Classic Audiobook Collection - Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock ~ Full Audiobook [comedy]
Episode Date: April 16, 2026Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock audiobook. Genre: comedy Stephen Leacock's Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy is a sparkling collection of comic sketches, mock essays, and playful s...tories that turns everyday modern life into a field of absurd adventure. With a straight face and a perfectly timed sense of exaggeration, Leacock pokes fun at businessmen, social climbers, amateur intellectuals, romantic dreamers, and anyone who takes fashionable ideas too seriously. The book moves through a series of memorable situations rather than a single continuous plot, introducing a lively cast of professors, lovers, schemers, hosts, guests, and eccentrics who all become trapped in their own vanity, confusion, or misplaced confidence. Whether he is parodying high society, popular fiction, education, travel, or the language of self-importance, Leacock keeps the humor light on its feet while quietly exposing the gap between how people wish to appear and how foolish they often are. Beneath the wit is a sharp but cheerful view of human nature, full of affection for weakness even as it laughs at it. Rich in irony, wordplay, and social satire, this is a classic showcase of Leacock's ability to make lunacy sound perfectly reasonable. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 00 (00:01:25) Chapter 01 (00:27:14) Chapter 02 (00:43:23) Chapter 03 (01:10:24) Chapter 04 (01:41:32) Chapter 05 (02:02:53) Chapter 06 (02:12:30) Chapter 07 (02:19:30) Chapter 08 (02:30:37) Chapter 09 (02:33:10) Chapter 10 (02:39:56) Chapter 11 (02:51:44) Chapter 12 (03:04:52) Chapter 13 (03:11:28) Chapter 14 (03:13:35) Chapter 15 (03:19:23) Chapter 16 (03:32:41) Chapter 17 (03:40:31) Chapter 18 (04:02:10) Chapter 19 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Moonbeams from the larger lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
Preface
The prudent husbandman, after having taken from his field all the straw that is there,
rakes it over with a wooden rake and gets as much again.
The wise child, after the lemonade jug is empty,
takes the lemons from the bottom of it and squeezes them into a still larger brew.
So does the sagacious author, after having sold his material to the magazines and been paid for it,
clap it into book covers and give it another squeeze. But in the present case, the author is of a
nice conscience and anxious to place responsibility where it is due. He therefore wishes to make
all proper acknowledgments to the editors of Vanity Fair, the American Magazine, the Popular
Magazine, Life, Puck, the Century, Matuthan's Annual, and all others who are in any way implicated
in the making of this book.
Stephen Leacock, McGill University, Montreal, October 1, 1915.
End of preface.
Section 1 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Spoof, A Thousand Guinea novel, New, Fascinating, Perplexing.
Chapter 1
Readers are requested to note that this novel has taken our special prize
of a check for a thousand guineas. This alone guarantees for all intelligent readers a palpitating
interest in every line of it. Among the thousands of manuscripts which reached us, many of them
coming in carts early in the morning, and moving in a dense phalanx indistinguishable from the
Covent Garden Market wagons, others pouring down our coal chute during the working hours of the day,
and others again being slipped surreptitiously into our letterbox by pale, timid girls,
scarcely more than children after nightfall. In fact, many of them came in their nightgowns.
This manuscript alone was the sole one, in fact the only one, to receive the prize of a check of a thousand guineas.
To other competitors we may have given, inadvertently perhaps, a bag of sovereigns or a string of pearls,
but to this story alone is awarded the first prize by the unanimous decision of our judges.
When we say that the latter body included two members of the cabinet, two lords of the Admiralty,
and two bishops, with power in case of dispute to send all the manuscripts to send all the manuscripts to the Tsar of Russia,
our readers will breathe a sigh of relief to learn that the decision was instant and unanimous.
Each one of them, in reply to our telegram, answered immediately, spoof.
This novel represents the last word in up-to-date fiction.
It is well known that the modern novel has got far beyond the point of mere storytelling.
The childish attempt to interest the reader has long since been abandoned by all the best writers.
They refuse to do it.
The modern novel must convey a message, or else it must paint a picture, or remove a veil,
or open a new chapter in human psychology.
Otherwise, it is no good.
Spoof does all of these things. The reader rises from its perusal, perplexed, troubled, and yet so
filled with information that rising itself is a difficulty. We cannot, for obvious reasons,
insert the whole of the first chapter, but the portion here presented was praised by the Saturday
afternoon review as giving one of the most graphic and at the same time realistic pictures of America
ever written in fiction.
Of the characters whom our readers are to imagine seated on the deck, on one of the many decks,
all connected by elevators, of the Gloritania, one word may be said.
Verde-Lancy is, as the reviewers have under oath declared, a typical young Englishman of the upper class.
He is nephew to the Duke of, but of this fact no one on the ship, except the captain, the purser,
the steward, and the passengers are or is aware.
In order entirely to conceal his identity, Verde-Lancy is traveling under the assumed name of Lancy de Vair.
In order the better to hide the object of his journey, Lancy de Verre, as we shall now call him,
though our readers will be able at any moment to turn his name backwards,
has given it to be understood that he is traveling merely as a gentleman anxious to see America.
This naturally baffles all those in contact with him.
the girl at his side, but perhaps we may best let her speak for herself.
Somehow as they sat together on the deck of that great steamer in the afterglow of the sunken sun,
listening to the throbbing of the propeller, a rare sound which neither of them, of course, had ever heard before,
Devere felt that he must speak to her, something of the mystery of the girl fascinated him.
What was she doing here alone with no one but her mother and her maid on the bosom of the Atlantic?
Why was she here? Why was she not somewhere else? The thing puzzled perplexed him. It would not let him alone. It fastened upon his brain. Somehow he felt that if he tried to drive it away, it might nip him in the ankle. In the end he spoke.
And you too, he said, leaning over her deck chair, are going to America?
He had suspected this ever since the boat left Liverpool.
Now at length he framed his growing conviction into words.
Yes, she assented, and then timidly,
it is 3,213 miles wide, is it not?
Yes, he said, and 1,781 miles deep.
It reaches from the 49th parallel to the Gulf of Mexico.
Oh, cried the girl, what a vivid picture,
I seem to see it."
"'It's major axis,' he went on, his voice sinking almost to a caress,
"'is formed by the rocky mountains, which are practically a prolongation of the cordillian range.
"'It is drained,' he continued.
"'How splendid!' said the girl.
"'Yes, is it not?
"'It is drained by the Mississippi, by the St. Lawrence, and, dare I say it, by the upper Colorado.'
somehow his hand had found hers in the half gloaming but she did not check him go on she said very simply i think i ought to hear it
the great central plain of the interior he continued is formed by a vast alluvial deposit carried down as silt by the mississippi east of this the range of the alleghenies nowhere more than eight thousand feet in height forms a secondary or subordinate axis from which the watershed follows
to the Atlantic. He was speaking very quietly but earnestly. No man had ever spoken to her like this
before. What a wonderful picture! she murmured half to herself, half allowed, and half not allowed,
and half not to herself. Through the whole of it, DeVare went on. There run railways, most of them
east to west, though a few run from west to east. The Pennsylvania system alone has 21,000
miles of track.
Twenty-one thousand miles, she repeated.
Already she felt her will strangely subordinate to his.
He was holding her hand firmly clasped in his and looking into her face.
Dare I tell you, he whispered, how many employees it has?
Yes, she gasped, unable to resist.
A hundred and fourteen thousand, he said.
There was size.
They were both thinking. Presently she spoke timidly.
Are there any cities there?
Cities, he said enthusiastically.
Ah, yes, let me try to give you a word picture of them.
Vast cities, with tall buildings, reaching to the very sky.
Why, for instance, the new Woolworth building in New York.
Yes, yes, she broke in quickly.
How high is it?
Seven hundred and fifty feet.
The girl turned to her.
and faced him.
Don't, she said.
I can't bear it.
Some other time, perhaps, but not now.
She had risen and was gathering her wraps.
And you, she said, why are you going to America?
Why? he answered.
Because I want to see, you know, to learn.
And when I have learned and seen and known,
I want other people to see and to learn and to know.
I want to write it all down, all the vast palpitiful
picture of it. Ah, if I only could, I want to see, and here he passed his hand through his
hair as if trying to remember, something of the relations of labor and capital, of the extraordinary
development of industrial machinery, of the new and intricate organization of corporation
finance, and in particular I want to try to analyze, no one has ever done it yet, the men who
guide and drive it all, I want to set down the psychology of the multimillionaire,
He paused. The girl stood irresolute. She was thinking, apparently, for if not, why stand there?
Perhaps, she faltered, I could help you.
You?
Yes, I might, she hesitated. I, I come from America.
You, said DeVere in astonishment. With a face and voice like yours, it is impossible.
The boldness of the compliment held her speechless for a moment.
I do, she said.
My people lived just outside of Cohoes.
They couldn't have, he said passionately.
I shouldn't speak to you like this, the girl went on,
but it's because I feel from what you have said
that you know and love America, and I think I can help you.
You mean, he said, divining her idea,
that you can help me to meet a multi-millionaire?
Yes, she answered, still hesitating.
You know one?
Yes, she said, still hesitating, I know one.
She seemed about to say more, her lips had already opened,
when suddenly the dull, raucous blast of the fog-horn,
they used a raucous one on this ship on purpose,
cut the night air, wet fog rolled in about them,
wetting everything.
The girl shivered.
I must go, she said.
Good night.
For a moment, DeVere was about to detain her.
The wild thought leaped into his mind to ask her her name, or at least her mother's.
With a powerful effort he checked himself.
Good night, he said.
She was gone.
Chapter 2.
Limits of space forbid the insertion of the whole of this chapter.
Its opening contains one of the most vivid word pictures
of the inside of an American customs house ever pictured in words.
From the customs wharf, DeVare is driven in a taxi to the Belmont.
Here he engages a room.
Here, too, he sleeps.
Here also, though cautiously at first, he eats.
All this is so admirably described
that only those who have driven in a taxi to an hotel and slept there
can hope to appreciate it.
Limits of space also forbid our describing in full Devere's vain quest in New York of the beautiful
creature whom he had met on the steamer, and whom he had lost from sight in the Agrette Department
of the Customs House. A thousand times he cursed his folly in not having asked her name. Meanwhile,
no word comes from her, till suddenly, mysteriously, unexpectedly, on the fourth day a note is
handed to Devere by the third assistant head waiter of the Belmont. It is addressed in a lady's
hand. He tears it open. It contains only the written words,
Call on Mr. J. Superman Overgold. He is a multi-millionaire. He expects you.
To leap into a taxi from the third story of the Belmont was the work of a moment.
To drive to the office of Mr. Overgold was less. The portion of the novel which follows is
perhaps the most notable part of it. It is this part of the chapter, which the Hibbert Journal
declares to be the best piece of psychological analysis that appears in any novel of the season.
We reproduce it here.
"'Exactly, exactly,' said DeVare, writing rapidly in his notebook as he sat in one of the
deep leather armchairs of the luxurious office of Mr. Overgold.
So you sometimes feel as if the whole thing were not worthwhile.
I do, said Mr. Overgold. I can't help asking myself what it all means. Is life, after all,
merely a series of immaterial phenomena, self-developing, and based solely on sensation and reaction,
or is it something else? He paused for a moment to sign a check for $10,000 and throw it out of the
window, and then went on, speaking still with the terse brevity of a man of business.
Is sensation everywhere, or is there person?
too. On what grounds, if any, may the hypothesis of a self-explanatory consciousness be rejected?
In how far are we warranted in supposing that innate ideas are inconsistent with pure materialism?
Devere listened fascinated. Fortunately for himself, he was a university man fresh from the
examination halls of his alma mater. He was able to respond at once.
I think, he said modestly, I grasp your thought. You mean, to what extent are we prepared to endorse
Hegel's dictum of immaterial evolution? Exactly, said Mr. Overgold, how far, if at all, do we
substantiate the Kantian hypothesis of the transcendental?
Precisely, said DeVare eagerly, and for what reasons, naming them, must we reject Spencer's
theory of the unknowable?
entirely so continued mr overgold and why if at all does bergsonian illusionism differ from pure nothingness they both paused mr overgold had risen there was great weariness in his manner
it's saddens one does it not he said he had picked up a bundle of panama two percent gold bonds and was looking at them in contempt the emptiness of it all he muttered he extended
the bonds to Devere.
Do you want them, he said, or shall I throw them away?
Give them to me, said Devere quietly.
They are not worth the throwing.
No, no, said Mr. Overgold, speaking half to himself,
as he replaced the bonds in his desk.
It is a burden that I must carry alone.
I have no right to ask anyone to share it.
But come, he continued,
I fear I am sadly lacking in the duties of internet.
national hospitality. I am forgetting what I owe to Anglo-American courtesy. I am neglecting the new
obligations of our common Indo-Chinese policy. My motor is at the door. Pray let me take you to my
house for lunch. DeVare assented readily, telephoned to the Belmont not to keep lunch waiting for him,
and in a moment was speeding up the magnificent Riverside Drive towards Mr. Overgold's home.
On the way, Mr. Overgold pointed out various objects of interest,
Grant's tomb, Lincoln's tomb, Edgar Allan Poe's grave,
the ticket office of the New York subway,
and various other points of historic importance.
On arriving at the house, DeVare was ushered up a flight of broad marble steps
to a hall fitted on every side with almost priceless objects de Art and others,
ushered into the cloakroom and out of it,
butlered into the lunchroom, and footman,
into a chair. As they entered, a lady already seated at the table turned to meet them. One glance
was enough, plenty. It was she, the object of Devere's impassioned quest. A rich lunch gown was
girdled about her with a twelve o'clock band of pearls. She reached out her hand, smiling.
Dorothea, said the multimillionaire. This is Mr. DeVare. Mr. DeVere, my wife.
Chapter 3. Of this next chapter, we need only say that the Blue Review, adults only,
declares it to be the most daring and yet conscientious handling of the sex problem ever attempted and done.
The fact that the Congregational Times declares that this chapter will undermine the whole foundations of English society
and let it fall, we pass over. We hold certificates in writing from a great number of the Anglican clergy
to the effect that they have carefully read the entire novel and see nothing in it.
They stood looking at one another.
So you didn't know, she murmured.
In a flash, DeVar realized that she hadn't known that he didn't know
and knew now that he knew.
He found no words.
The situation was a tense one.
Nothing but the woman's innate tact could save it.
Dorothea Overgold rose to it with the dignity of a queen,
She turned to her husband.
Take your soup over to the window, she said, and eat it there.
The millionaire took his soup to the window and sat beneath a little palm tree eating it.
You didn't know, she repeated.
No, said DeVare.
How could I?
And yet, she went on, you loved me, although you didn't know that I was married?
Yes, answered DeVare simply, I loved you in.
in spite of it.
How splendid!
she said.
There was a moment's silence.
Mr. Overgold had returned to the table, the empty plate in his hand.
His wife turned to him again with the same unfailing tact.
Take your asparagus to the billiard-room, she said, and eat it there.
Does he know too?
asked DeVere.
Mr. Overgold?
She said carelessly.
I suppose he does.
a preemone amy? French? Another mystery. Where and how had she learned it? Devere asked himself.
Not in France, certainly. I fear that you are very young, amico, meo, dear. Dorothea went on carelessly.
After all, what is there wrong in it, Piccolo Pochito? To a man's mind, perhaps, but to a woman, love is love.
She beckoned to the butler. Take Mr. Overgold a cutlet.
to the music-room, she said, and give him his Gorgonzola on the inkstand in the library.
And now, she went on, in that caressing way which seemed so natural to her,
don't let us think about it any more. After all, what is is, isn't it?
I suppose it is, said DeVare, half convinced in spite of himself.
Or at any rate, said Dorothea, nothing can at the same time both be and not be,
But come, she broke off, gaily dipping a macaroon in a glass of cremde-mint, and offering it to him with a pretty jester of camaraderie.
Don't let's be gloomy any more. I want to take you with me to the matinee.
Is he coming? asked Devere, pointing at Mr. Overgold's empty chair.
Silly boy, laughed Dorothea.
Of course John is coming. You surely don't want to buy the tickets yourself.
The days that followed brought a strange name.
life to Devere. Dorothea was ever at his side. At the theater, at the polo ground, in the park,
everywhere they were together. And with them was Mr. Overgold. The three were always together.
At times at the theater, Dorothea and DeVere would sit downstairs and Mr. Overgold in the gallery.
At other times, Devere and Mr. Overgold would sit in the gallery, and Dorothea downstairs.
At times, one of them would sit in row A, another in row B, and a third in row C.
At other times, two would sit in row B and one in row C.
At the opera, at times, one of the three would sit listening, the others talking,
at other times two listening and one talking, and at other times three talking and none listening.
Thus the three formed together one of the most perplexing, maddening triangles that ever
disturbed the society of the metropolis. The Danu Ma was bound to come. It came. It was late at night.
DeVere was standing beside Dorothea in the brilliantly lighted hall of the Grand Palaver Hotel,
where they had had supper. Mr. Overgold was busy for a moment at the cashier's desk.
Dorothea, DeVere whispered passionately, I want to take you away, away from all this. I want you.
She turned and looked him full in the face.
Then she put her hand in his, smiling bravely.
I will come, she said.
Listen, he went on.
The Gloratania sails for England tomorrow at midnight.
I have everything ready.
Will you come?
Yes, she answered.
I will.
And then passionately,
Dearest, I will follow you to England, to Liverpool,
to the end of the earth.
She paused in thought a moment and then added,
"'Come to the house just before midnight.
"'William, the second chauffeur, he is devoted to me,
"'shall be at the door with the third car.
"'The fourth footman will bring my things.
"'I can rely on him.
"'The fifth housemaid can have them already.
"'She would never betray me.
"'I will have the undergardener, the sixth,
"'waiting at the iron gate to let you in.
"'He would die rather than fail me.'
She paused again, then she went on.
"'There is only one thing, dearest, that I want to ask.
It is not much.
I hardly think you would refuse it at such an hour.
May I bring my husband with me?'
DeVare's face blanched.
"'Must you?' he said.
"'I think I must,' said Dorothea.
"'You don't know how I've grown to value to lean upon him.
At times I have felt as if I always wanted him to be near me.
I like to feel wherever I am, at the play, at a restaurant anywhere, that I can reach out and touch him.
I know, she continued, that it's only a wild fancy and that others would laugh at it.
But you can understand, can you not, Carino Caruso-Meo?
And think, darling, in our new life, how busy he too will be, making money for all of us in a new money market.
It's just wonderful how he does it.
A great light of renunciation lit up DeVare's face.
Bring him, he said.
I knew that you would say that, she murmured.
And listen, Pocito Pocket Edition.
May I ask one thing more, one weeny thing?
William, the second chauffeur,
I think he would fade away if I were gone.
May I bring him, too?
Yes, oh, my darling, how can I repay you?
And the second footman and the third housemaid,
if I were gone I fear that none of—
Bring them all, said Devere, half bitterly.
We will all elope together.
And as he spoke, Mr. Overgold sauntered over from the cashier's desk,
his open purse still in his hand, and joined them.
There was a dreamy look upon his face.
I wonder, he murmured, whether personality survives,
or whether it, too, went up against the irresistible,
dissolves and resolves itself into a series of negative reactions. Devere's empty heart echoed the words.
Then they passed out and the night swallowed them up.
Chapter 4
At a little before midnight on the next night, two motors filled with muffled human beings
might have been perceived or seen, moving noiselessly from Riverside Drive to the steamer wharf
where lay the Gloritania. A night of intense darkness
enveloped the Hudson. Outside the inside of the dock side, a dense fog wrapped the Statue of Liberty.
Beside the steamer, customs officers and deportation officials moved silently to and fro in long black
cloaks, carrying little deportation lanterns in their hands. To these, Mr. Overgold presented in
silence his deportation certificates, granting his party permission to leave the United States
under the imbecility clause of the Interstate Commerce Act. No objection was raised. A few moments later,
the huge steamer was slipping away in the darkness. On its deck, a little group of people,
standing beside a pile of first-class cabin luggage, directed a last sad look through their heavy black
disguise at the rapidly vanishing shore which they could not see. Devere, who stood in the midst of them,
clasping their hands, thus stood and gazed his last at America.
Spoof, he said.
We admit that this final panorama, weird in its midnight mystery,
and filling the mind of the reader with a sense of something like Ah,
is only appended to Spoof in order to coax him to read our forthcoming sequel, Spiff.
End of Section 1
Section 2 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen
Leecock. This Libravox recording is in the public domain. The Reading Public, a bookstore study.
Wish to look about the store, oh, oh, by all means, sir, he said. Then as he rubbed his hands
together in an urban fashion, he directed a piercing glance at me through his spectacles.
You'll find some things that might interest you, he said. In the back of the store on the left,
We have there a series of reprints,
Universal Knowledge from Aristotle to Arthur Balfour, at 17 cents,
or perhaps you might like to look over the pantheon of dead authors at 10 cents.
Mr. Sparrow, he called,
just show this gentleman our classical reprints, the 10-cent series.
With that he waved his hand to an assistant and dismissed me from his thought.
In other words, he had divined me in a moment.
There was no use in my having bought a sage-green fedora in Broadway
and a sporting tie done up crosswise with spots as big as nickels.
These little adornments can never hide the soul within.
I was a professor and he knew it,
or at least as part of his business he could divine it on the instant.
The sales manager of the biggest bookstore for ten blocks
cannot be deceived in a customer,
and he knew, of course, that, as a professor,
I was no good. I had come to the store as all professors go to bookstores, just as a wasp comes to an
open jar of marmalade. He knew that I would hang around for two hours, get in everybody's way,
and finally buy a cheap reprint of the dialogues of Plato, or the prose works of John Milton,
or lock on the human understanding, or some trash of that sort. As for real taste in literature,
the ability to appreciate at its worth a $1.50 novel of last month in a spring jacket with a tango
frontispiece, I hadn't got it, and he knew it. He despised me, of course, but it is a maxim of the
book business that a professor standing up in a corner buried in a book looks well in a store,
the real customers like it. So it was that even so up-to-date a manager as Mr. Selier tolerated my
presence in a back corner of his store. And so it was that I had an opportunity of noting
something of his methods with his real customers, methods so successful, I may say,
that he is rightly looked upon by all the publishing business as one of the mainstays of
literature in America. I had no intention of standing in the place and listening as a spy.
In fact, to tell the truth, I had become immediately interested in a new translation of the
moral discourses of Epictetus. The book was very neatly printed, quite well bound, and was
offered at 18 cents, so that for the moment I was strongly tempted to buy it, though it seemed best
to take a dip into it first. I had hardly read more than the first three chapters when my
attention was diverted by a conversation going on in the front of the store.
You're quite sure it's his latest? A fashionably dressed lady was saying to Mr. Selier,
"'Oh, yes, Mrs. Rasselier,' answered the manager.
"'I assure you this is his very latest. In fact, they only came in yesterday.'
As he spoke, he indicated with his hand a huge pile of books, gaily jacketed in white and blue.
"'I could make out the title in big gilt lettering. Golden Dreams.'
"'Oh, yes,' repeated Mr. Selier.
"'This is Mr. Slush's latest book. It's having a wonderful sale.'
"'That's all right then,' said the lady.
"'You see, one sometimes gets taken in so.
"'I came in here last week and took two that seemed very nice,
"'and I never noticed till I got home
"'that they were both old books,
"'published, I think, six months ago.'
"'Oh, dear me, Mrs. Rasselier,' said the manager,
"'in an apologetic tone.
"'I'm extremely sorry.
"'Pray let us send for them and exchange them for you.'
"'Oh, it does not matter.'
said the lady. Of course I didn't read them. I gave them to my maid. She probably wouldn't know
the difference anyway. I suppose not, said Mr. Selier with a condescending smile.
But of course, madame, he went on, falling into the easy chat of the fashionable bookman.
Such mistakes are bound to happen sometimes. We had a very painful case only yesterday.
One of our oldest customers came in in a great hurry to buy books to take on the
the steamer, and before we realized what he had done, selecting the books, I suppose, merely by the
titles, as some gentlemen are apt to do, he had taken two of last year's books. We wired it
once to the steamer, but I'm afraid it's too late. But now this book, said the lady, idly turning
over the leaves, is it good? What is it about? It's an extremely powerful thing, said Mr.
Selier, in fact, masterly. The critics are saying that it's perhaps the most powerful book of the season.
It is a, and here Mr. Selier paused, and somehow his manner reminded me of my own, when I am explaining to a university class, something that I don't know myself.
It has a power, so to speak, a very exceptional power. In fact, one may say without exaggeration, it is the most powerful book of the month.
indeed he added getting on to easier ground it's having a perfectly wonderful sale you seem to have a great many of them said the lady oh we have to answered the manager there's a regular rush on the book indeed you know it's a book that is bound to make a sensation in fact in certain quarters they are saying that it's a book that ought not to
and here mr sellyer's voice became so low and ingratiating that i couldn't hear the rest of the sentence oh really said mrs rasselyer well i think i'll take it then why not to see what these talked of things are about anyway
she had already begun to button her gloves and to readjust her feather boa with which she had been knocking the easter cards off the counter then she suddenly remembered something oh i was forgetting she said
"'Will you send something to the house for Mr. Rasselyer at the same time?
"'He's going down to Virginia for the vacation.
"'You know the kind of thing he likes, do you not?'
"'Oh, perfectly, madame,' said the manager.
"'Mr. Rasselier generally reads works of—er—I think he buys mostly books on—'
"'Oh, travel and that sort of thing,' said the lady.
"'Precisely, I think we have here,' and he pointed to the counter on the left,
what Mr. Rasselyer wants.
He indicated a row of handsome books,
seven weeks in the Sahara, $7,
six months in a wagon, $6.50 net,
afternoons on an ox-cart, two volumes,
4.30 with 20 off.
I think he has read those, said Mrs. Rasselier.
At least there are a good many at home that seem like that.
Oh, very possibly, but here now,
among the cannibals of Corfu.
Yes, that I think he has had.
Among the—that, too, I think.
But this I am certain he would like,
just in this morning.
Among the monkeys of New Guinea,
$10 net.
And with this, Mr. Seleier laid his hand
on a pile of new books,
apparently as numerous as the huge pile
of golden dreams.
Among the monkeys,
he repeated, almost caressingly.
It seems rather expensive.
"'Sepensive,' said the lady.
"'Oh, very much so, a most expensive book,'
the manager repeated, in a tone of enthusiasm.
"'You see, Mrs. Rasselyer, it's the illustrations, actual photographs.'
He ran the leaves over in his fingers, of actual monkeys taken with the camera,
and the paper you notice, in fact, madame, the book costs, the mere manufacture of it,
$9.90. Of course we make no profit on it.
but it's a book we like to handle.
Everybody likes to be taken into the details of technical business,
and of course everybody likes to know that a bookseller is losing money.
These, I realized, are two axioms in the methods of Mr. Selier.
So very naturally Mrs. Rasselyer bought among the monkeys,
and in another moment Mr. Selier was directing a clerk
to write down an address on Fifth Avenue,
and was bowing deeply as he showed the lady,
out of the door. As he turned back to his counter, his manner seemed much changed. That monkey book,
I heard him murmured to his assistant, is going to be a pretty stiff proposition. But he had no
time for further speculation, another lady entered. This time, even to an eye less trained
than Mr. Selliers, the deep, expensive mourning and the pensive face proclaimed the sentimental
widow. Something new in fiction, repeated the manager. Yes, madame, here's a charming thing,
Golden Dreams. He hung lovingly on the words. A very sweet story, singularly sweet. In fact,
madame, the critics are saying it is the sweetest thing that Mr. Slush has done.
Is it good? said the lady. I began to realize that all customers asked this.
A charming book, said the manager.
It's a love story, very simple and sweet, yet wonderfully charming.
Indeed, the reviews say it is the most charming book of the month.
My wife was reading it aloud only last night.
She could hardly read for tears.
I suppose it's quite a safe book, is it? asked the widow.
I want it for my little daughter.
Oh, quite safe, said Mr. Selier, with an almost paternal tone.
in fact, written quite in the old style, like the dear old books of the past, quite like—
Here Mr. Cellier paused with a certain slight haze of doubt visible in his eye,
like Dickens and Fielding and Stern, and so on. We sell a great many to the clergy, madame.
The lady bought Golden Dreams, received it wrapped up in green enameled paper, and passed out.
Have you any good light reading for vacation time? Called out the next next.
customer in a loud, breezy voice, he had the air of a stockbroker starting on a holiday.
Yes, said Mr. Selier, and his face almost broke into a laugh as he answered.
Here's an excellent thing, Golden Dreams, quite the most humorous book of the season,
simply screaming. My wife was reading it aloud only yesterday. She could hardly read for laughing.
What's the price? One dollar? One fifty. All right, wrap it up. There was
a clink of money on the counter, and the customer was gone. I began to see exactly where
professors and college people who want copies of Epictetus at 18 cents, and sections of
world reprints of literature at 12 cents a section, come in in the book trade.
"'Yes, Judge,' said the manager to the next customer, a huge dignified personage in
a wide-awake hat. See stories? Certainly. Excellent reading, no doubt, when the brain is overcharged
as yours must be. Here is the very latest. Among the monkeys of New Guinea, $10, reduced to $4.50.
The manufacturer alone costs $6.80. We're selling it out. Thank you, Judge. Send it? Yes. Good morning.
After that the customers came and went in a string. I noticed that though the store was filled with books,
10,000 of them at a guess, Mr. Sellier was apparently only selling two. Every woman who entered,
went away with Golden Dreams. Every man was given a copy of the Monkeys of New Guinea. To one lady,
Golden Dreams was sold as exactly the reading for a holiday, to another as the very book to read
after a holiday. Another bought it as a book for a rainy day, and a fourth as a right sort of reading
for a fine day. The monkeys was sold as a sea story, a land story, a story of the jungle,
and a story of the mountains, and it was put at a price corresponding to the monkeys. And it was put at a price
corresponding to Mr. Sellier's estimate of the purchaser. At last, after a busy two hours,
the store grew empty for a moment. Wilfred, said Mr. Sellier, turning to his chief assistant,
I am going out to lunch. Keep those two books running as hard as you can. We'll try them for
another day, and then cut them right out, and I'll drop round to Dockham and discount the
publishers, and make a kick about them, and see what they'll do. I felt that I had
lingered long enough. I drew near with the Epictetus in my hand.
Yes, sir, said Mr. Salier, professional again in a moment.
Epictetus, a charming thing. Eighteen cents. Thank you. Perhaps we have some other things
there that might interest you. We have a few second-hand things in the alcove there that you
might care to look at. There's an Aristotle two volumes, a very fine thing, practically
illegible that you might like. And a Cicero came in yesterday, very choice, damaged by damp,
and I think we have a Machiavelli quite exceptional, practically torn to pieces, and the cover's
gone. A very rare old thing, sir, if you are an expert. No thanks, I said, and then from a curiosity
that had been growing in me, and that I couldn't resist, that book, Golden Dreams, I said,
you seem to think it a very wonderful work? Mr. Sellier directed one of his shrewd glances at me.
He knew I didn't want to buy the book, and perhaps, like lesser people, he had his off
moments of confidence. He shook his head. A bad business, he said. The publishers have
unloaded the thing on us, and we have to do what we can. They're stuck with it, I understand,
and they look to us to help them. They're advertising it largely, and may play
pull it off. Of course, there's just a chance. One can't tell. It's just possible we may get the
church people down on it, and if so, we're all right. But short of that, we'll never make it.
I imagine it's perfectly rotten. Haven't you read it? I asked.
Dear me, no, said the manager. His air was that of a milkman who is offered a glass of his own
milk. A pretty time I'd have if I tried to read the new books. It's quite enough
to keep track of them without that.
But those people, I went on, deeply perplexed, who bought the book, won't they be disappointed?
Mr. Seleier shook his head.
Oh, no, he said, you see, they won't read it, they never do.
But at any rate, I insisted, your wife thought it a fine story.
Mr. Seleier smiled widely.
I'm not married, sir, he said.
End of Chapter 2.
Section 3 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Afternoon Adventures at My Club, Part 1.
1. The Anecdotes of Dr. So-and-So.
That is not really his name.
I merely call him that from his manner of talking.
His specialty is telling me short anecdotes of his professional life from day to day.
They are told with wonderful dash and power, except for one slight omission, which is that you never know what the doctor is talking about. Beyond this, his little stories are of unsurpassed interest, but let me illustrate. He came into the semi-silence room of the club the other day and sat down beside me.
Have something or other, he said. No thanks, I answered. Smoke anything? he asked.
No thanks.
The doctor turned to me.
He evidently wanted to talk.
I've been having a rather peculiar experience, he said.
Man came to me the other day, three or four weeks ago, and said,
Doctor, I feel out of sorts.
I believe I've got so-and-so.
Ah, I said, taking a look at him, been eating so-and-so, eh?
Yes, he said.
Very good, I said, take so-and-so.
Well, off the fellow went, I thought nothing of it, simply wrote such and such in my notebook,
such and such and such a date, symptoms such and such and such, prescribed such and such and so forth,
you understand?
Oh, yes, perfectly, doctor, I answered.
Very good.
Three days later, a ring at the bell in the evening, my servant came to the surgery.
Mr. So-and-so is here, very anxious to see you.
All right.
I went down.
There he was, with every symptom of so-and-so written all over him, every symptom of it,
this and this, and this.
Awful symptoms, doctor, I said, shaking my head.
Are they not?
He said, quite unaware that he hadn't named any.
There he was with every symptom, heart so-and-so, eyes so-and-so, pulse this.
I looked at him right in the eye, and I said,
Do you want me to tell you the truth?
Yes, he said.
good, I answered, I will. You've got so-and-so. He fell back as if shot. So-and-so, he repeated,
dazed. I went to the sideboard and poured him out a drink of such-and-such. Drink this, I said.
He drank it. Now, I said, listen to what I say. You've got so-and-so. There's only one chance,
I said. You must limit your eating and drinking to such-and-such. You must sleep such-and-such,
avoid every form of such and such. I'll give you a cordial, so many drops every so long,
but mind you, unless you do so-and-so, it won't help you. All right, very good, fellow promised,
off he went. The doctor paused a minute and then resumed. Would you believe it, two nights later,
I saw the fellow, after the theater in a restaurant, whole party of people, big plate of so-and-so in
front of him, quart bottle of so-and-so on ice, such and such and so forth. I stepped over to him,
tapped him on the shoulder. See here, I said. If you won't obey my instructions, you can't
expect me to treat you. I walked out of the place. And what happened to him, I asked.
Died, said the doctor in a satisfied tone. Died. I've just been filling in the certificate.
it. So-and-so, aged such and such, died of so-and-so.
An awful disease, I murmured.
2. The Shattered Health of Mr. Podge.
How are you, Podge? I said as I sat down in a leather armchair beside him.
I only meant, how do you do, but he rolled his big eyes sideways at me in his flabby face.
It was easier than moving his face, and he answered,
I'm not as well today as I was yesterday afternoon. Last week I was feeling pretty good part of the time,
but yesterday about four o'clock the air turned humid and I don't feel so well.
Have a cigarette, I said. No, thanks, I find they affect the bronchial tubes.
Whose, I asked? Mine, he answered. Oh, yes, I said, and I lighted one. So you find the weather trying.
I continued cheerfully.
Yes, it's too humid.
It's up to a saturation of 66.
I'm all right till it passes 64.
Yesterday afternoon it was only about 61, and I felt fine.
But after that it went up.
I guess it must be a contraction of the epidermis
pressing on some of the sebaceous glands, don't you?
I'm sure it is, I said.
But why don't you just sleep it off till it's over?
I don't like to sleep too much, he answered. I'm afraid of it developing into hypersomnia.
There are cases where it's been known to grow into a sort of lethargy that pretty well stops
all brain action altogether.
That would be too bad, I murmured. What do you do to prevent it?
I generally drink from half to three quarters of a cup of black coffee, or nearly black,
every morning at from eleven to five minutes past, so as to keep off hypersominy.
It's the best thing the doctor says.
Aren't you afraid, I said, of it's keeping you awake?
I am, answered Podge, and a spasm passed over his big yellow face.
I'm always afraid of insomnia.
That's the worst thing of all.
The other night I went to bed about half-past ten or twenty-five minutes after.
I forget which, and I simply couldn't sleep.
I couldn't.
I read a magazine story, and I saw.
still couldn't, and I read another, and still I couldn't sleep. It scared me bad.
Oh, cha, I said. I don't think sleep matters as long as one eats properly and has a good
appetite. He shook his head very dubiously. I ate a plate of soup at lunch, he said, and I feel it
still. You feel it? Yes, repeated Podge, rolling his eyes sideways in a pathetic fashion that he
had. I still feel it. I oughtn't to have eaten it. It was some sort of a bean soup, and of course
it was full of nitrogen. I oughtn't to touch nitrogen, he added, shaking his head.
Not take any nitrogen, I repeated. No, the doctor, both doctors, have told me that. I can eat
starches and albumins all right, but I have to keep right away from all carbons and nitrogens. I've been
dieting that way for two years, except that now and again I take a little glucose or phosphates.
That must be a nice change, I said cheerfully.
It is, he answered in a grateful sort of tone.
There was a pause. I looked at his big twitching face and listened to the heavy wheezing
of his breath, and I felt sorry for him.
See here, Podge, I said. I want to give you some good advice.
About what?
About your health?
Yes, yes, do, he said.
Advice about his health was right in his line.
He lived on it.
Well, then, cut out all this full business of diet and drugs and nitrogen.
Don't bother about anything of the sort.
Forget it.
Eat everything you want to just when you want it.
Drink all you like.
Smoke all you can.
And you'll feel a new man in a week.
"'Say, do you think so?' he panted.
His eyes filled with a new light.
"'I know it,' I answered.
And as I left him I shook hands with a warm feeling about my heart
of being a benefactor to the human race.
Next day, sure enough, Pudge's usual chair at the club was empty,
out getting some decent exercise, I thought.
Thank heaven.
Nor did he come the next day, nor the next, nor for a week.
leading a rational life at last, I thought, out in the open getting a little air and sunlight
instead of sitting here howling about his stomach. The day after that I saw Dr. Slider in black
clothes glide into the club in that peculiar manner of his, like an amateur undertaker.
Hello, Slider, I said to him, you look as solemn as if you had been to a funeral.
I have, he said very quietly, and then added.
poor Podge.
What about him? I asked, with sudden apprehension.
Why, he died on Tuesday, answered the doctor.
Hadn't you heard?
Strangest case I've known in years.
Came home suddenly one day, pitched all his medicines down the kitchen sink,
ordered a couple of cases of champagne and 200 Havanaas,
and had his housekeeper cook a dinner like a Roman banquet.
After being under treatment for two years,
lived, you know, on the narrowest margin conceivable. I told him, and Silk told him,
we all told him, his only chance was to keep away from every form of nitrogenous ultra-stimulants.
I said to him often, Podge, if you touch heavy carbonized food, you're lost.
Dear me, I thought to myself, there are such things after all.
It was a marvel, continued Slider, that we kept him alive at all, and of course,
Here the doctor paused to ring the bell to order two Manhattan cocktails.
As soon as he touched alcohol, he was done.
So that was the end of the valetudinarianism of Mr. Podge.
I have always considered that I killed him.
But anyway, he was a nuisance at the club.
3. The Amazing Travels of Mr. Yarner.
There was no fault to be found with Mr. Yarner till he made his trip around the world.
It was that, I think, which disturbed his brain and unfitted him for membership in the club.
Well, he would say, as he sat ponderously down with the air of a man opening an interesting conversation,
I was just figuring it out that eleven months ago today I was in Peking.
That's odd, I said, I was just reckoning that eleven days ago I was in Poughkeepsie.
They don't call it Peking over there, he said.
It sounded, pay-chance.
I know, I said, it's the same way with Poughkeepsie.
They pronounce it Pekipsy.
The Chinese, he went on musingly, are a strange people.
So are the people in Pekipsy, I added, awfully strange.
That kind of retort would sometimes stop him, but not always.
He was especially dangerous if he was found with a newspaper in his hand,
because that meant that some item of foreign intelligence
had gone to his brain. Not that I should have objected to Yarner describing his travels.
Any man who has bought a ticket round the world and paid for it is entitled to that.
But it was his manner of discussion that I considered unpermissible.
Last week, for example, in an unguarded moment, I fell a victim. I had been guilty of the
imprudence, I forget in what connection, of speaking of lions. I realized it once that I had done
wrong. Lions, giraffes, elephants, rickshaws, and natives of all brands are topics to avoid in
talking with a traveler. Speaking of lions, began Yarner. He was right, of course, I had spoken of
lions. I shall never forget, he went on, of course I knew he never would, a rather bad scrape I
got into in the upcountry of Uganda. Imagine yourself in a wild, rolling country, covered here and there
with quas along the sides of the nalas. I did so. Well, continued Yarner, we were sitting in our tent
one hot night, too hot to sleep, when all at once we heard, not ten feet in front of us,
the most terrific roar that ever came from the throat of a lion. As he said this, Yarner paused
to take a gulp of bubbling whiskey and soda, and looked at me so ferociously that I actually shivered.
Then quite suddenly his manner cooled down in the strangest way, and his voice changed to
a commonplace tone as he said.
Perhaps I ought to explain that we hadn't come up to the upcountry looking for big game.
In fact, we had been down in the down country with no idea of going higher than Mombasa.
Indeed, our going even to Mombasa itself was more or less an afterthought.
Our first plan was to strike across from Aden to Singapore.
but our second plan was to strike direct from Colombo to Carucci.
And what was your third plan? I asked.
Our third plan, said Yarner deliberately, feeling that the talk was now getting really interesting.
Let me see, our third plan was to cut across from Sakatra to Tananarivo.
Oh, yes, I said.
However, all that was changed and changed under the strangest circumstances.
We were sitting, Galen and I, on the piazza of the Galais-Face Hotel in Colombo.
You know the Gale Face?
No, I do not, I said very positively.
Very good.
Well, I was sitting on the piazza watching a snake charmer who was seated with a boa immediately in front of me.
Poor Galen was actually within two feet of the hideous reptile.
All of a sudden the beast whirled itself into a coil, its eyes fastened with hideous malignity,
on poor Gallen, and with its head erect it emitted the most awful hiss I have heard proceed from
the mouth of any living snake. Here Yarner paused and took a long, hissing drink of whiskey and soda,
and then as the malignity died out of his face, I should explain, he went on very quietly,
that Galen was not one of our original party. We had come down to Colombo from Mongolia,
going by the Peking Henko and the Nippon Yushan Kisha.
That, I suppose, is the best way, I said.
Yes, and oddly enough, but for the accident of Galen joining us,
we should have gone by the Amoy-Kochin-Sin-Sinapore route,
which was our first plan.
In fact, but for Galen, we should hardly have got through China at all.
The Boxer Insurrection had taken place only 14 years before our visit,
so you can imagine the awful state of the country.
Our meeting with Galen was thus absolutely providential.
Looking back on it, I think it perhaps saved our lives.
We were in Mongolia, this you understand was before we reached China,
and had spent the night at a small yak about four versts from Carbine,
when all of a sudden, just outside the miserable hut that we were in,
we heard a perfect fuselot of shots, followed immediately afterwards by one of the
the most blood-curdling and terrifying screams I have ever imagined.
Oh, yes, I said, and that was how you met Galen. Well, I must be off. And as I happened at that
very moment to be rescued by an incoming friend, who took but little interest in lions,
and even less in Yarner, I have still to learn why the lion howled so when it met Yarner,
but surely the lion had reason enough.
4. The Spiritual Outlook of Mr. Dumer
One generally saw old Mr. Dumer looking gloomily out of the windows of the library at the club.
If not there, he was to be found staring sadly into the embers of a dying fire in a deserted sitting-room.
His gloom always appeared out of place, as he was one of the richest of the members.
But the cause of it, as I came to know, was that he was perpetually concerned with,
with thinking about the next world. In fact, he spent his whole time brooding over it.
I discovered this accidentally by happening to speak to him of the recent death of Podge,
one of our fellow members.
Very sad, I said, Podge's death.
Ah, returned Mr. Dumer. Very shocking. He was quite unprepared to die.
Do you think so, I said. I am awfully sorry to hear it.
"'Quite unprepared,' he answered.
"'I had reason to know it as one of his executors.
"'Everything is confusion.
"'Nothing signed.
"'No proper power of attorney.
"'Cotocils drawn up in blank and never witnessed.
"'In short, sir, no sense apparently of the nearness of his death
"'and of his duty to be prepared.'
"'I suppose,' I said,
"'poor Podge didn't realize that he was going to die.
"'Ah, that's just it.'
resumed Mr. Dumer with something like sternness.
A man ought to realize it.
Every man ought to feel that at any moment,
one can't tell when, day or night,
he may be called upon to meet his—
Mr. Dumer paused here as if seeking a phrase,
to meet his financial obligations face to face.
At any time, sir, he may be hurried before the judge,
or rather his estate may be,
before the judge of the probate court.
It is a solemn thought, sir. And yet, when I come here, I see about me men laughing, talking,
and playing billiards, as if there would never be a day when their estate would pass into the
hands of their administrators, and an account must be given of every cent.
But after all, I said, trying to fall in with his mood, death and dissolution must come to all of us.
That's just it, he said solemnly. They've dissolved the double in.
tobacco people, and they've dissolved the oil people, and you can't tell whose turn it may be next.
Mr. Dumer was silent a moment, and then resumed, speaking in a tone of humility that was almost
reverential. And yet there is a certain preparedness for death, a certain fitness to die,
that we ought all to aim at. Any man can at least think solemnly of the inheritance tax,
and reflect whether by a contract intervivos drawn in blank, he may not obtain redemption.
Any man, if he thinks death is near, may at least divest himself of his purely speculative securities,
and trust himself entirely to those gold-bearing bonds of the great industrial corporations,
whose value will not readily diminish or pass away.
Mr. Dumer was speaking with something like religious rapture.
And yet, what does one see?
he continued. Men affected with fatal illness, and men stricken in years occupied still with idle talk and amusements,
instead of reading the financial newspapers, and at the last carried away with scarcely time, perhaps,
to send for their brokers when it is already too late.
It is very sad, I said.
Very, he repeated, and saddest of all, perhaps, is the sense of the irrevocability of death
and the changes that must come after it.
We were silent a moment.
You think of these things a great deal, Mr. Dumer?
I said.
I do, he answered.
It may be that it is something in my temperament.
I suppose one would call it a sort of spiritual-mindedness,
but I think of it all constantly.
Often as I stand here beside the window and see these cars go by,
he indicated a passing street car,
I cannot but realize that the time will come when I am no longer a managing director and wonder
whether they will keep on trying to hold the dividend down by improving the rolling stock,
or will declare profits to inflate the securities.
These mysteries beyond the grave fascinate me, sir.
Death is a mysterious thing.
Who, for example, will take my seat on the exchange?
What will happen to my majority control of the power company?
I shudder to think of the changes that may happen after death in the assessment of my real estate.
Yes, I said, it is all beyond our control, isn't it?
Quite, answered Mr. Dumer.
Especially of late years, one feels that, all said and done, we are in the hands of a higher power,
and that the state legislature is, after all, supreme.
It gives one a sense of smallness.
It makes one feel that in these states,
days of drastic legislation, with all one's efforts the individual is lost and absorbed in the
controlling power of the state legislature. Consider the words that are used in the text of the
income tax case, folio 2, or the text of the Trans-Missouri freight decision, and think of the
revelation they contain. I left Mr. Dumer still standing beside the window, musing on the vanity
of life and on things, such as the future control of freight rates,
that lay beyond the grave. I noticed as I left him how broken and aged he had come to look.
It seemed as if the chafings of the spirit were wearing the body that harbored it.
It was about a month later that I learned of Mr. Dumer's death. Dr. Slyder told me of it in the
club one afternoon, over two cocktails in the sitting room. A beautiful bedside, he said,
one of the most edifying that I have ever attended. I knew that Duma
was failing, and of course the time came when I had to tell him.
"'Mr. Dumer,' I said,
"'all that I, all that my medical can do for you, is done.
"'You are going to die.
"'I have to warn you that it is time for other ministrations than mine.'
"'Very good,' he said faintly but firmly.
"'Send for my broker.'
"'They sent out and fetched Jarvis.
"'You know him, I think.
"'Most sympathetic man, and yet most business-like,
he does all the firm's business with the dying, and we two sat beside Dumer, holding him up
while he signed stock transfers and blank certificates.
Once he paused and turned his eyes on Jarvis, read me from the text of the state
inheritance tax statute, he said.
Jarvis took the book and read aloud very quietly and simply the part at the beginning,
whenever and wheresoever it shall appear, down to the words, shall be no longer a subject of
judgment or appeal, but shall remain in perpetual possession.
Dumer listened with his eyes closed. The reading seemed to bring him great comfort.
When Jarvis ended, he said with a sign,
That covers it, I'll put my faith in that. After that he was silent a moment, and then said,
I wish I had already crossed the river. Oh, to have already crossed the river and be safe on the
other side. We knew what he meant. He had always
planned to move over to New Jersey. The inheritance tax is so much more liberal.
Presently it was all done. There, I said, it is finished now.
No, he answered. There is still one thing. Doctor, you've been very good to me. I should like to pay your
account now without it being a charge on the estate. I will pay it as—' He paused for a moment,
and a fit of coughing seized him, but by an effort of will, he found the power to
to say, cash. I took the account from my pocket, I had it with me, fearing the worst, and we laid
his checkbook before him on the bed. Jarvis, thinking him too faint to write, tried to guide
his hand as he filled in the sum, but he shook his head. "'The room is getting dim,' he said.
"'I can see nothing but the figures.'
"'Never mind,' said Jarvis, much moved. "'That's enough.'
"'Is it four hundred and thirty?' he asked faintly.
"'Yes,' I said, and I could feel the tears rising in my eyes, and fifty cents.
After signing the check, his mind wandered for a moment, and he fell to talking, with his eyes closed,
of the new federal banking law, and of the prospect of the reserve associations being able to
maintain an adequate gold supply.
Just at the last he rallied.
I want, he said in quite a firm voice, to do something for both of you before I die.
Yes, yes, we said.
You are both interested, are you not? he murmured, in city traction.
Yes, yes, we said.
We knew, of course, that he was the managing director.
He looked at us faintly and tried to speak.
Give him a cordial, said Jarvis, but he found his voice.
The value of that stock, he said, is going to take a sudden.
His voice grew faint.
Yes, yes, I whispered, bending over him.
There were tears in both our eyes.
Tell me, is it going up or going down.
It is going, he murmured, then his eyes closed.
It is going.
Yes, yes, I said, which.
It is going, he repeated feebly, and then quite,
suddenly he fell back on the pillows and his soul passed, and we never knew which way it was going.
It was very sad.
Later on, of course, after he was dead, we knew, as everybody knew, that it went down.
End of Section 3.
Section 4 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Librovoc's recording is in the public domain.
Afternoon Adventures at My Club, Part 2.
Five. The Reminiscences of Mr. Apricot.
Rather a cold day, isn't it? I said as I entered the club. The man I addressed popped his
head out from behind a newspaper, and I saw it was old Mr. Apricot, so I was sorry that I had
spoken. Not so cold as the winter of 1866, he said, beaming with benevolence.
He had an egg-shaped head, bald, with some white hair fluffed about the sides of
it. He had a pink face with large blue eyes behind his spectacles, benevolent to the verge of
imbecility. Was that a cold winter? I asked. Bitter cold, he said. I have never told you, have I,
of my early experiences in life. I think I have heard you mention them, I murmured, but he had
already placed a detaining hand on my sleeve. Sit down, he said. Then he continued.
Yes, it was a cold winter. I was going to say that it was the coldest I have ever experienced,
but that might be an exaggeration. But it was certainly colder than any winter that you have
ever seen, or that we ever have now, or are likely to have. In fact, the winters now are a mere
nothing. Here Mr. Apricot looked toward the club window where the driven snow was beating
in eddies against the panes. Simply nothing. One doesn't feel
them at all. Here he turned his eyes towards the glowing fire that flamed in the open fireplace.
But when I was a boy, things were very different. I have probably never mentioned to you,
have I, the circumstances of my early life? He had many times, but he had turned upon me the
full beam of his benevolent spectacles, and I was too weak to interrupt.
My father, went on Mr. Apricot, settling back in his chair and speaking with a far-away look in his eyes,
had settled on the banks of the Wabash River. Oh, yes, I know it well, I interjected.
Not as it was then, said Mr. Apricot very quickly. At present as you or any other thoughtless
tourist sees it, it appears a broad river pouring its vast flood in all directions. At the time I speak of,
it was a mere stream, scarcely more than a few feet in circumference. The life we led there was
one of rugged isolation, and of sturdy self-reliance and efforts such as it is, of course,
quite impossible for you or any other member of this club to understand. I may give you some
idea of what I mean when I say that at that time there was no town nearer to Pittsburgh
than Chicago, or to St. Paul than Minneapolis.
"'Impossible,' I said.
Mr. Apricot seemed not to notice the interruption.
"'There was no place nearer to Springfield than St. Louis,' he went on in a peculiar
sing-song voice, and there was nothing nearer to Denver than San Francisco, nor to New Orleans
than Rio Janeiro.
He seemed as if he would go on indefinitely.
"'You were speaking of your father?' I interrupted.
"'My father.'
said Mr. Apricot, had settled on the banks, both banks, of the Wabash.
He was like so many other men of his time, a disbanded soldier, a veteran.
Of the Mexican War or of the Civil War? I asked.
Exactly, answered Mr. Apricot, hardly heeding the question, of the Mexican Civil War.
Was he under Lincoln? I asked.
Over Lincoln, corrected Mr. Apricot gravely,
and he added,
"'It is always strange to me
"'the way in which the present generation
"'regards Abraham Lincoln.
"'To us, of course, at the time of which I speak,
"'Lincoln was simply one of ourselves.
"'In 1866?' I asked.
"'This was 1856,' said Mr. Apricot.
"'He came often to my father's cabin,
"'sitting down with us to our humble meal
"'of potatoes and whiskey.
"'We lived with a simplicity,
"'which, of course, you could,
could not possibly understand, and would spend the evening talking with my father over the
interpretation of the Constitution of the United States. We children used to stand beside them,
listening open-mouthed beside the fire in our plain-leather nightgowns. I shall never forget
how I was thrilled when I first heard Lincoln lay down his famous theory of the territorial
jurisdiction of Congress, as affected by the Supreme Court decision of 1857. I was only not
years old at the time, but it thrilled me.
"'Is it possible?' I exclaimed.
"'However could you understand it?'
"'Ah, my friend,' said Mr. Apricot, almost sadly.
"'In those days the youth of the United States were educated
"'in the real sense of the word.
"'We children followed the decisions of the Supreme Court
"'with breathless interest.
"'Our books were few, but they were good.
"'We had nothing to read but the law report,
the agriculture reports, the weather bulletins, and the almanacs. But we read them carefully
from cover to cover. How few boys have the industry to do so now, and yet how many of our
greatest men were educated on practically nothing else except the law reports and the almanacs,
Franklin, Jefferson, Jackson, Johnson. Mr. Apricot had lapsed into his sing-song voice,
and his eye had a sort of misty perplexity in it as he went on.
Harrison, Thompson, Peterson, Emerson. I thought it better to stop him. But you were speaking,
I said, of the winter of 1856. Of 1846, corrected Mr. Apricot. I shall never forget it.
How distinctly I remember. I was only a boy then, in fact a mere lad, fighting my way to school.
The snow lay in some places as deep as ten feet. Mr. Apricot paused.
and in others twenty, but we made our way to school in spite of it. No boys of today, nor for the matter of that, even men such as you, would think of attempting it. But we were keen, anxious to learn. Our school was our delight. Our teacher was our friend. Our books were our companions. We gladly trudged five miles to school every morning and seven miles back at night, did chores till midnight, studied algebra.
by candlelight. Here Mr. Apricot's voice had fallen into its characteristic sing-song,
and his eyes were vacant. Rose before daylight, dressed by lamplight, fed the hogs by lantern-light,
fetched the cows by twilight. I thought it best to stop him. But you did eventually get off the
farm, did you not? I asked. Yes, he answered. My opportunity presently came to me, as it came in those
days to any boy of industry and intelligence who knocked at the door of fortune till it opened.
I shall never forget how my first chance in life came to me. A man, an entire stranger,
struck no doubt with the fact that I looked industrious and willing, offered me a dollar
to drive a load of tan bark to the nearest market. Where was that? I asked.
Minneapolis, 700 miles. But I did it. I shall never forget my feelings when I found my
myself in Minneapolis, with one dollar in my pocket, and with the world all before me."
"'What did you do?' I said.
"'First,' said Mr. Apricot, "'I laid out seventy-five cents for a suit of clothes.
Things were cheap in those days. For fifty cents I bought an overcoat. For twenty-five I got a hat.
For ten cents a pair of boots, and with the rest of the money I took a room for a month
with a Swedish family, paid a month's board with a jersey.
German family, arranged to have my washing done by an Irish family, and—
But surely, Mr. Apricot, I began.
But at this point the young man who is generally in attendance on old Mr. Apricot
when he comes to the club appeared on the scene.
I am afraid, he said to me aside as Mr. Apricot was gathering up his newspapers and
his belongings, that my uncle has been rather boring you with his reminiscences.
Not at all, I said.
He's been telling me all about his early life in his father's cabin on the Wabash.
I was afraid so, said the young man.
Too bad.
You see, he wasn't really there at all.
Not there, I said.
No, he only fancies that he was.
He was brought up in New York and has never been west of Philadelphia.
In fact, he has been very well to do all his life.
But he found that it counted against him.
It hurt him in politics.
so he got into the way of talking about the Middle West and early days there,
and sometimes he forgets that he wasn't there.
I see, I said.
Meantime, Mr. Apricot was ready.
Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye, he said very cheerily.
A delightful chat.
We must have another talk over old times soon.
I must tell you about my first trip over the plains
at the time when I was surveying the line of the Union Pacific.
You who travel nowadays in your Pullman coaches and observation cars can have no idea.
Come along, uncle, said the young man.
Six.
The last man out of Europe.
He came into the club and shook hands with me as if he hadn't seen me for a year.
In reality, I had seen him only 11 months ago, and hadn't thought of him since.
How are you, Parkins?
I said in a guarded tone, for I said,
saw at once that there was something special in his manner.
Have a sig, he said as he sat down on the edge of the armchair, dangling his little boot.
Any young man who calls a cigarette a sig, I despise.
No thanks, I said.
Try one, he went on.
They're Hungarian.
There's some I managed to bring through with me out of the war zone.
As he said war zone, his face twisted up into a sort of scowl of self-important.
I looked at Parkins more closely, and I noticed that he had on some sort of foolish little coat,
short in the back, and the kind of bowtie that they wear in the Hungarian bands of the 6th Avenue restaurants.
Then I knew what the trouble was. He was the last man out of Europe, that is to say, the latest last man.
There had been about 14 others in the club that same afternoon. In fact, they were sitting all over it in Italian suits and Viennese.
overcoats, striking German matches on the soles of Dutch boots. These were the war zone men,
and they had just got out in the clothes they stood up in. Naturally they hated to change. So I knew
all that this young man, Parkins, was going to say, and all about his adventures before he began.
Yes, he said, we were caught right in the war zone. By Jove, I never want to go through again
what I went through. With that, he said, he said, we were caught right in the war zone. By Jove, I never want to go through again what I went through.
With that, he sank back into the chair in the pose of a man musing in silence over the recollection of days of horror.
I let him muse.
In fact, I determined to let him muse till he burst before I would ask him what he had been through.
I knew it anyway.
Presently, he decided to go on talking.
We were at Isle, he said, in the Carpathians, Lou Jones and I.
We'd just made a walking tour from Isle to Frisville.
and back again. Why did you come back? I asked. Back where? Back to Isle, I explained. After you'd
once got to frizzle, it seems unnecessary, but never mind, go on. That was in July, he continued.
There wasn't a sign of war, not a sign. We heard that Russia was beginning to mobilize.
At this word, he blew a puff from his cigarette, and then repeated, beginning to mobilize.
but we thought nothing of it.
Of course not, I said.
Then we heard that Hungary was calling out the honveds,
but we still thought nothing of it.
Certainly not, I said.
And then we heard,
Yes, I know, I said,
you heard that Italy was calling out the trombinari,
and that Germany was calling in all the Landis Gachutzaft.
He looked at me.
How did you know that? he said.
We heard it over here.
here, I answered.
Well, he went on,
next thing we knew we heard that the Russians were at Frizzle.
Great heavens, I exclaimed.
Yes, at Frizzle not a hundred miles away,
the very place we'd been at only two weeks before.
Think of it, I said,
if you'd been where you were two weeks after you were there,
or if the Russians had been a hundred miles away from where they were,
or even if Frizzle had been a hundred miles nearer to Izzell.
We both shuddered.
It was a close call, said Perkins.
However, I said to Lou Jones,
Lou, it's time to clear out.
And then I tell you our trouble began.
First of all, we couldn't get any money.
We went to the bank at Isall
and tried to get them to give us American dollars
for Hungarian paper money.
We had nothing else.
And wouldn't they?
Absolutely refused, said they hadn't any.
By George.
I exclaimed.
Isn't war dreadful?
What on earth did you do?
Took a chance, said Parkins,
went across to the railway station
to buy our tickets with the Hungarian money.
Did you get them? I said.
Yes, assented Parkins.
They said they'd sell us tickets,
but they questioned us mighty closely,
asked us where we wanted to go to,
what class we meant to travel by,
how much luggage we had to register,
and so on.
I tell you,
the fellow looked at us mighty closely.
Were you in those clothes? I asked.
Yes, said Parkins, but I guess he suspected we weren't Hungarians.
You see, we couldn't either of us speak Hungarian.
In fact, we spoke nothing but English.
That would give him a clue, I said.
However, he went on, he was civil enough in a way.
We asked when was the next train to the sea coast, and he said there wasn't any.
"'No trains?' I repeated.
"'Not to the coast.
"'The man said the reason was
"'because there wasn't any railway to the coast,
"'but he offered to sell us tickets to Vienna.
"'We asked when the train would go,
"'and he said there wouldn't be one for two hours.
"'So there we were waiting on that wretched little platform,
"'no place to sit down, no shade,
"'unless one went into the waiting room itself,
"'for two mortal hours.
"'And even then the train was an hour and a half late.
"'An hour and a half late,' I repeated.
"'Yep,' said Parkins.
"'That's what things were like over there.
"'So when we got on board the train,
"'we asked a man when it was due to get to Vienna,
"'and he said he hadn't the faintest idea.
"'Good heavens!'
"'Not the faintest idea.
"'He told us to ask the conductor or one of the porters.
"'No, sir, I'll never forget that journey through to Vienna,
"'nine mortal hours.
Nothing to eat, not a bite, except just in the middle of the day when they managed to hitch on a dining car for a while.
And they warned everybody that the dining car was only on for an hour and a half.
Commandeared, I guess, after that, added Parkins, puffing his cigarette.
Well, he continued, we got to Vienna at last.
I'll never forget the scene there, station full of people, trains coming and going,
men, even women, buying tickets, big piles of luggage being shoved on,
trucks. It gave one a great idea of the reality of things. It must have, I said. Poor old Lou Jones was
getting pretty well used up with it all, however, we determined to see it through somehow.
What did you do next? Tried again to get money, couldn't. They changed our Hungarian paper into
Italian gold, but they refused to give us American money. Horting it, I hinted. Exactly, said
harkins, hoarding it all for the war. Well, anyhow, we got a train for Italy, and there our troubles
began all over again. Train stopped at the frontier, officials, fellows in Italian uniforms,
went all through it, opening handbaggage. Not handbaggage, I gasped. Yes, sir, even the hand
baggage, opened it all, or a lot of it anyway, and scribbled chalk marks over it. Yes, and
worse than that, I saw them take two fellows and sling them clear off the train. They slung them
right out onto the platform. What for? I asked. Heaven knows, said Parkins. They said they had no
tickets. In wartime, you know, when they're mobilizing, they won't let a soul ride on a train
without a ticket. Infernal tyranny, I murmured. Isn't it? However, we got to Genoa at last,
only to find that not a single one of our trunks had come with us.
Confiscated? I asked.
I don't know, said Parkins. The head baggage man, he wears a uniform, you know, in Italy just like a soldier,
said that it was because we'd forgotten to check them in Vienna. However, there we were
waiting for 24 hours with nothing but our valises.
Right at the station? I asked.
No, at a hotel. We got the trunks later.
They telegraphed to Vienna for them and managed to get them through somehow, in a baggage
car, I believe.
And after that, I suppose you had no more trouble.
Trouble, said Parkins, I should say we had.
Couldn't get a steamer.
They said there was none sailing out of Genoa for New York for three days.
All cancelled, I guess, or else rigged up as cruisers.
What on earth did you do?
Stuck it out as best we could.
stayed right there in the hotel. Poor old Jones was pretty well collapsed, couldn't do anything but
sleep and eat, and sit on the piazza of the hotel. But you got your steamer at last, I asked.
Yes, he admitted, we got it, but I never want to go through another voyage like that again,
no, sir. What was wrong with it, I asked, bad weather? No, calm, but a peculiar calm,
glassy with little ripples in the water, uncanny sort of feeling.
What was wrong with the voyage?
Oh, just the feeling of it.
Everything under strict rule, you know,
no lights anywhere except just the electric lights.
Smoking room closed tight at 11 o'clock.
Decks all washed down every night,
officers up on the bridge all day looking out over the sea.
No, sir, I want no more of it.
Poor old Lou Jones, I guess he's quite used up.
He can't speak of it at all.
Just sits in broods.
In fact, I doubt.
At this moment, Parkins's conversation was interrupted by the entry of two newcomers into the room.
One of them had on a little Hungarian suit, like the one Parkins wore, and was talking
loudly as they came in.
Yes, he was saying, we were caught there fair and square right in the war zone.
We were at Isle and the Carpathians, poor old Parkinson's and I.
We looked around. It was Lou Jones describing his escape from Europe.
7. The War Mania of Mr. Jinks and Mr. Blinks.
They were sitting face to face at a lunch table at the club, so near to me that I couldn't
avoid hearing what they said. In any case, they were both stout men with gurgling voices which
carry. What Kitchener ought to do, Jinks was saying in a loud voice. So I knew at once that he
had the prevailing hallucination. He thought he was commanding armies in Europe. After which I watched
him show with three bits of bread and two olives and a dessert knife, the way in which the German
army could be destroyed. Blinks looked at Jinks's diagram with a stern impassive face,
modeled on the Sunday supplement photographers of Lord Kitchener. Your flank would be too much
exposed, he said, pointing to Jinks's bread. He spoke with the hard taciturnity of a
Joffrey. My reserves cover it, said Jinks, moving two pepper pots to the support of the bread.
Mind you, Jinks went on, I don't say Kitchener will do this. I say that this is what he ought to do.
It's exactly the tactics of Curl-Patkin outside of Merkton, and it's precisely the same
turning movement that Grant used before Richmond. Blinks nodded gravely.
Anybody who has seen the Grand Duke Nikolachovich quietly accepting the advice of General Ruski
under heavy artillery fire will realize Blinks's manner to a nice city.
And, oddly enough, neither of them, I am certain, has ever had any larger ideas about the history
of the Civil War than what can be got from reading Uncle Tom's cabin and seeing Gillette
play secret service. But this is part of the mania. Jinks and Blinks had suddenly developed the
hallucination that they knew the history of all wars by a sort of instinct.
They rose soon after that, dusted off their waistcoats with their napkins, and waddled
heavily towards the door. I could hear them as they went, talking eagerly of the need of
keeping the troops in hard training. They were almost brutal in their severity. As they passed
out of the door, one at a time to avoid crowding, they were still talking about it. Jinks was saying
that our whole generation is overfed and soft. If he had his way, he would take every man in the
United States up to 47 years of age, Jinks is 48, and train him to a shadow. Blinks went further.
He said they should be trained hard up to 50. He is 51. After that, I used to notice Jinks
and Blinks always together in the club, and always carrying on the European War. I never knew which side
they were on. They seemed to be on both. One day they commanded huge armies of Russians, and there
was one week when Blinks and Jinks at the head of vast levees of Cossacks threatened to overrun the whole
of Western Europe. It was dreadful to watch them burning churches and monasteries, and to see
Jinks throw whole convents full of white-robed nuns into the flames like so much waste paper.
For a time I feared they would obliterate civilization itself. Then suddenly Blinked
Jinks decided that Jinks's Cossacks were no good, not properly trained.
He converted himself on the spot into a Prussian field marshal, declared himself organized
to a pitch of organization of which Jinks could form no idea, and swept Jinks's army off
the earth without using any men at all, by sheer organization.
In this way they moved to and fro all winter over the map of Europe, carrying death and
destruction everywhere and reveling in it.
But I think I liked best the wild excitement of their naval battles.
Jinks generally fancied himself a submarine, and Blinks acted the part of a first-class
battleship. Jinks would pop his periscope out of the water, take a look at Blinks merely for
the fraction of a second, and then, like a flash, would dive underwater again and start
firing his torpedoes. He explained that he carried six.
But he was never quick enough for Blinks. One glimpse of his periscope, miles and miles away, was enough. Blinks landed him a contact shell in the side, sunk him with all hands, and then lined his yards with men and cheered. I have known Blinks sink Jinks at two miles, six miles, and once in the club billiard room just after the Battle of the Falkland Islands, he got him fair and square at ten nautical miles.
Jinks, of course, claimed that he was not sunk. He had dived. He was 200 feet underwater,
quietly smiling at Blinks through his periscope. In fact, the number of things that Jinks has learned
to do through his periscope passes imagination. Whenever I see him looking across at Blinks
with his eyes half closed and with a baffling quizzical expression in them, I know that he is
looking at him through his periscope. Now this is the time for Blinks to
watch out. If he relaxes his vigilance for a moment, he'll be torpedoed as he sits, and sent flying,
whiskey and soda and all, through the roof of the club, while Jinks dives into the basement.
Indeed, it has come about of late, I don't know just how, that Jinks has more or less got
command of the sea. A sort of tacit understanding has been reached, that Blinks, whichever army
he happens at the moment to command, is invincible on land.
But Jinks, whether as a submarine or battleship, controls the sea.
No doubt this grew up in the natural evolution of their conversation.
It makes things easier for both.
Jinks even asks Blinks how many men there are in an army division
and what a sotnia of Cossacks is and what the Army Service Corps means.
And Jinks in return has become a recognized expert in torpedoes
and has taken to wearing a blue serge suit and referring to Lord Beresford as Charlie.
But what I noticed chiefly about the war mania of Jinks and Blinks was their splendid indifference to slaughter.
They had gone into the war with a grim resolution to fight it out to a finish.
If Blinks thought to terrify Jinks by threatening to burn London, he little knew his man.
All right, said Jinks, taking a fresh light for his cigar.
burn it. By doing so, you destroy, let us say, two million of my women and children? Very good. Am I
injured by that? No, you merely stimulate me to recruiting. There was something awful in the grimness
of the struggle as carried on by blinks and jinks. The rights of neutrals and non-combatants,
Red Cross nurses, and regimental clergymen, they laughed to scorn. As for moving picture men and
newspaper correspondence, Jinks and Blinks hanged them on every tree in Belgium and Poland.
With combatants in this frame of mind, the war I suppose might have lasted forever.
But it came to an end accidentally, fortuitously, as all great wars are apt to, and by
accident also I happened to see the end of it. It was late one evening. Jinks and Blinks were
coming down the steps of the club, and as they came, they were speaking with
some vehemence on their favorite topic.
I tell you, Jinks was saying, war is a great thing.
We need it, Blinks.
We were all getting too soft, too scared of suffering and pain.
We wilt at a bayonet charge.
We shudder at the thought of wounds.
Ba, he continued, what does it matter if a few hundred thousands of human beings are cut
to pieces?
We need to get back again to the old Viking standard, the old pagan ideas of suffering.
and as he spoke he got it.
The steps of the club were slippery with the evening's rain,
not so slippery as the frozen lakes of East Prussia,
or the hills where Jinks and Blinks had been campaigning all winter,
but slippery enough for a stout man whose nation has neglected his training.
As Jinks waved his stick in the air to illustrate the glory of a bayonet charge,
he slipped and fell sideways on the stone steps.
His shin bone smacked against the edge of the stone in a way that was pretty well up to the old Viking standard of such things.
Blinks, with the shock of the collision, fell also, backwards on the top step, his head striking first.
He lay, to all appearance, as dead as the most insignificant casualty in Serbia.
I watched the waiters carrying them into the club, with that Newfield ambulance attitude towards pain,
which is getting so popular.
They had evidently acquired precisely the old pagan attitude
that Blinks and Jinks desired.
And the evening after that I saw Blinks and Jinks,
both more or less bandaged,
sitting in a corner of the club beneath a rubber tree, making peace.
Jinks was moving out of Montenegro,
and Blinks was foregoing all claims to Polish Prussia.
Jinks was offering Alsace-Loran to Blinks,
and Blinks in a fit of chival.
risk enthusiasm was refusing to take it. They were disbanding troops, blowing up fortresses,
sinking their warships, and offering idemnities which they both refused to take. Then as they
talked, Jinks leaned forward and said something to Blinks in a low voice, a final proposal of
terms evidently. Blinks nodded, and Jinks turned and beckoned to a waiter with the words,
one Scotch Whisky and soda and one Stein of Wurttemberger beer
And when I heard this I knew that the war was over
End of Section 4
Section 5 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock
This Libravox recording is in the public domain
Afternoon Adventures at My Club Part 3
8 The Ground Floor
I hadn't seen Ellisworth since our college days 20 years before, at the time when he used to borrow $2.5.
From the professor of public finance to tide him over the weekend.
Then quite suddenly, he turned up at the club one day and had afternoon tea with me.
His big, clean, shaven face had lost nothing of its impressiveness, and his spectacles had the same glittering magnetism
as in the days when he used to get the college bursar to accept his note of hands.
hand for his fees. And he was still talking Europe politics, just as he used to do in the days of
our earlier acquaintance. Mark my words, he said across the little tea table, with one of the most
piercing glances I have ever seen. The whole Balkan situation was only a beginning. We are on the eve
of the great Pan-Slavonic upheaval. And then he added, in a very quiet, casual tone,
by the way, could you let me have $25 till tomorrow?
A Pan-Slavonic movement, I ejaculated.
Do you really think it possible?
No, I couldn't.
You must remember, Ella's worth went on.
Russia means to reach out and take all she can get.
And he added, how about 15 till Friday?
She may reach for it, I said, but I doubt if she'll get anything.
I'm sorry I haven't got it.
You're forgetting the Bulgarian element, he continued, his animation just as eager as before.
The Slavs never forget what they owe to one another.
Here Ullisworth drank a sip of tea and then said quietly,
Could you make it ten till Saturday at twelve?
I looked at him more closely.
I noticed now his frayed cuffs and the dinginess of his overbrushed clothes.
Not even the magnetism of his spectacles could conceal it.
Perhaps I had been forgetting something, whether the Bulgarian element or not.
I compromised at ten dollars till Saturday.
The Slav, said Ellesworth, as he pocketed the money, is peculiar. He never forgets.
What are you doing now? I asked him, are you still in insurance?
I had a vague recollection of him as employed in that business.
No, he answered. I gave it up. I didn't like the outlook. It was
too narrow. The atmosphere cramped me. I want, he said, a bigger horizon.
Quite so, I answered quietly. I had known men before who had lost their jobs. It is generally
the cramping of the atmosphere that does it. Some of them can use up a tremendous lot of horizon.
At present, Ellisworth went on, I am in finance, I'm promoting companies. Oh, yes, I said, I had
seen companies promoted before.
Just now, continued Ellesworth, I'm working on a thing that I think will be rather a big
thing.
I shouldn't want it talked about outside, but it's a matter of taking hold of the cod fisheries
of the Grand Banks, practically amalgamating them, and perhaps combining with them the
entire herring output and the whole of the sardine catch of the Mediterranean.
If it goes through, he added, I shall be in a position to let you in on the ground floor,
I knew the ground floor of old. I have already many friends sitting on it, and others who have
fallen through it into the basement. I said, thank you, and he left me.
That was Ellesworth, wasn't it? said a friend of mine who was near me. Poor devil, I knew him
slightly, always full of some new and wild idea of making money. He was talking to me the other
day of the possibility of cornering all the huckleberry crop and making refined sugar.
Isn't it amazing what fool ideas fellows like him are always putting up to businessmen?
We both laughed. After that, I didn't see Ellisworth for some weeks. Then I met him in the club again.
How he paid his fees there I do not know. This time he was seated among a litter of foreign
newspapers with a cup of tea and a 10-cent package of cigarettes beside him.
"'Have one of these cigarettes,' he said.
"'I get them specially.
"'They are milder than what we have in the club here.'
"'They certainly were.
"'Note what I say,' Ellesworth went on.
"'The French Republic is going to gain from now on
"'a stability that it never had.'
"'He seemed greatly excited about it.
"'But his voice changed to a quiet tone as he added,
"'Could you, without inconvenience, let me have five dollars?'
So I knew that the codfish and the sardines were still unamalgamated.
What about the fisheries thing? I asked. Did it go through?
The fisheries? No, I gave it up. I refused to go forward with it.
The New York people concerned were too shy, too timid to tackle it.
I finally had to put it to them very straight that they must either stop shilly-shallying
and declare themselves, or the whole business was off.
Did they declare themselves?
I questioned.
They did, said Ellesworth, but I don't regret it.
I'm working now on a much bigger thing, something with greater possibilities in it.
When the right moment comes, I'll let you in on the ground floor.
I thanked him, and we parted.
The next time I saw Ellisworth, he told me at once that he regarded Albania as unable to
stand by itself, so I gave him five dollars on the spot and left him.
A few days after that, he called me up on the telephone to tell me that the whole of Asia Minor
would have to be redistributed. The redistribution cost me $5 more. Then I met him on the street,
and he said that Persia was disintegrating, and took from me a dollar and a half. When I passed him
next in the street, he was very busy amalgamating Chinese tramways. It appeared that there
was a ground floor in China, but I kept off it.
Each time I saw Ellisworth, he looked a little shabbier than the last.
Then one day he called me up on the telephone and made an appointment.
His manner when I joined him was full of importance.
I want you at once, he said in a commanding tone, to write me your check for a hundred dollars.
What's the matter, I asked.
I am now able, said Ellisworth, to put you in on the ground floor of one of the biggest things in years.
Thanks, I said. The ground floor is no place for me.
Don't misunderstand me, said Ellesworth. This is a big thing. It's an idea I've been working on for some time, making refined sugar from the Huckleberry crop. It's a certainty. I can get you shares now at $5. They'll go to $500 when we put them on the market. And I can run you in for a block of stock for promotion services as well. All you have to do is to give me
right now $100, cash or your check, and I can arrange the whole thing for you. I smiled.
My dear Ellisworth, I said. I hope you won't mind if I give you a little bit of good advice.
Why not drop all this idea of quick money? There's nothing in it. The business world has grown
too shrewd for it. Take an ordinary decent job and stick to it. Let me use my influence,
I added, to try to get you into something with a steady salary.
and with your brains you're bound to get on in time."
Ellesworth looked pained.
A steady job sounded to him like a ground floor to me.
After that I saw nothing of him for weeks, but I didn't forget him.
I looked about and secured for him a job as a canvassing agent for a book firm at a salary
of five dollars a week and a commission of one-tenth of one percent.
I was waiting to tell him of his good luck when I chanced to tell him to his good luck when I chanced to
to see him at the club again. But he looked transformed. He had on a long frock coat that
reached nearly to his knees. He was leading a little procession of very heavy men in morning
coats upstairs towards the private luncheon rooms. They moved like a funeral, puffing as they
went. I had seen company directors before, and I knew what they were at sight.
It's a small club and rather inconvenient, Ellesworth was saying, and the horizon. The
horizon of some of its members rather narrow. Here he nodded to me as he passed, but I can give you a
fairly decent lunch. I watched them as they disappeared upstairs. That's Ellesworth, isn't it?
said a man near me. It was the same man who had asked about him before. Yes, I answered.
Giving a lunch to his directors, I suppose, said my friend, lucky dog. His directors? I asked.
Yes, hadn't you heard?
He's just cleaned up half a million or more,
some new scheme for making refined sugar out of huckleberries.
Isn't it amazing what shrewd ideas these big businessmen get a hold of?
They say they're unloading the stock at $500.
It only cost them about five to organize.
If only one could get on to one of these things early enough, eh?
I assented sadly.
And the next time I am offered a chance on the ground floor,
I am going to take it, even if it's only the barley floor of a brewery.
It appears that there is such a place after all.
9. The Hallucination of Mr. Butt.
It is the hallucination of Mr. Butt's life that he lives to do good.
At whatever cost of time or trouble to himself, he does it.
Whether people appear to desire it or not, he insists on helping them along.
His time, his company, and his advice are at the service not only of those who seek them,
but of those who, in the mere appearances of things, are not asking for them.
You may see the beaming face of Mr. Butt appear at the door of all those of his friends
who are stricken with the minor troubles of life.
Whenever Mr. Butt learns that any of his friends are moving house, buying furniture,
selling furniture, looking for a maid, dismissing a maid, seeking a chauffeur, suing a plumber,
or buying a piano, he is at their side in a moment. So when I met him one night in the cloak
room of the club, putting on his raincoat and his galoshes with a peculiar beaming look on his
face, I knew that he was up to some sort of benevolence. Come upstairs, I said, and play billiards.
I saw from his general appearance that it was a perfectly safe.
offer. My dear fellow, said Mr. Butt, I only wish I could. I wish I had the time. I am sure it would
cheer you up immensely if I could, but I'm just going out. Where are you off to, I asked,
for I knew he wanted me to say it. I'm going out to see the Everly Joneses. You know them? No,
just come into the city, you know, moving into their new house, out on Seldom Avenue.
But, I said, that's a way out in the suburbs, is it not, a mile or so beyond the car tracks?
Something like that, answered Mr. Butt.
And it's going on for ten o'clock, and it's starting to rain.
Pooh-poo, said Mr. Butt, cheerfully, adjusting his galoshes.
I never mind the rain, does one good.
As to their house, I've not been there yet, but I can easily find it.
I have a very simple system for finding a house at night by merely knocking at the doors in the
neighborhood till I get it.
Isn't it rather late to go there? I protested.
My dear fellow, said Mr. Butt warmly.
I don't mind that a bit. The way I look at it is, here are these two young people,
only married a few weeks, just moving into their new house, everything probably upside down,
no one there but themselves, no one to cheer them up,
He was wriggling into his raincoat as he spoke, and working himself into a frenzy of benevolence.
Good gracious, I only learned at dinner-time that they had come to town, or I'd have been out there days ago, days ago.
And with that, Mr. Butt went bursting forth into the rain, his face shining with goodwill under the street lamps.
The next day I saw him again at the club at lunchtime.
Well, I asked, did you find the Joneses?
"'I did,' said Mr. Butt.
"'And by George I was glad that I'd gone.
"'Quite a lot of trouble to find the house,
"'though I didn't mind that, I expected it.
"'Had to knock at twenty houses at least to get it.
"'Very dark and wet out there, no streetlights yet.
"'However, I simply pounded at the doors
"'till someone showed a light.
"'At every house I called out the same things.
"'Do you know where the Everly Joneses live?'
"'They didn't.
"'All right,' I said,
go back to bed, don't bother to come down. But I got to the right spot at last. I found the
house all dark. Jones put his head out of an upper window. Hello, I called out. It's Butt.
I'm awfully sorry, he said. We've gone to bed. My dear boy, I called back. Don't apologize at all.
Throw me down the key and I'll wait while you dress. I don't mind a bit. Just think of it,
continued Mr. Butt, those two poor souls going to bed at half-past ten through sheer dullness.
By George I was glad I'd come. Now then, I said to myself, let's cheer them up a little,
let's make things a little brighter here. Well, down they came, and we sat there on furniture
cases and things, and had a chat. Mrs. Jones wanted to make me some coffee. My dear girl, I said,
I knew them both when they were children. I absolutely refuse. Let me,
make it. They protested. I insisted. I went at it, kitchen all upset, had to open at least 20 tins to get the
coffee. However, I made it at last. Now I said, drink it. They said they had some an hour or so ago.
Nonsense, I said, drink it. Well, we sat and chatted away till midnight. They were dull at first,
and I had to do all the talking, but I set myself to it. I can talk, you know, when I try.
Presently, about midnight, they seemed to brighten up a little. Jones looked at his watch.
By Jove, he said, in an animated way, it's after midnight. I think he was pleased at the way
the evening was going. After that we chatted away more comfortably. Every little while Jones would
say, by Jove, it's half-past twelve, or it's one o'clock, and so on. I took care, of course,
not to stay too late. But when I left them, I promised that I'd come back today to help straighten
things up. They protested, but I insisted. That same day, Mr. Butt went out to the suburbs
and put the Jones's furniture to rights. I worked all afternoon, he told me afterwards, hard at it
with my coat off, got the pictures up first, they'd been trying to put them up by themselves
in the morning. I had to take down every one of them, not a single one right.
Down they come, I said, and went at it with a will. A few days later Mr. Butt gave me a further report.
Yes, he said, the furniture is all unpacked and straightened out, but I don't like it.
There's a lot of it I don't quite like. I half feel like advising Jones to sell it and get some more,
but I don't want to do that till I'm quite certain about it. After that, I'm a lot of
Mr. Butt seemed much occupied, and I didn't see him at the club for some time.
How about the Everly Joneses, I asked. Are they comfortable in their new house?
Mr. Butt shook his head. It won't do, he said. I was afraid of it from the first. I'm moving
Jones in nearer to town. I've been out all morning looking for an apartment. When I get the right
one, I shall move him. I like an apartment far better than a house. So the Joneses is
in due course of time were moved. After that, Mr. Butt was very busy selecting a piano
and advising them on wallpaper and woodwork. They were hardly settled in their new home
when fresh trouble came to them. Have you heard about Everly Jones? said Mr. Butt one day with
an anxious face. No, I answered. He's ill, some sort of fever, poor chap, been ill three days,
and they never told me or sent for me, just like their grit, meant to fight it out alone.
I'm going out there at once.
From day to day I had reports from Mr. Butt of the progress of Jones's illness.
I sit with him every day, he said.
Poor chap, he was very bad yesterday for a while.
Mind wandered, quite delirious.
I could hear him from the next room, seemed to think someone was hunting him.
Is that damn old fool gone?
I heard him say. I went in and soothed him. There is no one here, my dear boy, I said. No one, only but.
He looked over and groaned. Mrs. Jones begged me to leave him. You look quite used up, she said,
go out into the open air. My dear Mrs. Jones, I said, what does it matter about me?
Eventually, thanks no doubt to Mr. Butt's assiduous care, Everly Jones got well. Yes, said,
said Mr. Butt to me a few weeks later. Jones is all right again now, but his illness has been a long,
hard pull. I haven't had an evening to myself since it began. But I'm paid, sir, now, more than
paid for anything I've done. The gratitude of those two people. It's unbelievable. You ought to
see it. Why, do you know that dear little woman is so worried for fear that my strength has been
overtaxed, that she wants me to take a complete rest and go on a long trip somewhere?
suggested first that I should go south.
My dear Mrs. Jones, I said, laughing.
That's the one place I will not go.
Heat is one thing I can't stand.
She wasn't nonplussed for a moment.
Then go north, she said.
Go up to Canada, or better still go to Labrador.
And in a minute that kind little woman was hunting up railway maps
to see how far north I could get by rail.
After that, she said, you can go on snow shoes.
She's found that there's a steamer to ungaava every spring, and she wants me to run up there on one steamer and come back on the next.
"'It must be very gratifying,' I said.
"'Oh, it is, it is,' said Mr. Butt warmly.
"'It's well worth anything I do.
It more than repays me.
I'm alone in the world, and my friends are all I have.
I can't tell you how it goes to my heart when I think of all my friends, here in the club and in the town,
always glad to see me, always protesting against my little kindnesses, and yet never quite satisfied
about anything unless they can get my advice and hear what I have to say.
Take Jones, for instance, he continued, do you know, really now is a fact?
The Hall Porter assures me of it.
Every time Everleigh Jones enters the club here, the first thing he does is to sing out.
Is Mr. Butt in the club?
It warms me to think of it.
Mr. Butt paused, one would have said that there were tears in his eyes, but if so, the kindly beam of his spectacles shone through them like the sun through April rain. He left me and passed into the cloak room. He had just left the hall when a stranger entered, a narrow, meek man with a hunted face. He came in with a furtive step and looked about him apprehensively. Is Mr. Bud in the club? He whispered to the hall porter.
"'Yes, sir, he's just gone into the cloak-room, sir, shall I?'
"'But the man had turned and made a dive for the front door and had vanished.'
"'Who is that?' I asked.
"'That's a new member, sir, Mr. Everley Jones,' said the hall-porter.
"'End of Section 5.
"'Section 6 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libre-Box recording is in the public domain.
Ram Spud, the New World Singer, is he divinely inspired, or is he not? At any rate, we discovered him.
Footnote, Mr. Spud was discovered by the author for the New York Life. He is already recognized as
superior to Tennyson, and second only, as a writer of imagination, to the Sultan of Turkey.
End footnote. The discovery of a new poet is always a joy to the cultivated world. It is, therefore,
with the greatest pleasure that we are able to announce that we ourselves, acting quite independently,
and without any aid from any of the English reviews of the day, have discovered one. In the person of
Mr. Ram Spud, of whose work we give specimens below, we feel that we reveal to our readers a genius
of the first order. Unlike one of the most recently discovered English poets, who is a Bengali,
and another who is a full-blooded yak, Mr. Spud is, we believe, a Navajo Indian.
We believe this from the character of his verse.
Mr. Spud himself we have not seen.
But when he forwarded his poems to our office and offered with characteristic modesty
to sell us his entire works for 75 cents, we felt in closing with his offer that we were
dealing not only with a poet, but with one of nature's gentlemen.
Mr. Spud, we understand, has had no education.
Other newly discovered poets have had, apparently, some.
Mr. Spud has had, evidently, none.
We lay stress on this point.
Without it, we claim it is impossible to understand his work.
What we particularly like about Ram Spud,
and we do not say this because we discovered him,
but because we believe it and must say it,
is that he belongs not to one school,
to all of them. As a nature poet, we doubt very much if he has his equal. As a psychologist,
we are sure he has not. As a clear lucid thinker, he is undoubtedly in the first rank,
while as a mystic he is a long way in front of it. The specimens of Mr. Spud's verse which we
append here with were selected, we are happy to assure our readers, purely at random from his work.
We first blindfolded ourselves, and then, standing with our feet in warm water, and having one hand tied behind our back,
we groped among the papers on our desk before us, and selected for our purpose whatever specimens first came to hand.
As we have said, or did we say it, it is perhaps as a nature poet that Ram Spud excels.
Others of our modern school have carried the observation of natural objects to a high degree of very nice precision,
But with Mr. Spud, the observation of nature becomes an almost scientific process.
Nothing escapes him. The green of the grass, he detects as in an instant. The sky is no sooner
blue than he remarks it with unerring certainty. Every bird note, every bee call, is familiar
to his trained ear. Perhaps we cannot do better than quote the opening lines of a singularly beautiful
sample of Ram Spud's genius, which seems to us the last word in nature poetry. It is called,
with characteristic daintiness, spring thaw in the Ahuncic woods, near Paspebiak, Passamaquoddy County.
We would like to say that, to our ears at least, there is a music in this title, like the sound
of falling water or of chopped ice. But we must not interrupt ourselves. We now begin, listen.
The thermometer is standing this morning at 33-1. As a consequence, it is freezing in the shade,
but it is thawing in the sun. There is a certain amount of snow on the ground, but of course not
too much. The air is what you would call humid, but not disagreeable to the touch.
Where I am standing I find myself practically surrounded by trees. It is simply astonishing
the number of the different varieties one sees.
I've grown so wise I can tell each different tree by seeing it glisten, but if that test
fails, I simply put my ear to the tree and listen, and, well, I suppose it is only a silly
fancy of mine, perhaps, but do you know I'm getting to tell different trees by the sound
of their saps?
After I have noticed all the trees and named those I know in words, I stand quite still
and look all around to see if there are any birds.
And yesterday, close where I was standing, sitting in some brush on the snow, I saw what I was
practically absolutely certain was an early crow.
I sneaked up ever so close and was nearly beside it when, say, it turned and took one look
at me and flew away.
But we should not wish our readers to think that Ram Sput is always and only the contemplative
poet of the softer aspects of nature.
Oh, by no means!
There are times when waves of passion sweep over him in such prodigious volume as to roll him to and fro like a pebble in the surf.
Gusts of emotion blow over him with such violence as to hurl him pro and con with inconceivable fury.
In such moods, if it were not for the relief offered by writing verse, we really do not know what would happen to him.
His verse written under the impulse of such emotions marks him as one of the greatest masters of
passion, wild and yet restrained, objectionable, and yet printable, that have appeared on this side
of the Atlantic. We append here with a portion, or half a portion, of his little gem entitled,
You. You, with your warm, full, rich, red, ripe lips, and your beautifully manicured fingertips,
you, with your heaving, panting, rapidly expanding and contracting chest, lying against my perfectly
ordinary shirt-front and dinner-jacket vest. It is too much your touch as such. It and your hand,
can you not understand? Last night an ostrich feather from your fragrant hair,
unnoticed fell. I guard it well. Yesterine from your tiara I have slid, unseen, a single diamond,
and I keep it hid. Last night you left inside the vestibule upon the sill,
a quarter dollar, and I have it still.
But even those who know Ram Spud as the poet of nature or of passion
still only know a part of his genius.
Some of his highest flights rise from an entirely different inspiration,
and deal with the public affairs of the nation.
They are in every sense comparable to the best work of the poet's laureate of England,
dealing with similar themes.
As soon as we had seen Ram Spud's work of this kind,
We cried, that is, we said to our stenographer,
What a pity that in this republic we have no laureateship.
Here is a man who might truly fill it.
Of the poem of this kind, we should wish to quote,
If our limits of space did not prevent it,
Mr. Spud's exquisite,
Ode on the reduction of the United States tariff.
It is a matter of the very gravest concern to at least
nine-tenths of the business interests in the United States,
whether an all-round reduction of the present tariff, either on an ad valorem or a specific basis,
could be effected without a serious disturbance of the general industrial situation of the country.
But no, we must not quote any more. No, we really mustn't.
Yet we cannot refrain from inserting a reference to the latest of these laureate poems of Ram's Spud.
It appears to us to be a matchless specimen of its class,
and to settle once and for all the vexed question, though we ourselves never vexed it,
of whether true poetry can deal with national occasions as they arise.
It is entitled, The Banker's Euthanasia, or the Federal Reserve Currency Act of 1914.
And though we do not propose to reproduce it here, our distinct feeling is that it will take
its rank beside Mr. Spud's elegy of the Interstate Commerce Act,
and his thoughts on the proposal of a uniform pure food law.
But our space does not allow us to present Ram Spud
in what is after all his greatest aspect,
that of a profound psychologist,
a questioner of the very meaning of life itself.
His poem, death, and gloom,
from which we must refrain from quoting at large,
contain such striking passages as the following.
Why do I breathe, or do I?
What am I for, and with me?
do I go? What skills it if I live, and if I die, what boots it? Anyone knowing Ram's
Bud as we do will realize that these questions, especially the last, are practically
unanswerable. End of Section 6. Section 7 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen
Leacock. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. Aristocratic anecdotes or little story
of great people. I have been much struck lately by the many excellent little anecdotes of celebrated
people that have appeared in recent memoirs and found their way thence into the columns of the daily
press. There is something about them so deliciously pointed, their humor is so exquisite,
that I think we ought to have more of them. To this end, I am trying to circulate on my own account
a few anecdotes which seems somehow to have been overlooked. Here, for example,
is an excellent thing, which comes, if I remember rightly, from the vivacious memoir of Lady
Ranolay de chit-chat.
An anecdote of the Duke of Strathetheithen.
Lady Ranelay writes,
The Duke of Strathathen, I am writing, of course, of the 17th Duke, not of his present grace,
was, as everybody knows, famous for his hospitality.
It was not perhaps generally known that the Duke was as witty as he was hospitable.
remember a most amusing incident that happened the last time but two that I was staying at the
Strathathan Towers. As we sat down to lunch, we were a very small and intimate party, there being only
43 of us, the Duke, who was at the head of the table, looked up from the roast of beef that
he was carving, and running his eye about the guests was heard to murmur. I'm afraid there isn't
enough beef to go round. There was nothing to do, of course, but to roar with laughter, and the
incident passed off with perfect Savoy Fair. Here is another story which I think has not had all
the publicity that it ought to. I found it in the book, Shot, Shell, and Shrapnel, or sixty
years as a war correspondent, recently written by Mr. Maxim Catling, whose exploits are
familiar to all readers. Anteuxed of Lord Kitchener.
I was standing, writes Mr. Maxim, immediately between Lord Kitchener and Lord Walsley,
with Lord Roberts a little to the rear of us, and we were laughing and chatting as we always did
when the enemy were about to open fire on us. Suddenly, we found ourselves the object of the most
terrific hail of bullets. For a few moments the air was black with them. As they went past,
I could not refrain from exchanging a quiet smile with Lord Kitchener, and another with Lord
Wolseley. Indeed, I have never, except perhaps on twenty or thirty occasions, found myself exposed
to such an awful fusillade. Kitchener, who habitually uses an eyeglass, among his friends,
watched the bullets go singing by, and then, with that inimitable Sengfroid, which he reserves for
his intimates, said, I'm afraid if we stay here we may get hit. We all moved away, laughing heartily.
To add to the joke, Lord Robert's aide-de-camp was shot in the pit of the stomach as we went.
The next anecdote which I reproduce may be already too well known to my readers.
The career of Baron Snorch filled so large a page in the history of European diplomacy
that the publication of his recent memoirs was awaited with profound interest by half the
chancellories of Europe.
Even the other half were half excited over them.
The tangled skein in which the politics of Europe were enveloped was perhaps never better
illustrated than in this fascinating volume.
Even at the risk of repeating what is already familiar, I offer the following for what
it is worth, or even less.
New Light on the Life of Cavour
I have always regarded Count Cavour, writes the Baron, as one of the most impenetrable
diplomatists whom it has been my lot to meet.
I distinctly recall an incident in connection with the famous Congress of Paris of 1856, which
rises before my mind as vividly as if it were yesterday. I was seated in one of the large
salons of the Elise Palaz, I often used to sit there, playing vint at Un, together with
Count Cavor, the Duke de Magenta, the Marquis de Casa Mombasa, the Conte de Piccolo
Pochito, and others whose names I do not recollect. The stakes had
been as usual very high, and there was a large pile of gold on the table. No one of us, however,
paid any attention to it, so absorbed were we all in the thought of the momentous crises that
were impending. At intervals the Emperor Napoleon III passed in and out of the room, and paused
to say a word or two with well-feigned Eloanamond to the players, who replied with such de
Gagemon as they could. While the play was at its height, a servant appeared
with a telegram on a silver tray. He handed it to Count Kovor. The Count paused in his play,
opened the telegram, read it, and then with the most inconceivable nonchalance, put it in his pocket.
We stared at him in amazement for a moment, and then the Duke, with the infinite ease of a trained
diplomat, quietly resumed his play. Two days afterward, meeting Count Kavor at a reception
of the Empress Eugenie, I was able, unobserved, to whisper in his ear,
what was in the telegram?
Nothing of any consequence, he answered.
From that day to this, I have never known what it contained.
My readers, concludes Baron Snorch, may believe this or not as they like, but I give
them my word that it is true.
Probably they will not believe it.
I cannot resist appending to these anecdotes a charming little story for
from that well-known book, Sorrows of a Queen. The writer, Lady De Weary, was an English
gentlewoman who was, for many years, mistress of the robes at one of the best-known German
courts. Her affection for her royal mistress is evident on every page of her memoirs.
Tenderness of a Queen. Lady de W. writes,
My dear mistress, the late Queen of Saxcobia Slits in Mine, was of a most tender and sympathetic
disposition. The goodness of her heart broke forth on all occasions. I well remember how one day,
on seeing a cabman in the poodle plats, kicking his horse in the stomach, she stopped in her walk
and said, Oh, poor horse! If he goes on kicking it like that, he'll hurt it. I may say in conclusion
that I think if people would only take a little more pains to resuscitate anecdotes of this sort,
there might be a lot more of them found.
End of Section 7.
Section 8 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Education made agreeable, or the diversions of a professor.
A few days ago, during a pause in one of my college lectures,
my class being asleep, I sat reading Draper's intellectual development of Europe.
Quite suddenly I came upon the following sentence.
Eritosthenes cast everything he wished to teach into poetry.
By this means he made it attractive, and he was able to spread his system all over Asia Minor.
This came to me with a shock of an intellectual discovery.
I saw at once how I could spread my system, or parts of it, all over the United States and Canada.
To make education attractive.
There it is.
to call in the help of poetry, of music, of grand opera, if need be, to aid in the teaching of the dry subjects of the college classroom.
I set to work at once on the project, and already I have enough results to revolutionize education.
In the first place, I have compounded a blend of modern poetry in mathematics, which retains all the romance of the latter, and loses none of the dry accuracy of the former.
Here is an example.
The poem of Lord Ulland's daughter expressed as a problem in trigonometry.
Introduction
A party of three persons, a Scotch nobleman, a young lady, and an elderly boatman,
stand on the banks of a river are, which, for private reasons, they desire to cross.
Their only means of transport is a boat, of which the boatman, if squared, is able to row at a rate
proportional to the square of the distance.
The boat, however, has a leak, S, through which a quantity of water passes sufficient to sink it
after traversing an indeterminate distance, D.
Given the square of the boatman and the mean situation of all concerned, to find whether
the boat will pass the river safely or sink.
A chieftain to the highlands bound cried, boatman do not tarry, and I'll give you a silver
pound to Romy or the fairy.
before them raged the angry tide X to the second plus Y from side to side.
Out spake the hearty Highland White,
I'll go, my chief, I'm ready. It is not for your silver bright, but for your winsome lady.
And yet he seemed to manifest a certain hesitation.
His head was sunk upon his breast in puzzled calculation.
Suppose the river X plus Y and call the distance Q,
Then dare we thus the gods defy? I think we dare, don't you?
Our floating power expressed in words is X plus 47 thirds.
Oh, haste thee, haste, the lady cries.
Though tempests round us gather, I'll face the raging of the skies,
but please cut out the algebra.
The boat has left the stormy shore, S, a stormy C before her,
C1, C2, C3, C4, the tempest gathers o'er, the thunder rolls, the lightning smites him,
and the rainfalls at infinitum. In vain the aged boatman strains, his heaving sides reveal his pains.
The angry water gains apace, both of his sides and half his base, till, as he sits,
he seems to lose the square of his hypotenuse. The boat advanced to X plus two,
Lord Ullin reached the fixed point Q, then the boat sank from human eye.
O Y, O Y to the second, O G. Y.
But this is only a sample of what can be done.
I have realized that all our technical books are written and presented in too dry a fashion.
They don't make the most of themselves.
Very often the situation implied is intensely sensational,
and if set out after the fashion of an up-to-date newspaper,
would be wonderfully effective. Here, for example, you have Euclid writing in a perfectly prosaic way,
all in small type, such an item as the following. A perpendicular is let fall on a line B.C.
So as to bisect it at the point C, etc., etc. Just as if it were the most ordinary occurrence in the
world, every newspaper man will see at once that it ought to be set up thus.
Awful catastrophe, perpendicular falls headlong on a given point. The line at sea said to be
completely bisected, president of the line makes statement, etc., etc. But I am not contenting myself
with merely describing my system. I am putting it to the test. I am preparing a new and very
special edition of my friend Professor Daniel Murray's work on the calculus. This is a book
little known to the general public. I suppose one may say, without exaggeration, that outside of the
classroom, it is hardly read at all. Yet I venture to say that when my new edition is out,
it will be found on the tables of every cultivated home, and will be among the best sellers of the
year. All that is needed is to give to this really monumental book the same chance that is given
to every other work of fiction in the modern market. First of all, rapid in what is called,
technically a jacket. This is of white enameled paper, and on it is a picture of a girl,
a very pretty girl, in a summer dress and sunbonnet, sitting swinging on a bow of a cherry tree.
Across the cover in big black letters are the words, the calculus, and beneath them the legend,
the most daring book of the day. This you will observe is perfectly true. The reviewers of the
mathematical journals when this book first came out, agreed that, quote,
Professor Murray's views on the calculus were the most daring yet published, end quote.
They said, too, that they hoped that the professor's unsound theories of infinitesimal rectitude
would not remain unchallenged. Yet the public somehow missed it all, and one of the most
profitable scandals in the publishing trade was missed for the lack of a little business
enterprise. My new edition will give this book its first real chance. I admit that the inside
has to be altered, but not very much. The real basis of interest is there. The theories in the book
are just as interesting as those raised in the modern novel. All that is needed is to adopt
the device, familiar in novels, of clothing the theories in personal form and putting the
propositions advanced into the mouths of the characters, instead of leaving them as unsupported
statements of the author. Take, for example, Dr. Murray's beginning. It is very good,
anyone will admit it, fascinatingly clever, but it lacks heart. It runs. If two magnitudes,
one of which is determined by a straight line, and the other by a parabola, approach one another,
the rectangle included by the revolution of each will be equal to the sum of a series of indeterminate rectangles.
Now this is, quite frankly, dull. The situation is there, the idea is good, and, whether one agrees or not,
it is at least as brilliantly original as even the best of our recent novels.
But I find it necessary to alter the presentation of the plot a little bit. As I re-edited it,
the opening of the calculus runs thus. On a bright morning in June along a path gave with the
opening efflorescence of the hybiscis, and entangled here and there with the wild blossoms of
the convolvulus, two magnitudes might have been seen approaching one another. The one magnitude,
who held a tennis racket in his hand, carried himself with a beautiful erectness, and moved
with a firmness such as would have led Professor Murray to exclaim in despair. Let it be granted
that A.B., for such was our hero's name, is a straight line. The other magnitude, which drew near
with a step at once elusive and fascinating, revealed as she walked a figure so exquisite in its every
curve as to call from her geometrical acquaintances the ecstatic exclamation, let it be granted
that M is a parabola. The beautiful magnitude of whom we have last spoken bore on her arm as she
walked, a tiny dog over which her fair head was bent in endearing caresses. Indeed, such was her
attention to the dog Vye, his full name was Velocity, but he was called Vye for short,
that her wayward footsteps carried her not in a straight line, but in a direction so constantly
changing as to lead that acute observer, Professor Murray, to the conclusion that her path
could only be described by the amount of attraction ascribable to Vy.
Guided thus along their respective paths, the two magnitudes presently met with such suddenness
that they almost intersected.
"'I beg your pardon,' said the first magnitude very rigidly.
"'You ought to, indeed,' said the second rather sulkily.
"'You've knocked vi right out of my arms!'
She looked around despairingly for the little dog, which seemed to have disappeared in the
long grass.
"'Won't you please pick him up?' she pleaded.
"'Not exactly in my line, you know,' answered the other magnitude.
"'But I tell you what I'll do.
If you'll stand still, perfectly still where you are,
and let me take hold of your hand, I'll describe a circle.'
"'Oh, aren't you clever?' cried the girl, clapping her hands.
"'What a lovely idea! You describe a circle all around me,
and then we'll look at every weenie bit of it, and we'll be sure to find Vi.'
She reached out her hand to the other magnitude, who clasped it with an assumed intensity sufficient to retain it.
At this moment a third magnitude broke on the scene.
A huge oblong angular figure, very difficult to describe, came revolving towards them.
"'M!' it shouted.
"'Emily, what are you doing?'
"'My goodness!' said the second magnitude in alarm.
it's Mama! I may say that the second installment of Dr. Murray's fascinating romance will appear
in the next number of the illuminated bookworm, the great adult juvenile vehicle of the newer
thought in which these theories of education are expounded further.
End of Section 8. Section 9 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
everyday experience. He came across to me in the semi-silence room of the club. I had a rather queer
hand at Bridge last night, he said. Had you? I answered and picked up a newspaper. Yes, it would
have interested you, I think, he went on. Would it, I said, and moved to another chair.
It was like this, he continued following me. I held the king of hearts. Half a minute, I said.
I want to go and see what time it is. I went out and looked at the clock in the hall. I came back.
And the queen and the ten, he was saying. Excuse me just a second. I want to ring for a messenger.
I did so. The waiter came and went. And the nine and two small ones, he went on.
Too small what? I asked. Two small hearts, he said. I don't remember which. Anyway, I remember
very well indeed that I had the king and the queen and the jack, the nine and two little ones.
Half a second, I said, I want to mail a letter. When I came back to him, he was still murmuring.
My partner held the ace of clubs in the queen. The jack was out, but I didn't know where the
king was. You didn't? I said in contempt. No, he repeated in surprise, and went on murmuring.
Diamonds had gone round once and spades twice, and so I suspected that my partner was leading from weakness.
I can well believe it, I said, sheer weakness.
Well, he said, on the sixth round the lead came to me.
Now what should I have done? Finesced for the ace or led straight into my opponent.
You want my advice, I said, and you shall have it openly and fairly.
In such a case as you describe, where a man has led out at me repeatedly and with provocation,
as I gather from what you say, though I myself do not play bridge, I should lead my whole hand at
him. I repeat, I do not play bridge. But in the circumstances I should think it the only thing to do.
End of Section 9. Section 10 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Librevox recording is in the public.
domain. Truthful oratory, or what our speakers ought to say.
1. Truthful speech giving the real thoughts of a distinguished guest at the 50th anniversary
banquet of a society. Mr. Chairman and gentlemen, if there is one thing I abominate more than
another, it is turning out on a cold night like this to eat a huge dinner of 12 courses
and know that I have to make a speech on top of it. Gentlemen, I just feel stuff.
There's the plain truth of it. By the time we had finished that fish, I could have gone home satisfied. Honestly, I could. That's as much as I usually eat. And by the time I had finished the rest of the food, I felt simply waterlogged, and I do still. More than that, the knowledge that I had to make a speech congratulating the society of yours on its 50th anniversary, haunted and racked me all through the meal. I am not in plain truth.
the ready and brilliant speaker you take me for. That is a pure myth. If you could see the desperate
home scene that goes on in my family when I am working up a speech, your minds would be at rest on
that point. I'll go further and be very frank with you. How this society has lived for 50 years,
I don't know. If all your dinners are like this, heaven help you. I've only the vaguest idea
of what the society is anyway and what it does. I try to do. I try to do.
get a constitution this afternoon but failed. I am sure from some of the faces that I recognize
around this table that there must be good business reasons of some sort for belonging to this
society. There's money in it, mark my words, for some of you, or you wouldn't be here.
Of course I quite understand that the president and the officials seated here beside me
come merely for the self-importance of it. That gentleman is about their size. I realized that,
from their talk during the banquet. I don't want to speak bitterly, but the truth is they are
small men, and it flatters them to sit here with two or three blue ribbons pinned on their coats.
But as for me, I'm done with it. It will be fifty years please heaven, before this event
comes round again. I hope, I earnestly hope, that I shall be safely under the ground.
2. The speech that ought to be made by a state governor after visiting the fall exposition of an agricultural society.
Well, gentlemen, this annual fall fair of the Skidink County Agricultural Association has come round again.
I don't mind telling you straight out that of all the disagreeable jobs that fall to me as governor of this state,
my visit to your fall fair is about the toughest. I want to tell you, gentlemen, right here and
now that I don't know anything about agriculture, and I don't want to. My parents were rich enough
to bring me up in the city in a rational way. I don't have to do chores in order to go to the
high school, as some of those present have boasted that they did. My only wonder is that they ever
got there at all. They show no traces of it. This afternoon, gentlemen, you took me all round
your livestock exhibit. I walked past and through nearly a quarter of a month.
of hogs. What was it that they were called? Tamworths? Berkshers? I don't remember. But all I can say,
gentlemen, is, whew, just that. Some of you will understand readily enough. That word sums up my
whole idea of your agricultural show, and I'm done with it. No, let me correct myself.
There was just one feature of your agricultural exposition that met my warm approval. You were good
enough to take me through the section of your exposition called your Midway Pleasance.
Let me tell you, sirs, that there was more real merit in that than all the rest of the show
put together. You apologized, if I remember rightly, for taking me into the large tent of the
Syrian dancing girls. Oh, believe me, gentlemen, you needn't have. Syria is a country which
commands my profoundest admiration. Someday I mean to spend a vacation there, and believe me, gentlemen,
when I do go, and I say this with all the emphasis of which I am capable, I should not wish to be
accompanied by such a set of flatheads as the officials of your agricultural society. And now,
gentlemen, as I have just received a fake telegram by arrangement, calling me back to the capital
of the state, I must leave this banquet at once. One word in conclusion, if I had known as
fully as I do now how it feels to drink half a bucket of sweet cider, I should,
should certainly never have come.
3.
Truthful speech of a district politician to a ladies' suffrage society.
Ladies, my own earnest heartfelt conviction is that you are a pack of cats.
I use the word cats advisedly, and I mean every letter of it.
I want to go on record before this gathering as being strongly and unalterably opposed
to woman's suffrage until you get it.
After that I favor it. My reasons for opposing the suffrage are of a kind that you couldn't understand,
but all men, except the few that I see at this meeting, understand them by instinct. As you may, however,
succeed as a result of the fuss you are making in getting votes, I have thought it best to come.
Also, I am free to confess, I wanted to see what you looked like. On this last head I am disappointed.
I like women a good deal fatter than most of you are, and better looking. As I look round this
gathering, I see one or two of you that are not so bad, but on the whole, not many. But my own
strong personal predilection is, and remains, in favor of a woman who can cook, mend clothes,
talk when I want her to, and give me the kind of admiration to which I am accustomed.
Let me, however, say in conclusion that I am altogether in sympathy with your movement
to this extent. If you ever do get votes, and the indications are that you will blast you,
I want your votes and I want all of them. End of Section 10. Section 11 of Moonbeams from the
larger lunacy by Stephen Leacock. This Libravox recording is in the public domain. Our Literary Bureau.
Footnote. This literary bureau was started by the author in the New York century. It leaped into such a
prominence that it had to be closed at once.
Novels read to order first aid for the busy millionaire.
No brains needed, no taste required, nothing but money, send it to us.
We have lately been struck, of course not dangerously, by a new idea.
A recent number of a well-known magazine contains an account of an American multi-millionaire
who, on account of the pressure of his brain power and the rush of his business,
found it impossible to read the fiction of the day for himself.
He therefore caused his secretaries to look through any new and likely novel
and make a rapid report on its contents,
indicating for his personal perusal the specially interesting parts.
Realizing the possibilities coiled up in this plan,
we have opened a special agency or bureau for doing work of this sort.
Any over-busy multimillionaire or Superman, who becomes our client,
may send us novels, essays, or books of any kind,
and will receive a report explaining the plot
and pointing out such parts as he may with propriety read.
If he can once find time to send us a postcard
or a postal cablegram night or day,
we undertake to assume all the further effort of reading.
Our terms for ordinary fiction are $1 per chapter,
for works of travel, 10 cents per mile,
and for political or other essays, two cents per page, or $10 per idea,
and for theological and controversial work, $7.50 per cubic yard extracted.
Our clients are assured of prompt and immediate attention.
Through the kindness of the editor of the century,
we are enabled to insert here a sample of our work.
It was done to the order of a gentleman of means,
engaged in silver mining in Colorado,
who wrote us that he was anxious to get a halt on modern fiction,
but that he had no time actually to read it.
On our assuring him that this was now unnecessary,
he caused to be sent to us the monthly parts of a serial story
on which we duly reported as follows.
January installment
Theodolite Gulch, the Dip, Canyon County, Colorado.
Dear Sir, we beg to inform you that the scene of the
the opening chapter of the Fortunes of Barbara Plin-Limon is laid in Wales. The scene is laid,
however, very carelessly and hurriedly, and we expect that it will shortly be removed. We cannot,
therefore, recommend it to your perusal. As there is a very fine passage describing the
Cambrian hills by moonlight, we enclose here with a condensed table showing the mean altitude
of the moon for the month of December in the latitude of Wales. The character of Miss
Plyn Lemon, we find to be developed in conversation with her grandmother, which we think you had
better not read. Nor are we prepared to endorse your reading the speeches of the Welsh peasantry,
which we find in this chapter, but we forward herewith, in place of them, a short glossary
of Welsh synonyms which may aid you in this connection.
February installment.
Dear Sir, we regret to state that we find nothing in the second chapter of the fortunes of
Barbara Plin-Limon, which need be reported to you at length. We think it well, however, to apprise you of
the arrival of a young Oxford student in the neighborhood of Miss Plin-Limon's cottage, who is
apparently a young man of means and refinement. We enclose a list of the principal Oxford colleges.
We may state that from the conversation and manner of this young gentleman, there is no ground for
any apprehension on your part. But if need arises, we will report by cable.
to you instantly. The young gentleman in question meets Miss Plin-Limon at sunrise on the slopes of Snowden.
As the description of the meeting is very fine, we send you a recent photograph of the sun.
March installment. Dear Sir, our surmise was right. The scene of the story that we are digesting for you is changed.
Miss Plin-Limon has gone to London. You will be gratified to learn that she has fallen heir to a fortune of 100,000.
pounds, which we are happy to compute for you at 486,66 and 66 cents less exchange.
On Miss Plin Limon's arrival at Charing Cross Station, she is overwhelmed with that strange feeling of isolation felt in the surging crowds of a modern city.
We therefore enclose a timetable showing the arrival and departure of all trains at Charing Cross.
April installment.
Dear sir, we beg to bring to your notice the fact that Miss Barbara Plin-Limon has by an arrangement made through her trustees become the inmate on a pecuniary footing in the household of a family of title.
We are happy to inform you that her first appearance at dinner in evening dress was most gratifying.
We can safely recommend you to read in this connection lines four and five and the first half of line six on page 100 of the book as enclosed.
We regret to say that the Marquis of Slush and his eldest son, Viscount Fitzbuse, courtesy title, are both addicted to drink.
They have been drinking throughout the chapter.
We are pleased to state that apparently the second son, Lord Radnor of Slush, who is away from home, is not so addicted.
We send you under separate cover a bottle of Radnor water.
May installment
Dear Sir, We regret to state.
that the affairs of Miss Barbara Plin-Limon are in a very unsatisfactory position. We enclose three pages
of the novel with the urgent request that you will read them at once. The old Marquis of Slush
has made approaches towards Miss Plin-Limon of such a scandalous nature that we think it best to ask
you to read them in full. You will note also that Young Viscount Slush, who is tipsy through
whole of pages, 121 to 125, 128 to 133,
and part of page 140 has designs upon her fortune. We are sorry to see also that the Marchioness
of Buse, under the guise of friendship, has ensured Miss Plinlimin's life and means to do away with
her. The sister of the Marchioness, the Lady Dowager, also wishes to do away with her.
The second housemaid, who is tempted by her jewelry, is also planning to do away with her.
We feel that if this goes on, she will be done away with.
June installment. Dear sir, we beg to advise you that Viscount Fitzbuse, inflamed by the beauty and innocence of Miss Plin Lemon, has gone so far as to lay his finger on her. Read page 170, line six and seven. She resisted his approaches. At the height of the struggle, a young man attired in the costume of a Welsh tourist, but wearing the stamp of an Oxford student, and yet carrying himself with the unmistakable high.
tour, we knew it at once, of an aristocrat, burst or bust into the room. With one blow he
felled Fitzbuse to the floor, with another he clasped the girl to his heart. Barbara, he exclaimed,
Radnor, she murmured. You will be pleased to learn that this is the second son of the Marquis,
Viscount Radner, just returned from a reading tour in Wales. P.S., we do not know what he read,
so we enclose a file of Welsh newspapers to date.
July installment.
We regret to inform you that the Marquis of Slush has disinherited his son.
We grieve to state that Viscount Radnor has sworn that he will never ask for Miss Plinlimmon's hand
till he has a fortune equal to her own.
Meantime, we are sorry to say he purposes to work.
August installment.
The Viscount is seeking employment.
September installment
The Viscount is looking for work
October installment
The Viscount is hunting for a job
November installment
We are most happy to inform you
that Miss Plyn Limin has saved the situation
Determined to be worthy of the generous love of Viscount Radnor
She has arranged to convey her entire fortune
To the old family lawyer
Who acts as her trustee
She will thus become as poor as the Viscount
and they can marry. The scene with the old lawyer who breaks into tears on receiving the fortune,
swearing to hold and cherish it as his own, is very touching. Meantime, as the Viscount is
hunting for a job, we enclose a list of advertisements under the heading, Help Wanted Males.
December installment. You will be very gratified to learn that the fortunes of Miss Barbara
Plin-Limon have come to a most pleasing termination. Her marriage,
with the Viscount Radnor was celebrated very quietly on page 231. We enclose a list of the principal
churches in London. No one was present except the old family lawyer, who was moved to tears
at the sight of the bright, trusting bride, and the clergyman who wept at the sight of the check
given him by the Viscount. After the ceremony, the old trustee took Lord and Lady Radner
to a small wedding breakfast at an hotel. We enclose a list. During the
breakfast a sudden faintness, for which we had been watching for ten pages, overcame him.
He sank back in his chair gasping.
Lord and Lady Radner rushed to him and sought in vain to tighten his necktie.
He expired under their care, having just come to indicate in his pocket a will, leaving
them his entire wealth.
This had hardly happened when a messenger brought news to the Viscount that his brother,
Lord Fitzbues, had been killed in the hunting field, and that he, meaning him himself, had now succeeded
to the title. Lord and Lady Fitzbues had hardly time to reach the townhouse of the family
when they learned that owing to the sudden death of the old Marquis, also we believe in the hunting field,
they had become the Marquis and Marchioness of Slush. The Marquis and the Marchioness of Slush are still
living in their ancestral home in London. Their lives are an example to all their tenentry in
Piccadilly, the Strand and elsewhere. Concluding note, Dear Mr. Galtz, we beg to acknowledge with many
thanks your check for $1,000. We regret to learn that you have not been able to find time to read
our digest of the serial story placed with us at your order. But we note with pleasure that you
propose to have the essential points of our digest boiled down by one of the business experts
in your office. Awaiting your commands, we remain, etc., etc.
End of Section 11. Section 12 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Speeding Up Business
We were sitting at our editorial desk in our inner room, quietly writing up
our week's poetry, when a stranger looked in upon us. He came in with a burst, like the entry
of the hero of Western drama coming in out of a snowstorm. His manner was all excitement.
Sit down, we said in our grave, courteous way. Sit down, he exclaimed. Certainly not. Are you aware
of the amount of time and energy that are being wasted in American business by the practice
of perpetually sitting down and standing up again? Do you realize that every time you sit down and
stand up, you make a dead lift of, he looked at us, 250 pounds? Did you ever reflect that every
time you sit down, you have to get up again? Never, we said quietly. We never thought of it.
You didn't, he sneered. No, you'd rather go on lifting 250 pounds through two feet, an average of 500 foot,
pounds, practically 62 kilowatts of wasted power. Do you know that by merely hitching a pulley
to the back of your neck, you could generate enough power to light your whole office?
We hung our heads. Simple as the thing was, we had never thought of it.
Very good, said the stranger. Now, all American businessmen are like you. They don't think.
Do you understand me? They don't think. We realized the truth of it at once. We had
never thought. Perhaps we didn't even know how. Now I tell you, continued our visitor,
speaking rapidly and with a light of wild enthusiasm in his face, I'm out for a new campaign,
efficiency in business, speeding things up, better organization. But surely, we said musingly,
we have seen something about this lately in the papers?
Seen it, sir, he exclaimed, I should say so. It's everywhere.
It's a new movement. It's in the air. Has it never struck you how a thing like this can be seen in the air?
Here again we were at fault. In all our lives we had never seen anything in the air. We had never even looked there.
Now, continued the stranger, I want your paper to help. I want you to join in. I want you to give publicity.
Assuredly, we said with our old-fashioned politeness, anything which concerns the
the welfare, the progress, if one so may phrase it,
"'Stop,' said the visitor.
"'You talk too much. You're prosy. Don't talk. Listen to me. Try and fix your mind on what I am
about to say.' We fixed it. The stranger's manner became somewhat calmer.
"'I am heading,' he said, the new American efficiency movement. I have sent our circulars
to 50,000 representative firms explaining my methods. I am
receiving 10,000 answers a day. Here he dragged a bundle of letters out of his pocket,
from Maine, from New Hampshire, from Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut,
we murmured. Exactly, he said, from every state in the Union, from the Philippines, from Puerto
Rico, and last week I had one from Canada. Marvelous, we said, and may one ask what your new methods are?
You may, he answered. It's a proper question. It's a typical business question, fair, plain, clean, and even admitting of an answer. The great art of answering questions, he continued, is to answer at once without loss of time, friction, or delay in moving from place to place. I'll answer it.
Do, we said. I will, said the stranger. My method is first, to stimulate business to the highest point by infusing
into it everywhere the spirit of generous rivalry, of wholesome competition, by inviting
each and every worker to outdo each and every other.
And can they do it, we asked, puzzled and yet fascinated. Can they all do it?
They do and they can, said the stranger. The proof of it is that they are doing it. Listen,
here is an answer to my circular number six efficiency and recompense that came in this morning.
It is from a steel firm.
Listen.
The stranger picked out a letter and read it.
Dear sir, our firm is a steel corporation.
We roll rails.
As soon as we read your circular on the stimulus of competition,
we saw that there were big things in it.
At once we sent one of our chief managers to the rolling mill.
He carried a paper bag in his hand.
Now boys, he said, every man who rolls a rail gets a gumdrop.
The effect was magical. The good fellows felt a new stimulus. They now roll out rails like dough.
Work is a joy to them. Every Saturday night, the man who has rolled most gets a blue ribbon.
The man who has rolled the next most a green ribbon. The next most, a yellow ribbon and so on,
through the spectroscope. The man who rolls least gets only a red ribbon. It is a real pleasure
to see the brave fellows clamoring for their ribbons.
output, after defraying the entire cost of the ribbons and the gum-drops, has increased
40%. We intend to carry the scheme further by allowing all the men who get a hundred blue ribbons
first to exchange them for the grand efficiency prize of the firm, a pink ribbon. This the winner
will be entitled to wear whenever and wherever he sees fit to wear it. The stranger paused
for breath. "'Marvellous,' we said. There is no doubt the stimulus
of keen competition.
Shut up, he said impatiently.
Let me explain it further.
Competition is only part of it.
An item just as big that makes for efficiency
is to take account of the little things.
It's the little things that are never thought of.
Here was another wonder.
We realized that we had never thought of them.
Take an example, the stranger said.
I went into a hotel the other day.
What did I see?
Bellboys being summoned upstairs every minute and flying up in the elevators. Yes, and every time they
went up, they had to come down again. I went up to the manager. I said, I can understand that when
your guests ring for the bellboys, they have to go up, but why should they come down? Why not have
them go up and never come down? He caught the idea at once. That hotel is transformed. I have a letter
from the manager stating that they find it 50% cheaper to hire new bellboys instead of waiting
for the old ones to come down. These results, we said, are certainly marvelous. You are
most assuredly to be congratulated on, you talk too much, said the stranger. Don't do it, learn to
listen. If a young man comes to me for advice in business, and they do in hundreds lots of them,
almost in tears over their inefficiency, I'd say,
Young man, never talk, listen, answer, but don't speak.
But even all this is only part of the method.
Another side of it is technique.
Technique, we said, pleased but puzzled.
Yes, the proper use of machine devices.
Take the building trade.
I've revolutionized it.
Till now all the bricks, even for a high building,
were carried up to the mason and high.
Madness! Think of the waste of it! By my method, instead of carrying the bricks to the
mason, we take the mason to the brick, lower him on a wire rope, give him a brick, and up he goes
again. As soon as he wants another brick he calls down, I want a brick, and down he comes
like lightning. This, we said, is little short of, cut it out, even that is not all. Another
thing bigger than any is organization.
the business in this country is not organized. As soon as I sent out my circular, number four,
have you organized your business? I got answers in thousands. Heartbroken many of them. They had
never thought of it. Here, for example, is a letter written by a plain man, a gardener, just an ordinary
man, a plain man. Yes, we said, quite so. Well, here is what he writes. Dear sir,
As soon as I got your circular, I read it all through from end to end, and I saw that all my
failure in the past had come from my not being organized.
I sat and thought a long while, and I decided that I would organize myself.
I went right into the house, and I said to my wife, Jane, I'm going to organize myself.
She said, Oh, John, and not another word, but you should have seen the look on her face.
So the next morning I got up early and began to organize myself. It was hard at first, but I stuck to it. There were times when I felt as if I couldn't do it. It seemed too hard. But bit by bit I did it, and now, thank God, I am organized. I wish all men like me could know the pleasure I feel in being organized. Touching, isn't it? said the stranger. But I get lots of letters like that. Here's another, also from a man,
a plain man working on his own farm. Hear what he says. Dear sir, as soon as I saw your circular
on how to speed up the employee, I felt that it was a big thing. I don't have any hired help here
to work with me, but only father. He cuts the wood and does odd chores about the place. So I realized
that the best I could do was to try to speed up father. I started in to speed him up last Tuesday,
and I wish you could see him. Before this, he couldn't split a cord of wood without cutting a slice
off his boots. Now he does it in half the time. But there, the stranger said, getting impatient
even with his own reading. I needn't read it all. It is the same thing all along the line. I've got
the method introduced into the department stores. Before this, every customer who came in
wasted time trying to find the counters. Now we install a patent
springboard with a mechanism like a catapult.
As soon as a customer comes in, an attendant puts him on the board, blindfolds him,
and says, where do you want to go?
Glove counter.
Oh, all right.
He's fired at it through the air.
No time lost.
Same with the railways.
They're installing the method too.
Every engineer who breaks the record from New York to Buffalo gets a glass of milk.
When he gets a hundred glasses, he can exchange them for a glass.
of beer. So with the doctors. On the new method, instead of giving a patient one pill a day for
14 days, they give him 14 pills in one day. Doctors, lawyers, everybody. In time, sir, said the
stranger in tones of rising excitement, you'll see even the plumbers. But just at this
moment the door opened. A sturdy-looking man in blue entered. The stranger's voice was hushed
at once. The excitement died out of his face.
his manner all of a sudden was meekness itself.
I was just coming, he said.
That's right, sir, said the man.
Better come along and not take up the gentleman's time.
Goodbye, then, said the stranger, with meek affability, and he went out.
The man in blue lingered behind for a moment.
A sad case, sir, he said, and he tapped his forehead.
You mean, I asked.
Exactly. Cracked, sir, quite cracked, but harmless. I'm engaged to look after him, but he gave me the slip downstairs.
Is he under delusions, we inquired?
Yes, sir. He's got it into his head that business in this country has all gone to pieces,
thinks it must be reorganized. He writes letters about it all day, and sends them to the papers
with imaginary names. You may have seen some of them. Good day, sir.
We looked at our watch. We had lost just half an hour over the new efficiency.
We turned back with a sigh to our old-fashioned task.
End of Section 12.
Section 13 of Moonbeams from the larger lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Who is also Who, a companion volume to Who's Who?
Note by the editor.
I do not quarrel with it.
the contents of such valuable compendiums as Who's Who, Men and Women of the Time,
etc., etc. But they leave out the really representative people. The names that they include are so
well known as to need no commentary, while those that they exclude are the very people one most
wishes to read about. My new book is not arranged alphabetically, that order having given
great offense in certain social circles. Smith, J. Everyman,
Born Canoka Springs, Education, Canoka Springs, present residents, the Springs, Kenoka.
Address, Canoka Springs Post Office. After leaving school, threw himself, October 1881,
into college study, thrown out of it, April 1882, decided to follow the law, followed it,
1882, was left behind 1883, decided 1884 to abandon it, abandoned it, resolved 1885 to turn his
energies to finance, turned them 1886, kept them turned 1887, unturned them 1888, was offered position
1889 as sole custodian of Mechanics Institute, Canoka Springs, decided, same date, to accept it.
Accepted it. Is there now? Will be till he dies. Flintlock, J. Percussion, aged 87, war veteran
and pensioner. Born, blank. Educated, blank. At outbreak of Civil War sprang to arms,
both sides, sprang union first, entered beef contract department of Army of U.S., fought at Chicago,
Omaha, and leading beef centers of operation during the thickest of the beef conflict,
was under Hancock, Burnside, Mead, and Grant, fought with all of them, mentioned very strongly
by all of them, entered Confederate service 1864, attached very much to Rum Department of
quartermaster's staff, mentioned in this connection very warmly in dispatches of General Lee,
mustered out, way out of Army, lost from site 1865 to 1895, placed on pension list with rank of general
1895, has stayed on 1895 to 1915, obtained, on 6th Avenue, war medals and service clasps.
publications, my campaigns under grant, battles I have saved, feeding an army, stuffing the public,
etc, etc, recreations telling war stories, favorite amusement showing war medals.
Crook W. Underhand. Born, dash, parents, double dash, educated at technical school,
on graduation turned his attention to the problem of mechanical time locks and patent safes,
entered Sing Sing 1890, resident there 1890 to 1893, Auburn, 1894, three months, various state institutions,
1895 to 1898, worked at profession 1898 to 1890, Sing Sing, 1900, professional work,
1901, Sing Sing 1902, Profession, 1903, Sing,
Sing, Profession, Sing, et cetera, et cetera.
Life Appointment, 1908, General Favorite,
Musical, has never killed anybody.
Gloomy, dreary O'Leary, Scotch Dialect Comedian and Humorist,
well known in Scotland, has outstanding offer
from Duke of Sutherland to put foot on a state.
Muck O Absolute. Novelist of low German extraction, born Rotterdam, educated Muckendorf,
escaped to America, long unrecognized, leaped into prominence by writing The Social Gas Pipe,
a powerful indictment of modern society, written in revenge for not being invited to dinner.
Other works, the sewerage of the seaside, an arraignment of Newport Society, reflecting on some of
his best friends. Vice and Supervice, a telling denunciation of the New York police, written
after they had arrested him. White Ravens, an indictment of the clergy. Black crooks, an indictment
of the publishers, etc., etc., has arraigned and indicted nearly everybody. Winer Egbert
Ethelwind, poet, at age of 16, wrote a quatrain, the banquet of Nebuchadnezzar, and at once
left school, followed it up in less than two years by a poem in six lines, America. Rested a year,
then produced Babylon a vision of civilization, three lines. Has written also, Herod a tragedy, four
lines, revolt of woman, two lines, and The Day of Judgment, one line, recreation, writing poetry.
Adult, Honorable Underdone. Address. The Shrubbery.
Hopton Under Hyde, Rather home near Pottersby, Potts, Hans, Hopes, England, or words to that effect.
Organizer of the Boys League of Pathfinders, Chief Commissioner of the Infant Crusaders,
Grandmaster of the Young Imbeciles, Major General of the Girl Rangers, Chief of Staff of the Matron
Mountain Climers, etc. Zwifinsky XZ, Polish pianist, plays all night, address 4,5,
570 West 457 Street, Westside, Chicago West.
End of Section 13
Section 14 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Passionate Paragraphs
An extract from a recent, very recent novel,
illustrating the new beauties of language and ideas
that are being rapidly developed by the 20th century
press. His voice as he turned towards her was taught as a tie-line.
You don't love me, he horsed, thick with agony. She had angled into a seat and sat sensing
rather than seeing him. For a time she silenced, then presently as he still stood and enveloped
her. Don't, she thinned, her voice fining to a thread. Answer me, he gloomed, still staring into
and through her. She half heard, half didn't hear him. Night was falling about them as they sat thus
beside the river, a molten afterglow of iridescent saffron shot with incandescent carmine, lit up the
waters of the Hudson till they glowed like electrified uranium. For a while they both sat silent,
looming. It had to be, she glumped. Why, why, he barked.
Why should it have had to have been, or, more hopefully, even be to be?
Surely you don't mean because of money?
She shuddered into herself.
The things seemed to sting her.
It hadn't really.
Money, she almost but not quite moaned.
You might have spared me that.
He sank down and grasped.
And after they had sat thus for another half hour,
grassing and growling and angling and sensing one another,
It turned out that all that he was trying to say was to ask if she would marry him.
And of course, she said yes.
End of Section 14.
Section 15 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Weeji the Pet Dog, an idol of the summer.
We were sitting on the veranda of the Soapley's summer cottage.
How lovely it is here!
I said to my host and hostess, and how still?
It was at this moment that Ouija, the pet dog,
took a sharp nip at the end of my tennis trousers.
Wee-gee! exclaimed his mistress with great emphasis.
Bad dog! How dare you, sir! Bad dog!
I hope he hasn't hurt you, said my host.
Oh, it's nothing, I answered cheerfully. He hardly scratched me.
You know I don't think he means anything by it, said Mrs. Soapley.
Oh, I'm sure he doesn't, I answered.
Ouija was coming nearer to me again as I spoke.
Weeji, cried my hostess.
Noddy dog, bad!
Funny thing about that dog, said Soapley, the way he knows people.
It's a sort of instinct.
He knew right away that you were a stranger.
Now, yesterday, when the butcher came,
There was a new driver on the cart, and Ouija knew it right away,
grabbed the man by the leg at once, wouldn't let go.
I called out to the man that it was all right, or he might have done Ouija some harm.
At this moment, Ouija took the second nip at my other trouser leg.
There was a short, gur and a slight mix-up.
Wee-wee-gee!
Called Mrs. Soapley,
How dare you, sir?
You're just a bad dog.
"'Go and lie down, sir.
"'I'm so sorry.
"'I think you know it's your white trousers.
"'For some reason, Ouigi simply hates white trousers.
"'I do hope he hasn't torn them.'
"'Oh, no,' I said.
"'It's nothing, only a slight tear.'
"'Here, weege, wege,' said Soapley,
"'anxious to make a diversion
"'and picking up a little chip of wood.
"'Chace it, fetch it out.'
"'And he made the motions of throwing it into the lake.
"'Don't throw it too far, Charles,' said his wife.
"'He doesn't swim awfully well,' she continued, turning to me,
"'and I'm always afraid he might get out of his depth.
"'Last week he was ever so nearly drowned.
"'Mr. Van Toy was in swimming, and he had on a dark blue suit.
"'Dark blue seems simply to infuriate Ouija,
"'and Ouija just dashed in after him.
"'He don't mean anything, you know.
"'It was only the suit made him angry.
He really likes Mr. Van Toy, but just for a minute we were quite alarmed.
If Mr. Van Toy hadn't carried Weiji in, I think he might have been drowned.
By Jove, I said in a tone to indicate how appalled I was.
Let me throw the stick, Charles, continued Mrs. Soapley.
Now, Weiji, look, Weiji, here, good dog, look. Look now.
Sometimes Weiji simply won't do what one wants.
Here, Weegee, now, good day.
dog. Weiji had his tail sideways between his legs and was moving towards me again.
"'Hold on,' said Soapley in a stern voice. "'Let me throw him in.
"'Do be careful, Charles,' said his wife.
"'Soply picked Weiji up by the collar and carried him to the edge of the water.
It was about six inches deep, and threw him in, with much the same force as, let us say,
a pen is thrown into ink, or a brush dipped into a pot of varnish.
"'That's enough, that's quite enough, Charles!' exclaimed Mrs. Soapley.
"'I think he'd better not swim. The water in the evening is always a little cold.
Good dog, good doggie, good wigi!'
Meantime, good wigi had come up out of the water and was moving again towards me.
"'He goes straight to you,' said my hostess.
I think he must have taken a fancy to you.
He had.
To prove it,
Weiji gave himself a rotary whirl like a twirled mop.
Oh, I'm so sorry, said Mrs. Soapley.
I am.
He's wedded you.
Weiji, lie down.
Down, sir.
Good dog, bad dog, lie down.
It's all right, I said.
I have another white suit in my valise.
But you must be wet through, said Mrs. Soapley.
"'Perhaps we'd better go in.
"'It's getting late anyway, isn't it?'
"'And then she added to her husband,
"'I don't think Ouija ought to sit out here
"'now that he's wet.'
"'So we went in.'
"'I think you'll find everything you need,'
"'said Soaply, as he showed me to my room.
"'And, by the way, don't mind if Ouija
"'comes into your room at night.
"'We like to let him run all over the house,
"'and he often sleeps on this bed.'
"'All right,' I said cheer.
fearfully, I'll look after him. That night Weiji came, and when it was far on in the dead
of night, so that even the lake and the trees were hushed in sleep, I took Weiji out, and—'
But there is no need to give the details of it. And the soplies are still wondering where
Ouija has gone to, and waiting for him to come back, because he is so clever at finding his way.
But from where Weiji is, no one finds his way back.
end of section fifteen section sixteen of moonbeams from the larger lunacy by stephen lecoq this librivox recording is in the public domain side lights on the supermen an interview with general bernardy
he came into my room in that modest prussian way that he has clicking his heels together his head very erect his neck tightly gripped in his forty-two centimeter collar he had on a pinkle-haube or
Prussian helmet, which he removed with a sweeping gesture and laid on the sofa.
So I knew it once that it was General Bernardi.
In spite of his age, he looked, I am bound to admit, a fine figure of a man.
There was a splendid fullness about his chest and shoulders, and a suggestion of rugged
power all over him.
I had not hurt him on the stairs.
He seemed to appear suddenly beside me.
How did you get past the janitor?
I asked, for it was late at night, and my room at college is three flights up the stairs.
The janitor, he answered carelessly. I killed him. I gave a gasp. His resistance, the general
went on, was very slight. Apparently in this country your janitors are unarmed.
You killed him? I asked. We Prussians, said Bernardi, when we wish an immediate access anywhere,
always kill the janitor. It is quicker, and it makes for efficiency. It impresses them with a sense
of our FERC-Barkite. You have no word for that in English, I believe. Not outside of a livery stable,
I answered. There was a pause. I was thinking of the janitor. It seemed in a sort of way,
I admit that I have a sentimental streak in me, a deplorable thing. Sit down, I said presently.
Thank you, answered the general, but remained standing.
All right, I said, do it.
Thank you, he repeated, without moving.
I forgot, I said, perhaps you can't sit down.
Not very well, he answered.
In fact, we Prussian officers.
Here he drew himself up higher still.
Never sit down.
Our uniforms do not permit of it.
This inspires us with a kind of,
Here his eyes glittered.
It must, I said.
In fact, with an unsitlikheit, unver mashkinle height, and unvershamptheit, with an
einfer allemal under shouse.
Exactly, I said, for I saw that he was getting excited.
But pray tell me, General, to what do I owe the honor of this visit?
The General's manner changed at once.
"'Hally learned and high well-born professor,' he said,
"'I come to you as to a fellow author,
"'known and honored, not merely in England,
"'for that is nothing,
"'but in Germany herself and in Turkey,
"'the very home of culture.
"'I knew that that was mere flattery.
"'I knew that in this same way,
"'Lord Heldane had been so captivated
"'as to come out of the emperor's presence,
"'unable to say anything but sitlicite for weeks,
that good old John Burns had been betrayed by a single dinner at Potsdam,
and that the Sultan of Turkey had been told that his answers to ultimatums
were the wittiest things written since Kant's critique of pure reason,
yet I was pleased in spite of myself.
"'What?' I exclaimed.
"'They know of my works of humor in Germany?'
"'Do they know them?' said the general.
"'Ack, Himmel! How they laugh!
that work of yours, I think I see it on the shelf behind you, the elements of political science,
how the Kaiser has laughed over it, and the crown prince, it nearly killed him.
I will send him the new edition, I said, but tell me, General, what is it that you want of me?
It is about my own book, he answered. Have you read it? I pointed to a copy of Germany and the
next war, in its glaring yellow cover, the very hue of fir-barked height, lying on the table.
You have read it, you have really read it? asked the general with great animation.
No, I said, I won't go so far as to say that, but I have tried to read it, and I talk about it
as if I had read it. The general's face fell. You are as the others, he said. They buy the book,
They lay it on the table. They talk of it at dinner. They say,
Bernardi has prophesied this. Bernardi foresaw that. But read it, never more.
Still, I said, you get the royalties. They are cut off. The perfidious British government
will not allow the treacherous publisher to pay them. But that is not my complaint.
What is the matter, then? I asked. My book is misunderstood. You English reader,
have failed to grasp its intention. It is not meant as a book of strategy. It is what you call
a work of humor. The book is to laugh. It is one big joke. You don't say so, I said in astonishment.
Assuredly, answered the general, here, and with this he laid hold of the copy of the book before me
and began rapidly turning over the leaves, let me set it out asunder for you, the humor of it.
Listen, though, to this, where I speak of Germany's historical mission on page 73.
No nation on the face of the globe is so able to grasp and appropriate all the elements of culture as Germany is?
What do you say to that? Is it not a joke?
Ach, Himmel, how our officers have laughed over that in Belgium,
with their booted feet on the mantelpiece as they read,
and with bottles of appropriated champagne beside them as they laugh.
You are right, General, I said, you will forgive my not laughing out loud, but you are a great humorist.
Am I not? And listen further still how I deal with the theme of the German character.
Moral obligations such as no nation had ever yet made the standard of conduct are laid down by the German philosophers.
Good, I said, gloriously funny. Read me some more.
This, then, you will like. Here I deal with the permissible rules of war. It is on page 236 that I am reading it. I wrote this, chiefly, to make Lafar navalmen and our Zeppelin crews. A surprise attack, in order to be justified, must be made only on the armed forces of the state and not on its peaceful inhabitants. Otherwise the attack becomes a treacherous crime. A, what? Here the general broke into roars of
after. Wonderful, I said. Your book ought to sell well in Scarborough and in Yarmouth. Read some more.
I should like to read you what I say about neutrality, and how England is certain to violate our
strategical right by an attack on Belgium, and about the sharp measures that ought to be taken
against neutral ships laden with contraband. The passages are in chapters seven and eight,
but for the moment I fail to lay the thumb on them. Give me the book, Jenner.
I said. Now that I understand what you meant by it, I think I can show you also some very
funny passages in it. These things, for example, that you say about Canada and the colonies.
Yes, here it is, page 148. In the event of war, the loosely joined British Empire will break
into pieces, and the colonies will consult their own interests. Excellantly funny. And this again,
Canada will not permanently retain any trace of the English spirit.
And this, too, the colonies can be completely ignored so far as the European Theatre of War is concerned.
And here again, Egypt and South Africa will at once revolt and break away from the Empire.
Really, General, your ideas of the British colonies are superbly funny.
Mark Twain wasn't a circumstance on you.
Not at all, said Bernardi, and he,
his voice reverted to his habitual Prussian severity. These are not jokes. They are facts.
It is only through the folly of the Canadians in not reading my book that they are not more widely
known. Even as it is, they are exactly the views of your great leader, Heinrich Baratze.
Who? I said. Heinrich Baratze, your great Canadian leader. Leader of what?
That I do not know, said Bernardi. Our intelligence.
office has not yet heard what he leads. But as soon as he leads anything, we shall know it.
Meantime, we can see from his speeches that he has read my book. Ah, if only your other leaders in Canada,
Sir Robert Laurier, Sir Osler Sifton, Sir Williams Borden, you smile, you do not realize
that in Germany we have exact information of everything. All that happens we know it.
meantime I had been looking over the leaves of the book.
Here at least, I said, is some splendidly humorous stuff, this about the Navy.
The completion of the Kiel Canal, you write in Chapter 12, is of great importance, as it will
enable our largest battleships to appear unexpectedly in the Baltic and in the North Sea,
appear unexpectedly, if they only could, how exquisitely absurd!
"'Sir,' said the general,
"'that is not to laugh.
"'You air yourself.
"'That is Firk-Barkite.
"'I did not say the book is all humor.
"'That would be false art.
"'Part of it is humor and part is Firk-Bark-ite.
"'That passage is specially designed
"'to frighten Admiral Jellico,
"'and he won't read it.
"'Pots to Sund, he won't read it,'
"'repeated the general,
"'his eyes flashing and his clenched fist
"'striking in the air.
What sort of combatants are these of the British Navy who refused to read our war books?
The Kaiser's Heligoland's speech, they never read a word of it.
The FERC-Barkite proclamation of August, they never looked at it.
The Reich Stegs read, with the printed picture of the Kaiser shaking hands with everybody,
they used it to wrap up sandwiches.
What are they then, Angelico and his men?
They sit there in their ships, and they read nothing.
How can we get at them if they refuse to read?
How can we frighten them away if they haven't culture enough to get frightened?
By'm Himmel! shouted the general in great excitement.
But what more he said can never be known,
for at this second a sudden catastrophe happened.
In his frenzy of excitement, the general struck with his fist at the table,
missed it, lost his balance, and fell over sideways
right on the point of his pinkle-hob, which he had laid on the sofa. There was a sudden sound
as of the ripping of cloth and the bursting of pneumatic cushions, and to my amazement,
the general collapsed on the sofa, his uniform suddenly punctured in a dozen places.
"'Schnapps!' he cried. "'Fetch brandy!'
"'Great heavens, General,' I said. "'What has happened?'
"'My uniform!' he moaned. He moaned. It has burst.
Give me schnapps!
He seemed to shrink visibly in size.
His magnificent chest was gone.
He was shrivelling into a tattered heap.
He appeared as he lay there, a very allegory and illustration of Prussian FERC-Barkheit,
with the wind going out of it.
Fetch schnapps, he moaned.
There are no schnapps here, I said.
This is McGill University.
Then call the janitor, he said.
you killed him, I said. I didn't. I was lying. I gave him a look that should have killed him,
but I don't think it did. Rouse yourself from your chair and call him. I will, I said, and started up
from my seat. But as I did so, the form of General Bernardi, which I could have sworn had been
lying in a tattered heap on the sofa on the other side of the room, seemed suddenly to vanish from my
eyes. There was nothing before me but the empty room, with the fire burned low in the grate,
and in front of me an open copy of Bernardi's book. I must, like many another reader, have fallen
asleep over it. End of Section 16. Section 17 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen
Leacock. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. The Survival of the Fittest
A bell tinkled over the door of the little drug store as I entered it, which seemed strange in a lighted street of a great city.
But the little store itself, dim even in the center and dark in the corners, was gloomy enough for a country crossroads.
I have to have the bell, said the man behind the counter, reading my thought, I'm alone here just now.
A toothbrush? he said and answered to my question. Yes, I guess I've got some somewhere around here.
He was stooping under and behind his counter, and his voice came up from below.
I've got some somewhere.
And then as if talking to himself, he murmured from behind a pile of cardboard boxes,
I saw some Tuesday.
Had I gone across the street to the brilliant premises of the cut-rate pharmaceutical,
where they burn electric light by the meterful,
I should no sooner have said toothbrush than one of the ten clerks in white hospital jackets
would have poured a glittering assortment over the counter,
prophylactic, lactic, and every other sort.
But I had turned in, I don't know why,
to the little store across the way.
Here, I guess these must be toothbrushes,
he said, reappearing at the level of the counter
with a flat box in his hand.
They must have been presumably, or have once been,
at some time long ago.
Their toothbrush is all right, he said,
and started looking over them with an owner's interest.
What is the price of them, I asked.
Well, said the man musingly,
I don't just know.
I guess it's written on them likely,
and he began to look at the handles.
Over at the pharmaceutical across the way,
the words,
what price would have precipitated a ready avalanche of figures?
This one seems to be seventy-five cents,
he said and handed me one.
Is it a good toothbrush? I asked.
It ought to be, he said, you'd think at that price.
He had no shop-talk, no patter, whatever.
Then he looked at the brush again more closely.
I don't believe it is 75, he muttered.
I think it must be 15, don't you?
I took it from his hand and looked and said,
for it was well to take an occasional step towards the kingdom of heaven,
that I was certain it was 75.
Well, said the man, perhaps it is.
My sight is not so good now.
I've had too much to do here, and the work's been using me up some.
I noticed now as he said this how frail he looked as he bent over his counter,
wrapping up the toothbrush.
I've no sealing wax, he said, or not handy.
That doesn't matter, I answered.
Just put it in the paper.
Over the way, of course, the two.
toothbrush would have been done up almost instantaneously in white enamel paper, sealed at the end and
stamped with a label, as fast as the money paid for it, went rattling along an automatic carrier to a
cashier. You've been very busy, eh? I asked. Well, not so much with customers, he said, but with
fixing up the place. Here he glanced about him. Heaven only knows what he had fixed. There were
no visible signs of it. You see, I've only been in here a couple of months. It was a pretty
tough-looking place when I came to it, but I've been getting things fixed. First thing I did,
I put those two carboys in the window with the lights behind them. They show up fine, don't they?
Fine, I repeated, so fine indeed that the dim yellow light in them reached three or four feet
from the jar. But for the streaming light of the great store across the street, the windows of
the little shop would have been invisible.
It's a good location here, he said.
Anyone could have told him that it was the worst location within two miles.
I'll get it going presently, he went on.
Of course it's uphill just at first.
Being such a good location, the rent is high.
The first two weeks I was here, I was losing $5 a day.
But I got those lights in the window and got the stock overhauled a little to make it
attractive, and last month I reckon I was only losing three dollars a day.
That's better, I said.
Oh, yes, he went on, and there was a clear glint of purpose in his eye that contrasted with
his sunken cheeks. I'll get it going. This last two weeks I'm not losing any more than,
say, two and a half a day or something like that. The custom is bound to come. You get a place
fixed up and made attractive like this, and people are sure to come sooner or later.
what it was that was fixed up and wherein lay the attractiveness i do not know it could not be seen with the outward eye perhaps after two months work of piling dusty boxes now this way now that and putting little candles behind the yellow carboys to try the effect
some inward vision came that lighted the place up with an attractiveness wanting even in the glass and marble glitter of the pharmacy across the way yes sir continued the man i mean to the
stay with it. I'll get things into shape here, fix it up a little more, and soon I'll have it.
His face radiated with a vision of hope, so that I won't lose a single scent. I looked at him
in surprise, so humble and ambition it had never been my lot to encounter. All that bothers me,
he went on, is my health. It's a nice business, the drug business. I like it, but it takes it
out of you. You've got to be alert and keen all the time, thinking out plans to please the custom
when it comes. Often I don't sleep well nights for the rush of it. I looked about the little shop,
as gloomy and sleepful as the mausoleum of an Eastern King, and wondered by what alchemy of the
mind the little druggist founded a very vortex of activity. But I can fix my health, he returned.
I may have to get someone in here and go away for a spell.
I'll do it. The doctor was saying he thought I might take a spell off and think out a few more wrinkles
while I'm away. At the word doctor, I looked at him more warmly, and saw then what was plain enough to
see, but for the dim light of the little place, the thin flush of the cheek, the hopeful mind,
the contrast of the will to live and the need to die, God's little irony on man, it was all there
plain enough to read. The spell for which the little druggist was going is that which is written in
letters of sorrow over the sunlit desolation of Arizona and the mountains of Colorado. A month went
by before I passed that way again. I looked across at the little store, and I read the story
in its drawn blinds and the padlock on its door. The little druggist had gone away for a spell,
and they told me on inquiry that his journey had been no further than to the cemetery behind the town,
where he lies now musing, if he still can, on the law of the survival of the fittest in this well-adjusted world.
And they say that the shock of the addition of his whole business to the great pharmacy across the way
scarcely disturbed a soda siphon.
End of Section 17.
Section 18 of Moonbeams from
From the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The first newspaper, a sort of allegory.
How likes it you, Master Brenton, said the brawny journeyman, spreading out the news sheet
on a smooth oaken table where it lay under the light of a leaded window.
A marvelous fair sheet, murmured Brenton Caxton, seventh of the name.
Let me but adjust my glasses and peruse it further,
lest haply there be still aught in it that smacks of error.
It needs not, said the journeyman, tis the fourth time already from the press.
Nay, nay, answered Master Brenton softly, as he adjusted his great horn-drimmed spectacles,
and bent his head over the broad damp news-sheet before him.
Let us grudge no care in this. The venture is a new one, and, me seems, a very parlous thing with all.
"'Tis a venture that may easily fail and carry down our fortunes with it,
"'but at least let it not be said that it failed for want of brains in the doing.'
"'Fail quotha,' said a third man, who had not yet spoken,
"'old, tall, and sour of visage, and wearing a printer's leather apron.
"'He had moved over from the further side of the room
"'where a little group of apprentices stood beside the wooden presses
"'that occupied the corner, and he was looking,
over the shoulder of Master Brenton Caxton.
How can it do what else?
Tis a mad folly.
Mark you, Master Brenton and Master Nick.
I have said it from the first, and let the blame be none of mine.
Tis a mad thing you do here.
See then!
He went on, turning and waving his hand.
This vast room, these great presses, yonder benches and tools, all new, yonder vats
of ink straight out of Flanders.
think you, you can recover the cost of all this out of yonder poor sheets. Five and forty years have
I followed this mystery of printing, ever since thy grandfather's day, Master Brenton, and never
have I seen the like. What needed this great chamber when your grandfather and father were
content with but a Garrett place, and yonder presses that can turn off four-score copies
in the compass of a single hour? Tis mad folly, I say.
The moment was an interesting one. The speakers were in a great room, with a tall ceiling traversed by blackened beams. From the street below there came dimly through the closed casements, the sound of rumbling traffic, and the street cries of the London of the 17th century. Two vast presses of such colossal size that their wooden levers would tax the strength of the stoutest apprentice, were ranged against the further wall. About the room spread out on oaken chairs,
and wooden benches were flat boxes filled with lead in type, freshly molten, and a great pile
of paper, larger than a man could lift, stood in a corner. The first English newspaper in history
was going to press. Those who in later ages, editors, printers, and workers have participated in
the same scene can form some idea of the hopes and fears, the doubts and the difficulties
with which the first newspaper was ushered into the world.
Master Brenton Caxton turned upon the last speaker
the undisturbed look of the eye that sees far across the present
into the years to come.
Nay, Edward, he said, you have labored over much in the past,
and see not into the future.
You think this chamber too great for our purpose?
I tell you, the time will come when not this room alone,
but three or four such will be needed for our task.
Already I have it in my mind that I will divide even this room into portions,
with walls shrewdly placed through its length and breadth,
so that each that worketh shall sit as it were in his own chamber,
and there shall stand one at the door, and whosoever cometh,
to whatever part of our task his business appertains,
he shall forthwith be brought to the room of him that hath charge of it.
cometh he with a madrigal or other light poesy that he would set out on the press,
he shall find one that has charge of such matters, and can discern their true value.
Or, cometh he with news of aught that happens in the realm,
so shall he be brought instant to the room of him that recordeth such events.
Or, if so be, he would write a discourse on what seemeth him some wise conceit
touching the public concerns, he shall find to his hand a convenient desk
with ink and quills, and all that he needeth to set it straightway on paper. Thus shall there be
a great abundance of written matter to our hand, so that not many days shall elapse after one of our
news sheets goes abroad before there be matter enough to fill another.
"'Days,' said the aged printer, "'think you can fill one of these news sheets in a few days.
Where, indeed, if you search the whole realm, will you find talk enough in a single week
to fill out this great sheet half an L wide.
"'I, days indeed,' broke in Master Nicholas, the younger journeyman.
Master Brenton speaks truth, or less than truth,
for not days indeed, but in the compass of a single day, I warrant you,
shall we find the matter with all?'
Master Nicholas spoke with the same enthusiasm as his chief,
but with less of the dreamer in his voice and I,
and with more swift eagerness of the practical man.
fill it indeed he went on why gadzook's man who knoweth what happenings there are and what not till one assays the gathering of them
and should it chance that there is nothing of greater import no bore-hunt of his majesty to record nor the news of some great entertainment by one of the lords of the court then will we put in lesser matter ay whatever comes to hand the talk of his majesty's burgesses in the parliament or any such things
hear him sneered the printer the talk of his majesty's burgesses in westminster forsooth and what clerk or learned person would care to read of such or think you that his majesty's chamberlain would long bear that such idle chatter could be brooded abroad
if you can find no worthy your thing for this our news-sheet than the talk of the burgesses then shall it fail indeed had it been the speech of the king's great barons and the bishops twere different
but dost fancy that the great barons would allow that their weighty discourses be reduced to common speech,
so that even the vulgar may read it, and happily hear in their fathom their very thought itself,
and the bishops, the great prelates, to submit their ideas to the vulgar hand of a common printer,
framing them into mere sentences, tis unthinkable that they should sanction it.
Aye, murmured Claxton in his dreaming voice,
The time shall come, Master Edward, when they will not only sanction it, but seek it.
Look you, broke in Master Nick.
Let us have done with this talk, whether there be enough happenings or not enough.
And here he spoke with a kindling eye, and looked about him at the little group of apprentices
and printers, who had drawn near to listen,
if there be not enough, then I will make things happen.
What is easier than to tell of happenings, fourth of the realm, of which no man can know,
some talk of the Grand Turk in the war that he makes, or some happenings in the new land
found by Master Columbus.
Aye, he went on, warming to his words, and not knowing that he embodied in himself,
the first birth on earth of the telegraphic editor.
And why not?
One day we write it out on our sheet, the Grand Turk maketh disastrous war on the bulgers of
the north, and hath burnt divers of their villages. And that hath no sooner gone forth,
than we print another sheet, saying, it would seem that the villages be not burnt,
but only scorched, nor doth it appear that the Turk burnt them, but that the bulgers burnt
divers villages of the Turk, and are sitting now in his mosque in the city of Hadrian.
Then shall all men run to and fro, and read the sheet in question and ask,
is it thus, and, is it thus? And by very uncertainty of circumstances, they shall demand the more
curiously to see the news-sheet and read it.
Nay, nay, Master Nick, said Brenton firmly, that will I never allow. Let us make it to ourselves
a maxim that all that shall be said in this news-sheet, or newspaper, as my conceit would fain
call it, for be it not made of paper? Hear a merry laugh of the apprentice,
greeted the quaint fancy of the master, shall be of ascertained verity and fact indisputable.
Should the Grand Turk make war, and should the rumor of it come to these aisles,
then will we say, the Turk maketh war, and should the Turk be at peace,
then we will say, the Turk it doth appear is now at peace.
And should no news come, then shall we say,
in good sooth we know not whether the Turk destroyeth the bulgers or whether he doth not for while some hold that he harasseth them sorely others have it that he harasseth them not whereby we are sore put to it to know whether there be war or peace nor do we desire to vex the patients of those who read by any further discourse on the matter other than to say that we ourselves are in doubt what be and what be not truth nor will we any further speak of it
than this. Those about Kaxton listened with awe to this speech. They did not, they could not know,
that this was the birth of the leading article, but there was something in the strangely fascinating
way in which their chief enlarged upon his own ignorance that foreshadowed to the meanest intelligence
the possibilities of the future. Nicholas shook his head. "'Tis a poor plan, Master Brenton,' he said,
the folk-wish news give them the news. The more thou givest them, the better pleased they are,
and thus doth the news-sheet move from hand to hand, till it may be said, if I too may coin a phrase,
to increase vastly its circulation. In sooth, said Master Brenton, looking at Nicholas with a quiet
expression that was not exempt from a certain slyness. There I do hold thou art in the wrong,
even as a matter of craft or policy. For it seems to me that if our paper speaketh first this and then
that, but hath no fixed certainty of truth, sooner or later will all its talk seem vain,
and no man will heed it. But if it speak always the truth, then sooner or later shall all come
to believe it, and say of any happening, it standeth written in the paper, therefore it is so.
And here I charge you all that have any part in this new venture,
continued Master Brenton, looking about the room at the listening faces and speaking with great seriousness.
Let us lay it to our hearts that our maxim shall be truth and truth alone.
Let no man set his hand to aught that shall go upon our presses, save only that which is assured
truth. In this way shall our venture ever be pleasing to the most high, and I do verily believe,
and hear Caxdon's voice sank lower as if he were thinking aloud,
in the long run it will be mighty good for our circulation the speaker paused then turning to the broad sheet before him he began to scan its columns with his eye the other stood watching him as he read
What is this, Master Edward? he queried presently.
Here I see in this first induct, or column, as one names it, the word king fairly and truly
spelled. Lower down it standeth K-Y-N-G, and yet further in the second induct, K-Y-N-G-E,
and in the last induct, where there is talk of His Majesty's marvelous skill in the French
game of palm or tennis, lo, the word stands, Q-U-H-Y-N-G-G-E.
How sayeth thou?
Wouldst have it written always in but one in the same way?
asked the printer in astonishment.
I, truly, said Kaxton.
With never any choice or variation to suit the fancy of him who reads,
so that he who likes it written K-I-N-G may see it so,
and yet also he who would prefer it written in a freer style,
or Q-U-H-Y-N-G-E, may also find it so,
and thus both be pleased.
That will I never have, said Master Brenton firmly.
Does not remember, friend, the old tale in the fabula of Asapis, of him who would please all men?
Here will I make another maxim for our newspaper.
All men we cannot please, for in pleasing one be like we run counter to another.
Let us set our hand to write always without fear.
Let us seek favor with none.
Always in our news-sheet we will seek to speak dutifully and with all reverence of the king his majesty.
Let us also speak with all respect and commendation of His Majesty's great prelates and nobles,
for are they not the exalted of the land?
Also I would have it that we say nothing harsh against our wealthy merchants and burgesses,
for hath not the Lord prospered them in their substances.
Yea, friends, let us speak ever well of the king, the clergy, the nobility,
and of all persons of wealth and substantial holdings. But beyond this, here Brenton Coxon's eye
flashed, let us speak with utter fearlessness of all men. So shall we be, if I may borrow a mighty good
word from Tacitus in his annals, of a complete independence, hanging on to no man. In fact, our venture
shall be an independent newspaper. The listeners felt an instinctive awe at the words, and again a strange
prescience of the future made itself felt in every mind. Here, for the first time in history,
was being laid down that fine, fearless creed that has made the independent press what it is.
Meantime, Caxton continued to glance his eye over the news sheet, murmuring his comments on what he
saw. Ah, vastly fine, Master Nicholas, this of the sailing of His Majesty's ships for Spain.
This, too, of the doge of Venice, his death, tis brave reading, and maketh a fair discourse.
Here also this likes me, tis shrewdly devised, and here he placed his finger on a particular spot on the news-sheet.
Here, in speaking of the strange mishap of my lord Arundel, thou useth a great S for strange,
and setteth it in a line all by itself, whereby the mind of him that reads is suddenly awakened,
alarmed, as it were, by a bell in the night. Tis good, tis well. But mark you, friend, Nicholas,
try it not too often, nor use your great letters too easily. In the case of my Lord Orundle,
it is seemly, but for a mishap to a lesser person, let it stand in a more modest fashion.
There was a pause, then suddenly Kaxton looked up again.
What manner of tale is this? What strange thing is here? In fact,
faith, Master Nicholas, whence hast thou so marvelous a thing. The whole world must know of it.
Harken ye all unto this. Let all men that be troubled of aches, spavins, rooms, boils,
maladies of the spleen, or humors of the blood, come forthwith to the sign of the red lantern
in East Cheap. There shall they find one that hath a marvelous remedy for all such ailments,
brought with great dangers and perils of the journey from a far distant land. This wondrous
balm shall straightway make the sick to be well, and the lame to walk. Rubbed on the eye it restoreth
sight, and applied to the ear it reviveth the hearing. Tis the sole invention of Dr. Gostavus
Friedman, some time of Godingin, and brought by him hitherwards out of the sheer pity of his
heart for them that be afflicted. Nor shall any other fee be asked for it, save only such a light
and tender charge, as shall defray the cost of Dr. Friedman, his coming and going.
Kaxton paused and gazed at Master Nicholas in wonder.
"'Wence hast thou this?'
Master Nicholas smiled.
"'I had it of a Chapman or travelling doctor,
who was most urgent that we set it forth straightway on the press.
"'And is it true?' asked Kaxton.
"'Thou hast it of a full surety of knowledge?'
Nicholas laughed lightly.
"'True or false, I know not,' he said,
but the fellow was so curious that we should print it, that he gave me two golden laurels and a new sovereign on the sole understanding that we should set it forth in print.
There was a deep silence for a moment.
He payeth to have it printed, said Kaxton, deeply impressed.
Aye, said Master Nicholas, he payeth and will pay more. The fellow hath other bombs equally potent.
All of these he would admonish, or shall I say,
advert, the public. So, said Kaxton thoughtfully, he wishes to make, if I may borrow a phrase of
Albertus Magnus, an advertisement of his goods. Even so, said Nicholas. I see, said the master,
he payeth us, we advert the goods, forthwith all men buy them, then hath he more money,
he payeth us again, we advert the goods more, and still he payeth us,
That would seem to me, friend Nick, a mighty good busyness for us.
So it is, rejoined Nicholas, and after him others will come to advert otherwheres,
until be like a large part of our news-sheet, who knows the whole of it, perhaps,
shall be made up in the merry guise of advertisements.
Kackston sat silent in deep thought.
But Master Kaxston, cried the voice of a young apprentice, a mere child as he seemed,
with fair hair and blue eyes filled with the native candor of unsullied youth,
is this tale true?
What sayest thou, Warwick? said the master printer, almost sternly.
Good master, is the tale of the wondrous balm true?
Boy, said Caxdon, Master Nicholas hath even said,
we know not if it is true.
But didst thou not charge us, pleaded the boy,
that all that went under our hand into the press should be truth and truth alone?
I did, said Kaxton thoughtfully, but I spoke perhaps somewhat in overhaste. I see that we must
hear distinguish. Whether this is true or not, we cannot tell, but it is paid for, and that
lifts it, as who should say, out of the domain of truth. The very fact that it is paid for
giveth it, as it were, a new form of merit, a verity altogether its own.
Aye, aye, said Nicholas, with a twinkle in his shrewd eyes, entirely its own.
Indeed so, said Caxton, and here let us make to ourselves another and a final maxim of
guidance. All things that any man will pay for, these we will print, whether true or not,
for that doth not concern us. But if one cometh here with any one cometh here with any
strange tale of a remedy, or aught else, and wishes us to make advertisement of it, and hath
no money to pay for it. Then shall he be cast forth out of this officina, or office if I may
call it so, neck and crop into the street. Nay, I will have me one of great strength ever at
the door ready for such castings.' A murmur of approval went round the group.
Caxston would have spoken further, but at the moment the sound of a bell was heard booming in the street without.
"'Tis the great bell,' said Caxton, ringing out the hour of noon.
"'Quick, all of you to your task. Lay me the forms on the press and speed me the work.
We start here a great adventure. Mark well the maxims I have given you, and Godspeed our task.'
And in another hour or so, the Prentice Boys of the Master Printer were calling in the streets the sale of the first English newspaper.
End of Section 18. Section 19 of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
This Liber Vox recording is in the public domain.
In the Good Time After the War.
Footnote, an extract from a London newspaper of 1916.
House of Commons report. The Prime Minister in Rising said that he thought the time had now come
when the House might properly turn its attention again to domestic affairs. The foreign world
was so tranquil that there was really nothing of importance which need be brought to the attention
of the House. Members, however, would perhaps be glad to learn incidentally that a new and more
comfortable cage had been supplied for the ex-German emperor, and that the ex-crown prince was
now showing distinct signs of intelligence, and was even able to eat quite quietly out of his
keeper's hand. Members would be gratified to know that at last the Hoenzollern family were able to
abstain from snapping at the hand that fed them, but he would now turn to the subject of
home rule. Here the house was seen to Jan noticeably, and a general lack of interest.
was visible, especially among the Nationalist and Ulster members.
A number of members were seen to rise as if about to move to the refreshment room.
Sir John Redmond and Sir Edward Carson were seen walking arm in arm towards the door.
The Prime Minister,
Will the members kindly keep their seats?
We are about to hold a discussion on home rule.
Members will surely recall that this form of discussion was one of our favorite exercises only a year or so ago,
so ago. I trust that members have not lost interest on the subject. General laughter among the members,
and cries of, cut it out, what is it? The Prime Minister, with some austerity. Members are well
aware what Home Rule meant. It was a plan, or rather it was a scheme, that is to say it was
an act of Parliament, or I should say a bill. In fact, Mr. Speaker, I don't mind confessing that,
not having my papers with me, I am unable to inform the house just what home rule was.
I think, perhaps, the ex-minister of munitions, has a copy of last year's bill.
Mr. Lloyd George Rising, with evident signs of boredom.
The house will excuse me. I am tired. I've been out all day aeroplaning with Mr. Churchill
and Mr. Bonar-Law, with a view to inspect the new national training camp.
I had the home rule bill with me, along with the Welsh disestablishment.
bill and the land bill, and I am afraid that I lost the whole Bally lot of them, dropped them into
the sea or something. I hope the Speaker will overlook the term Bally. It may not be parliamentary.
Mr. Speaker, laughing, Tutt, never mind a little thing like that. I am sure that after all that
we have gone through together, the House is quite agreed that a little thing like parliamentary
procedure doesn't matter. Mr. Lloyd George humbly. Still, I am sorry.
for the term. I'd like to withdraw it. I separate or distinguish in any degree the men of Ulster
from the men of Tipperary, and the heart of Belfast from the heart of Dublin. Loud cheers. Mr. Redmond,
springing forward. And I'll say this, not I, nor any man of Ireland, Dublin, Belfast, or
cannot, will ever set our hands or names to any bill that shall separate Ireland in any degree
from the rest of the empire. Work out, if you like, a news,
scheme of government. If the financial clauses are intricate, get one of your treasury clerks to
solve them. If there's trouble in arranging your excise on your customs, settle it in any way you
please. But it is too late now to separate England and Ireland. We've held the flag of the
empire in our hand. We mean to hold it in our grasp forever. We have seen its colors tinged a brighter
red with the best of Ireland's blood, and that proud stain shall stay forever as the symbol of
the unity of Irish and the English people.
Loud cheers ring through the house.
Several members rise in great excitement, all shouting and speaking together.
There is heard the voice of Mr. Angus McCluskey, member for the Hebrides, calling,
and ye'll no forget Scotland me, lad, when you talk of unity.
Did you mind the 42nd and the London Scottish in the trenches of the Isne?
Wa carried the flag of the empire then.
Unity, my friends, you'll never be.
break it. It may involve a wee-bit sacrifice for Scotland, financially speaking. I'll no say no to a
revision of the monetary terms, if ye suggest it. But for Unita, Scotland and the Empire, now and forever.
A great number of members have risen in their seats. Mr. Openap Owen Glendower is calling,
I and Wales, never forget Wales. Mr. Trevelyne Trindning of Cornwall has started singing,
and shall Trelawney die, while the deep booming of Rule Britannia from 500 throats
ascends to the very rafters of the house. The speaker laughing and calling for order,
while two of the more elderly clerks are beating with the mace on the table,
gentlemen, gentlemen, I have a proposal to make. I have just learned that there is at the
Alambra in Leicester Square, a real fine moving picture show of the entrance of the Allies into Berlin.
Let's all go to it.
We can leave a committee of the three youngest members to stay behind
and draw up a new government for Ireland.
Even they can't go wrong now as to what we want.
Loud cheers as the house empties,
singing, It was a long way to tipperary,
but the way lay through Berlin.
End of Section 19.
End of Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock.
