of a great man, and sitting there talking with an unsophisticated youth like me just as naturally as
life. It sounds like a book. I asked him up to my office, made him sit in my best chair. And
the one with the four good legs, while I took the foundered one.
I told him to make himself perfectly free with the luxuriant furniture of the office
and invited him to spit on the floor whenever it came handy.
I told him that I knew great men didn't want to feel hampered while chewing tobacco
and that I wanted my guests to feel at ease.
He then took his knife, cut off a piece of tobacco, about the size of a paperweight,
threw it back till it struck the gable end of his mouth with a hollow thud,
and proceeded to unroll the most gorgeous panorama of falsehoods that I ever listened to.
Casually, while putting the fresco work on my floor, he took out a letter from Waterson and showed it to me.
Waterson writes about the same kind of a copper plate hand that I do.
I wanted to take the letter and make a plaster cast of it, but Mr. Brown said Hank wouldn't like it.
The letter went on in a free and easy way to joke Brown about looking too often on the maddening bull,
and then asked him to be a correspondent for the CJ.
The next day I came downtown,
thinking about how easy it was for anyone
by a straightforward, honest course
to rise in the world and get acquainted with prominent men.
By and by, I met the sheriff.
He asked me if I didn't want to go up to the jail
and take a last look at my journalistic friend.
I went up.
Brown lay there in an easy position
on an old blanket in one of the cells.
The surrounding seemed to be in perfect harmony
with a general appearance of Mr. Brown. He had taken off the large satin arrangement, which served
partly as a necktie, and partly to throw the public off its guard in relation to his shirt.
The shirt was there, slightly disfigured, but still in the ring. It was the same shirt that
he had started out in life with. He had outgrown it, and it looked feeble, but it was evidently
determined to stay by Mr. Brown. I looked at him, and then broke into tears. Large two-dollar sobs
convulsed my frame. I told him that he had basely imposed upon me and led me to believe that he was a
Republican, and now he had removed the mask, as it were, and I could see that he was a Democrat.
With these stone walls and iron grates and that soiled shirt, I can no longer doubt.
I left him, resolving that hereafter I would not be betrayed by appearances. He will drift away into
the mighty, surging mass of humanity, and we shall forget it. Perhaps when the governor of Maine
holds a mass meeting and reunion at Augusta, he will be there.
But he will drop out of my horizon like the memory of a red-headed girl,
and I shall go on my way until some other newspaper man
with a letter from White La Reed or George Washington or Noah,
or some other prominent man, comes along,
and then I shall, no doubt, open up to his view
the same untold wealth of confidence and generous trust.
Those who are looking anxiously every mail
for a copy of the Louisville Courier Journal, or the Salt Lake Trinity,
Tribune, containing a long letter about their town, will be disappointed.
They will never come.
Through the long vista of years and down through the mellow, softened atmosphere of the sweet
by-and-by, I hear the low, sad refrain, and it is refraining, never more.
Instead of the merry prattle of Mr. Brown amid the loud echo of his expectorations as they
fall with a startling crash upon the marble floor of my office, I only hear the rattle of
the cast-iron come-alongs, and the tearful,
never more.
End of Chapter 77.
Chapter 78 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule, and some other literary
gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
He was blind.
While engaged the other day in writing a little ode to the liver pad, I heard a slight noise,
and on looking toward the door, I saw a boy with his hat in his hand, standing on one leg,
and thoughtfully scratching it with the superior toe of the other foot.
I asked the freckled youth what I could do for him.
He said that there was a man at the foot of the stairs who wished to see me.
I asked him then why in the name of a great Republican of free people he didn't see me.
Then I told the boy that there was no admission fee,
that it was the regular afternoon matinee and it was a free show.
The frank and manly little fellow then came forward
and told me that the man was blind.
It was not intended as a joke.
It was a horrible reality, and pretty soon a man into whose sightless orbs the cheerful light of day
had not entered for many years came up the stairs and into the office.
I said,
Ah, sir, I see that you are a poor blind man.
You cannot see the green grass and waving trees.
While others see the pleasant fields and lovely landscape, you wander on year after year in the
hopeless gloom.
Poor man, do you not at times yearn for immortality and pine to be among the angels,
where the light of a glorious eternity will enter upon your sightless vision like a beautiful dream?
This was a little sentiment that I had committed to memory being an extract from the youth's companion.
He wiped away three or four scalding tears with his sleeve and said that he did.
He was getting means, he said, to enable him to go to New York,
where he was going to have his eyes taken out and refilled.
He also intended to have the cornea filed down and a new crystal put in.
I asked him how much he thought it would cause.
He said he thought it could be arranged so that $1,000 would pay the bill.
At first I started to draw a check for that amount,
and then I thought I would try him with a dollar first.
He took the dollar and walked sadly away.
It always makes me feel bad when I see a fellow creature
who is doomed with uncertain steps and sightless eyes
to tread his weary way through life,
and I cannot be happy when I know that such misery is abroad in the land.
I thought how much I had to be thankful for,
how fortunate I had been to have all my senses and my bright and beautiful intellect
that I wouldn't take $400 for.
Then I wandered out to a saloon on A Street to get a cigar.
The blind man was there.
He had just poured out about six fingers of Jamaica rum
and was setting them up for the boys.
I thought I would stand in with the arrangement,
so I leaned up against the bar in very classic style
and took two cigars at 25 cents apiece.
When he came to pay for the goods,
he shoved out the dollar I gave him, which I recognized, because it was a pewter dollar,
and a very inferior pewter dollar at that.
The bartender kicked like a roan cow, and while the excitement was at its height,
I stole away to where I could be alone with my surging thoughts.
The blind man is still in town, but he is not succeeding very well.
Unfortunately, he has told several large, open-faced lies,
and the feeling of pity for him is petered out, if I may be allowed that expression.
When he is sober, he is going to have his eyes operated on at New York,
and when he was drunk, he's going to have them attended to in San Francisco.
This gives the general appearance of insincerity to his remarks,
and the merciless public yearns for him to pack his nightshirt like the Arabs
and silently steal away.
End of Chapter 78.
Chapter 79 of Bill Nyan Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley.
Thoughts of the mellow previously.
It is the evening of St. Valentine's Day, and I'm thinking of the long ago.
St. Valentine's Day is nothing now but a blessed memory.
Another landmark has been left behind in our onward march toward the great hereafter.
We come upon the earth, battle a little while, with its joys and its griefs,
and then we pass away to give place to unlawful.
other actors on the mighty stage. Only a few short years ago, what an era St. Valentine's Day was to me.
Now I still get Valentine's, but they are different, and they affect me differently. They're not of so high an
order of merit artistically, and that poetry is more impudent and less on the turtle dove order.
Some may be neglected on St. Valentine's Day, but I am not. I never go away by myself and get mad because I've been
overlooked. I generally get Valentine's enough to paper a large hall. I file them away carefully
and sell them back to the dealer for next year. Then the following St. Valentine's Day, I love to
look at the familiar features of those I have received in the years ago. One of these blessed
valentines I have learned to love as I do my life. I received at first in 1870. It represents a
newspaper reporter with a nose on him like the woman's suffrage movement.
It is a large, enthusiastic nose of a bright bay color, with bias folds of the same,
shored with dregs of wine.
How well I know that knows.
The reporter is represented in tight green pants and orange coat.
The vest is scarlet, and the necktie is maroons shot with old gold.
The picture represents the young journalist is a little bit disposed to be brainy.
The intellect is large and abnormally prominent.
It hangs out over the deep-set eyes like,
a minority juror on the average panel. I cannot help contrasting this dazzling five-cent
Valentine with a delicate little poem and pale blue and torch-on lace which I received in the
days of yore from the red-headed girl with a wart on her thumb. Ah, how little of genuine pleasure
have fame and fortune to offer us compared with that of sitting behind the same school desk
with the Bismarck blonde of the school and with her alternately masticating the same hunk of
spruce gum. I sometimes chew gum nowadays to see if it will bring back the old pleasant sensations,
but it don't. The teacher is not watching me now. There's too little restraint,
and a companion, too, who then assisted in operating the gum business and used to spit on her
slate with such elegance and abandon, and wipe it thoughtfully off with her apron, she too is gone.
One summer day, when the little birds were pouring forth their lay, and the little lambs were
frisking on the green sward, and yanking their tails athwart to the ambient air,
she led out for the great untried west with a grasshopper sufferer. The fluff and bloom of
existence for her, too, is gone. She bangs eternal punishment out of thirteen consecutive
children near Ogilalha, Nebraska, and wears out her sweet girlish nature, working up her husband's
underclothes into a rag carpet. It seems tough, but such is life.
End of Chapter 79.
Chapter 80 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
My Tombstone Mine, Camp on Alder Gulch, June 18, 180.
The general feeling of expectation and suspense, which is the natural result of recent mineral discoveries near to any mining town, is still prevalent.
If possible, it is on the increase, and all the prevailing indications of profound mystery are visible everywhere.
There is a general air of knowing something that other people do not.
Almost every man is hugging to his bosom a ponderous secret, which is slowly crushing him,
while all his fellow men are trying to hold down the same secret.
Occasionally, a man comes to me, takes my ear and wrapping it around his arm two or three times so that I can't get away.
he tells me that he knows where there is the richest thing in America.
Only he and his wife and another man and his wife know where this wonderful wealth is to be found.
He asked me to come into it so that capital will then be interested.
I agree to it. On the way to the camp, I overtake the able-bodied men of Wyoming,
all of whom are trying in their poor, weak way, to keep the same secret.
Such as life.
Sometimes I think that perhaps I had better give up mining.
I do not seem to get the hang of the thing,
somehow. All the claims I get hold of are rich in nothing but assessments, while less deserving
men catch on to the bonanzas. Once I located a vein which showed what I called good indications
of a permanent vein, staked it out under the United States law, and went to work on it. It paid
out $11 for sharpening picks alone and going down 10 feet to hold it. It was mighty hard
quarts, but the lead grew wider and better defined all the time until I got down 10 feet
and had an assay.
The assayer said that I had struck a marble quarry,
but it was very inferior marble after all.
Besides, I found afterward that it was owned by Jay Gould
and some other tender feet from New York.
Then I relocated the claim
and called it the marble-top cemetery load,
and went away.
Probably if I had gone down on it,
the ore would have shown free milling tombstones
and powers Greek slaves and all that kind of business,
but I felt kind of depressed all the time
while I was at work on it. There was a kind of hark from the tombs a doleful sound air about the whole
mine. Coming city still booms. Building lots have gone up to $100 each. This, for a place where a few
weeks ago the song of the coyote was heard in the land and where the valley of the river and bald
sides of the rugged mountains were unscarred, is a good showing. The magical power of a mineral
excitement to transform the bleak prairie and the rocky canyon into a thriving village at once is
something to command our admiration and wonder. Two months ago, I might say, the little village
of Cummins City was nothing but a little caucus of prairie dogs, an award meeting of wood ticks.
Now look at it. Opera houses, orphan asylums, hurdy-gurdys, churches, barbershops, ice cream
saloons, dog fights, musical soirees, spruce gum, bowling alleys, Salvation and three-card
Monty. Everything in fact that the heart of man could yearn for.
As you drive up Euclid Avenue, you smell the tropical fragrance of frying bacon,
and hear the recorder of the district murmuring with a profane murmur because his bread won't raise.
Here and there along the riverbank, like a lot of picnickers,
the guileless miners are panning-pounded quartz,
or submitting their socks to the old process for freeing them from decomposed quartzite
and non-argentiferous clayite.
Flying from the dome of the opera house is a red flannel shirt,
while a pair of corpulent drawers of the same ruddy complexion has gathered all the clear,
bracing atmosphere of that locality. As a picturesque tower on the roof of the Grand Central,
the architect has erected a minaret or Donjon Keep, which is made to represent a salt barrel.
So true to life is this new and unique design that sometimes the cattle, which roam up and down
Euclid Avenue, climb up on the Mansard roof of the Grand Central, and lick the salt off the
Donjon Keep, and fall over the battlements into the motion.
culverin, or stick their feet through the roof and rattle the pay gravel into the custard pie
and cottage pudding. Bill Root, the stage driver, went out there during the early days of the camp,
and with more or less red liquor stowed away among his vitals. William is quite sociable and
entertaining, even under ordinary circumstances, but when he has thawed out his digestion
with firewater, he talks a good deal. He is sociable to that extent that the bystander is steeped in
profound silence when William proceeds to unfold his springstock of information.
On the following morning, William awoke with a seal-brown taste in his mouth and wrapped in
speechless misery. There was no cardinal liquor in the camp, the condition of affairs which
does not now exist, so that William was silent. On the amputating table of the leading
veterinary surgeon of Cummins City, was found a tongue that had just been removed. It was really
cut from the mouth of a horse that had nearly severed
himself by drawing a lariat through it, but the story soon gained currency that an indignant camp
had risen in its might and visited its vengeance on William Rout for turning loose its conversational
powers on the previous day. Great excitement was manifested throughout the camp, as William had
not uttered a word as yet. Toward noon, however, a party of hardened miners carrying a willow-covered
lunch basket with a cork in the top, arrived in camp, and shortly after that it was ascertained,
that the conversational powers of Mr. Root still remained unimpaired.
The chaplain of the camp set a day for fasting and prayer,
and the red flannel shirt on the dome of the opera house was hung at half-mast,
in token of the universal sorrow and distress.
This is a true story, which accounts for the awkward manner in which I have told it.
End of Chapter 80.
Chapter 81 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other
literary gems by Bill Nye. This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Bankrupt sale of a circus. As I write these lines, my heart is filled with bitterness and woe.
There is a feeling of deep disappointment this morning that has cast my soul down into the very
depths of sadness. Some years ago, the legislature of Wyoming conceived the stupendous idea
that the circus, instead of being man's best friend and assistant in his onward march through life,
was after all a snare and a delusion. This august body then passed a law that fixed the licenses
of circuses showing in Wyoming Territory at $250, which was, of course, an embargo on the show business
that, as I might say, laid it out colder than a wedge so far as Wyoming Territory was concerned.
The history of that law is a history of repeated injury and usurpation.
Our people were bowed down to the earth with the iron heel of an unjust legislature
and forced to drag out the weary years without the pleasures which come to other states and other territories.
In the midst of this overhanging gloom, there were two men who were not afraid of all the powerful legislature,
but boldly lifted up their voices and denounced with clarion tone and dauntless eye the great wrong,
that had been done to our people.
One of these men was a tall, fine-looking man with piercing eye and noble mien.
He stood out at the front of this unequal war,
and with his silvery hair streaming in the mountain zephyrs,
he told the legislature that a justly indignant people would claim at the hands of her lawmakers
a full and ample retribution for the tyrannical act.
Judge Blair, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Wyoming,
whether at the social gathering or the quarterly meeting,
never lost an opportunity to condemn the unrighteous act or to labor for its abolishment.
He fearlessly adjourned court time after time in order that the jury might go to Denver or Salt Lake to attend the circus
and embodied in one of his opinions on the bench the everlasting truth that the usurpation of the people's prerogatives by the lawmakers of any state or territory,
insofar as to deprive them of a divine right inherent in their very natures,
and compelling them to undergo a slavish isolation from the mammoth aggregation of living wonders
and colossal galaxy of arenic talent was unjust in its conception and criminal in its enforcement.
See Boggs v. Bogs 981.
The other dauntless antagonist of the tyrannical law was a young man with pale, seldom hair
and a broad open brow that bulged out into space like a sore thumb.
He was slender in form like a parallel of it.
longitude, with a nose on him that looked like a thing of life. This young man was myself.
Together, we talked in-season and out-of-season, laboring with the lawmakers with an energy
worthy of a better cause. We met with scorn and rebuffs on every hand, and the cold, hard world
laughed at us, and unfeelingly jeered at our ceaseless attempts. But we labored on, till last winter
the welcome telegram was flashed over the wires that the dismal.
spotic measure was no more. Then there was a general joy all over the territory. Judge Blair
sang in that impassioned way of his, which makes a confirmed invalid, reconciled to death,
and I danced. When I danced, there is a wild originality about the gyrations that startles those
who are timid, and causes the average unprotected ballroom bell to climb up on the platform
with the orchestra, where she will be safe. By and by, the young man with a step-ladder,
and the large oil paintings and the long-handled paste brush came to town and put some magnificent decalcomania pictures on the billboards and fences,
and Judge Blair and I patted each other on the back and laughed seven or eight silvery laughs.
But in the midst of our unfettered glee, a telegram came from Denver,
that the circus that had built our town had been attached by the sheriff.
It seems that the elephant broken into a warehouse in Denver and had eaten 160 bales of hay worth of
$100 each in the Leadville market.
The owner of the hay then
attached the show in order to secure
pay for the hay. This
necessitated a long delay,
and finally a sale of the circus.
Everything went. The big elephant
and the baby elephant. The band
chariot with a cross-eyed hyena
painted on it. The steam calliope
that couldn't play anything but silver threads
among the gold. The sacred
jackass from North Park.
The red-nosed baboon from New Jersey.
The sore-eyed prairie dog
from Jack Creek, the sway-backed grizzly bear from York State, and the second-hand clown from
Dubuque all had to go. Then they opened a package of petrified jokes and antique conundrums that had been
exhumed from the ruins of Pompeii. Seemed almost like sacrilege, but the ruthless auctioneer
tore these prehistoric jokes from the sarcophagus and knocked them down to the gaping throng
for whatever they would bring. The show was valued at two million dollars in the large illustrated
catalogs and bright-hued posters, but after the costs of attachment and sale had been paid,
there was only $231 left. Oh, what a sacrifice! How little there is in this brief transitory
life of ours that is abiding. How few of our bright hopes are ever realized. How many glad
promises are held out to us for the roseate future that never reach fruition.
End of Chapter 81
Chapter 82 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Greeley v. Valley Tan
I stopped over one day at Greeley on my return.
Greeley is the town after which Horace Greeley was named.
It is enclosed by a fence and embraces a large track
a very fine agricultural land. The editor of the Tribune had just received a brand new power press.
I asked him to come out and take something. He did not seem to grasp my meaning exactly.
Afterward, I wandered about the town, thinking how much drier the air is in Greeley than in Denver.
The throat rapidly becomes parched, and yet the inducements for the visitor that step in at various
places and chew a clover to are very rare indeed. I think of it.
thought what a dull, melancholy day the Fourth of July must be in Greeley, and how tame and dull
life must be to those who experience a uniform size of head from year to year. The blessed
novelty of rising in the morning with a dark brown taste in the mouth, and the cheerful feeling
that your head is so large that you can't possibly get it out through your bedroom door are
sensations that do not enter here. All the water not used it greatly for irrigating purposes is
worked up into a light, nutritious drink for the people.
End of Chapter 82.
Chapter 83 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule, and some other literary
gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Eternal Fitness of Things
An exchange comes out with an article giving the former residence and occupation of those
who are immediately connected with the Indian management.
It will be seen that they are, almost without an exception, from the Atlantic coast,
where they have had about the same opportunity to become acquainted with the duties pertaining to their appointment,
as Lucifer has had for the past 2,000 years to form a warm personal acquaintance with the Prophet Isaiah.
With all due respect to the worthy descendants of the Pilgrim fathers,
and not wishing to cast a slur upon the ability or the integrity of the dwellers along the rock-bound coast of New England,
I will say, in the mildest manner possible, that these men are no more fit to manage hostile Indians
than perdition is naturally fitted for a powder house.
A man may successfully cope with the wild and fierce codfish in his native jungle,
or beard the saltwater clam in his den, and still signally fail as an Indian agent.
The codfish is not treacherous.
He may be bold, bloodthirsty, and terrible, but he will never go back on a treaty.
Whoever heard of a codfish going back on his word?
Whoever heard of a codfish leaving the reservation and spreading desolation over the land?
No one.
The expression on the face of a codfish shows that he is perfectly open and above board.
We might say the same of the clam.
Of course, if driven to the wall, as it were, he will fight.
But we have yet to find a single instance in the annals of history
where the clam, unless grossly insulted and openly put upon,
ever made an open outbreak. This is why we claim that clam culture and Indian management are not
analogous. They are not simultaneous nor coextensive. They are not identical nor homogenous.
I feel that in treating this subject in my candid and truthful way, perhaps the administration will
feel hurt and grieved, but if so, I can't help it. The great reading public seems to look to me as much as to say,
what are your views on this great subject which is agitating the public mind?
I can't evade it, and even if President Hayes were an own brother,
instead of being a warm personal friend and admirer,
I would certainly speak right out, as I have spoken out,
and tell the whole broad Republic of Columbia
that to successfully steer a hostile tribe of nervous, refractory,
and irritable Indian bummers past the rocks and shoals of war is one thing,
and to drive a saltwater clam up a hickory tree
and kill him with a club is entirely another thing.
End of Chapter 83.
Chapter 84 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
They unanimously arose and hung him.
I was talking the other day with a Laramie Cityman about Leadville.
He said,
in addition to the fact of Laramie Money
being now invested there, we have sent many good citizens there to build up homes and swell the boom
of the young city. We also sent several there of whom we are not proud. We still hold them in loving
remembrance. Sometimes we go through the motions of getting judgments against these men, and making
transcripts with big seals on them and sending to Leadville to be placed on the execution docket
of Lake County. We also sent Edward Fraudsham to Leadville. We intimated to him the life
was very brief and that if he wanted to gather a little steak to leave his family,
perhaps he could do so faster in Leadville than anywhere else. So he went. He is there now.
He at once won the notice of the public there and soon became the recipient of the most
flattering attentions. A little band of American citizens one evening took him out on the plaza,
or something of that kind, and hung him last fall. The maple turned to crimson and the
sassafras to gold, and when the morning woke the song of the Bunko Steer and the Robin,
Mr. Frodschum was on his branch all right, but he couldn't seem to get in his work as a songster.
There seemed to be a stricture in the glottis, and the diaphragm wouldn't buzz.
The gorgeous dyes of the autumn sunrise seemed strangely at variance with the gendarme blue of Mr. Fradtsham's countenance.
His death calls to mind one sunny day in the midsummer of 78.
It was one of those days when there is a lull on the summer of the same thing.
struggle for existence, and the dreamy silence and hush of nature seemed to be concurred in by a
committee of the whole. It was one of those days when, in the language of the average magazine poet,
the flowers bloomed, the air was mild, the little birds poured forth their lay, and everything
in nature smiled. But soon from out of the silence, bursting upon the quiet air, came the sharp
report of a pistol, then another, and another in rapid succession, people who are going to trade in
that locality suddenly thought of other places of business where the same articles could be obtained
cheaper. Men who were not afraid of danger in any form went away because they didn't want to be
called as witnesses on the inquest. The shooting went on for some time. It sounded like the battle of
the wilderness. After a while, it ceased. A large party of men went out to gather up the dead
and arranged for a grand funeral. But the remains were not so dead as they ought to be. There were
bullet holes, to be sure, penetrating various parts of the combatants, but the funeral had to be
postponed. Sidewalks were plowed up, signs were riddled and windows chattered, but Edward
Fradsham got off with a bullet hole through the side. The doctor pronounced it a very close call,
but not necessarily fatal. It was a terrible disappointment to everyone. As a shooting match,
it was a depressing failure, and as a double funeral, it was not deserving of mention. The city council
told Fraschen that if he couldn't shoot better than that, he might select some young growing
town outside of Wyoming and grow up with it. He did so. He favored Colorado, with his stirring
energetic presence. His grave grows green today on the sunny hillside beneath the bending
willow, and the soft, sweet breath that is sighing through the pines and stirring the delicate
ferns beside the glassy depth of the mountain stream is singing his requiem. Perhaps, however,
I am rushing the season for Leadville a little. If so, the last refrain after the word presence
may be wrapped up in warm flannels and stored away till July.
End of Chapter 84
Chapter 85 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary
gems by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Read by Dale Barkley.
Rhetoric versus Woodtick
camp on the new Jerusalem mind, June 15th.
It is impossible at present to say anything about what the future of this district may bring forth.
Every lead shows up beautifully, and so much so, in fact, that claim owners are working first one
and then another in order to hold them under the new law, which requires an amount of work
to be done on the lead within 60 days, which is generally only required within one year.
This new regulation, which is the act of the district, of course, may not stand any very severe test,
but at present the miners are respecting it. It is severe on me, however, and virtually leaves me out.
What I need is a law that will not ride over and overthrow and freeze out the poor man.
This law is passed in the interest of capital and in direct violation of the rights and privileges
of the great surging mass of horny-handed working man like Brick Pomeroy and myself.
I have in the time to particularize or describe the different mines visited,
and if I were to do so, the chances are that I wouldn't cover myself or the district with glory.
It is true that I know a foot wall from a windlass with one hand tied behind me,
but if I were buying a mine, I would be about as apt to purchase a deposit of sulfurettes of expectations,
showing traces of free-milling telly-ride of disappointment as anything else.
The camp has about 300 miners and prospectors now within the city limits.
All up and down the picturesque valley of the swift-flowing river,
the low cabin and white tent dot the green sward,
and far above the everlasting hills rear their heads on high,
torn by the titanic power of giant heat in the days of the long ago.
I said this to Professor Page, the scientific correspondent of the inter-ocean,
who accompanied me.
I thought that perhaps it would take.
him to know that I could reel off a sentence like that, but it didn't affect him in that
way. On the contrary, he seemed to think that the heat must have affected me in some way. We climbed
Jehu Mountain on the evening that we arrived in camp. We thought it would be the proper thing to do,
so we dug our toenails into the prehistoric granite and the micaceous, what's his name, and
climbed to the top. For a few minutes, we didn't mind it much and got along first rate,
trying to make each believe that climbing in mountains was our regular business.
I began to tell the professor a little harmless lie about how I had traveled among the Alps,
but I didn't finish it.
Somehow I felt like breathing in what atmosphere was not in actual use,
but I didn't have any place to put it.
The air at Jehu Mountain is good enough what there is of it, but it is too rare.
If a man could let out the backstrapes of his vest and breathe in the unoccupied atmosphere
lying between the Laramie River and the Zodiac, it would be all right, but he can't do it.
His intentions are good, but his skin isn't elastic enough to hold the diluted fluid.
We climbed up to where we could see the silvery moon, rising like a pale school marm,
and looking sadly across the dark valley, asleep at nights and brace.
I thought it was time to say something.
Professor, said I, as my brow lighted up like a torchlight procession,
and my voice broke upon the hush and solitude of evening, like the trance.
fabulous notes of the buzzsaw. Do you not think that far away amid the unknown worlds which drift
through space and along whose track the drifting systems of planets wheel and circle through
countless ages, while man clothed in a little brief authority, cut such fantastic tricks before high
heaven as makes the angels weep, regarding himself as the center of the solar system,
planning to frustrate the immutable laws of nature, violating the prime and coordinate common law
of universes, going behind the returns, as it were, trying to peer behind the veil,
as I might say, prognosticating the unprognosticatable, evading the axioms and bylaws,
which not only regulate worlds in their creation, but link the phantasmagoria of diagonal
anamelculae and casts a oleogenous incongruity of prehistoric usufruct.
Professor didn't say anything. He didn't seem to have followed me.
Somewhere the thread had been broken, and the glowing truth couched in such language as would light up the pages of history and astronomy were lost upon the silent air.
The professor seemed sad and anxious and preoccupied.
There was a look of apprehension and doubt and distrust in his eye, and he moved about uneasily.
I asked him if there were any last words that I could carry to his friends,
and if there were any little acts of humanity and friendship which I could perform to render his last moments more pleasant.
He said there were.
Then he told me that a wood tick was slowly but surely boring a hole into his spinal column,
near where the off-scapula forms a junction with a nigh one,
and asked me to help bring him to justice.
We should learn from this, that heaven-born genius,
with the music of poetic language and a flame with an inspiration almost miraculous,
sometimes makes less impression upon the listener than a little insect,
no larger than a grain of mustard seed.
End of Chapter 85.
Chapter 86 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley.
The Model Wife.
Dr. Westwood lectured here on Wednesday evening on the model husband.
He wanted me to sit upon the stage as the horrible example,
but I declined.
He was quite pointed in his remarks all the way through, and seemed to have me in his mind when he described the model husband, although, of course, he used a fictitious name.
The lecture was a good one, and very well liked by the husbands who had to sit and take it for an hour and a half.
Let the gentle male reader imagine himself sitting for that length of time with his own wife on one side of him, and another man's wife on the other side of him, and when the speaker makes a point on the old man to get alternate jabs in the side from the delighted lady.
I shall lecture here during the winter on the subject of the model wife.
I will then get even.
I will tell how the young man with bright hopes
and thinking only of the great-consuming love he has for his new spouse
is torn away from the hallowed ties of home
and the sunny influences of young companions
and buried in the poverty-stricken cottage of a woman
who cannot begin to support him in the style in which he has been accustomed.
It is high time that this course of discreet.
graceful misrepresentation on the part of young women should be exposed. I once knew a young man
with a most gentle and trustful nature. He had never known care or sorrow, but an adventurous with
winsome smile and loving voice crossed his path and allowed him to think that she could
maintain a husband like other women, and in his blind adoration for her, he bade goodbye to his home
and its joys and madly walked out with her into the great untried future. She told him that he should
never know the cruel sting of poverty and other romantic trash, and look at him today. He is a broken-hearted
man. His wife does not take him into society, does not keep him clothed as other men are clothed,
and grudgingly gives him the little pittance from week to week which she earns by washing.
Is it strange that his pillow is wet with tears, and in his agony he cries out upon the still
air of night? Oh, mother, why did I leave that kindly protection and overshadowing love,
and marry a total stranger.
And the woman who is sworn to protect and love and cherish him
kicks him in the pit of the stomach,
and harshly tells him to dry up.
I sometimes think that if mothers knew to what sorrow and gross and shameless treatment,
their sons were to submit all through their lives,
they would put them out of their misery with a baseball club.
Some mothers do try this, but they postpone it too long,
and the sons get too large and more difficult to kill
than when their skulls are young and tender.
I have always maintained that a kind word and a caress
will do more for the great yearning nature of the husband
than harshness and severity.
The true wife may reprove her husband
when he spills coal all over the Brussels carpet
and then steps on it and grinds it in,
but how much better even that is then to kick him under the bed
and then sit down on him and gouge out his eyes with a pinking iron.
I know that men are too often misunderstood.
They may be rough on the exterior,
but they can love, oh so,
earnestly, so warmly, so truly, so deeply, so intensely, so yearningly, so fondly, and so universally.
Always kiss your husband goodbye when you go downtown to your work. It may be the last time.
I once knew a wife who went downtown to price a new dullman. Because she was vexed about something,
she did not kiss her husband, but slammed the door and left him. When she returned, he was a
corpse. While peeling the potatoes for dinner with a carving knife, he had step
on a clothespin, which threw him forward over the baby carriage, the knife entering at the
northeast corner of the gizzard, sticking out between the shoulder blade about two feet into space.
What a scene for the now repentant wife. There in the full vigor of his manhood lay all that was
mortal of her companion, dead as a mackerel. Let us take this home to ourselves and ask ourselves
today if we are doing this square thing by the only husband we have. Are we loving him as we should,
or are we turning this task over to the hired girl?
Intemperance, too, is a fruitful cause of connubial unhappiness.
Young man, beware of a wife who loves the flowing bowl.
I once knew a beautiful young lady, talented and with good business ability.
The entire circle of her acquaintance admired and respected her,
but alas, one evening at a banquet, her companion with a heavenly smile,
asked her to drink wine.
Gradually the taste grew upon her,
and although she married, she cannot support her husband.
and he gradually pined away and died broken-hearted.
He used to set up nights for her to come home,
and he caught the inflammatory rheumatism and swelled up and died.
It was a terrible thing.
I tell you, we cannot be too careful.
You take a handsome young man like the author of these lines,
and his power for good or evil is untold.
I sometimes wish that I had not been constructed
with so much dazzling beauty to the square inch,
and I am almost tempted to go and disfigure myself some way.
If I were to ask a fair gazelle on New Year's Day to come and join me in a social glass
and then throw one of those melting two-by-eight glances of mine on her,
I know for a moral certainty that before night she would be in the calaboose.
But I shall guard against that.
Nothing of that kind shall ever be laid at my door.
I promised my aged parents when I left the old homestead that I would never set him up for anyone.
End of Chapter 86
Chapter 87 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or The Tale of a Meekide Mule and Some Other Literary Gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Some overland tourists. The varied classes of tourists passing over the Union Pacific Railroad,
representing, as they do, all classes of humanity,
seemed to call for a brief notice from the nimble pen of a great man.
During my short but eventful life, I have given a large portion of my time to studying human nature.
Studying human nature and rustling for grub, as the psalmist has it, have occupied my time ever since I arrived at man's estate.
There's one style of tourist which I am more particularly devoted to, perhaps than any other.
It is the young man who is in search of health for his invalid mustache.
Only last week I saw one of these gentle youths who is going to try sea air and sea air.
California fruit to see if he couldn't rescue his consumptive mustache from the jaws of death.
When he got off here and took the poor thing out to where it could look about and see the green
plains and snow-capped mountains, I felt sorry for him. It is hard for one to be a successful tourist with a pale
invalid along with him night and day, and I can imagine how that young man would have to get up
nights when his mustache got restless and needed fresh air or wanted to take its tonic. It was certainly
the most gentle, retiring, modest mustache I ever saw.
It didn't seem to care for anything, only to be loved.
Every little while, the youth would reach up to where it was
and feel around nervously to see if it had climbed the golden stairs
or was still on deck.
It was not a heavy mustache at all.
It was about as voluptuous as a buffalo gnats eyebrow.
I never saw a mustache before that brought the scalding tears to my eyes like that one.
I thought how lonely the young man would be
when it had glided up the flume and left him in this cold,
uncharitable world with nothing to love and cling to,
but an earnest and unhappy boil in the back of his neck
that wouldn't come to a focus.
Sometimes I go down to the train to see some fair young girl
who was on the overland trip,
but I'm not always gratified.
A short time ago I went over,
feeling as though I would like to see a fair young creature
full of life and joy and with the light of a joyous future
shining in her lustrous eyes.
It didn't seem to be her train.
It was the day that a woman was on board with a Russia iron alipacca dress and white eyes.
She was from Winipawanky, Ginger, Suevety, Magogary, Maine.
She had a little sore-eyed boy with cream-colored hair and freckles on his face as large as a veal cutlet.
The boy would occasionally walk along the platform with his forefinger rammed into his mouth and hooked around his wisdom tooth.
He would walk along looking up into the sky and running into his head.
everybody and falling over the baggage truck till his mother got quite irritated. And I told the boy
that the future looked dark for him unless he braced up and stopped pulverizing people's corns.
By and by the boy ran into a blind man and knocked the wind out of him so that all he could do
for ten minutes was to stand there and gasp for breath, as though he wanted to breathe in the vast
realms of space. Then his mother extended a long, bony hand with a large silver ferule on the biggest
finger, and she laid hold of that lemon-colored kit of hers and gathered in as much of his ear as
her hand would hold. She churned him up pretty good, and it didn't seem to be very much exertion
for her either. Every little while he would make an aerial flight, and back he would come,
his boots banging against the car with a loud report. Finally, the woman with a wide eye from
Winnipewanky, Ginger Swapity-Magory, Maine, consolidated her efforts for one grand flourish,
but while in mid-air the boy's ear unscrewed and he lit out through the firmament,
falling in a shapeless mass on the other side of the second-class car,
where his gentle mother found him, gathered him up in her gingham apron.
There are lots of these little queer and amusing circumstances
taking place here almost every day.
And I have often thought that if someone with a taste for the ridiculous
would turn his attention in that direction,
he would make an interesting sketch of them.
During the month of June we had a heavy snowstorm,
and it pleased the average tourist very much to be able to snowball in mid-summer
so that he could tell his friends about it when he got home.
One intellectual Hercules, with a head about as large as a gumdrop
and a linen hat like the dome of the Mormon temple,
thought it would be a frisky little thing to throw some snow
in the face of a sensible man engaged in conversation on the hotel pavement.
The sensible man mopped the snow out of his face
and went on with his conversation until the train was ready to start
and the mental giant had forgotten all about it.
Then the large man walked up to the watery-eyed youth
with a big lunch basket full of snow
and proceeded to stowed away around the features of the youthful snide
with a skim milk optic.
He used what he could get nearby,
trying to fill his ears full but couldn't get snow enough.
Then he took what he had left
and worked it down inside the voluptuous shirt collar
of the bilious young man from the normal school.
I enjoyed at first rate
because I cannot bear to see a feminine tourist
like this young man, wearing men's clothes and trying to play himself for a man.
And a man wants to be a merry laughing girl and can't,
and he stands trembling on the dividing line between manhood and womanhood,
and hesitating which way to fall.
I often wish that I had a foot like Brigham Young's tombstone
with a swing to it like a pile driver.
I'd like to kick the young man with the old gold hat band and the polka-data necktie
so far into the realms of space that when he fell,
people would think you as a red-headed meteor looking for a soft place to fall into.
End of Chapter 87
Chapter 88 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Catching Mountain Trout at an elevation of 8,000 feet.
A few days ago, in company with Dr. Hayford, I went over to Dale Creek on a
brief extemporary trouting expedition. Dale Creek is a beautiful and romantic stream running through
a rugged canyon and crossed by the beautiful iron bridge of the Union Pacific Railroad. We went up on
number four and returned on number three. Dale Creek at this season of the year is not very much
of a torrent, and on the day we went over there, all the trout had gone down to the mouth of the
stream to get a drink. Every little while the doctor would put on his glasses and hunt for the creek,
while I caught grasshoppers and looked at the scenery.
I did not catch any trout myself,
but the doctor drove one into a prairie dog hole and killed him.
I am frantically fond of field sports,
although I am not always successful in securing game.
I love to wander through the fragrant grass and wildflowers,
listening to the song of the bobble ink as he sways to and fro on some slender weed,
but it delays me a good deal to stop every little while
and cut my flyhooks out of my clothes.
I throw a fly very gracefully, but when it catches under my shoulder blades and I try to lift myself up in that manner, my companions laugh at me and make me mad.
Dr. Hayford, who had command of the expedition, told me that we would have an hour and three quarters to fish, and then we would have to go back and catch the train.
Therefore, we hurried a good deal, and I had to leave a decrepit trout that I had found in a dead pine tree and was almost sure of.
We gathered a bouquet of wild roses and ferns and cut worms and went back to the bridge to wait for number three.
We sat there for an hour or two on a voluptuous triangular fragment of granite,
telling large three-ply falsehoods about catching fish and shooting elephants in Michigan.
Then we waited two or three more long, weary hours, and still the train didn't come.
After a while it occurred to me that I had been made the victim of the man who had spent the most of his life
telling the public about the pleasant weather of Wyoming.
He enjoyed my misery and cheered me up by saying that perhaps our train had gone,
and we would have to wait for the emigrant train.
We ate what lunch we had left, told a few more lies, and suffered on.
At last the thunder of the train in the distance was borne down to us,
and we rose with a sigh of relief,
gathered up our bouquets and decomposed trout,
and prepared to board the car.
But it was a work train and didn't stop.
Then I went away by myself and tried to control my fiendish temper.
I thought of the doctor's interesting family at home
and how they would mourn if I were to throw them over Dale Creek Bridge
and pulverize them on the rocks below.
So my better nature conquered and I went back to wait a few more weeks.
The next train that came along was a freight train,
and it made better time going past us than at any other point on the road.
Toward evening the regular passenger train came along.
I found out which coach the doctor was going to ride in, and I got into another one.
I took my poor withered little bouquet and looked at it.
All the flowers were dead, and so were the bugs that were in it.
It was a ghostly ruin that had cost me $9.25.
An idea struck me, and I gave the bouquet to the train boy to sell.
I told him what the entire array of gasliness had cost me,
and asked him to get what he could out of it.
He took the collection and sold it out to the passengers,
realizing $21.35. Passengers bought them and sent them home as flowers collected at Dale Creek Bridge
in the Rocky Mountains. Then a kind-hearted gentleman on the train who saw how sad I looked and how ragged
my clothes were, where I had cut fish hooks out of them, took up a collection for me. Hereafter, when a man
asks me to join a fishing excursion to the mountains, I hope that I shall have the moral courage
and strength of character to refuse.
End of Chapter 88.
Chapter 89 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of amicied mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley.
Homemade Indian relics.
Sherman on the Union Pacific Railroad
is the loftiest by a considerable majority
of any point on the road.
This fact has occasioned some
little notoriety for Charmin, and on the strength of it, a small reservoir of Western curiosities has
been established there. I went over to the Curiosity Ranch while the train was taking breath to see
what I could see and buy it if the price were not too high. There were a great many Western
curiosities from various parts of the country, and I got deeply interested in them. I love to find
some old relic of ancient times or some antique weapon of warfare peculiar to the noble Aztecs.
I can ponder over them by the hour and enjoy at first rate.
Among the living wonders, I noticed a bale of Indian arrows.
These arrows are beautiful to look upon and are remarkably well preserved.
They are as good as new.
I asked simply as a matter of form if they were Indian arrows.
The man said they were.
Then I asked who made them, and he got mad and wouldn't speak to me.
I do not think I am unreasonable to want to know who makes my Indian arrows.
am I? I am willing to pay a fair price for the genuine Connecticut-made arrow with cane shaft and
warranted cast steel point, but the Indian arrow made at Omaha's not durable. This curiosity man
would make more money and command a larger trade if he were not so quick-tempered. He had also
some western cactus as a curiosity for the tenderfoot who had never fooled with a cactus much.
It was the clear thing, however. I sat down on one to test its genuineness. It stood the test,
better than I did. When you have doubts about a cactus and don't know whether it is a genuine
cactus or a young watermelon with its hair banged, you can test it by sitting down on it. It may
surprise you at first, but it tickles the cactus almost to death. For a high-priced houseplant,
gentle, meek-eyed exotic that don't care much for affection, the Rocky Mountain cactus takes the
cake. It is very easy to live and don't require much fondling. It will enjoy life better if you'll get
mad at it about once a week and pull it up by the roots and kick it around the yard.
Water it carefully every four years. If you water it oftener than that, it will be surprised,
and gradually pine away and die. Another item I must not forget, giving directions for the
cultivation of this rare tropical plant. Get someone to sit down on it occasionally, if you don't
feel equal to it yourself. There's nothing that makes a cactus thrive and flourish so much as to have a
victim with linen pants on, sit down on it, and then get up impulsively like. If a cactus can have
these little attentions bestowed upon it, it will live to a good old age and insinuate itself
through the pantaloons of generations yet unborn. Plant in a gravelly coarse soil and kick it
every time you think of it. Returning to our subject, however, I think the Indian is a trifle
uncertain, and at times tricky by nature. Of course, I do not wish to say anything that would have
tendency to injure the reputation of the Indian. For an all candor, I will say that he means well.
I do not wish to have what I may say published as coming from me because the Indian has always used
me well, perhaps because I never allow myself to stray into his jurisdiction. But he has little
hateful mean ways which I despise. Some think that if he were to have more chance to learn,
more normal schools and baseball clubs and upright pianos, he would have more ambition to
do right and get ahead, but I almost doubt it. I'm very humane myself, but I am more apt to be harsh
in my measures with the Indian than most Eastern people of culture are. Perhaps this is because I have
seen people who had been shot full of large-sized bullet holes by the red man. This makes a difference,
and I may be prejudiced. When the average philanthropist has seen a family lying scattered around
promiscuous and shot so full of holes that even the coarsest kind of food is of no use, he began
to ask in his mind whether a more severe method of treatment would not be beneficial to the Indian.
I want to look this matter calmly in the face and ask whether night shirts and civilization and
suspenders will make good citizens out of these unfettered children of the forest or not.
Is it the opinion of the gentle reader that a nation of flea-bidden, smoke-tanned beggars,
will come forward and submit to the ennobling influences of Christianity
and duck vests and horseshoe scarf pins and quarterly meeting.
and gauze underwear? Methinks not. Nature constructed the noble red man with certain little mental,
moral, and physical eccentricities, and these eccentricities can be better worn away and remodeled
on the evergreen shore. Poor, weak, fallible man cannot successfully grapple with the task of
working over an entire nation of human beings and changing the whole trend, so to speak,
of a nation's mental and moral nature. Let us not, therefore, usurp the prerogative or attempt
to perform the Herculean task which a wise creator has laid out for himself.
Policy of divine administration, if I mistake not, is to improve the Indian and reform him
in a future state, in large corral where the worm dieth not.
This, of course, is only my private opinion, and I am offering it now in packages containing
six each, securely boxed and sent free to any address on receipt of one dollar.
I would sell it cheaper, were it not for the excessive freight, in the recent rise and white
paper. Supposing then the above to be the correct theory, what can poor erring man do to forward
the good work? Evidently, he can do nothing unless it to be to change the state of the red man
from a discouraging and annoying mortality to a bright and shining immortality. I would suggest that
this be done so far as possible by those who can spare the time and ammunition to do so. I will give
to such all the encouragement and moral support I can. I would assist in the good work, but I
I am most too busy now, planting my raspberry jam, and setting out my early Swedish dried apple pie plant.
End of Chapter 89
Chapter 90 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule, and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The previous reporter
Fluke McGilder, an old Washington reporter, who afterward was well-known...
known among Western newspaper men, was one of the most tireless and persistent newsgatherers I ever
knew. He used to tell with considerable apparent pleasure how he didn't obtain the points on a
prominent military court-martial which was held at Cheyenne in 1876. It happened on this wise.
When it was known for a dead certainty that the court-martial had closed and that the result
was sealed up in an envelope in the possession of General Pope, who roomed at the inter-ocean
Fluke got up an infernal lie to tell the general and thus got him away from his room.
He induced a little negro boy by promising him an old pair of pants to go up and deliver a note to General Pope,
saying that General Merritt was out at Fort Russell and that he wanted to see him immediately.
After the general had gone, Fluk crawled into the transom of his room and began to ransack things.
It turned out, however, that the documents were safe in the general.
general's overcoat pocket, and McGilder was baffled. He searched all the drawers in the room,
looked under the bed, rummaged the pockets of all the extra clothes in the room, and the more
he searched, the matter he got, and when it last it dawned upon him that he was foiled, his wrath
knew no bounds. He filled his pockets with the general's cigars, drank the general's wine,
and wiped his nose on the general's best clean handkerchiefs. He spit tobacco juice and the general's
slippers, wiped his feet on the pillow shams, dressed the coal stove up in the general's night
shirt, and spread a few spare hairpins which he had in his pockets under the general's pillow.
He was pretty mad. He took the spatoon and stood it on the center table with a toothbrush
sticking in the middle and wound up by trying on the general's underclothes and tearing the ruffles off.
It is so well established that Fluk had a great deal of ambon-pois that it is unnecessary to say
he had a good deal of trouble to get into General Pope's apparel as the general is a slim man.
However, as McGilder stood in the position of a boy who was just on the point of going in swimming
and had the last garment drawn over his head so that he could not see very well,
General Pope slipped in with a large snow shovel, which he applied with a great vigor.
When they offered Fluk a chair at a party after that, he would murmur,
No, thank you. I prefer to stand up. I've been sitting.
down all day and wish a change. But everybody knew that he hadn't sat down for over a week.
End of Chapter 90. Chapter 91 of Bill Nye and Boomerang or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some
other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale
Barclay. The Peace Commission. Evidence of Johnson before the court. Los Pinos, Colorado, November 17th.
Chief Johnson was again called on the stand this morning and administered the following oath to himself in a solemn and awe-inspiring manner.
By the great horned spoons of the pale face and the great round-faced moon, round as the shield of my fathers,
by the great high macamuck of the eut nation, by the beard of the prophet in the Continental Congress, I dassent tell a lie.
When Johnson had repeated this solemn oath, at the same time making the grand hailing sign of,
the secret order known as the thousand and one, there was not a dry eye in the house.
Question by General Adams.
What is your name and occupation, and where do you reside?
Answer, my name is Johnson, just plain Johnson.
The rest has been torn off.
I am by occupation a farmer.
I am a horny-handed senator, and don't you forget it.
I reside in Greeley, Colorado.
Question, did you, or did you not, hear of a massacre at White River Agency
during the fall, and if so, to what extent?
Objected to by defendant's counsel because it is irrelevant, immaterial, unconstitutional,
imitation, and incongruous.
Most of the forenoon was spent in arguing the point before the court, when it was allowed
to go in, whereupon the defendant's counsel asked to have the exception noted on the court's
moments.
Answer, I did not hear of the massacre until last evening, when I happened to pick up a copy
of the Evanston Age and read it.
It was a very sad affair, I should think.
Question. Were you or were you not present at the massacres?
Objected to by defendant's counsel on the ground that the witness is not bound to answer a question which would criminate himself.
Objection sustained and questioned and questioned by the prosecution.
Question. Where were you on the night that this massacre is said to have occurred?
Answer. What massacre? Question. The one at White River? Answer. I was attending a serious
of protracted meetings at Greeley in this state. Question. Were Douglas, colorow and other
Ute chiefs with you at that meeting in Greeley? Answer, they were. Court adjourned for dinner.
General Adams remarked to a reporter that he was getting down to business now and that he had
no doubt that in a few months he would convict all these Uts of falsehood in the first degree.
After dinner, court was called with Johnson at the bat and Douglas on deck, General Adams
shortstop, Ure, Center Field.
Question.
You say that you were not present at the White River Massacre.
Were you ever engaged in any massacre?
Objected to, but objection afterward withdrawn.
Answer. No.
Question, never? Answer, never.
Question, what? Never? Answer.
Well, damn seldom.
Great applause and cries of, ugh.
Question. Did you, or did you not know a man named N.C.
Meeker? Answer, yes. Question, go on and state if you know where you met him and at what time.
Answer, I met him in Greeley, Colorado two or three years ago. After that, I heard that he got an
appointment as Indian agent somewhere out west. Question, did you ever hear anything of him after that?
Answer, nothing whatever. Question, did the account of the White River massacre that you read in the
age mentioned the death of Mr. Meeker? Answer, no, is he dead? General Adams.
Yes, he is dead.
At that, the witness gave a wild whoop of pain and anguish,
fell forward into the arms of General Adams,
and as unconscious as we go to press.
We do not wish to censure General Adams.
No doubt he is conducting this investigation to the best of his ability.
But he ought to break such news as this as gently to the Indian as possible.
End of Chapter 91.
Chapter 92 of Bill Nyan Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librovox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Some answers to correspondence.
Loc Malone Beaver, Utah, writes as follows.
I am now making some important scientific experiments with Limburger cheese as a motor,
but have no data whereby to work.
So new and unusual is the motor to science that I am unable to get anything relative to its history.
Number one, when was Limburger Cheese first discovered, and by whom?
Two, what did he do for it anyway?
Three, to what do you attribute the bad odor in which Limburger cheese is held by scientists?
Four, looking from what may be termed a purely utilitarian standpoint
and not allowing ourselves to be influenced by incongruous incandescence,
should you say in all respects that virtually in view of the heterogeneous mobility of attendant
and amalculate it might have or couldn't possibly was?
Answer. Number one, Limburger Cheese was first discovered by Galileo
floating through space during his studies relative to the heavenly bodies.
This was about 1609. The body had, however, been floating through space for many millions of
years previous to that, as Galileo remarks in his diary, that he wasn't proud of it at all,
for it was evidently in a very poor state of preservation.
Galileo caught some of it and tamed it, but the scientific minds of that age have not yet made this attempt to utilize it as a motor.
Number two, the discovery was purely accidental. At about the time referred to, Galileo had constructed its powerful telescope, which would bring the moon down so that the valleys and hills of that body were plainly visible.
One day, the telescope brought down a fragment of Limburger cheese that was floating through space.
It magnified the cheese to such an extent that Galileo could smell it distinctly.
This was the true cause of Galileo's abandonment of the Copernican theory and eventually of astronomy.
Number three, the last answer really disposes of your third question.
Number four, grappling with the abstruse and alarmingly previous usufruct embodied in the omnipresent
and constantly emanating and noticeably refractory diagnosis herein set forth,
and still wandering on through the ever-changing, yet constantly invariable and fluctuating,
yet undeviating parahelian of the heavenly bodies, with unprejudiced mind and unbiased judgment,
arriving at the conclusion that perhaps in some cases it might not, or yet again, it might or might not,
and still it might.
Numerous husband writes from Jehoshaphat Valley as follows.
I am 27, and am going on 28 years of age.
A few years ago, I joined.
on to the Mormon Church, and with my usual enthusiasm, begun to get married. I have been getting
married with more or less recklessness ever since. When times was dull, and I was out of employment,
I would go and get married. The official count shows that I am an easy and graceful merrier.
I now find that I am hopelessly involved financially. I had intended this summer to build a colossal
villa for my multitudinous wife, but it will cost me more than I can now command. Besides that,
the circus is now on the way, and I am called upon to secure voluptuous woven wire mattress-stuffed
opera reserved seats for my household aggregation of living wonders. I am willing to take all I can
pay for if she will sit on a hard blue seat with me and let her feet dangle down, but I cannot
abide by the excessive tariff for preserved seats. I love the high moral tone of the show,
and dearly love the grand display of arenic talent, but I cannot crawl under the canvas with my
domestic caravan without attracting attention. When I was a boy, and had not yet entered with my wild,
impetuous nature into the matrimonial business, I used to carry water to the elephant, and thus see the
world's congress of rare and beautiful zoological wonders, but I could not do that now. By the time I got the
Jordan carried up to the elephant, I pay my admittance. The show would be over and gone, and I would be
more or less left. I thereupon ask an all candor for your valuable advice on these points.
Answer. The case before us is one which would evoke sympathy from the stonyest heart.
It is also one which requires a close scrutiny and cool, deliberate investigation.
You probably at first married a wife whom you considered a treasure, and at once set yourself
about amassing wealth of this kind until you find that you are carrying over on your inventory
year after year, a large stock of undesirable wives which you are unable to dispose of.
You probably thought when you first married that there were only two or three unmarried
young ladies in the broad and beautiful universe who are worthy of you. This was a fatal error
and one very common to the brand new bridegroom. The census will show that there are several,
if not more, desirable young ladies who are still on deck. I am sorry that you have placed
yourself in the position you have, and so far as possible will as
you, but these suggestions which I might offer could only be partially successful.
Could you earlier in the season, if given your wives, say, a dozen able-bodied hens apiece,
with instructions that they were to be stimulated to the utmost by their respective owners,
the egg crop might have assisted very materially in purchasing circus tickets,
with the consequent concert tickets and vermilion lemonade?
There are other suggestions that might be made, but it is too late now to make them.
I can only offer one more balm to your deeply wounded and disappointed heart.
You might, by economy and frugality,
secure an available point on the route with your mass meeting of household gods and goddesses
where you could sit on the fence and see the elephant meander by.
Yours enveloped in a large wad of dense gloom.
End of Chapter 92
Chapter 93 of Bill Nyan Boomerang
or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems.
by Bill Nye. This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Crow Indian and his cause. Earlier in the week, five crow chiefs passed through here on their way to Washington.
I went down to see them. They were as fine-looking children of the forest as I ever saw.
They wore buckskin pants with overskirt of same. The hair was worn princess, held in place with
Frasier's axle grease, and large mother of clamber.
shell brooch. Down the back, it was braided like a horse's tail on a muddy day, only the hair was
coarser. When an Indian wants to crimp his hair, he has to run it through a rolling mill first to make
it malleable. Then the blacksmith of the tribe rolls it up over the ordinary freight car coupling
pen, and on the following morning it hangs in graceful Saratoga waves down the back of the untutored savage.
I said to the interpreter, who seemed to act as their trainer, no doubt these crows are going to Washington
to try and interest haze in their cause.
He gave a low, gurgling laugh.
No, said he with a merry twinkle of the eye,
as he laid his lip halfway across a plug of government tobacco.
As spring approaches, they have decided to go to Washington
and ransack the Indian Bureau for their gauzy shirts.
I caught hold of a car seat and rippled till the coach was filled with my merry girlish laughter.
These Indians wear high expressive cheekbones.
and most of them have strabismus in their feet.
They had their paint on,
makes them look like a chromo of Powhatan,
mashing the eternal soul out of John Smith with a bologna sausage.
One of these chiefs, named Raw Dog with a bunion on the heel, I think,
chief of the wall-eyed skunk-eaters,
looked so guileless and kind that I approached him
and said that no doubt the warpath in the land of the setting sun
was overgrown with grass,
and in his mountain home, very likely,
the beams of peace lit up the faces of his tribe.
He did not seem to catch my meaning.
I asked him if his delegation was going to Washington uninstructed.
In reply, he made a short remark,
something like that which the shortstop of a match game makes,
when a hot ball takes him unexpectedly between the gastric and the liver pad.
Somehow, live Indians do not look so picturesque as the steel engraving does.
The smell is not the same either.
Steel engravings of Indians do not show the decalcomania outline of a frying pan on the buckskin pants
where the noble red man made a misstep one morning and sat down on his breakfast.
A dead Indian is a pleasing picture.
The look of pain and anxiety is gone, and rest, sweet rest, more than he really needs,
is come at last.
His hands are folded peacefully, and his mouth is open like the end of a sawmill.
His trials are o'er.
His swift foot is making pigeon-toed tracks in the shifting sands of eternity.
The picture of a wild-free Indian, chasing the buffalo, may suit some,
but I like still life and art.
I like the picture of a broad, shouldered, well-formed brave
as he lies with his nerveless hand across a large hole in the pit of his stomach.
There's something so sweetly sad about it.
There is such a nameless feeling of repose and security on the part of the spectator.
Some have such sensitive natures that they cannot look at the remains of an Indian
who has been run over by two sections of freight, but I can.
Somehow I do not feel that nervous distrust when I look at the red man with his esophagus,
is wrapped around his head and tied in a double bow knot that I do when he is full of the vigor of
health. When a train of cars is jammed his thigh bone through his diaphragm and flatten his head out
like a soup plate, I feel then that I can trust him. I feel that he may be relied upon. I consider
him in the character of ghastly remains as a success. He seems at last so in earnest, and as though
he could be trusted. When the Indian has been mixed up so that the closest scrutiny cannot determine
and where the head adjourns and the thorax begins,
the scene is so suggestive of unruffled quiet and calm and gentle childlike faith
that doubt and distrust and timidity and apprehension flee away.
End of Chapter 93
Chapter 94 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The nuptials of Dangerous Dangerous Day.
on the morning on which adam forepaw entered the city of laramie and with a grand array of humpbacked dromedaries club-footed elephants in an uncalled for amount of pride and pomp and circumstance captured the town dangerous davis clad in buckskin and glass beads and ornamented with one of smith and weston's brass-mounted self-cocking black hills bustles entered his honor's office and walking up to the counter where the judge deals out justice to the vagabond tenderfoot and bankrupt non-resist
as well as to the law defying Laramite, called for $5 worth of matrimony.
On his arm leaned the fair form of the one who had ensnared the heart of the frontiersman
and who had evidently gobbled up the manly affections of Dangerous Davis.
She was resplendent in new clothes and a pair of Indian moccasins,
and when she glided up to the center of the room,
the casual observer might have been deceived into the belief
that she was moving through the radiant atmosphere like an $11.10.
dollar peri, if it had not been for the gentle patter of her moccasin as it fell upon the floor
with a sylph-like footfall of the prize elephant as he moves around the ring to the dreamy strains
of old zip coon. A large filled ring gleamed and sparkled on her brown hand and vied in
splendor with a large seedwort on her front finger. The ends of her nails were draped in the deepest
morning and as she leaned her head against the off-shoulder of Dangerst Davis, the ranch-butter
from her tawny locks made a deep and lasting impression on his buckskin bosom. At this auspicious
moment, his honor entered the room with a green-covered German almanac for 1852 and a copy of Robinson
Crusoe under his arm, and as he saw the young thing he was about to unite himself to the bold
bad man from Bitter Creek, he burst into tears while Judge Blair, who had adjourned the district
court in order to witness the ceremony, sat down behind the stove and sobbed like a child. At this
this moment, William Crout, who had been married under all kinds of circumstances and in 11 different
languages, entered the room and inspired confidence in the weeping throng.
Dangerous Davis changed his quid of tobacco from one side of his amber mouth to the other,
spat on his hands, and asked to see the judge's matrimonial price list. The judge showed him
some different styles out of which Dangerous Davis selected the kind he wanted. By this time,
about 113 men who had been waiting around the courtroom during the past.
past week, in order to be drawn as jurymen, had crowded in to witness the ceremony.
After all the preliminaries had been gone through with, the judge commenced reading the marriage
service out of a copy of the Clown's Comic Songbook. When he asked if anyone present had any objections
to the proceedings, Price, from force a habit, rose and said, I object, but Dangerous Davis
caressed his brass-mounted Grecian band, and Price withdrew the objection. Everybody admitted
Price is a good judgment under the circumstances in withdrawing the objection.
After the usual ceremony, the judge put the bridegroom through some little initiations,
instructed him in the grand hailing signs, grips, passwords, and signals,
swore him to support the Constitution of the United States,
pronounced the benediction on the newly wedded pair,
and the ceremony closed with an extemporaneous speech by Judge Brown
and profound silence and thoughtfulness on the part of Brockway,
as he reflected upon the dangers which constantly surround us.
Dangerous Davis mounted his Bronco,
and tying his new wife on behind him on the saddle with an old shawl strap,
plunged his spurs into the panting sides of his calico-colored steed,
and in a few moments was flying over the green plains,
while the mountain breeze caught up the oleogeness in his saffron-hued tresses of the bride,
and in wild glee mingled them with the bronco's sorrel tail,
and tossed them to the four winds of heaven.
End of Chapter 94
Chapter 95 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Holiday Hog
Dear reader, did you ever go along past the market these cold December mornings
and study the expression of the frozen holiday hog
as he stands at the door with his mouth propped open by a chip
and the last hardened outlines of a diabolical smile lingering about the whole face,
did it ever occur to you that he has ways like Charles Francis Adams?
And yet he was not always thus, a cold, hard, immovable pork statue.
Once he was the pride of some Nebraska home.
He was petted and caressed, no doubt,
and had more demoralized melon rinds and cold potatoes and dishwater than he actually needed.
But think of it, gentle, kind-hearted reader.
He has been torn from those.
he loved and butchered to make a Caucasian holiday, snatched from the home of his youth, and frozen
into a double and twisted post-mortem examination. Perhaps, dear reader, you have never had to stand as a
model for the picture of the man in the front of the almanac who looks like the victim of a buzzsaw,
with the various members of the Zodiac family floating around him. If you have not, and we will take
your word for it, you cannot fully realize the feelings of the Nebraska hog on a December day
without a stitch of clothes to his back.
End of Chapter 95.
Chapter 96 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Some census conundrums.
It was in the prime of summertime, an evening calm and cool,
when the census enumerator came to the sanctity of my home,
and opened a valise which contained,
a large duodecimal volume and about nine gallons of brand new interrogation points.
He opened his notebook, which was about the size of the White River Reservation, and proceeded
to get acquainted. I thought at first that he had come from Chicago to interview me about
the presidential convention and get my views. This was not the case, however. I think he's
going to write my biography and sell it, $2 each. I gave him all the information I could,
and telegraphed to my old Sabbath school superintendent at home for more.
Among other little evidences of his morbid curiosity, I will give the following.
When were you born? And looking calmly, back at this important epoch in your life,
do you regret that you took the step?
If yes, state to what extent and under what circumstances.
Do you remember George Washington, and if so, to what amount?
What is your fighting weight? Who struck Billy Patterson? Did you ever have membranous croup? And what did you do for it? Do you keep hands, or do you lavish your profanity on those of your neighbors? Have any of your ancestors ever been troubled with ingrowing nails or blind staggers? What is your opinion of rats? Are you a victim to rum and other alcoholic stimulants? And if so, at what hour do you?
you usually succumb to the potent enemy? Would you have any scruples in asking the enumerator
to join you in wrestling with Man's Destroyer at that hour? Do you eat onions? Which side do you lie on
while sleeping? Which side do you lie on during a political campaign? What is the chief end of man?
Are you single? And if so, what is your excuse? Who will care for Mother now?
End of Chapter 96
Chapter 97 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Gentle Power of a Woman's Influence
Common City is still a crude metropolis.
Society has not yet arrived at the white vest and lawn sociable period there.
There's nothing to hamper anyone or throw a tiresome restraint around him.
You walk up and down the streets of the camp without feeling that the vigilant eye of the policeman is upon you,
and when you register at the leading hotel, the proprietor don't ask how much baggage you have or insist upon it that your valise ought to be blown up with a quill to give it a robust appearance.
Speaking of this hotel, however, brings to my mind a little incident which really belongs in here.
There are two ladies at this place, the only ones in the city limits, if my memory serves me.
one of these ladies owns a lot of poles or house logs, which were, at the time of which I speak,
on the dump, as it were, ready to be used in the construction of a new cabin.
It seems that some of the prospectors of the corporation without the fear of God or the Common Council
of Common City had been appropriating these logs from time to time until out of a good fair assortment
there remained only a dejected little pile of culls.
The owner had watched with great annoyance, the gradual disappearance of the gradual disappearance of
her property from day to day, and it made her lose faith in the final redemption of all mankind.
She became cynical and misanthropical, lost her interest in the future, and became low-spirited
and unhappy. One day, however, after this thing had proceeded about far enough, she went to her
trunk and taking out the large size of navy revolver, the kind that plows up the vitals so successfully,
and send so many Western men to their long home.
Then she went out to where a group of men had scattered themselves out around camp to smoke.
She wasn't a large woman at all, but these men respected her.
Though they were only rough miners there in the wilderness,
they recognized that she was a woman, and they recognized it almost at a glance, too.
There she was, alone among a wild group of men in the mountains,
far from the protecting arm of the law and the softening influences of metropolitan life,
and yet the common feeling of gallantry implanted in the mass of the mountain tree
implanted in the masculine breast was there.
She indicated with a motion of her revolver
that she desired to call a meeting to order.
There seemed to be a general anxiety
on the part of every man present
to come to order just as soon as circumstances would permit.
Then she made a short speech
relative to the matter of house logs
and suggested that unless a certain number of those articles
now invisible to the naked eye
were placed at a certain point
or a certain amount of copex
placed on file with the chairman of the meeting
within a specific time, that perdition would be popping on Main Street in about two and a half
ticks of the chronometer. There didn't seem to be any desire on the part of the meeting to amend
the motion or lay it on the table. Although it was arbitrary and imperative, and although an
opportunity was given for a free expression of opinion, there didn't seem to be any desire to take
advantage of it. Committee of three was appointed to carry out the suggestions of the chair,
and in about a half an hour, the house logs and copecks, having been placed on deposit at the places designated,
the meeting broke up, subject to the call of the chairman. It was not a very long session,
but it was very harmonious, very harmonious, and very orderly. There was no calling for the previous question or rising to a point of order.
Pale-faced men who composed the convention did not look to the casual observers as though they had come there to raise points for debate over parliamentary practice.
kept their eye on the speaker's desk and didn't interrupt each other or struggle to see who
would get the floor. It is wonderful this inherent strength of weakness, as I might say,
which enables a woman amid a throng of reckless men to command their respect and obedience,
sometimes where remained strength and awkwardness would not avail.
End of Chapter 97
Chapter 98 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
Librevox Recordings in the Public Domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The native inborn shiftlessness of the prairie dogs.
I had read in my fourth reader about prairie dogs, and I thought, according to Washington Irving,
that they knew more than a congressman.
He says a great deal about the sagacity and general mental acumen of the prairie dog,
but I don't just exactly somehow seem to see where it comes in.
If it be an indication of shrewdness and forethought to establish
a village nine hundred miles from a railroad, wood, water, and grub, and live on alkali and
moss agates, and wander down the vista of time without a square meal, then the prairie dog is
beyond the barest passability of doubt, keen and shrewd to a wonderful degree. But if instinct or
animal sagacity be reckoned according to the number and amount of creature comforts afforded
within a given space, I have a cow in mind that will double discount all the chuckle-headed
cactus-eating prairie dogs west of the Missouri. I do not wish to say anything relative to Mr. Irving's
opinion of the prairie dog, which would not be perfectly respectful, for I learn with great sorrow that
Mr. Irving is dead, but I do think that there is hardly an animal in the entire arcana of nature
that will not beat the prairie dog two to one as a provider for his family or himself. I have an old
hen at my home here who certainly approximates very closely to my ideal of
irreclaimable fool that has grown childish with old age, and outside of the Democratic Party,
perhaps she is entitled to distinction. But even she has lucid intervals, and she hasn't yet
fallen to where she would willingly take up a home under the Desert Land Act, like a prairie dog.
End of Chapter 98. Chapter 99 of Bill Nye and Boomerang were the tale of a meek-eyed
Mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Answers to Correspondents.
The following answers to correspondence contain a great deal of useful information,
and I publish them in order to avoid the constant annoyance of writing the same in substance
to so many inquiring friends.
Sweet Sixteen, writes from Hold Up Hollow.
I am betrothed to a noble youth from Rew
from Rice Lake, Minnesota, but he seems to have soured on his betroth.
At first he seemed to love me, according to Gunter, but he has grown cold.
About the first of the round-up, he went away, and I soon afterward heard that he was affianced
to another.
I understand that he says I am not of noble lineage enough for him.
It is true.
I may not be a thoroughbred, but I have a pure loving nature, which is now running to waste.
The name of my beloved is de Courtney van de Edbeat.
He comes from the first families, and, oh, I love him so.
Can you tell me what to do?
Sweet 16.
Answer, yes, I can tell you what to do.
I have been there some, too.
If you will only do as I tell you, you are safe.
You must win him back.
I think you can easily do so.
Select a baseball club of about the weight you can handle easily,
and then go to him and win him back.
You are too prone to give up easily.
Do not be discouraged.
All will yet be well.
He may think now that you are not of noble blood, but you can make him change his mind.
Go to him with the love light in your eye, and put a triangular head on him with your baseball club,
and tell him that he does not understand the cravings of your nature.
Drive him into the ground and sit down on him, and then tell him that you are nothing but a poor,
friendless girl, and need someone to cling to.
Then you can cling to him.
All depends upon how successful you are as a clinger.
I see at a glance that DeCourtney needs to be.
flattened out a few times. Do not kill him, but bring him so near to the new Jerusalem that he can
see the dome of the courthouse, and he will gradually come back to you and love you, and your life
will be one long golden dream of never-fading joy, and to Courtney will wring out the colored
clothes for you and help you do the washing, and he will stay at home evenings and take care of the
children while you go to prayer meeting, and he will not murmur when you work off an inexpensive
meal of cold rice and friccassied codfish on him.
gets to feeling independent, puts on the old air of defiance. You can diet him on cold mush and
mackerel till he will not feel so robust, and then you can reason with him again, and while he is
recovering, you can take your baseball club and your noble self-sacrificing love and win him back some
more. Lala Rook, writes from Waukegan, Illinois, as follows to wit. My classmates and I
have had quite a serious discussion recently on several questions of table etiquette,
and we have finally agreed to leave the matter with you.
First, if one is asked to say grace at the table,
does not wish to do so, or is not familiar with the forms,
what should he do?
Second, if one has anything in his mouth
or gets any foreign substance like a piece of bone or a seed in his mouth,
how should he remove it?
And what is the proper thing to do with it?
Third, would you kindly add a few general rules of table etiquette,
which would be useful to the many admirers of your classic style?
Answer, it would be hazardous for a gentleman unaccustomed to saying grace at the table to attempt it, unless he be a naturally fluent extemporaneous speaker.
It is more difficult for one unacquainted with it than to address a Sabbath school or write a letter accepting the nomination for president.
It is, therefore, preferable to say in a few terse remarks that you are profoundly grateful for the high compliment, but that your health will not admit of its acceptance.
Second, care should be used while at table not to get large foreign substances like hair-pinned, soup bones, or clothespins into the mouth with food, as it naturally requires some little Song-Froid intact to remove them.
One accustomed to the mysteries of parlor magic may slide the articles into his sleeve while coughing, and thence into the coat pocket of his host, thus easily getting himself out of an unpleasant situation, and at the same time producing roars of laughter at the expense of the host.
if however you are not familiar with sleight of hand you may take in a full breath and expel the object across the room under the what-not where it will not be discovered until you have gone away
i will add a few general rules for table etiquette which i have learned by actual experience to be of untold benefit to the act of society man first it is proper to take the last of anything on the plate if it comes to you instead of declining it it is supposed that there is more in the house or if not the host may go
downtown and get some. Do not, therefore, decline anything because it is the last on the dish,
unless it looks as though it wouldn't suit you. Second, if by mistake you get your spoon in the
gravy so far that the handle is more or less sticky, do not get ill-tempered or show your displeasure,
but draw it through your mouth two or three times, laughing a merry laugh all the time. Do not
attempt to polish it off with your handkerchief. It might spoil your handkerchief. Third, in drinking
wine at table, do not hang your eyes out on your cheek or drink too fast or get it up your
nose. Do not drain your glass perfectly dry and then try to draw in what atmosphere there is in the
room. This is not only vulgar, but it tends to cast large chunks of three-cornered gloom over the
guests. When you have drained your glass, do not bang it violently on the table and ask your
host how much he is out. This gives too much of the air of wild, unfettered freedom and the unrestrained
hilarity of the free lunch.
Fourth, when you get anything in your mouth that is too hot,
do not get mad and swear because the other guests will only laugh at you,
but remove the morsel calmly and tell the waiter to put it on ice a little while for you.
Fifth, when your coffee is out and you desire more,
do not pound on your cup with your spoon, but be gentle and ladylike in your demeanor,
telling some fresh little anecdote to please the guests,
looking yearningly toward the coffee urn all the while.
Sixth, if you have to leave the table as soon as you are through, do not jump up suddenly and upset the table,
but make an original and spicy remark about having to eat and run like a beggar,
and this will create such a hearty laugh over your sally of wit that you can slip out,
select the best hat in the hall, and be halfway home before the company can restrain its mirth.
There are some more good rules that I have on hand not only relative to the table,
but the ballroom, the parlor, the croquet lawn, the train, the church, and in fact almost everywhere
that the society man might be placed. These I will give the public from time to time, as the
growing demand seems to dictate.
End of Chapter 99.
Chapter 100 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems
by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Secret of Garfield's election.
Headquarters in the field, September 19, 1880.
As I start for Chicago tomorrow, I take this opportunity to write.
The trip so far has been one continuous ovation.
I have been swinging round the circle,
leaving the flag and the Constitution with the people
and living out of a valise, and my friends,
till I begin to yearn for home.
It has been my fortune to run into several Garfield meetings
during the time that I've been here, and to make short but telling speeches for the Republican candidates.
As one of the local papers very truthfully said,
Mr. Nye certainly reaches the very core of the subject matter in his admirable campaign speeches this fall.
His commanding appearance and wild, peculiar beauty, win the attention with the audience even before he says one word.
And when speaking, his air of candor and searching truth secures the earnest and prayerful consideration of those
before him. He seems to supply a want long felt, and in case of Garfield's election, we have
no hesitation in saying that it will be due largely to the scorching truths and heaven-born genius
of this remarkable man. It is a novel sensation indeed, after five years of silent suffering
in Wyoming, disenfranchised and helpless, to mingle in the campaign and give free utterance
to the blood-curdling truths that have for years been bottled up in this brain. Perhaps the people here
do not deserve it, but they need purification through suffering. I have one Garfield speech that
I have used here a number of times with telling effect, in which I shall turn over to the state
central committee when I go west. By taking out the front breaths, turning the overskirt and
revising the peroration, it will wear till November easily. I would insert it in this letter,
only for the fact that it seems rather tame in print, owing to the absence of gestures. In my public speaking,
most everyone who is near me seems to be forcibly struck with my gestures.
Hear what the press says.
The Minneapolis Tribune, speaking of my wonderful effort, concludes as follows.
Perhaps the most potent weapon of this campaign is the soothing, poetical style of gesture
owned and operated by William Nye.
In his speech last evening before the Young Men's Republican Club,
those who were on the fence were harassed with soul-destroying doubts as to which was most to be feared.
the success of an unprincipled democracy or the frolicsome gestures of the speaker.
The general feeling of the close of the speech seemed to be that Minneapolis had never listened to a speech
so rich with wild, impetuous, and death-dealing gesticulations before.
The Stillwater Lumberman says,
The speech last evening was noticeable for its grandeur of conception
and the picturesque grace of its calisthenics.
Speaker seemed to be largely made up of massive brow and limbs.
When he rose and with easy grace unrolled his speech and untangled his legs,
a general smile seemed to ripple the faces of the immense audience,
and when he took a drink of water and began to make his new style of gesture,
the mirthful manifestations gave place to a horrible apprehension of danger.
Toward the close of the speech, when Mr. Nye got warmed up to his work
and seemed to be lost in a wilderness of dissolving limbs,
the police interfered and prevented the sacrifice of human life.
The Clare Lake News of the 17th says,
one of the distinguishing features of the meeting held here on Wednesday evening
under the management of the Temple of Honor
was a short speech on temperance by Bill Nye of Wyoming.
His work in the line of temperance seems to have been mainly
that of furnishing the horrible examples
so that young men might avoid the demon of rum.
After the speaker got well underway and began to emphasize
his language with some gestures that he has imported at great expense for his own use,
the congregation seemed at a loss whether it would be best as a matter of safety
to flee from intemperance or the death-dealing gestures of the speaker.
Mr. Nye today gave bonds in the sum of $500 to keep the peace,
shipped his gestures to Chicago, and will leave on the first southbound train.
End of Chapter 100.
Chapter 101 of Bill Nye and Boomer
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librivox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Paralles of the Butter-Dut Picker
Speaking of trains reminds me that I have been scooting around the country lately on mixed and accommodation trains.
They are a good style of conveyance in some respects.
For instance, if a man has a carload of wheat that he wants to run into St. Paul with and sell,
he can have it attached to the mixed train, and then he can get into the coach and go along with it,
and attend to it personally. But where a man's time is worth $9 a moment, as mine is, it is annoying.
At first I couldn't get accustomed to it. I couldn't overcome my inertia when the car started or stopped,
and it kept me worn out all the time apologizing to a corpulent old lady in the third seat from me.
And I've been given a little time to select a lady whose lap I would prefer to sit down,
in. There were a dozen, perhaps, in the car more desirable than this old lady, but in the hurry
and agitation I always seemed to select her. Finally, the conductor said that kind of business had gone
far enough, and he tied me into my seat with a shawl strap. The train was very long, and when it
got under full headway, it was almost impossible to stop it at the various stations. We either
stopped out in the country prematurely, or passed the station at the rate of nine miles a minute,
and then repented and came back.
I was struck with the similarity of the first five or six towns on the line
and spoke of it to a friend who accompanied me.
It seemed to me that Clarksville, Mapleton, El Dorado Junction, Pine Grove, and Brookville
had been planned by the same architect.
But my friend only laughed and showed me that we had been switched and sidetracked for two or three hours at the first-named place.
We stopped in the woods once, and I went out after butternuts.
It was a lovely autumn day, and after the thick, nutritious air of the car, it was paradise to get out into the forest where the fresh, sweet odor of the falling leaves was everywhere, and the hush of nature's annual funeral checked the thoughtless word and noisy laughter of the invader.
I wandered on thinking of the brevity and comparative unimportance of our human life.
How short the race we run, and how unsatisfactory our achievements at last.
How like the leaves the forest
We spring forth in the early summer of our existence
Nod pleasantly to our fellows a few brief mornings
And then die
Thoughtlessly and aimlessly I had wandered on
Until I came to a large butternut
Which I climbed with the old and almost forgotten enthusiasm of boyhood
At the top I tried some of my old and difficult tricks
And just as the train moved silently away
I was going through the difficult and dangerous act
of hanging to the upper limb of a butternut tree by the seat of the pants,
and waiting patiently for the bow or the casimir to yield,
and let the artist down into the arena by force of gravitation.
Dear reader, did you ever go through this thrilling experience?
Did you ever feel the utter insecurity and maddening uncertainty which it yields?
If not, then these lines are not to you.
Gently the tree swayed to and fro with the motion of the autumn breeze.
Sadly, the pines were sighing like lost souls, and the dead leaves fell softly to the ground like the footfalls of departed spirits.
I began to wish that I could fall softly to the ground like the footfalls of departed spirits, too.
I began to get bored and unhappy after a while.
My feet and hands hung in a cluster, and the position seemed strained and unnatural.
I began to yearn for society and the comforts of a home.
I mentally calculated the distance I would have to fall,
and wondered which of my bones I would shatter the most and what the doctor's bill would be.
All at once I heard what seemed like a sound of smothered laughter.
It was no doubt nothing but a sound which my fevered imagination had conjured up,
aided by the torrent of blood that rushed to my head and thumped so loudly in my ears,
but it maddened me, and I summoned all my strength and the mighty struggle to free myself.
Finally, there was a short, sharp crash, and I felt myself rapidly descending through space.
I fancied that I was an acrobat
and had fallen from the center pole that holds up the sky.
I thought I lay in the dust and saw dust of the ring in a shapeless mass,
and overall and above all there was the maddening sensation
that my wardrobe was not complete.
In my tortured imagination I could hear demoniac laughter
and occasional words of derision.
They became more pronounced and distinct at last,
and I fancied I heard one of these grinning imps saying,
how peaceful he looks and how young and fair. See how carelessly he has inserted his nose in the
moist earth. He must have suffered a good deal through life, and yet his face is calm and happy in its
expression. His general appearance is that of perfect rest, and the glad fruition of every hope.
Let us go up into the tree and get the rest of his remains and send them all home together.
This last speaker reminded me of the conductor, and the similarity struck me even in my
trance. Slowly I opened my eyes. It was he. I almost wished that the fall had killed me. I did not fall
from the tree to be humorous, but if I had, I should have considered it the crowning triumph of an
eventful career. Most everyone from the train was there, and several from the nearest towns along the line.
I bowed my thanks in silence and backed over to the car. I got aboard and sat down. I found that I
I attracted less attention when I was sitting down, and I never cared so little for public notice in my life as I did that day.
It seems that the train had gone away some distance, but when it got by itself, it remembered that I was not on board,
and the peanut boy remembered seeing me get off at this point. So as the train was already two weeks and four days behind,
the conductor decided to go back. He says now that he does not regret it. He says that the life of a conductor at the best has but few bright spots in it,
and the oases along the desert which he treads are widely separated,
but he told me with tears in his eyes that Providence had made me the humble instrument for great good,
and he felt grateful to me.
When he breaks out into a glad ripple of childish laughter now without any apparent cause,
he takes a piece of checked Casimir out of his pocket and explains how he got it,
tells the whole story to his friends.
So there are a great many people along that line of travel who know me by reputation,
although they have never seen me.
End of Chapter 101.
Chapter 102 of Bill Nye and Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley.
A word or two about the swallow.
Lately, I've made some valuable discoveries
relative to ornithology,
and I will give some of them to the public,
for I love to shed information right and left,
like a normal school. When the soft south wind began to kiss our cheeks, and the horseradish
and North Park Prospector began to start, the swift-winged swallows drew near to my picturesque home
on East Fifth Street, and I hoped with a great, anxious, throbbing hope that they would build
beneath the Gothic eaves of my $200 ranch. I would take my guitar at the sunset hour and sit at my
door in a camp-chair, with the fading glory of the dying day bathing me in a flood of golden light
and touching up my chubby form, and I would warble when sparrows build, an old solo in Jay,
which seems to fit my voice, and the swallows would flit around me on tireless wing, and squeak and
sling mud over me till the cows came home. This thing had gone on for several days, and the little
mud houses under the eaves were pretty near ready, and in the meantime the spring bed-bub.
and come with his fragrant breath and turpentine and quicksilver and lime,
an aquiferous and giant powder and a feather,
has made my home a howling wilderness that smelled like a city drugstore.
But it didn't kill the bugs.
It pleased them.
They called a meeting and tendered me a vote of thanks
for the kind attentions with which they had been received.
They ate all these diabolical drugs not only on regular days,
but right along through Lent.
I got mad and resolved to a note.
shore the house and burn it down. One evening I felt sad and worn, and was trying to solace myself
by trilling a few snatches from Mendelssohn's wail, written in the key of G, for a bare-tone voice.
A neighbor came along and stopped to lean over the gate and drink in the flood of melody,
which I was spilling out on the evening air. When I got through and stopped to tune my guitar anew
and scratch a warm place on my arm, he asked if I were not afraid that those swallows would bring
bedbugs to the house.
heard that before, but I thought it was a campaign lie. I acted on the suggestion, however.
I'm taking a long pole from behind the door, where I keep it for pictorial Bibleman.
I knocked down an Dobey Cottage and proceeded to examine it. It was level full of imported
Marino and Cotswold and South Down and Early Rose and Duchess of Oldenburg and 20-ounce
pippins and seek no further bedbugs. There were bedbugs and modest gray ulsters and bedbugs
and dregs of wine and old gold, bedbugs and ashes of roses, and bedbugs and elephants' breath,
bedbugs with their night clothes on and in morning wrappers, bedbugs that were just going on the
night shift, and bedbugs that had been at work all day and were just going to bed. I killed all I could,
and then drove the rest into a pan of coal oil. When one undertook to get out of the pan, I shot him.
This conflict lasted several days. I neglected my other business and omitted more
prayers until there was a great calm in the swift-winged swallows homeward flew.
When these feathered songsters came around my humble cot another spring,
they will meet with a cold, unwelcome reception.
I shall not even ask them to take off their things.
I have formed the idea somehow from watching the eccentric nervous flight of the swallow,
that when he makes one of those swift flank movements with the speed of chain lightning,
he must be acting from the impulse of a large, earnest, triangular bedbug of the boarding-house.
variety. I may be wrong, but I have given this matter a good deal of attention, and whether this
theory be correct or not, I do not care. It is good enough for me. End of Chapter 102.
Chapter 103 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary
gems by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Laughing Sam
During the past week, I have experienced the pleasure of an acquaintance with Laughing Sam,
a character well-known throughout the West.
Samuel Thompson was introduced to me on Tuesday last,
and although he has a look of subdued pain and half-concealed anguish,
I soon found that he was capable of exhibiting the most wild and ungovernable mirth.
Laughing Sam is employed by Surveyor Downey,
and the latter has often told me how he wished that I could employ Sam by the month
to laugh at what I might write, so that I could be encouraged. After the formalities of an introduction
were over, we began to tell anecdotes in order to get Sam into a cheerful frame of mind.
When one would get tired and lay off for a rest, some other one would come forward to the bat
and tell some more humorous tales. But Sam had evidently heard all these anecdotes and looked
at disgusted and fatigued and bored. Downey whispered to me that it wouldn't do. We must have
something entirely different, and that I had better fix up one of those custom-made lies of mine,
such as we used to tell at the boarding-house in 75. I did so with some hesitation, but Sam kindly
gave me his attention and cheered me with an occasional pleased grunt. Then I threw my whole soul
into it. I put in all the pathos of which I am capable at certain parts, and then where it was grand and
terrific, I got up and sawed the air, and where it was ludicrous, I enlarged upon it till Sam's
eye began to glisten. By and by, the fountains of the great deep opened, and Sam lay on the floor
a quivering mass. Sometimes we thought he was dead, but then one leg would fly through the air,
and he would give a wild whoop of pain. Then in a lucid moment, he would try to get up, but he would
fall back again, and his lips would spasmodically relax and contract, and the air would be filled
with a wild mixture of yells and whoops and gurgles and contortions.
It was not what was said that made him laugh,
but it was because his time had come to indulge in a little mirth.
I tried the same story afterward on an ordinary lapper,
and when I got through, he was bathed in tears.
So it wasn't the story.
When laughing Sam looks at his watch and sees that a large amount of mirthfulness is due,
he calmly puts away anything that may be near him of a fragile nature
and proceeds to laugh in a way that shakes the stars loose in the firmament
and disarranges the entire planetary world.
This fall he has an engagement to laugh for Eli Perkins during the lecture season.
Eli is to give him half the proceeds of the lectures,
and Sam has got to laugh whether he feels like it or not.
End of Chapter 103.
Chapter 104 of Bill Nyan Boomerang
were the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill
nigh. This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Calamity Jane consolidated. I have one claim, at least myself and two or three other
capitalists have, which has shown itself to be very rich, but it is not for sale. We are sinking
on it now. We set a force of men at work on it two weeks ago, consisting of a genial cuss from
Bitter Creek. He dug a few hours in a vertical direction, when overworked nature yielded, and he
went to sleep. I discharged to the entire gang. Shortly after that, at a great expense, we secured
a day shift by the name of O'Toole. He is Greek, I think. He is still at work, though we found it
very difficult to use the long-handle shovel at first. He insisted on pouring the dirt down the
back of his neck, and then climbing out of the shaft with it, and undressing himself with a gentle
repose of manner, which indicated that he had perfect command of himself, and knew that his time was
going right on all the same. Still, there are drawbacks about this style of mining. The work does
not progress as rapidly as the present rush and hurry and turmoil of the American people seem to demand.
Two weeks ago, the perilous undertaking of sinking this shaft to a depth of 10 feet in a
perpendicular direction was begun, and although we have shipped several mule loads of the choicest
grub consisting of bacon and large packages done up in corn-colored overshirts and X-XX-X Nebraska flour,
yet the top of Mr. O'Toole's head is visible to the naked eye from a considerable distance as he stands in the shaft.
Occasionally, the Count D. O'Toole fancies that he has been bitten by a tarantula,
and the stockholders of the Calamity Jane Consolidated have to ship a large lunch basket with a willow cover to it
and cork in the top in order to counteract the poison that is rankling in his system.
End of Chapter 104
Chapter 105 of Bill Nyan Boomerang
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Nocturnal Cow
With the opening up of my spring movements in the agricultural line comes the cow.
Laramie has about seven cows that annoy me a good deal.
They work me up so that I lose my equanimity.
I have mentioned this matter before, but this spring, the trouble seems to have assumed some new features.
The prevailing cow for this season seems to be a seal-brown cow with a stub-tail which is arranged as a night key.
She wears it banged.
The other day I had just planted my celluloid radishes and irrigated my royal bangle turnips and sewn my hunting-case summer squashes,
and this cow went by trying to convey the impression that she was out for a walk.
That night the blow fell.
The queen of night was high in the blue vault of heaven amid the twinkling stars.
All nature was hushed to repose.
The people of Laramie were in their beds.
So were my hunting case summer squashes.
I heard a stealthy step near the conservatory,
where my celluloid radishes and pickled beets are growing, and I arose.
It was a lovely sight.
At the head of the procession,
there was a seal-brown cow with a tail like the handle on a pump,
and standing at an angle of 45 degrees. That was the cow.
Following at a rapid gate was a bewitching picture of alabaster limbs and gothic joints
and wombsut a muslin night robe. That was me.
The queen of night withdrew behind a cloud. The vision seemed to break her all up.
By and by there was a crash. The seal-brown cow went home carrying the garden gate with her as a kind of keepsake.
She had plenty of garden gates at home in her collection, but she had none.
of that particular pattern, so she wore it home around her neck. The rider of these lines then
carefully brushed the sand off his feet with a pillow sham and retired to rest. And the bright
May morn was ushered in upon the busy world. The radish and squash bed had melted into chaos,
and there only remained some sticks of stove wood, and the tracks of a cow, interspersed with
a dainty little footprints of some Perry or other who evidently stepped about four yards at a
lick and could wear a number nine shoe if necessary.
Yesterday morning, it was very cold, and when I went out to feed my royal self-acting hen,
I found this same cow wedged into the hen coop.
Oh, blessed opportunity!
Oh, thrice blessed and long sought revenge!
Now I had her where she could not back out,
and I secured a large picket from the fence and took my coat off and breathed in a full breath.
I did not want to kill her.
I simply wanted to make her wish that she had died of membranous croup when she was young.
While I was spitting on my hands
She seemed to catch my idea
But she saw how hopeless was her position
I brought down the picket
With a condensed strength and eagerness
And wrath of two long-suffering years
It struck the corner of the henhouse
There was a deafening crash
And then all was still
Save the low, rippling laugh of the cow
As she stood in the alley
And encouraged me while I nailed up the henhouse again
Looking back over my whole life
It seems to me
that it has strewn with nothing but the rugged ruins of my busted anticipations.
End of Chapter 105.
Chapter 106 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule,
and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Relentless Garden Hose.
It is now the proper time for the cross-eyed woman to fool with the garden hose.
faced death in almost every form, and I do not know what fear is, but when a woman with one
eye gazing into the zodiac and the other, peering into the middle of next week and wearing one of
those large, floppy sunbonnets, picks up the nozzle of the garden hose and turns on the full
force of the institution, I fly wildly to the mountains of Hepsidam. Water won't hurt anyone, of course,
if care is used not to forget and drink any of it, but it is this horrible suspense and
uncertainty about facing the nozzle of a garden hose in the hands of a cross-eyed woman that unnerves me
and paralyzes me. Instantaneous death is nothing to me. I am as cool and collected where lead and rain
iron hail are thickest as I would be in my own office writing the obituary of the man who steals my jokes.
But I hate to be drowned slowly in my good clothes and on dry land and have my dying gaze rest on a woman
whose ravishing beauty would drive a narrow-gauge mule into convulsions
and make him hate himself to death.
End of Chapter 106.
Chapter 107 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A Wail! To the editor of the bass drum.
I appeal to the charity of more favored sisters of
the East who live in an atmosphere of music to throw a crumb of comfort to one who lives in the
wilderness and has in the past ten years heard positively no music. I want a list of contralto
songs for the voice, compass two octaves G and bass cleft to G above the line, treble. I should
also like a list of piano solos, third or fourth grade, the Traumairee order of music preferred.
I will make any compensation desired and forever bless my friends in need.
No name.
It is pretty sad to suffer along for ten years and not hear any music,
and must seem dull and quiet,
especially to one who has lived in an atmosphere of music.
Ten years with no one at hand to churn up the atmosphere occasionally,
with something extending from G in base cleft to G above the line treble,
is a long while.
But here in the wilderness, we have to squeeze along the best we can.
We can't go in here old bull every two weeks here.
Sitting bull is about as near as we can approximate
to the bull family. It is pretty tough, there's no denying it. Speaking about crumbs of comfort,
however, if no name will drop around to the bass drum office, say about 1230 tomorrow, we will
attend to the crumb business. We do not, as a general rule, warble much, but if she will come
around at that hour, we will trill two or three little oleos for one who lives in the wilderness
and has in the past ten years heard positively no music. If we had known that she was starving along
that way without five cents worth of music to lay her jaw to, we would have hunted her up and given
her a blast or two. There's nothing mean about us. We may be rough and perhaps impulsive at times,
but we will never hush our merry lay so long as anybody is suffering, always come right to us
when hungry for music. End of Chapter 107. Chapter 108 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The great horrid man receiveth New Year calls.
In my boudoir, December 20th, 1879.
New Year's day will be leap year, and the ladies want to make calls.
The masculine man will, therefore, have to receive.
Some of us will club together at private houses and receive,
while others will hire a hall and sling a great deal of agony,
doubt. I shall be at home to some extent. I shall wear my organdy, looped up with demi-over skirt of the same,
and three-ply lambricans of Swiss, with corded edges and buttonholes of elephant's breath cut plain.
My pannier is down at the machine shop now and will be done in a few days.
I shall be assisted by Superintendent Dickinson and first assistant postmaster General Spalding of the Laramie Post Office Department,
and the grand difficulty will no doubt occur at the residence of the latter.
Mr. Dickinson will wear a lavender moire antique with all wool underclothes.
The costume will be draped on the side with bevel pinions and looped back with English buttonholes and cut low in the neck.
Mr. Spalding will wear a cream-colored walking suit with train number four.
He will also wear buttons with buttonholes to match.
Sleeves cut princess with polished elbows of same.
Boots plain with cranberry sauce.
brocated silk overskirt with lemon sauce.
Fifty-three buttoned kids, fastening to the suspenders,
open back with Italian dressing.
I give these notes to the reporter in advance
because women are so apt to get these things all mixed up.
After we have spent so much time constructing an elaborate wardrobe,
we do not wish the journals of the territory to come out the next day
and make each one of us appear like a perfect dud.
Our table will also look the nicest of any in town.
We have designed it our house.
ourselves. We have arranged the hose so that we can play it on the dishes after we have used them
and save splashing around in hot water between meals. We intend to feed the first three or
four delegations without doing any work on the dishes. After that, we will of course have to
turn on the hose. Visitors will be made to feel perfectly at home. Collars will be required not to
spit on the floor. Parties making calls will not be allowed to throw peanut shells in the card
receiver or leave their muddy articles on the piano.
Collars will please remain seated while the frigid sustenance is circulated.
No standing collars allowed.
Standing collars are going out of style anyway.
End of Chapter 108.
Chapter 109 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other
literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Just the Thing.
Office of the Twilight Bumblebee.
We have just received a copy of the Nebraska Stats Zeitung Tribune,
a nice little eight-page German paper published at Grand Island, Nebraska.
We have not read it all through yet, but it is a mighty good paper.
We do not understand much German.
We are a little rusty.
Sway glass logger is about all the German we know, and that isn't very pure.
But this paper we like.
There is a tone about it that seems to indicate.
a lofty conception of true journalism.
The noble ambition to cope with vice and the prevailing errors of the day,
and to conquer ignorance and wrong.
As we said before, there are great many things in the paper
which we fail to quite catch on to, owing to our ignorance of the German language,
but there is a picture of a cook stove on the eighth page that is first rate.
It is in the English language.
There is also a picture of a windmill,
in fractured English on the same page.
It is very correct in its sentiment,
and we endorse it. In conclusion, we will say that from what we have seen of this paper,
we are prepared to say that it meets a want long felt. It is pure in tone, noble in politics,
fearless in its attack upon the popular shortcomings of the day, and well-deserving of the
hearty approval of the public. End of Chapter 110 of Bill Nyan Boomerang,
or the tale of a meek-eyed mule, and some other literary gems by Bill.
Nye. This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Thanks. M.E. Post, M.C. of Cheyenne will please accept our thanks for an indestructible
pumpkin pie presented on the ninth instant. It is the most durable pie that we ever
wrestled with. Probably it was not picked early enough and got too ripe. It is the first
genuine cane-bottomed pie with patent dust damper and nickel-plated movement that we have tasted
since we came west. He says it was raised on the Laramie Plains. If this be true, we have opened up
before us another resource of which we may be justly proud. We have valuable marble quarries,
but marble may be cracked and broken. We also have mountains of iron and leads of valuable quartz,
but all these must yield to the superior strength of man. This style of pie, however, will defy
the power of mortal ingenuity and withstand the effacing finger of time. Men may come, and men may come,
may go, but this pie will last forever. We make bold to say that when Gabriel sounds the
proclamation that time is no more, this blasted pie will stand up without a blush and say,
here, Gabriel, is where you get your nice fresh pie, and don't you forget it either.
End of Chapter 110.
Chapter 111 of Bill Dyan Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule, and some other literary
gems by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
read by Dale Barkley.
An anti-Mormon town.
A Mormon missionary turned himself loose in Rollins the other night
and attempted to proselyte the good people
into getting another invoice of wives
to assist in taking off the chill of the approaching winter.
But there is a feeling in the audience
that the man who represented the Church of the Latter-day Saints
was a little off in addressing them,
so they went to a dealer in old and rare antiquities
and purchased some eggs that had a smell
which is peculiar to eggs that have yielded to the infirmities of age.
The Rollins people raised the windows on the sides of the building
and broke 11 and one-half dozen out of a possible 12 dozen of these eggs,
which had been coined in the year of the Great Crash.
It was the year when so many hens were not feeling well.
They broke them against the brass collar button of the orator,
and they ran down in graceful little brooklets and rivulets and squibblets and dribblets
over his white lawn tie and boiled shirt.
Rollins is not strictly a Mormon town, and the lecturer who took some clothes through in a valise the other day bound for Evanston, where he could get them washed, was arrested by a New York detective who was sure he had at last caught the man who had Stewart's body.
End of Chapter 111.
Chapter 112 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meek-eyed mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
read by Dale Barkley
A Christmas ride in July
I've just returned from a long ride to the Soda Lakes
The ride reminded me of a tour I took in July
from Laramie over to Cheyenne two years ago
We had experienced the pleasure of riding over the mountain
On the Union Pacific train
And had held our breath while crossing Dale Creek Bridge
And viewed with wonder the broken billows of granite
Lying here and there at the tip-top of the mighty divide
But someone had said that it was nothing
compared with a mirth-provoking trip by carriage across the mountains over a fine wagon road to Cheyenne.
In the morning I nearly melted, riding up to Sandy Canyon, and took off my coat and gliding pleasantly along,
alternately sang one or two low throbs of melody, and alternately swore about the extreme heat.
When we got nearly to the top, I thought it didn't look well for a man to whom the American people look for so much in the future,
to be riding along the public highway without his coat, so I put it on.
At the top of the mountain, I put on a linen duster and gloves.
Shortly after that, I put on my overshoes and a seal-skin cap.
Later, I put on my buffalo overcoat, and got out and ran behind the carriage to keep warm.
When I got to Cheyenne, the doctor looked me over and said that he could save my feet
because they had so much vitality and were in such a good state of preservation.
But my ears, my pride and glory, the ears that I had defended through the newspapers for years,
and had stood up for when all about was dark, they had to go.
That is, part of them had to go, and there was enough left to hear with,
but the ornamental scallops and box-plating and frills,
the Wayne Scotting and Royal Corinthia Establishers had to go.
End of Chapter 112.
Chapter 113 of Bill Nye and Boomerang,
or the tale of a meekide mule and some other literary gems by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
by Dale Barkley.
Examining the brand on a frozen steer.
A stock owner went out the other day over the divide to see how his cattle were standing the
rigorous weather and found a large fine steer in his last long sleep.
The stockman had to roll him over to see the brand, and he has regretted his curiosity
ever since.
He told me that the brand looked to him like a Roman candle making about 2,000 revolutions
per moment, and with 187 more prismatic colors than he thought were in existence.
Sometimes a steer is not dead, but in a cold, sleepy stupor, which precedes death,
and when stirred up a little and irritated because he cannot die without turning over and
showing his brand, he musters his remaining strength and kicks the inquisitive stockman so high
that he can see and recognize the features of departed friends. That was the way it happened on
this occasion, the stockman fell in the branches of a pine tree on Jack Creek, not dead, but
very thoughtful. He said he was near enough to hear the rush of wings, and was just going to
register and engage a room in the New Jerusalem when he returned to consciousness.
End of Chapter 113. Chapter 114 of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or the tale of a meekide
mule, and some other literary gems by Bill Nye. This Libervox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley
Onion Peelands
The Chinese agriculturalist does his hair up in a French twist
because he don't want to have his cue cumber the ground.
Almost every day there is a new liver pad or lung pad or kidney pad,
but in its way nothing has succeeded in giving instant relief
like the Leadville footpad.
A man can scratch his back against a hat rack or a whatnot for a year or two,
and attribute it to buckwheat cakes,
but after he has gone on this way for about seven years,
the public and his friends begin to lose faith in him.
A handsome competence is in store for the man
who will invent a neat, durable, and portable pie opener
that will successfully reach the true inwardness
of the average box-toed Bessemer steel gooseberry pie
which the hired girl casts in her kitchen foundry.
Along the dreary pathway of this cloud-environed life of ours,
there is no joy so pure, no triumph, so complete,
no success so fraught with rapture,
is that of the female artist who hangs on the flying trapeze by her chillblane
and kisses her hand to the perspiring throng.
It is not the disheartening sense of failure alone,
which makes a man swear in the stilly night,
nor yet the fact that he has slapped his alabaster limb harder than he needed to,
but it is the trifling and heartless way in which the mosquito kisses his hand to the audience
and soars away humming a Tyrolean lay.
Putting up stovepipe is easy enough if you only go at it right.
In the morning, breakfast on some light, nutritious diet,
and drink two cups of hot coffee,
after which put on a suit of old clothes, or new ones if you can get them on time,
put on an old pair of buckskin gloves,
and when everything is ripe for the fatal blow,
go and get a good hardware man who understands his business.
If this rule be strictly adhered to,
the gorgeous 18-carat stem-wining profanity of the present day
may be very largely diminished, and the world made better.
It is strange that the human heart is so easily influenced by the change of seasons,
and although spring succeeds winter and summer follows upon the heels of spring,
just as it did centuries ago,
Yet the transition from one to the other is ever new and pleasing, and the bosom is gladdened with the cheering assurance of spring or the promise of coming summertime.
With the wealth of golden days, its cucumbers and vinegar, its green corn, its string beans, it's baseball, its mammoth circus, its fragrant flowers, and its soda water flavored with syrup from a long-necked wicker-covered bottle, just as it was in the days of Pharaoh and Hannibal and Andrew Jackson.
End of Chapter 114.
End of Bill Nye and Boomerang, or The Tale of a Meek-Eyed Mule, and Some Other Literary Gems, by Bill Nye.
