<p><SPAN name="13"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>XIII</h3>
<h3>THE FOURTH IN SALVADOR<br/> </h3>
<p>On a summer's day, while the city was rocking with the din and
red uproar of patriotism, Billy Casparis told me this story.</p>
<p>In his way, Billy is Ulysses, Jr. Like Satan, he comes from
going to and fro upon the earth and walking up and down in it.
To-morrow morning while you are cracking your breakfast egg he
may be off with his little alligator grip to boom a town site
in the middle of Lake Okeechobee or to trade horses with the
Patagonians.</p>
<p>We sat at a little, round table, and between us were glasses
holding big lumps of ice, and above us leaned an artificial
palm. And because our scene was set with the properties of the
one they recalled to his mind, Billy was stirred to narrative.</p>
<p>"It reminds me," said he, "of a Fourth I helped to celebrate
down in Salvador. 'Twas while I was running an ice factory down
there, after I unloaded that silver mine I had in Colorado. I
had what they called a 'conditional concession.' They made me
put up a thousand dollars cash forfeit that I would make ice
continuously for six months. If I did that I could draw down my
ante. If I failed to do so the government took the pot. So the
inspectors kept dropping in, trying to catch me without the
goods.</p>
<p>"One day when the thermometer was at 110, the clock at
half-past one, and the calendar at July third, two of the
little, brown, oily nosers in red trousers slid in to make an
inspection. Now, the factory hadn't turned out a pound of ice
in three weeks, for a couple of reasons. The Salvador heathen
wouldn't buy it; they said it made things cold they put it in.
And I couldn't make any more, because I was broke. All I was
holding on for was to get down my thousand so I could leave the
country. The six months would be up on the sixth of July.</p>
<p>"Well, I showed 'em all the ice I had. I raised the lid of a
darkish vat, and there was an elegant 100-pound block of ice,
beautiful and convincing to the eye. I was about to close down
the lid again when one of those brunette sleuths flops down on
his red knees and lays a slanderous and violent hand on my
guarantee of good faith. And in two minutes more they had
dragged out on the floor that fine chunk of molded glass that
had cost me fifty dollars to have shipped down from Frisco.</p>
<p>"'Ice-y?' says the fellow that played me the dishonourable
trick; 'verree warm ice-y. Yes. The day is that hot, señor.
Yes. Maybeso it is of desirableness to leave him out to get the
cool. Yes.'</p>
<p>"'Yes,' says I, 'yes,' for I knew they had me. 'Touching's
believing, ain't it, boys? Yes. Now there's some might say the
seats of your trousers are sky blue, but 'tis my opinion they
are red. Let's apply the tests of the laying on of hands and
feet.' And so I hoisted both those inspectors out the door on
the toe of my shoe, and sat down to cool off on my block of
disreputable glass.</p>
<p>"And, as I live without oats, while I sat there, homesick for
money and without a cent to my ambition, there came on the
breeze the most beautiful smell my nose had entered for a year.
God knows where it came from in that backyard of a country—it
was a bouquet of soaked lemon peel, cigar stumps, and stale
beer—exactly the smell of Goldbrick Charley's place on
Fourteenth Street where I used to play pinochle of afternoons
with the third-rate actors. And that smell drove my troubles
through me and clinched 'em at the back. I began to long for my
country and feel sentiments about it; and I said words about
Salvador that you wouldn't think could come legitimate out of
an ice factory.</p>
<p>"And while I was sitting there, down through the blazing
sunshine in his clean, white clothes comes Maximilian Jones, an
American interested in rubber and rosewood.</p>
<p>"'Great carrambos!' says I, when he stepped in, for I was in a
bad temper, 'didn't I have catastrophes enough? I know what you
want. You want to tell me that story again about Johnny Ammiger
and the widow on the train. You've told it nine times already
this month.'</p>
<p>"'It must be the heat,' says Jones, stopping in at the door,
amazed. 'Poor Billy. He's got bugs. Sitting on ice, and calling
his best friends pseudonyms. Hi!—<i>muchacho!</i>' Jones called my
force of employees, who was sitting in the sun, playing with
his toes, and told him to put on his trousers and run for the
doctor.</p>
<p>"'Come back,' says I. 'Sit down, Maxy, and forget it. 'Tis not
ice you see, nor a lunatic upon it. 'Tis only an exile full of
homesickness sitting on a lump of glass that's just cost him a
thousand dollars. Now, what was it Johnny said to the widow
first? I'd like to hear it again, Maxy—honest. Don't mind what
I said.'</p>
<p>"Maximilian Jones and I sat down and talked. He was about as
sick of the country as I was, for the grafters were squeezing
him for half the profits of his rosewood and rubber. Down in
the bottom of a tank of water I had a dozen bottles of sticky
Frisco beer; and I fished these up, and we fell to talking
about home and the flag and Hail Columbia and home-fried
potatoes; and the drivel we contributed would have sickened any
man enjoying those blessings. But at that time we were out of
'em. You can't appreciate home till you've left it, money till
it's spent, your wife till she's joined a woman's club, nor Old
Glory till you see it hanging on a broomstick on the shanty of
a consul in a foreign town.</p>
<p>"And sitting there me and Maximilian Jones, scratching at our
prickly heat and kicking at the lizards on the floor, became
afflicted with a dose of patriotism and affection for our
country. There was me, Billy Casparis, reduced from a
capitalist to a pauper by over-addiction to my glass (in the
lump), declares my troubles off for the present and myself to
be an uncrowned sovereign of the greatest country on earth. And
Maximilian Jones pours out whole drug stores of his wrath on
oligarchies and potentates in red trousers and calico shoes.
And we issues a declaration of interference in which we
guarantee that the fourth day of July shall be celebrated in
Salvador with all the kinds of salutes, explosions, honours of
war, oratory, and liquids known to tradition. Yes, neither me
nor Jones breathed with soul so dead. There shall be rucuses in
Salvador, we say, and the monkeys had better climb the tallest
cocoanut trees and the fire department get out its red sashes
and two tin buckets.</p>
<p>"About this time into the factory steps a native man
incriminated by the name of General Mary Esperanza Dingo. He
was some pumpkin both in politics and colour, and the friend of
me and Jones. He was full of politeness and a kind of
intelligence, having picked up the latter and managed to
preserve the former during a two years' residence in
Philadelphia studying medicine. For a Salvadorian he was not
such a calamitous little man, though he always would play jack,
queen, king, ace, deuce for a straight.</p>
<p>"General Mary sits with us and has a bottle. While he was in
the States he had acquired a synopsis of the English language
and the art of admiring our institutions. By and by the General
gets up and tiptoes to the doors and windows and other stage
entrances, remarking 'Hist!' at each one. They all do that in
Salvador before they ask for a drink of water or the time of
day, being conspirators from the cradle and matinee idols by
proclamation.</p>
<p>"'Hist!' says General Dingo again, and then he lays his chest
on the table quite like Gaspard the Miser. 'Good friends,
señores, to-morrow will be the great day of Liberty and
Independence. The hearts of Americans and Salvadorians should
beat together. Of your history and your great Washington I
know. Is it not so?'</p>
<p>"Now, me and Jones thought that nice of the General to remember
when the Fourth came. It made us feel good. He must have heard
the news going round in Philadelphia about that disturbance we
had with England.</p>
<p>"'Yes,' says me and Maxy together, 'we knew it. We were talking
about it when you came in. And you can bet your bottom
concession that there'll be fuss and feathers in the air
to-morrow. We are few in numbers, but the welkin may as well
reach out to push the button, for it's got to ring.'</p>
<p>"'I, too, shall assist,' says the General, thumping his
collar-bone. 'I, too, am on the side of Liberty. Noble
Americans, we will make the day one to be never forgotten.'</p>
<p>"'For us American whisky,' says Jones—'none of your Scotch
smoke or anisada or Three Star Hennessey to-morrow. We'll
borrow the consul's flag; old man Billfinger shall make
orations, and we'll have a barbecue on the plaza.'</p>
<p>"'Fireworks,' says I, 'will be scarce; but we'll have all the
cartridges in the shops for our guns. I've got two navy sixes I
brought from Denver.'</p>
<p>"'There is one cannon,' said the General; 'one big cannon that
will go "BOOM!" And three hundred men with rifles to shoot.'</p>
<p>"'Oh, say!' says Jones, 'Generalissimo, you're the real silk
elastic. We'll make it a joint international celebration.
Please, General, get a white horse and a blue sash and be grand
marshal.'</p>
<p>"'With my sword,' says the General, rolling his eyes. 'I shall
ride at the head of the brave men who gather in the name of
Liberty.'</p>
<p>"'And you might,' we suggest 'see the commandante and advise
him that we are going to prize things up a bit. We Americans,
you know, are accustomed to using municipal regulations for gun
wadding when we line up to help the eagle scream. He might
suspend the rules for one day. We don't want to get in the
calaboose for spanking his soldiers if they get in our way, do
you see?'</p>
<p>"'Hist!' says General Mary. 'The commandant is with us, heart
and soul. He will aid us. He is one of us.'</p>
<p>"We made all the arrangements that afternoon. There was a buck
coon from Georgia in Salvador who had drifted down there from a
busted-up coloured colony that had been started on some
possumless land in Mexico. As soon as he heard us say
'barbecue' he wept for joy and groveled on the ground. He dug
his trench on the plaza, and got half a beef on the coals for
an all-night roast. Me and Maxy went to see the rest of the
Americans in the town and they all sizzled like a seidlitz with
joy at the idea of solemnizing an old-time Fourth.</p>
<p>"There were six of us all together—Martin Dillard, a coffee
planter; Henry Barnes, a railroad man; old man Billfinger, an
educated tintype taker; me and Jonesy, and Jerry, the boss of
the barbecue. There was also an Englishman in town named
Sterrett, who was there to write a book on Domestic
Architecture of the Insect World. We felt some bashfulness
about inviting a Britisher to help crow over his own country,
but we decided to risk it, out of our personal regard for him.</p>
<p>"We found Sterrett in pajamas working at his manuscript with a
bottle of brandy for a paper weight.</p>
<p>"'Englishman,' says Jones, 'let us interrupt your disquisition
on bug houses for a moment. To-morrow is the Fourth of July. We
don't want to hurt your feelings, but we're going to
commemorate the day when we licked you by a little refined
debauchery and nonsense—something that can be heard above five
miles off. If you are broad-gauged enough to taste whisky at
your own wake, we'd be pleased to have you join us.'</p>
<p>"'Do you know,' says Sterrett, setting his glasses on his nose,
'I like your cheek in asking me if I'll join you; blast me if I
don't. You might have known I would, without asking. Not as a
traitor to my own country, but for the intrinsic joy of a
blooming row.'</p>
<p>"On the morning of the Fourth I woke up in that old shanty of
an ice factory feeling sore. I looked around at the wreck of
all I possessed, and my heart was full of bile. From where I
lay on my cot I could look through the window and see the
consul's old ragged Stars and Stripes hanging over his shack.
'You're all kinds of a fool, Billy Casparis,' I says to myself;
'and of all your crimes against sense it does look like this
idea of celebrating the Fourth should receive the award of
demerit. Your business is busted up, your thousand dollars is
gone into the kitty of this corrupt country on that last bluff
you made, you've got just fifteen Chili dollars left, worth
forty-six cents each at bedtime last night and steadily going
down. To-day you'll blow in your last cent hurrahing for that
flag, and to-morrow you'll be living on bananas from the stalk
and screwing your drinks out of your friends. What's the flag
done for you? While you were under it you worked for what you
got. You wore your finger nails down skinning suckers, and
salting mines, and driving bears and alligators off your town
lot additions. How much does patriotism count for on deposit
when the little man with the green eye-shade in the
savings-bank adds up your book? Suppose you were to get pinched
over here in this irreligious country for some little crime or
other, and appealed to your country for protection—what would
it do for you? Turn your appeal over to a committee of one
railroad man, an army officer, a member of each labour union,
and a coloured man to investigate whether any of your ancestors
were ever related to a cousin of Mark Hanna, and then file the
papers in the Smithsonian Institution until after the next
election. That's the kind of a sidetrack the Stars and Stripes
would switch you onto.'</p>
<p>"You can see that I was feeling like an indigo plant; but after
I washed my face in some cool water, and got out my navys and
ammunition, and started up to the Saloon of the Immaculate
Saints where we were to meet, I felt better. And when I saw
those other American boys come swaggering into the trysting
place—cool, easy, conspicuous fellows, ready to risk any kind
of a one-card draw, or to fight grizzlies, fire, or
extradition, I began to feel glad I was one of 'em. So, I says
to myself again: 'Billy, you've got fifteen dollars and a
country left this morning—blow in the dollars and blow up the
town as an American gentleman should on Independence Day.'</p>
<p>"It is my recollection that we began the day along conventional
lines. The six of us—for Sterrett was along—made progress
among the cantinas, divesting the bars as we went of all strong
drink bearing American labels. We kept informing the atmosphere
as to the glory and preeminence of the United States and its
ability to subdue, outjump, and eradicate the other nations of
the earth. And, as the findings of American labels grew more
plentiful, we became more contaminated with patriotism.
Maximilian Jones hopes that our late foe, Mr. Sterrett, will
not take offense at our enthusiasm. He sets down his bottle and
shakes Sterrett's hand. 'As white man to white man,' says he,
'denude our uproar of the slightest taint of personality.
Excuse us for Bunker Hill, Patrick Henry, and Waldorf Astor,
and such grievances as might lie between us as nations.'</p>
<p>"'Fellow hoodlums,' says Sterrett, 'on behalf of the Queen I
ask you to cheese it. It is an honour to be a guest at
disturbing the peace under the American flag. Let us chant the
passionate strains of "Yankee Doodle" while the señor
behind the bar mitigates the occasion with another round of
cochineal and aqua fortis.'</p>
<p>"Old Man Billfinger, being charged with a kind of rhetoric,
makes speeches every time we stop. We explained to such
citizens as we happened to step on that we were celebrating the
dawn of our own private brand of liberty, and to please enter
such inhumanities as we might commit on the list of unavoidable
casualties.</p>
<p>"About eleven o'clock our bulletins read: 'A considerable rise
in temperature, accompanied by thirst and other alarming
symptoms.' We hooked arms and stretched our line across the
narrow streets, all of us armed with Winchesters and navys for
purposes of noise and without malice. We stopped on a street
corner and fired a dozen or so rounds, and began a serial
assortment of United States whoops and yells, probably the
first ever heard in that town.</p>
<p>"When we made that noise things began to liven up. We heard a
pattering up a side street, and here came General Mary
Esperanza Dingo on a white horse with a couple of hundred brown
boys following him in red undershirts and bare feet, dragging
guns ten feet long. Jones and me had forgot all about General
Mary and his promise to help us celebrate. We fired another
salute and gave another yell, while the General shook hands
with us and waved his sword.</p>
<p>"'Oh, General,' shouts Jones, 'this is great. This will be a
real pleasure to the eagle. Get down and have a drink.'</p>
<p>"'Drink?' says the general. 'No. There is no time to drink.
<i>Viva la Libertad!</i>'</p>
<p>"'Don't forget <i>E Pluribus Unum!</i>' says Henry Barnes.</p>
<p>"'<i>Viva</i> it good and strong,' says I. 'Likewise, <i>viva</i> George
Washington. God save the Union, and,' I says, bowing to
Sterrett, 'don't discard the Queen.'</p>
<p>"'Thanks,' says Sterrett. 'The next round's mine. All in to the
bar. Army, too.'</p>
<p>"But we were deprived of Sterrett's treat by a lot of gunshots
several squares sway, which General Dingo seemed to think he
ought to look after. He spurred his old white plug up that way,
and the soldiers scuttled along after him.</p>
<p>"'Mary is a real tropical bird,' says Jones. 'He's turned out
the infantry to help us do honour to the Fourth. We'll get that
cannon he spoke of after a while and fire some window-breakers
with it. But just now I want some of that barbecued beef. Let
us on to the plaza.'</p>
<p>"There we found the meat gloriously done, and Jerry waiting,
anxious. We sat around on the grass, and got hunks of it on our
tin plates. Maximilian Jones, always made tender-hearted by
drink, cried some because George Washington couldn't be there
to enjoy the day. 'There was a man I love, Billy,' he says,
weeping on my shoulder. 'Poor George! To think he's gone, and
missed the fireworks. A little more salt, please, Jerry.'</p>
<p>"From what we could hear, General Dingo seemed to be kindly
contributing some noise while we feasted. There were guns going
off around town, and pretty soon we heard that cannon go
'BOOM!' just as he said it would. And then men began to skim
along the edge of the plaza, dodging in among the orange trees
and houses. We certainly had things stirred up in Salvador. We
felt proud of the occasion and grateful to General Dingo.
Sterrett was about to take a bite off a juicy piece of rib when
a bullet took it away from his mouth.</p>
<p>"'Somebody's celebrating with ball cartridges,' says he,
reaching for another piece. 'Little over-zealous for a
non-resident patriot, isn't it?'</p>
<p>"'Don't mind it,' I says to him. ''Twas an accident. They
happen, you know, on the Fourth. After one reading of the
Declaration of Independence in New York I've known the S. R. O.
sign to be hung out at all the hospitals and police stations.'</p>
<p>"But then Jerry gives a howl and jumps up with one hand clapped
to the back of his leg where another bullet has acted
over-zealous. And then comes a quantity of yells, and round a
corner and across the plaza gallops General Mary Esperanza
Dingo embracing the neck of his horse, with his men running
behind him, mostly dropping their guns by way of discharging
ballast. And chasing 'em all is a company of feverish little
warriors wearing blue trousers and caps.</p>
<p>"'Assistance, amigos,' the General shouts, trying to stop his
horse. 'Assistance, in the name of Liberty!'</p>
<p>"'That's the Compañia Azul, the President's bodyguard,'
says Jones. 'What a shame! They've jumped on poor old Mary just
because he was helping us to celebrate. Come on, boys, it's our
Fourth;—do we let that little squad of A.D.T's break it up?'</p>
<p>"'I vote No,' says Martin Dillard, gathering his Winchester.
'It's the privilege of an American citizen to drink, drill,
dress up, and be dreadful on the Fourth of July, no matter
whose country he's in.'</p>
<p>"'Fellow citizens!' says old man Billfinger, 'In the darkest
hour of Freedom's birth, when our brave forefathers promulgated
the principles of undying liberty, they never expected that a
bunch of blue jays like that should be allowed to bust up an
anniversary. Let us preserve and protect the Constitution.'</p>
<p>"We made it unanimous, and then we gathered our guns and
assaulted the blue troops in force. We fired over their heads,
and then charged 'em with a yell, and they broke and ran. We
were irritated at having our barbecue disturbed, and we chased
'em a quarter of a mile. Some of 'em we caught and kicked hard.
The General rallied his troops and joined in the chase. Finally
they scattered in a thick banana grove, and we couldn't flush a
single one. So we sat down and rested.</p>
<p>"If I were to be put, severe, through the third degree, I
wouldn't be able to tell much about the rest of the day. I mind
that we pervaded the town considerable, calling upon the people
to bring out more armies for us to destroy. I remember seeing a
crowd somewhere, and a tall man that wasn't Billfinger making a
Fourth of July speech from a balcony. And that was about all.</p>
<p>"Somebody must have hauled the old ice factory up to where I
was, and put it around me, for there's where I was when I woke
up the next morning. As soon as I could recollect by name and
address I got up and held an inquest. My last cent was gone. I
was all in.</p>
<p>"And then a neat black carriage drives to the door, and out
steps General Dingo and a bay man in a silk hat and tan shoes.</p>
<p>"'Yes,' says I to myself, 'I see it now. You're the Chief de
Policeos and High Lord Chamberlain of the Calaboosum; and you
want Billy Casparis for excess of patriotism and assault with
intent. All right. Might as well be in jail, anyhow.'</p>
<p>"But it seems that General Mary is smiling, and the bay man
shakes my hand, and speaks in the American dialect.</p>
<p>"'General Dingo has informed me, Señor Casparis, of
your gallant service in our cause. I desire to thank you with my
person. The bravery of you and the other señores Americanos
turned the struggle for liberty in our favour. Our party
triumphed. The terrible battle will live forever in history.</p>
<p>"'Battle?' says I; 'what battle?' and I ran my mind back along
history, trying to think.</p>
<p>"'Señor Casparis is modest,' says General Dingo. 'He
led his brave compadres into the thickest of the fearful
conflict. Yes. Without their aid the revolution would have
failed.'</p>
<p>"'Why, now,' says I, 'don't tell me there was a revolution
yesterday. That was only a Fourth of—'</p>
<p>"But right there I abbreviated. It seemed to me it might be
best.</p>
<p>"'After the terrible struggle,' says the bay man, 'President
Bolano was forced to fly. To-day Caballo is President by
proclamation. Ah, yes. Beneath the new administration I am the
head of the Department of Mercantile Concessions. On my file I
find one report, Señor Casparis, that you have not made
ice in accord with your contract.' And here the bay man smiles
at me, 'cute.</p>
<p>"'Oh, well,' says I, 'I guess the report's straight. I know
they caught me. That's all there is to it.'</p>
<p>"'Do not say so,' says the bay man. He pulls off a glove and
goes over and lays his hand on that chunk of glass.</p>
<p>"'Ice,' says he, nodding his head, solemn.</p>
<p>"General Dingo also steps over and feels of it.</p>
<p>"'Ice,' says the General; 'I'll swear to it.'</p>
<p>"'If Señor Casparis,' says the bay man, 'will present
himself to the treasury on the sixth day of this month he will
receive back the thousand dollars he did deposit as a forfeit.
Adios, señor.'</p>
<p>"The General and the bay man bowed themselves out, and I bowed
as often as they did.</p>
<p>"And when the carriage rolls away through the sand I bows once
more, deeper than ever, till my hat touches the ground. But
this time 'twas not intended for them. For, over their heads, I
saw the old flag fluttering in the breeze above the consul's
roof; and 'twas to it I made my profoundest salute."</p>
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