Classic Audiobook Collection - Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye ~ Full Audiobook [comedy]
Episode Date: February 21, 2024Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye audiobook. Genre: comedy Humorist Bill Nye, in his brief 46 years, served as justice of the peace, newspaperman, miner, and postmaster in the rough town of Laramie, Wyom...ing. This 1901 edition, published after his death, includes a Biographical tribute to Nye, quoting his dear friend, Hoosier poet James Whitcomb Riley: 'He was unselfish wholly, and I am broken-hearted, recalling the always patient strength and gentleness of this true man, the unfailing hope and cheer and faith of his child-heart, his noble and heroic life, and pure devotion to his home, his deep affections, constant dreams, plans and realizations.' This book of humorous stories and essays are wonderful examples of Nye's 'child-heart' of mirth. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:06:39) Chapter 02 (00:15:24) Chapter 03 (00:22:32) Chapter 04 (00:29:41) Chapter 05 (00:35:58) Chapter 06 (00:46:51) Chapter 07 (00:53:09) Chapter 08 (00:59:46) Chapter 09 (01:05:46) Chapter 10 (01:16:18) Chapter 11 (01:20:15) Chapter 12 (01:30:31) Chapter 13 (01:43:09) Chapter 14 (01:48:53) Chapter 15 (01:54:49) Chapter 16 (02:01:23) Chapter 17 (02:13:34) Chapter 18 (02:17:36) Chapter 19 (02:22:40) Chapter 20 (02:28:43) Chapter 21 (02:37:29) Chapter 22 (02:45:19) Chapter 23 (02:49:38) Chapter 24 (02:53:40) Chapter 25 (03:00:31) Chapter 26 (03:04:40) Chapter 27 (03:11:13) Chapter 28 (03:21:05) Chapter 29 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Chapter 1 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye. Biographical. Edgar Wilson Nye was whole-souled, big-hearted,
and genial. Those who knew him lost sight of the humorist and the wholesome friend. He was born
August 25, 1850, in Shirley Piscataquist County, Maine. Poverty of resources drove the family to
St. Croix Valley, Wisconsin, where they hoped to be able to live under conditions less severe.
After receiving a meager schooling, he entered a lawyer's office, where most of his work consisted
in sweeping the office and running errands. In his idle moments, the lawyer's library was at his service.
Of this crude and desultory reading, he afterward wrote,
I could read the same passage today that I did yesterday, and it would seem as fresh at the
second reading as it did at the first. On the following day, I could read it again,
and it would seem as new and mysterious as it did on the preceding day.
At the age of 25, he was teaching a district school in Polk County, Wisconsin, at $30 a month.
In 1877, he was Justice of the Peace in Laramie.
Of that experience, he wrote,
It was really pathetic to see the poor little miserable booth where I sat and waited with numb fingers for business.
But I did not see the pathos which clung to every cobwe
and darkened the rattling casement.
Possibly I did not know enough.
I forgot to say the office was not a salaried one,
but solely dependent upon fees.
So while I was called Judge Nye,
and frequently mentioned in the papers with consideration,
I was out of coal half the time
and once could not mail my letters for three weeks
because I did not have the necessary postage.
He wrote some letters to the Cheyenne son
and soon made such a reputation for himself
that he was able to obtain a position on the Laramie Sentinel.
Of this experience, he wrote,
The salary was small, but the latitude was great,
and I was permitted to write anything that I thought would please the people,
whether it was news or not.
By and by, I had won every heart by my patient poverty
and my delightful parsimony with regards to facts.
With a hectic imagination,
and an order on a restaurant which advertised in the paper,
I scarcely cared through the live-long day whether school kept or not.
Of the proprietor of the Sentinel, he wrote,
I don't know whether he got into the penitentiary or the Greenback Party.
At any rate, he was the wickedest man in Wyoming.
Still, he was warm-hearted and generous to a fault.
He was more generous to a fault than to anything else,
more especially, his own faults.
He gave me $12 a week to edit the paper,
local, telegraph, selections, religious, sporting, political, fashions, and obituary.
He said $12 was too much, but if I would jerk the press occasionally and take care of his children,
he would try to stand it. You can't mix politics and measles. I saw that I would have to draw the
line at measles. So one day I drew my princely salary and quit, having acquired a style of
fearless and independent journalism, which I still retain. I can write. I can write.
up things that never occurred, with a masterly and graphic hand. Then if they occur,
I am grateful. If not, I bow to the inevitable and smother my chagrin. In the midst of a wrangle
in politics, he was appointed postmaster of his town, and his letter of acceptance addressed to the
postmaster general at Washington, was the first of his writings to attract national attention. He said
that, in his opinion, his being selected for the office was a triumph of eternal right over error
and wrong. It is one of the epics, I may say, in the nation's onward march toward political purity
and perfection, he wrote, I don't know when I have noticed any stride in the affairs of state,
which has so thoroughly impressed me with its wisdom. Shortly after he became postmaster,
he started the boomerang. The first office of the paper was over a livery stable, and I put up a sign
instructing collars to twist the tail of the gray mule and take the elevator.
He at once became famous and was soon brought to New York at a salary that seemed fabulous to him.
His place among the humorists of the world was thenceforth assured.
He died February 22, 1896, at his home in North Carolina, surrounded by his family.
James Whitcomb Riley, the Hoosier poet, was for many years a close personal friend of the dead humorist.
When informed of Nye's death, he said,
especially favored, as for years I have been with close personal acquaintance and association with Mr. Nye,
his going away fills me with selfishness of grief that finds a mute rebuke in my every memory of him.
He was unselfish, holy, and I am broken-hearted, recalling the always patient strength and gentleness of this true man,
the unfailing hope and cheer and faith of his child heart, his noble and heroic life, and pure devotive.
to his home, his deep affections, constant dreams, plans, and realizations.
I cannot doubt but that somehow, somewhere, he continues cheerily on in the unbroken exercise
of these same capacities. Mr. Riley recently wrote the following sonnet.
O William and thy blithe companionship, what liberty is mine, what sweet release,
from clamorous strife, and yet what boisterous peace.
Ho, ho, it is thy fancies finger-tip
That dince the dimple now
And kinks the lip
That scarce may sing in all this glad increase of merriment
So pray thee do not cease to cheer me thus
For underneath the quip of thy droll sorcery
The wrangling fret of all distress is still
No syllable of sorrow vexeth me
No teardrops wet my teeming lids
Save those that leap to tell thee
Thou'st a guest that overweepeth yet
only because thou jocest over well.
End of chapter one.
Chapter 2 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Requesting a remittance, personal, Washington, D.C., along toward morning, 1887,
Cashier, World Office, New York.
My dear sir, you will doubtless be surprised to hear from me so soon.
as I did not promise when I left New York that I would write you at all while here.
But now I take pen in hand to say that the Senate and House of Representatives are having a good deal of fun with me
and hope you are enjoying the same great blessing.
You will wonder at first why I send in my expense account before I send in anything for the paper,
but I will explain that to you when I get back.
At first I thought I would not bother with the expense account till I got to your office,
but I can now see that it is going to worry me to get there
unless I hear from you favorably by return mail.
When I came here, I fell into the mad world of society
and attracted a good deal of attention
by my cultivated ways and Jeffersonian method
of sleeping with a different member of Congress every night.
I have not written anything for publication yet,
but I am getting material together
that will make people throughout our broad land
open their eyes in astonishment.
I shall deal fairly and openly with these great national questions, and frankly, hew to the line, let the chips fall where they may, as I heard a man say today on the floor of the house, the Willard House, I mean.
But I believe in handling great political matters without gloves, as you will remember, if you have watched my course as Justice of the Peace and Literature.
Kandor is my leading characteristic, and if you will pardon me for saying so in the first letter you ever received from me, I believe there is nothing about my whole character, which I am.
seems to challenge my admiration for myself any more than that.
Congressman and their wives are daily landing at the Great National Castle Garden
and looking wildly around for the place where they are told they will get their mileage.
On every hand, all is hurry and excitement.
Bills are being introduced, acquaintances renewed,
and punch-bulls are beginning to wear a preoccupied air.
I have been mingling with society ever since I came here,
and that is one reason I have written very little for publication and did not send what I did write.
Yesterday afternoon my money gave out at 3.20, and since that, my mind has been clear and society has made fewer demands on me.
At first I thought I would obtain employment at the Treasury Department as exchange editor in the Greenback Room.
Then I remembered that I would get very faint before I could go through a competitive examination,
and in the meantime I might lose social caste by wearing my person on the outside of my clothes.
So I have resolved to write you a chatty letter about Washington, assuring you that I am well
and asking you kindly to consider the enclosed, tabulated bill of expenses as I need the money
to buy Christmas presents and get home with.
Poker is one of the curses of national legislation.
I have several times heard prominent foreigners say, in their own language, thinking no doubt,
that I could not understand them, that the members of the American Congress did not betray any
emotion on their countenances. One foreigner from Liverpool, who thought I could not understand his
language, said that our congressman had a way of looking as though they did not know very much.
When he afterwards played poker with those same men, he saw that the look was acquired.
One man told me that his vacant look had been as good as $50,000 to him, whether he stood pat or
drew to an ostensible flush while really holding four bullets. So far, I have not been over to the
Capitol, preferring to have Congress kind of percolate into my room, two or three at a time. But unless
you can honor the enclosed way bill, I shall be forced to go over to the House tomorrow and write
something for the paper. Since I have been writing this, I have been led to inquire whether it would
be advisable for me to remain here through the entire session or not. It will be unusually long,
lasting perhaps clear into July, and I find that the stenographers, as a general thing,
get a pretty accurate and spicy account of the proceedings, much more so than I can,
and as you will see by enclosed statement, it is going to cost more to keep me here than I figured on.
My idea was that board and lodgings would be the main items of expense,
but I struck a low-priced place whereby clubbing together with some plain gentlemen from a distance
who have been waiting here three years for political recognition,
and who do not feel like surrounding themselves with a hotel,
we get a plain room with six beds in it.
The room overlooks the District of Columbia,
and the first man in has the choice of beds,
with the privilege of inviting friends to a limited number.
We lunch plainly in the lower part of the building
in a standing position without restraint or finger bowls.
So board is not the principal item of expense,
though of course I do not wish to put up at a place,
where I will be a disgrace to the paper.
I wish that you would when you send my check.
Write me frankly, whether you think I had better remain here
during the entire season or not.
I like the place, first rate.
But my duties keep me up nights to a late hour,
and I cannot sleep during the day,
because my roommates annoy me
by doing their washing and ironing over an oil stove.
I know by what several friends have said to me
that Congress would like to have me stay here all winter,
but I want to do what is best for.
for the paper. I saw Mr. Cleveland briefly last evening at his home, but he was surrounded by a
crowd of fawning sycophants, so I did not get a chance to speak to him as I would like to,
and don't know as he would have advanced the amount to me anyway. He's very firm and stubborn,
I judged, and would yield very little indeed, especially to yours truly, Bill Nye. The following
bill looks large in the aggregate, but when you come to examine each item by itself, there's
really nothing startling about it, and when you remember that I have been here now
four days, and that this is the first bill I have sent in to the office during that time.
I know you will not consider it out of the way, especially as you are interested in seeing me
make a good paper of the world, no matter what the expense is.
We are having good open winter weather, and stock is looking well so far.
I fear you will regard the item for embalming as exorbitant, and it is so.
But I was compelled to pay that price, as the man had to be shipped a long distance, and I did not
want to shock his friends too much when he met them at the depot.
To rent of dress suit for the purpose of seeing life in Washington in the interest of the paper,
$4.50. To charges for dispersing turtle soup from lap of same, $1. To getting fur collar
put on overcoat in interest of paper, $9. To amount loaned a gentleman who had lived in Washington
a long time and could make me a social pet, I will return same to you in case he pays it
before I come back, $5.00. To lodgings, two nights at 25 cents, 50 cents. Six meals at 50 cents,
90 cents. Pen and ink, 20 cents. Postage on this letter, 8 cents. Bronchial trotches in
an interest of paper, 20 cents. Car fare, 60 cents. Laundery work done in interest of paper, 30 cents.
Carriage hire and getting from humble home of a senator to my own voluptuous lodgings.
$2. To expenses of embalming a man who came to me and wanted me to use my influence in changing
policy of the paper, $180. To fine paid for assault and battery in and upon a gentleman who said
he wanted my influence, but really was already under other influence, and who stepped on my
stomach twice without offering to apologize, $19. Paid janitor of jail next morning, $1. Paid for breaking
the window of my cell, 50 cents. Paid damage for writing humorous poetry on wall of cell so that it could not
be erased, $2.00. Total, $2.18. I will probably remain here until I hear from you favorably.
I've met several members of Congress for whom I have voted at various times off and on, but they
were cold and haughty in their intercourse with me. I have been invited to sit on the floor of the
house until I get some other place to stay, but I hate to ride a free horse to death.
Bill Nye
End of Chapter 2
Chapter 3 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libre Vox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A patent oratorical steam organette for railway stumping.
I am now preparing for general use and desire to call the attention of numerous readers
to what I have nominated the campaigner's companion
for use during or preceding a hot political campaign.
Eureka is a very tame expression for this unique little contrivance,
as it is good for any speaker, and on behalf of any party,
I care not of what political belief the orator may be.
It is intended for immediate use,
like a box of dry plates on an amateur photographic tour,
only that it is more on the principle of the organet,
with from 500 to 5,000 tunes packed with it ready for use.
It is intended to be worked easily on the rear platform of a special car
and absolutely prevents repetition or the wrong application of local gags.
Every political speaker of any importance has suffered more or less from what may be called
the misplaced gag, such as localizing the grave of a well-known member of Congress
in the wrong county or swelling up with pardonable pride over
large soapworks in a rival town, 50 miles away from the one where they really are.
All these things weaken the political possibilities of great men and bring catumally upon the
party they represent. My idea is to arrange a sort of organet on the rear platform of the car
to be operated by steam conducted from the engine by means of pipes, the contrivance to be
entirely out of sight under a neat little spread made of the American flag.
Behind this, an eminent man may stand with his hand socked into the breast of his frock coat,
nearly up to the elbow, and while its bosom swells with pardonable pride, the engineer turns on steam.
Previously, the private secretary has inserted a speech prepared on punched paper,
furnished by me, and bearing on that special town and showing a degree of familiarity with that neighborhood,
which would win the entire adult population.
Behind this machine, the eminent speaker weaves to and fro simply making the gestures and shutting off the steam with his foot whenever there is a manifest desire on the part of the audience to applaud.
I am having over 500 good one-night towns prepared in this way, and if it would not take up
too much of your space, I would like to give here one speech illustrating my idea and showing the
plan in brief, though with each machine I furnish a little book called Every Man His Own Demosthenes.
This book tells exactly how to work the campaigner's companion, makes it almost a pleasure to aspire
to office.
I have chosen as an illustration a speech that I have had prepared for Asheville, North Carolina,
but all the others are equally applicable and apropos.
See that all bearings are well-oiled before you start, especially political bearings.
See that the crank is just tight enough without being too tight,
and also that the journals do not get hot.
Fellow citizens of Asheville and Buncombe County and Brother Tar Heels from a way back,
If I were a faithful Muhammadan and believes that I could never enter heaven but once,
I would look upon Buncombe County and despair ever afterwards.
Four minutes for applause to die away.
Asheville is 2,339 feet above tidewater.
She is the hotbed of the invalid and the home of the physical wreck who cannot live elsewhere,
but who comes here and lives till he gets plumb sick of it.
Your mountain breezes and your fried chicken bear strength,
and healing in their wings.
Hold valve open two minutes and a half
to give laughter full scope.
Your altitude and your butter
are both high, and the man who cannot get
all the fresh air he wants on your mountains
will do well to rent one of your cottages
and allow the wind to meander
through his whiskers.
Asheville is a beautiful spot where a perry
could put in a highly enjoyable summer,
picnicking along the Swananoa through the day
and conversing with plum-levy
at his blood-curdling barber shop
in the gloaming.
Nothing can
possibly be thrillinger than to hear plum tell of the hairbreadth escapes his customers have had
in his cozy little shop. The annual rainfall here is 40.2 inches, while smoking tobacco and horned cattle
both do well. Ten miles away stretches Alexander's. You are only 35 miles from Buck Forest.
Pizgum Mountain is only 20 miles from here. And Takayasti Farm is only a mile away,
with its name extending on beyond as far as the eye can reach.
French Broad River bathes your feet on the right, and the sun kissed Swananoa, with its beautiful
borders of rhododendrons, sloshes up against you on the other side. Mount Mitchell, with an altitude
of 6,711 feet, and an annual rainfall of 53.8 inches is but 20 miles distant, while lower hominy is near,
and Hell's half acre, Sandy Mush, and Blue Ruin are within your grasp. The sun never lit up a
cuter little town than Asheville. Nature just seemed to wear herself out on Buncombe County,
and then she took what she had left over to make the rest of the country. Your air is full of vigor.
Your farms get up and hump themselves in the middle, or on one side so that you have to wear a pair
of telegraph pole climbers when you dig your potatoes. Here you will see the Jopinaika,
the Jankwell, and the jaundice, growing side by side in the spring, and at the cheese foundry,
you can hear the skipper calling to his mate. Here is the home of General Tom
Klingman, who first originated the idea of using tobacco externally for burns, scalds, ringworms,
spavin, pneumonia, brights disease, pole evil, pip, gargut, heartburn, earache, and financial
stringency. Here, Randolph and Hunt can do your job printing for you, and the citizen
and the advance will give you the news. You are on a good line of railroad, and I like your air very much,
aside from the air just played by your home band.
Certainly, you have here the makings of a great city.
You have pure air enough here for a city four times your present size,
and although I have seen most all the Switzerland's of America,
I think this is in every way preferable.
People who are in search of a Switzerland of America that can be relied upon
will do well to try your town.
And now, having touched upon everything of national importance that I can think of,
I will close by telling you a little anecdote which will, perhaps, illustrate my position
better than I could do it in any other way.
Here, I insert a humorous anecdote which has no special bearing on the political situation,
and during the ensuing laughter, the train pulls out.
End of Chapter 3.
Chapter 4 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Veritas. My name is Veritas. I write for the papers. I am quite an old man, and have written my kindly
words of advice to the press for many years. I am the friend of the public and the guiding star of the
American newspaper. I point out the proper course for a newly elected member of Congress and show
the thoughtless editor the wants of the people. I write on the subject of political economy,
also on both sides of the paper. Sometimes I write on both sides of the question. When I use
do so, I write over the name of taxpayer, but my real name is Veritas. I am the man who first
suggested the culvert at the Jim Street crossing, so that the water would run off toward the
pound after a rain. With my ready pen, ready and trenchant also, as I may say, I have in my
poor weak way suggested a great many things which might otherwise have remained for many years
unsuggested. I am the man who annually calls for a celebration of the Fourth of July in our little town
and asks for some young elocutionists to be selected by the committee,
whose duty it shall be to read the Declaration of Independence and a shrill voice
to those who yearn to be thrilled through and through with patriotism.
Did I not speak through the columns of the press and clarion tones for a proper observance of our nation's great natal day
in large Gothic extended caps? The nation's starry bank.
would remain furled, and the greased pig would continue to crouch in his lair.
With the aid of my genial co-workers, taxpayer, old settler, old subscriber, constant reader,
U.L.C., fair play, and Mr. Pro Bono Pubblico, I have made the world a far more desirable place
in which to live than it would otherwise have been. My co-labourer, Mr. taxpayer, is an old
contributor to the paper, but he is not really a taxpayer.
uses this signature in order to conceal his identity, just as I use the name Veritas. We have a great
deal of fun over this at our regular annual reunions where we talk about all our affairs. Old Settler is a
young tenderfoot, who came here last spring and tried to obtain a livelihood by selling an indestructible
lamp chimney. He did well for several weeks by going to the different residences and throwing one of his
glass chimneys on the floor with considerable force to show that it would not break. He did a good business,
till one day he made a mistake.
Instead of getting hold of his exhibition chimney,
he picked out one of the stock
and busted it beyond recognition.
Since that, he has been writing articles
in Violet Inc relative to old times
and publishing them over the signature of Old Settler.
Old subscriber is a friend of mine
who reads its paper at the hotels
while waiting for a gratuitous drink.
Fair play is a retired Monty Man,
and pro bono publico is our genial
and urbane undertaker.
I am a very prolific writer,
but all my work is not printed.
A venal and corrupt press
at times hesitates about giving currency
to such fearless, earnest truths
as I make use of.
I am also the man who says
brave things in the columns of the papers
when the editor himself does not dare to say them
because he is afraid he will be killed.
But what wrecks Veritas,
the bold and free? Does he flinch or quail?
Not a flinch, not a quail.
Boldly he flings aside his base fears, and with bitter vituperation, he assails those he dislikes
and attacks with resounding blows his own personal enemies,
fearlessly citing his name Veritas to the article, so that those who yearn to kill him may know
just who he is.
What would the world do without Veritas?
In the hands of a horde of journalists who have nothing to do but attend to their own business,
left with no anonymous friend to whom they can fly, when momentous occasions arise,
when the sound advice and better judgment of an outside friend is needed,
their condition would indeed be a pitiable one.
But he will never desert us.
He is ever at hand, prompt to say over his gnome de plume,
what he might hesitate to say over his own name,
for fear that he might go home with a battle of Gettysburg under each eye,
in a nose like a volcanic eruption.
He cheerfully attacks everything and everybody,
and then goes away till the fight, the funeral, and the libel suit are over.
Then he returns and assails the grim monster wrong.
He proposes improvements.
In the following week, a bitter reply comes from taxpayer.
Pro Bono Publico, the retired three-card Montyist, says,
Let us have the proposed improvement, regardless of cost.
Then the cynical ULC, who is really the janitor at the blind asylum,
grumbles about useless expense,
and finally draws out from the teeming brain of constant reader,
a long, flabby essay, written on red-ruled leaves,
cut out of an old meat-market ledger,
written economically on both sides with light blue ink
made of bluing and cold tea.
This essay introduces, under the most trying circumstances,
such crude yet original literary gems as
what some power the gifty gillus, etc.
He also says,
The wee small hours a yunt the twal.
And farther on,
breeze there a man with soul-so dead,
never to himself hath said, etc. His essay is not so much the vehicle of thought as it is the
accommodation train for fragments of his old-school declamations to ride on. But to Veritas, we owe much.
I say this because I know what I'm talking about, for am I not old Veritas himself?
Haven't I been writing things for the papers ever since papers were published? Am I not the man
who for years has been a stranger to fear? Have I not again and again called the congressman,
the capitalist, the clergyman, the voter, and the philanthropist, everything I could lay my tongue to,
and then fought mosquitoes and the deep recesses of the swamp, while the editor remained at the office
and took the credit for writing what I had given him for nothing? Has not many a paper built up a name
and a libel suit upon what I have written, and yet I am almost unknown? When people ask,
who is Veritas, and where does he live, no one seems to know. He is up seven flights of stairs
in a hot room that smells of old clothes and neglected thoughts.
Far from the madding crowd, as Constant Reader is so truly said,
I sit alone, with no personal property but an overworked costume,
a strong love for truth,
and a shawl strap full of suggestions to the overestimated man,
who edits the paper.
So I battle on, with only the meager and flea-bitten reward
of seeing my name in print, anon, as Constant Reader would say.
All I have to fork over to posterity is my...
good name, which I beg leave to sign here, Veritas.
End of Chapter 4. Chapter 5 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The drug business in Kansas, Hudson, Wisconsin, Mr. Bill Nye, dear sir, I hope you will pardon
me for addressing you on a matter of pure business, but I have heard that you are not averse
to going out of your way, to do a favor now and then to those who are sincere and appreciative.
I have learned from a friend that you have been around all over the West,
and so I have taken the liberty of writing you to ask what you think would be the chances of success
for a young man if he were to go to Kansas to enter the drug business.
I am a practical young druggist 23 years of age and have some money, a few hundred dollars,
with which to go into business.
Would you advise Kansas or Colorado?
as a good part of the West for that business.
I have also written some for the press,
but with little success.
I enclose you a few slips cut from the papers
in which these articles originally appeared.
I send stamp for reply,
and hope you will answer me,
even though your time may be taken up pretty well
by other matters.
Respectfully yours,
Adolf James, Lockbox, 604.
Hudson, Wisconsin, October 1st,
Mr. Adolf James, Lockbox, 604.
for, Dear Sir, your favor of late date is at hand, and I take pleasure in writing this dictated
letter to you, using the columns of the Chicago Daily News, as a delicate way of teaching you.
I will take the liberty of replying to your last question first, if you pardon me,
and I say that you would do better, no doubt at once, in a financial way, to go on with your
drug business than to monkey with literature. In the first place, your style of composition is like the
present style of dress among men. It is absolutely correct, and therefore it is absolutely like
that of nine men out of every ten we meet. Your style of writing has a mustache on it,
wears a three-button cutaway of some scotch mixture, carries a cane, and wears a straight
stand-up collar and scarf. It is so correct and so exactly in conformity with the prevailing
style of composition, and your thoughts are expressed so thoroughly like other people's methods of
dressing up their sentences and sandpapering the soul out of what they say, that I honestly think
you would succeed better by trying to subsist upon the quick sales and small profits which the drug
trade ensures.
Now, let us consider the question of location.
Seriously, you ought to look over the ground yourself.
But as you have asked me to give you my best judgment on the question of preferences between
Kansas and Colorado, I will say without hesitation that if you mean by the drug business,
the sale of sure enough drugs, medicines, paints, oils, glass, putty, toilet articles,
and prescriptions carefully compounded. I would not go to Kansas at this time.
If you would like to go to a flourishing country and put out a big basewood mortar in front of
your shop in order to sell the tincture of damnation throughout bleeding Kansas, now is your
golden opportunity. Now is the accepted time. If it is the great big burning desire of your
heart to go into a town of 2,000 people and open the 13th drugstore in order that you may stand
behind a tall black walnut prescription case day in and day out with a graduate in one hand and
a Babcock fire extinguisher and the other filling orders for whiskey made of stump water and the
juice of future punishment. You will do well to go to Kansas. It is a temperance state and no saloons
are allowed there. All is quiet and orderly and the drug business is a great success. You can
run a dummy drugstore there with two dozen dreary old glass bottles on the shelves, punctuated by
the hand of time and the Kansas fly of the period, and with a prohibitory law at your back and a tall
red barrel in the back room filled with a mixture that will burn great holes into nature's heart
and make the cemetery blossom as the rose, and in a few years you can sell enough of this
justly celebrated preparation for household, scientific, and experimental purposes, only to fill
your flabby pockets with wealth and paint the pure air of Kansas a bright and inflammatory red.
If you sincerely and earnestly yearn for a field where you may go forth and garner an honest harvest
from the legitimate effort of an upright soda fountain and free and open sail of slippery elm
in its unadulterated condition, I would go to some state where I would not have to enter
into competition with a style of pharmacy that has the unholy instincts and ambitions of a blind
pig. I would not go into the field where red-eyed ruin simply waited for a prescription blank,
not necessarily for publication, but simply as a guarantee of good faith, in order that it may
bound forth from behind the prescription case and populate the poor houses and the popper's
nettle-grown addition to the silent city of the dead. The great question of how best to down
the demon rum is before the American people, and it will not be put aside until it is settled.
But while this is being attended to, Mr. Janes, I would start a drugstore farther away from the center of conflict,
and go on joyously sacrificing expensive tinctures, compounds, and syrups at bedrock prices.
Go on, Mr. Janes, dealing out to the yearning, panting public, drugs, paints, oils, glass putty,
varnish patent medicines, and prescriptions carefully compounded,
with none to molest or make afraid, but shun, oh shun, the wild-eyed pharmacopopoe.
that contains naught but the festering fluid so popular in Kansas,
a compound that holds crime and solution and ruin and bulk
that shrivels up a man's gastric economy
and sears great ragged holes into his immortal soul.
Take this advice home to your heart,
and you will ever command the hearty cooperation of yours for health,
as the late Lydia E. Pinkham so succinctly said.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley
The Perils of Identification, Chicago, February 20, 1888.
Financial circles here have been a good deal interested in the discovery of a cipher,
which had been recently adopted by a depositor,
in which began to attract the attention at first of a gentleman employed in the clearinghouse.
He was telling me about it and showing me the vouchers or duplicates of them.
It was several months ago that he first noticed on the back of a check,
passing through the clearinghouse, the following cipher,
written in a symmetrical Gothic hand.
Dear sir, herewith, fine payment for last month's butter,
is hardly up to the average.
Why do you blonde your butter?
Your butter last month tried to assume in a feminine air,
which certainly was not consistent with its vigor.
Is it not possible that this butter is the brother to what we had the month previous,
and that it was exchanged for its sister by mistake?
We have generally liked your butter very much,
but we will have to deal elsewhere if you are going to encourage it
in wearing a full beard.
Yours truly, W.
Moneyed men all over Chicago and financial cryptogrammers
came to read the curious thing,
and to try and work out its bearing on trade.
Everybody took a look at it, went away defeated.
Even the men who were engaged in trying to figure out the identity of the Snell murderer took a day off
and tried their waterberry thinkers on this problem.
In the midst of it all, another check passed through the clearinghouse with this cipher in the same hand.
Sir, your bill for the past month is too much.
You forget the eggs returned at the end of second week, for which you were to give me credit.
The cook broke one of them by a mistake and then threw up the portfolio of Pie Founder in our once joyous home.
I will not dock you for loss of cook, but I cannot allow you for the eggs.
How you succeed in dodging quarantine with eggs like that is a mystery to yours truly, W.
Great excitement followed the discovery of this endorsement on a check for $32.87.
Everybody who knew anything about ciphering was called in to consider it.
A young man from a high school near here who made a specialty of mathematics and pimples
and who could readily tell you how long a shadow a nine-pound groundhog would cast at two o'clock and 37 minutes p.m. on
Groundhog Day, if sunny at the town of Fungus, Dakota, provided latitude and longitude,
and an irregular mass of red chalk be given to him, was secured to jerk a few logarithms in the interests of trade.
He came and tried it for a few days, covered the interior of the exposition building with figures,
and then went away.
The Pinkerton detectives laid aside their literary work on the Great Train Book entitled
The Jerkwater Bank Robbery and Other Choice Crimes by the author of How I Traced a Lame Man Through Michigan and Other Felonies.
They grappled with a cipher and several of them leaned up against something and thought for a long time,
but they could make neither head nor tail to it.
Ignatius Donnelly took a powerful dose of comus and under its maddening influence sought to solve the great problem
which threatened to engulf the nation's surplus. All was in vain,
cowed and defeated, the able conservators of coin, who require a man to be identified
before he can draw on his overshoes at sight, had to acknowledge if this thing continued,
threatened the destruction of the entire national fabric.
About this time, I was calling at the First National Bank of Chicago, the greatest bank,
if I am not mistaken, in America. I saw the bond securing its issue of national currency
the other day in Washington, and I'm quite sure the custodian told me it was the greatest of any
bank in the union. Anyway, it was sufficient, so that I felt like doing my banking business there
whenever it became handy to do so. I asked for a certificate of deposit for $2,000 and had the
money to pay for it, but I had to be identified. Why, I said to the receiving teller,
surely you don't require a man to be identified when he deposits money do you? Yes, that's the
idea. Well, isn't that a new twist on the crippled industries of this country? No, that's our rule.
Hurry up, please, and don't keep men waiting who have money and know how to do business.
Well, I don't want to obstruct business, of course, but suppose, for instance, I get myself
identified by a man I know, and a man you know, and a man who can leave his business and come
here for the delirious joy of identifying me, and you admit that I am the man I claim to be
corresponding as to description, age, sex, etc., with the man I advertise myself to be,
how would it be about your ability to identify yourself as the man you claim to be?
I go all over Chicago, visiting all the large pork packing houses in search of a man I know,
and who is intimate with literary people like me.
And finally, we will say, I find one who knows me and who knows you and whom you know,
and who can leave his leaf lard long enough to come here and identify me all right.
right? Can you identify yourself in such a way that when I put in my $2,000, you will not loan it upon
insufficient security as they did in Cincinnati the other day as soon as I go out of town? Oh, we don't
care especially whether you trade here or not so that you hurry up and let other people have a chance.
Where you make a mistake is in trying to rehearse a piece here instead of going out to Lincoln
Park or somewhere in a quiet part of the city. Our rules are that a man who makes a deposit here must be
identified. All right. Do you know Queen Victoria? No, sir, I do not. Well, then there's no use in
disturbing her. Do you know any other of the crowned heads? No, sir. Well, then do you know President
Cleveland, or any of the cabinet, or the Senate, or members of the House? No. That's it, you see.
I move in one set and you and another. What respectable people do you know? I'll have to ask you
to stand aside, I guess, and give that string of people a chance. You have no right to
to take up my time in this way. The rules of the bank are inflexible. We must know who you are
even before we accept your deposit. I then drew from my pocket a copy of the Sunday world,
which contained a voluptuous picture of myself. Removing my hat and making a court salam by letting
out four additional joints in my lithe and versatile limbs, I asked if any further identification
would be necessary. Hastily closing the door to the vault and jerking the combination, he
said that would be satisfactory. I was then permitted to deposit in the bank. I do not know why I
should always be regarded with suspicion wherever I go. I do not present the appearance of a man who is
steeped in crime, and yet when I put my trivial little two-gallon valise on the seat of a depot waiting
room, a big man with a red mustache comes to me and hisses through his clenched teeth,
take your baggage off the seat. It is so everywhere. I apologize for disturbing a ticket agent
long enough to sell me a ticket, and he tries to jump through a little brass wicket and throttle me.
Other men come in and say,
Give me a ticket for Bandeline, Ohio, and be damn sudden about it, too.
And they get their ticket and go aboard the car and get the best seat.
Well, I am begging for the opportunity to buy a seat at full rates and then ride in the woodbox.
I believe that common courtesy and decency in America needs protection.
Go into N-Hotel or A-Hotel, whichever suits the either and neither reader of these lines,
lines, and the commercial man who travels for a big sausage casing house in New York has the bridal
chamber, while the meek and lowly minister of the gospel gets a wall pocket room with a cot,
a slippery elm towel, a cake of cast iron soap, a disconnected bell, a view of the laundry,
a tin roof, and $4 a day. But I digress. I was speaking of the bank Czech cipher.
At the first national bank, I was shown another of these remarkable endorsements. It read as
follows. Dear sir, this will be your pay for chickens and other fowls received up to the first of the
present month. Time is working wondrous changes in your chickens. They are not such chickens as we
used to get a view before the war. They may be the same chickens, but oh, how changed by the
lapse of time. How much more indestructible. How they have learned since then to defy the
encroaching tooth of remorseless ages or any other man. Why do you not have them tender like your
squashes. I found a blue poker chip in your butter this week. What shall I credit myself for it?
If you would try to work your butter more and your customers less, it would be highly respected,
especially by yours truly, W. Looking at the signature on the check itself, I found it to be that
of Mrs. James Wexford of this city. Knowing Mr. Wexford, a wealthy and influential publisher here,
I asked him today if he knew anything about this matter. He said that all he knew about it
was that his wife had a separate bank account,
and had asked him several months ago
what was the use of all the blank space on the back of a check
and why it couldn't be used for correspondence with the remitee.
Mr. Wexford said he'd bet $500 that his wife had been using her checks that way,
for he said he never knew of a woman who could possibly pay postage on a note,
remittance, or anything else,
unless every particle of the surface
had been written over in a wild, delirious three-story hand.
Later on I found that he was right about it.
His wife had been sassing the grocer and the butterman on the back of her checks.
Thus ended the great bank mystery.
I will close this letter with a little incident, the story of which may not be so startling, but it is true.
It is a story of child faith.
Johnny Quinlan of Evanston has the most wonderful confidence in the efficacy of prayer,
but he thinks that prayer does not succeed unless it is accompanied by considerable physical strength.
He believes that adult prayer is a good thing, but doubts the efficacy of juvenile prayer.
He has wanted a Jersey cow for a good while, and tried prayer, but it didn't seem to get to the central office.
Last year, he went to a neighbor who is a Christian and believer in the efficacy of prayer, also the owner of a Jersey cow.
Do you believe that prayer will bring me a yaller jersey cow? said Johnny.
Why, yes, of course. Prayer will remove mountains. It will do anything.
Well, then, suppose you give me the cow you've got, and pray for another one.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A Father's Letter, My Dear Son, We got your last letter some three days ago.
It found us all moderately well, though not very frisky.
Your letters nowadays are getting good.
quite pretty as regards penmanship. You are certainly going to develop into a fine penman,
your mother thinks. She says that if you improve as fast in your writing next year as you have last,
you will soon be writing for the papers. In my mind's eye, I can see you there in your room
practicing for a long time on a spiral spring which you make with your pen. I believe you call
it the whole arm movement. I think you got the idea from me. You remember I used to have a whole arm
movement that I introduced into our family along in the summer of 69. You was at that time trying
to learn to swim. Once or twice, the neighbors brought you home with your lungs full of river water
and your ears full of coarse sand. We pumped you dry several times, but it did not wean you from
the river. So I introduced the whole arm movement one day and used it from that on in what you would
call our curriculum. It worked well. Your letters are now very attractive from a scientist.
standpoint, the letters all have pretty little curly tails on them. And though you do not always
spell, according to Gunter, the capital letters are as pretty as a picture. I never saw such a round
oh as you make when you hang your tongue out and begin to swing yourself. Your mother says that your great
uncle on her side was a good writer too. He could draw off a turtle dove without taking his pen from the
paper. Most everybody would know as soon as they looked at it that it was a turtle dove, or some such
bird as that. He could also draw a deer with coil spring horns on him and a barbed wire fence to it
and a scalloped tail, and it looked as much like a deer as anything else he could think of.
He was a fine penman and wrote a good deal for the papers. Your mother has got a lot of his
pieces in the house yet, which the papers sent back because they were busy and crowded full of
other stuff. I read some of these letters, and anyone can see that it was a great sacrifice for the
editors to send the pieces back, but they had got used to it and conquered their own personal
feelings and sent them back because they were too good for the plain untutored reader.
One editor said that he did not want to print the enclosed pieces because he thought it would
be a pity to place such pretty writing in the soiled hands of the practical printer.
He said that the manuscript looked so pretty just as it was that he handed the heart to
send it into the composing room. So the day may not be far away,
Henry, when you can write for the press, your mother thinks. I don't care so much about it myself,
but she has her heart set on it. Your mother thinks that you are a great man, though I have not
detected any symptoms of it yet. She has got that last pen scroll work here of yours in the Bible,
where she can look at it every day. It's the picture of a hen sitting in a nest of curlekews
made with red ink, over a woven wire mattress of doodads and blue ink, and some tall grass
and violet ink. Your mother says that this fowl is also a turtle dove, but I think she is wrong.
She says the world has always got a warm place for one who can make such a beautiful picture
without taking his pen off the paper. Perhaps she is right. I hope that you will not take me for an example,
for I am no writer at all. My parents couldn't give me any advantages when I was young.
When I ought to have been learning how to make a red ink bird of paradise, swooping down on a violet ink
butterfly with green horns. I was frittering away my time, trying to keep my misguided parents
out of the poor house. I tell you, Henry, there is mighty little fluff and bloom and funny business in my
young life. While you are acquiring the rudiments of long Dennis and polo and penmanship,
and storing your mind with useful knowledge with which to parize your poor parents when you come home,
do not forget, Henry, that your old swayback father never had those opportunities for soaking his system
full of useful knowledge which you now enjoy.
When I was your age, I was helping to jerk the smutty logs off of a new farm
with a pair of red and restless steers in the interest of your grandfather.
But I do not repine.
I just simply call your attention to your privileges.
Could you have a summer in the heart of the primeval forest
thrown in contact with a pair of high-strung steers
and a large number of black flies of the most malignant type,
snaking half-burnt logs across yourself,
and fighting flies from early dawn till set of sun,
you would be willing, nay, tickled to go back to your monotonous round of baseball
and Suffolk jackets and pest-house cigarettes.
We rather expected you home some time ago,
but you said you needed sea air and change of scene,
so you will not be home very likely till the latter part of the month.
We will be glad to see you any time, Henry,
and we will try to make it as pleasant as we can for you.
Your mother got me to fill the big straw tick for your
bed again so that you would have a nice tall place to sleep, and so that you could live high,
as the feller said. I tried on the old Velocopede pants you sent home last week. They are too short for me
with the style of legs I am using this summer. Your bathing pants are also too short for me,
so I gave them to a poor woman here who is trying to ameliorate the condition of her sex.
I send you our love and $9 in money. We will sell the other calf as soon as it is ripe.
Chintz bugs are rather more robust than last year, and the mortgage on our place looks as if it
might maturely. We had a lecture on phrenology at the schoolhouse Tuesday night, during which
four of our this-spring's roan turkeys wandered so far away from home that they lost their
bearings and never came back again. So goodbye for this time, your father, Bill Nye.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The Aztec at Home
It has been my good fortune within the past ten years to witness a number of the remaining landmarks left to indicate the trail of the original inhabitant of this country.
It has been a pleasure, and yet a kind of sad pleasure, to examine the crumbling ruins of what was once regarded, no doubt, is the very trium.
of Aboriginal taste and mechanical ingenuity.
I can take but a cursory glance at these earmarks of a forgotten age,
for a short treatise like this, cannot embrace minute details, of course.
We are told by the historian that there were originally two distinct classes of Indians
occupying the territory now embraced by the United States,
vis-à-vis the village Indians or horticultural Indians,
and the extremely rural Indians, or non-horticultural variety.
The village Indians, or horticulturalists, subsisted upon fruits and grain, ground in a crude way,
while the non-horticulturalists lived on wild game, berries, acorns, and pilgrims.
Of the latter class, few traces remain, accepting rude arrowheads and coarse stone weapons.
These articles show very little skill as a rule.
The only indication of brains that I ever discovered being on a large stone hammer or Mohawk swatter,
and they were not the brains of the man who made it either.
The village Indians, however, were architects from a way up the gulch.
They constructed a number of architectural works of great beauty, several of which I have visited.
They were once, no doubt, regarded as very desirable residences.
But now, alas, they have fallen into innocuous desuetude.
At least that is what it looked like to me.
And the odor reminded me of innocuous desuetude in a bad state of preservation.
In New Mexico, over 300 years ago, there were built a number of pereblos or villages which still stand up in a measure,
though some of them are in recumbent position.
These pereblos or villages are formed of three or four buildings constructed in the Retroos style of architecture
and made of adobe bricks.
These bricks are generally of a beautiful, soft, black, and tan color,
and at a distance look like the first loaf of bread baked by a young lady who has been reared in luxury,
but his father has been suddenly called away to Canada.
The adobe brick is said to be so indigestible, in fact,
that I am confident that it is not far distant
when it will be found on every hotel bill of fare
in our broad sin-cursed land.
One of these dwellings was generally about 200 feet long,
with no stairways in the interior,
but movable ladders on the outside instead.
This manner of reaching the upper floor had its advantages,
and yet it was not always convenient.
it. One feature in its favor was the isolation which a man could pull around himself by going in at
the second-story window and pulling the ladder up after him, as there was no entrance to the house on the
ground floor. If a man really courted retirement and wanted to write a humorous lecture or a two-dollar
homily, he could insert himself through the second-story window, pull in the staircase, and go to work.
Then no one could disturb him without bribing a hook-and-ladder company to come along and let him in.
But the great drawback was the annoyance incident to ascending these ladders at a late hour in the night,
while under the influence of Aztec rum, a very seductive yet violently intoxicating beverage,
containing about eight parts cheer to 92 parts inebriate.
These residents were hardly Gothic in style, being extremely rectangular,
with a tendency toward the more modern dry goods box.
It is believed by abler men than I am, men who could believe more in too much,
minutes than I could believe in a lifetime if I had nothing else to do, that those houses contained
about 38 apartments on the first floor and 19 on the second. These apartments were separated by some
kind of cheap and transitory partition, which could not stand the climatic changes, and so has gone to
decay. But these Indians were determined to have their rooms separated in some way, for they were
very polite and decorous to a fault. No Aztec gentleman would emerge from his room until he had
completed his toilet if it cost him his position. I once heard of an Aztec who lived way down
in old Mexico somewhere several centuries ago, and who was the pink of politeness. He wore full
dress, winter and summer, the whole year round, and studied a large work on etiquette every evening.
In night, he would undress himself by unhooking the German silver ring from his nose and hanging
it on the back of a chair. One night, a young man from the capital named ozone, or something like that,
a relative of the Montezuma's, came over to stay a week or two with this Aztec dude.
As a good joke, he slipped in and nipped the nose ring of his friend just to see if he would so far violate the proprieties as to appear at breakfast time without it.
Morning came, and the dude awoke to find the bright rays of a Mexican sun streaming in through his casement.
He rose and bathing himself in a gourd.
He looked on the back of the chair for his clothing, but it was not there.
A cold perspiration broke out all over him.
He called for assistance, but no one came. He called again and again, louder and still more loud,
but help came not. He went to the casement and looked out upon the plaza. The plaza did not
turn away. A Mexican plaza is not easily dashed. He called till he was hoarse, but all was still
in the house. Hollow echoes alone came back to him to mock him. At night, when the rest of the
household returned from a protracted picnic in the distant hills, young ozone ascended the ladder
which he carried with him in a shawl strap,
and entering the room of the Aztec dude
gave him the nose ring with a hearty laugh.
But alas, he was greeted with a wild piercing shriek
of a maniac robbed of his clothing.
The man had suffered such mental tortures
during the long, long day,
that when night came, reason tottered on her throne.
It is said that he never regained his faculties,
but would always greet his visitors
with a wild 40-cent shriek
and bury his face in his hands.
His friends tried to get him into society again,
but he could not be prevailed upon to go.
He seemed to be afraid that he would be shocked in some way,
or that someone might take advantage of him,
and read an immoral poem to him.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
In the South, Asheville, North Carolina, December 9th.
There is no place in the United States, so far as I know,
where the cow is more versatile or ambidextrous, if I may be allowed the use of a term that is far above my station in life,
then here in the mountains of North Carolina, where the obese possum and the anonymous distiller have their homes.
Not only is the Tar Heel cow, the author of a pale, athletic style of butter,
but in her leisure hours she aids in tilling the perpendicular farm on the hillside,
or draws the products to market.
In this way, she contrives to put in her time to the best advantage,
and when she dies, it casts a gloom over the community in which she has resided.
The life of a North Carolina cow is indeed fraught with various changes and saturated with a zeal,
which is praiseworthy in the extreme.
From the sunny days when she gambles through the beautiful valleys,
inserting her black retruce and perspiration dotted nose into the blue grass from ear to ear,
until at life's close, when every part and portion of her overworked system is turned into food,
raiment or overcoat buttons, the life of the tar heel cow is one of intense activity.
Her girlhood is short, and almost before we have deemed her emancipated from calfhood herself,
we find her in the capacity of a mother. With the cares of maternity, other demands are quickly
made upon her. She is obliged to ostracize herself from society and enter into the prosaic
details of producing small pallid globules of butter, the very pallor of which so thoroughly belies,
lies its lusty strength. The butter she turns out rapidly until it begins to be worth something,
when she suddenly suspends publication and begins to haul wood to market. In this great work,
she is assisted by the pearl-grey or ecru-colored jackass of the tepid south. This animal has been
referred to in the newspapers throughout the country, and yet he never ceases to be an object of
the greatest interest. Jackasses in the south are of two kinds, vis-a-vis male and female.
Much has been said of the jackass, pro and con.
I do not remember ever to have seen the above statement in print before,
and yet it is as trite as it is incontrovertible.
In the Rocky Mountains, we call this animal the burrow.
There he packs bacon, flour, and salt to the miners.
The miners eat the bacon and flour,
and with the salt they are enabled to successfully salt the mines.
The burrow has a low contralto voice,
which ought to have some machine oil on it.
The voice of this animal is not unpleasant if he would pull some of the pathos out of it and make it more joyous.
Here, the jackass at times, becomes a co-worker with the cow,
in hauling tobacco and other necessaries of life into town,
but he goes no further in the matter of assistance.
He compels her to tread the cheese press alone,
and contributes nothing whatever in the way of assistance for the butter industry.
The North Carolina cow is frequently seen here driven double or single by means of a small rope line
attached to a tall, emaciated gentleman who is generally clothed with the divine right of suffrage
to which he adds a small pair of earbods during the holidays. The cow is attached to each shaft
and a small single tree or swingle tree by means of a broad strap harness. She also wears a breaching,
in which respect she frequently has the advantage of her escort. I think I have never witnessed
a sad or sight than that of a new milch cow torn away from home and friends and kindred deer
descending a steep mountain road at a rapid rate and striving in her poor, weak manner to keep out of the way of a small Jackson Democratic wagon, loaded with a big hogshead full of tobacco.
It seems to me so totally foreign to the nature of the cow to enter into the tobacco traffic, a line of business for which she can have no sympathy, and in which she certainly can find very little interest.
Tobacco of the very finest kind is produced here, and is used mainly for smoking purposes.
It is the highest-priced tobacco produced in this country.
A tobacco broker here yesterday showed me a large quantity of what he called export tobacco.
It looks very much like other tobacco while growing.
He says that foreigners use a great deal of this kind.
I am learning all about the tobacco industry while here,
and as fast as I get hold of any new facts, I will communicate them to the press.
The newspapers of this country have done much for me,
not only by publishing many pleasant things about me, but by refraining from publishing other things
about me. And so I'm glad to be able now and then to repay this kindness by furnishing information
and facts for which I have no use myself, but which may be of incalculable value to the press.
As I write these lines, I'm informed that the snow is 26 inches deep here and four feet deep
at high point in this state. People who did not bring in their pomegranates last evening are bitterly
be wailing their thoughtlessness today. A great many people come here from various parts of the
world for the climate. When they have remained here for one winter, however, they decide to leave it
where it is. It is said that the climate here is very much like that of Turin, but I did not intend to
go to Turin even before I heard about that. Please send my paper to the same address, and if someone
who knows a good remedy for Chilblains will contribute it to the Sabbath globe, I shall watch for it with
great interest. Yours as hereto-for, Bill Nye. P.S. I should have said relative to the cows of this
state that if the owners would work their butter more and their cows less, they would confer a
great boon on the consumer of both. Bill Nye. End of Chapter 9. Chapter 10 of Bill Nye's
Sparks by Bill Nye. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Read by Dale Barkley.
to the general public i may say that i violate no confidence in saying that spring is the most joyful season of the year but june is also a good month
well has the poet ejaculated and what is so rare as a day in june though i have seen days in march that were so rare that they were almost raw this is not a weather report however i started out to state that central park just now is looking at its very best and opens up with the prospects of doing a
good business this season. A ride through the park just now is a delight to one who loves to
commune with nature, especially human nature. The nobility of New York now turns out to get the
glorious air and ventilate its crest. I saw several hundred crests and coats of arms the other
day in an hour's time, and it was rather a poor day, too, for a great many of our best people
are just changing from their spring to their light summer coats of arms.
One of the best crests I saw was a nice, large, red crest about the size of an adult rhubarb pie,
with a two-year-old Durham Unicorn above it, bearing in his talons the unique maxim,
sans culots, sans snotchamontagab, sans aries sypolis est.
And how true this is, too, and in great many cases.
Another very handsome crest on the carriage of the van student tickles
consisted of a towel-rack penchant with cockroach regarer.
holding in his beak a large red tapeworm, on which was inscribed,
Spirituous Frumenti, come homo tomorrow.
Many of the crests contained terse Latin mottos,
taken from the inscriptions on peppermint conversation candies,
and were quite cute.
A coat of arms consisting of a small limburger cheese cu chant,
above which stood a large can of chloride of potash,
on which was inscribed the words,
Miss, may I see you home?
i thought very taking and just mysterious enough to make it exciting some day i am going to get myself a crest i am only waiting for something to put it on it will consist of a monkey with his eye knocked out and a bright green parrot with his tail pulled off and over this the simple remark
we have had a high old time or words to that effect not so many equestrians were out as usual on the day i visited the park but those who were out afforded the observer a beautiful
view of the park between their persons and the saddle. The equestrians were more numerous,
and one or two especially were as beautiful as anything that nature ever turned out.
One young woman in a neat fitting plug hat looked to me like a peri. It has been a good while
now since I saw a perry, but I have always heard them very highly spoken of, and I hope she
will not be offended when she reads these lines and finds that I regard her in that light.
carriage horses are dressing, about as they did last season, except that ponpon tails are more worn, especially at the end.
Neck yolks are cut low this year so as to show the shoulders of the wearer, and horses in mourning wear their tails at half-mast.
The porous plastron is not in favor this year, but many horses who interfere are wearing life preservers over the fetlock,
and sometimes a small chest protector of russet leather over the joint, according to the taste of the wearer.
Pocodot or half-mourning dogs are much affected by people who are beginning to get the upper hand of their grief.
Much taste is shown in the selection of dogs for the coming season, and many owners chain their coachman to the dog,
so that if anyone were to come and try to abduct the dog, the coachman could bite him and drive him away.
A good coachman to take care of a watchdog is almost invaluable.
A custom of taking the butler along in the seat with the coachman is growing.
in favor for two reasons. First, it shows that you have a butler. And second, you know that while he is
out with you, he is not putting paste in the place of your diamonds at home. So I had almost said that
it paced to do this. The automatic or jointless footman is still popular, and a young man who has a good
turning-lath leg and an air of impenetrable gloom can get a job most any time. Many New York
gentlemen who are fond of driving take their grooms out to Central Park every afternoon for an airing.
This is a wise provision for those who have associated much with grooms will agree with me that a little
airing now and then is just what they need. There ought to be a book of park etiquette printed soon,
however, for the guidance of its patrons. In the first place, it should be considered out for a gentleman
to hire a coop by the hour in order to recover from alcoholic prostration and then sleep
up and down the drive with his feet out the window. It is not respectful, and besides that,
the blood is liable to all rush to his head. Drunken cab drivers, too, should not be permitted
to drive in the park, for only a little while ago one of them is said to have fallen from his
high perch and injured his crest. A park policeman should be specially detailed as a breath
tester to stand at each entrance and smell the breath of all drivers and other patrons of the park.
Let us enforce the law. But the most of the most of the driver. But the most of the rest of the law.
curious feature about the exhibition afternoon spin in the park is the great prevalence of
mourning symbols. Almost, if not quite, one-third of the carriages one meets, is decorated with black
in every possible way, till sometimes it looks like a runaway funeral procession. Why people should
come to Central Park to advertise their woe by means of long black mourning tassels at their
horse's heads, and a draped driver with broad bands of bombzine concealing the russetops of his boots,
sometimes dressed in black throughout, is more than I can understand.
The honest, earnest, and genuine affection of a good woman for a worthy man, alive or dead,
is too sacred to treat lightly, and the love that survives the wreck and ruin of gathering ears
has inspired more than one man to deeds of daring, whereby he is one everlasting renown.
But the woe that is divided up among the servants and shared in by the horses is not in good taste,
it is not in good order, and there are flies on it.
It is like saying to the world,
Come and see how I suffer.
It is parading your sore toe in Central Park,
where people with sore toes are not supposed to congregate.
It is like a widow, wailing her woe,
through the want column of a healthy mourning paper.
It is in effect, saying, to Christendom,
come and hear me snort,
and see me paw up the ground
in my paroxysms of wild and uncontrollable anguish.
My grief is of such a penitent.
trading nature and of that searching variety that it has broken out at the barn, and even the horses
that I bought two weeks after the funeral, with a part of the life insurance money, have gone into
mourning, and the coachman who got here day before yesterday from Liverpool has tied himself up
in black bombazine and takes special delight in advertising our sorrow. I do not believe that it will
always be popular to wear mourning for our friends unless we feel a little doubtful about where they
went. Black is offensive to the eye, offensive to the nose, and it makes your flesh crepe to touch it.
Will the proofreader please deal gently with the above joke, and I will do as much for him some time.
Henry Ward Beecher had the right idea of the way to treat death, and when at last it came his turn
to die, his home and his church both seem to say, the great preacher is gone, but there is nothing
about the change that is sad. There is something the matter with grief that works itself up
into black rosettes and long black banners that sweep the ground, and shut out the sky,
and look like despair, and feel like the season cracked back of a warty dragon. But wealth has
its little eccentricities, and we must bear with them. But he alone is indeed rich, who is content,
and who does not look under the bed every night for an indictment. Look at poor old Mr. Sharp,
with his stock of aldermen depreciating on his hands, men for whom he paid a big price only a few years
ago, and who would not attract attention now on a ten-cent counter, while he don't feel very well
himself. No, I would not swap places with Jay Sharp and ride through Central Park behind a pair of
rip-snorten horses with mourning rosettes on their heads and feel that I must hurry back to help
select an unprejudiced jury. I would rather hang on to the brow of a Broadway car till I got to
52nd Street and then stroll over to the menagerie and feed red pepper to the sacred cow and have a good,
plain, quiet time, than to wear fine clothes and be wealthy and hate myself all the time.
I believe that I am happier in my untroubled, dreamless sleep on my quiet couch, which draws a
salary during the daytime as an upright piano. Happier browsing about it at different restaurant each day,
so that the waiters will not get well acquainted with me and expect me to give them the money that I am saving
up to go to Europe with. Happier, I say, to be thus tossed about on the bosom of the great heaving
human-tide than to have forty or fifty millions of dollars concealed about my person that I cannot
remember how I obtained. I dislike notoriety, and nothing irritates me more than the coarse
curiosity of people who ride at night in the elevated trains and peer idly into my room as I toil
over my sewing or go gaily about humming a simple air, as I prepare the evening meal over my cute
little portable oil stove, and though I have not courted this interest on the part of the people,
and though I would prefer to live less in the eye of the public, I feel that, occupying the position
I do, I cannot expect to wholly consult my own wishes in the matter, and I am content to live
quietly and enjoy good health rather than wear good clothes and feel rocky all the time.
I would rather have a healthy alimentary than be garnished all over with passimentary.
End of Chapter 10
Chapter 11 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Liberty Enlightening the World
When Patrick Henry put his old cast-iron spectacles on the top of his head and whooped for liberty,
he did not know that someday we would have more of it than we knew what to do with.
He little dreamed that the time would come when we would have more liberty than we could pay for.
when Mr. Henry sawed the air and shouted for liberty or death,
I do not believe that he knew the time would one day come
when liberty would stand knee-deep in the mud of Bedloe's Island
and yearn for a solid place to stand upon.
It seems to me that we have too much liberty in this country in some ways.
We have more liberty than we have money.
We guarantee that every man in America shall fill himself up,
full of liberty at our expense.
And the less of an American he is, the more liberty he can have.
have. If he desires to enjoy himself, all he needs is a slight foreign accent and a willingness
to mix up with politics as soon as he can get his baggage off the steamer. The more I study
American institutions, the more I regret that I was not born a foreigner so that I could have
something to say about the management of our great land. If I could not be a foreigner, I believe
I would prefer to be a Mormon or an Indian, not taxed. I'm often led to ask in the language of the poet,
is the Caucasian played out?
Most everybody can have a good deal of fun in this country, except the American.
He seems to be so busy paying his taxes all the time that he has very little time to mingle in the
giddy whirl with the alien.
That is the reason that the alien, who rides across the United States on the limited mail,
and writes a book about us before breakfast, wonders why we are always in a hurry.
That is the reason we have to throw our meals into ourselves with a dull thud, and hardly have
time to maintain a warm personal friendship with our families. We do not care much for wealth,
but we must have freedom, and freedom costs money. We have advertised to furnish a bunch of
freedom to every man, woman, or child who comes to our shores, and we are going to deliver the
goods whether we have any left for ourselves or not. What would the great world beyond the seas
say to us if someday the blue-eyed Mormon, with his heartful of love for our female seminaries
and our old women's homes should land upon our coasts and find that we are using all the liberty
ourselves. What do we want of liberty anyhow? What could we do with it if we had it? It takes a man of
leisure to enjoy liberty, and we have no leisure whatever. It is a good thing to keep in the house
for the use of guests only, but we don't need it for ourselves. Therefore, I am in favor of a
statue of liberty enlightening the world because it will show that we keep it on tap, winter and summer.
We want the whole broad world to remember that when it gets tired of oppression, it can come here to America and oppress us.
We are used to it, and we rather like it.
If we don't like it, we can get on the steamer and go abroad, where we may visit the effete monarchies and have a high old time.
The sight of the Goddess of Liberty standing there in New York Harbor, night and day, bathing her feet in the rippling sea, will be a good thing.
It will be first-rate, and may also be productive of good in a direct-and-a-day.
that many have not thought of. As she stands there day after day bathing her feet in the broad
Atlantic, perhaps some moss-grown Mormon moving toward the far west, a confirmed victim of
the matrimonial habit, may fix the bright picture in his so-called mind, and remembering how,
on his arrival in New York, he saw liberty, bathing her feet with impunity. He may be led in,
after years, to try it on himself. End of Chapter 11.
Chapter 12 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
He seized the capital.
When I got off the Pennsylvania train yesterday, I went to a barber shop before I did anything else.
I have a thick, Venetian red chinchilla beard which grows rapidly,
and which gives me a fuzzy appearance every 24 hours unless I place myself frequently into the hands of a barber.
At first I used to shave myself, but I cut myself to pieces in such a sickening manner without
seeming to impede the growth of the rich and foxy beard that until last summer, I gave up being my
own barber. At that time, I was presented with a safety razor, which the manufacturer said
would not cut my face because it was impossible for it to cut anything except the beard.
The safety razor resembles in appearance several other toilet articles, such as the spokeshave,
the road scraper, the can opener, the lawnmower, and the turbine water wheel, but it does not look like a razor.
It also looks like a carpet sweeper some, and reminds me of a monkey wrench.
It is said that you can shave yourself on a train if you'll use this instrument.
I tried it once last winter while going west.
In fact, I took the trip largely to see if one could shave on board the train safely with this razor.
I had no special trouble.
At least I did not cut off any features that I cared anything about, but I was dissonable.
disappointed in the results, and also in the length of time consumed in cleaning the razor after I got through.
I was shaving myself only from 42nd Street to Albany, but it took me from Albany to Omaha to pull the razor apart,
and to dig out the coagulated lather and the dear, dear whiskers. I now employ a valet, whose name is Patria McCloria.
He irons my trousers, shaves and dresses me, and mows the lawn. When I come to Washington, I am too democratic to travel with a valet,
fearing that it might cost me several thousand votes someday, and so I leave my maid at home to wash and dress the salad.
And that day, he does not miss me, and I get the credit at Washington of being a man who spent so much time thinking of his country's welfare that he doesn't have a chance to look pretty.
I did not fall into a very gaudy barber shop.
The appointments were like some of the president's appointments, I thought, vis-a-vis and poor taste.
But this is not a political letter.
I do not wish to antagonize anybody, especially.
the President of the United States. He has always treated me well. I will now return to the
barbershop. It was a plain structure with beautiful sasperilla pictures here and there on the walls
and a faint odor of rancid pomatum and overworked hair restoratives. There were three chairs
richly upholstered in two-ply carpeting of some inflammatory hue with large vines and the
kinds of flowers which grow on carpets but nowhere else. I have seen blossoms woven into ingrained
carpets, varying in color from a dead black to the color of a hepatized lung. But I've never
seen one that reminded me of anything I ever saw in nature. The chair I sat in also had springs in
it. They were made of selections from the Washington Monument. The barber, who waited on me,
asked me if I wanted a shave. A great many barbers asked me this during the year. Sometimes they do it
from habit. Sometimes they do it to brighten up my life and bring a smile to my wan cheek. As I have no
hair. The thinking mind, naturally, and by a direct course of reasoning, arrives at the conclusion that
when I go into a barber shop and climb into a chair, I do so for the purpose of getting shaved,
and not with the idea of having my fortune told or my deposition taken. Still, barbers continue to
ask me this question and look at each other with ill-concealed mirth. I said yes, I would like a
shave, unless he preferred to take my temperature, or amuse me by making a death mask of himself. He then
began to strap a large razor with a double-suffle movement and to size me up at the same time.
He was a colored man, but he had lived in Washington a long time and knew a great deal more than
he would if his lot had fallen elsewhere. He spoke with some feeling and fed me with about the
most unpalatable lather I think I ever participated in. He also did an odd thing when he went
for the second time over my face. I never have noticed the custom outside of that shop.
most barbers in making the second trip over a customer's face,
moisten one side at a time with a sponge or the damp hand as they go along.
But in this case, a large quantity of lather was put in my ear,
and as he needed it, he took out what he required from time to time
and using his finger like a paintbrush,
and spreading on the lather as he went along.
So accurately had he learned to measure the quantity of lather which an ear will hold,
that when he got through with me and I went away,
there is not over a tablespoonful in either ear, and possibly not that much.
Well, I sat in the chair. I heard a man who seemed to be in about the third chair from me,
saying that a certain bill numbered so-and-so had been referred to a certain committee
and would undoubtedly be reported favorably. If so, it would in its regular order come up for discussion
and reach a vote so-and-so. I was charmed with a man's knowledge of the condition of affairs
in both houses and the exact status of all threatened legislation,
because I always have to stop and think a good while
before I can tell whether a bill originates on the floor of the House
or in the rotunda.
I cannot see this man, but I judged that he was a senator or sergeant-at-arms.
He talked for some time about the condition of national affairs,
and finally, someone said something about evolution.
I was perfectly wrapped up in what he was saying,
and remember distinctly how he referred to Herbert Spencer's definition of evolution
as a change from indefinite, coherent, heterogeneity,
through continuous differentiations and integrations.
When I arose from my chair and looked over that way,
I saw that the gentleman who had been talking on the condition of congressional legislation
was a colored hotel porter of Washington,
who was getting shaved in the third chair,
and the man who is discussing the merits of evolution
was a colored man who is shaving him.
Here in Washington, the colored man has the air of one who is holding up one corner
of the great national structure.
Whether he is opening your soft-boiled eggs for you in the morning,
morning, or putting bay rum on your nose, or checking your umbrella, or brushing you with a
wilted whisk broom, his thoughts are mostly upon national affairs. He is naturally an imitator wherever
he goes, and this old resident of Washington has watched and studied the air and language of
eminent statesmen so carefully that when he goes forth in the morning with his whitewashing portfolio
on his arm, he walks unconsciously like Senator Everts, or John James Ingalls. I saw a colored man taking a
perpendicular lunch at the depot yesterday, and evidently the veteran Georgia Senator is his model,
for he cut his custard pie into large rectangular hunks and pushed it back behind his glottis with a
case knife, after which he drew in a saucerful of tea, with a loud and violent Ways and Means Committee
report, which reminded me of the noise made by an unwary cyclone trying to suck a cistern dry.
I think that the colored man exaggerated the imitation somewhat, but he was evidently trying to assume the
table manners of Senator Brown, of Georgia. For this reason, and for no other, members of the
cabinet, senators, representatives, judges, and heads of departments cannot be too careful in their
daily walk and conversation. Unconsciously, they are molding the customs, the manners, and the styles
of dress, which are to become the customs, the manners, and the dress of a whole race.
If I could today take our statesmen all apart, not so much for the purpose of examining their
works, but so that we could be alone and talk this matter over by ourselves, I would strive in my
poor, weak, faltering way to impress upon them the awful responsibility, which rests upon them
not only as polite and fluent conversationalists, classical and courteous debaters, speaking
pieces for the benefit of future conventions, of referring to each other as liars, traitors,
thieves, deserters, mummers, beats, and great immoral abscesses on the body politic, rehearsing
campaign speeches in Congress at an expense of $20 per day each, and meantime obstructing wholesome
tariff legislation, but as the conservators of etiquette, statesmanship, and morality for a race
of people, the great responsibility for whose welfare still rests upon us as a nation.
Only the day before yesterday I saw a thin, wiry, and colored gentleman pawing around in an
ash barrel for something, and I waited to see what he was after.
He resurrected a sad and dejected plug hat.
and though it was not half so good as the one he wore, he seemed much pleased with it, put it on.
I ventured to ask him why he had done so without improving his appearance,
and he said that for a long time he had been looking for a hat which would heighten the resemblance
which people had often noticed and remarked in days gone by both in person saw,
and general carriage walk and conversation saw, also in the matter of clear-cut and logical life sentences
as existing between himself saw and Senator Everett saw.
He believed that he had struck it, saw.
As spring warms up the air about Washington, the heating apparatus of the Capitol building begins to relax its interest,
and now you can visit most any part of the stately pile without being scrambled in your own and bum point.
Last winter I heard Senator Fry of Maine make his great tariff speech,
and although there is nothing about the speech itself which seemed to evolve much exercise or industry,
for it was the same speech in every essential quality that I have heard every November,
since I began to take an interest in politics.
The perspiration ran down his face in small washouts and sweatlets
and fell in the arena with a mellow plunk.
I believe this unnatural heat to be the cause of much ill health
among our lawmakers, and I freely admit that the unhealthy surroundings of Washington
and the great contrast between the hot air of the Capitol
and the cold air outside have done a great deal towards keeping me out of the Senate.
The night air of Washington is also filled with malaria,
yet, and is much worse than any night air I have ever used before.
End of Chapter 12. Chapter 13 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Lipervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
He Sees the Navy. It has become such a general practice to speak disrespectfully of the United States Navy
that a few days ago I decided to visit the Brooklyn Navy Yard for the purpose of ascertaining,
if possible, how much cause there might be for this light and airy manner of treating the Navy,
and if necessary, to take immediate steps towards purifying the system.
I found that the matter had been grossly misrepresented,
and that our Navy, so far as I was able to discover, is self-sustaining.
It has been thoroughly refitted and refurnished throughout,
and is as pleasant a Navy as one would see in a day's journey.
I had the pleasure of boarding the Man of War, Richmond, under a flag of truce, in the Atlantic,
under a suspension of the rules. I remained sometime on board each of these warships, and any man
who speaks lightly of the United States Navy and my presence hereafter will receive a stinging rebuke.
The Brooklyn Navy Yard was inaugurated by the purchase of 40 acres of ground in 1801. It has a pleasant
waterfront, which is at all times dotted here and there with new war vessels undergoing repairs.
Since the original purchase, others have been made in the land side of the yard enclosed by means of a
large brick wall, so that in case there should be a local disturbance in Brooklyn, the rioters
could not break through and bite the Navy. In this way, a man on board the Atlanta, while at
Anchor and Brooklyn, is just as safe as he would be at home. In order to enter an exploration,
the Navy Yard, it is necessary that one should have a pass. This is a safe card wisely adopted
by the commandant in order to keep out strangers who might get in under the pretext of wishing to
view the yard and afterwards attack one of the new vessels. On the day I visited the Navy Yard just
ahead of me, a plain but dignified person in citizens' dress passed through the gate. He had the
bearing of an officer, I thought, and kept his eye on some object about nine and one-fourth miles ahead,
as he walked past the guard.
He was told to halt, but of course he did not do so.
He was above it.
Then the guard overhauled him and even fell in his pockets for his pass, as I supposed.
Concealed on his person, the guard found four pint bottles filled with the essence of crime.
They poured the poor man's rum on the grass and then fired him out,
accompanied by a rebuke which will make him more deliberate about sitting down for a week or two.
The feeling against arduous spirits in the United States Navy is certainly on the increase,
and the day is not far distant when alcohol in a free state will only be used in the arts,
sciences, music, literature, and the drama.
The Richmond is a large but buoyant vessel painted black.
It has a front stairway hanging over the balcony,
and the latch string to the front door was hanging cheerily out as we drew alongside.
During an engagement, however, on the approach of the evening,
enemy, the front stairs are hauled up and the latch string is pulled in, while the commanding officer
makes the statement, April Fool, through a speaking trumpet to the chagrined and infuriated foe.
The Richmond is a veteran of the late war, a war which no one ever regretted more than I did,
not so much because of the bloodshed and desolation it caused at the time, but on account of the rude
remarks since made to those who did not believe in the war and whose feelings have been
repeatedly hurt by reference to it since the war closed. The guns of the Richmond are muzzle loaders,
i.e. the load or charge of ammunition is put into the other or outer end of the gun,
instead of the inner extremity or base of the gun, as is the case with the breach loader.
The breach loader is a great improvement on the old-style gun, making warfare a constant source of
delirious joy now, whereas in former times, in case of naval combat during a severe storm,
the man who went outside the ship to load the gun while it was raining, frequently contracted pneumonia.
Modern guns are made with breaches, which may be easily removed during a fight and replaced when visitors come on board.
A sort of grim humor pervades the above remark.
The Richmond is about to sail away to China.
I do not know why she is going to China, but presume she does not care to be here during the amenities, antipathies,
and aspersions of a presidential campaign.
A man of war would rather make some sacrifices generally
than to get into trouble.
I must here say that I would rather be captured by our naval officers
than by any other naval officers I have ever seen.
The older officers were calm and self-possessed
during my visit on board both of Richmond and Atlanta,
and the young fellows are as handsome as a steel engraving.
While gazing on them as they proudly trod the quarter-deck
or any other deck that needed it,
I was proud of my sack,
and I could not help thinking
that had I been an unprotected but beautiful girl,
hostile to the United States,
I could have picked out five or six young men there
to either of whom I would be glad
to talk over the details of an armistice.
I could not help enjoying fully
my hospitable treatment by the officers above referred to
after having been only a little while before,
rudely repulsed and most cruelly snubbed
by a haughty young cotton sock brood.
in a New York store.
When will people ever learn
that the way to have fun with me
is to treat me for the time being
as an equal?
It was Wash Day on board ship,
and I cannot help noticing
how the tyrant man asserts himself
when he becomes sole boss of the household.
The rule on board a man of war
is that the first man who on Wash Day
shall suggest a picked-up dinner,
shall be loaded into the double-barreled howitzer
and shot into the bosom of Venus.
On the clothes line I noticed a very few frills.
The lingerie on board a war vessel is severe in outline and almost harsh in detail.
Here the salt breezes search in vain for the singularly sod off and fluently trimmed toga of our home life.
Here all has changed.
From the basement to the top of the lightning rod from pit to dome, as I was about to say,
a belligerent ship on wash day is not gaily caparisoned.
The Atlanta is a fair representative of the modern war vessel
and would be the most effective craft in the world if she could use her guns.
She has all the modern improvements, hot and cold water, electric lights,
handy to depots and a good view of the ocean,
but when she shoots off her guns, they pull out her circles,
abrade her deck, concuss her rotunda,
contuse the main brace, and injure people who have always been friendly to the government.
Her guns are now being removed and new circles put in,
so that in future she would be enabled to give less pain to her friends
and squirt more gloom into the ranks of the enemy.
She is at present, as useful for purposes of defense,
as a revolver in the bottom of a locked-up bureau drawer,
the key of which is in the pocket of your wife's dress in a dark closet,
wherein also the burglar is, for the nonce, concealed.
Politics has very little to do with the conduct of a Navy yard.
No one would talk politics with me.
I could not arouse any interest there at all in the election.
Everyone seemed delighted with the present administration, however.
The Navy Yard always feels that way.
In the Chokie, or Brig at the Guard House,
I saw a sailor locked up who was extremely drunk.
How did you get here, my man? I asked.
Through the influence of prominent Democrat, you damn fool,
how'd you suppose? he unto me straightway did reply.
The sailor is sometimes infested with a style of arid humor,
which asserts itself in the most unlooked.
for fashion. I laughed
hardly, it is odd yet coarse
repartee, and went away.
The guardhouse contains a
choice collection of manacles, handcuffs,
lily irons, and other rare
gems. The lily irons
are not now in use.
They consist of two iron bands for the wrists,
connected by means of a
flat iron which can be opened up
to let the wrists into place.
Then they are both locked at one time by
means of a wrench, like the one
used by a piano tuner.
With a pair of lily irons on the wrists, and another pair on the ankles,
a man locked in the brig and caught out 2,000 miles at sea in a big gale,
with a rudder knocked off the ship and a large litter of kittens in the steam cylinder,
would feel almost helpless.
I had almost forgotten to mention the drugstore on board ship.
Each man of war has a small pharmacy on the second floor.
It is open all night, and prescriptions are carefully compounded.
Pure drugs, paints, oils, varnishes, and putty.
are to be had there at all times. The ship's dispensary is not a large room, but two ordinary men
and a truss would not feel crowded there. The druggist treated me well on board both ships,
and offered me my choice of antiseptics and anodynes, or anything else I might take a fancy to.
I shall do my trading in that line, hereafter, on board ship. The Atlanta has many very modern
improvements, and it's said to be a wonderful sailor. She also has a log. I saw it.
It does not look exactly like what I had as an old lumberman imagined that it would.
It is a book with writing in it about the size of the tax roll for 1888.
In the cupola of the ship, where the wheel is located,
there is also a big brass compass about as large as the third stomach of a cow.
In this, there is a little index or dingus, which always points towards the north.
That is all it has to do.
On each side of the compass is a large cannonball,
magnetized or polarized or influenced as to overcome the attraction of the needle for some desirable
portion of the ship. There is also an index connected with the shaft whereby the man at the wheel
can ascertain the position of the shaft and also ascertain at night whether the ship is
advancing or retreating, the thing that he should inform himself about at the earliest possible
moment. The culinary arrangements on board these ships would make many a hotel blush, and I have paid
$4 a day for a worse room than the chokie at the guardhouse.
In the Navy Yard at Brooklyn is the big iron hull or running gears of an old ship of some kind
which the Republicans were in the habit of hammering on for a few weeks prior to election every four years.
Four years ago, through an oversight, the workmen were not called off nor informed of Blaine's defeat
for several days after the election.
The Democrats have an entirely different hull in another part of the yard in which they are hammering.
The keel blocks of a new cruiser, 375 feet long, are just laid in the big shiphouse of the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
She will be a very airy and cheerful boat, I judge, if the keel blocks are anything to go by.
In closing this account, I desire to state that I hope I have avoided the inordinate use of marine terms
as I desire to make myself perfectly clear to the ordinary landsman,
even at the expense of beauty and style of description.
I would rather be thoroughly understood than confuse the reader while exerting myself to show my knowledge of terms.
I also desire to express my thanks to the United States Navy for its kindness and consideration during my visit.
I could have been easily blown into space half a dozen times without any opportunity to blow back through the papers,
had the Navy so desired, and yet nothing but terms of endearment passed between the Navy and myself.
Lieutenant Arthur P. Nazro, Chief Engineer Henry B. Nones, past assistant engineer, E. A. McGee, Captain F.H. Harrington of the United States Marine Corps. Mr. Gus C. Rotor, Apothecary Henry Wimmer, and the Dog Zib of the Richmond. Master Shipwright McGee, Captain Miller, Captain of the Yard, and Mr. Milligan, Apothecary of the Atlanta, deserve honorable mention for coolness and heroic endurance while I was there.
There.
End of Chapter 13.
Chapter 14 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
More about Washington, Washington, D.C.
I have just returned from a polite and resher-shae party here.
Washington is the hotbed of gaiety, and general headquarters for the Reshercée business.
It would be hard to find a Bon Tongar, Aggregor.
and the one I was just at, to use the words of a gentleman who was there,
and who asked me if I wrote the heathen Chinese.
He was a very talented man with a broad sweep of skull and a vague yearning for something more
tangible to drink.
He was in Washington, he said, in the interests of Mingo County.
I forgot to ask him where Mingo County might be.
He took a great interest in me and talked with me long after he really had anything to say.
He was one of those fluent conversationalists frequently.
met with in society. He used one of these web-perfecting talkers, the kind that can be fed with
raw Roman punch, and that will turn out punctuated talk in links, like varnished sausages.
Being a poor talker myself, and rather more fluent as a listener, I did not interrupt him.
He said that he was sorry to notice how young girls and their parents came to Washington
as they would to a matrimonial market. I was sorry also to hear it. It pained me to know that
young ladies should allow themselves to be bamboozled into matrimony. Why was it, I asked,
that matrimony should ever single out the young and fair? Ah, said he, it is indeed rough.
He then breathed a sigh that shook the foliage of the speckled geranium nearby, and killed
an artificial caterpillar that hung on its branches. Matrimony is all right, said he, if properly
brought about. It breaks my heart, though, to notice how Washington is used as a matrimonial market.
seems to me almost as if these here young ladies were brought here like slaves and exposed for sale i had noticed that they were somewhat exposed but i did not know that they were for sale i asked him if the wastes of party dresses had always been so sadly in the minority and he said they had
i danced with a beautiful young lady whose trail had evidently caught in a doorway she hadn't noticed it till she had walked out partially through her costume i do not think a lady ought to give too much thought to her a part of her
peril, neither should she feel too much above her clothes. I say this in the kindest spirit, because
I believe that man should be a friend to woman. No family circle is complete without a woman.
She is like a glad landscape to the weary eye. Individually and collectively, woman is a great
adjunct of civilization and progress. The electric light is a good thing, but how pale and feeble it
looks by the light of a good woman's eyes. The telephone is a great invention. It is a good thing to
talk at and murmur into and deposit profanity in, but to take up a conversation and keep it up
and follow a man out through the front door with it, the telephone has still much to learn from
woman. It is said that our government officials are not sufficiently paid, and I presume that is the
case, so it became necessary to economize in every way, but why should wives concentrate all their
economy on the waste of a dress? When chest protectors are so cheap as they now are, I hate to see people
suffer, and there is more real suffering, more privation, and more destitution pervading the
Washington's scapula and clavicle this winter than I ever saw before.
But I do not hope to change this custom, though I spoke to several ladies about it, and
ask them to think it over. I do not think they will. It seems almost wicked to cut off the
best part of a dress and put it at the other end of the skirt, to be trodden under feet of man,
as I may say. They smiled good-humoredly at me as I tried to impress my views upon them,
but should I go there again next season and mingle in the mad whirl of Washington,
where these fair women are also mingling and said mad whirl,
I presume that I will find them clothed in the same gaslight waist
with trimmings of real vertebrae down the back.
Still, what does a man know about the proper costume for woman?
He knows nothing, whatever.
He is in many ways a little inconsistent.
Why does a man frown on a certain costume for his wife
and admire it on the first woman he meets?
Why does he fight shy of religion and Christianity and talk very freely about the church,
but get mad of his wife as an infidel?
Crops around Washington are looking well.
Winter wheat, crocuses, and indefinite postponements were never in a more thrifty condition.
Quite a number of people are here who are waiting to be confirmed.
Judging from their habits, they are lingering around here in order to become confirmed drunkards.
I leave here tomorrow with a large wet towel in my plug hat.
perhaps I should have said nothing on this dress reform question while my hat is fitting me so immediately.
It is seldom that I step aside from the beaten path of rectitude, but last evening, on the way home,
it seemed to me that I didn't do much else but step aside. At these parties, no charge is made for
punch. It is perfectly free. I asked a colored man who stood near the punch bowl,
and who replenished it ever and anon, what the damage was, and he drew himself up to his full height.
possibly I did wrong, but I hate to be a burden on anyone.
It seemed odd to me to go to a first-class dance
and find the supper and the band and the rum all paid for.
It must cost a good deal of money to run this government.
End of Chapter 14.
Chapter 15 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley.
A great benefactor.
It was not generally known at the time, but about a year.
year ago, a gentleman from Jaysburg named Allens and G. Meltz opened a law office in Chicago,
intending to give that city a style of clear-cut counseling, soliciting, conveyancing, prosecuting, and
defending, such as she had never witnessed before. He was young, but he was full of confidence,
and as he pulled the nails out of the dry goods boxes in which he had brought his revised statutes
and repleteen appliances, he felt ready and willing to furnish advice at living rates to
all who had come and examine his stock. But time kept on in his remorseless flight, bringing in at
the casement of Mr. Meltz, the roar and hum of traffic in the nut-brown flavor of the Chicago River,
but that was all. He was there, ready and almost eager to advise one and all, but one and all,
without exception, evaded him. No matter how gaily he lettered his window with the announcement
that he would procure a divorce for anyone without pain, married people continued to suffer on or go
elsewhere. Even though he had put up a transparency, divorces prepared while you wait.
No one called at his office, number six and five-eighth's Water Street, to get one.
Day after day, innumerable people went by him in the mad rush and hurry of life, married,
but not mated, forgetting that Mr. Meltz could relieve them without publicity.
Remorseless time had rolled on in this way for three months, now and then picking out a
fragment of the cornice on the new courthouse and braining a pedestrian with it, when one day,
Mr. Meltz was solicited by the proprietor of a new remedy for indigestion and brain fever to try his
medicine. He also told Mr. Meltz that in case of cure or beneficial effects, he desired to use
his endorsement, and as the remedy was new, he proposed to issue an addition of one million
circulars containing the endorsement of prominent professional people of Chicago. Alence and G. Meltz
bought a bottle and began using it.
In three weeks, the following endorsement
entered over a million and a half families
in the United States
at the expense of the man who owned the remedy.
Chicago, December 19, 1885.
Dr. J. Burdock Wells.
Sir, I am a lawyer of this city
and for the past year have been seriously
and dangerously afflicted with sharp,
darting pains up and down the spinal column,
dimness of sight,
acidity of the tonsils and ingrowing spleen. I suffered the agonies of the damned. I take this method of
informing the world, especially those who may be suffering as I did, that less than a month ago,
I was in a pitiful state. I have a large practice, especially as an attorney, in procuring
noiseless divorces. My office is at No. 6 and 5th, Southwater Street, and for years I have been
engaged in this line, procuring divorces for thousands everywhere, orders filled by mail,
by a new system of my own, by which applicants, throughout the union, may be treated at a distance
as well as in my office. This had so taken up my time and engrossed my attention that before I knew
it, my health had become impaired materially, and I did not know at any time but that the next
succeeding moment might be my subsequent one. With clients calling on me and pressing me by mail
for their services, with persistent people hurrying and urging me for divorces, so that they could
marry someone else without unnecessary delay, I was stricken down with ingrowing spleen and gastric
yearning of the most violent character. My physicians gave me up. They said I could never recover. I was in
despair. At that moment, like a clap of thunder from a clear sky, came Dr. J. Burdock Wells, with a bottle of
his unerring bile renovator and gastric rectifier. I took one bottle and called for another. In a little while,
I began to hope. When I arose in the morning, my mouth did not taste like that of a total stranger
anymore. In one week, my eye had recovered its old brilliancy, and in ten days I was back in my office again
at No. 6 and 5'8 Southwater Street, rapidly catching up with my large business in answering all
calls made upon me from all quarters. I have not only regained my health, but I have been the
humble means since my recovery of bringing peace to many an aching heart. One man from Kansas,
writes me, your recovery was indeed a great boon to me. You have saved my life. Whenever I want a divorce
again, I shall surely go to you. God bless you and prolong your life for many years that you may
go on spreading joy and hope again throughout our broad land, furnishing your automatic and
delightful divorces to those who suffer. I can most heartily endorse Dr. J. Burdock Welles' remedy,
and would cheerfully recommend it to those who have tried everything else without success. I would be
glad to have any or all who suffer, call at my office, number six and five-eight South Water Street,
if they doubt my recovery, when they will find me removing superfluous husbands or wives,
absolutely, without pain. Allenson G. Meltz. Attorney and counselor at law, solicitor and chancery,
practices in all the courts, divorces sent COD at a moment's notice. Try our home treatment for divorce.
A man who visited Mr. Meltz's office last week says that his business is simply enormous,
and that he has added to his former office the gorgeous room in number seven and a half.
People are now coming from all quarters of the globe to get Mr. Meltz to administer his divorces to them.
End of Chapter 15.
Chapter 16 of Bill Nye's Parks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
the coupon letter of introduction the interchange of letters of introduction between old friends by which valuable acquaintances are added to the list is a great blessing and in good hands these letters have no doubt been the beginning of many a warm friendship
But, like all other blessings, it has been greatly abused.
I have been the recipient of letters, presented by tourists,
which it was easy to see, had been rung from some sand-bagged friend of mine.
Letters with sobs between the lines, letters punctuated with invisible signals,
calling upon me to remember that the bearer had looked over the writer's shoulder
as each sentence grew into a polite prevarication.
To those who are in the habit of giving hearty letters of introduction
and endorsement to casual acquaintances,
I desire to say that I am perfecting a system
by which the drugged and kidnapped writer
of a style of assumed sincerity and bogus hilarity
will be thoroughly protected.
Let me explain briefly, and then illustrate my method.
A casual acquaintance who has met you,
say four or five times,
and who feels thoroughly intimate with you,
calling you by the name that no one uses but your wife,
approaches you with an air of confidence
that betrays his utter ignorance,
of himself and asks for a letter of introduction in the same serious vein in which one asks for a match.
You are already provided with my numbered introductory letter pad. You write the letter of
introduction on a sheet, numbered to correspond with a letter of advice, mailed simultaneously to the
person who is to submit to the letter of introduction. For instance, a young man, inclined to be
fresh, enters your office or library and states that he is going abroad. He has learned that you
are intimate with Dom Pedro of Brazil. Perhaps you have conveyed that idea unintentionally while in the
young man's presence at some time. So now he asks the trifling favor of a letter of introduction to the
emperor. He is going to see the president and cabinet and the members of the Supreme Court before he
leaves this country. When he goes to South America, he naturally wants to meet Dom Pedro. So you fill out
the right-hand end or coupon of the sheet as follows. International Introductionary Letter System
form Z-23, number B-135-986, New York, December 25, 1886.
Sir, you will please honor this letter of introduction in accordance with the terms of a certain
letter of advice numbered as above, and bearing even date herewith, mailed to you this day
and oblige, yours, etc. A, B. The young man goes abroad with this letter in closed in a maroon
alligator-skin pocketbook, and when he arrives in,
In Brazil, he finds that the way has been paved for him by the following letter of advice.
International introductory letter system, form Z-23, New York, December 25, 1886, number B-135-986.
Sir, Mr. W., a young man with great assurance and a maroon-colored alligator-skin pocketbook,
bearing a letter of introduction to you numbered as above, is now at large.
He will visit Europe for a few weeks, after which he will tour about South
America. He will make a specialty of volcanoes and monarchs. He will offer to exchange photographs with you,
but you must use your own judgment about complying with this request. Do not allow this letter to
influence you in the matter. You will readily recognize him by the wonderful confidence which he has in
himself and which is not shared by those who know him here. He is a fluent conversationalist and can
talk for hours without fatigue to himself. You will find it very difficult to wound his feelings, but
there would be no harm in trying.
Should you get this letter in time,
you might do as you thought best in the matter of quarantine.
Some foreign powers are doing that way.
Mr. W. has met a great many prominent people in this country.
What this country needs is more free trade on the high seas
and better protection for its prominent people.
I've tried to be conservative in what I've said here,
and if I have given you a better opinion of the young man
than his conduct on fuller acquaintance will warrant,
I assure you that I have not done so intentionally.
You will notice at once that he is a self-made man,
so your admiration for the works of nature need not be in any way diminished.
With due respect, your most obedient servant, A.B.
To his Imperial Highness D. Pedro, Esquire,
Brazil, South America, number Z-30865.
Sir, this letter of advice will probably proceed
a tall youth named Brindley.
Mr. Brindley is a young man who, by a strange combination of circumstances, is the eldest son of a perfect gentleman, who now has and will ever continue to have my highest esteem, and my promissory note for $250.
Will you kindly bear this in mind while you peruse my pleading letter of introduction which will accompany Mr. Brindley, Jr., all through his stormy and tempestuous career in the capacity of son to his father?
He has never done anything that the grand jury could get a hold of.
Treat him as well as you can consistently,
and if you can get him a position in a bank,
I'm sure his father would appreciate it.
A place in a bank where he would not have anything to do
but look pretty and declare dividends in a shrill, falsetto voice,
would please him very much.
He is a very good declaimer.
He is not accustomed to manual toil,
but he has always yearned to do literary work.
If he could do the editorial work connected with a site,
draft department, or write humorous endorsements on the backs of checks over a nom de plume,
it would tickle the boy almost to death. Anything you could do toward getting him a position in a large
bank that is nailed down securely would be thoroughly appreciated by me, and I should be glad to
retaliate at any time. Yours candidly, Wyman Dayton. To Mr. K. O. Peck, London. A beautiful
feature of this invaluable system is the understanding to which everybody,
is committed that the original letter is entirely worthless on its presentation,
unless the letter of advice has been already received.
End of Chapter 16.
Chapter 17 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevux recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
How to Teach Journalism
I'm glad to know Cornell University is to establish a department of journalism next September.
I have always claimed that Journalism,
could be taught in universities and colleges just as successfully as any other athletic exercise.
Of course, you cannot teach a boy how to jerk a giant journal from the clutches of decay
and make of it a robust and rip-snorting shaper and trimmer of public opinion
in whose counting room people will walk all over each other in their mad efforts to insert
advertisements. You cannot teach this in a school anymore than you can teach a boy how to
discover the open polar sea, but you can teach him the rudiments and save him
a good deal of time experimenting with himself.
Boys spend small fortunes in the best years of their lives
learning the simplest truths in relation to journalism.
We grope on blindly,
learning this year perhaps how to distinguish an italic shooting stick when we see it,
or how to eradicate type lice from a standing galley.
Learning next year, how to sustain life on an annual pass
in a sample early rose potato,
weighing four pounds and measuring 11 inches in circumference.
This is a slow and tedious way to obtain journalistic training.
If this can be avoided or abbreviated, it will be a great boon.
As I understand it, the Department in Cornell University will not deal so much with actual newspaper experience
as it will with construction and style and writing.
This is certainly a good move, for we must admit that we can improve very greatly our style and the purity of our English.
For instance, I select an exchange at random, and on the telegraphic page,
I find the details of a horrible crime.
It seems that an old lady, who lived by herself almost,
and who had amassed between $16 and $17,
was awakened by an assassin,
dragged from her bed, and cruelly murdered.
The large telegraph headline reads,
Drug from her bed and murdered.
This is incorrect in orthography, syntax, and prosody,
bad in form and inelegant in style,
carefully parsing the word drug as it appears,
here, I find that it does not agree with anything in number, gender, or person. I do not like to
criticize the style of others when I know that my own is so faulty, but I am sure that the word
drug should not be used in this way. Take the following also from the Kansas correspondence of the
Statesville-N-O landmark. There were several bad accidents in and around Clearwater during my absence
from home. The saddest one was the shooting of one Peter Peterson by his father. They were out
rabbit hunting in the snow. A rabbit got up and started to run. The son was in a swag of a place and the
father was taking aim at the rabbit. The son at the same time was trying to get a shot at it and not
knowing that his father was shooting, ran between the rabbit and his father and was killed dead,
falling on the snow with his gun grasped in his hands and never moved. He still carried that
pleasant smile which he had on an expectation of shooting that jack rabbit when put in the grave.
Wheat is selling at about 60 cents, corn, $0.40.
to 50 cents, fat hogs, gross four and a half to four and three-fourths, fat steers four and a fourth,
butcher's stock, two cents. It is hard to say just exactly wherein this is faulty, but something is the
matter with it. I would like to get an expression of opinion from those who take an interest in such
things as to whether the fault is in orthopee, orthography, anatomy, obituary, or price current,
or whether it consists in writing several features too closely in the same paragraph. It would also
be a good idea to establish a chair for advertisers in some practical college in order that they
might run in for a few hours and learn how to write an advertisement so that it would express in the
most direct way what they desired to state. Here is an advertisement, for instance, which is given
exactly as written and punctuated. Mrs. Dr. Edwards, the great Western clairvoyant, has arrived and
will remain only a short time. Call it once at Hotel Windsor, 119, 121, and 123 East State.
Street Street, Room 19, third floor. Please take elevator. The greatest and most natural born and
highly celebrated, and well known all over the country, clairvoyant, now traveling on the road,
and wonder from the Pacific Coast. Seventh daughter of the seventh daughter, born with
veil and second sight, every mystery revealed, if one you love is true or false, removes trouble,
settles lovers quarrel, causes a speedy marriage with one you love, valuable information to gentlemen
on all business transactions,
how to make profitable investments
for speedy riches,
lucky numbers,
Egyptian talisman for the unlucky,
cures mysterious and chronic diseases.
All who are sick or in trouble from any cause
are invited to call without delay.
I have always claimed that clairvoyance
could be made a success
if we could find someone who is sufficiently natural born
to grapple with it.
Now Mrs. Edward seems to know what is required.
She was born utterly without affectation.
When she was born, she just seemed to say to those who happened to be present at the time,
fellow citizens, you will have to take me just as you find me.
I cannot dissemble or appear to be otherwise than what I am.
I am the most natural born and highly celebrated all over the country,
Clairvoyant now traveling on the road and wander from the Pacific coast.
She then led off a whoop that ripped open the sable robes of night,
after which she took a light lunch and retired to her dressing room.
Ex-Mair Henry C. Robinson of Hartford, Connecticut, if I am not mistaken, suggested a school of journalism at least 12 years ago, but it did not meet with immediate and practical endorsement.
Now, Cornell comes forward and seems to be in earnest, and I am glad of it. The letters received from day to day by editors and written to them by men engaged on other pursuits, practically admit and prove that there is not now in existence an editor who knows enough to carry liver to a bear.
That is the reason why every means should be used to pull this profession out of the mire of
dense ignorance and place it upon the high dry soil which leads to genius and consanguinity.
The above paragraph I quote from a treatise on journalism which I wrote just before I knew
anything about it.
The life of the journalist is a hard one, and although it is not so trying as the life of
the newspaper man, it is full of trials and perplexities.
If newspaper men and journalists did not stand by each other,
I do not know what joy they would have.
Kindness for each other, gentleness and generosity, even in their rivalry,
characterized the conduct of a large number of them.
I shall never forget my first opportunity to do a kind act for a fellow newspaper man,
nor with what pleasure I availed myself of it,
though he was my rival, especially in the publication of large and spirited equestrian handbills and posters.
He also printed a rival paper and assailed me most bitterly from time to time.
His name was Lorenzo Dow Peas, and we had carried on an acrimonious warfare for two years.
He had said that I was a reformed prohibitionist, and that I had left a neglected wife in every
state in the Union.
I had stated that he would give better satisfaction if he would wear his brains breaded.
Then he had said something else that was personal, and it had gone on so for some time.
We devoted 15 minutes each day to the management of our respective papers,
and the balance of the day to doing each other up in a way to please our subscribers.
One evening, Lorenzo Dow Peas came into my office, said he wanted to see me personally.
I said that would suit me exactly, and that if he had asked to see me in any other way,
I did not know how I could have arranged it.
He said he meant that he would like to see me by myself.
I therefore discharged the force, turned out the dog, and we had the office to ourselves.
I could see that he was in trouble.
For every little while he would brush away a tear.
in an underhanded kind of way and swallow a large imaginary mass of something.
I asked Lorenzo why he felt so depressed, and he said,
William, I have came here for a favor.
He always said, I have came, for he was a self-made man and hadn't done a very good job either.
I have came here for a favor.
I wrote a reply to your venomous attack of today, and I expected to publish it tomorrow in my paper.
But to tell you the truth, we are out of paper.
At least we have a few bundles at the freight office, but they have taken descending at COD,
and I have in the means just at hand to take it out.
Now, as a brother in the great and glorious order of journalism,
would it be too much for you to loan me a couple of bundles of paper to do me till I get my pay
for some equestrian bills struck off Friday at just as good as the wheat?
How long would a couple of bundles last you?
I asked as I looked out at the window and wondered if he would reveal his circulation.
Five issues and a little over, he said.
filling his pipe from a small box on the desk.
But you could cut off your exchanges and then it would last longer, I remarked.
Yes, but only for one additional issue.
I am very anxious to appear tomorrow because my subscribers will be looking for a reply to what you said about me this morning.
You stated that I was a journalistic bacteria looking for something to infect.
And while I did not come here to get you to retract, I would like it as a favor if you had loaned me enough white paper to set myself straight before my subscribers.
"'Well, why don't you go and tell them about it?'
"'It wouldn't take long,' I said, in a jocund way, slapping Lorenzo on the back.
"'But he did not laugh.
"'I then told him that we only had paper enough to last us till our next bill came,
"'and so I could not possibly loan any.
"'But that if he would write a caustic reply to my editorial,
"'I would print it for him.'
"'He caught me in his arms, and then for a moment his head was pillowed on my breast.
"'Then he sat down and wrote the following card.
Editor of the Boomerang
Will you allow me through your columns
to state that in your issue of yesterday
you did me a great injustice by referring to me
as a journalistic bacteria
looking for something to infect
also as a lop-eared germ of contagion
and warning people to vaccinate
in order to prevent my spread?
I denounce the whole article
is a malicious falsehood
and state that if you will only give me a chance
I will fight you on site.
All I ask is that you will wait
till I can overtake you
and I am able and willing to knock great chunks off the universe with you.
I do not ask any favors of an editor who misleads his subscribers
and intentionally misunderstands its correspondence.
A man who advises an anxious inquirer who wants to know
how to get a cheap baby buggy to leave the child at a cheap hotel.
A man who assumes to wear brains but who really thinks with a fungus growth.
A man the bleak and barren exterior of whose head is only equaled by its bald and echoing interior.
here, Lorenzo Dow Pease. I looked it over, and as there didn't seem to be anything personal in it,
I told him I would print it for him with pleasure. He then asked that I would, as a further favor,
refrained from putting any advertising marks on it, and that I would make it follow pure reading matter,
which I did. I ledded the card and printed it with a simple word of introduction,
in which I said that I took pleasure in printing it, inasmuch as Mr. Pease could not get his paper,
out of the express office for a few days.
It was a kindness to him and did not hurt my paper in the end.
There are many reasons why the establishment of a department of journalism at Cornell
will be a good move, and I believe that while it will not take the place of actual experience,
it will serve to shorten the apprenticeship of a young newspaper man
and the fatigue of starting the amateur and journalism will be divided between the managing editor
and the tutor.
It will also give the aspiring sons of wealthy parents a chance to toy with journalism.
without interfering with those who are actually engaged in it.
End of Chapter 17.
Chapter 18 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
His Garden
I always enjoy a vegetable garden, and through the winter I look forward to the spring days
when I will take my cob pipe and hoe and go joyously afield.
I like to toy with the moist earth and the common squirt.
squash bug of the work-a-day world. It is a pleasure also to irrigate the garden, watering the
sauerkraut plant and the timid tomato vine as though they were children asking for a drink.
I am never happier than when I am engaged in irrigating my tropical garden or climbing my neighbor
with a hoe and he shuts off my water supply by sticking an old pair of pantalins in the canal
that leads to my squash conservatory. One day a man shut off my irrigation that way and dammed the
water up to such a degree that I shut off his air supply, and I was about to say, damned him up also.
We had quite a scuffle. Up to that time, we had never exchanged a harsh word. That morning I noticed
that my early climbing horseradish and my dwarf army worms were looking a little au revoir,
and I wondered, what was the matter? I had been absent several days and was grieved to notice that
my garden had a kind of blaze air, as though it needed rest and change of scene. The pull into China
eggplant looked up sadly at me and seemed to say,
Pardon, don't you think it's a long time between drinks?
The watermelon seemed to have a dark brown taste in its mouth,
and there is an air of gloom all over the garden.
At that moment, I discovered my next-door neighbor at the ditch on the corner.
He was singing softly to himself.
Oh, yes, I'll meet you.
I'll meet you when the sun goes down.
He was also jamming an old pair of Rembrandt pants into the canal
where they would shut off my supply.
He stood with his back towards me, and just as he said he would meet me when the sun went down,
I smote him across the back of the neck with my hoe handle,
and before he could recover from the first dumb surprise and wonder,
I pulled the dripping pantaloons out of the ditch and tied them in a true lover's knot around his neck.
He began to look black in the face, and his struggles soon ceased altogether.
At that moment his wife came out and shrieked two pure womanly shrieks,
and hissed in my ear.
have killed me husband. I said, possibly I had. If so, would she please send in the bill,
and I would adjust it at an early day. I said this in a bantering tone of voice, and raising my hat
to her in that polished way of mine, started to go, when something fell with a thud on the Greensward.
It was the author of these lines. I did not know till two days afterward that my neighbor's wife
wore a moire antique rolling pin under her apron that morning. I did not suspect it. I did not
suspected till it was too late. The affair was kind of hushed up on account of the respectability of
the parties. By the time I had recovered, the garden seemed to melt away into thin air. My neighbor had
it all his own way, and while his proud Hollyhocks and Johnny jump-ups reared their heads to drink the
mountain water at the twilight hour, my little low-necked summer squashes curled up and died. Most every year yet
I made a garden. I pay a man $3 to plow it. Then I pay $7.50 for garden seeds, and in July, I hire the same man at $3 to Summerfellow the whole thing while I go and buy my vegetables of a Chinaman named One Lung. I've done this now for eight years, and I owe my robust health and rich olive complexion to the fact that I've got a garden and do just as little in it as possible. Parties, desiring a dozen or more of my Shanghai
Eggplants to set under an ordinary domestic hen can procure the same by writing to me, an enclosing lock of hair, and ten dollars.
End of Chapter 18 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye. This Lipervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Written to the Boy, Asheville, North Carolina, February 16, 1887. My dear Henry, your last,
The last issue of the retina, your new thought vehicle, published at New Bellany, this state, was received yesterday.
I like this number, I think, better than I did the first.
While the news in it seems fresher, the editorial assertions are not so fresh.
You do not state that you have come to stay this week, but I infer that you occupy the same position you did last week, with reference to that.
I was more especially interested in your piece about how to rear children and the care of parents.
I read it to your mother last night while she was setting her bread.
Nothing tickles me very often at my time of life,
and when I laugh a loud peal of laughter at anything nowadays,
it's got to be a pretty blamed good thing, I can tell you that.
But your piece about bringing up children made me laugh real hard.
I enjoy a piece like that from the pen of a juicy young brain like yours.
It almost made me young again to read the words of my journalistic, gosling son.
You also say that teething is the most of the most of the most of the most of your life.
trying time for parents. Do you mean that parents are more fretful when they are teething than any other time?
Your mother and me reckoned that you must mean that. If so, it shows your great research.
How a mere child hardly out of knee panties, a young shoot like you, who is never a parent for a
moment in his life, can enter into and understand the woes that beset parents is more than I can
understand. If you had been through what I have while teething, I could see how you might understand
and write about it, but at present I do not see through it. The first teeth I cut as a parent made me
very restless. I was sick two years ago with a new disease that was just out, and the doctor
gave me something for it that made my teeth fall like the leaves of autumn. In six weeks after I began
to convales, my mouth was perfectly bald-headed. For days, I didn't bite into a Ben Davis apple
that I didn't leave a fang into it. Well, after that, I saw an advertisement in the rural rustler,
paper I used to take then, of a place where you could get a set of teeth for $6.
I didn't want to buy a high-priced and gaudy set of teeth at the tail end of such a life as I had
led, and I knew that teeth, no matter how expensive they might be, would be of little avail to
coming generations, so I went over to the place named in the paper and got an impression
of my mouth taken. There's really nothing in this life that will take the stiff-necked
pride out of a man like viewing a plaster cast of his tottering mouth.
The dentist fed me with a large ladle full of putty, or plaster of pairs, I reckon,
told me to hold it in my mouth till it set.
I don't remember a time in all my life when the earth and transitory things ever looked so undesirable
and so trifling as they did while I sat there in that big red barber chair with my mouth full of cold putty.
I felt just as a man might when he is being taxidermied.
After a while, the dentist took out the cast.
It was a cloudy day, and so it didn't look.
too much like me after all. If it had, I would have sent you one. After I'd said again two or three
times, we got a pretty fair likeness, he said, and I went home, having paid six dollars, and left my
address. Three weeks after that, a small boy came with my new teeth. They were nice, white, shiny
teeth, and did not look very ghastly after I had become used to them. I wished at first that the gums
had been a duller red, and that the teeth had not looked so new. I put them in my mouth, but they
felt cold and distant. I took them out and warmed them in the sunlight. People going by,
no doubt, thought that I did it to show that I was able to have new teeth, but that was not the case.
I wore them all that forenoon while I butchered. There were times during the forenoon when I wanted
to take them out, but when a man is butchering, he hates to take his teeth out just because they
hurt. Neighbors told me that after my mouth got hardened on the inside, it would feel better.
But oh, how it relieved me at night to take those teeth out and put them on the top of a
cool bureau where the wind could blow through their whiskers. How I hated to resume them in the
morning and start in on another long day when the roof of my mouth felt like a big red bunion,
my gums like a pale red stone bruise. A year ago, Henry, about 2.30 in the afternoon, I think it was,
I left that set of teeth in the rare flank of a barbecue I was to in our town. Since then,
I have not been so pretty, perhaps, but I have no more unicorns on the rafters of my mouth,
and my note is just as good at 30 days as ever it was.
You are right, Henry, when you go on to state in your paper
that teething is the most trying time for parents.
Tata, as the feller says,
Your father.
End of Chapter 19.
Chapter 20 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Answers to Correspondence
George R. Beath, R. Kola, Illinois, writes to know the value of a silver dollar of 1878 with eight feathers in the eagle's tail.
It is worth what you can get for it, Mr. Beath.
Perhaps the better way would be to forward it to me, and I will do the best I can with it.
There being but eight feathers in the eagle's tail would be no drawback.
Send it to me at once, and I'll work it off for you, Mr. Beath.
Tudor, Tucson, Arizona, asks, what do you regard is the best method of teaching the Alph?
to children. Very likely my method would hardly receive your endorsement, but with my own children,
I succeed by using an alphabet with the names attached, which I give below. I find that by connecting
the alphabet with certain easy and interesting subjects, the child rapidly acquires knowledge
of the letter, and it becomes firmly fixed in the mind. I use the following list of alphabetical
names in the order given below. A is for antediluvian, anarchistic, and agamemnon. B is for
Busephalus, Burgundy, and Bullhead. C is for Cantherides, Confucius, and Casablanca.
D. D. D.E.O.O.O.O.D., Delphi. And Dishabille. E. E. is for Euripides, European, and effervescent.
F. F. Firmagate, feronaceous, and fundamental. G. is for garrulous, gastric, and gangrene.
H. is for haemstrap, honeysuckle, and hoil. I is for idiosyncrasy, idiomatic,
and iodine. J is for Jondas, Jamaica, and Joy de Spiree. K is for Candelphi, Kindergarten,
and Ku Klux. L is for Lopsided, Lazarus, and Yano Estacado. M is for meningitis, Mardi Gras,
and Mesopotamia. N is for Narraganset, Neapolitan, and Nix Comoros. O is for oleander, oleogenes,
and oleomargarine. P is for flabargarine. P is for flabarararine. P is for flabararar.
Phthach, and Parabola.
Q is for query, quasi, and quits.
R is for rejuvenate, Regina, and Replicat.
S is for simultaneous, sagouch, and saleratus.
T is for tubercular, thermostocles, and thereabouts.
U is for ultramarine, uninitiated, and utopian.
B is for voluminous, Voltaire, and Vivisection.
W is for Witherspoon.
woodcraft and washerwoman. X is for Xenophon, Xerxes, and X-Mis.
Y is for Istli, Yahoo, and Yellowjacket. Zee is for Zoological, Zanzibar, and Zacatechus.
In this way, the eye of the child is first appealed to. He becomes familiar with the words
which begin with a certain letter, and before he knows it, the letter itself has impressed itself
upon his memory. Sometimes, however, where my children were slow to remember a word,
and hence its corresponding letter,
I have drawn the object on a blackboard,
or on the side of the barn.
For instance, we will suppose that D is hard to fix in the mind of the pupil,
and the words to which it belongs as an initial
do not readily cling to memory.
I have only to draw upon the board a Deuteronomy, a Delphi,
or a Dishaville, and he will never forget it.
No matter how he may struggle to do so,
it will still continue to haunt his brain forever.
The same with Z, which is a very difficult letter to remember.
I assist the memory by stimulating the eye, drawing rapidly and crudely perhaps, a zoological, a zanzibar, or a zucketekas.
The great difficulty in teaching children the letters is that there is really nothing in the naked alphabet itself to win a child's love.
We must dress it in attractive colors and gaudy plumage, so that you will be involuntarily drawn to it.
Those who have used my method say that after mastering the alphabet, the binomial theorem and the rule in Shelley's case
seemed like child's play. This goes to show what method and discipline will accomplish in the mind of the young.
Fond mother, Braley's Fork, asks,
What shall I name my little girl baby? That will depend upon yourself very largely, fond mother.
Very likely if your little girl is very rugged and grows up to be the fat woman in a museum,
she will wear the name of Lily. When a girl is named a Lily, she at once manifests a strong desire
to grow up with a complexion like Othello, and the same fatal yearning for her name.
someone to strangle. This is not always thus, but girls are obstinate, and it is better not to put a name
on a girl baby that she will not live up to. Again, font mother, let me urge you to refrain from
naming your little daughter a soft flabby name like Irma, Geraldine, Bandeline, Lillelia, Potassa, Valerian,
Rosetta, or Castoria. These names belong to the inflammatory pages of the American novelette.
Do not put such a name on your innocent child. Imagine this inscription.
on a marble slab.
Trifoliata,
beloved daughter of Gerald and Vaseline Tubbs,
died March 27, 1888.
She caught cold in her front name.
I have seen a young lady try faithfully for years
to live down one of these flimsy cheesecloth names,
but the harsh world would not have it.
A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches,
and while I can imagine your little girl in future years,
as a white-haired and lovely grandmother,
wearing the name of Mary or Ruth,
with a double chin that seems to ever beckon the old gentleman
to come and chuck his fat forefinger under it,
I cannot, in my mind's eye, see her as a household deity,
wearing a white cap in the name of rosette, or panumbra,
or sagodontia, or catalpa, or voxhumania.
End of Chapter 20.
Chapter 21 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain,
read by Dale Barkley.
the farmer and the tariff on board a western train the other day i held in my bosom for over seventy-five miles the elbow of a large man whose name i do not know he was not a railroad hog or i would have resented it he was built wide and he couldn't help it so i forgave him
he had a large gentle kindly eye and when he desired to spit he went to the car door opened it and decorated the entire outside of the train forgetting that our speed would help to give scope
to his remarks. Naturally, as he sat there by my side, holding on tightly to his ticket,
and evidently afraid the conductor would forget to come and get it, I began to figure out in my mind
what might be his business. He had pounded one thumb so that the nail was black, where the
blood had settled under it. This might happen to a shoemaker, a carpenter, a blacksmith, or almost
anyone else. So it didn't help me out much, though it looked to me as though it might have been done
by trying to drive a fence nail, through a leather hinge with the back of an axe,
and nobody but a farmer would try to do that.
Following up the clue, I discovered that he had milk on his boots,
and then I knew I was right.
The man who milks before daylight in a dark barn,
when the thermometer is 28 degrees below zero,
and who hits his boots by reason of the uncertain light and prudishness of the cow,
is a marked man.
He cannot conceal the fact that he is a farmer unless he removes that badge.
So I started out on that theory
and remarked that this would pass
for a pretty hard winter on stock.
The thought was not original with me,
for I have heard it expressed by others
either in this country or Europe.
He said it would.
My cattle has gone through a moleful of hay
since October and 11 ton of brand.
Hay don't seem to have the goodness to it
that it had last year,
and with their new processed grist mills,
they jerk all the juice out of brand,
so as you might as well feed cows with excelsior
and upholster your horses with hemlock bark as to buy a brand.
Well, why do you run so much to stock?
Why don't you try diversified farming and rotation of crops?
Well, probably you got that ID in the papers.
A man that earns big wages writing farm hints for agricultural papers
can make more money with a soft lead pencil
and two or three season cracked IDs like that,
and I can carrying of them out on the farm.
We used to have a feller in the drugstore in our town
that wrote such good pieces for the rural Vermont,
and made up such a good condition powder out of his own head that two years ago we asked him to write an essay for the annual meeting of the buckwheat trust and to use his own judgment about choice of subject and what do you suppose he had selected for an essay that took the whole forenoon to read what subject you mean yes give it up well he'd wrote out that whole blamed intellectual wad on the subject of the inhumanity of dehorning hydraulic rams how's that
That's pretty fair.
Well, farming is like running a paper in regard to some things.
Every feller in the world will take and turn in and tell you how to do it,
even if he don't know a blame thing about it.
There ain't a man in the United States today that don't secretly think he could run airy-one
if his other business busted on him, whether he knows the difference between a new milk cow
or a horse hayrake or not.
We had one of these embroidered nightshirt farmers come from town better than three years ago,
been a toilet soap man and done well.
And so he came out and bought a farm that had nothing to it but a fancy house and barn,
a lot of metter in the front yard, in a southern aspect.
The farm was no good.
You couldn't raise a disturbance on it.
Well, what does he do?
Goes and gets a pass-of-slim-tailed yellow cows from New Jersey,
and aims to handle cream and diversified farming.
Last year, the cuss sent a load of cream over,
tried to sell it at the new crematory while the funeral and holler-cost was going on.
I may be a sort of chump myself, but I read my paper.
and don't get left like that.
What are the prospects for farmers in your state?
Well, they are poor.
Never was so poor, in fact, since I've been there.
Folks wonder why boys leaves the farm.
My boys left so as to get protected, they said,
and so they went into a clothing store, one of them.
And one went into hardware,
and one is talking protection in the legislature this winter.
They said that farming was getting to be like fishing and hunting,
well enough for a man that has means and leisure,
but they couldn't make a living at it, they said.
Another boy is in a drugstore, and the man that hires him say he is a royal feller.
Kind of a castor royal feller, I said, with a shriek of laughter.
He waited until I had laughed all I wanted to, and then he said,
I've always hollered for high tariff in order to heist the public debt,
but now that we've got the national debt coopered,
I wish they'd take a little hack at mine.
I've put in 50 years farming.
I never drank liquor in any form.
I've worked from 10 to 18 hours a day, been ecumen.
economical in clothes and never went to a show more than a dozen times in my life.
Raised a family and learned upwards of 200 calves to drink out of a tin pail without blowing their
vittles up my sleeve. My wife worked alongside of me, sewing new seats on the boys' pants,
skimming milk, and even helping me load hay. For 40 years we toiled along together and hardly
got time to look into each other's faces or dared to stop and get acquainted with each other.
Then her health failed. Catched cold in the springhouse, probably skimming milk.
and washing pans and scald and bales and spanking butter.
Anyhow, she took in a long breath one day
while the doctor in me was watching her, and she says to me,
Henry, says she, I've got a chance to rest,
and she put one tired war out hand on top of the other tired war out hand,
and I knew she'd gone where they don't work all day and do chores all night.
I took time to kiss her then.
I'd been too busy for a good while previous to do that,
and then I called in the boys.
After the funeral, it was too much for them to stay around and eat the kind of cooking we had to put up with.
Nobody spoke up around the house as we used to.
The boys quit whistling around the barn and talked kind of low to themselves about going to town and getting a job.
They're all gone now, and the snow is four feet deep up there on Mother's grave in the old Buryan ground.
Then both of us looked out of the car window quite a long while without saying anything.
I don't blame the boys for going into something else long as other things pays better.
But I say, and I say what I know, that the man who holds the prosperity of this country in his hands,
the man that actually makes the money for other people to spend, the man that eats three good
simple square meals a day and goes to bed at nine o'clock so that future generations with good
blood and cool brains can go from his farm to the Senate and Congress and the White House.
He is the man that gets left at last to run his farm with nobody to help him, but a hired man
and a high protective tariff.
The farms in our state is mortgaged for over.
$700 million. Ten of our Western states, I see by the papers, has got about three billion and a
half mortgages on their farms, and that don't count the chattel mortgages filed with the town
clerks on farm machinery, stock, wagons, and even crops, by gosh, that ain't two inches high
under the snow. That's what the prospect is for farms now. The government is rich, but the men that made it,
the men that fought perrari fires and perrari wolves and engines and potato bugs and has paid the
war debt and pensions and everything else, and hollered for the union and the Republican part and
high tariff and anything else that they was told to, is left high and dry this cold winter,
with a mortgage of seven billions and a half on the farms they have earned and saved a thousand
times over. Yes, but look at the glory of sending from the farm the future president,
the future senator, and the future member of Congress. That looks well on paper, but what does it
really amount to? As soon as a farmer boy gets in a place like that, he forgets the soil.
it produced and holds his head as high as a hollyhock. He bellers for protection to everybody
but the farmer, and while he sails round in a he tidy-tidy room with a fire in it day and night,
his father on the farm has to kindle his own fire in the morning with elmslivers, and he has to
wear his son's lawn tennis suit next to him or freeze to death, and he has to milk in an old
gray shawl that has held that member of Congress since he was a baby by gory, and the old lady
has to sojourn through the winter and the flannels that Silas wore at the rigatur before he went to
Congress. So I say, and I think that Congress agrees with me, damn a farmer anyhow. And then he went
away. End of Chapter 21. Chapter 22 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye. This Libervox recording is in the
public domain, read by Dale Barkley. A conventional speech. During the recent conventions,
a great many good speeches have been made which did not get into print for various reasons.
Some others did not even get a hearing, and still others were prepared by delegates who could not get the eye of the presiding officer.
The manuscript of the following speech bears the marks of earnest thought,
and though the author did not obtain recognition on the floor of the convention,
I cannot bear to see an appreciative public deprived of it.
Mr. Chairman and gentlemen of the convention,
we are met together here as a representation of the greatest and grandest party in the world,
a party that has been first in peace, first in war,
and first in the hearts of its countrymen,
as the good book has it.
We come together here today, gentlemen,
to perpetuate by our action the principles which won us victory at the polls
and wrenched it from an irritated and disagreeable foe
on many a tented field.
I refer to freedom.
Our party has ever been the champion of freedom.
We have made a specialty of freedom.
We have ever been in the van.
That's why we have been on the move, where freedom a quarter of a century goes but a mere name.
Now we have fostered it and aided it and encouraged it and made it pay.
We have emancipated a whole race, several of whom have since voted the other way.
But we must not be discouraged.
We are here to work.
Let us do it and so advance our common cause and honor God.
But who is to be the leader?
Who will be able to carry our victorious banner from Portland, Maine to Portland,
Oregon, gaily speaking pieces from the tailgate of a train. Who is sufficiently obscure to
sively make the race? Cries of Jeremiah Amrask, Rudolph Minkins-Fitler, Blaine, James Wardout,
John Sherman, Charlie Kinney, etc. The eye of the nation is upon us. We cannot escape the awful
responsibility which we have today assumed. With all our anxiety to please our friends,
we must not forget that we are here in the interests of universal freedom.
To not allow yourselves to be blinded, gentlemen,
by the assurance that this is to be a businessman's campaign,
a campaign in which conflicting business interests are to figure more than the late war.
It is a fight involving universal freedom,
as I said in our conventions four, eight, and twelve years ago.
We have before us a pure and highly elocutionary platform.
Let us nominate a man who will, as I may say,
affiliate and amalgamate with that platform.
Who is that man?
Cries of Blaine, Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine. Blaine.
Lockwood, Lockwood, Belva A. Lockwood.
And general confusion, during which John A. Wise
is seen to jerk loose about a nickel's worth of Billy Mahones whiskers.
Mr. Chairman and gentlemen of the convention,
there has never been a more harmonious convention in the United States,
to my knowledge, since the Sioux Massacre in Minnesota.
We are all here for the best good of the party,
and each is willing to concede something rather than create any ill feeling.
Look at Mahone, for instance.
We have a good platform.
Now let us nominate a man whose record is in harmony with that platform.
Freedom has ever been our watchword.
Now that we have made the human race within our borders absolutely free,
let us add to our magnificent history as a party by one crowning act.
Let us fight for the emancipation of rum.
Rum has always been a mighty power in American politics, but it has not been absolutely free.
Let us be the first to recognize it as the great cornerstone of American institutions.
Let us make it free.
We have never had any Daniel Webster's or Henry Clay's since rum went up from 20 cents a gallon to its present price.
The war tax on whiskey for over 20 years has made freedom of farce, and liberty a loud and empty snort in mid-air.
Who then shall be our standard bearer as we journey onward towards victory?
Cries of Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine and confusion.
Gentlemen, I wish that a better and thrillinger orator had been selected in my place to name the candidate, on whom alone I can unite.
Soldiers, rail splitters, statesmen, canal boys, tailors, farmers, merchants and school teachers have been presidents of the United States.
But to my knowledge, no convention has ever yet known.
named a distiller. I have the honor today to name a modest man for the high office of president,
a man who never before allowed his name to be presented to a convention, a man who never even
stated in the papers that his name would not be presented to the convention, a man who has never
sought or courted publicity even in his own business, a man who has been a distiller in a quiet way
for over 15 years, and yet has never even advertised in the papers, a man who is so carefully shunned
to the eye of the world, that only two or three of us know where his place of business is,
a man who is such an utter contempt for office that he has shot two government officials who
claimed to be connected with the internal revenue business, a man who can drink or let it
alone, but who has aimed to divide the time up about equally between the two. A man who had
absolutely nothing to do with the war, not having heard about it in time, a man who defies
his calumniators or anybody else of his heft, a man who had paid him.
paint the White House red, a man who takes great pleasure in being his own worst enemy.
Cries of, name him, name him, great confusion and cries of pain from several harmonious delegates
for getting the worst of it. Not to take up your time, let me say in closing that the day for
great men as candidates for an important office is passed. Great men in a great country antagonize
different factions and are then compelled to fall back on literature. What we want is an obscure and
silent chump. I have found him. He has never antagonized but two men in his life, and they are now
voting in a better land. He is a plain man, and his career at Washington would be marked with more or less
tobacco juice. For over 15 years, he has been constructing, at his country seat, a lurid style of
whiskey known as the essence of crime. Quietly and unostentatiously, he has fought for the
emancipation of whiskey everywhere. He says that we are too prone to worry about. He is. He says that we are too
prone to worry about our clothes and their cost, and to give too little thought to our tax-ridden rum.
Then, Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, here in the full glare of public approval, feeling that the name
I am about to pronounce will in a few moments flash across a mighty continent and greet the
moist and moaning news editor, the grimy peasant, the pussy banker, and the streaked tennis player,
that the name I now nourish and my panting brain will soon be taken up on willing tongues and
born across the Union, rising and saluting the hot blue dome of heaven, pulsating across the ocean,
rocking the beautifully upholstered thrones of the old world, and calling forth a dark blue
torrent of profanity from the offices of the illustrated papers, none of which will be provided with
his portrait. I desire to name Mr. Clem Beasley of Arkansas, a man who has spent his best years
manufacturing man's greatest enemy. I hurrah for him and holler for him,
and love him for the hick enemy he has made.
End of Chapter 22.
Chapter 23 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley.
A plea for one in adversity.
I learn with much sadness that Mr. William H. Vanderbilt's once princely fortune
has shriveled down to $150 million.
This piece of information comes to me like a...
clap of thunder out of a clear sky. Once petted, fondled and caressed, William H. Vanderbilt,
shorn of his wealth and resting upon no foundation but his sterling integrity, must struggle along
with the rest of us. It would be but truth to say that Mr. Vanderbilt will receive very little
sympathy from the world now in the days of his adversity in penury where the wolf is at his door.
There are many of his former friends who will say that William could economize and struggle along
on $150 million, but let them try it once and see how they would like it themselves.
$150 million, with no salary outside of that amount, will not last forever.
A poor man might pinch along in such a case if he could get something to do,
but we must remember that Mr. Vanderbilt has always lived in comparatively comfortable circumstances.
His hands, therefore, are tender, and his stomach juts out into the autumn air.
He will, therefore, find it hard at first to husk corn,
and dig potatoes. When he stoops over a sawbuck around New York this winter, his stomach will be in the
way, and his vest will no doubt split open on the back. All these things will annoy the spoiled
child of luxury, and his broad features will be covered with sadness. They will, at least,
if there is sadness enough in the country to do it. The fall of William H. Vanderbilt,
and his headlong plund from the proud eminence to which his means had elevated him
downward to the cringing poverty of $150 million, should be a sad warning to us all.
This fate may fall to any of us. Oh, let us be prepared when the summons comes.
For one, I believe I am ready. Should the dread news come to me tomorrow that such a fate
had befallen me, I would nerve myself up to it and meet it like a man. With the ruin of my
former fortune, I would buy me a crust of bread and some pie, and then I would take the balance
and go over into Canada, and there I would establish a home for friendless bank cashiers who are now there,
several hundred of them, all alone, and with no one to love them. All kinds of charitable institutions
costing many thousands of dollars are built in America from year to year for the comfort of
homeless and friendless women and children, but man is left out in the cold. Why is this thus?
Lots of people in Canada, of course, are doing their best to make it cheerful and sunny for our lovely cash-eastern,
years there, but still it is not home. As a gentleman once said in my hearing,
there is no place like home. And he was right. In conclusion, I do not know what to say,
unless it be to appeal to the newspaper men of the country and Mr. Vanderbilt's behalf.
While he was wealthy, he was proud and arrogant. He said,
Let the newspapers be blankety-blanked to blank, were words to that effect, but we do not care for
that. Let us forget all that, and remember that his sad fate may someday be our own.
In our affluence, let us not lose sight
The fact that Van is suffering
Let us procure a place for him on some good paper
His grammar and spelling are a little bit rickety
But he could begin as janitor and gradually work his way up
Parties having clothing or funds which they feel like giving
May forward the same to me at Hudson, Wisconsin, post-paid
And if the clothes do not fit Van, they may possibly fit me
New York, October 7, 1883, Bill Nye
P.S. October 30th. Since issuing the above, I have received several consignments of clothes for the suffering,
also one sack of cornmeal, and a ham. Let the good work go on, for it is far more blessed to give than to receive,
I am told, and as Jay Gould said, when, as a boy, he gave the wormy half of an apple to his dear teacher,
half is better than the whole, H-O-L-E.
End of Chapter 23.
of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
The rhubarb pie.
In June, the medicated tropical fruit, known as the rhubarb pie, is in full bloom.
The farmer goes forth into his garden to find out where the coy, old-setting hen is hiding
from the vulgar gaze, and he discovers that his pie plant is ripe.
He then forms a syndicate with his wife for the purpose of publishing the seditious and rebellious
pie. It is singular that the War Department has never looked into the scheme for fighting the
Indians with rhubarb pie instead of the regular army. One half the army could then put in its
time court-martialing the other half, and all would be well. Rubarb undoubtedly has its place
in the materia medica, but when it sneaks into the pie of commerce, it is out of place. Castor oil
and capsicum and dynamite and chloroform and porous plasters and arsenic all have their uses of
in one way or another, but they would not presume to enter into the composition of a pie.
They know it would not be tolerated. But rhubarb, elated with its success as a drug,
forgets its humble origin, and aspires to become an article of diet. Now the pumpkin knows
its place. You never knew of a pumpkin trying to monkey with science. The pumpkin knows that it was
born to bury itself in the bosom of the pumpkin pie. It does not, therefore, go about the country,
claiming to be a remedy for spavin.
supposing that the gory yet toothsome steak that grows on the back of the 21-year-old stear's neck
should claim for itself that it could go into a drugstore and cure rheumatism and heartburn.
Wouldn't everyone say that it was out of place and uncalled for? Certainly.
The back of the tough old steers neck knows that it is destined for the mince pie
and nature did not intend otherwise.
So also with the vulcanized gristle, an Arctic overshoe heel,
and the shoestring and the white button,
and all those elements that go to make up the mince pie.
They do not try to make medicines and cordials and anodynes of themselves.
Rubarb is the only thing that successfully holds its place with the apothecary,
and yet draws a salary in the pie business.
I do not know how others may look at this matter, but I do not think it is right.
Still, you find this medicated pie in the social circle everywhere.
We guard our homes with the strictest surveillance in other matters,
and yet we allow the low vulgar pie-plant pie to creep into our houses and into our hearts.
That is, it creeps into our hearts figuratively speaking.
The heart is not, as a matter of fact, one of the digestive organs,
but I use the term just as all poets do under like circumstances.
Many, however, will always continue to use the rhubarb pie,
and for those I give below a receipt which has stood the test of years,
one which results in a pie that frosts in sudden atmospheric changes cannot injure.
None but the youngest rhubarb should be used in making pies.
Go out and kill your rhubarb with a club,
taking care not to kill the old and tough variety.
Give it a chance to repent.
Remove the skin carefully and take out the digestive economy of the plant.
Be specially careful to get off the fuzzy coating.
As rhubarb pies with hair on are not in such favor as they were when the country was new.
Now put in the basement of cement and throw on your rhubarb.
Flavor with linseed oil and hammer out the titheat.
top crust until it is moderately thin, then solder on the cover and drill holes for the copper
rivets. Having headed the rivets in place, nail on zinc monogram, and kill and dry the pie slowly.
When it is cooled, put on two coats of metallic paint and adjust the time lock.
After you find that the pie is impervious to the action of chilled steel or acids, remove and feed it to
the man and cheerfully pays for his whiskey and steals his newspaper.
End of Chapter
Chapter 25 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
A Country Fire
Last night I was awakened by the cry of fire.
It was a loud horse cry such as a large adult man might emit from his window on the night air.
The town was not large, and the fire department, I had been told, was not so effective as it should have been.
For that reason, I arose and carefully dressed myself in order to assist, if possible.
I carefully lowered myself from my room by means of a staircase,
which I found concealed in a dark and mysterious corner of the passage.
On the streets, all was confusion.
The hoarse cry of fire had been taken up by others,
passed around from one to another till it had swollen into a dull roar.
The cry of fire in a small town is always a grand sight.
All along the street in front of Mr. Pendergast's roller rink,
the blanched faces of the people could be seen.
Men were hurrying to and fro,
knocking the bystanders over in their frantic attempts to get somewhere else.
With great foresight, Mr. Pendergast,
who had that day finished painting his roller rink,
a dull rhone color,
removed from the building the large card
which bore the legend fresh paint,
so that those who are so disposed
might feel perfectly free to lead up against the rink
and watch the progress of the flames.
Anon the bright glare of the devouring element,
might have been seen bursting through the casement of Mr. Cicero Williams' residence,
facing on the alley west of Mr. Pendergast's rink.
Across the street, the spectator, whose early education had not been neglected,
could distinctly read the sign of our esteemed fellow townsman, Mr. Alonzo Burlingame,
which was lit up by the red glare of the flames,
so that the letters stood out plain as follows.
Alonzo Burlingame, dealer in soft and hard coal, ice cream,
wood, lime, cement, perfumery, nails, putty, spectacles, and horse radish,
chocolate carmels, and tar roofing, gas fitting and undertaking, and all its branches,
hides tallow and maple syrup, fine gold jewelry, silverware, and salt, glue, codfish, and
gent's neckwear, undertaker and confectioner, all diseases of horses and children a specialty.
John White, proprietor.
The flames spread rapidly until they threatened the palace rink of our esteemed fellow townsmen,
Mr. Pendergast, whose genial and urbane manner has endeared him to all.
With a degree of forethought, worthy of a better cause, Mr. Leroy W. Butts suggested the propriety
of calling out the Hook-and-Latter Company, an organization of which everyone seemed to be justly
proud. Some delay ensued in trying to find the janitor of Pioneer Hook-and-Latter Company
number one's building, but at last he was secured, and after he had gone home for the key,
Mr. Butts ran swiftly down the street to awake the foreman, but after he addressed himself and
inquired anxiously about the fire, he said that he was not foreman of the company since the
second of April. Meantime, the fire fiend continued to rise up ever and anon on his hind feet
and lick up salt barrel after salt barrel in close proximity to the palace rink,
owned by our esteemed fellow citizen, Mr. Pendergast.
Twice Mr. Pendergast was seen to shudder, after which he went home and filled out a blank which he forwarded to the insurance company.
Just as the town seemed doomed, the hook-and-latter company came rushing down the street with their navy-blue hook-and-ladder truck.
It is indeed a beauty, being one of the excelsier, noiseless hook-and-latter factory's best instruments,
with tall red pales and rich blue ladders.
Some delay ensued, as several of the officers claimed that under a new bylaw passed in January,
they were permitted to ride on the truck to fires.
This having been objected to by a gentleman who had lived in Chicago for several years,
a copy of the bylaws was sent for, and the dispute summarily settled.
The company now donned its rubber overcoats with great coolness
and proceeded at once to deftly twist the tail of the fire fiend.
It was a thrilling sight as James MacDonald, a brother of Terrence MacDonald,
Trombone, Indiana,
rapidly ascended one of the ladders in the full glare of the devouring element,
and fell off again. Then a wild cheer rose to a height of about nine feet, and all again became
confused. It was now past eleven o'clock, and several of the members of the Hook and Ladder Company,
who had to get up early the next day in order to catch a train, excused themselves, and went home to
seek much-needed rest. Suddenly it was discovered that the brick livery stables of Mr. McMichaels,
a nephew of our worthy assessor, was getting hot. Leaving the palace rink to its fate,
the hook and ladder company directed its attention to the brick barn,
and after numerous attempts, at last succeeded in getting its large iron prong
fastened on the second-story window sill, which was pulled out.
The hook was again inserted, but not so effectively,
bringing down this time an armful of hay and part of an old horse blanket.
Another courageous jab was made with the iron hook,
which succeeded in pulling out about five cents worth a brick.
This was greeted by a wild burst of applause from the bystanders,
during which the Hook and Ladder Company fell over each other
and added to the horror of the scene by a mad burst of pale blue profanity.
It was not long before the stable was licked up by the Fire Fiend,
and the Hook and Ladder Company directed its attention
toward the undertaking, embalming, and ice cream parlors
of our highly esteemed fellow townsmen, Mr. A. Burlingame.
The company succeeded in pulling two stone windowsills out of this building
before it burned.
Both times they were encored by the large and aristocratic audience.
Mr. Burlingame at once recognized the efforts of the heroic fireman by tapping a cake of beer,
which he distributed among them at 25 cents per glass.
This morning, a space 47 feet wide where but yesterday all was joy and prosperity and beauty,
is covered over with blackened ruins.
Mr. Pendergast is overcome by grief at the loss of his rink,
but assures us that if he is successful in getting the full amount of his insurance,
he will take the money and build two rinks, either one of which will be full.
far more imposing than the one destroyed last evening. A movement is on foot to give a literary
and musical entertainment at Burley's Hall to raise funds for the purchase of new uniforms for the
fire laddies at which Mrs. Butts has consented to sing when the robins nest again, and Miss
Murdy Stout will recite Ostler Joe, a selection which never fails to offend the best people
everywhere, 25 cents for each offense. Let there be a full house.
End of Chapter 25.
Chapter 26 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Big Steve. You think no doubt, William, that I am happy, but I cannot say that I am.
I will tell you my little reminiscence, if you don't mind, and you can judge for yourself.
These were the words of Big Steve, as we sat together one evening, watching the dealer slide the cards out of his little tin photograph album,
while the crowd bought chips of the banker and corded them up on the green table.
You look on me as a great man to inaugurate a funeral
and wish that you had a miscellaneous cemetery yourself to look back on.
But greatness always has its drawbacks.
We cannot be great unless we pay the price.
What we call genius is, after all, only industry and perseverance.
When my father undertook to clean me out in our own St. Lawrence County home,
I filled his coat-tails full of birdshot,
and fled. Father afterwards said that he could have overlooked it so far as the coat was concerned,
but he didn't want it shot to pieces while he had it on. Then I went to Kansas City and shot a
colored man. That was a good many years ago, and you could kill a colored man then, as you can
a Chinaman now with impunity, or any other weapon you can get your hands on to. Still, the colored man
had friends, and I had to go further west. I went to Nevada then, and lived under a cloud and
a gnome de plume, as you fellers say. I really didn't want to thin out the population of Nevada,
but I had to protect myself. They say that after a feller has killed his man, he has a thirst for
blood and can't stop. But that ain't so. You justifiable homicide a man and get clear, and then you
have to look out for friends of the late lamented. You see them everywhere. If your stomach gets
out of order, you see the air full of vengeance, and you drink too much, and that don't help
it. Then you kill a man on suspicion that he is following you up.
and after that you shoot in an extemporaneous way that makes life in your neighborhood a little uncertain.
That's the way it was with me. I've got where I don't sleep good anymore, and the fun of life is kind of
pinched out, as we say in the minds. It's a big thing to run a school meeting or an election,
but it hardly pays me for the free, spectacular show I see when I'm trying to sleep.
You know if you've ever killed a man. No, I never killed one right out, I said apologetically.
I shot one once, but he gained 75 pounds.
in less than six months. Well, if you ever had, you'd notice that he always says or does something
that you can remember him by. He either says, oh, I am shot, or you've killed me, or something like that,
in a reproachful way, that you can wake up in the night and hear most any time. If you kill him dead,
and he don't say a word, he will fall hard on the ground with a groan that will never stop. I can
shut my eyes and hear one now. After you've done it, you always wish they'd showed a little more fight.
You could forgive him if they'd cuss you and holler and have some style about them, but they won't.
They just reel and fall and groan.
Do you know I can't eat a meal unless my back is against the wall?
I asked Wild Bill once how he could stand it to turn his back on the crowd and eat a big dinner.
He said he generally got drunk just before dinner, and that helped him out.
So you see, William, that if a man is a great scholar, he is generally dyspeptic.
If he's a big preacher, they tie a scandal to his coat-tail.
and if he's an eminent murderer, he has insomnia and loss of appetite.
I almost wish sometimes that I had remained in obscurity.
It's a big thing to be a public man with your name in the papers
and everybody afraid to collect a bill of you,
for fear you'll let the glad sunlight into their thorax.
But when you can't eat nor sleep,
and you're liable to wake up with your bosom full of buckshot
or your neck pulled out like a turkey gobbler's,
and your tongue hanging out of your mouth in a ludicrous manner,
and your overshoes failing to touch the ground by about 10 feet,
You begin to look back on your childhood and wish you could again be put there, sleepy and sinless, hungry and happy.
End of Chapter 26
Chapter 27 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Speech of Red Shirt, the fighting chief of the Sioux Nation.
It had been a day of triumph at a Rastina, Buffalo Bill, returning from Marlboro House,
had amused the populace with the sports of an amphitheater to an extent hitherto unknown,
even in that luxurious city. A mighty multitude of people from Perth Amboy in New York
had been present to watch the attack on the Deadwood coach and view with bated breath the conflict
in the arena. The shouts of revelry had died away. The last loiterer had retired from the bleaching
boards and the lights in the palace of the cowboy band were extinguished. The moon piercing the tissue
of fleecy clouds,
tipped the dark waters about Constable Hook
with a wavy, tremulous light.
The dark browned Roman soldier,
wearing an umbrella belonging to Emory Caralfi,
wabbled slowly homeward,
the proud possessor of a large rectangular,
jag.
No sound was heard,
save the low sobs of some retiring waves
as it told its story to the smooth pebbles of the beach,
with a lower sob of some gentleman
who had just sought to bed down
a brand-new bucking bronco from Ogalala
and decided to escape violently through the roof of the tent.
Then all was still as the breast when the spirit has departed.
Anon the smoked tan-shayan snore would steal in upon the silence
and then die away like the sow of a summer breeze.
In the green room of the amphitheater,
a little band of warriors had 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.
The night wind blew chill
And the warrior had added to his
Moss-aggot ear-bobs
A heavy coat of maroon-colored roof paint
There was an embarrassing silence
Of a little spell
And then redshirt, fighting chief of the Sioux Nation,
borrowed a chew of tobacco from Orelia's Pourdough,
stepped forth, and thus addressed them.
Fellow citizens and gentlemen of the Wild West
Ye call me chief
And ye do well to call him chief
Who for two long years
has met in the arena every shape of man or beast that the broad empire of Nebraska could furnish,
and yet has never lowered his arm.
If there be one among you can say that Everett Grubdance or Skelp German or on the warpath,
my action did belie my tongue, let him stand forth and say it,
and I will send him home with his daylights done up in the morning paper.
If there be three in all your company, dare face me on the bloody sands.
Let them come on, and I will bore holes in the arena with them,
and utilized them in fixing up a sickening spectacle.
And yet I was not always thus, a hired butcher,
attacking a deadwood coach, both afternoon and evening,
the savage chief of still more savage men.
My ancestors came from Illinois.
They dwelt there in the vine-clad hills and citron groves of the Sangamon
at a time when the country was overrun with Indians.
Instead of paying to see Indians,
my ancestors would walk a long distance over a poor road
in order to get a shot at a white man.
In Dakota, my early life ran quiet as the clear brook by which I babbled,
and my boyhood was one long, happy summer day.
We bathed in the soiled waters of the Upper Missouri
and ate the luscious prickly pear in the land of the Dakotas.
I did not then know what war was,
but when Sitting Bull told me of Marathon and Luxtra and Bull Run
how at a fortified railroad pass,
Emery Keralphy had withstood the whole Roman army,
my cheek burned, I knew not why,
and I thought what a glorious thing I would be.
to leave the reservation and go upon the war path.
But my mother kissed my throbbing temples
and bade me go soak my head
and think no more of those old tales and savage wars.
That very night, the entire regular army and wife
landed on our coasts.
They tore down our tepee, stampeded our stock,
stole our grease paints,
and played a mean trick on our dog.
Today in the arena, I killed a man in the Black Hills coach,
and when I undid his cinch,
behold, he was my friend.
The same sweet smile was on his face that I had noted when I met him on my trip abroad.
He knew me, smiled faintly, made a few false motions, and died.
I begged that I might bear away the body to my tepee and express it to his country seat near Limerick.
And upon my bended knees, amid the dust and blood of the arena, I begged this poor favor,
and a Roman praetor from St. George answered,
Let the carrion rot.
There are no noble men but Romans and banana men.
Let the show go on.
Give us our money's worth.
Bring out the Bobtail Lion from Abyssinia
and the bucking bronco from Dead Man's Ranch.
And the assembled maids and matrons
and the rabble shouted in derision
and told me to brace up
and bade Johnny get his gun, get his gun, get his gun,
and other vile flings which I do not now recall.
And so must you, fellow warriors,
and so must I die like dogs.
You stand here like giants,
New York giants, as you are,
but tomorrow the fangs of the infuriary.
curated buffalo may sink into your quivering flesh.
Tonight, you stand here in the full flesh of health and conscious rectitude,
but tomorrow some crank may shoot you from the deadwood coach.
Hark, hear ye y'on buffalo roaring in her den?
Tis three days since she tasted flesh,
but tomorrow she will have warrior on toast, and don't you forget it,
and she will fling your vertebrae about her cage like the costly Etruscan pitcher of a league nine.
If ye are brutes, then stand here like a man.
fat oxen waiting for the butcher's knife.
If ye are men, arise and follow me.
We will beat down the guard, overpower the ticket chopper,
and cut for the tall timber.
We will go through Ellum Park, Port Richmond, Tower Hill,
West Brighton, Sailor Snugg Harbor,
and New Brighton like a colored revival
through a watermelon patch.
Beat down the walls of the circus Maximus,
tear the mosquito bars from the windows of Nero's Palace,
capture the Roman ballet, and light out for Europe.
Oh, comrades, warriors,
gladiators. If we be man, let us die like man beneath the blue sky, don't you know,
and by the still waters, according to Gunter, in the presence of the nobility,
rather than be stepped on by a spoiled bronco, surrounded by low tradesmen from New York.
End of Chapter 27. Chapter 28 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain, read by Dale Barkley.
Lo, the poor Shinnecock. There can be nothing more pathetic than to watch the decay of a race,
even though it be a scrub race. To watch the decay of the Indian race has been with me for many years a passion,
and the more the Indian has decayed, the more reckless I have been in studying his ways.
The Indian race for over 200 years has been a race against time, and I need hardly add that time is
way ahead as I pen these lines. I dislike to speak of myself so much, but I have been
identified with Indians more or less for 15 years. In 1876, I was detailed by a San Francisco
paper to attend the Custer Massacre and write it up. But not knowing where the massacre was to be
held, I missed my way and wandered for days in an opposite direction. When I afterwards heard how
successful the massacre was and fully realized what I had missed, my mortification knew no bounds,
but I might have been even more so if I had been successful. We never know what is best for us.
But the Indian is on the wane, whatever that is, he is disappearing from the face of the earth,
and we find no better illustration of this sad fact than the gradual fading away of the Shinnecock Indians
near the extremity of Long Island. In company with the world artist, who has paid a large salary
to hold me up to ridicule in these columns, I went out the other day to Southampton and visited the
surviving members of this great tribe. Neither of us knows the meaning of fear. If we had been
ordered by the United States government to wipe out the whole Shinnecock tribe, we would have taken
a damp towel and done it. The Shinnecock tribe now consists of James Bun and another man, but they are
neither of them pure-blooded Shinnecock Indians. One-legged Dave, an old whaler, who, as the gifted reader,
has no doubt already guessed, has but one leg, having lost the other and going over a reef many years ago,
is a pure-blooded Indian, but not a pure-blooded Shinnecock. Most of these Indians are now mixed up
with a negro race by marriage and are not considered warlike. The Shinnockes have not been
rash enough to break out since they had the measles some years ago, but we will let that pass.
There are now about 150 Shinnococks on the reservation, the most of whom are Negroes. They live
together in peace and hominy, trying most of the time to ascertain what the wild waves are saying in
regard to fish. There is an air of gentle, all-pervading peace which hangs over the Shinnacock
hills, and that had its effect even upon my tumultuous and aggressive nature, wooing me to repose.
I could rest there all this summer, and then after a good night's sleep, I could go right at it again
in the morning. Rest at Southampton does not seem to fatigue one, as it does elsewhere.
The Shinnecock Indian has united his own repose of manner with the calm and haughty distrust
of industry peculiar to the Negro, and the result is something that approaches nearer to the
idea of eternal rest than anything I've ever seen. The air seems to be saturated with it,
and the moonlight is soaked full of calm. It would be a good place in which to wander through the
gloaming and pour a gallon or so of low, passionate yearning into the ear of a loved one.
As a friend of mine, who is the teacher of modern languages and calisthenics in an educational
institution, once said, the air seems filled with that delicious dulceifarina, for which
those regions is noted for. I use his language because,
I do not know now how I could add it in anyway.
We visited Mr. James Bunn at his home on Huckleberry Avenue,
saw the city hall and custom house, and obtained a front view of it,
secured a picture of the residence of the street commissioner,
and then I talked with Mr. Bunn while the artist got a marine view of his face.
Mr. Bunn was for 40 years a whaler,
but it abandoned the habit now,
as there is so little demand among the restaurants for whales,
and also because there are fewer whales.
I ascertained from him that the whale at this season of the year does not readily rise to the fly,
but bites the harpoon greedily during the middle of the day.
Mr. Bunn also gave us a great deal of other information,
among other things, informing us of the fact that the white men had been up to their old tricks
and were trying to steal portions of the reservation that had not been nailed down.
He did not say whether it was the same man who was trying to steal the old Southampton graveyard or not.
James is about 75 years old and his father once lived in a wigwam on the Shinnock Hills.
Mr. Bunn says that the country has changed very much in the past 250 years
and that I would hardly know the place if I could have seen it at first.
During that time he says two other houses have been built and he has re-shingled the
L of his barn with hay.
He told us the thrilling story of the Spanish sylph and how she was wrecked many years ago
on the coast near his house and how the Spanish dollars burst out of her gait.
shaping side and fell with a low mellow plunk into the raging main. Now and then the sea has given up
one of these sand dollars as the years went by, and not over two years ago one was found among the
shore nearby. What I blame the Shinnecock Indians for is their fatal yearning to subsist solely
on this precarious income. But with the decline of the whaling industry, due somewhat to the great
popularity of natural and acquired gas as a lubricant, together with the cheap methods of picking up
electricity and preserving it for illuminating purposes, and also to the fact that whales are more
skittish than they used to be, the Shinnecock whaler is left high and dry. It is indeed a pathetic
picture. Here on the stern and rock-bound coast, where their ancestors greeted Columbus and
other excursionists as they landed on the new dock, and at once had their pictures taken in a group
for the illustration on the greenbacks, now the surviving relic of a brave people with bowed heads and
frosting locks are waiting a few days only for the long dark night of merciful oblivion.
So he walks in the nighttime, all through the long fly time. He walks by the sorrowful sea,
and he yearns to wake never, but lie there forever in the arms of the sheltering sea,
to lie in the lap of the sea. At least that is my idea of the way the Shinnecock feels about it.
The Indian race, wherever we find it, gives us a wonderful illustration of the great inherent power of
rum as a human leveler. The Indian has perhaps greater powers of endurance than the white man
and enters into the great unequal fight with rum almost hilariously, but he loses his presence of mind
and forgets to call a cab at the proper moment. This is a matter that has never been fully understood,
even by the pale face, and of course the Indian is a perfect child in the great conflict with rum.
The result is that the Indian is passing away under our very eyes, and the time will soon come when
the Indian agent will have to seek some other healthful outdoor exercise. So the consumptive
Shinnecock, the author of Shinney on Your Own Ground and other games, is soon to live only in the
flea-bitten records of a great nation. Once he wrote pieces for the boys to speak in school and
contributed largely to McGuffies and Sanders' periodicals, but now you never hear of an Indian,
who is a good extemporaneous public speaker, or who can write for sour apples. He no longer makes a
statement that he is an aged hemlock, that his limbs are withered and his trunk attached by the
constable. He has ceased to tell through the columns of the fifth reader how swift he used to be as a
warrior, and that the warpath is now overgrown with grass. He very seldom writes anything for the papers
except over the signature of Veritas, and the able young stenographer, who used to report his speeches at
the council fire, seems to have moved away. Two hundred and fifty years ago, the Shinnecock Hills
were covered by a dense forest, but in that brief,
period, as if by magic, two and one half acres of that ground have been cleared, which is an average of an entire acre for every hundred years.
When we stopped to consider that very little of this work was done by the women, and that the men have to attend to the cleaning of the whales in order to prepare them for the table,
and also write their contributions for the school books and sign treaties with the white father at Washington,
we were forced to admit that had the Indians' life been spared for a few thousand years more, he would have been alive at the end of that time.
So they wander on together, waiting for the final summons,
waiting for the pip or measles, and their cough is dry and hacking as they cough along together
towards the large and wide hereafter.
They have lived so near Manhattan, where refinement is so plenty,
where the joy they jerk from barley every other day but Sunday gives the town a reddish color,
that the Chinnecock is dying, dying with his cowhide boots on,
dying with his hectic flesh on, while the church bells chime in Brooklyn,
and New Yorkers go to Jersey,
go to get their firewater, go to get their red-eyed bug juice, go to get their cooking whiskey.
Far away at Minnehaha in the land of the Dakota, where the cyclone feels so kinky,
rising on its active hind feet with its tail up o'er the dashboard, blowing babies through the grindstone
without injuring the babies, where the cyclone and the whopper journey on and joy together.
There, refinement and fermenti, with the new and automatic maladies and choice diseases that belong to the Caucasian,
gather in the festive red man, take him to the reservation,
rob him while his little life lasts,
rob him till he turns his toes up,
rob him till he kicks the bucket.
And the Shinnecock is fading,
he who greeted Christopher Columbus when he landed,
tired and seasick with a breath of peace and onions,
he who welcomed other strangers with her notions of refinement
and their knowledge of the scriptures
and their fondness for gambrenous,
they have compassed his damnation,
and the Shinnecock is busted.
End of Chapter 28
Chapter 29 of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Read by Dale Barkley
Webster in his great book.
Noah Webster probably had the best command of language of any author of our time.
Those who have read its great work entitled Webster's Unabridged Dictionary,
or how one word led to another, will agree with me that he was smart.
Noah never lacked for a word by which to express himself.
He was a brainy man and a good speller.
We were speaking of Mr. Webster on the way up here this afternoon,
and a gentleman from Ashland told me of his death.
Those of you who have read Mr. Webster's works will be pained to learn of this.
One by one our eminent men are passing away.
Mr. Webster has passed away, Napoleon Bonaparte is no more,
and Dr. Mary Walker is fading away.
This has been a severe winter on Sitting Bull,
and I have to guard against the night air a good deal myself.
It would ill become me at this late date to criticize Mr. Webster's work,
a work that is now, I may say, in nearly every office, home, schoolroom, and counting room in the land.
It is a great book.
I only hope that had Mr. Webster lived, he would have been equally fair in its criticism of my books.
I hate to compare my books with Mr. Webster's because it looks egotistical in me,
but although Noah's book is larger than mine and has more literary
attractions as a book to set a child on at the table. It does not hold the interest of the reader
all the way through. He has tried to introduce too many characters into his book at the expense of
the plot. It is a good book to pick up and while away at leisure hour, perhaps, but it is not a
work that could rivet your interest till midnight, while the fire went out and the thermometer
went down to 47 below zero. You do not hurry through the pages to see whether Reginald married the
girl or not. Mr. Webster didn't seem to care whether he married the girl or not.
Therein consists the great difference between Noah and myself. He don't keep up to interest.
A friend of mine at Sing Sing, who secured one of my books, said he never left his room till he had
devoured it. He said he seemed chained to the spot. And if you can't believe a convict who is
entirely out of politics, who in the name of George Washington can you believe? Mr. Webster was
certainly a most brilliant writer, but a little inclined, perhaps, to be wrong. I have discovered in some
of his later books, 118,000 words, no two of which are alike. This shows great fluency and
versatility, it is true, but we need something else. The reader waits in vain to be thrilled
by the author's wonderful word painting. There is not a thrill in the whole tome. No, it wasn't
much of a thriller. I am free to confess that when I read this book, of which I had heard so much,
I was bitterly disappointed.
It is a larger book than mine, and costs more, and has more pictures in it than mine.
But is it a work that will make a man lead a different life?
What does he say of the tariff?
What does he say of the roller skating rink?
He is silent.
He is full of cold, hard words, and dry definitions.
But what does he say of the Mormons and female suffrage and how to cure the pip?
Nothing.
He evades everything, just as a man does when he writes a letter accepting the nomination for president.
As I said before, however, it is a good book to pick up for a few moments or to read on the train.
I can never think of taking a long railroad journey without Mr. Webster's tail in my pocket.
I would just as quick think of traveling without my bottle of cough medicine as to start out with Mr. Webster's book.
Mr. Webster's speller was a work of less pretensions, perhaps, but it had an immense sale.
Eight years ago, 40 million of these books had been sold, and yet it had the same grave defect.
It was disconnected, cold, prosy, and dull.
I read it for years, and at last became a very close student of Mr. Webster's style.
Still, I never found but one thing in the book for which there was such a stampede,
which was even ordinarily interesting, and that was a perfect gem.
It was so thrilling in detail and so different from Mr. Webster's general style,
that I have often wondered who he got to write it for him.
Perhaps it was the author of The Breadwinners.
It related to the discovery of a boy in the crotch of an old apple tree
by an elderly gentleman and the feeling of bitterness and animosity that sprang up between the two.
And how the old man told the boy at first that he had better come down out of that tree
because he was afraid the limb would break with him and let him fall.
Then, as the boy still remained, he told him that those were not eating apples,
that they were just common cooking apples, and that there were worms in them.
But the boy said he didn't mind a little thing like that.
So then the old gentleman got irritated and called the dog and threw turf at the boy,
and at last saluted him with pieces of turf and decayed cabbages,
and after he had gone away, the old man pried the bulldog's jaws open
and found a mouthful of pantaloons and a freckle.
I do not tell this, of course, in Mr. Webster's language,
but I give the main points, as they recur now to my mind.
Though I have been a close student of Mr. Webster for years
and examined his style closely,
I am free to say that his ideas about writing a book are not the same as mine.
Of course, it is a great temptation for a young author to write a book,
that will have a large sale, but that should not be all. We should have a higher object than that,
and strive to interest those who read our books. It should not be jerky and scattering in its
statements. I do not wish to do an injustice to a great man who I learn is now no more, a man who
has done so much for the world and who could spell the longest word without hesitation,
but I speak of these things just as I would expect others to criticize my work. If one aspire to
monkey with the literati of our day we must expect to be criticized. I have been criticized myself.
When I was in public life, as a Justice of the Peace in the Rocky Mountains, a man came in one
day and criticized me so that I did not get over it for two weeks. I might add, though I dislike to
speak of it now, that Mr. Webster was at one time a member of the Legislature of Massachusetts.
I believe that was the only time he ever stepped aside from the straight and narrow way.
A good many people do not know this, but it is true.
It only shows how a good man may at one time in his life go wrong.
End of Chapter 29.
End of Bill Nye's Sparks by Bill Nye.
