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<h2> VIII. A HAND-BOOK TO HADES </h2>
<p>"Boswell," said I, the other night, as the machine began to click
nervously. "I have just received a letter from an unknown friend in Hawaii
who wants to know how the prize-fight between Samson and Goliath came out
that time when Kidd and his pirate crew stole the House-Boat on the Styx."</p>
<p>"Just wait a minute, please," the machine responded. "I am very busy just
now mapping out the itinerary of the first series of the Boswell
Personally Conducted Tours you suggested some time ago. I laid that whole
proposition before the Entertainment Committee of the Associated Shades,
and they have resolved unanimously to charter the Ex-Great Eastern from
the Styx Navigation Company, and return to the scenes of their former
glory, devoting a year to it."</p>
<p>"Going to take their wives?" I asked.</p>
<p>"I don't know," Boswell replied. "That is a matter outside of the
jurisdiction of the committee and must be decided by a full vote of the
club. I hope they will, however. As manager of the enterprise I need
assistance, and there are some of the men who can't be managed by anybody
except their wives, or mothers-in-law, anyhow. I'll be through in a few
minutes. Meanwhile let me hand you the latest product of the Boswell
press."</p>
<p>With this the genial spirit produced from an invisible pocket a
red-covered book bearing the delicious title of "Baedeker's Hades: A
Hand-book for Travellers," which has entirely superseded, according to the
advertisement on the fly-leaves, such books as Virgil and Dante's Inferno
as the best guide to the lower regions, as well it might, for it appeared
on perusal to have been prepared with as much care as one of the more
material guide-books of the same publisher, which so greatly assist
travellers on this side of the Stygian River.</p>
<p>Some time, if Boswell will permit, I shall endeavor to have this little
volume published in this country since it contains many valuable hints to
the man of a roving disposition, or for the stay-at-home, for that matter,
for all roads lead to Hades. For instance, we do not find in previous
guide-books, like Dante's Inferno, any references whatsoever to the
languages it is well to know before taking the Stygian tour; to the kind
of money needed, or its quantity per capita; no allusion to the necessity
of passports is found in Dante or Virgil; custom-house requirements are
ignored by these authors; no statements as to the kind of clothing needed,
the quality of the hotels—nor indeed any real information of vital
importance to the traveller is to be found in the older books. In
Baedeker's Hades, on the other hand, all these subjects are exhaustively
treated, together with a very comprehensive series of chapters on "Stygian
Wines," "Climate," and "Hellish Art"—the expression is not mine—and
other topics of essential interest.</p>
<p>And of what suggestive quality was this little book. Who would ever have
guessed from a perusal of Dante that as Hades is the place of departed
spirits so also is it the ultimate resting-place of all other departed
things. What delightful anticipations are there in the idea of a visit to
the Alexandrian library, now suitably housed on the south side of Apollyon
Square, Cimmeria, in a building that would drive the trustees of the
Boston Public Library into envious despair, even though living Bacchantes
are found daily improving their minds in the recesses of its commodious
alcoves! What joyous feelings it gives one to think of visiting the
navy-yards of Tyre and finding there the ships concerning the whereabouts
of which poets have vainly asked questions for ages! Who would ever dream
that the question of the balladist, himself an able dreamer concerning
classic things, "Where are the Cities of Old Time," could ever find its
answer in a simple guide-book telling us where Carthage is, where Troy and
all the lost cities of antiquity!</p>
<p>Then the details of amusements in this wonderful country—who could
gather aught of these from the Italian poet? The theatres of Gehenna, with
"Hamlet" produced under the joint direction of Shakespeare and the Prince
of Denmark himself, the great Zoo of Sheolia, with Jumbo, and the famous
woolly horse of earlier days, not to mention the long series of menageries
which have passed over the dark river in the ages now forgotten; the
hanging gardens of Babylon, where the picnicking element of Hades flock
week after week, chuting the chutes, and clambering joyously in and out of
the Trojan Horse, now set up in all its majesty therein, with
bowling-alleys on its roof, elevators in its legs, and the original
Ferris-wheel in its head; the freak museums in the densely populated
sections of the large cities, where Hop o' my Thumb and Jack the Giant
Killer are exhibited day after day alongside of the great ogres they have
killed; the opera-house, with Siegfried himself singing, supported by the
real Brunhild and the original, bona fide dragon Fafnir, running of his
own motive power, and breathing actual fire and smoke without the aid of a
steam-engine and a plumber to connect him therewith before he can go out
upon the stage to engage Siegfried in deadly combat.</p>
<p>For the information contained in this last item alone, even if the book
had no other virtue, it would be worthy of careful perusal from the
opening paragraph on language, to the last, dealing with the descent into
the Vitriol Reservoir at Gehenna. The account of the feeding of Fafnir, to
which admission can be had on payment of ten oboli, beginning with a puree
of kerosene, followed by a half-dozen cartridges on the half-shell, an
entree of nitro-glycerine, a solid roast of cannel-coal, and a salad of
gun-cotton, with a mayonnaise dressing of alcohol and a pinch of powder,
topped off with a demi-tasse of benzine and a box of matches to keep the
fires of his spirit going, is one of the most moving things I have ever
read, and yet it may be said without fear of contradiction that until this
guide-book was prepared very few of the Stygian tourists have imagined
that there was such a sight to be seen. I have gone carefully over Dante,
Virgil, and the works of Andrew Lang, and have found no reference
whatsoever in the pages of any of these talented persons to this
marvellous spectacle which takes place three times a day, and which I
doubt not results in a performance of Siegfried for the delectation of the
music lovers of Hades, which is beyond the power of the human mind to
conceive.</p>
<p>The hand-book has an added virtue, which distinguishes it from any other
that I have ever seen, in that it is anecdotal in style at times where an
anecdote is available and appropriate. In connection with this same
Fafnir, as showing how necessary it is for the tourist to be careful of
his personal safety in Hades, it is related that upon one occasion the
keeper of the dragon having taken a grudge against Siegfried for some
unintentional slight, fed Fafnir upon Roman-candles and a sky-rocket, with
the result that in the fight between the hero and the demon of the wood
the Siegfried was seriously injured by the red, white, and blue balls of
fire which the dragon breathed out upon him, while the sky-rocket flew out
into the audience and struck a young man in the top gallery, knocking him
senseless, the stick falling into a grand-tier box and impaling one of the
best known social lights of Cimmeria. "Therefore," adds the astute editor
of the hand-book, "on Siegfried nights it were well if the tourist were to
go provided with an asbestos umbrella for use in case of an emergency of a
similar nature."</p>
<p>In that portion of the book devoted to the trip up the river Styx the
legends surpass any of the Rhine stories in dramatic interest, because,
according to Commodore Charon's excursion system, the tourist can step
ashore and see the chief actors in them, who for a consideration will give
a full-dress rehearsal of the legendary acts for which they have been
famous. The sirens of the Stygian Lorelei, for instance, sit on an
eminence not far above the city of Cimmeria, and make a profession of
luring people ashore and giving away at so much per head locks of their
hair for remembrance' sake, all of which makes of the Stygian trip a thing
of far greater interest than that of the Rhine.</p>
<p>It had been my intention to make a few extracts from this portion of the
volume showing later developments in the legends of the Drachenfels, and
others of more than ordinary interest, but I find that with the departure
of Boswell for the night the treasured hand-book disappeared with him;
but, as I have already stated, if I can secure his consent to do so I will
some day have the book copied off on more material substance than that
employed in the original manuscript, so that the useful little tome may be
printed and scattered broadcast over a waiting and appreciative world. I
may as well state here, too, that I have taken the precaution to have the
title "Baedeker's Hades" and its contents copyrighted, so that any pirate
who recognizes the value of the scheme will attempt to pirate the work at
his peril.</p>
<p>Hardly had I finished the chapter on the legends of the Styx when Boswell
broke in upon me with: "Well, how do you like it?"</p>
<p>"It's great," I said. "May I keep it?"</p>
<p>"You may if you can," he laughed. "But I fancy it can't withstand the
rigors of this climate any more than an unfireproof copy of one of your
books could stand the caniculars of ours."</p>
<p>His words were soon to be verified, for as soon as he left me the book
vanished, but whether it went off into thin air or was repocketed by the
departing Boswell I am not entirely certain.</p>
<p>"What was it you asked me about Samson and Goliath?" Boswell observed, as
he gathered up his manuscript from the floor beside the Enchanted
Typewriter. "Whether they'd ever been in Honolulu?"</p>
<p>"No," I replied. "I got a letter from Hawaii the other day asking for the
result of the prize-fight the day Kidd ran off with the house-boat."</p>
<p>"Oh," replied Boswell. "That? Why, ah, Samson won hands down, but only
because they played according to latter-day rules. If it had been a
regular knock-out fight, like the contests in the old days of the ring
when it was in its prime, Goliath could have managed him with one hand;
but the Samson backers played a sharp game on the Philistine by having the
most recently amended Queensbury rules adopted, and Goliath wasn't in it
five minutes after Samson opened his mouth."</p>
<p>"I don't think I understand," said I.</p>
<p>"Plain enough," explained Boswell. "Goliath didn't know what the modern
rules were, but he thought a fight was a fight under any rules, so, like a
decent chap, he agreed, and when he found that it was nothing but a
talking-match he'd got into he fainted. He never was good at expressing
himself fluently. Samson talked him down in two rounds, just as he did the
other Philistines in the early days on earth."</p>
<p>I laughed. "You're slightly off there," I said. "That was a
stand-up-and-be-knocked-down fight, wasn't it? He used the jawbone of an
ass?"</p>
<p>"Very true," observed Boswell, "but it is evident that it is you who are
slightly off. You haven't kept up with the higher criticism. It has been
proven scientifically that not only did the whale not swallow Jonah, but
that Samson's great feat against the Philistines was comparable only to
the achievements of your modern senators. He talked them to death."</p>
<p>"Then why jawbone of an ass?" I cried.</p>
<p>"Samson was an ass," replied Boswell. "They prove that by the temple
episode, for you see if he hadn't been one he'd have got out of the
building before yanking the foundations from under it. I tell you, old
chap, this higher criticism is a great thing, and as logical as death
itself."</p>
<p>And with this Boswell left me.</p>
<p>I sincerely hope that the result of the fight will prove as satisfactory
to my friend in Hawaii as it was to me; for while I have no particular
admiration for Samson, I have always rejoiced to hear of the discomfitures
of Goliath, who, so far as I have been able to ascertain, was not only not
a gentleman, but, in addition, had no more regard for the rights of others
than a member of the New York police force or the editor of a Sunday
newspaper with a thirst for sensation.</p>
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