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<h1> THE OLD SOAK, and HAIL AND FAREWELL </h1>
<h2> By Don Marquis </h2>
<h3> Line Drawings By Sterling Patterson </h3>
<h4>
Garden City, N. Y., and Toronto
</h4>
<h4>
Doubleday, Page K Company
</h4>
<h3> 1921 </h3>
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<h3> ACKNOWLEDGMENT </h3>
<p>The author thanks the Publishers of the New York Sun, in which the
following sketches and verses originally appeared, for permission to
reissue them in book form.</p>
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<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>OLD SOAK</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER ONE—Introducing the Old Soak </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER TWO—Beginning the Old Soak's
History of the Rum Demon </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER THREE—Liquor and Hennery Simms </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER FOUR—The Old Soak's History—The
Barroom as an Educative </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER FIVE—Look Out For Crime Waves! </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER SIX—Continuing the Old Soak's
History—The Barroom and the Arts </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER SEVEN—An Argument With the Old
Woman </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER EIGHT—The Old Soak's History—More
Evils of Prohibition </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER NINE—Preparing for Christmas </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER TEN—Continuing the History—the
Old Soak Fears for the Growing </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER ELEVEN—Jabe Potter's Optimism </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER TWELVE—More of the History—As
It Used to Be of a Morning </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER THIRTEEN—Peace and Contentment </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER FOURTEEN—Continuing the History of
the Rum Demon—Unfermented </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER FIFTEEN—Political Talk </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER SIXTEEN—The History Continued—Prohibition
and Winter Weather </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER SEVENTEEN—The Old Soak Finds a Way</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER EIGHTEEN—The History Continued—the
Barroom's Good Influence </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER NINETEEN—A House Divided </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER TWENTY—Continuing the History of
the Rum Demon—the Barroom and </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE—Sympathy Wanted </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO—The History of the Rum
Demon Concluded—Prohibition </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> <b>HAIL AND FAREWELL</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> I—A LAST DRINK </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> II—IN THE OLD DAYS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> III—A DIPSEY CHANTEY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0028"> IV—A CERTAIN CLUB </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029"> V—A TEMPERANCE TRACT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030"> VI—A VISION IN THE NIGHT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0031"> VII—THE LAST CASE OF GIN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032"> VIII—CROWNED SINGERS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033"> IX—DOWN IN A WINE VAULT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0034"> X—ANACREON </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0035"> XI—THERE WERE GIANTS IN THE OLD DAYS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0036"> XII—IN AN OLD-TIME TAVERN BOOTH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0037"> XIII—THE OLD BRASS RAILING </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0038"> XIV—ONCE YOUTH WAS MINE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0039"> XV—IN A TAVERN BOOTH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0040"> XVI—AN ENGAGEMENT </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0041"> XVII—THE BATTLE OF THE KEYHOLES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0042"> XVIII—IN A TAVERN BOOTH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0043"> XIX—YEARNINGS AND MEMORIES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0044"> XX—DO YOU REMEMBER? </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0045"> XXI—AND YOU MAY KECALL THIS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0046"> XXII—TRUE, BUT WHAT OF IT? </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0047"> XXIII—A SUMMER DAY DREAM </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0048"> XXIV—ON SWEARING OFF AGAIN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0049"> XXV—AFTER SEVERAL HIGHBALLS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0050"> XXVI—CHANT ROYAL OF THE DEJECTED
DIPSOMANIAC </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0051"> XXVII—PROVERBS XXIII, 29 </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0052"> XXVIII—AN OBJECT LESSON </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0053"> XXIX—A KANSAS TRAGEDY </SPAN></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> OLD SOAK </h2>
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER ONE—Introducing the Old Soak </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>UR friend, the Old
Soak, came in from his home in Flatbush to see us not long ago, in
anything but a jovial mood.</p>
<p>“I see that some persons think there is still hope for a liberal
interpretation of the law so that beer and light wines may be sold,” said
we.</p>
<p>“Hope,” said he, moodily, “is a fine thing, but it don't gurgle none when
you pour it out of a bottle. Hope is all right, and so is Faith... but
what I would like to see is a little Charity.</p>
<p>“As far as Hope is concerned, I'd rather have Despair combined with a case
of Bourbon liquor than all the Hope in the world by itself.</p>
<p>“Hope is what these here fellows has got that is tryin' to make their own
with a tea-kettle and a piece of hose. That's awful stuff, that is.
There's a friend of mine made some of that stuff and he was scared of it,
and he thinks before he drinks any he will try some of it onto a dumb
beast.</p>
<p>“But there ain't no dumb beast anywheres handy, so he feeds some of it to
his wife's parrot. That there parrot was the only parrot I ever knowed of
that wasn't named Polly. It was named Peter, and was supposed to be a
gentleman parrot for the last eight or ten years. But whether it was or
not, after it drank some of that there home-made hootch Peter went and
laid an egg.</p>
<p>“That there home-made stuff ain't anything to trifle with.</p>
<p>“It's like amateur theatricals. Amateur theatricals is all right for an
occupation for them that hasn't got anything to do nor nowhere to go, but
they cause useless agony to an audience. Home-made booze may be all right
to take the grease spots out of the rugs with, but it ain't for the human
stomach to drink. Home-made booze is either a farce with no serious kick
to it, or else a tragedy with an unhappy ending. No, sir, as soon as what
is left has been drank I will kiss good-bye to the shores of this land of
holiness and suffering and go to some country where the vegetation just
naturally works itself up into liquor in a professional manner, and end my
days in contentment and iniquity.</p>
<p>“Unless,” he continued, with a faint gleam of hope, “the smuggling
business develops into what it ought to. And it may. There's some friends
of mine already picked out a likely spot on the shores of Long Island and
dug a hole in the sand that kegs might wash into if they was throwed from
passing vessels. They've hoisted friendly signals, but so far nothing has
been throwed overboard.”</p>
<p>He had a little of the right sort on his hip, and after refreshing
himself, he announced:</p>
<p>“I'm writing a diary. A diary of the past. A kind of gol-dinged
autobiography of what me and Old King Booze done before he went into the
grave and took one of my feet with him.</p>
<p>“In just a little while now there won't be any one in this here broad land
of ours, speaking of it geographically, that knows what an old-fashioned
barroom was like. They'll meet up with the word, future generations of
posterity will, and wonder and wonder and wonder just what a saloon could
have resembled, and they will cudgel their brains in vain, as the poet
says.</p>
<p>“Often in my own perusal of reading matter I run onto institutions that I
would like to know more of. But no one ever set down and described 'em
because everyone knowed all about them in the time when the writing was
done. Often I thought I would 'a' liked to knowed all about them Hanging
Gardens of Babylon, for instance, and who was hanged in 'em and what for;
but nobody ever described 'em, as fur as I know.”</p>
<p>“Have you got any of it written?” we asked him. “Here's the start of it,”
said he.</p>
<p>We present it just as the Old Soak penned it.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER TWO—Beginning the Old Soak's History of the Rum Demon </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> WILL hereinunder
set down nothing but what is the truth, the whole truth and nothing but
the truth, so help me God. Well, in the old days, before everybody got so
gosh-amighty good, barrooms was so frequent that nobody thought of setting
down their scenery and habits.</p>
<p>Usually you went into it by a pair of swinging doors that met in the
middle and didn't go full length up, so you could see over the top of the
door, and if any one was to come into one door you didn't want to have
talk with or anything you could see him and have a chance to gravitate out
the door at the other end of the barroom while he was getting in. But you
couldn't see into the windows of them as a habitual custom, because who
could tell whether a customer's family was going to pass by and glance in.
Well, in your heart you knew you was doing nothing to be ashamed of, but
all families even in the good old days contained some prohibition
relations. The Good Book says that flies in the ointment send forth a
smell to heaven. Well, you felt more private like with the windows fixed
thataway. They was painted, soaped, and some stained glassed.</p>
<p>It had its good sides and it had its bad sides, but I will say I have been
completely out of touch, just as much as if I was a native of some hot
country, with all kinds of morality and religions of all sorts, ever since
the barrooms was shut up. From childhood's earliest hours religion has
been one of my favourite studies, and I never let a week pass without I
get down on my knees some time or another and pray about something any
more than I would let a week pass without I washed all over. It was early
recollections of a good woman that kept me religious, and I hope I do not
have to say anything further to this gang. Well, in spite of my religion I
never went to church none. Because it ain't reasonable to suppose that a
man could keep awake. He thinks, “What if I should nod,” and he does. So
that always throwed me back onto the barrooms for my religion.</p>
<p>Well, then, the first thing you know when you are up by the free lunch
counter eating some of that delicatessen in comes a girl and says to
contribute to the cause. Well, “What cause are you?” you ask her. Well,
she says, Salvation Army or the Volunteers, or what not, and so forth, as
the case may be, or maybe she was boosting for some of these new religions
that gets out a paper and these girls go around and sell it for ten cents,
which they always set a date for the world coming to an end. Well, then,
you got a line on her religion, and you was ashamed not to give her a
quarter, for you had spent a dollar for drinks already that morning. And
then all through the day there was other religions come in, one after
another, or maybe the same religion over and over again.</p>
<p>Well, then, you kept in touch with religions and it made a better man out
of you, and along about evening time when you figured on going home you
felt like it wouldn't be right to tell any pervarications to your wife
about how you come to be so late, so you just said over the phone: “I am
starting right away. I stopped into Ed's place to play a game of pool
after work and met a fellow I used to know. I couldn't get away from him
and I was too thoughtful of you to insist for him to come home to dinner
so he insisted I ought to have a drink with him for old time's sake.” And
if it hadn't been for being in contact with different religions all day
you would of lied outright to your wife and felt mean as a dog about it
when she found you out.</p>
<p>Well, then, it needs no further proof that the abolishment of the saloon
has taken away the common people's religions from them, but it is my
message to tell just what the barrooms was like and not to criticize the
laws of the land, even when they are dam-foolish as so many of them are.
So I will confine myself to describing the barroom and the rum demon.</p>
<p>Well, I never saw much rum drunk in the places where I hung out. Sometimes
some baccardy into a cocktail, but for my part cocktails always struck me
as wicked. The good book says that the Lord started the people right but
that men had made many adventures. Well, then, I took mine straight for
the most part, except when I needed some special kind of a pick-up in the
morning.</p>
<p>And the good book says not to tarry long over the wine cup, and I never
done that, neither, except a little Rhine wine in the summer time, but
mostly took mine straight.</p>
<p>Well, then, to come down to describing these phantom places over which the
raven says nevermore but the posterity of the future may wish to have its
own say so about. Well, there was a long counter always kept wiped off,
not like these here sticky soda-water counters which the boys and girls
back of them always look sticky, too, and their sleeves look sticky and
the glasses is sticky, but in a decent barroom the counter was kept swiped
off clean and selfrespectable.</p>
<p>And there was a brass rail with cuspidors near to it, if you wanted to
cuspidate it was handy right there, and there's no place to hawk and
cuspidate in these here soda-water dives. Not that I ever been in them
much. All that stuff rots the lining of your stomach. As far as I am
concerned, being the posterity of a lot of Scotch ancestors, I never liked
soft stuff in my insides.</p>
<p>I never drunk nothing but whiskey for comfort and pleasure, and I never
took no medicine in my life except calomel, and I always held to the
Presbyterian religion as my favourite religion because those three things
has got some kick when took inside of you.</p>
<p>Well, then, to get down to telling just what these places was like, it
would surprise this generation of posterity how genteel some of them was.
Which I will come down to in my next chapter. Well, I will close this
chapter.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER THREE—Liquor and Hennery Simms </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> NEVER could see
liquor drinking as a bad habit,” said the Old Soak, “though I admit fair
and free it will lead to bad habits if it ain't watched.</p>
<p>“In these here remarks of mine, I aim to tell the truth, and nothing but
the truth, so help me Jehorsophat, as the good book says.</p>
<p>“One feller I knowed whose liquor drinking led to bad habits was my old
friend Hennery Simms.</p>
<p>“Every time Hennery got anyways jingled he used to fall downstairs, and he
fell down so often that it got to be a habit and you couldn't call it
nothing else. He thought he had to.</p>
<p>“One time late at night I was going over to Brooklyn on the subway, and I
seen one of these here escalators with Hennery onto it moving upwards,
only Hennery wasn't riding on his feet, he was riding on the spine of his
back.</p>
<p>“And when he got to the top of the thing and it skated him out onto the
level, what does Hennery do but pitch himself onto it again, head first,
and again he was carried up.</p>
<p>“After I seen him do that three or four times I rode up to where Hennery
was floundering at and I ast him what was he doing.</p>
<p>“'I'm falling downstairs,' says Hennery.</p>
<p>“'What you doing that fur?' I says.</p>
<p>“'I'm drunk, ain't I?' says Hennery. 'You old fool, you knows I always
falls downstairs when I'm drunk.'</p>
<p>“'How many times you goin' to fall down these here stairs?' I ast him.</p>
<p>“'I ain't fell down these here stairs once yet,' says Hennery, 'though I
must of tried to a dozen times. I been tryin' to fall down these here
stairs ever since dusk set in, but they's something wrong about 'em.</p>
<p>“'If I didn't know I was drunk, I would swear these here stairs was
movin'.'</p>
<p>'“They be movin',' I tells him.</p>
<p>“'You go about your business,' he says, 'and don't mock a man that's doing
the best he can. In course they ain't movin'.</p>
<p>“'They only looks like they was movin' to me because I'm drunk. You can't
fool me.'</p>
<p>“And I left him still tryin' to fall down them stairs, and still bein'
carried up again. Which, as I remarked at first, only goes to show that
drink will lead to habits if it ain't watched, even when it ain't a habit
itself.”</p>
<p>“Do you have any more of your History of the Rum Demon written?” we asked
him.</p>
<p>“Uh-huh,” said he, and left us the second installment.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER FOUR—The Old Soak's History—The Barroom as an Educative Influence </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ELL, as I said in
my first installment, some 'of them barrooms was such genteel places they
would surprise you if you had got the idea that they was all gems of
iniquity and wickedness with the bartenders mostly in clean collars and
their hair slicked, not like so many of these soda-water places, where the
hair is stringy.</p>
<p>Well, this is for future generations of posterity that will have never saw
a saloon, and the whole truth is to be set down, so help me God, and I
will say that it took a good deal of sweeping sometimes to keep the floor
clean and often the free lunch was approached with one fork for several
people, especially the beans. Well, it has been three or four years even
before that Eighteenth Commandment passed since free lunch was what it
once was. And some barrooms was under par. But I am speaking of the
average good class barroom, where you would take your own children or
grandchildren, as the case may be.</p>
<p>They was some very kind-hearted places among them where if a man had spent
all his money already for his own good they would refuse to let him have
anything more to drink until maybe someone set them up for him.</p>
<p>But to get down to brass tacks and describe what they looked like more
thoroughly I will say they was always attractive to me with those long
expensive mirrors and brass fixtures like a scene of elegance and grandeur
out of the Old Testament where it tells of Solomon in all his glory. And
if a gent would forget to be genteel after he took too much and his money
was all spent and imbue himself with loud talk or rough language and maybe
want to hit somebody and there was none of his friends there to take
charge of him often I have seen such throwed out on their ear, for the
better class places always aimed to be decent and orderly and never to
have an indecent reputation for loudness and roughhouseness.</p>
<p>Well, I will say I have not kept up with politics like I used to since the
barrooms was vanished. My eyes ain't what they used to be and the
newspapers are different from each other so who can tell what to believe,
but in the old days you could keep in touch with politics in the barrooms.
It made a better citizen out of you for every man ought to vote for what
his consciousness tells him is right and to abide in politics by his
consciousness.</p>
<p>Well, closing the barroom has shut off my chance to be imbued with
political dope and who to bet on in the next election and I am not so good
a citizen as before the saloons was closed. I would not know who to bet on
in any election but I used to get straight tips and in that way took an
interest in politics which a man is scarcely to be called an American
citizen unless he does.</p>
<p>Well I see everywhere where all the doctors and science sharks says to
keep in touch with outdoor sports if you want to keep young. I used to
know all about all those outdoor sports and who the Giants had bought and
what they paid for him and who was the best pitcher and what the dope was
on tomorrow's entries at Havana, but all that is taken away from me now
the saloons is closed and I got no chance to get into touch with outdoor
sports and I feel it in my health. Some of these days the Prohibition
aliments will wake up and see they have ruined the country but then it
will be too late. Taking the sports away from a nation is not going to do
it any good when the next war comes along if one does.</p>
<p>Well, I promised I would describe more what they looked like. I will
tackle that in the next chapter, so I will bring this installment to a
close.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER FIVE—Look Out For Crime Waves! </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HEY'RE going to
take our tobacco next, are they?” said the Old Soak. “Well, me, I won't
struggle none! I ain't fit to struggle. I'm licked; my heart's broke. They
can come and take my blood if they want it, and all I'll do is ask 'em
whether they'll have it a drop at a time, or the whole concerns in a
bucket.</p>
<p>“All I say is: <i>Watch out for Crime Waves!</i> I don't threaten nobody,
I just predict. If you ever waked up about 1 o'clock in the morning, two
or three miles from a store, and that store likely closed, and no
neighbour near by, and the snow drifting the roads shut, and wanted a
smoke, and there wasn't a single crumb of tobacco nowheres in the house,
you know what I mean. You go and look for old cigar and cigarette butts to
crumble into your pipe, and there ain't none. You go through all your
clothes for little mites of tobacco that have maybe jolted into your
pockets, and there ain't none. Your summer clothes is packed away into the
bottom of a trunk somewheres, and you wake your wife to find the key to
the trunk, and you get the clothes and there ain't no tobacco in them
pockets, either.</p>
<p>“And then you and your wife has words. And you sit and suffer and cuss and
chew the stem of your empty pipe. By 3 in the morning there ain't no
customary crime known you wouldn't commit. By 4 o'clock you begin to think
of new crimes, and how you'd like to commit them and then make up comic
songs about 'em and go and sing them songs at the funerals of them you've
slew.</p>
<p>“Hark to me: If tobacco goes next, there'll be a crime wave! Take away a
man's booze, and he dies, or embraces dope or religion, or goes abroad, or
makes it at home, or drinks varnish, or gets philosophical or something.
But tobacco! No, sir! There ain't any substitute. Why, the only way
they're getting away with this booze thing now is because millions and
millions of shattered nerves is solacing and soothing theirselves with
tobacco.</p>
<p>“I'm mild, myself. I won't explode. I'm getting my booze. I know where
there's plenty of it. My heart's broke to see the saloons closed, and I'm
licked by the overwhelming righteous... but I won't suffer any personal
for a long time yet. But there's them that will. And on top of everything
else, tobacco is to go! All right, take it—but I say solemn and
warningly: <i>Look Out For Crime Waves!</i></p>
<p>“The godly and the righteous can push us wicked persons just so far, but
worms will turn. Look at the Garden of Eden! The mammal of iniquity ain't
never yet been completely abolished. Look at the history of the world—every
once in a while it has always looked as if the pious and the uplifter was
going to bring in the millennium, with bells on it—but something has
always happened just in time and the mammal of unrighteousness has come
into his own again. I ain't threatening; I just predict—-<i>Look Out
For Crime Waves!</i></p>
<p>“As for me, I may never see Satan come back home. I'm old. I ain't long
for this weary land of purity and this vale of tears and virtue. I'll soon
be in a place where the godly cease from troubling and the wicked are at
rest. But I got children and grandchildren that'll fight against the
millennium to the last gasp, if I know the breed, and I'm going to pass on
full of hope and trust and calm belief.</p>
<p>“Here,” concluded the Old Soak, unscrewing the top of his pocket flask,
“here is to the mammal of unrighteousness!”</p>
<p>He deposited on our desk the next installment of his History.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER SIX—Continuing the Old Soak's History—The Barroom and the Arts </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ELL, I promised to
describe what the saloon that has been banished was like so that future
generations of posterity will know what it was like they never having seen
one. And maybe being curious, which I would give a good deal to know how
they got all their animals into the ark only nobody that was on the spot
thought to write it down and figure the room for the stalls and cages and
when it comes to that how did they train animals to talk in those days
like Balaam and his ass, and Moses knocking the water out of the rocks
always interested me.</p>
<p>Which I will tell the truth, so help me. It used to be this way: some had
tables and some did not. But I never was much of a one for tables, for if
you set down your legs don't tell you anything about how you are standing
it till you get up and find you have went further than you intended, but
if you stand up your legs gives you a warning from time to time you better
not have but one more.</p>
<p>Well, I will tell the truth. And one thing is the treating habit was a
great evil. They would come too fast, and you would take a light drink
like Rhine wine whilst they was coming too fast and that way use up
considerable room that you could of had more advantage from if you had
saved it for something important.</p>
<p>Well, the good book says to beware of wine and evil communications
corrupts a good many. Well, what I always wanted was that warm feeling
that started about the equator and spread gentle all over you till you
loved your neighbour as the good book says and wine never had the
efficiency for me.</p>
<p>Well, I will say even if the treating habit was a great evil it is an ill
wind that blows nobody any good. Well, I promised to come down to brass
tacks and describe what the old-time barroom looked like. Some of the old
timers had sawdust on the floor, which I never cared much for that as it
never looked genteel to me and almost anything might be mixed into it.</p>
<p>I will tell the whole truth, so help me. And another kick I got is about
business advantages. Which you used to be lined up by the bar five or six
of you and suppose you was in the real estate business or something a
fellow would say he had an idea that such and such a section would be
going to have a boom and that started you figuring on it. Well, I missed a
lot of business opportunities like that since the barroom has been
vanished. What can a country expect if it destroys all chances a man has
got to get ahead in business? The next time they ask us for business as
usual to win a war with this country will find out something about closing
up all chances a man has to get tips on their business chances.</p>
<p>Well, the good book says to laugh and grow fat and since the barroom has
been taken away, what chance you got to hear any new stories I would like
to know. Well, so help me, I said I would tell the truth, and the truth is
some of them stories was not fit to offer up along with your prayers, but
at the same time you got acquainted with some right up-to-date fellows.
Well, what I want to know is how could you blame a country for turning
into Bolshevisitors if all chance for sociability is shut off by the
government from the plain people?</p>
<p>Well, the better class of them had pictures on the walls, and since they
been taken away what chance has a busy man like me got to go to a museum
and see all them works of art hand painted by artists and looking as slick
and shiny as one of these here circus lithographs. Well, a country wants
to look out what it is doing when it shuts off from the plain people all
the chance to educate itself in the high arts and hand painting. Some of
the frames by themselves must of been worth a good deal of money.</p>
<p>The Good Book says you shalt not live by bread alone and if you ain't got
a chance to educate your self in the high arts or nothing after a while
this country will get to the place where all the foreign countries will
laugh at us for we won't know good hand painting when we see it. Well,
they was a story to all them hand paintings, and often when business was
slack I used to talk with Ed the bartender about them paintings and what
did he suppose they was about.</p>
<p>What chance have I got to go and buy a box to set in every night at the
Metropolitan Opera House I would like to know and hear singing. Well, the
good book says not to have anything to do with a man that ain't got any
music in his soul and the right kind of a crowd in the right kind of a
barroom could all get to singing together and furnish me with music.</p>
<p>A government that takes away all its music like that from the plain people
had better watch out. Some of these days there will be another big war and
what will they do without music. I always been fond of music and there
ain't anywhere I can go that it sounds the same sort of warmed up and
friendly and careless. Let alone taking away my chance to meet up with
different religions taking away my music has been a big blow to me.</p>
<p>Well, I will tell the truth so help me, it was a nice place to drop into
on a rainy day; you don't want to be setting down at home on a rainy day,
reading your Bible all the time. But since they been closed I had to do a
lot of reading to get through the day somehow and the wife is too busy to
talk to me and the rest of the family is at work or somewheres.</p>
<p>Well, another evil is I been doing too much reading and that will rot out
your brains unless of course it is the good book and you get kind of mixed
up with all them revelations and things. And you get tired figuring out
almanacs and the book with 1,000 drummer's jokes in it don't sound so good
in print as when a fellow tells them to you and I never was much of a one
for novels. What I like is books about something you could maybe know
about yourself and maybe some of them old-time wonders of the world with
explanations of how they was made. But nobody that was on the spot took
the trouble to explain a lot of them things which is why I am setting down
what the barroom was like so help me.</p>
<p>Well, in the next chapter I will describe it some more or future
generations will have no notion of them without the Constitution of the
United States changes its mind and comes to its census again.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER SEVEN—An Argument With the Old Woman </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Old Woman and
me had quite an argument last Sunday,” said the Old Soak. “It ended up
with her turning a saucepan full of hot peas onto my bald spot, which
ain't no way to treat garden truck, with the cost of things what they be.</p>
<p>“But I won one of these here moral victories, even if she did get the best
of me and chase me out of the house.</p>
<p>“It all come about over some pie we had for dinner on Sunday. It looked
like mince pie to me when she set it on the table, and I says to her why
don't she make some rhubarb pie or apple pie or something, for this is a
hell of a time of year to be having mince pie. And mince pie ain't no good
anyhow unless you put a shot of brandy or hard cider into it. She knows I
orter be careful what I put into my stomach, which is all to the bad since
I can't get the right kind of drink any more, and I told her so.</p>
<p>“'Well, then,' says she, 'this ain't mince pie. This is raisin pie.'</p>
<p>“'Raisin pie!' I says, and I was shocked and scandalized. 'Raisin pie!
Good lord, woman, are you crazy? You don't mean to say you've went and
took hundreds and hundreds of good raisins and went and wasted them
thataway by puttin' 'em in a <i>pie!</i> It's the most extravagant thing I
ever hearn tell on! Ain't you got sense enough to know that in these days
raisins ain't something you eat?'</p>
<p>'“Well, what are they, then?' she says.</p>
<p>'“Raisins, I told her, 'is something you make hootch out of, and you know
I'm reduced to makin' my own stuff these days. And yet here you be,
puttin' at least a quart of good raisins into a gosh-darned pie!'</p>
<p>“Well, one word led to another, and, as I said, she hit me with the peas.
But I got away with that pie. I won the moral victory. I got that pie
fermentin' now, in the bottom of a cask full of grape and berry juice and
other truck I picked up here and there. No, sir, there ain't goin' to be
no raisins wasted around my house by eatin' of 'em in this here time of
need!”</p>
<p>The Old Soak was silent a moment, and then he said: “This here installment
of my diary of booze takes up that very point of quarrellin' with the Old
Woman.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER EIGHT—The Old Soak's History—More Evils of Prohibition </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ELL, another kick
I got on the abvolition of ' the barroom is the fact that you got to stay
around home so much and that naturally leads to having a row with your
wife.</p>
<p>When there was barrooms my wife used to jaw me every time I come home
anyways lit up and I just let her jaw me and there wasn't any row for I
figured better let her get away with it who knows maybe she thinks she is
right about it.</p>
<p>But now I stick around home a good deal of the time and it leads to words.</p>
<p>Well, she says to me, why don't you go and get a job of work of some kind.</p>
<p>Well, I tell her, mind your own business I always been a good pervider
ain't I. You have got five or six children working for you ain't you and a
man that pervides his wife with five or six children to work for her is
not going to listen to no back talk.</p>
<p>Well, she says, you ought to be ashamed to loaf around home all the time.</p>
<p>Well, I says, I'm thinking up a big business deal but that's the way with
women they never understand they got to keep their mouth shut and give a
man peace and quiet to do his thinking in so he can make them a good
living all they think about is newfangled ways to spend the money after he
has slaved himself half to death making it.</p>
<p>Well, she says, I ain't seen you slaving any lately.</p>
<p>Well, I tells her, I done all my hard slaving when I was young and I got a
little money coming in right along from them two houses I own, and I ain't
going to work myself into the grave for no extravagant woman, and me with
a heart pappitation you can hear half a mile on a clear day.</p>
<p>Well, she says, what rent money them two houses brings in don't any more
than pay for the booze you drink.</p>
<p>Well, I says, you Prohibitionists done that to me. You went and made it
plumb impossible to get good liquor for any reasonable price. That there
rent money used to pay for three times the booze I drink.</p>
<p>Well, she says, you oughta get a job.</p>
<p>If I was to tie myself down to a job, I tells her, what chance would I
have to trade and dicker around and make little turnovers, let alone
thinking up this big business deal I am working on.</p>
<p>You are a liar, she said, and if I knowed where your whiskey was hid I'd
bust every bottle and what kind of a business deal are you thinking up.</p>
<p>It is an invention I says to her and you mind your own business just
because I have stood for you intrupting me for forty years is no sign I am
going to stand for it forty years more.</p>
<p>You can quit any time she says and good riddance the children will keep me
and there will be one less to cook for besides being ashamed of you before
all my own friends and the nice people the children know.</p>
<p>Well, I said, here I set turning over the leaves of the Bible and you
attack me that way and me trying to think up a business deal to buy you an
automobile and the pappitation in my heart that bad it shakes the chair I
am setting in and if a man with one foot in the grave can't get any peace
and quiet to read his Bible in his own home against the time he is going
to cash in then I will say that Prohibition has brought this country to a
pretty pass.</p>
<p>Well, she says, what is that pappitation from but all the liquor you
drunk.</p>
<p>It is from my constitution, I says, as the doctor will tell you if it
hadn't been for a little mite of stimulant now and then I would of cashed
in long ago and you would now have the life insurance money.</p>
<p>Well, she says, what kind of an invention is this you claim you are
thinking up all the time?</p>
<p>Yes, I says, I would see myself telling you, wouldn't I and you blabbing
it the next time a lot of them church women meets at our house and some
old church deacon getting hold of it and getting rich off of it and me
wandering the streets in destitution with the rain running down often my
beard and the end of my nose because you and the children cast me into the
street.</p>
<p>Well, she says, where is that thousand dollars that my uncle Lemuel willed
to me and I give it to you for one of them inventions nearly thirty years
ago and never seen hide nor hair on it since then.</p>
<p>Well, I says, that thousand dollars is gone and it went the same way as
that money I loaned to your cousin Dan when he failed in business and
would of starved to death him and his family if I hadn't come across with
the cash that is where that thousand dollars is.</p>
<p>Well, that's the way it goes, until I get tired of trying to make her see
any sense and sneak out to where my stuff is hid and fill me a pint bottle
for my hip pocket and go and find a friend somewheres.</p>
<p>And in just that way Prohibition is breaking up millions and millions of
homes every day.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER NINE—Preparing for Christmas </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>HRISTMAS,” said
the Old Soak, “will soon be here. But me, I ain't going to look at it. I
ain't got the heart to face it. I'm going to crawl off and make
arrangements to go to sleep on the twenty-third of December and not wake
up until the second of January.</p>
<p>“Them that is in favour of a denaturized Christmas won't be interfered
with by me. I got no grudge against them. But I won't intrude any on them,
either. They can pass through the holidays in an orgy of sobriety, and
I'll be all alone in my own little room, with my memories and a case of
Bourbon to bear me up.</p>
<p>“I never could look on Christmas with the naked eye. It makes me so darned
sad, Christmas does. There's the kids... I used to give 'em presents, and
my tendency was to weep as I give them. 'Poor little rascals,' I said to
myself, 'they think life is going to be just one Christmas tree after
another, but it ain't.' And then I'd think of all the Christmases past I
had spent with good friends, and how they was all gone, or on their way.
And I'd think of all the poor folks on Christmas, and how the efforts made
for them at that season was only a drop in the bucket to what they'd need
the year around. And along about December twenty-third I always got so
downhearted and sentimental and discouraged about the whole darned
universe I nearly died with melancholy.</p>
<p>“In years past, the remedy was at hand. A few drinks and I could look even
Christmas in the face. A few more and I'd stand under the mistletoe and
sing, 'God rest ye merry, gentlemen.' And by the night of Christmas day I
had kidded myself into thinking I liked it, and wanted to keep it up for a
week.</p>
<p>“But this Christmas there ain't going to be any general iniquity used to
season the grand religious festival with, except among a few of us Old
Soaks that has it laid away. I ain't got the heart to look on all the
melancholy critters that will be remembering the drinks they had last
year. And I ain't going to trot my own feelings out and make 'em public,
neither. No, sir. Me, I'm going to hibernate like a bear that goes to
sleep with his thumb in his mouth. Only it won't be a thumb I have in my
mouth. My house will be full of children and grandchildren, and there will
be a passel of my wife's relations that has always boosted for
Prohibition, but any of 'em ain't going to see the old man. I won't mingle
in any of them debilitated festivities. I ain't any Old Scrooge, but I
respect the memory of the old-time Christmas, and I'm going to have mine
all by myself, the melancholy part of it that comes first, and the cure
for the melancholy. This country ain't worthy to share in my kind of a
Christmas, and I ain't so much as going to stick my head out of the window
and let it smell my breath till after the holidays is over. I got presents
for all of 'em, but none of 'em is to be allowed to open the old man's
door and poke any presents into his room for him. They ain't worthy to
give me presents, the people in general in this country ain't, and I won't
take none from them. They might 'a' got together and stopped this
Prohibition thing before it got such a start, but they didn't have the
gumption. I've seceded, I have. And if any of my wife's Prohibition
relations comes sniffin' and smellin' around my door, where I've locked
myself in, I'll put a bullet through the door. You hear me! And I'll know
who's sniffin', too, for I can tell a Prohibitionist sniff as fur as I can
hear it.</p>
<p>“I got a bar of my own all fixed up in my bedroom and there's going to be
a hot water kettle near by it and a bowl of this here Tom and Jerry
setting onto it as big as life.</p>
<p>“And every time I wake up I'll crawl out of bed and say to myself: 'Better
have just one more.'</p>
<p>“'Well, now,' myself will say to me, 'just <i>one!</i> I really hadn't
orter have that one; I've had so many—but just one goes.'</p>
<p>“And then we'll mix it right solemn and pour in the hot water, standing
there in front of the bar, with our foot onto the railing, me and myself
together, and myself will say to me:</p>
<p>“'Well, old scout, you better have another afore you go. It's gettin'
right like holiday weather outside.'</p>
<p>“'I hadn't really orter,' I will say to myself again, 'but it's a long
time to next holidays, ain't it, old scout? And here's all the
appurtenances of the season to you, and may it sing through your digestive
ornaments like a Christmas carol. Another one, Ed.'</p>
<p>“And then I'll skip around behind the bar and play I was Ed, the
bartender, and say, 'Are they too sweet for you, sir?'</p>
<p>“And then I'll play I was myself again and say, 'No, they ain't, Ed.
They're just right. Ask that feller down by the end of the bar, Ed, to
join us. I know him, but I forget his name.'</p>
<p>“And then I'll play I was the feller and say I hadn't orter have another
but I will, for it's always fair weather when good fellows gets together.</p>
<p>“And then me and myself and that other feller will have three more,
because each one of us wants to buy one, and then Ed the bartender will
say to have one on the house. And then I'll go to sleep again and
hibernate some more. And don't you call me out of that there room till
along about noon on the second day of January. I'll be alone in there with
my joy and my grief and all them memories.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER TEN—Continuing the History—the Old Soak Fears for the Growing Children </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>NOTHER thing wrong
with Prohibition that will one day make them sorry they passed that
commandment onto the constitution is the way it will bring liquor in front
of the growing children and if the children learns to drink it too young
what will become of this country I would like to know when the next war
comes along.</p>
<p>I guess they didn't think of that, all these here wise Johnnies when they
passed that law.</p>
<p>When you used to get all you wanted in a barroom you went there for it and
the children didn't see you and they couldn't go into them places and it
wasn't sticking around under the children's noses at home all the time
making them ask Pa what do you need with so much of that medicine and can
I have some Pa.</p>
<p>But now you have it at home and it is sticking under their noses all the
time and the chances are millions and millions of children will learn to
drink too soon just because it is sticking under their noses all the time
and that is what Prohibition is doing for this country for everyone knows
if they drink it too soon it will stunt their growths.</p>
<p>It is a great responsibility to bring up children right and Godfearing and
be sure they say their lay me down to sleep every night like the Good Book
says they should, and what I want to know is why this government don't
help the parents and fathers with all them responsibilities instead of
being a stumbling block in their way and putting liquor in the home where
the growing children will smell it all the time and if they smell it they
will want some of it.</p>
<p>Of course a young feller has got to learn to drink some time but there is
such a thing as learning too young and it stunts their growth and the good
book says keep it out of the mouths of babes and sucklings.</p>
<p>Maybe a little beer is all right if a baby is puny to fatten him up but I
never give my children any hard liquor till they had their growth and I
got no use for a government that turns in and puts liquor in the home to
make drunkards out of the little innocent children.</p>
<p>Maybe if a child has got a cold a little whiskey is good for him and what
is left in the bottom of the glass when their dad is done with it if they
put some sugar and water in it and play they are like Pa won't hurt none
of them any and will help make them so they can hold their share when they
get growed up, but that is different from forcing it down their poor
little innocent throats all the time and every day, which is what that
Prohibition commandment amounts to.</p>
<p>I knowed a child once in a fambly where they thought it was smart to let
him have some hard liquor and he growed up with goggle eyes and all
rickety from it and took to smoking these here cheap cigarettes and it was
a shame as any person with any heart a tall would have said and does this
government want the whole future generation of posterity to grow up goggle
eyed and rickety like that by forcing liquor into the home and where will
they get their strong soldiers from in the next war.</p>
<p>I will say they got no conscience to do a thing like that to the whole
passel of children waiting to grow up and go to be soldiers.</p>
<p>It is enough to make any honest man stop and think and his heart bleed
when he thinks of all them millions and millions of innocent children and
the way they are being ruined with liquor in the home and maybe helping
their daddies make it with yeast and raisins and things and cornmeal in
the cellar.</p>
<p>I teached my boys to drink in the barroom just as fast as they growed up
and teached them to tell good liquor from bad liquor and not to mix their
drinks and not to go in for fancy drinks and to drink along with me for a
comfort for my old age and a father had ought to make chums of his boys
like that and give them the right example and they stay close to him and
he knows what they are thinking about and can give them good advice and my
boys has been a comfort to me.</p>
<p>My boys is all growed up, but what worries me is the millions and millions
of little children that is going to learn to drink too young.</p>
<p>Well, in my next chapter I promise to get down to brass tacks and tell
just exactly what those barrooms was like that has been vanished.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER ELEVEN—Jabe Potter's Optimism </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>O, SIR,” said the
Old Soak, “I ain't got so darned much left. It may get me through a year,
and it may run me only about ten months.</p>
<p>“But I don't want so much as I use to, for some reason. In course, no
gentleman of the old school figgers on less than a quart a day, but there
has been times when I exceeded that there limit. Looking back on them
times, I don't know whether to be glad or sorry. It's a satisfaction to
remember that I had the liquor, but it's a grief to know I won't never
have that same liquor again.</p>
<p>“But at a quart a day, if I'm careful, and don't give any parties to new
acquaintances that is took sudden with a love and admiration for me, I'll
toddle along fer ten or twelve months yet. And by that time, something or
other will happen in my favour; you see if it don't. Either the country
will backslide into iniquity again in spots; or else somebody will die and
leave me an island down near Cuba; or else Old Jabe Potter, my friend out
on Long Island I told you of, will get his smuggling works started into
operation.</p>
<p>“Fact is, Old Jabe is already set, and his smuggling works is ready to
operate right now, only there don't seem to be nothin' to smuggle, Jabe
says. He's got one of these here gasolene boats, and he goes out and makes
signals to the ocean liners to and from Europe, but they ain't onto Jabe's
signals, or something. I tell him he's got to make arrangements in advance
with some of them transatlantic bartenders, for they don't know what he's
driving at. 'Well,' Jabe says, 'you'd think they could tell by my looks
I'm thirsty, wouldn't you?' Jabe, he's romantic and optimistic; but them
notions of his is all right if they was only organized.”</p>
<p>He paused a while, refreshed himself from his pocket flask, and then took
up another line of enquiry.</p>
<p>“What I would like to know,” he said, “is what mean folks is going to
blame their meanness onto, now that booze is gone. It used to be a good
excuse for a lot of people that wasn't worth nothin', and knowed it, and
acted ornery... booze was the answer, everybody said. If they did anything
they hadn't orter, people said they was all right except when they had a
drink or two, but a drink or two changed their entire disposition, and the
drink orter be blamed, and not them. My own observation and belief leads
me to remark that them kind of folks was less ornery and mean when they
had booze than when they didn't have it.</p>
<p>“Well, I notice in myself a kind of a habit growing up to blame everything
onto Prohibition, just as Prohibitionists used to blame everything onto
booze. I want to be fair to the drys, and I will say that neither
Prohibition nor booze has much to do with making a mean man mean. I want
to be fair to the drys, so as to show them up; they ain't fair to me, and
when I'm fair to them it shows how superior I be.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER TWELVE—More of the History—As It Used to Be of a Morning </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ELL, I promised I
would tell just what those vanished barrooms was like, and I will tell the
truth, so help me.</p>
<p>One thing that I can't get used to going without is that long brass
railing where you would rest your feet, and I have got one of them fixed
up in my own bedroom now so when I get tired setting down I can go and
stand up and rest my feet one at a time.</p>
<p>Well, you would come in in the morning and you would say, Ed, I ain't
feeling so good this morning.</p>
<p>I wonder what could the matter be, Ed says, though he has got a pretty
good idea of what it could be all the time. But he's too kind hearted to
let on.</p>
<p>I don't know, you says to Ed, I guess I am smoking too much lately. When
you left here last night, Ed says, you seemed to be feeling all right,
maybe what you got is a little touch of this here influenza.</p>
<p>It ain't influenza, Ed, you says to him, it is them heavy cigars we was
all smoking in here last night. I swallered too much of that smoke, Ed,
and I got a headache this morning and my stomach feels kind o' like it was
a democratic stomach all surrounded by republican voters, and a lot of
that tobacco must of got into my eyes and I feel so rotten this morning
that when my wife said are you going downtown without your breakfast I
just said to her Hell and walked out to dodge a row because I could see
she was bad tempered this morning.</p>
<p>What would you say to a little absinthe, says Ed, sympathetic and helpful,
a cocktail or frappy.</p>
<p>No, says you, if you was to say what I used to say, I leave that there
stuff to these here young cigarettesmoking squirts, which it always tasted
like paregoric to me.</p>
<p>Yes, sir, Ed says, it is one of them foreign things, and how about a milk
punch, it is sometimes soothing when a person has smoked too much.</p>
<p>No, Ed, you says, a milk punch is too much like vittles and I can't stand
the idea of vittles.</p>
<p>Yes, sir, Ed used to say, you are right, sir, how about a gin fizz. A gin
fizz will bring back your stomach to life right gradual, sir, and not with
a shock like being raised from the dead.</p>
<p>Ed, you says to him, or leastways I always used to say, a silver fizz is
too gentle, and one of them golden fizzes, with the yellow of an egg in
it, has got the same objections as a milk punch, it is too much like
vittles.</p>
<p>Yes, sir, Ed says, I think you are right about vittles. I can understand
how you feel about not wanting vittles in the early part of the day. And
that makes you love Ed, for you meet a lot of people who can't understand
that. There ain't no sympathy and understanding left in the world since
bartenders was abolished.</p>
<p>How about an old-fashioned whiskey cocktail, says Ed.</p>
<p>You feel he is getting nearer to it, and you tell him so, but it don't
seem just like the right thing yet.</p>
<p>And then Ed sees you ain't never going to be satisfied with nothing till
after it is into you and he takes the matter into his own hands.</p>
<p>I know what is the matter with you, he says, and what you want, and he
mixes you up a whiskey sour and you get a little cross and say it helped
some but there was too much sugar in it and not to put so much sugar in
the next one.</p>
<p>And by the time you drink the third one, somewhere away down deep inside
of you there is a warm spot wakes up and kind of smiles.</p>
<p>And that is your soul has waked up.</p>
<p>And you sort of wish you hadn't been so mean with your wife when you left
home, and you look around and see a friend and have one with him and your
soul says to you away down deep inside of you for all you know about them
old Bible stories they may be true after all and maybe there is a God and
kind of feel glad there may be one, and if your friend says let's go and
have some breakfast you are surprised to find out you could eat an egg if
it ain't too soft or ain't too done.</p>
<p>Well, I promised, so help me, I would tell the truth about them barrooms
that has perished away, and the truth I will tell, and the truth with me
used to be that more than likely it wasn't really cigars that used to get
me feeling that way in the mornings, and I will take up a different part
of the subject in my next chapter.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER THIRTEEN—Peace and Contentment </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>ROHIBITION,” said
the Old Soak, “is doing more harm than you can see with the naked eye.
Formerly when a man called up and told his wife that he was detained at
his office by an unexpected caller on business just as he was starting
home his wife knew he had stopped to take three or four balls with the
boys on the corner and thought very little about it. Now she wonders if
that unexpected caller could have been a lady.</p>
<p>“When a man came home late with the smell of liquor on his breath he knew
he was in bad, but he knew just how bad in he was. Now everything is
uncertainty and guesswork everywhere, and intellects is cracking under
strains on all sides.</p>
<p>“It must 'a' been the same way back in the historic days of iniquity and
antiquity, when the Roman Empire switched all of a sudden from being
heathen to being Christian; everybody had to be good all of a sudden, and
only a few had learnt how; and everybody that hadn't quite succeeded in
turning Christian went around for a while wondering if everybody else was
as gosh-darned Christian as they let on to be. I know a lot of people now
that says they're on the wagon, but I'd hate to go so sound asleep in a
street car that I wouldn't wake up if they tried to pull my flask out of
my pocket. I don't struggle none trying to be good, myself. I'm a
dipsomaniac, and I know it, and I'm contented to be that way.</p>
<p>“Years ago I used to struggle, and think maybe I would quit drinking some
time, and it kept me unhappy. But as soon as I come right out and
acknowledged Booze as my boss and master, and set him up and crowned him
king, a great peace fell onto me, and I ceased to struggle, and I been
happy and contented and full of love for my fellow men ever since. There
ain't nothing like finding out which gang you belong to and sticking to
your own crowd consistent. If I had only been brought up to be a drunkard
when I was young I would 'a' settled into it natural and been saved a lot
of worry and struggle and uncertainty. But there was years when I fit
against it, from time to time, and it kept me unsettled and discontented,
and I wasted a lot of good time trying to keep sober when I might 'a' been
drunk and cheerful, radiating joy and happiness into the world and being
of some use to my fellow men. But I s'pose everybody thinks if they had
their life to live over again they'd do different, and the main thing is
to reach peace and contentment toward the end, as I have reached it.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER FOURTEEN—Continuing the History of the Rum Demon—Unfermented Grape Juice </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ELL, as I said in
my last chapter, it is time for me to get down to brass tacks and describe
just what those barrooms that has been vanished was like so that future
generations of posterity will know what they missed, and to tell the truth
in all particulars, so help me.</p>
<p>Some of them was that arted up with hand paintings that if you had all
them paintings in your home you would feel proud of yourself, like Solomon
in all his glory, and would feel like you was living in the midst of a
high art museum, and the shining brass cuspidores to spit in and the brass
rail and all them shiny glasses and bottles and mirrors made up a scene of
grandeur and glory like the good book mentions and you would think you was
King Faro of Egypt, if you lived in the midst of all that or Job in all
his riches before the itch broke out on him.</p>
<p>Well, speaking of the Good Book, my wife has always been more or less of a
prohibitionist in order to show me that she is independent of me, and one
day one of these here church friends of hers tries to tell me all the
liquor that was drinked in the Bible wasn't nothing but unfermented grape
juice.</p>
<p>Yes, it was, I said, don't you believe it was, like hell it was. You go
and get your testament and see where King Solomon talks about the stuff
that makes the heart merry and then go and swill yourself with grape juice
and see if you could get the way he was when he wrote eat, drink, and be
merry for tomorrow ye die. And how about the time them two women came to
him with that one child and both claimed that it was hern and he says to
the officer on duty, let me see that there sword of yourn for a minute
I'll darned soon see who this kid belongs to. And verily the officer
drawed his sword and the King he heaved it up and was about to cut the kid
in two when one of the women says to stop unhand him King and not do the
rash act it is the other woman's yew lamb and let her have it, it being
her own all the time and her one yew lamb and her preferring to see the
other woman grab it off than have half of it.</p>
<p>Well, says the King, half a loaf is better than no bread, but with infants
it is different, take the child, it is yours woman, and go and sin no
more.</p>
<p>Well, now, I ask you, was King Solomon drinking the unfermented juice of
the grape when he got that there hunch, or was he not? I will say he was
not. Them radical and righteous ideas never come to a man when he is cold
sober. He has got to have a shot of something moving around under his belt
before he gets thataway.</p>
<p>And how about them Bible hangovers, I said to this here church person. Man
and boy I been a student of the Bible from cover to cover for a good many
years now and I never seen a book with more evidences of hangovers and
katzenjammers into it. How about that there book that says vanity, vanity,
all is vanity. Well, I ask you, did you ever get that way in the morning
after you had spent the night before drinking the unfermented juice of the
grape.</p>
<p>That there Book of Exclusiastics is just one long howl from the next
morning head. Things seem right, says old Exclusiastic, and they look
right; but if you bite into them they don't taste right, or words to that
effect. And you stick around awhile, says old man Exclusiastic, and you'll
darned soon see they ain't nothing right nowhere and never will be again.
Moreover, says he, I was wrong when I used to think things was right;
there ain't never anything anywhere been all right and I was all wrong
when I was a young feller and used to think things was right and the
wrongest thing about the whole business is the darned fools like I used to
be who go around saying things is all right, and the sum and substance of
everything is vanity, says he, vanity, vanity, all is vanity.</p>
<p>You could tell some folks that that there old Exclusiastic was writing as
the result of unfermented grape juice, but a man with any experience of
his own knows a good deal better and what kind of a taste was in his
mouth. You can't tell an old Bible reader like me anything about this
unfermented stuff. The trouble with these here church people is that too
many of them ain't never read the Bible, or if they did read it they read
it with the idea that it was saying something else like they wanted it to
say.</p>
<p>I always stuck to the Bible in spite of the church folks and I always will
for it has got some kick into it. There is three things in the world I
always stick to, the Bible and hard liquor and calomel, for they has got
the kick to them. You can have all your light wines and unfermented stuff
and all your pretty new-thought religions and all your new-fangled
medicines you want to, but for me I will stick to the Old Testament and
corn whiskey and calomel like my forefathers done before me. You can't
pull any of that unfermented stuff on me and get away with it.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER FIFTEEN—Political Talk </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Old Soak came
in to see us during the recent Presidential campaign.</p>
<p>“What I expected has come to pass,” he said, sorrowfully. “This here Cox
that everybody hoped was a Wet Prohibitionist ain't that at all. He ain't
nothin' but a Dry Liquor Man. I been a Republican ever sense the days of
Abraham Lincoln, but I had an idee this year I was goin' to have fer to
leave the old party flat on account o' rumours I hearn that this here Cox
was comin' out for liquor. My conscience is Republican, but my religion is
liquor; an' I would of voted agin any conscience fer the sake o' my
religion. But I ain't goin' to be compelled fer to make that sacrifice.
I'd ruther vote fer an outan'-out Prohibitionist than one of these here
fellers that gits the word passed private to the wets that they'll be a
stick in the lemonade, and gets the word passed private to the drys that
what he means is nothin' but a stick o' pep'mint candy. They ain't no hope
fer liquor in public life no more; it has become a question fer the home.
As fur es my own private stock is concerned, it mostly ain't. But I got a
grand idee workin' up. My old woman's got a niece who's come to live with
us, an' I'm tryin' to marry that there gal to a revenue agent. I see by
the papers they are always trackin' down a couple thousand gallons
somewheres or other, and I don't hear no glass crashin' nowheres to
indicate where them bottles is bein' busted. I wants somebody in the
fambly that will take me along on some of these here raids I read about.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER SIXTEEN—The History Continued—Prohibition and Winter Weather </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ELL, when I seen
all them men shovelling snow and ice in the streets and no place to go for
a drink and maybe one of them spring thaws coming along soon now which
they are always full of these here la grip germs I says to myself them
Prohibitionists think they have done something pretty smart but they got
another think coming to them.</p>
<p>I never been much of a hand to kick against the weather. As a fact, I use
to like all kinds of weather as it come along.</p>
<p>You went into a place and you said to Ed it looks like one of them cold
rains is going to start up pretty soon, Ed.</p>
<p>Yes, sir, Ed says, it is pretty raw. The wind is rawring. What will you
have?</p>
<p>Well, I use to say, I was wondering about a little Scotch with boiling
water into it and a lump of butter and a lump of sugar into it I knowed a
fellow used to treat himself thataway one time.</p>
<p>No, sir, says Ed, I wouldn't advise anything like that sir, it will get
you sweating inside of you all around your stomach and lungs and then you
will go out and swallow some cold damp air and take one of them inside
colds, sir, and it may run into new-monia or this here pellicanitis.</p>
<p>Well, Ed, I don't want to ketch none of them germs, you would say to him,
and how about some rock and rye.</p>
<p>You better stick to straight rye and leave out the rock. When you was in
here a little bit ago you was drinking straight rye and you don't want to
be mixing them too much, says Ed.</p>
<p>And no sooner said than done.</p>
<p>Or maybe it was summer time and a hot day and you would say to Ed I wonder
how many people is getting sun struck to-day, Ed.</p>
<p>A good many says Ed they drink too much cold water and it gets to them.</p>
<p>I am glad I don't have to go out into the awful heat, you would say.</p>
<p>The main thing is to keep your pores open says Ed for if you stop the
presspiration that means a sun stroke. The main thing is to encourage the
presspiration to sweat itself out of you.</p>
<p>I think you are right Ed you says and I was wondering about some beer.</p>
<p>No, sir, not for you, says Ed, I wouldn't advise no beer. You put these
here temperance drinks like beer and sassperiller into your stomach, sir,
and it takes up a lot of room you will wish you had later in the day. For
some people I would say beer wouldn't do no harm, sir, but I should say,
sir, that it was the wrong thing for you.</p>
<p>One of them long silver fizzes with ice shook up into it would sound nice
to my ears as it went down my oozlygoozlum you would say to Ed.</p>
<p>Ed he is kind of lazy with the heat and he don't want to shake it up so he
says to you on a hot day like this you are taking chances with your life
every time you put ice drinks into you and he says what's the matter with
that rye you been drinking all the early part of the day that is the best
thing to keep the presspiration coming out of your sweat pores.</p>
<p>Well, no sooner said than done.</p>
<p>The number of times them old-fashioned bartenders has saved my life summer
and winter with good advice is as too numerous to mention as is the stars
in the sky and their name is legend as the good book says.</p>
<p>In them days when there was a barroom on every corner and sometimes four
barrooms on every four corners I never cared about the weather at all for
I knowed no matter what the weather was I could keep my health safe.</p>
<p>If you was to look out the barroom window and see a sudden change in the
weather you could make a sudden change and switch to some other kind of
drink and keep yourself protected from them sudden changes.</p>
<p>But in these days when a sudden change in the weather comes what
protection have you got I would like to know. You are running the risks of
them sudden changes all the time day and night, and no chance to change
your drink to meet them with for you are lucky if you have one kind of
liquor let alone all the different kinds of ingredients you used to
ornament your digestion with.</p>
<p>Nowadays when the weather ain't just right I have to stay home in my own
room up to the top of the house where I got that little bar rigged up
where I wait on myself and staying to home all the time ain't any too good
for me.</p>
<p>It don't give me a chance to get any outdoor exercise, staying at home
don't and a man needs outdoor exercise if he is going to keep his health.</p>
<p>That is another thing Prohibition has done to me: it has took away all my
chance for outdoor exercise.</p>
<p>I reckon them Prohibitionists will be satisfied when they got everybody's
health broke down on account of them sudden changes in the weather and
nobody getting any outdoor exercise any more.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER SEVENTEEN—The Old Soak Finds a Way </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>ES, sir; yes,
sir!” said the Old Soak, with a happy smile on his face. “I've done found
out the way to beat the game—! Ask me no questions, and I'll tell ye
no lies as to how I done it.</p>
<p>“Ye see this here bottle, do ye? Kentucky Bourbon, and nothin' else.
Bottled in bond, an' there's plenty more where that comes from.—Ask
me no questions, and I'll enrich ye with no misinformations!—Ye see
that there little car parked out there by the curbstone, do ye? Well, sir,
that there car is <i>my</i> car, and under the back seat of it is twelve
quarts of this here stuff!—And it ain't home brewed, neither; it's
some of the best liquor you ever throwed your lips over!—How do I do
it?—Don't ply me with no questions, and I won't bring you no false
witnesses!</p>
<p>“Notice these here new clothes of mine? Well, sir, that there suit's a
bargain.—It only cost me two cases of rye.—I got three new
suits like that to home, an' I'm figgerin' on buying one of these here low
neck an' short sleeve dress suits for to wear to banquets this winter.—They's
a whole passel o' folks would like to give me banquets this cornin'
season.—How do I do it?—Ask me no questions, and I'll give you
no back talk!</p>
<p>“If you was to come out to the house, I'd interduce ye to quite a lot of
good liquor.—Can't drink no more, huh?—Ain't ye got a friend
ye could bring?—I'd like to have ye meet my son-in-law.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir; yes, sir! Daughter was married two months ago. The youngest
one. Her and her husband is makin' their home with us temporary.—I'm
tryin' to persuade of 'em to stop to our house permanent.—Yes, sir,
my son-in-law, he is one of these here revenooers.—Well, so long!—I
gotto see an old friend o' mine that lives up to the Bronx this afternoon.—He
ain't had a real drink fer nigh onto three months, he tells me.—I'm
headin' a rescue party into them there regions.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir; yes, sir! I figger my daughter married well!—Bring up yer
kids in the way they should go like the Good Book says, and Providence
will do the rest.—Henry, that's my son-in-law, is figgerin' mebby he
can get my son Jim made a revenooer, too.—Ask me no questions, an
I'll give away no fambly secrets!”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER EIGHTEEN—The History Continued—the Barroom's Good Influence </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>NOTHER thing I
miss in regard to all them vanished barrooms being closed up is kind
feeling about respect to the old especially to parents and them that has
departed.</p>
<p>Where is the younger generations of posterity going to learn how to be
kind hearted about home and mother now that the barrooms is all closed up
I would like to know?</p>
<p>It used to be that a lot of fellows would get all tanked up of an
afternoon or evening and in the right sort of a place they would get to
singing songs.</p>
<p>All them songs about home and mother and to treat her right now that her
hair had turned gray. I never was much of a one to sing myself especially
unless I had a few drinks into me.</p>
<p>But whether I helped sing them or not all them songs would make a better
man of me. You stand up to a bar or sit down at a table and listen to them
songs for two or three hours and if you are any kind of a man at all you
will wish you had always done the right thing and now that all them songs
about home and mother has been took away from me I ain't the man I used to
be at all.</p>
<p>I feel myself going down hill because my softer emotions and feelings
ain't never stirred up by nothing any more.</p>
<p>Well, this Eighteenth Commandment is going to make a hard-hearted country
out of this here country. Nobody is never going to think as much of home
and mother as they used to. And I guess them prohibitionists won't feel so
smart when they see all them old ladies with gray hair flung out onto the
streets in the rainy weather just because nobody would pay the mortgage
off. Lots of times when I was a young feller after hearing them songs for
awhile I would say to myself I will set right down and write a letter to
my mother, I ain't wrote her for five or six months. And when I got older
after she passed on I used to say to myself some of these days I will have
to make a visit to the old home place and take a look around there.</p>
<p>But all them softer feelings has been took away from me now and what I
would like to know is how is the younger generation going to grow up. Hard
hearted, that is how.</p>
<p>Some of these here fine days I may be cast out into the street myself with
the rain drops dripping down offen my hat brim into my eyebrows just
because nobody won't pay a mortgage and it has got to be a hard-hearted
country.</p>
<p>I hope none of them there smart alick Prohis will be flung out onto the
street thataway. Because they got no friends would pay off their mortgages
and they would just naturally be destituted to death. I ain't hard hearted
like they be and I hope that don't happen to none of them. But if it ever
did they would find out a few things.</p>
<p>In my next chapter I will get down to brass tacks and give a true
description of them barrooms that has perished off the face of the earth.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER NINETEEN—A House Divided </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Old Soak has
been looking rather well for some time; he seems prosperous and happy, for
the most part, and contented with the quantity and quality of the hootch
he has been gettin'. But yesterday he dropped in to see us with just the
slightest shade of gloom on his features. We asked him about it.</p>
<p>“It's that there son of mine,” he says. “He's too young to know enough to
let well enough alone, like the Good Book says to do. They's a lot of
these young fellers you can't learn nothing to.</p>
<p>“This yere son-in-lawr of mine I been tellin' you about, that is a
revenooer, got my son made into a revenooer, too. And it ain't long before
my son gits jest as good an automobile as the one my son-in-lawr's been
drivin'. And joy out to our house has been unconcerned, with everyone
exceptin' the Ol' Woman, and she's been prayin' agin the rest of the
fambly.</p>
<p>“But this yere son o' mine, he gets too much hootch under his belt one
day, and he gets into this yere brand-new automobile of his'n and he
starts onto one of these yere raids. Which would of been all right, bein'
as it's what a revenooer is for, if he had only used a leetle bit o'
jedgment. But the young has got a lot to learn, and babes and striplings,
the Good Book says, jest naturally has their dam fool streaks.</p>
<p>“This yere raid my son goes onto turns out all wrong. For whilst he is
pinchin' who does he pinch in the gang of wicked sinners but that there
son-in-lawr of mine, the revenooer as got him his job, said son-in-lawr
bein' off duty and pickled hisself at the time.</p>
<p>“So this here son-in-lawr of mine, he mighty nigh loses of his job as a
revenooer, bein' took up in one of the raids he was legally supposed to be
startin' himself, and they was quite a fuss about it, so I understand, and
the thing was finally settled with a compromise—it wasn't my
son-in-lawr lost his job, but they compromised it and fired my son out'n
his job.</p>
<p>“But now my son, he has went and got sore at my son-in-lawr, and he says
unless he gits his job back as a revernooer he will tell all he knows.</p>
<p>“So my house is a house that is sided against itself, like the Good Book
says, and every member of the fambly has took sides one way or the other
'twixt my son and my son-in-lawr, and the Ol' Woman is agin both on 'em,
and agin me, too—a-prayin' an' a-prayin' an' a-prayin'.</p>
<p>“'You went and prayed for years an' years so as to get prohibish'n,' I
tells her; 'an' now you got it—you got more on it than any woman I
knows, for it's come right into your own home. An' now you got it you
ain't satisfied with it—there you be onto your marrow bones prayin'
agin the revenooers.'</p>
<p>“I s'pose I was too hifalutin' an' ambitious, wantin' to keep two members
of my fambly into the revenooer job. And as long as my son-in-lawr stays
into office and continues to make his home with me I won't have no kick
cornin', but will take my hootch in thankfulness and humility, like the
Good Book says to do, eatin', drinkin' an' bein' merry. This yere leetle
cloud of gloom what you notice is due to the Ol' Woman's prayers. I cain't
help but feel she is goin' direct agin Scripter and her husband's best
intrusts.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER TWENTY—Continuing the History of the Rum Demon—the Barroom and Manners </h2>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0088.jpg" alt="0088 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0088.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>NOTHER thing about
those barrooms that has been vanished forever is the fact that most of
them was right polite sort of places if a fellow edged up to the bar and
knocked over your glass of whiskey or something like that he would say, O
excuse me stranger and you would say sure, but look where in hell you are
going to after this.</p>
<p>Sure he would say no offence meant. No offence taken you would say to him.
Have one with me he would say.</p>
<p>No sooner said than done.</p>
<p>But nowadays all you see and hear is bad manners and impoliteness with
people hustling and bumping into each other on the subways and stepping on
each other and women and children amongst them and nobody ever begging
anybody's pardon and hard feelings everywhere.</p>
<p>The trouble is everybody is sore and wanting a drink all the time and
there is no place where the younger generation is going to learn good
manners now that the barrooms is gone. What is the young fellows just
growing up to manhood going to do for their manners now that the barrooms
is closed, is what I want to know.</p>
<p>It used to be you would get onto a subway train and there would be two or
three women standing up and you would be setting down and there would be
three or four drinks under your belt and you would be feeling good and you
would say to yourself am I a gentleman or ain't I a gentleman.</p>
<p>You're damned right I am a gentleman, you would say to yourself, here,
lady, you set down, and don't let any of these here bums roust you out of
that seat.</p>
<p>If any of these here bums tries to roust you out of that seat I will put a
tin ear onto them.</p>
<p>That's the kind of a gentleman I am, lady, they would have a hell of a
time, lady, getting your seat away from you with me here.</p>
<p>And she seen you was a gentleman and she smiled at you and you hung onto a
strap and felt good.</p>
<p>But nowadays there ain't no manners, with no place to get a drink or
anything.</p>
<p>You are setting in the subway and a lady comes in and has nowheres to set,
and you say to yourself let some of these other guys get up and give her a
seat.</p>
<p>And you think a while and you say to yourself I'll bet she is a
Prohibitionist anyhow. Let her stand up. She has got to learn you can't
have any manners with the barrooms all closed and everything.</p>
<p>Well, that's another thing closing the barroom has done. It has took away
all the manners this town ever had.</p>
<p>In my next chapter I will get down to brass tacks and tell just what those
barrooms was like for the benefit of future posterity that has never seen
one.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE—Sympathy Wanted </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>ES,” said the Old
Soak, “I get plenty of hootch nowadays. My son is back into the revenoo
business, and my son-in-lawr is with it, too. I gets plenty of whiskey.
I've got some into me, and I've got some onto my hip, and I know where I'm
going to get some more when that's gone.”</p>
<p>And he sighed.</p>
<p>“Why so gloomy, then?” we asked. “You should be radiating a Falstaffian
joviality. You should be as merry as the merry, merry villagers in an
opera on the Duke's birthday. But on the contrary, you shake from out your
condor wings unutterable wo, as E. A. Poe has it. Wherefore?”</p>
<p>“I miss,” he said, “the next mornin' sympathy... the next mornin'
ministration. Any one can get drunk under the auspices of Prohibition, but
it takes the right kind of barkeep fur to get you sober agin and make you
like it.</p>
<p>“Where is the next morning barkeep? He ain't. He was wise as a serpent and
gentle as a dove like the Good Book says. He knowed right off what ailed
you, at 11 o'clock on a cloudy morning, and what was good for it. A little
of this, out of the long green bottle, and a little of that, and some ice
tinklin' in it, and the white of an egg mebby, and... oh, you know! One of
them, and there was salve onto the sore spot of your soul. Two of them and
you began to forgive yourself. Three of them, and you could hear about
breakfast; you could look an egg into the eye.</p>
<p>“And he never asked no question about your past, that barkeep didn't. He
didn't need to. He knowed. He seen last night's history in this morning's
footnote. He was kind. 'Feel a little better now, sir?' he'd ask. 'Two or
three of them is enough, sir, if you ask me. Get your breakfast, now, sir,
and you'll be quite O. K. Yes, sir, I learned to mix them in New
Orleans...' You talked to him, and he let you. He was like a mother's knee
to a three-year-old that's bumped his head, the old-fashioned barkeep was.</p>
<p>“But now, he ain't. Now, when you get up, Gloom stands on one side of you
and Conscience on the other, and Remorse is feeding lines of both of 'em.</p>
<p>“'Well,' says Gloom, 'this is a fine, cheerful morning, this is! This is
about as full of sunshine as the insides of the whale that drank Jonah.'</p>
<p>“'It is,' says Remorse, 'and then some. Conscience and me feels so bad
about it that we're gonna jump off the dock together.'</p>
<p>“'I ain't, neither,' says Conscience. 'I'm gonna save myself for the
worst. The worst is yet to come. And I want to be here when it comes.'</p>
<p>“'I ain't gonna be here when it comes,' says Gloom. 'I'm going over to the
Aquarium and rent myself out for a fish.'</p>
<p>“Just then,” went on the Old Soak, “a strange party sticks his head in at
the door and says, 'Never again!' “'Who be you?' says Gloom. 'I'm
Repentance,' says the buttinski, 'and I calls on you guys to mend your
ways!'</p>
<p>“And Gloom, he looks at the hard liquor left in the bottom of the bottle,
and at the sky, and at the door of the closed-up barroom across the
street, and he says, 'It can't be done without some uplift. I need
soothing words, and an educated hand.'</p>
<p>“'We got what's coming to us,' says Remorse. 'And there's more of it
coming,' says Conscience. 'Better quit!' says Repentance. 'I ain't gonna
quit,' says Gloom, 'without the right kind of a drink to quit on. I ain't
never yet quit without the right kind of a drink to quit on, and I'm not
going to start any innovations on a rotten day like this.'</p>
<p>“Well,” went on the Old Soak, “you sits on the edge of your bed and you
listen to these yere guys talking, and you think how right all of them is,
and you wonder whether it's any use getting up, and you think of all the
barkeeps you used to know, and after a while you suck an orange and think
of one of them long silver fizzes with frost on the glass and charity and
loving-kindness in its heart, like Ed used to shake up,—you think of
it so hard you well-nigh taste it, and then the meerage fades away and you
ain't nothin' but a camel in the desert again with a humpbacked taste in
your mouth.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said the Old Soak, “I can get all the booze I want, but I
can't get sympathy. What a man needs in the morning is a kind heart for to
comfort him, and a strong arm to lean on. Anybody can give me good advice,
but it don't soothe me any; what I want is a quick friend in a white
apron, wise as a bishop and gentle as a nurse.</p>
<p>“What I want is the Al's and Ed's I used to know. But they've went.
Forever. I won't meet 'em in Hell, because they're too kind hearted to go
there, and I won't meet 'em in Heaven, because I won't go there myself.</p>
<p>“I reckon,” concluded the Old Soak, “I'll have to go to England.”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO—The History of the Rum Demon Concluded—Prohibition Is Making a Free Thinker of the Old Soak </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>NOTHER thing that
going without barrooms is doing for this country is it is destroying Home
Life.</p>
<p>It is pretty hard to get along with your wife after you have been married
to her for twenty or thirty years and kind of settle down and realize you
are going to be married to her as long as she lives for better or for
worse unless something happens which it seldom does.</p>
<p>Not that you don't kind of like her and you know she kind of likes you but
the thing is that her and you is apt to treat each other mean now and then
because you get to thinking what a good time you could have if you didn't
have to turn in so much of your money to making a home run smooth and you
know even if you do row with each other you will make up again and you get
to kind of looking forward to the rows because anyhow that is a change.</p>
<p>But sometimes you carry them rows too far and then you don't know how to
get your Home Life running right again because she is always too stubborn
to give in and you won't be the first one to give in because you know she
is wrong.</p>
<p>But when there was liquor to be had in plenty it was easier to make up
after one of them rows and Home Life went along smoother.</p>
<p>You would get up in the morning and she would say to you, would you have a
boiled egg for breakfast or a fried, and you would say hades what an idea.
Can't you never think of anything but eggs for breakfast. And she would
say yesterday I didn't have eggs and you was sore because you wanted eggs.
You would say just because I wanted eggs yesterday is that any sign I want
them every day of my life till death do us part. I was only asking what
you wanted she would say.</p>
<p>I will go where I can get what I want, you would say. I will eat my
breakfast at a restaurant this morning and maybe I can keep them from
shoving eggs in front of me when I don't ask for eggs. The trouble with
your stomach is not what you put into it in the morning, she would say,
but what you put into it the night before. The trouble with my stomach,
you would say, is that I am worried to death and worked to death all the
time trying to keep this house running and it gives me the dis-pepsy. It
is the liquor gives you dispepsy she would say.</p>
<p>If it wasn't for a little stimulant in my stomach, like the Good Book
says, you tell her, my dispepsy wouldn't let me digest anything at all and
I would starve to death and the mortgage on the house would be foreclosed
and you would go to the old woman's home. Whose money pays the interest on
that mortgage she would say. Whose? you would say. Mine, she would say.
You wouldn't have any money you tell her, if you paid me back what your
relations has borrowed of me.</p>
<p>Well, one word leads to another, and you go off without any breakfast, for
you see her taking the Bible down to set and read it, and when she sets
and reads the Bible you know she is reading it against you and it gets you
madder and madder.</p>
<p>And in the old days when there was barrooms you would go into one still
feeling mad and say Ed, mix me one of the old-fashioned whiskey cocktails
and don't put too much orange and that kind of damned garbage into it, I
want the kick.</p>
<p>No sooner said than done.</p>
<p>And after a couple of them you would say, well after all, the Old Woman
means well, I wonder if I didn't treat her a little mean this morning I
orter call her up on the telephone and give her a jolly.</p>
<p>And then you would think of her relations that you hate and get mad at her
again on account of always sticking up for them, and say, Ed, that don't
set so well, let's try a whiskey sour.</p>
<p>And you would meet a friend and have another with him, and pretty soon eat
some breakfast and think how, after all, it was eggs you was eating for
breakfast and they wasn't cooked no ways as good as the old woman would of
poached them for you on toast if you hadn't been so darned mean to her.</p>
<p>And your friend would say his old woman blowed him up for coming home
pickled.</p>
<p>And you would have another drink and say that was one thing your old woman
never done to you. My old woman has got some sense, you would say to him,
she knows how a man feels about taking a drink, and she never blows me up.</p>
<p>And you would set and brag about your old woman and you had never had a
cross word between you in thirty years. And then he would begin to brag
about his old woman, too.</p>
<p>And pretty soon you would say to yourself you better go to the phone and
call her up. She has her mean streaks all right, but who knows, she may
have been right this morning after all, and you take another drink and get
her on the telephone, and give her a chance to say how sorry she was about
the way she treated you that morning and maybe you go and pay an
installment on a new carpet sweeper for her.</p>
<p>Well, it was that way in the old days. Liquor kept your Home Life running
along o. k. You would get mad with your wife and then you would get sorry
for her and give her an excuse to make up with you again.</p>
<p>But now, with no chance to get a drink when I am away from home if I treat
the Old Woman mean in the morning I don't give her a chance to get on my
good side again. And I can see sometimes that it is breaking her heart.</p>
<p>That's what prohibition is doing to this country. It is breaking the
women's hearts and it is breaking up the Home Life on every hand.</p>
<p>What is going to become of a country where all the Home Life is broke up?</p>
<p>And what is going to become of the children if there ain't any Home Life
running along smooth any more?</p>
<p>These Prohibitionists that is so darned smart never thought of that I
guess when they put that Eighteenth Commandment across onto us.</p>
<p>Whenever I think of all them women's hearts that is breaking and all that
Home Life that is going plumb to the dogs all on account of the barrooms
being closed up it well-nigh makes a free thinker out of me.</p>
<p>I don't claim to be a church man, but I never was a free thinker before,
neither. But all the sorrow that is going on in the world on account of
them barrooms being closed is making a free thinker of me.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HAIL AND FAREWELL </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> I—A LAST DRINK </h2>
<p>To George McDaniel</p>
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<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0103.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>Hail! Barleycorn... they said you<br/>
weren't Nice!<br/>
Salve! You bum, and Vale! Hail! Farewell!<br/>
Your feet, the Prohis say, go down to Hell;<br/>
You led men into Poker, Fights and Dice,<br/>
You filled the world with Murder, Lust and Lice,<br/>
You made a Bar Fly of the Howling Swell,<br/>
You bought the blood that deep-dyed bandits sell—<br/>
You might lead one in time, I fear, to Vice!<br/></p>
<p>Old blear-eyed mutt, beloved and accurst!<br/>
Before you go, a song for old sake's sake;<br/>
A song memorial to the days and nights<br/>
When I companioned with the Dipsas Snake<br/>
And bared my throat unto his febrous bites,<br/>
Quenching a thirst to gain a greater thirst.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> II—IN THE OLD DAYS </h2>
<p>To Paul Thompson</p>
<p>Liquor there is, but, oh! the Bar is gone!<br/>
The long Brass Rail above the Sawdust Floor,<br/>
The gay Hot Dog, the gleaming Cuspidore,<br/>
The bright, brave Nose that brave, bright lights<br/>
shone on,<br/>
The jocund Barkeep, Ed or A1 or John,<br/>
The ribald jest I loved, the answering roar<br/>
That jangled the glasses, shook the swinging door—-<br/>
Liquor there is, but these delights are done!<br/>
In the old days when bubbles winked at me,<br/>
In the glad days when I was steeped in Rum,<br/>
I played the Prospero to fantasy,<br/>
I drank, and bade my Ariel fancies come.”<br/>
But I have lost my ancient wizardry<br/>
And mine old self, my lyric self, is dumb.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> III—A DIPSEY CHANTEY </h2>
<p>To Ned Leamy</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0106.jpg" alt="0106 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0106.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>Ho! Heave the anchor! Heave! Fetch her up!<br/>
Twist! with the corkscrews! Steward, lend a hand!<br/>
Let her prance out to sea like a frolic-footed pup,<br/>
For the ship is full of liquor, and to hell with the land!<br/>
Ghosts from the ocean abysses, clambering, clamour-<br/>
ing, come;<br/>
Climb to our decks and roar: “Broach us a puncheon<br/>
of rum!<br/>
We are scaly with salt and sand; we've had nothing<br/>
but water to swallow—<br/>
Stave in a hogshead of rum! Let us roll in the<br/>
scuppers and wallow!”<br/>
<br/>
Heh! Splice the main-brace! Ho! She smells the<br/>
gale!<br/>
The shipper walks the bridge with a bottle to his eye;<br/>
She rollicks with her boilers full of good Bass Ale—<br/>
By the timber peg of Silver, the sea shall not go dry!<br/>
We have raxed 'em out of the deep, they follow<br/>
through shine and fog,<br/>
Phantoms of ancient mariners, lured by the reek<br/>
of our grog;<br/>
Noah and Hawkins and Kidd, up from the green<br/>
abysses,<br/>
And there, in a wine-stained galley, the ghost of<br/>
great Ulysses!<br/>
Eric the Red in a whale-boat, and with him, cheek<br/>
by jowl,<br/>
Silver begging a drain, God bless his wicked soul!<br/>
Ho! How she snorts! Hey! Hear her snore!<br/>
The wind slaps her nostrils, she hiccoughs for her<br/>
breath!<br/>
Steward, a corkscrew! You poor fish ashore,<br/>
By the bones of Reuben Ranzo, you can choke to<br/>
death!<br/>
With eyes of the darting witch-fire, like mist the<br/>
poor ghosts come,<br/>
And an anguished wind from the mist bellows and<br/>
whines for Rum—<br/>
They have been thirsty so long! Let us be good<br/>
fellows still,<br/>
And open a hundred casks and let 'em wallow and<br/>
swill!<br/>
Quick! With a corkscrew! Oh, damn the wheel!<br/>
The captain's in his hunk, with a bottle to his eye!<br/>
The engineer is stoking with Scotch and lemon 'peel!<br/>
By Davy Jones's locker, the sea shall not go dry!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> IV—A CERTAIN CLUB </h2>
<p>To Winfield Moody</p>
<p>Ah, dead and done! Forever dead and done<br/>
The mellow dusks, the friendly dusks and dim,<br/>
When Charley shook the cocktails up, or Tim—?<br/>
Gone are ten thousand gleaming moments, gone<br/>
Like fireflies twinkling toward oblivion!<br/>
Ah, how the bubbles used to leap and swim,<br/>
Breaking in laughter round the goblet's brim,<br/>
When Walter pulled a cork for us, or John!<br/>
I have seen ghosts of men I never knew,—<br/>
Great, gracious souls, the golden hearts of earth—<br/>
Look from the shadows in those rooms we love,<br/>
Living a wistful instant in our mirth;<br/>
I have seen Jefferson smile down at Drew,<br/>
And Booth pause, musing, on the stair above.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> V—A TEMPERANCE TRACT </h2>
<p>To Bob Dean</p>
<p>Cocktails are the little brooms<br/>
That whiskey way your will-power!<br/>
A dark disease is Bright's disease,<br/>
And will not yield to pill-power.<br/>
Some may upon red rums descant<br/>
Who never did decant rums,<br/>
But I have eaten bitter bread<br/>
Where bitters breed their tantrums.<br/>
The fool will give his life to booze,<br/>
The wiser man taboos that,<br/>
And I'm a sad Budweiser man<br/>
Than when I used to ooze that.<br/>
I owned a bank, and for a fad<br/>
I cultivated two lips;<br/>
If I had owned the mint itself<br/>
'Twould all have gone for juleps.<br/>
Mumm's extra dry makes some men grow<br/>
As dry as any mummy,<br/>
But when I'm tight I loosen up—<br/>
A punch, and I am chummy.<br/>
Except when I swore off in Lent<br/>
With borrowers I mingled;<br/>
They'd make my pockets cease to clink<br/>
Whenever I was jingled.<br/>
But though I drank with scarce a check<br/>
My drafts saved people trouble,<br/>
For I would often pay dubs twice<br/>
Because I saw 'em double.<br/>
O, cognac is a fearful drink<br/>
To brandy man with shame, O!<br/>
He will, that drinks diluted gin,<br/>
Die looted of good name, O!<br/>
I wined till I began to ail,<br/>
And then I whined with aleing,<br/>
Until to crown the woes I cite<br/>
I found my eyesight failing.<br/>
“Sir, fits will come,” my doctor warned,<br/>
“Surfeits will bloat the mind, sir!”<br/>
I laughed and took my glasses off<br/>
And said, “I'll go it blind, sir!”<br/>
Champagnes and real incider me<br/>
Set my high spirits flagon;<br/>
Still with gay dogs I played the wag,<br/>
Deriding of the wagon.<br/>
My tongue was like a cotton bale,<br/>
All whitish from the gin, sir—<br/>
The doctor said “No tongue can state<br/>
The state your tongue is in, sir!”<br/>
“With so much rye and corn you cope,<br/>
Your crowd are cornucopers—<br/>
How can earth be Utopia<br/>
When peopled by you topers?”<br/>
But still I dodged from fête to fête,<br/>
Still followed by my fate, O!<br/>
Still floating loans and liquids till<br/>
My bank did liquidate, O!<br/>
Buns use up dough; what my fun did,<br/>
Were it refunded one day,<br/>
Would fund the Banks of Newfoundland<br/>
And float the Bay of Fundy.<br/>
Don't hitch your wagon to a star<br/>
Upon the brandy bottle;<br/>
If you your neck to nectar ope<br/>
Your hope 'twill surely throttle.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> VI—A VISION IN THE NIGHT </h2>
<p>To Grant Rice</p>
<p>Beyond Arcturus, in a peevish wind,<br/>
I met a rumpled devil beating home.<br/>
“And whence, poor Fiend,” I challenged, “hast<br/>
thou come<br/>
With ragged plumage ravelled out behind<br/>
And splintered teeth and lamps all blear and blind?<br/>
What Fate hath bent a skillet o'er thy dome?”<br/>
He sighed, and in that sigh I read a tome<br/>
Of bleeding sorrows and<br/>
an aching mind.<br/>
“Rough Stuff,” he moaned, “was what I got for<br/>
mine!<br/>
It was fierce Virtue put me on the bum,<br/>
Trampled my slats and wronged my winsome face—<br/>
Once I was loved and called the Angel Wine!<br/>
Kicked hellward now, and hurtling out through space,<br/>
I am known only as the Demon Rum!”<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> VII—THE LAST CASE OF GIN </h2>
<p>To Loren Palmer</p>
<p>The Tullywub is singing by the Willywinkle's grotto<br/>
His passionate devotion, though he knows he hadn't<br/>
ought to,<br/>
And she wipes away a teardrop with a little furtive<br/>
fin;<br/>
She is fluttered, but she's frightened by his outburst<br/>
of emotion<br/>
In their somewhat formal corner of a rather proper<br/>
ocean—<br/>
And I can understand 'em, for I've got a crate of gin.<br/>
Interpretative theses on the psychochemic state<br/>
Induced in the batrachia by fear or love or hate<br/>
I find are rather easy since I've opened up the crate,<br/>
And I'm gonna be a scientist by morning.<br/>
A Willywinkle's seldom a sprightly thing or elfish,<br/>
But morally she's rigid as the most exclusive shell-<br/>
fish;<br/>
<br/>
She cans her rash admirer, but she cans him with a<br/>
sigh!<br/>
An analytic novel might be reared upon the basis<br/>
Of a very earnest study of the looks upon their<br/>
faces<br/>
And their brave renunciation when they sobbed and<br/>
said good-by.<br/>
I claim that the transmission of their fortitude and<br/>
pain<br/>
To succeeding generations will improve the moral<br/>
strain<br/>
Of the species here considered and their loss result<br/>
in gain;<br/>
And I wish I had some Angostura Bitters!<br/>
I have a strong impression of the immanence of<br/>
morals<br/>
In this quite extensive cosmos, from castor beans<br/>
to corals,<br/>
And Science and Religion, I will tell the world, are<br/>
one;<br/>
I should prove it, gentle reader, had we leisure time<br/>
before us,<br/>
I should prove it or expire in the act of hurling<br/>
Taurus—<br/>
I wonder where the dickens has that silly corkscrew<br/>
gone?<br/>
I find, as I grow older, the pert Subliminal<br/>
Keeps butting in to chatter with egoistic gall:<br/>
Romance I meditated; this isn't that at all—<br/>
But anyhow I have some limes and siphons!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> VIII—CROWNED SINGERS </h2>
<h3> To Charley Bayne </h3>
<p>Liquor there is . . . but we knew happier<br/>
days!<br/>
When jug by jowl in many a tavern booth<br/>
We sat and glimpsed the world's ulterior truth,<br/>
And followed life through all its secret ways—<br/>
What light flashed up on us in golden rays<br/>
Out of the booze, to blend with fire of youth!<br/>
Crowned singers, we! although, forsooth,<br/>
The Dipsas Snake still rustled in our bays.<br/>
Hail, Rum! Sweet Demon of my wastrel years!<br/>
Farewell, old mellow Angel, ripe with Vice!<br/>
Dreamers and singers, cronies, let us drink<br/>
A stirrup-cup of laughter and of tears!<br/>
Omar and Falstaff, both are on the blink—<br/>
The Bitter People say they are not Nice!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> IX—DOWN IN A WINE VAULT </h2>
<p>To Harold Gould</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0118.jpg" alt="0118 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0118.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>Down in a wine vault underneath the city<br/>
Two old men were sitting; they were drinking<br/>
booze.<br/>
Torn were their garments, hair and beards were gritty;<br/>
One had an overcoat but hardly any shoes.<br/>
Overhead the street cars through the streets were<br/>
running<br/>
Filled with happy people going home to Christmas;<br/>
In the Adirondacks the hunters all were gunning,<br/>
Big ships were sailing down by the Isthmus.<br/>
In came a Little Tot for to kiss her granny,<br/>
Such a little totty she could scarcely tottle,<br/>
Saying, “Kiss me, Grandpa! Kiss your little Nanny!”<br/>
But the old man beaned her with a whiskey bottle!<br/>
Outside the snowflakes began for to flutter,<br/>
Far at sea the ships were sailing with the seamen,<br/>
Not another word did Angel Nanny utter.<br/>
Her grandsire chuckled and pledged the Whiskey<br/>
Demon!<br/>
Up spake the second man; he was worn and weary,<br/>
Tears washed his face, which otherwise was pasty;<br/>
“She loved her parents, who commuted on the Erie;<br/>
Brother, I'm afraid you struck a trifle hasty!<br/>
“She came to see you, all her pretty duds on,<br/>
Bringing Christmas posies from her mother's<br/>
garden,<br/>
Riding in the tunnel underneath the Hudson;<br/>
Brother, was it Rum caused your heart to harden?”<br/>
Up spake the first man, “Here I sits a thinking<br/>
How the country's drifting to a sad condition;<br/>
Here I sits a dreaming, here I sits a drinking,<br/>
Here I sits a dreading, dreading prohibition,<br/>
“When in comes Nanny, my little daughter's<br/>
daughter;<br/>
Me she has been begging ever since October<br/>
For to sign the pledge! It's ended now in slaughter—<br/>
I never had the courage when she caught me sober!<br/>
“All around the world little tots are begging<br/>
Grandpas and daddies for to quit their lushing.<br/>
Reformers eggs 'em on. I am tired of egging!<br/>
Tired of being cowed, cowering and blushing!<br/>
“I struck for freedom! I'm a man of mettle!<br/>
Though I never would 'a' done it had I not been<br/>
drinking—<br/>
From Athabasca south to Popocatapetl<br/>
We must strike for freedom, quit our shrinking!”<br/>
Said the second old man, “I beg your pardon!<br/>
Brother, please forgive me, my words were hasty!<br/>
I get your viewpoint, our hearts must harden!<br/>
Try this ale, it is bitter, brown and tasty.”<br/>
Said the first old man, “Hear me sobbing.<br/>
“Poor little Nanny, she's gone to Himmel.<br/>
Principle must conquer, though hearts be throbbing!<br/>
Just curl your lip around this kimmel!”<br/>
Down in a wine vault underneath the city<br/>
They sat drinking while the snow was falling,<br/>
Wicked old men with scarcely any pity—<br/>
The moral of my tale is quite appalling!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> X—ANACREON </h2>
<p>To Ned Ranck<br/></p>
<p>In the sunless land where thou art gone,<br/>
The shadowy realm of Proserpine,<br/>
Hast wine to drink, Anacreon?<br/>
Still hast thy lute its laughing tone,<br/>
Still do thy nymphs the ivy twine,<br/>
In the sunless land where thou art gone?<br/>
A Bacchus on a reeling throne,<br/>
Thy temples bound with trailing vine,<br/>
Hast wine to drink, Anacreon?<br/>
From cool deep caves of delved stone,<br/>
Do slaves still fetch thee Samian wine,<br/>
In the sunless land where thou art gone?<br/>
Or is a cup's mere semblance shown,<br/>
Then snatched from those parch'd lips of thine?—-<br/>
Hast wine to drink, Anacreon?<br/>
<br/>
Like Tantalus dost thou make moan,<br/>
Plagued by a mockery malign?<br/>
In the sunless land where thou art gone<br/>
Hast wine to drink, Anacreon?<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XI—THERE WERE GIANTS IN THE OLD DAYS </h2>
<p>To George Van Slyke</p>
<p>Gog was a giant,<br/>
Likewise so was Magog;—<br/>
Gog says, “It's Christmas,<br/>
Please pass the Egg-nog!”<br/>
Gurgle! Gurgle! Gurgle!<br/>
Glug! Glug! Glug!<br/>
Gog says to Magog,<br/>
“It is full of Nutmeg,—<br/>
Guzzle! Guzzle! Guzzle!<br/>
Glog! Glog! Glog!”<br/>
Magog says to Gog,<br/>
“Have some Haig and Haig!”<br/>
Gargle! Gargle! Gargle!<br/>
Grog! Grog! Grog!”<br/>
Gog says to Magog,<br/>
“Your eyes are all a-goggle!<br/>
You are all agog!”<br/>
Magog says to Gog,<br/>
“Your feet wiggle-woggle,<br/>
<br/>
You're gigglish as a gargoyle<br/>
And logey as a log!”<br/>
Gog says to Magog,<br/>
“I'm as gleg as a grig!<br/>
Gurgle! Gurgle! Gurgle!<br/>
Glug! Glug! Glug!”<br/>
Magog says to Gog,<br/>
“I'm jolly as a polly—<br/>
Wiggle—waggle—wog<br/>
That's turning to a froggle,<br/>
A friggle—fraggle—frog!<br/>
Guggle! Guggle! Guggle!<br/>
Glog! Glog! Glog!”<br/>
And Gog filled his noggin,<br/>
And Magog his mug,—<br/>
Magog was a giant,<br/>
Likewise so was Gog;<br/>
On New Year's morning<br/>
Both were on their legs,<br/>
And sat down to breakfast<br/>
And ordered ham and eggs!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XII—IN AN OLD-TIME TAVERN BOOTH </h2>
<p>To Ben De Casseres</p>
<p>Drinking, I doze, and see the gods go by;<br/>
They wave to me the hand of comradeship,<br/>
For I am one with them, and at my lip<br/>
The cup of wisdom bubbles ... up the sky<br/>
A blur of moondust drifts to dull mine eye,<br/>
But through the veil my romping visions slip<br/>
To dance among the careless stars, outstrip<br/>
The racing planets where they swoop and fly,<br/>
And then . . . from somewhere east of Mars<br/>
a keen<br/>
Thin wind whines for a Dime; I drop one in<br/>
A sad Salvation Army tambourine<br/>
And hear a weary homily on Sin . . .<br/>
“Sister,” I say, “you're right, and yet the Truth<br/>
Sometimes sits near me in this tavern booth.”<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XIII—THE OLD BRASS RAILING </h2>
<p>To Charley Still</p>
<p>Our minds are schooled to grief and dearth,<br/>
Our lips, too, are aware,<br/>
But our feet still seek a railing<br/>
When a railing isn't there.<br/>
I went into a druggist's shop<br/>
To get some stamps and soap,—<br/>
My feet rose up in spite of me<br/>
And pawed the air with hope.<br/>
I know that neither East nor West,<br/>
And neither North nor South,<br/>
Shall rise a cloud of joy to shed<br/>
Its dampness on my drouth,—.<br/>
I know that neither here nor there,<br/>
When winds blow to and fro,<br/>
Shall any friendly odours find<br/>
The nose they used to know,—<br/></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0127.jpg" alt="0127 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0127.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>No stein shall greet my straining eyes,<br/>
No matter how they blink,<br/>
Mine ears shall never hear again<br/>
The highball glasses clink,—<br/>
There is not anywhere a jug<br/>
To cuddle with my wrist,—<br/>
But my habituated foot<br/>
Remains an optimist!<br/>
It lifts itself, it curls itself,<br/>
It feels the empty air,<br/>
It seeks a long brass railing,<br/>
And the railing isn't there!<br/>
I do not seek for sympathy<br/>
For stomach nor for throat,<br/>
I never liked my liver much—<br/>
'T is such a sulky goat!—<br/>
I do not seek your pity for<br/>
My writhen tongue and wried,<br/>
I do not ask your tears because<br/>
My lips are shrunk and dried,—<br/>
But, oh! my foot! My cheated foot!<br/>
My foot that lives in hope!<br/>
It is a piteous sight to see<br/>
It lift itself and grope!<br/>
I look at it, I talk to it,<br/>
I lesson it and plead,<br/>
But with a humble cheerfulness,<br/>
That makes my heart to bleed,<br/>
It lifts itself, it curls itself,<br/>
It searches through the air,<br/>
It seeks a long brass railing,<br/>
And the railing isn't there!<br/>
I carried it to church one day—<br/>
O foot so fond and frail!<br/>
I had to drag it forth in haste:<br/>
It grabbed the chancel rail.<br/>
My heart is all resigned and calm,<br/>
So, likewise, is my soul,<br/>
But my habituated foot<br/>
Is quite beyond control!<br/>
An escalator on the Ell<br/>
Began its upward trip,<br/>
My foot reached up and clutched the rail<br/>
And crushed it in its grip.<br/>
It grabs the headboard of my bed<br/>
With such determined clasp<br/>
That I'm compelled to scald the thing<br/>
To make it loose its grasp.<br/>
Sometimes it leaps to clutch the curb<br/>
When I walk down the street—<br/>
Oh, how I suffer for the hope<br/>
That lives within my feet!<br/>
Myself, I can endure the drouth<br/>
With stoic calm, and prayer—<br/>
But my feet still seek a railing<br/>
When a railing isn't there.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XIV—ONCE YOUTH WAS MINE </h2>
<p>To Frank Stanton</p>
<p>Once the wild raptures and the beating wings<br/>
Of Song were mine, the sun, the climbing flight;<br/>
The wind's great fellowship upon the height. . . .<br/>
Once Youth was mine, and the young heart that<br/>
sings!<br/>
But now the little things, the trivial things,<br/>
Beat down my spirit with their leagued might . . .<br/>
Could I, within some friendly Dive to-night,<br/>
Meet the Old Gang, 'twould make me young, by<br/>
jings!<br/>
As the mad lark rises, drunk with joy and sun,<br/>
When morning bends above the dewy meadow,<br/>
And his clear call proclaims: “The day is won!”<br/>
Over a hurried rout of driven shadow,<br/>
So should I rise and sing, had I a Bun.<br/>
O would that we were soused together, Kiddo!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XV—IN A TAVERN BOOTH </h2>
<p>To Bob Lillard</p>
<p>Out of my forehead now the long thoughts reach<br/>
In level rays that melt the Pleiades,<br/>
Which, melting, somehow smell like toasted<br/>
cheese . . .<br/>
I know Life's secret now, but have no speech<br/>
To utter it: indeed, small wish to teach<br/>
My truths to trivial planets such as these<br/>
Whereon the populations drone like bees<br/>
That have no honey-gift, each stinging each . . .<br/>
And yet I will speak, too!... the slow words<br/>
come<br/>
With pain out of my deeps of ecstasy,<br/>
Burst from my soul as from a beaten drum<br/>
In a hoarse pulse of sound . . . But hark to<br/>
me!<br/>
“Life's secret is that all things cool somewhat<br/>
Like golden bucks”...but, somehow, that<br/>
seems rot.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XVI—AN ENGAGEMENT </h2>
<p>To Kit Morley</p>
<p>There is a place, not far from Gissing Street,<br/>
In Paradise, where one can dream and laugh<br/>
You go through Shelley Lane, striking your staff<br/>
Upon the cobbles, turn with eager feet<br/>
Down Benêt Place, and there you are! I'll meet<br/>
You, Christopher, and we shall quarrel and quaff<br/>
Our pewter tankards full of Shandygaff,<br/>
And eat and eat and eat and eat and eat!<br/>
And must we die first? Well, it's worth the trouble<br/>
I shall go first, because I'm old and gray,<br/>
And permanently I'll reserve a booth—<br/>
And when you come, no doubt I'll see you double,<br/>
And as you land from Charon's skiff I'll say:<br/>
“Here, kid, taste this! Roll this upon your tooth!'<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XVII—THE BATTLE OF THE KEYHOLES </h2>
<p>To Jimmy Farnsworth</p>
<p>The keyholes to the right of me<br/>
Were dancing of a jig,<br/>
The keyholes to the left of me<br/>
Were merry as a grig,<br/>
The keyholes right before my face<br/>
Were drunk and winked at me,<br/>
And I stood there alone—alone!—<br/>
With one<br/>
small<br/>
key.<br/>
<br/>
They frightened me, they daunted me;<br/>
I turned back to the stair,<br/>
And faced nine keyholes pale and stern<br/>
That lay in ambush there.<br/>
Six keyholes on the ceiling sat,<br/>
Eight keyholes on the door,<br/>
And seven saddened keyholes lay<br/>
Hiccoughing<br/>
on the<br/>
floor.<br/>
<br/>
I crawled through one, I crawled through two,<br/>
I crawled through keyholes three—<br/>
And then I saw a vistaed mile<br/>
Of keyholes waiting me!—<br/>
“I will not crawl another yard<br/>
Through keyholes, though I die!”—<br/>
Oh, when my fighting blood is up<br/>
A Turk<br/>
am.<br/>
<br/>
They leapt at me, they flew at me,<br/>
They whistled as they came,<br/>
They gritted of their gleaming teeth,<br/>
They stung and spurted flame;<br/>
I put my back against the floor<br/>
And fought 'em gallantly—?<br/>
But what could anybody do<br/>
With one<br/>
small<br/>
key?<br/>
<br/>
Keyholes at the front of me,<br/>
And keyholes on the flank,<br/>
And as they rushed at me I smelled<br/>
The liquor that they drank;<br/>
Keyholes on my spinal cord,<br/>
And keyholes in my hair—<br/>
And with a “Heave together, boys!”<br/>
They rolled<br/>
me down<br/>
the stair.<br/>
<br/>
It bumped me some, it bent me some,<br/>
It broke a nose or two,<br/>
And when the milkman came, he said:<br/>
“What Kaiser Belgiumed you?”<br/>
I says to him: “It might have been<br/>
The same with you as me<br/>
If you like me had had to fight<br/>
A gang of keyholes all last night<br/>
With one<br/>
small<br/>
key!”<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XVIII—IN A TAVERN BOOTH </h2>
<p>To Sam McCoy</p>
<p>I thought a Sun pursued; through endless space<br/>
I fled the following thunder of his feet;<br/>
Snorting he came, his breath a withering heat,<br/>
Blown soot of cindered comets freakt his face;<br/>
My hide caught fire and crackled with the pace,<br/>
My burning heart with jets of anguish beat;<br/>
Flaming I leapt, in flame leapt on the fleet<br/>
And savage star . . . We slashed our fiery trace<br/>
Ten constellations broad in screaming red<br/>
Across the startled purple of the night;<br/>
A word tremendous clove mine ears and head,<br/>
A great arm fell and stripped my wings of flight:<br/>
“Hey, Mister, pay your check!” a brute voice said.<br/>
It was a red-haired barkeep known as Ed.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XIX—YEARNINGS AND MEMORIES </h2>
<p>To Jimmy Fisher</p>
<p>Liquor there is—but how I miss the Bar!<br/>
I miss a certain attitude of mind,<br/>
Congenial, which I seek but never find<br/>
Except beneath the golden triple star<br/>
Which from the brandy bottle shines afar.<br/>
I miss a type of jest that was designed<br/>
For roaring barrooms warmed with booze, and<br/>
kind—<br/>
Good Gawd! how coarse and low my real tastes are.<br/>
I miss an ambling, splay-foot waiter's beak,<br/>
Which like some red peninsula of hell<br/>
Glowed through the humming barroom's smoky<br/>
reek—<br/>
I miss the lies I used to hear men tell<br/>
Over the telephone to waiting wives—<br/>
What sweet aromas had these joyous lives!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XX—DO YOU REMEMBER? </h2>
<p>To Harry Dixey</p>
<p>Do you remember that first Morning Drink<br/>
When Ed would smile and say, “What shall it be?”<br/>
“Would you advise a Gin Fizz, Ed, for me?”<br/>
“It is too early for a Fizz, I think.”<br/>
“And would an Absinthe put me on the blink,<br/>
I wonder, Ed?”—“Absinthe would not agree<br/>
This morning, sir.”—“Then what's your recipe?”<br/>
“A bland Club Cocktail, delicate and pink!”<br/>
O kindly Barkeeps that have raised me up<br/>
From morning glooms and made me live again,<br/>
Where are ye now, and where your wizardry?<br/>
As dead as great Ulysses' faithful pup!<br/>
As dead as Babylon and James G. Blaine!<br/>
As dead as Gyp the Blood and Nineveh!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> XXI—AND YOU MAY KECALL THIS </h2>
<p>To Charley Edson</p>
<p>—“I wanchya meeta 'nol' 'nol frien' o' mine!”<br/>
—” Umgladdameecha! Bill's frien's my frien's, too!”<br/>
—“Thish frien' besh frien'! I gotto open wine!”<br/>
—“You gotto le' me buy thish drink f'r you!”<br/>
—“I gotto buy thish drink f'r 'nol' 'nol' frien'!”<br/>
—“Now, lishen, Jim! You gonna love thish lad!”<br/>
—“Billsh friensh is my friensh to th' bitter en'!”<br/>
—“Now, lishen, Jim! thish besh frien' ever had!”<br/>
Honest, hardworking drunkards! Hour by hour<br/>
They toiled on at their chosen task until<br/>
They bent beneath the burdens that they bore,<br/>
They bent and swayed, sustained but by the power,<br/>
Each one, of his Indomitable Will,<br/>
Which ever bade him conquer Just One More.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<h2> XXII—TRUE, BUT WHAT OF IT? </h2>
<p>To Gilbert Gabriel</p>
<p>Old Demon Rum, they say you ruined homes,<br/>
Bashing the piteous Wife betwixt her eyes.<br/>
Stabbing Aunt Tildy with her own hair-combs,<br/>
And teaching your young offspring stealth and lies<br/>
Angel! they say that one night, lost to grace,<br/>
You filched the infant's coral from her crib,<br/>
Hocked it, and blew the loot at Leery's Place-<br/>
Then strangled Baby Sister in her bib<br/>
Because it purchased only sixteen beers!<br/>
Demon! they say you used to cut up rough,<br/>
Sowing the earth with poverty and tears—<br/>
And I believe it readily enough!<br/>
I do admit your crimes as charged above,<br/>
But, Angel! crime can never kill my love!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> XXIII—A SUMMER DAY DREAM </h2>
<p>To Foster Follett</p>
<p>If there were many miles of me<br/>
How I would love to trail<br/>
My length along the cooling sea<br/>
Above the brown sea kale.<br/>
Were there five thousand feet of me<br/>
Instead of five feet four,<br/>
A thousand times as cool I'd be<br/>
Swimming from shore to shore.<br/>
And when I saw a brewery<br/>
Upon some cape or isle<br/>
I'd crawl out of the dripping sea<br/>
And greet it with a smile.<br/>
Then all my lovely coils I'd wrap<br/>
Around that brewery,<br/>
And when I'd squeezed out every drap<br/>
Slide back into the sea.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> XXIV—ON SWEARING OFF AGAIN </h2>
<p>To Dan Carey</p>
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<p>Barleycorn, my jo John!<br/>
They say that we must part!<br/>
'Twill mend my stomach, maybe,<br/>
But, O! it breaks my heart!<br/>
I hoped that we should grow old<br/>
Cheek by jowl together,<br/>
Boozing by the fireside<br/>
Through the wintry weather;—<br/>
With white hair and red face,<br/>
Full of dreams and liquor,<br/>
Watching from an armchair<br/>
The firelight flicker;—<br/>
<br/>
But Barleycorn, my jo John,<br/>
Fare ye well forever!—<br/>
The preachers have my soul, John,<br/>
The doctors have my liver!<br/>
And I shall have an old age<br/>
Dry and dull as virtue—<br/>
But never think, my dear friend,<br/>
I'm happy to desert you!<br/>
Barleycorn, my jo John!<br/>
To think that we should part—.<br/>
They say 'twill save my eyesight,<br/>
But, O; it breaks my heart!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> XXV—AFTER SEVERAL HIGHBALLS </h2>
<p>To Clive Weed</p>
<p>I saw three roses on the wall,<br/>
Three red, red roses on the wall,<br/>
Repeated in a pattern:<br/>
The first, I Cleopatra call,<br/>
The second one's named Sadie Hall,<br/>
The third one is a slattern.<br/>
Three flowers, all curlycues and swirls,<br/>
Each blare-mouthed like a trumpet;<br/>
One used to fish for swine with pearls,<br/>
The second was the best of girls,<br/>
The third one was a strumpet.<br/>
Three red-mouthed roses on the wall<br/>
As bright and hot as blood;<br/>
The first one caused an empire fall,<br/>
The second was just Sadie Hall,<br/>
The third died in the mud.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> XXVI—CHANT ROYAL OF THE DEJECTED DIPSOMANIAC </h2>
<p>To Hal Steed</p>
<p>Some fools keep ringing the dumb waiter bell<br/>
Just as I finish killing Uncle Ned;<br/>
I wonder if they could have heard him yell?<br/>
A moment since I cursed at them and said:<br/>
“This is a pretty time to bring the ice!”<br/>
—Old Uncle Ned! Two times of late, or thrice,<br/>
I've thought of prodding him with something keen,<br/>
But always Fate has seemed to intervene;<br/>
Last night, for instance, I was in the mood,<br/>
But I was far too drunken yestere'en——-<br/>
My way of life can end in nothing good!<br/>
At Mrs. Dumple's, last week, when I fell<br/>
And spoiled her dinner party I was led<br/>
Out to a cab; they saw I was not well<br/>
And took me home and tucked me into bed.<br/>
I should quit mingling hashish with my rice!<br/>
I should give over singing “Three Blind Mice”<br/>
<br/>
At funerals! Why will I make a scene?<br/>
Why should I feed my cousins Paris Green?<br/>
I am increasingly misunderstood:<br/>
When I am tactless, people think 'tis spleen.<br/>
My way of life can end in nothing good.<br/>
Why should one cry that he is William Tell,<br/>
Then flip a pippin from his hostess' head<br/>
That none but he can see? Why should one dwell<br/>
Upon the failings of the newly wed<br/>
At wedding breakfasts? Can I not be Nice?<br/>
I am so silly and so full of vice!<br/>
Such prestidigitator tricks, I ween,<br/>
As finding false teeth in a soup tureen<br/>
Are not real humour; they are crass and crude,<br/>
And cast suspicion on the host's cuisine:<br/>
My way of life can end in nothing good.<br/>
My wife and her best friend, a social swell,<br/>
Zoo-ward I lured to see the cobras fed;—<br/>
“We can't get home,” I giggled, “for the El<br/>
Is broken, Sarah—let's elope, instead!”<br/>
I spoke of all she'd have to sacrifice,<br/>
And she seemed yielding to me, once or twice,<br/>
Until my wife broke in and said: “Eugene,<br/>
Your finger nails are seldom really clean;—<br/>
I'd loose poor Sarah's hand, Eugene, I would!”<br/>
How weak and stupid I have always been!<br/>
My way of life can end in nothing good.<br/>
I drink and doze and wake and think of hell,<br/>
My eyes are blear from all the tears I shed:<br/>
I'm pitiably bald: I'm but a shell!<br/>
I sobbed to-day, “I wish that I were dead!”<br/>
I wish I could quit drugs and drink and dice.<br/>
I wish I had not talked of chicken lice<br/>
The Sunday that we entertained the Dean,<br/>
Nor shouted to his wife that paraffin<br/>
Would make her thin beard grow, nor played the<br/>
food<br/>
Was pennies and her face a slot machine:<br/>
My way of life can end in nothing good.<br/>
—That bell again: A voice: “Is your name Bryce?<br/>
These goods is C. O. D. Send down the price!”<br/>
“Bryce lives,” I yell, “at Number Seventeen!”<br/>
Bryce doesn't live there, but I feel so mean<br/>
I laugh and lie; my tone is harsh and rude.<br/>
—Uncle is gone! I'm phthisical and lean—<br/>
My way of life can end in nothing good!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
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<br/>
<h2> XXVII—PROVERBS XXIII, 29 </h2>
<p>To Oliver Herford</p>
<p>From many a classic scroll and tome<br/>
In golden texts the warnings shine:<br/>
“If you must drink, get soused at home!<br/>
Will you get pickled? Then use brine!”<br/>
Each generation gets a sign,<br/>
But each one needs another prod<br/>
From scriptures human or divine—<br/>
The Wastrel always drops his Wad!<br/>
Sleek Athens from the Attic loam<br/>
With ill intention coaxed the vine—<br/>
Arcadian Simps admired the foam<br/>
While hair-oiled City Gents malign<br/>
Dropped philters in the neatherd's stein—<br/>
Soon Corydon upon the sod<br/>
Lay coinless with a cloven chine—<br/>
The Wastrel always drops his Wad!<br/>
<br/>
When Gallic ginks Cook-toured to Rome,<br/>
Or roaring Teutons from the Rhine,<br/>
The thought would fill some yokel's dome<br/>
To dally with the stranger's wine—<br/>
Next reel: tough students sprain his spine<br/>
And bean him with a curule rod<br/>
And roll him down the Palatine:<br/>
The Wastrel always drops his Wad!<br/>
Raus! Bacchus, with that breath of thine,<br/>
And sad eyes like a bilious cod!<br/>
Me for the Tracts—I've learned, in fine,<br/>
The Wastrel always drops his Wad!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> XXVIII—AN OBJECT LESSON </h2>
<p>To Bobby Rogers</p>
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<p>A young man in a Mu-se-um<br/>
Was showing me a mummy<br/>
Who lay there patiently, but glum,<br/>
A-clasping of his tummy. . .<br/>
Cophetua or Kafoozelum,<br/>
Or some such regal rummy.<br/>
“In youth,” says I, “this king was gay,<br/>
In spite of Mrs. Grundy;<br/>
He burnt the Nile one Saturday,<br/>
<br/>
But where was he on Sunday?”<br/>
I added, in my learned way,<br/>
“'Sic transit gloria mundi!'<br/>
“He conquered princes not a few;<br/>
They voted as he bid 'em.<br/>
From Babylon to Timbuctoo,<br/>
From Sheba up to Siddim,<br/>
He thought of things he shouldn't do,<br/>
And then he went and did 'em!<br/>
“He loved to send out royal bids<br/>
For high Egyptian jinkses<br/>
Where pretty Theban katydids<br/>
And little Memphian minxes<br/>
Would trot among the pyramids<br/>
And tango round the sphinxes . . .<br/>
“But now, in his sarcophagus,<br/>
How quite deceased we find him,<br/>
With sand in his aesophagus<br/>
And all his past behind him,<br/>
While Time (the anthropophagus!)<br/>
Is whetting teeth to grind him.<br/>
“Then note, my lad, the end of kings!<br/>
Therefore, avoid ambition,<br/>
For earthly greatness all has wings.<br/>
You stick to your position,<br/>
And if men come with crowns and things<br/>
To tempt you, go a-fishin'!”<br/>
“Was I a Kingly Souse,” says he,<br/>
Impressed from A to Izzard,<br/>
“Would I wind up so leathery<br/>
As this departed wizard,<br/>
With baldness on the dome of me,<br/>
And gravel in my gizzard?”<br/>
“You would without a doubt,” says I,<br/>
“Lose wealth and health and hair, O!”<br/>
Shaken with sobs he made reply,<br/>
“I promise, and I swear, O!<br/>
That I will never drink!—and try<br/>
And never be a Pharaoh!”<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> XXIX—A KANSAS TRAGEDY </h2>
<p>To Charley Stansbury</p>
<p>I started from Missouri,<br/>
The western part of Missouri,<br/>
To ride to Nicodemus,<br/>
To Nicodemus, Kansas,<br/>
In the western part of Kansas;<br/>
Not far from Happy, Kansas,<br/>
In Graham County, Kansas . . .<br/>
Across the State of Kansas I started in a flivver . . .<br/>
A jolty little flivver with a rhythm rather jerky . . .<br/>
Irregularly rhythmical, when rhythmical at all . . .<br/>
I had to get to Nicodemus<br/>
By noon on Saturday to pay the mortgage<br/>
On a farm near Nicodemus,<br/>
Graham County, Kansas,<br/>
Belonging to a sweetheart who would otherwise be<br/>
rooned<br/>
Financially and so could not afford to marry me. . . .<br/>
As I entered into Kansas,<br/>
And crossed Miami County,<br/>
At the town of Ossawatomie<br/>
I received a telegraphic message<br/>
From my love at Nicodemus.<br/>
“Hasten with the money,” said the telegraphic<br/>
message,<br/>
“Hasten with the money you are bringing from my<br/>
Uncle.<br/>
From my Uncle Jethro, in Missouri,<br/>
For the man that holds the mortgage,<br/>
Banker Jasper Grinder, who holds the fiendish<br/>
mortgage,<br/>
Has said he will foreclose it<br/>
And take away the homestead at noon on Saturday,<br/>
Or else I'll have to marry him,<br/>
To keep him from foreclosing,<br/>
Marry Banker Jasper Grinder to keep him from<br/>
foreclosing . . .<br/>
I would hate to marry Grinder,<br/>
But, on the other hand,<br/>
I would hate to lose the whole alfalfa crop . . .<br/>
Hasten with the money,<br/>
From my Uncle Jethro,<br/>
Hasten to your true love, Miss Elvira Simpkins,<br/>
At Nicodemus, Kansas.”<br/>
Three hundred miles away<br/>
Was Nicodemus, Kansas,<br/>
Nicodemus, Graham County,<br/>
Not so far from Happy, Kansas<br/>
Could I do it in a flivver<br/>
In ten hours?<br/>
from Ossawatomie I started with a burst of speed,<br/>
That carried me to Quenemo,<br/>
To Quenemo, in Osage County, Kansas,<br/>
At the rate of forty miles an hour . . .<br/>
At a garage in Quenemo<br/>
I paused for gasolene,<br/>
At Quenemo, in Osage County, Kansas . . .<br/>
But the man that ran the place<br/>
With shrill bucolic snicker<br/>
Said: “There ain't no gasolene!<br/>
The gasolene in Kansas<br/>
Has all been took and contrabanded,<br/>
Leastways, commandeered,<br/>
Just one hour ago,<br/>
By order of the Governor,<br/>
The Governor of Kansas,<br/>
On account of military operations “...<br/>
No gasolene in Kansas!<br/>
And three hundred miles away my love,<br/>
My love, Elvira Simpkins,<br/>
Was waiting for the money I had got from Uncle<br/>
Jethro<br/>
To save the home at Nicodemus<br/>
From the clutch of Jasper Grinder!<br/>
“I will telegraph the money!” I shouted<br/>
With a flash of inspiration. . .<br/>
But the station agent told me,<br/>
“There ain't no telegraph nor nothing<br/>
Runs into Nicodemus,<br/>
To Nicodemus, Kansas.<br/>
As fur as I can see in this here book!”<br/>
And I looked at the wire from Elvira again<br/>
And saw it had been sent from Happy, Kansas,<br/>
And all the time the precious<br/>
Minutes fluttered by<br/>
Banker Jasper Grinder, in Nicodemus, Kansas,<br/>
Minute after minute,<br/>
Was approaching nearer to the hour of his desire . . .<br/>
I could hear him chuckle,<br/>
The dry and throaty chuckle that village bankers<br/>
chuckle<br/>
In the semi-arid regions<br/>
Another inspiration came to me and I cried:<br/>
“I will run my flivver<br/>
To Nicodemus, Kansas,<br/>
On alcohol, by heck!<br/>
I can make the engine in my little flivver<br/>
Run to Nicodemus, Kansas,<br/>
On alcohol, by Henry!”<br/>
But the crowd that gathered around me<br/>
Laffed and laffed and laffed . . .<br/>
“They ain't no alcohol in Kansas,”<br/>
Said the crowd, between its chortles—<br/>
“Kansas is a dry State,<br/>
It's prohibition Kansas,<br/>
And you'll never get to Nicodemus<br/>
Graham County, Kansas,”<br/>
Just then the village toper<br/>
A gentle creature and decayed<br/>
Thrust into my hand a gallon<br/>
Of Stutter's Stomach Bitters,<br/>
He handed me four big quarts<br/>
Of Stutter's Stomach Bitters,<br/>
And I poured 'em in the tank and left the town of<br/>
Quenemo, with the engine doing lovely<br/>
And the flivver going strong<br/>
And I reached the town of Skiddy,<br/>
The town of Skiddy, Kansas, in Morris County,<br/>
Kansas,<br/>
And I drew up by the drug store and I yelled<br/>
For Stutter's Stomach Bitters . . .<br/>
“I must reach Elvira Simpkins, in Nicodemus,<br/>
Kansas,<br/>
'Ere the clock strikes 12 . . .<br/>
Give me Bitters, give me Bitters!<br/>
Fill the tank with Bitters, for I race to raise the<br/>
mortgage<br/>
But the druggist said: “There's been a run on Bitters!<br/>
Considerable colic in this watermelon weather!—<br/>
How about Stewroona?”<br/>
On a gallon of Stewroona I ran from Skiddy, Kansas,<br/>
As far as Elmo, Kansas,<br/>
And there I laid in nineteen quarts<br/>
Of prohibition appetizer:<br/>
Doctor Bunkus's Discovery for Kidneys<br/>
Westward, aver westward;”:<br/>
To my love,- Elvira Simpkins<br/>
At Nicodemus, Kansas,<br/>
I ran on Doctor Bunkus, through the dryest belt of<br/>
Kansas,<br/>
Through the prohibition centre,<br/>
Dear Old Doctor Bunkus urged my little flivver;<br/>
From Elmo, to Palacky,<br/>
Six quarts of Lily Gingham's Discovery<br/>
And a dozen more of Bunkus<br/>
Took me nearer, nearer, nearer,<br/>
To my love, Elvira Simpkins . . .<br/>
From Palacky west to Pfeifer,<br/>
Through the town of Fingal,<br/>
Then northward to Ogallah,<br/>
I ran on Si wash Injun Soorah,<br/>
A Remedy for Liver Trouble,<br/>
Take a wineglass full before each meal.<br/>
Nearer, ever nearer, to my love at Nicodemus<br/>
From Ogallah north to Happy,<br/>
North to Happy, Kansas, in Graham County,<br/>
Kansas,<br/>
North and west to Happy, word of glorious omen . . .<br/>
And the villagers came down to sniff the glad aroma<br/>
Of the flying flivver<br/>
As I turned north to Nicodemus<br/>
At thirteen minutes until noon,<br/>
Filled once more with! Stutter's Stomach Bitters<br/>
I raced into the presence of my love,' Elvira Simpkins.<br/>
Alas! Alas! Ala:<br/>
Elvira did not clasp me in her sturdy Kansas<br/>
arms<br/>
She sniffed the air and said:<br/>
“I never will be wedded<br/>
To a man who reeks with liquor!<br/>
Give me Uncle Jethro's money!<br/>
And don't you leave that drunken flivver on the<br/>
streets of Nicodemus.<br/>
And she went and married Jasper Grinder after all.<br/></p>
<h3> THE END </h3>
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