Classic Audiobook Collection - Cobb’s Anatomy by Irvin S. Cobb ~ Full Audiobook [comedy]
Episode Date: January 27, 2023Cobb’s Anatomy by Irvin S. Cobb audiobook. Genre: comedy Cobbs Anatomy is not a medical textbook but a slyly titled collection of comic essays in which Irvin S. Cobb turns the human body into his f...avorite subject for satire. With the voice of a seasoned newspaper storyteller, Cobb plays both lecturer and long-suffering specimen, inviting you to examine the daily indignities of being built the way nature built you. In a series of sketches focused on tummies, teeth, hair, and finally hands and feet, he follows the anxieties and absurd rituals that grow up around ordinary body parts: the stout man trying to fit into a world designed for 'stock sizes,' the uneasy truce we make with dentists, the small tyrannies of barbers and beautifiers, and the fussing we do over grooming and appearance as if respectability depended on it. Cobb blends exaggeration, sharp observation, and self-deprecating confession to show how vanity, discomfort, and social expectations can turn simple anatomy into comedy. The result is a brisk, witty portrait of human nature disguised as an inspection of the human frame. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 1 (00:30:40) Chapter 2 (01:00:13) Chapter 3 (01:32:02) Chapter 4 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Cobb's Anatomy by Irving S. Cobb. Chapter 1. Tomies
Dr. Woods Hutchinson says that fat people are happier than other people.
How does Dr. Woods Hutchinson know? Did he ever have to leave the two top buttons of his vest
unfastened on account of his extra chins? Has the pressure from within against the waistband
where the watch-fob is located ever been so great in his case, that he had practically to undress
himself to find out what time it was? Does he have to take the tailor's word for it,
that his trousers need pressing? He does not. And that sort of remark is only what might
be expected from any person upward of seven feet tall and weighing about 98 pounds with his
heavy underwear on. I shall freely take Dr. Woods Hutchinson's statements on the joys and
ills of the thin. But when he undertakes to tell me that fat people are happier than thin people,
it is only hearsay evidence with him and decline to accept his statements unchallenged. He is
going outside of his class. He is, as you might say, no more than an innocent bystander,
whereas I am a qualified authority.
I will admit that at one stage of my life I regarded fleshiness as a desirable asset.
The incident came about in this way.
There was a circus showing in our town, and a number of us proposed to attend it.
It was one of those one-ring ten-cent circuses that used to go about over the country,
and it is my present recollection that all of us had to be.
funds laid by sufficient to buy tickets. But if we could procure admission in the regular way,
we felt it would be a sinful waste of money to pay our way in. With this in mind, we went
scouting round back of the main tent in a comparatively secluded spot. And there we found a place
where the canvas sidewall lifted clear of the earth for a matter of four or five inches.
We held an informal caucus to decide who should go first.
The honor lay between two of us, between the present writer, who was relatively skinny,
and another boy named Thompson, who was even skinnier.
He won, as the saying is, on farm.
It was decided by practically a unanimous vote, he alone dissenting,
that he should crawl under and see how the land lay inside.
If everything was all right, he would make it make it necessary.
known by certain signals, and we would then follow one by one. Two of us lifted the canvas
very gently, and this Thompson boy started to wriggle under. He was about halfway in when
zip, like a flash, he bodily vanished. He was gone, leaving only the marks where his toes
had gouged the soil. Storled, we looked at one another. There was something peculiar about this.
Here was a boy who had started into a circus tent in a circumspect,
indeed a highly cautious manner, and then finished the trip with undue and sudden precipitancy.
It was more than peculiar it bordered upon the uncanny.
It was sinister.
Without a word having been spoken, we decided to go away from there.
Waring expressions of intense unconcern and sterling innocence upon our young faces,
We did go away from there and drifted back in the general direction of the main entrance.
We arrived just in time to meet our young friend coming out.
He came hurriedly, using his hands and his feet both,
his feet for traveling and his hands for rubbing purposes.
Immediately behind him was a large, coarse man,
using language that stamped him as a man who had outgrown the spirit of youth,
and was pre-eminently out of touch with the ideals and aims of boyhood.
At that period, it seemed to me and to the Thompson boy,
who was moved to speak feelingly on the subject,
and in fact to all of us,
that excessive slimness might have its drawbacks.
Since that time, several of us have had occasion to change our minds.
With the passage of years we have fleshed up,
and now we know better.
The last time I saw the Thompson boy,
he was known as Excess Baggage Thompson.
His figure in profile suggested a man carrying a roll-top desk in his arms,
and his face looked like a face that had refused to gel,
and was about to run down on his clothes.
He spoke longingly of the days of his youth
and wondered if the shape of his knees had changed much,
the last time he saw them. Yes, sir, no matter what, Dr. Hutchinson says, I contend that the slim
man has all the best of it in this world. The fat man is the universal goat. He is humanity's
standing joke. Stomachs are the curse of our modern civilization. When a man gets a stomach,
his troubles begin. If you doubt this, ask any fat man. I started to say ask any fat woman. I started to say
ask any fat woman too, only there aren't any fat women to speak of. There are women who are
plump and will admit it. There are even women who are inclined to be stout. But outside of
dime museums, there are no fat women. But there are plenty of fat men. Ask one of them. Ask any
of them. Ask me. The thing of acquiring a tummy steals on one insidiously.
like a thief in the night you notice that you are plumping out a trifle and for the time being you feel a sort of small personal satisfaction in it your shirts fit you better
you love the slight strain upon the button-holes you admire the pleasant plunking sound suggestive of ripe watermelons when you pat yourself then a day comes when the persuasive odor of mothballs fills the autumnal air
and everybody at the barbershop is having the back of his neck shaved also.
Thus betokening awakened social activities,
and when evening is at hand you take the dress suit, which fitted you so well,
out of the closet where it has been hanging and undertake to back yourself into it.
You are pained to learn that it is about three sizes too small.
At first you are inclined to blame the suit for shrinking,
but second thought convinces you that the fault lies elsewhere.
It is you that have swollen, not the suit that has shrunk.
The buttons that should adorn the front of the coat
are now plainly visible from the rear.
You buy another dress suit, and next fall you have outgrown that one too.
You pant like a lizard when you run to catch a car.
You cross your legs and have to hold the cross one on with both hands
to keep your stomach from shoving it off in space.
After a while you quit crossing them
and are content with dawdling yourself on your own lap.
You are fat.
Dog on it.
You are fat.
You are up against it,
and it is up against you, which is worse.
You are something for people to laugh at.
You are also expected to laugh.
It is all right for a thin man to be grouchy,
people will say the poor creature has dyspepsia and should be humored along.
But a fat man with a grouch is inexcusable in any company.
There is so much of him to be grouchy.
He constitutes a wave of discontent and a period of general depression.
He is not expected to be romantic and sentimental either.
It is all right for a giraffe to be sentimental, but not a hippopotamus.
If you doubt me, consult any set of natural history pictures, the giraffe is shown with his long
and sinuous neck, entwined in fond embrace about the neck of his mate.
But the amphibious, blood-sweighing hippo is depicted as spouting and wallowing, morose
and misanthrope, in a mud-puddle off by himself.
In passing, you may say that I regard this comparison as a particularly apt one, because I know
of no living creature so truly amphibious in hot weather as an open-poored fat man unless it is a hippopotamus oh how true is the saying that nobody loves a fat man
when fat comes up on the front porch love jumps out of the third-story window love in a cottage yes love in a rendering plant no a fat man's heart is supposed to lie
so far inland that the softer emotions cannot reach it at all.
Yet the fattest are the truest, if you did but know it.
And also they are the tenderest, and a man with a double chin rarely leads a double life.
For one thing it requires too much moving round.
A fat man cannot wear the clothes he would like to wear.
As a race fat men are fond of bright and cheerful colors.
But no fat man can indulge his innocent desires in this direction, without grieving his family and friends,
and exciting the derisive laughter of the unthinking.
If he puts on a fancy-flowered vest, they'll say he looks like a hanging garden of Babylon,
and yet he has a figure just made for showing off a fancy-flowered vest to best effect.
He may favor something in light checks for his spring suit, but if he even if he even,
ventures abroad in a checkered suit, ribbled strangers will look at him meaningfully and remark
to one another, that the center of population appears to be shifting again.
It has been my observation that fat men are instinctively drawn to short tan overcoats for the
early fall. But a fat man, in a short tan overcoat strolling up the avenue on a sunny afternoon,
will be constantly overhearing persons behind him, wondering why they didn't wait
until night to move the bank vault.
That irks him sore.
But if he turns round, to reproach them he is liable to shove an old lady or a poor blind manned off the sidewalk.
And then, like his knot, some gammon will sing out,
"'Holly gee, chimney! What's become of the rest of the parade?
Here's the bass drum going home all by itself.'
I've known of just such remarks being made, and I assure you they cut a sensitive
soul to the core. Not for the fat man or the snappy clothes for varsity men, and the patterns,
called by the tailors confined, because that is what they should be, but aren't. Not for him the
silken shirt with the broad stripes. Shirts with stripes that were meant to run vertically,
but are caused to run horizontally, by reasons over which the wearer has no control,
remind others of the awning over an Italian grocery.
So the fat man must stick to somber navy blues and depressing blacks and melancholy grays.
He is advised that he should wear his evening clothes whenever possible,
because black and white lines are more becoming to him.
But even in evening clothes,
that wide expanse of glazed shirt in those white enamel studs,
We'll put the onlookers in mind of the front end of a dairy lunch, or so I have been cruelly told.
When planning public utilities, who thinks of a fat man?
There never was a handsome cab made that would hold a fat man comfortably unless he left the doors open,
and that makes him feel undressed.
There never was an orchestra seat in a theater that would contain all of him at the same time.
He churns up and sloshes out over the sides.
Appartment houses and elevators and hotel towels are all constructed upon the idea that the world is populated by stock-sized people with those double-a-last shapes.
Take a Pullman car, for instance.
One of the saddest sights known is that of a fat man trying to undress on one of those closet shells called upper berths without getting hope to.
entangled in the hammock, or committing suicide by hanging himself with his own suspenders.
And after that the next most distressing sight is the same fat man after he has undressed,
and is lying there, spouting like a sperm whale, and overflowing his reservation,
like a crock of salt rising dough in a warm kitchen,
and wondering how he can turn over without bulging the side of the car, and maybe causing a wreck.
Ah, me, those dark green curtains with the overcoat buttons on them hide many a distressful spectacle from the traveling public.
If a fat man undertakes to reduce, nobody sympathizes with him.
A thin man trying to fatten up so he won't fall all the way through his trousers when he draws him on in the morning is an object of sympathy and of admiration.
and people come from miles round and give him advice about how to do it.
But suppose a fat man wants to train down to a point where,
when he goes into a telephone booth and says 94 broad,
the spectators will know he is trying to get a number,
and not telling his tailor what his waist measurement is.
Is he greeted with sympathetic understanding?
He is not.
He is greeted with derision.
and people stand round and gloat at him the authorities recommend health exercises but health exercises are almost invariably undignified in effect and wearing besides
who wants to greet the dewy morn by lying flat on his back and lifting his feet fifty times what kind of a way is that to greet the dewy morn anyhow and bending over with the knees stiff and touching the tips of the toes with the tips of the face
fingers, that's no employment for a grown man with a family to support and a position to maintain in society,
besides which it cannot be done. I make the statement unequivocally, and without fear of successful
contradiction that it cannot be done. And if it could be done, which, as I say, it can't,
there would be no real pleasure in touching a set of toes that one has known of only by common
rumor for years.
Those toes are the same as strangers to you.
You knew they were in the neighborhood, of course, but you haven't been intimate with
them.
Maybe you try dieting, which is contrary to nature.
Nature intended that a fat man should eat heartily, else why should she endow him with
the capacity and the accommodations?
Starving in the midst of plenty is not for him who has plenty.
of midst. Nature meant that a fat man should have an appetite, and that he should gratify it at regular
intervals, meant that he should feel like the Grand Canyon before dinner, and like the Royal Gorge
afterward. Anyhow, dieting for a fat man consists in not eating anything that's fit to eat.
The specialist merely tells him to eat what a horse would eat, and has the nerve to charge him
for what he could have found out for himself at any livery stable.
Of course, he might bant in the same way that a woman bans.
You know how a woman bans.
She begins the day very resolutely.
And if you are her husband, you want to avoid irritating her or upsetting her,
because hell hath no fury like a woman banting.
For breakfast she takes a swallow of lukewarm water and half of a soda-cracker.
for luncheon she takes the other half of the cracker and leaves off the water for dinner she orders everything on the menu except the date and the name of the proprietor she does this in order to give her strength to go on with the treatment
no fat man would diet that way but no matter which way he does diet it doesn't do him any good health exercises only make him muscle sore and bring on what the harvey ball team called
the Charles W. Horse, while banning results in attacks of those kindred complaints,
the Molly K. Grubbs, and the fan J. Todd's. Walking is sometimes recommended, and the example
of the camel is pointed out, the camel being a creature that can walk for days and days.
But as has been said by some thinking person, who in Thunder wants to be a camel?
The subject of horseback riding is also brought up frequently in this connection.
It is one of the commonest delusions among fat men that horseback writing will bring them down
and make them sylph-like and willowy.
I have several fat men among my lists of acquaintances who labor under this fallacy.
None of them was ever a natural-born horseback rider.
None of them will ever be.
I like to go out of a bright morning and take a comfortable seat on a park bench.
One park bench is plenty roomy enough if nobody else is using it,
and sit there and watch these unhappy persons passing single file along the bridle path.
I sit there and gloat until my rights I ought to be required to take out a gloator's license.
Mind you, I have no prejudice against horseback riding as such.
horseback riding is all right for the mounted policeman and colonel w f cody and members of the stickney family and the party who used to play mazapop in the sterling drama of that name that is how those persons make their living they are suited for it and acclimated to it
It is also all right for equestrian statues of generals in the Civil War, but it is not
fit employment for a fat man, and especially for a fat man, who insists on trying to ride
a hard-trotting horse English style, which really isn't riding it at all when you come right
down to cases, but an outdoor cure for neurasthenia invented, I take it, by a British subject
who was nervous himself and hated to stay long.
in one place. So, as I was saying, I sit there on my comfortable park bench and watch those
friends of mine bouncing by, each wearing on his face that set expression which is also seen
on the faces of some men while walsing, and on the faces of most women when entertaining their
relatives by marriage. I have one friend who is addicted to this form of punishment in a
violent, not to say, a malignant farm. He uses for his purpose a tall and self-willed horse
of the tutor period, a horse with those high dormer effects and a sloping mansard.
This horse must have been raised, I think, in the knockabout song and dance business.
Every time he hears music or thinks he hears it, he stops and stamps with his feet.
When he does this, my friend bends forward and clutching.
him round the neck tightly. I think he is trying to whisper in the horse's ear, and beg him
in heaven's name to forbear, for what he looks like is Santa Claus with a clean shave, sitting
on the combing of a very steep house, with his feet hanging over the eaves, peering down the chimney
to see if the children are asleep at. When that horse dies, he will still have finger-marks
on his throat, and the authorities will suspect foul play, probably.
Once I tried it myself.
I was induced to scale the heights of a horse that was built somewhat along the general idea of the Andes Mountains,
only more rugged and steeper nearing the crest.
From the ground he looked to be not more than sixteen hands high,
but as soon as I was up on top of him,
I immediately discerned that it was not sixteen hands.
It was sixteen miles.
What I had taken for the horse's blaze face was a snow-capped peak.
Miss Anna Peck might have felt at home up there, because she has had the experience that is
used to that sort of thing, but I am no mountain climber myself.
Before I could make any move to descend to the lower and less rarefied altitudes, the
horse began executing a few fancy steps, and he started traveling sidewise with a kind of a slanting
bias movement that was extremely disconcerting, not to say alarming, instead of proceeding
straight ahead as a regular horse would.
I clung there, a straddle of his ridge-pole, with my fingers twined in his mane, trying
to anticipate where he would be next, in order to be there to meet him, if possible,
and I resolved right then that, if Providence in his wisdom so wielded it, that I should
get down from up there alive.
I should never do so again.
However, I did not express these longings in words, not at that time.
At that time there was only two words in the English language which seemed to come to me.
One of them was, whoa, and the other was, ouch.
And I spoke them alternately with such rapidity that they merged into the composite word,
which is a very expressive word, and one that I would have.
fiercely recommend to others who may be situated as I was.
At that moment, of all the places in the world that I could think of, and I could think of a
great many, because the events of my past life were rapidly flashing past me, as is customary,
I am told, in other cases of grave peril, such as drowning, I say, of all the places in the world,
there were just two where I least desired to be. One was up on top of that horse.
and the other was down under him.
But it seemed to be a choice of the two evils,
and so I chose the lesser and got under him.
I did this by the simple expedient that occurred to me at the moment.
I fell off.
I was trampled on considerably,
and the earth proved to be harder than it looked when viewed
from an approximate height of sixteen miles up.
But I lived and breathed,
or at least I breathed after a time had elapsed,
and I was satisfied.
and so having gone through this experience myself i am in position to appreciate what any other man of my general build is going through as i see him bobbing by the poor martyr sacrificing himself as a burnt offering
or any way a blistered one on the high altar of a gothic ruin of a horse and besides i know that riding a horse doesn't reduce a fat man it merely
reduces the horse.
So it goes.
The fat man is always up against it.
His figure is half-masted in regretful memory of the proportions he had once,
and he is made to mourn.
Most sports and many gainful pursuits are closed against him.
He cannot play lawn tennis, or at least, according to my observation,
he cannot play lawn tennis oftener than once in two weeks.
In between games, he limps or,
around, stiff as a hat-tree, and sore as a mashed thumb.
Time was when he might mingle in the mystic mazes of the waltz, tripping the light fantastic
toe or stubbing it as the case may be.
But that was in the days of the old-fashioned square dance, which was the fat man's friend
among dances and also of the old-fashioned two-step.
And not in these times.
When dancing is a cross between a wrestling match, a contortion act, and a trip on a
roller coaster, and is either name for an animal like the bunny hug and the tarantula glide,
or for a town, like the Mobile Mopop and the Far Rockaway Rock and the South Bend Bend.
His friends would interfere, or the authorities would.
He can go in swimming, it is true, but if he turns over and floats, people yell out that
somebody has set the lifecraft adrift, and if he basks at the water's edge, boats will come in
try to dock alongside him.
And if he takes a sunbath on the beach and sunburns,
there's so everlasting much of him to be sunburned
that he practically amounts to a conflagration.
He cannot shoot rapids, craps, or big game
with any degree of comfort, nor play billiards.
He can't get close enough to the table to take the shots,
and he puts all the English on himself,
and none of it on the cue ball.
Consider the gainful pursuits.
Think how many of them are denied to the man,
who may have energy and ability, but is shut out because there are a few extra terraces on his
front lawn. A fat man cannot be a leading man in a play. Nobody desires a fat hero for a novel.
A fat man cannot go in for aeroplaning. He cannot be a wirewalker or a successful walker of
any of the other recognized brands, track, cake, sleep, or floor. He doesn't make a popular
waiter. Nobody wants a fat waiter on a hot day. True, you may make him bring your order
under covered dishes, but even so there is still that suggestion of rain on a tin roof
that is distasteful to so many. So I repeat that fat people are always getting the worst of
it, and I say again, of all the ills that flesh is heir to, the worst is the flesh itself.
As the poet says, the world, the flesh and the devil, there you have it in a sentence,
the flesh in between, catching the devil on one side and the jeers of the world on the other.
I don't care what Dr. Woods Hutchinson or any other thin man says.
I contend that history is studded with instances of prominent persons who lost out because they got fat.
Take Cleopatra now.
The lady to whom Mark Anthony said,
I am dying, Egypt, dying,
and then refrain from doing so for about nineteen more stanzas.
Cleo or Pat, she was known by both names, I hear,
did fairly well as a queen, as a coquette,
and as a promoter of excursions on the river,
until she fleshened up.
Then she flivered.
Dr. Johnson was a fat man,
and he suffered from prickly heat, and from Boswell, and from the fact that he couldn't eat
without spilling most of the gravy on his second mezzanine landing.
As a thin and spindly stripling, Napoleon altered the map of Europe and stood many nations
on their heads. It was after he had grown fat and Percy that he landed on St. Helena,
and spent his last days on a barren rock with his arms folded, posing for steel engravings.
was fat, and he had a lot of hard luck in keeping his relatives. They were always constantly
dying on him, and he finally had to stab himself with one of those painful-looking old
Roman two-handed swords, lest something really serious befall him.
Falstaff was fat, and he lost the favor of kings in the last act. Coming down to our own day
and turning to a point no farther away than the White House at Washington, but have we not
enough examples without becoming personal.
Yes, I know, Julia Caesar said,
Let me have men about me that are fat.
But you bet it wasn't in the heated period
when J. Caesar said that.
End of Chapter 1. Tummies.
Chapter 2 of Cobb's Anatopy by Irving S. Cobb.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 2.
Teeth.
One of the most pleasant features about being born, as I conceive it, is that we are born without teeth.
I believe there have been a few exceptions to this rule.
Richard III, according to the accounts, came into the world equipped with all his teeth
and a perfectly miserable disposition, and once in a while, especially during Roosevelt years,
when the Colonel's picture is hanging on the walls of so many American homes,
We read in the paper that a baby has just been born somewhere with a full set,
and even, as in the case of the infant son of a former member of the Rough Riders,
with nose glasses and a close-cropped mustache.
This, however, may have been a pardonable exaggeration of the real facts.
As I recall now, it was reported in a dispatch to the New York Tribune from Lover's Leap, Iowa,
during the presidential campaign eight years ago.
In the main, though, we are born without teeth.
We are born without a number of things, clothes, for example.
Although Anthony Comstock is said to be pushing a law,
requiring all children to be born with overalls on.
But teeth is the subject which we are now discussing.
This absence of teeth tends to give the very young of our species
the appearance in the face of an old-fashioned buckskin purse with the drawstring broken.
But be that as it may, we are generally fairly well content with life,
until the teeth begin to come.
First there are milk teeth.
Right there our troubles start.
To use the term commonly in use, we cut them,
although, as a matter of fact, they cut us,
cut them with the aid of some such mussy thing as a toothing ring or the horny part of the nurse's thumb, or the reverse side of a spoon.
Cut them at the cost of infinite suffering, not only for ourselves, but for everybody else in the vicinity.
And about the time we get the last one in, we begin to lose the first one out.
They go one at a time by falling out or by being yanked.
or by coming out of their own accord when we eat molasses taffy.
They were merely what you might call our entered apprentice teeth.
We go in now for the full 32 degrees, one degree for each tooth, and 32 teeth to a set.
By arduous and painful processes, stretching over a period of years we get our regular teeth.
The others were only volunteers.
concluding with the wisdom teeth as so-called.
But it is a misnomer because there never is room for them
and they have to stand up in the back row,
and they usually arrive with holes in them.
And if we really possessed any wisdom,
we would figure out some way of abolishing them altogether.
They come late and crowd their way in
and push the other teeth out of line,
and so we have to go about for a month.
with the top of our mouths filled with braces and wires and things,
so that when we breathe hard, we sob and croon inside of ourselves like an aeolian harp.
But in any event we get them all, and no sooner do we get them than we began to lose them.
They develop cavities and aches and extra roots,
and we spend a good part of our lives and most of our substance with the dentist.
nevertheless in spite of all we can do and all he can do we keep on losing them and after a while they are all gone and our face folds up on us like a crush hat or a concertina
And from our brow to our chin, we don't look much more than a third as long as we used to look.
We dislike this folded-up appearance naturally.
Who wouldn't?
And we get tired of living on spoon vituals and the memory of past beefsteaks.
So we go and get some false ones made.
They have to be made to order.
There appears to be no market for custom-made teeth.
You never see any hand-me-down teeth advertised, guaranteed to fit any face and withstand a damp climate.
Getting them made to order is a long and unhappy process, and I will pass over it briefly.
Having got them we find that they do not fit us, or that we do not fit them, which comes to the same thing.
The dentist makes them fit, by altering us some and the teeth some,
and after some months they quit feeling as though they didn't belong to us,
but had been borrowed temporarily from somebody's lone collection of ceramics.
But just about the time they are becoming acclimated, and we are getting used to them.
The interior of our mouth, for private reasons, best known to itself,
changes around materially, and we either have to go back and start all over and go through the whole thing again,
or else happily we die and pass on to the barn from which no traveller returneth either with his teeth or without them.
If Shakespeare had only thought of it, and he did think of a number of things from time to time,
he might have divided his seven ages of man much better by making them the seven ages of teeth as follows.
First age, no tooth.
Second age, milk teeth.
Third age, losing them.
Fourth age, getting more teeth.
Fifth age, losing them.
Sixth age, getting false teeth and finding they aren't satisfactory.
Seventh age, toothless again.
I knew a man once who was a gunsmith and lost all his teeth at a comparatively early age.
He went along that way for a year.
He had to eschew the tenderloin for the reason that he couldn't chew it,
and he had to cut out hickory nut cake and corn on the ear and such things.
But there is nothing about the art of gunsmithing which seems to call for teeth,
so he got along very well,
living in a little house with the wife of his bosom and a faithful house-dog named Ponto.
But when he was past sixty, he went and got himself some teeth
from the dentist.
He did this without saying anything about it at home.
He was treasuring it up for a surprise.
The cornerstone was laid in May,
and the scaffolding was all up by July,
and in August the new teeth were dedicated with suitable ceremonies.
They altered his appearance materially.
His nose and chin, which had been on terms of intimacy,
now rubbed each other a last fond goodbye,
and his face lost that accordion pleaded look and straightened out and became about six or seven inches longer from top to bottom he now had a sort of determined aspect like the iron-jawed lady in a circus whereas before
his face had the appearance of being folded over and wadded down inside of his neckband so his hat could rest comfortably on his collar
He knew he was altered, but he didn't realize how much he was altered, until he went home that evening and walked proudly in the front gate.
His wife, who was timid about strangers, slammed the door right in his face, and faithful Ponto came out from under the porch steps and bit him severely in the calf of the leg.
There was only one consolation in it for him.
for the first time in a long number of years, he was in a position to bite back.
And that's how it is with teeth.
With your teeth, let us say, for right here I'm going to drop the personal pronoun
and speak of them as your teeth from now on.
If anybody has to suffer, it might as well be you and not me.
I expect to be busy telling about it.
As I started to say a while ago, you—you—remember, it's you from this point.
You get your regular teeth, and they start right in giving you trouble.
Every little while one of them bursts from its cell with a horrible yell,
and in the lulls between pangs you go forth among men with a haunted look in your eye of one who is listening
for the footfalls of a dreaded apparition, and one half of your head is puffed out of
as though you were engaged in the whimsical idea of holding an eggplant in the side of your jaw.
A kind friend meets you, and speaking with that high courage and the lofty spirit of sacrifice,
which a kind friend always exhibits when it's your tooth that is kicking up the rumpus and not his,
he tells you you ought to have something done for it right away.
You know that as well as he does, but you hate to have the subject
brought up. It's your toothache anyhow. It originated with you. You are its proud parent,
but not so awfully proud as that. Mother and child doing as well as could be expected,
but not expected to do very well. But these friends of yours keep on shoving their free advice on
you, and the tooth keeps on getting worse and worse, until the pain spreads all through the
first ward, and finally you grab your resolution in both hands to keep it from leaking out
between your fingers, and you go to the dentists.
This happens so many times that after a while you lose count, and so with the dentist.
If he didn't write your name down every time in his little red book, with pleasingly large
amounts entered opposite to it, it seems to you that you are always doing something for your
teeth. You have them pulled and pushed and shoved and filled and unfilled and refilled and
refilled and excavated and blasted and sculptured and scroll-sawed and a lot of other things that
you wouldn't think could be done legally without a building permit. As time passes on,
the inside of your once well-tilled and commodious head becomes but little more than a recent
sight. Your vaults have been blown.
and most of your contents abstracted by amalgamated mike and dental slim,
and demon yewamon of the human face.
You are merely the scattered clues left behind for the authorities to work on.
You are the faint traces of the fiendish crime.
You are the point marked X.
But all along there is generally one tooth that has behaved herself like a lady.
other teeth may have betrayed your confidence but old faithful has hung on attending to business asking only for standing-room and kind treatment the others you may view with alarm but to this tooth you can point with pride
but have a care she is deceiving you some night you go to bed and have a dream in your dream it seems to you that a fox-terrier is chasing a woodchuck around
and around the inside of your head.
In that tangled sort of fashion, peculiar to dreams,
your sympathy seems to go out first to the fox-terrier,
and then to the woodchuck as they circle about nimbly leaping from your tonsils to your larynx,
and then up over the rafters in the roof of your mouth and down again,
and pattering over the submaxillary from side to side.
But about then you wake up with a violent start,
and decide that any sympathy you may have in stock should be reserved for personal use exclusively,
because at this moment the dog trees the woodchuck at the base of that cherished tooth of yours
and starts to dig him out.
He is a very determined dog and very active, but he needs a manicure.
You are struck by that fact almost immediately.
uttering some of those trite and commonplace remarks that are so customary for use under such circumstances and yet are so futile to express one's real sentiments,
you arise and undertake to pacify the infuriated creature with household remedies.
You try to lure him away with a wad of medicated cotton stuck on the end of a parlor match.
But Arnica is evidently an acquired taste with him.
He doesn't seem to care for it any more than you do.
You begin to dress, using one hand to put your clothes on,
and the other to hold the top of your head on.
At this important juncture,
the dog tears down the last remaining partitions and nails the woodchuck.
The woodchuck is game, say what you will,
about the habits and customs of the woodchuck.
You have to hand it to him there.
He's game as a lion.
He fights back desperately.
Intense excitement rains throughout the vicinity.
While the struggle wages you get your clothes on and wait for daylight to come, which it does
in from eight to ten weeks.
Norway is not the only place where the nights are six months long.
There is nobody waiting at the dentists when you get there, it being early.
You are willing to wait.
At a barbershop it may be different, but at a dentist's you are always willing to wait like a gentleman.
But the sinewy young man who is sitting in the front parlor reading the Hammer Throwers Gazette
welcomes you with a false air of gaiety entirely out of keeping with the circumstances and invites you to step right in.
He tells you that you are next.
This is wrong.
If you were next, you would turn and flee like a deer.
Not being next, you enter.
Right from the start, you seem to take a dislike to this young man.
You catch him spitting in his hands and hitching his sleeves up as you are hanging up your hat.
Besides, he is too robust for a dentist.
With those shoulders he ought to be a barler-maker or a safe-money.
or something of that sort.
You resolve inwardly the next time you go to a dentist,
you are going to want to be more ladylike bearing and gentler demeanor.
It seems a brutal thing that a big, strong man should waste his years in a dental establishment
when the world is clamoring for strong men to do the heavy lifting jobs.
But before you can say anything, this muscular athlete has laid
violet hands on your palpitating form, and wadded it abruptly into the hideous embraces
of a red plush chair, which looks something like the one they use up at Sing Sing,
only it's done more quickly up there, and with less suffering on the part of the condemned.
On one side of you, you behold quite a display of open plumbing, and on the other side
a tasty exhibit of small steel tools of assorted sizes.
No matter which way your gaze may stray, you'll be seeing something attractive.
You also take notice of an electric motor about large enough, you would say, to run a trolley
car, which is purring nearby in a sinister and forbidding way.
They are constantly making these little improvements in the dental profession.
I have heard that fifty years ago, a dentist traveled about over the country from place to
place, sometimes pulling a tooth and sometimes breaking a colt. He practiced his art with an outfit
consisting of two pairs of iron forceps, one pair being saber-toothed, while the other pair was
merely soft-fretted, and he gave a man the same kind of treatment he gives a horse,
only he tied the horse's legs first. But now electricity
is in general use, and no dentist's establishment is complete without a dynamo attachment,
which makes a crooning sound when in operation, and provides instrumental accompaniment
to the song of the official canary.
I know why a barber in a country town is always learning to play on the guitar, and I know
why a man with an emotional Adam's apple always wears an open front collar.
I know these things, but am debarred from telling them by reason of a solemn oath.
But I have not yet been able to discover why every dentist keeps a canary in his office.
Nor do I know why it is, just as you settle your neck back on a headrest that's every bit as comfortable as an anvil.
And just as a dentist climbs into you as far as the armpits and begins probing at the bottom of a tooth,
which has roots extending back beyond your ears, like an old-fashioned pair of spectacles,
that the canary birds should wipe his nose on a cuddle bone,
and dash into a melodious outburst of two hundred thousand twitters,
all of them being twitters of the same size, shape, and color.
For that matter, I don't even know what kind of an animal a cuddle is,
although I should say from the shape of his bone,
as used by the canary instead of a pocket-handkerchief,
that he is circular and flat and stands on edge only with the utmost difficulty.
If you will pardon my temporary digressions into the realm of natural history,
we will now return to the main subject, which was your tooth.
The moment the muscular young man starts up his motor and gives the canary its music cue
and begins pawing over his tool collection to pick out a good, sharp one, you recover.
All of a sudden you feel fine, and so does the tooth.
Neither one of you ever felt better.
The fox terrier must have killed the woodchuck and then committed suicide.
You are about to mention this double tragedy and beg the young man's pardon for causing him any trouble,
and excuse yourself and go away, but just then.
he quits feeling of his biceps and suddenly seizes you by your features and undoes them.
If you are where you can catch a glimpse of yourself in a mirror,
you will immediately note how much the human-face divine can be made to look
like an old-fashioned red-brick colonial fireplace.
There are likely to be several things you would like to talk about.
You are full of thoughts seeking utterance.
For one thing, you want to tell him.
you don't think the brand of soap he uses on his hands is going to agree with you at all.
You probably don't care personally for the way your barber's thumb tastes either,
but a barber's thumb is Peaches Melba alongside of a dentist's.
Before you can say anything, though, he discovers a cavity or orophis or some sort in the base of your tooth.
It seems to give him pleasure.
Filled with intense gratification by this discovery, and fired, moreover, by the impetuous
order of the chase, he grabs up a crochet-needle with a red-hot stinger on the end of it,
and jabs it down your tooth, to a point about opposite where your suspenders fork in
the back.
You have words with him, then, or at least you start to have words with him, but he puts
his knee in your chest and tells you that.
it really doesn't hurt it all, but is only your imagination and utters other soothing
remarks of that general nature.
He then exchanges the crochet needle for a kind of an instrument with a burr on the end
of it.
This instrument first came into use at the time of the Spanish Inquisition, but has since been
greatly improved on and brought right up to date.
He takes this handy little utensil and proceeds.
to stir up your imagination some more. You again try to say something, speaking in a muffled tone,
but he is not listening. He is calling to a brother assassin in the adjoining room to come and see a
magnificent example of a prime old vatted triple-x exposed nerve. So the second grave-dicker
rests his tools against the palate of his victim and comes in.
As nearly as you can gather from hearsay evidence,
you not being an eyewitness yourself.
One of them harpoons the nerve just back of the gills with a nut-pick.
Remember, please, it is your nerve that they are taking all these liberties with,
and pulls it out of its retreat,
and the other man takes a tack-hammer and tries to beat its brink.
brains out. Any time he misses the nerve, he hits you, so his average is still a thousand,
and it is fine practice for him. A pleasant time is had by everyone present, except you and the
nerve. The nerve wraps its hind legs around your breastbone and hangs on desperately. You
perspire freely and make noises like a drunken Zulu, trying to sing a Swedish folk song while
holding a spoon full of hot mush in his mouth.
In time becoming worried even of these congenial diversions and tiring of the shop-talk
that has been going on, the second dentist returns to his original prey, and the party
who has you in charge tries a new experiment.
He arms himself with a kind of an automatic hammering machine, somewhat similar to the steam riveter
used in constructing steel office buildings, except that this one is more compact and can deliver
about 85 more blows to the second.
Thus equipped, he descends far below your high watermark and engages in aquatic sports and
pastimes for a considerable period of time.
It seems to you that you never saw a man who could go down and stay down as long as this
young man can.
you began to feel that you misjudged his real vocation in life when you decided that he ought to be a boiler-maker you know that he was intended for pearl fishing he's a natural born deep sea-diver he doesn't even have to come up to breathe but stays below
knee-deep in your tide wash merrily knocking chunks off your lowermost coral reefs with his little steam riveter and having a perfectly lovely time
You are overflowing copiously, and you wish he would take the time to stop and bail you out?
You abhor the idea of being drowned as an inside job.
But no, he keeps right on, and along about here it is customary for you to swoon away.
On recovering, you observe that he has changed his mind again.
He is now going in for amateur theatricals and is using you for a theater.
first thoughtfully draping a little rubber-drop curtain across your proscenium arch to keep you from seeing what is going on behind your own scenes he is setting the stage for the thrilling sawmill scene in blue jeans
you can distinctly feel the circular saw at work and you can taste a hod of martyr and a bucket of hot tar and one thing and another that have been left in the wings you also judge that the insulation is the insulation is
burning off of an electrical fixture somewhere up stage.
All this time, the tooth is still offering resistance,
and eventually the dentist comes out in front once more
and makes a little curtain speech to you.
He has just ascertained that what the tooth really needed
was not filling but pulling.
He thought at first that it should be filled,
and that is what he had been doing, filling it.
But now he knows that pulling it is the thing.
the indicated procedure. He does not understand how a tooth that seems so open could have
deceived him. Nevertheless, he will now pull the tooth. He pulls her. She does her level
best, but he pulls her. He harvests small sections of the gum from time to time, and occasionally
he stops long enough to loosen up the roots as far down as your floating ribs. But he
pulls her. He spares no pains to pull that tooth. Or if he spares any, you are not able
subsequently to remember what they were. You utter various loud sounds in a strange and
incomprehensible language, and he lays back and braces his knees against your lower jaw,
and the tooth utters the death rattle and begins picking the cover lid. And then he gives one
final heave, and breaks the roots away from the lower part of your spinal column to which
they were adhering, and emerges into the open, panting but triumphant, and holds his trophy
up for you to look at.
If you didn't know it was your tooth, you take it for an old-fashioned China Cuspidor
that had been neglected by the janitor.
It was a tooth that you had been prising for years, but now you wouldn't have it as a gracious
gift.
You are through with that tooth forever.
You never want to see it again.
As for the dentist, he collects the fixed charge for stumpage and corkage and one thing
and another, and you come away with a feeling in the side of your jaw like a vacant lot.
Your tongue keeps going over there to see if it can recognize the old place by the whole
where the foundations used to be.
You never realized before what a basement there was to a tooth.
As you come out, you pass a fresh victim going in,
and you see the dentist welcome him and then turn to crank up his motor,
and you hear the canary tuning up with a new line of V-shaped twitters.
And you are glad that he is the one who is going in,
and that you are the one who is coming out.
Science tells us that the teeth are the hardest things in the human composition, which is all very well as far as he goes, but what science should do is to go on and finish the sentence. It means the hardest to keep.
End of Chapter 2, Teeth.
Chapter 3 of Cobb's Anatomy by Irving S. Cobb. This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Hair.
As I remarked in the preceding chapter of this work,
one of the pleasantest features about being born
is that we are born without teeth and other responsibilities.
Teeth like debts and installment payments come along later on.
It is the same with hair.
Born we are hairless or comparatively so.
We are in a highly incomplete state at that period.
of our lives.
It takes a fond and doting parent to detect evidences of an actual human aspect in us.
Only the ears and the mouth appear to be up to the plans and specifications.
There is a mouth which, when opened, as it generally is, makes the rest of the face look like a
tire, and there is a pair of ears of such generous size that only a third one is needed
round at the back somewhere, to give us the appearance of a loving cup.
And we are smocked and him stitched with a million wrinkles apiece, more or less,
which partly accounts for the fact that every newborn infant looks to be about 200 years old.
And uniformly, we have the nice red complexion of a restaurant lobster.
You know, that live broiled look.
As for our other features, they are more or less rudimentary.
Of a nose, there is only what a chemist could call a trace.
It seems hard to imagine that a dinky little nubbing like that,
a dimple turned inside out as it were,
will ever develop into a regular nose
with a capacity for freckling in the summer
and catching cold in the winter,
a nose that you can sneeze through and blow through.
There are no eyebrows to speak of either,
and the skull runs up to a sharp point,
like a pineapple cheese.
Just back of the peak is a kind of soft dented in place,
like a Parker House roll,
and if you touch it, we die.
In some cases, this spot remains soft throughout life,
and these persons grow up and go through railroad trains
in presidential years, taking straw votes.
And, as I said before, there isn't any hair.
Only on the slopes of the cheese are some very,
pale, faint, downy lines, which look as though they have been sketched on lightly with a very
soft drawing pencil, and would wipe off readily. This, however, is the inception and beginning
of what afterward becomes among our race, hair. To look at it, you could hardly believe it,
but it is. Barring accidents are backwardness. It continues to grow from that time on through
our childhood, but its behavior is always a profound disappointment.
If the child is a girl and therefore entitled to curly hair, her hair is sure to come in stiff
and straight. If it's a boy, to whom curls would be a curse and a cross of affliction,
he is morally certain to be as curly as a frizzly chicken, and until he gets old enough
to rebel, he will wear long ringlets, and boys,
of his acquaintance will insert cockle-burrs and chewing gum into his tresses, and he will be
known popularly as cissy, and otherwise his life will be made joyous and carefree for him.
If a reddish tone of hair is desired, it is certain to grow out yellow or brown or black.
And if brown is your favorite shade, you are absolutely sure to be nice and red-headed,
with eyebrows and lashes to match.
and so many collics that when you remove your hat,
people will think you're wearing two or three halos at once.
Hair rarely or never acts up to its advance notices.
One of the earliest and most painful recollections of my youth
is associated with hair.
I still tingle warmly when I think of it.
I should say I was about eight years old at the time.
My mother sent me down the street
to the barbers to have my hair trimmed.
Shingled was the term then used.
Some of my private collection of cowlicks
had begun to stand up in a way that invited adverse criticism
and reminded people of sunbursts.
They made me look as though my hair were trying to pull itself out
by the roots and escape.
So I was sent to the barbers.
My little cousin, two years younger,
went along in my charge.
It was thought that the performance,
entertain her. I was mounted in a chair and had a cloth tucked in round my neck, like a
self-made millionaire, about to eat consomme. The officiating barber got out a shiny steel instrument
with jaws, the first pair of clippers I had ever seen, and he ran this up the back of my neck,
producing a most agreeable feeling. He reached the top of my head and would have paused,
but I told him to go right ahead and clip me close all over, which he did.
When he had finished the job I was so delighted with the sensation
and with the attendant result as viewed in a mirror
that I suggested he might give my little cousin a similar treat.
From a mere child I was ever so willing always to share my simple pleasures with those about me,
especially where it entailed no inconvenience on my part.
I told him my father would pay the bill for both of us when he came by that night.
The barber fell in with a suggestion.
It has ever been my experience that a barber will fall in readily
with any suggestion whereby the barber is going to get something out of it for himself.
In this instance he was going to get another quarter,
and a quarter went farther in those days that it does now.
I dismounted from the chair, and my innocent little cousin was in store,
stalled in my place.
As I now recall, she made no protest.
The barber ran his clippers conscientiously and painstakingly over her tender, young scalp,
while I stood admiringly by and watched the long yellow curls fall,
writhing upon the floor at my feet.
It seemed to me that a great and manifest improvement was produced in her general appearance.
Instead of being hampered by those silly curls dangling down all round her face,
she now had a round, slick, smooth dome decorated with a stiff yellowish stubble,
and the skin showed through nice and pink, and the ears were well displayed,
whereas before they had been practically hidden.
She was also relieved of those foolish bangs hanging down in her eyes.
This, I should have stated, occurred in the period when womankind of whatsoever age and also some men wore bangs,
a disease from which all have since recovered, with the exception of race-horses and princesses of the various reigning houses of Europe.
And now my little cousin was shut of those annoying bangs, and her forehead ran up so high that you had to go round behind her to see where it left off.
filled with a joyous sense of achievement and conscious of a kindly deed worthily performed,
I took my little cousin by her hand and led her home.
My mother was waiting for us at the front door.
She seemed surprised when I took off my hat and gave her a look,
but that wasn't a circumstance to her surprise when I proudly took off my little cousin's cap.
She uttered a kind of strangled cry,
and my cousin's mother came running,
and the way she carried on was scandalous and ill-timed.
I will draw a veil over the proceedings of the next few minutes.
At the time, it would have been a source of great personal gratification and comfort to me
if I could have drawn a number of veils, good, thick, woollen ones, over the proceedings.
My mother wept, my aunt wept, my little cousin.
wept, and I am not ashamed to state that I wept quite copiously myself, but I had more provocation
to weep than any of them. When this part of the affair was over, my mother sent me back to the
barber with a message. I was to say that a heart-broken woman demanded to have the curls of which
her darling child had been denuded. I believe that there was some idea entertained of sewing them
to a cap, and requiring my cousin to wear the cap until new ones had sprouted.
Even to me, a mere child of eight, this seemed a foolish and totally unnecessary proceeding,
but the situation had already become so strained that I thought it the part of prudence
to go at once without offering any arguments of my own.
I felt, however, that I would rather be away from the house for a while, until Commer's second
judgment, had succeeded excitement and tumult.
The man who owned the barbershop seemed surprised when I delivered the message,
but he told me to come back in a few minutes and he'd do what he could.
I drifted on down to the confectionery store at the corner to forget my sorrows for the moment
in a worshipful admiration of a display of prize-boxes and crack-noles in glass-front cases.
you should be able to fix the period by the fact that cracknalls and prize boxes were still in vogue among the young.
When I returned, the head barber handed me quite a large box, a shoe-box, with a string-tied round it.
It did not seem possible to me that my cousin could have had a whole shoe-box full of curls,
but things had been going pretty badly that afternoon, and my motives had been misjudged.
and everything, so without any talk I took the box and hurried home with it.
My mother cut the string, and my aunt lifted the lid.
I should prefer again to draw a veil over the scenes that now ensued,
but the necessity of finishing this narrative requires me to state that it being a saturday
and the head barber being a busy man.
He had not taken time to sort out my cousin's curls from among the mother's,
the floatsum and jetsam of his establishment, but he had just swept up enough off the floor
to make a good assorted boxful.
I think the oldest inhabitant had probably dropped in that day to have himself trimmed a little
round the edges.
I seemed to remember a quantity of sandy whiskers shot with gray.
There was enough hair in that box, and enough different kinds and colors of hair and stuff,
to satisfy almost any taste you would have thought.
But my mother and aunt were anything but satisfied.
On the contrary, far from it.
And yet my cousin's hair was all there,
if they had only been willing to spend a few days sorting it out
and separating it from the other contents.
In this particular instance,
I was the exception to the rule that hair generally gives a boy
no great trouble from the time he emerges out of babyhood
until he puts on long pants
and begins to discern something strangely and subtly attractive
about the sex described by Mr. Kipling
as being the more deadly of the species.
During this interim,
it is a matter of no moment to a boy
whether he goes shaggy or cropped shorn or unshorn.
At intervals a frugal parent trims him
to see if both his ears are still there,
or else a barber does it with more thoroughness,
often recovering small articles of household use that have been mysteriously missing from months.
But in the main he goes along, carefree and unbarbered,
not greatly concerned with putting anything in his head or taking anything off of it.
In due season, though, he reaches the age where adolescent whiskers and young romance
begin to sprout out on him simultaneously.
And from that moment on for the rest of his life, his hair is.
is giving him bother and plenty of it.
Your hair gives you bother as long as you have it, and more bother when it starts to go.
You are always doing something for it, and it is always showing deep-died ingratitude in return,
or else the dye isn't deep enough, which is even worse.
Hair is responsible for such by-products as dandruff, barbers, wigs, several comic weeklies, mental anguish, added expense, Chinese revolutions, and the standard joke about a wife's using your best razor to open a can of tomatoes with.
Hair has been of aid to Buffalo Bill, Little Lord Fortleroy, Samson, the Lady Godiva, Jojo the Dog-Faced Boy,
poets, pianists, some artist, and most mattress makers,
but a drawback and a sorrow to Epsilon,
polar bears in captivity and the male sex in general.
This assertion goes not only for hair on the head,
but for hair on the face.
Let us consider for a moment the matter of shaving.
If you shave yourself, you excite a barber's contempt,
and there is nobody whose contempt
the average man dreads more than a barber's, unless it is a waiters.
And on the other hand, if you let a barber shave you,
he excites not your contempt particularly,
but your rage and frequently your undying hatred.
Once in a burst of confidence a barber told me one of the trade secrets of his profession.
He said that among barbers every face fell into one of three classes,
it being either a square, a round, or a squirrel.
I know not, Reader, whether yours be a square or a round or a squirrel,
but this much I will chance on a venture sight unseen,
that you have your periods of intense unhappiness when you are being shaved.
I do not refer so much to the actual process of being shaved.
Indeed, there is something restful and soothing to the average male adult
in the feel of a sharp razor being guided over a bristly jowl by a deft and skillful hand
to the accompaniment of a gentle grating sound, and followed by a sensation of transient silken
smoothness.
Nor do I refer to the barber's habit of conversation.
After all, a barber is human.
He has to talk to somebody, and it might as well be you.
If he didn't have you to talk to, he'd have to talk to another barber.
and that would be no treat to him what i refer to is that which precedes a shave and more especially that which follows after it you rush in for a shave
in ten minutes you have an engagement to be married or something else important and you want a shave and you want it quick does the barber take cognizance of the emergency he does not such would be contrary to the ethics of his calling
knowing from your own lips that you want a shave and that's positively all,
he nevertheless is instantly filled with a burning desire to equip you with a large number of other things.
In this regard, the barbering profession has much in common with the haberdashering
or gents furnishing profession as practiced in our larger cities.
You invade a haberdashering establishment for the purpose, let us say, of investing,
in a plain and simple pair of half-hose, price twenty-five cents.
That emphatically is all that you desire.
You so state in plain, simple language,
using the shorter and uglier word sucks.
Does the youth in the pale mauve shirt with the marquee ring
on the little finger of his left hand rest content with this?
Need I answer this question?
In succession he tries to sell you a fancy-weigh.
with large pearl buttons, a broken lot of silk pajamas, a bathrobe, some shrimp pink underwear,
he wears this kind himself, he tells you, in strict confidence, a pair of plush suspenders
and a knitted necktie that you wouldn't be caught wearing at twelve o'clock at night in the
bottom of a coal mine during a total eclipse of the moon.
If you resist his blandishments and so far forget that you are a gentleman as to you
use harsh language, and if you insist on a pair of socks and nothing else, he'll let you
have them, but he will never feel the same toward you as he did.
Tis much the same with the barber.
You need a shave in a hurry, and he is willing that you should have a shave, he being
there for that purpose, but first and last he can think of upward of thirty or forty
other things that you ought to have, including a shampoo, a hair, a hair, a
haircut, a hair singe, a hair tonic, a hair oil, a manicure, a facial massage, a scalp massage,
a Turkish bath, his opinion on the merits of the newest white hope, a shoe-shine, some
kind of a skin food, and a series of comparisons of the weather we are having this time this
month, with the weather we were having this time last month.
Not all of us are gifted with the power of repartee
by which my friend Frisby turned the edge of the barber's desires.
Your hair, said the barber, fondling a truant luck, is long.
I know it is, said Frisby.
I like it long.
It's so rel-crofty.
It is very long, said the barber with a wistful expression.
I like it long, said Frisby.
I like to have people come up to me on the street and call me Mr. Sutherland
and ask me how I left my sisters.
I like to be mistaken for a Russian pianist.
I like for strangers to stop me and ask me how's everything up at East Aurora.
In short, I like it long.
Yes, sir, said the barber.
Quite so, sir, but it's very long, particularly here in the back.
it covers your coat collar.
Indeed, said Frisby.
You say it covers my coat collar?
Yes, sir, said the barber.
You can't see the coat collar at all.
Have you a good sharp pair of shears here? said Frisby.
Oh, yes, sir, said the barber.
All right, said Frisbee.
Cut the collar off.
But not all of us, as I said before, have this ready gift of
parry and thrust that distinguishes my friend Frisbee.
Mostly we weakly surrender.
Or if we refuse to surrender, demanding just a shave by itself and nothing else,
what then follows?
In my own case, speaking personally, I know exactly what follows.
I do not like to have any powder dabbed on my face when I am through shaving.
I believe in letting the bloom of youth show through your skin, providing you have any bloom of youth to do so.
I always take pains to state my views in this regard at least twice during the operation of being shaved.
Once at the start when the barber has me all lathered up, with soap-suds dripping from the flanges of my shell-like ears and running down my neck,
and once again toward the close of the operation, when he has laid aside his razor and is sousing my defense-like ears.
and is sousing my defenseless features in a liquid that smells and tastes a good deal like those scented pink blotters they used to give away at drugstores to advertise somebody's cologne
does the barber respect my wishes in this regard certainly not he insists on powdering me either before my eyes or surreptitiously and in a clandestine manner if he didn't powder me up he would lose his sense of
self-respect, and probably the union would take his cart away from him.
I think there is something in the Constitution and bylaws requiring that I be powdered up.
I have fought the good fight for years, but I am always powdered.
Sometimes the crafty foe dissembles.
He pretends that he is not going to powder me up.
But all of a sudden, when my back is turned, as it were, he grabs up his powder swab,
and makes a quick swoop upon me, and the hellish deed is done.
I should be pleased to hear from other victims of this practice,
suggesting any practical relief short of homicide.
I do not wish to kill a barber.
There are several other orders in a head,
referring to the persons I intend to kill off first,
but I may be driven to it.
After he has gashed me casually hither in Yen,
and slewished down my helpless,
countenance, with the carefree abandon of a livery-stable hand, washing off a buggy,
and after, as above stated, he has covered up the traces of his crime with powder.
The barber next takes a towel and folds it over his right hand, as prescribed in the rules and
regulations, and then he dabbs me with that towel on various parts of my face,
nine hundred and seventy-four, nine hundred and seventy-four separate and distinct times.
I know the exact number of dabs, because I have taken the trouble to keep count.
I may be in as great a hurry as you can imagine.
I may be but a poor nervous wreck already as I am.
I may be quivering to be up and away from there, but he dabs me with his top.
He dabs me until reason totters on her throne, sometimes just a tiny tot, as the saying goes,
or it may be that the whole cerebral structure is involved.
And then, when he is apparently all through, the demoniac dabber comes back and dabs me one more fiendish,
deliberate, and premeditated dab, making nine hundred and seventy-five dabs in all.
He has to do it.
It's in the ritual that I and you and everybody must have that last dab.
I wonder how many gibbery idiots there are in the asylum today,
whose reason was overthrown by being dabbed that last farewell dab.
I know from my own experience that I can feel the little dark green gibbers
sloshing around inside of me every time it happens.
and some day my mind will give way altogether and there will be a hurry call sent in for the wagon with a lock on the back door yet it is of no avail to cavail or protest we cannot hope to escape
we can only sit there in mute and helpless misery and be filled with a great envy for mexican hairless dogs for quite a spell now we have been speaking of hair on the face at this point we reveal
to hair in its relation to the head.
There are some few among us, mainly professional southerners and leading men,
who retain the bulk of the hair on their heads through life.
But with most of us, the circumstances are different.
Your hair goes from you.
You don't seem to notice it at first.
Then all of a sudden you wake up to the realization that your head is working its way up through the hair.
You start in then desperately doing things for your hair
In the hope of inducing it to stick round the old place a while longer
But it has heard the call of the wild and it is on its way
There's no detaining it
You soak your skull in lotions until your brain softens and your hat band gets moldy from the damp
But your hair keeps right on going
After a while it's practically gone
If only about two-thirds of it is gone, your head looks like a great ox-egg in a snug nest.
But if most of it goes, there is something about you that suggests the glacial period,
with an icy barren peak rising high above the vegetation line,
where a thin line of heroic strands still cling to the slopes.
You are bald, then, a subject fit for the japs of the wicked and universally coupled in the better.
with onions, with hard-boiled eggs, and with the front row of orchestra chairs at a musical
show.
At this time of writing, baldness is creeping insidiously up each side of my head.
It is executing flank movements from the temples northward, and some day the two columns
will meet, and after that I'll be considerably more of a high brow than I am now.
At present I am craftily combing the remaining thatch in the middle.
middle, and smoothing it out nice and flat, so as to keep those bare spots covered,
thinly perhaps, but nevertheless covered.
It is my earnest desire to continue to keep them covered.
I am not a professional beauty.
I am not even what you would call a good amateur beauty, but I want to make what little
hair I have go as far as it conveniently can.
But does the barber, to whom I repair at frequent intervals,
coincide with my desire in this respect again i reply he does not every time i go in i speak to him about it i say to him
woodman spare that hair touch not a single strand in youth it sheltered me and i'll protect it now or in substance that he says yes he will but he doesn't mean it he waits until he can catch me with my guard down
Then he sees as a comb, and using the edge of his left hand as a bevel,
and operating his right with a sort of free-arm Spencerian movement,
he roaches my hair up in a scallop effect on either side,
and upon reaching the crest he fights with it and wrestles with it
until he makes it stand erect in a feather-edged design.
I can tell by his expression that he is pleased with this arrangement.
He loves to send his victim,
into the world, tufted like the fretful cockatoo.
He likes to see searching waves of hair dash high on a stern and rock-bound head.
His sense of the artistic demands such a result.
What cares he how I feel about it, so long as the higher cravings of his own nature are
satisfied?
But I resent it.
I resent it bitterly.
I object to having my head look like a real estate development
with an opening for a new street going up each side
and an ornamental design in fancy landscape gardening across the top.
If I permit this, I won't be able to keep on saying
that I was twenty-seven on my last birthday,
with some hope of getting away with it.
So I insist that he put my front hair right back where he found it.
He does so under protest and begrudging.
it is true, but he does it.
And then, watching his opportunity,
he runs in on me and overpowers me
and roaches it up some more.
If I weaken and submit,
he is happy as the day is long.
If he gets it roached up on both sides,
that will make me look like a horizontal bar performer,
which is his idea of manly beauty.
Or if he gets it roached up on one side only,
there is still some consolation in it for him.
I'm liable to be mistaken anywhere for a trained animal performer.
But once in a very great while,
he doesn't get it roached up on either side,
but has to stand there and suffer as he sees me
walk forth into the world with my hair combed to suit me and not him.
I can tell by his look that he is grieved and downcast,
and that he will probably go home and be crossed to the children.
He has but one solace.
He hopes to have better luck with me next time, and probably he will.
The last age of hair is a wig,
but wigs are not very satisfactory either.
I've seen all the known varieties of wigs,
and I never saw one yet that looked as though it were even on speaking terms
with the head that was under it.
A wig always looks as though it were a total stranger to the head, and it just lit there a minute to rest, preparatory to flying along to the next head.
Nevertheless, I think on the whole I'll be happier when my time comes to wear one, because then no barber can roach me up.
End of Chapter 3.
Hair
Chapter 4 of Cobb's Anatomy by Irving S. Cobb.
This Librivox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 4. Hands and Feet
Nearly every boy has a period in his life.
When he is filled with an envious admiration for the East Indian God with the extra set of arms, Vishnu, I think this party's name is.
To a small boy, it seems a grand thing to have a really adequate assortment of hands.
He considers the advantage of such an arrangement in school, two hands in plain view above the
desk holding McGuffie's fourth reader at the proper angle for study, and the other two out of sight,
down underneath the desk, engaged in manufacturing paper wads, or playing crack-a-lou,
or some other really worthwhile employment, or for robbing bird's nests.
There should be two hands for you since skinny up the tree.
and one hand for scaring off the mother bird, and one hand for stealing the eggs.
And for hanging on behind wagons the combination positively could not be beaten.
Then there would be the gaudy conspicuousness of going around with four arms,
weaving in and out in a kind of spidery effect,
while less favored boys were forced to content themselves with just an ordinary and insufficient pair.
Really, there was only one drawback to the contemplation of this scheme.
There'd be twice as many hands to wash when company was coming to dinner.
Generally speaking, a boy's hands give him no serious concern during the first few years of his life,
except at such times as his mother grows officious and fussy,
and insists that they ought to be washed up as far as the regular place for washing a boy's hands,
to wit about midway between the knuckles and the wrist.
The fact that one finger is usually in a state of mashedness is no drawback.
The presence of a soiled rag around a finger gives to a boy's hand a touch of distinctiveness,
singles it out from ordinary unmaimed hands.
Its presence has been known to excuse its happy possessor from such chores as
bringing wood in for the kitchen stove or pulling dock weeds out of the grass in a front yard,
where it would be much easier and quicker to pull the grass out of the dockweeds.
It may even be a source of profit by removing the wrappings and charging two china marbles a look.
I seem to recall that in the case of a specially attractive injury,
such as a thumbnail knocked off or a deep cut which has refused to heal by first intention,
or an embedded splinter in process of being drawn out by a scrap of fat meat,
that as much as four china marbles could be charged.
On the Fourth of July you occasionally burned your hands,
and in cold winters they chapped extensively across the knuckles,
but those were but the marks and scars of honorable endeavor and a hearty endurance.
In our set, the boy whose knuckles had the deepest cracks in them
was a prominent and admired figure, crowned, as you might say, with an imaginary chaplet by reason of his chaps.
With girls, of course, it was different.
Girls were superfluous and unnecessary creatures, with a false and inflated idea of the value of soap and water.
Their hands weren't good for much anyway.
Later on, we discovered that a girl's hands were excellent for holding,
purposes in a hammock or while coming back from a straw ride.
But I am speaking now of the earlier stages of our development,
before the presence of the ostensibly weaker sex began to awaken
irresponsive throbs in our several bosoms.
In short, when girls were mere nuisances and things to be ignored whenever possible.
In that early stage of his existence, hands have no altruistic or sentimental.
or ornamental value for a boy, they are for useful purposes altogether and are regarded as such.
It is only when he has reached the age of tailcoats and spike-fence collars that he discovers two hands
are frequently too many and often not enough.
They are too many at your first church wedding when wearing your first pair of white kids,
and they are not enough at a five o'clock tea.
There is a type of male who can go to a five o'clock tea and not fall over a lot of Louis Con's furniture
or get himself hopelessly tangled up in a hanging drapery, and who can seem perfectly at ease
while holding in his hands a walking stick, a pair of dove-colored gloves, a two-quart hat,
a cup of tea with a slice of lemon peel in it, a teaspoon, a lump of sugar, a seed cookie,
an olive and the hand of a lady with whom he is discussing the true meaning of the message of the
late Ipsen.
But these gifted mortals are not common.
They are rare and exotic.
There are also some few who can do ushing at a church wedding with a pair of white kids on
and not appear overly self-conscious.
These are also the exceptions.
The great majority of us suffer vis-apeutive.
under such circumstances.
You have the feeling that each hand weighs fully twenty-four pounds, and that it is hanging
out of the sleeve for a distance of about one and three-quarter yards, and you don't know
what to do with your hands, and on the whole would feel much more comfortable and decorative
if they were both sought off at the wrists and hidden some place where you couldn't find
them.
You have that feeling and you look it.
you look as though you were working in a plaster of paris factory and were carrying home a couple of large sacks of samples it would be grand to be a vishnu at a five o'clock tea but awful to be one at a church wedding
about the time you find yourself embarking on a career of teas and weddings you also begin to find yourself worrying about the appearance of your hands
up until now the hands have given you no great concern one way or the other but some day you wake to the realization that you need to be manicured once you catch that disease there is no hope for you
there are ways of curing you of almost any habit except manicuring you get so that you aren't satisfied unless your nails run down about a quarter of an inch further than nails were originally intended to run and unless they glitter freely you feel strangely diswrought in company
inasmuch as no male creature's finger-nails will glitter with the desired degree of brilliancy for more than twenty-four short and fleeting hours after a treatment you find yourself constantly in the act of either just getting a manicure or just getting over one
it is an expensive habit too it takes time and it takes money there's the fixed charge for manicuring in the first place and then there's the tip
once there was a manicure lady who wouldn't take a tip but she is now no more her indignant sisters stab her to death with hatpins and nail files
manacuring as a public profession is a comparatively recent development of our civilization the fathers of the republic and the founders of the constitution which was founded first and has been foundering ever since if you can believe what a lot of people in congress say
They knew nothing of manicuring.
Speaking by and large,
they only got their thumbs wet when doing one of three things,
taking a bath,
going in swimming or turning a page in a book.
Washington probably was never manicured nor Jefferson nor Franklin.
It's a cinch that Daniel Boone and Israel Putnam and George Rogers Clark weren't,
and yet it is generally conceded that they got along fairly well without it.
But as the campaign orators are forever pointing out from the hustlers and the forum,
this is an age calling for change and advancement.
And manicuring is one of the advancements that likewise calls for the change,
for fifty cents in change anyhow, and more if you are inclined to be generous with the tip.
Shall you ever forget your first manicure?
The chance are unanimously in the momentary.
majority. It seems an easy thing to walk into a manicure parlor or a barbershop and shove
your hands across a little table to a strange young woman and tell her to go ahead and shine
them up a bit. The way you hear old veteran manicuree's saying it. It seems easy, I say,
and looks easy, but it isn't as easy as it seems. Until you get hardened, it requires courage of a very
high ardor.
You, the abashed novice, see other men sitting in the front window of the manicure shop
just as debonair and cozy as though they'd been born and raised there, swapping the ready
repartee of the day with dashing creatures of a frequently blonde aspect, and you imagine they
have always done so.
You little know that these persons who are now appearing so much at home and who can
snap out those bright, witty sayings like,
I gotcha, Steve, and, well, see who's here.
Without a moment's hesitation, and without having to stop and think for the right word or the right
phrase, but have it right there on the tip of the tongue.
You little wreck that they too passed through the same initiation which you now contemplate,
yet such is the case.
You have dress rehearsals, private ones, in your room.
In the seclusion of your bedchamber, you picture yourself opening the door of the marble manicure hall,
and stepping in with a brisk yet graceful tread, like James K. Hatchet, making an entrance in the first act,
and glancing about you casually, like John Drew, counting up the house, and saying,
Hello, girlies, how are all the little hearts delights this afternoon?
Just like that.
And picking out the most sumptuous and attractive of the flattered young ladies in waiting,
and sinking easily into the chair opposite her, see photos of William Farisham,
and throwing the coat lapels back, at the same time resting the left hand,
clenched upon the upper thigh with the elbow well out.
Donald Bryan asking a lady to waltz,
and offering the right hand to the favorite female
and telling her to go as far as she likes with it.
It sounds simple when you're figuring it out alone,
but it rarely works out that way in practice.
It is my belief that every woman longs for the novelty of a Turkish bath
and every man for the novelty of a manicure
long before either dares to tackle it.
I may be wrong, but this is my belief.
And in the case of the man, he usually makes a number of false starts.
You go to the portals and hesitate, and then, stumbling across the threshold,
you either dive on through to the barbershop, if there is a barbershop in connection,
or else you mumble something about being in a hurry and coming back again,
and retreat, with all the grace and ease that would be shown by a hard-shell crab,
that was trying to back into the mouth of a milk bottle.
You are likely to do this several times, but finally someday you stick.
You slumped down into one of those little chairs and offer your hands or one of them
to a calm and slightly arrogant-looking young lady, and you tell her to please shine them up a little.
You endeavored to appear as though you had been doing this at frequent periods stretching through a good
number of years, but she, bless her little heart, she knows better than that.
The female of the manicuring species is not to be deceived by any such cheap and transparent
artifices.
If you wore a peekable waist, she couldn't see through you any easier.
Your hands would give you away if your face didn't.
In a sibilant aside, she addresses the young lady at the next table, the one with the nine
bracelets and the hair-done-up delicatessen store mode, sausages, rolls, and buns, whereup
both of them laugh in a significant silvery way, and you feel the back of your neck setting your
collar on fire.
You can smell the bone button back there scorching, and you're glad it's not celluloid,
celluloid being more inflammable and subject to combustion when subjected to intense heat.
When both have laughed their merry-fill, the young woman who has you in charge, looks you right in the eye and says,
"'Dearie me, you pardon me saying so, but your nails are in a perfectly terrible state.
I don't think I've seen a jump man's nails in such a state for ever so long.
Pardon me again, but how long has it been since you had them did?'
To which you reply in what seems to be a jaunty and off-hand tone,
Oh, quite some little while I've been out of town.
That's what I thought, she says with a slight shrug.
It isn't so much what she says.
It's the way she says it, the tone and all,
which makes you feel smaller and smaller until you could crawl into your own watch-pocket
and live happily there ever after.
There'd be slews of room,
and when you wanted the air of an evening,
you could climb up in a buttonhole of your vest
and be quite cozy and comfortable.
But shrink as you may,
there is now no hope of escape,
for she has reached out and grabbed you firmly by the wrist.
She has you fast.
You have a feeling that eight or nine thousand people
have assembled behind you,
and are all gazing fixedly into the small of your back.
The only things about you that haven't shriveled up are your hands.
You can feel them growing larger and larger,
and redder and redder, and more prominent and conspicuous every instant.
The Lady begins operations.
You are astonished to note how many tools and implements it takes
to manicure a pair of hands properly.
The top of her little table is full of them, and she pulls open a drawer and shows you some more, ranged in rows.
There are files and steel biters and pigeon-toed scissors, and scrapers and polishers and things,
and wads of cotton with which to staunch the blood of the wounded,
and bottles of liquid and little medicinal-looking jars full of red paste,
and a cut-glass crock with soap-suds in it,
and a whole lot of little orange-wood stobbers.
In the interest of truth, I have taken the pains to inquire,
and I have ascertained that these stobbers are invariably of orange-wood.
Say what you will, the orange tree is a hearty growth.
Every February you read in the papers that the Florida orange crop
for the third consecutive time since Christmas
has been entirely and totally destroyed by Frost.
And yet there is always an adequate supply on hand
of the principal products of the orange phosphate
for the soda fountains, blossoms for the bride,
political sentiment for the north of Ireland,
and little sharp stabbors for the manicure lady.
Speaking as an outsider,
I would say that there are to be other varieties of wood
that would serve as well,
and bring about the desired results as readily.
A good, thorny variety of poison ivy ought to fill the bill, I should think.
But it seems that orange wood is absolutely essential.
A manicure lady could no more do a manicure properly without using an orange wood-stopper at certain periods
than a cartoonist could draw a picture of a man in jail without putting a ball and chain on him,
or a summer resort could get along without a lover's leap with an easy walking distance of the hotel.
It simply isn't done, that's all.
Well, as I was saying, she gets out her toolkit and goes to work on you.
You didn't dream that there were so many things, mainly of a painful nature,
that could be done to a single fingernail,
and you flinch as you suddenly remember that you have ten of them in all,
Counting thumbs in with fingers.
She takes a fingernail in hand, and she files it, and she trims it,
and she softens it with hot water, and hardens it with chemicals, and pour boils it a little
while, and then she cuts off the hangnails.
If there aren't any hangnails there already, she'll make a few,
and shears away enough extra cuticle to cover quite a good-sized little boy.
She goes over you with a bristle brush and warms up your nerve ends until you tingle clear back to your dorsal fin,
and then she takes one of those orange wood-stobbers previously referred to,
and goes on an exploring expedition down under the nail looking for the quick.
She always finds it.
There was no record of a failure to find the quick,
Having found it, she proceeds to wake it up and teach it some parlor tricks.
I may not have set forth all these various details in the exact order in which they take
place, but I know she does them all.
And somewhere along about the time when she is halfway through with the first hand,
she makes you put the other hand in the suds.
Later on, when you have had more practice at this thing,
You learn to wait for the signal before plunging the second hand into the suds.
But being green on this occasion, you are apt to mistake the moving of the crock of suds
over from the right-hand side to the left-hand side, as a notice and to poke your untouched hand
right in without further orders, hoping to get it softened up well, so as to save her trouble
in trimming it down to a size which will suit her.
But this is wrong, this is very wrong, as she tells you promptly, with a pitying smile for your ignorance.
Manicure girls are as careful about boiling a hand as some particular people are about boiling their eggs for breakfast of a morning.
A two-minute hand is no pleasure to her absolutely if she has diagnosed your hand as one calling forth six
minutes, or vice versa.
So, should you err in this regard, she will snatch the offending hand out and wipe it
off and give it back to you and tell you to keep it in a dry place until she calls for it.
Manecure girls are very funny that way.
Time passes on and on, and by degrees you begin to feel more and more at home.
Your bashfulness is wearing off.
The coherent power of speech has returned to you,
and you have exchanged views with her on the relative merits of the better-known brands of chewing-gum,
and which kind holds the flavor longest,
and you have swapped ideas on the issue of whether ladies should or should not smoke cigarettes in public,
and she knows how much your stick-pin cost you,
and you know what her favorite flower is.
You are getting along fine, when all of a sudden, she dabs your nails with a red paste and
then snatches up a kind of a polishing tool and ferociously rubs your fingers until they catch
on fire.
Just when the conflagration threatens to become general, she stops using the polisher and proceeds
to cool down the ruins by gently burnishing your nails against the soft,
pink palm of her hand.
You like this, better than the other way.
You could ignite yourself by friction almost any time if you got hold of the right kind
of a shammie-skin rubber, but this is quite different and highly soothing.
You are beginning to really enjoy the sensation when she roguishly pats the back of your
hand, pity pat, as a signal that the operation is now over.
You pay the check and tip the lady, tip her fifty cents if you wish to be regarded as a lovely jump man,
or only twenty-five cents if you are satisfied with being a very nice fellow,
and you secure your hat and step forth into the open with the feeling of one who has taken a trip into a distant domain,
and on the whole has rather enjoyed it.
You stand in the sunlight and waggle your fingers.
and you were struck with the desirable glitter that flirts from fingertip to finger-tip like a heliograph winking on a mountaintop it is indeed a pleasant spectacle
you decide that hereafter you will always glitter so it is cheaper than wearing diamonds and much more refined and so you take good care of your fingers all that day and carefully refrain from dipping them in the brine while in getting it
in the well-known indoor sport of spearing for dill pickles at the business men's lunch.
But the next morning, when you wake up, the desirable glitter is gone.
You only glimmer, dully.
Your fingers do not sparkle and dazzle and scintillate as they did.
As Francois Villan, the French poet would undoubtedly have said,
had manicures been known at the time he was writing his poems,
where are the manicures of yesterday, instead of making it where are the snows of yesterday?
There being no ready answer for either question, except that manicures of yesterday, like the
snows of yesterday, are never there when you start looking for them. They have just
naturally got up and gone away, leaving no forwarding address. You have now been launched
upon your career as a manicuree.
You never get over it.
You either get married and your wife does your nails for you,
thus saving you large sums of money,
but failing to import the high degree of polish
and the spice of romance noticed in connection with the same job
when done away from home,
or you continue to patronize the regular establishments
and become known in time as Polished Percival,
the pet of the manicure purpose.
But in either event, your hands which once were hands and nothing more, have become a source of added
trouble and expense to you.
Speaking of hands, naturally brings one to the subject of feet, which was intended originally
to be the theme for the last half of this chapter.
But unfortunately I find I have devoted so much space to your hands that there is but
little room left for your feet, and so far as your feet are concerned, we must content ourselves
on this occasion with a few general statements.
Feet, I take it, speaking both from experience and observation, are even more trouble to
us than hands are.
There are still a good many of us left who go through life without doing anything much for
our hands, but with our feet it is different.
They thrust themselves upon us, so to speak, demanding care and attention.
This goes for all sizes and all ages of feet.
From the time you are a small boy and suffer from stone bruises in the summer and chill
blains in the winter, on through life you're beset with corns and calluses and falling of
the instep and all the other ills that feet are heir to.
The rich limp with the gout.
The moderately well-to-do content themselves with an active ingrown nail or so, and the
poor man goes out and drops an iron casting on his toe.
Nearly every male who lives to reach the voting age has a period of mental weakness in his
youth when he wears those pointed shoes that turn up at the ends like sleigh-runners, and
spends the rest of his life regretting it. Feet are certainly ungrateful things. I might say they
are proverbially ungrateful. You do for them, and they do you. You get one corn, hard or soft,
cured up or removed bodily, and a whole crowd of its relatives come in to take its place.
I imagine that nature intended we should go barefooted and is now getting even with us.
us because we don't. Our poor, painful feet go with us through all the years, and every step
in life is marked by a pang of some sort, and right on up to the end of our days our feet are
getting more infirm and more troublesome and more crotchety and harder to bear with all the
time. How many are there right now who have one foot in the grave and the other at the
Choropatists.
Thousands, I reckon.
Napoleon said an army traveled on its stomach.
I don't blame the army.
Far from it?
I've often wished I could travel that way myself,
and I've no doubt so has every other man
who ever crowded a number nine and three-quarter foot
into a number eight patent-leather shoe,
and then went to call on friends residing in a steam-heated apartment,
as what man has not.
once the green corn dance was an exclusive thing with the sioux indians but it may now be witnessed when one man steps on another man's toes in a crowd
we are accustomed to make fun of the humble worm of the dust but in one respect the humble worm certainly has it on us he goes through existence without any hands and any feet to bother him
Indeed, in this regard, I can think of but one creature in all creation who is worse off than we poor humans are.
That is the lowly earwig.
Think of being an earwig that suffers from fallen arches himself and has a wife that suffers from cold feet.
End of Chapter 4. Hands and Feet
End of Cobb's Anatomy by Irving S. Cobb.
