<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The Works of Edgar Allan Poe</h1>
<h2>by Edgar Allan Poe</h2>
<h3>The Raven Edition<br/> VOLUME IV.</h3>
<hr />
<h2>Contents</h2>
<table summary="" >
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.1">THE DEVIL IN THE BELFRY</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.2">LIONIZING</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.3">X-ING A PARAGRAB</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.4">METZENGERSTEIN</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.5">THE SYSTEM OF DOCTOR TARR AND PROFESSOR FETHER</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.6">THE LITERARY LIFE OF THINGUM BOB, ESQ.</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.7">HOW TO WRITE A BLACKWOOD ARTICLE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.8">A PREDICAMENT</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.9">MYSTIFICATION</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.10">DIDDLING</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.11">THE ANGEL OF THE ODD</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.12">MELLONTA TAUTA</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.13">THE DUC DE L’OMELETTE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.14">THE OBLONG BOX</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.15">LOSS OF BREATH</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.16">THE MAN THAT WAS USED UP</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.17">THE BUSINESS MAN</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.18">THE LANDSCAPE GARDEN</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.19">MAELZEL’S CHESS-PLAYER</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.20">THE POWER OF WORDS</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.21">THE COLLOQUY OF MONOS AND UNA</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.22">THE CONVERSATION OF EIROS AND CHARMION</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap4.23">SHADOW—A PARABLE</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
<hr />
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.1"></SPAN>THE DEVIL IN THE BELFRY</h2>
<p class="letter">
What o’clock is it?—<i>Old Saying</i>.</p>
<p>Everybody knows, in a general way, that the finest place in the world is—or,
alas, <i>was</i>—the Dutch borough of Vondervotteimittiss. Yet as it lies
some distance from any of the main roads, being in a somewhat
out-of-the-way situation, there are perhaps very few of my readers who
have ever paid it a visit. For the benefit of those who have not,
therefore, it will be only proper that I should enter into some account of
it. And this is indeed the more necessary, as with the hope of enlisting
public sympathy in behalf of the inhabitants, I design here to give a
history of the calamitous events which have so lately occurred within its
limits. No one who knows me will doubt that the duty thus self-imposed
will be executed to the best of my ability, with all that rigid
impartiality, all that cautious examination into facts, and diligent
collation of authorities, which should ever distinguish him who aspires to
the title of historian.</p>
<p>By the united aid of medals, manuscripts, and inscriptions, I am enabled
to say, positively, that the borough of Vondervotteimittiss has existed,
from its origin, in precisely the same condition which it at present
preserves. Of the date of this origin, however, I grieve that I can only
speak with that species of indefinite definiteness which mathematicians
are, at times, forced to put up with in certain algebraic formulae. The
date, I may thus say, in regard to the remoteness of its antiquity, cannot
be less than any assignable quantity whatsoever.</p>
<p>Touching the derivation of the name Vondervotteimittiss, I confess myself,
with sorrow, equally at fault. Among a multitude of opinions upon this
delicate point—some acute, some learned, some sufficiently the
reverse—I am able to select nothing which ought to be considered
satisfactory. Perhaps the idea of Grogswigg—nearly coincident with
that of Kroutaplenttey—is to be cautiously preferred.—It runs:—“Vondervotteimittis—Vonder,
lege Donder—Votteimittis, quasi und Bleitziz—Bleitziz obsol:—pro
Blitzen.” This derivative, to say the truth, is still countenanced by some
traces of the electric fluid evident on the summit of the steeple of the
House of the Town-Council. I do not choose, however, to commit myself on a
theme of such importance, and must refer the reader desirous of
information to the “Oratiunculae de Rebus Praeter-Veteris,” of Dundergutz.
See, also, Blunderbuzzard “De Derivationibus,” pp. 27 to 5010, Folio,
Gothic edit., Red and Black character, Catch-word and No Cypher; wherein
consult, also, marginal notes in the autograph of Stuffundpuff, with the
Sub-Commentaries of Gruntundguzzell.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the obscurity which thus envelops the date of the
foundation of Vondervotteimittis, and the derivation of its name, there
can be no doubt, as I said before, that it has always existed as we find
it at this epoch. The oldest man in the borough can remember not the
slightest difference in the appearance of any portion of it; and, indeed,
the very suggestion of such a possibility is considered an insult. The
site of the village is in a perfectly circular valley, about a quarter of
a mile in circumference, and entirely surrounded by gentle hills, over
whose summit the people have never yet ventured to pass. For this they
assign the very good reason that they do not believe there is anything at
all on the other side.</p>
<p>Round the skirts of the valley (which is quite level, and paved throughout
with flat tiles), extends a continuous row of sixty little houses. These,
having their backs on the hills, must look, of course, to the centre of
the plain, which is just sixty yards from the front door of each dwelling.
Every house has a small garden before it, with a circular path, a
sun-dial, and twenty-four cabbages. The buildings themselves are so
precisely alike, that one can in no manner be distinguished from the
other. Owing to the vast antiquity, the style of architecture is somewhat
odd, but it is not for that reason the less strikingly picturesque. They
are fashioned of hard-burned little bricks, red, with black ends, so that
the walls look like a chess-board upon a great scale. The gables are
turned to the front, and there are cornices, as big as all the rest of the
house, over the eaves and over the main doors. The windows are narrow and
deep, with very tiny panes and a great deal of sash. On the roof is a vast
quantity of tiles with long curly ears. The woodwork, throughout, is of a
dark hue and there is much carving about it, with but a trifling variety
of pattern for, time out of mind, the carvers of Vondervotteimittiss have
never been able to carve more than two objects—a time-piece and a
cabbage. But these they do exceedingly well, and intersperse them, with
singular ingenuity, wherever they find room for the chisel.</p>
<p>The dwellings are as much alike inside as out, and the furniture is all
upon one plan. The floors are of square tiles, the chairs and tables of
black-looking wood with thin crooked legs and puppy feet. The mantelpieces
are wide and high, and have not only time-pieces and cabbages sculptured
over the front, but a real time-piece, which makes a prodigious ticking,
on the top in the middle, with a flower-pot containing a cabbage standing
on each extremity by way of outrider. Between each cabbage and the
time-piece, again, is a little China man having a large stomach with a
great round hole in it, through which is seen the dial-plate of a watch.</p>
<p>The fireplaces are large and deep, with fierce crooked-looking fire-dogs.
There is constantly a rousing fire, and a huge pot over it, full of
sauer-kraut and pork, to which the good woman of the house is always busy
in attending. She is a little fat old lady, with blue eyes and a red face,
and wears a huge cap like a sugar-loaf, ornamented with purple and yellow
ribbons. Her dress is of orange-colored linsey-woolsey, made very full
behind and very short in the waist—and indeed very short in other
respects, not reaching below the middle of her leg. This is somewhat
thick, and so are her ankles, but she has a fine pair of green stockings
to cover them. Her shoes—of pink leather—are fastened each
with a bunch of yellow ribbons puckered up in the shape of a cabbage. In
her left hand she has a little heavy Dutch watch; in her right she wields
a ladle for the sauerkraut and pork. By her side there stands a fat tabby
cat, with a gilt toy-repeater tied to its tail, which “the boys” have
there fastened by way of a quiz.</p>
<p>The boys themselves are, all three of them, in the garden attending the
pig. They are each two feet in height. They have three-cornered cocked
hats, purple waistcoats reaching down to their thighs, buckskin
knee-breeches, red stockings, heavy shoes with big silver buckles, long
surtout coats with large buttons of mother-of-pearl. Each, too, has a pipe
in his mouth, and a little dumpy watch in his right hand. He takes a puff
and a look, and then a look and a puff. The pig—which is corpulent
and lazy—is occupied now in picking up the stray leaves that fall
from the cabbages, and now in giving a kick behind at the gilt repeater,
which the urchins have also tied to his tail in order to make him look as
handsome as the cat.</p>
<p>Right at the front door, in a high-backed leather-bottomed armed chair,
with crooked legs and puppy feet like the tables, is seated the old man of
the house himself. He is an exceedingly puffy little old gentleman, with
big circular eyes and a huge double chin. His dress resembles that of the
boys—and I need say nothing farther about it. All the difference is,
that his pipe is somewhat bigger than theirs and he can make a greater
smoke. Like them, he has a watch, but he carries his watch in his pocket.
To say the truth, he has something of more importance than a watch to
attend to—and what that is, I shall presently explain. He sits with
his right leg upon his left knee, wears a grave countenance, and always
keeps one of his eyes, at least, resolutely bent upon a certain remarkable
object in the centre of the plain.</p>
<p>This object is situated in the steeple of the House of the Town Council.
The Town Council are all very little, round, oily, intelligent men, with
big saucer eyes and fat double chins, and have their coats much longer and
their shoe-buckles much bigger than the ordinary inhabitants of
Vondervotteimittiss. Since my sojourn in the borough, they have had
several special meetings, and have adopted these three important
resolutions:</p>
<p>“That it is wrong to alter the good old course of things:”</p>
<p>“That there is nothing tolerable out of Vondervotteimittiss:” and—</p>
<p>“That we will stick by our clocks and our cabbages.”</p>
<p>Above the session-room of the Council is the steeple, and in the steeple
is the belfry, where exists, and has existed time out of mind, the pride
and wonder of the village—the great clock of the borough of
Vondervotteimittiss. And this is the object to which the eyes of the old
gentlemen are turned who sit in the leather-bottomed arm-chairs.</p>
<p>The great clock has seven faces—one in each of the seven sides of
the steeple—so that it can be readily seen from all quarters. Its
faces are large and white, and its hands heavy and black. There is a
belfry-man whose sole duty is to attend to it; but this duty is the most
perfect of sinecures—for the clock of Vondervotteimittis was never
yet known to have anything the matter with it. Until lately, the bare
supposition of such a thing was considered heretical. From the remotest
period of antiquity to which the archives have reference, the hours have
been regularly struck by the big bell. And, indeed the case was just the
same with all the other clocks and watches in the borough. Never was such
a place for keeping the true time. When the large clapper thought proper
to say “Twelve o’clock!” all its obedient followers opened their throats
simultaneously, and responded like a very echo. In short, the good
burghers were fond of their sauer-kraut, but then they were proud of their
clocks.</p>
<p>All people who hold sinecure offices are held in more or less respect, and
as the belfry—man of Vondervotteimittiss has the most perfect of
sinecures, he is the most perfectly respected of any man in the world. He
is the chief dignitary of the borough, and the very pigs look up to him
with a sentiment of reverence. His coat-tail is very far longer—his
pipe, his shoe-buckles, his eyes, and his stomach, very far bigger—than
those of any other old gentleman in the village; and as to his chin, it is
not only double, but triple.</p>
<p>I have thus painted the happy estate of Vondervotteimittiss: alas, that so
fair a picture should ever experience a reverse!</p>
<p>There has been long a saying among the wisest inhabitants, that “no good
can come from over the hills”; and it really seemed that the words had in
them something of the spirit of prophecy. It wanted five minutes of noon,
on the day before yesterday, when there appeared a very odd-looking object
on the summit of the ridge of the eastward. Such an occurrence, of course,
attracted universal attention, and every little old gentleman who sat in a
leather-bottomed arm-chair turned one of his eyes with a stare of dismay
upon the phenomenon, still keeping the other upon the clock in the
steeple.</p>
<p>By the time that it wanted only three minutes to noon, the droll object in
question was perceived to be a very diminutive foreign-looking young man.
He descended the hills at a great rate, so that every body had soon a good
look at him. He was really the most finicky little personage that had ever
been seen in Vondervotteimittiss. His countenance was of a dark
snuff-color, and he had a long hooked nose, pea eyes, a wide mouth, and an
excellent set of teeth, which latter he seemed anxious of displaying, as
he was grinning from ear to ear. What with mustachios and whiskers, there
was none of the rest of his face to be seen. His head was uncovered, and
his hair neatly done up in papillotes. His dress was a tight-fitting
swallow-tailed black coat (from one of whose pockets dangled a vast length
of white handkerchief), black kerseymere knee-breeches, black stockings,
and stumpy-looking pumps, with huge bunches of black satin ribbon for
bows. Under one arm he carried a huge <i>chapeau-de-bras</i>, and under the other
a fiddle nearly five times as big as himself. In his left hand was a gold
snuff-box, from which, as he capered down the hill, cutting all manner of
fantastic steps, he took snuff incessantly with an air of the greatest
possible self-satisfaction. God bless me!—here was a sight for the
honest burghers of Vondervotteimittiss!</p>
<p>To speak plainly, the fellow had, in spite of his grinning, an audacious
and sinister kind of face; and as he curvetted right into the village, the
old stumpy appearance of his pumps excited no little suspicion; and many a
burgher who beheld him that day would have given a trifle for a peep
beneath the white cambric handkerchief which hung so obtrusively from the
pocket of his swallow-tailed coat. But what mainly occasioned a righteous
indignation was, that the scoundrelly popinjay, while he cut a fandango
here, and a whirligig there, did not seem to have the remotest idea in the
world of such a thing as keeping time in his steps.</p>
<p>The good people of the borough had scarcely a chance, however, to get
their eyes thoroughly open, when, just as it wanted half a minute of noon,
the rascal bounced, as I say, right into the midst of them; gave a <i>chassez</i>
here, and a <i>balancez</i> there; and then, after a <i>pirouette</i> and a
<i>pas-de-zephyr</i>, pigeon-winged himself right up into the belfry of the House
of the Town Council, where the wonder-stricken belfry-man sat smoking in a
state of dignity and dismay. But the little chap seized him at once by the
nose; gave it a swing and a pull; clapped the big <i>chapeau-de-bras</i> upon his
head; knocked it down over his eyes and mouth; and then, lifting up the
big fiddle, beat him with it so long and so soundly, that what with the
belfry-man being so fat, and the fiddle being so hollow, you would have
sworn that there was a regiment of double-bass drummers all beating the
devil’s tattoo up in the belfry of the steeple of Vondervotteimittiss.</p>
<p>There is no knowing to what desperate act of vengeance this unprincipled
attack might have aroused the inhabitants, but for the important fact that
it now wanted only half a second of noon. The bell was about to strike,
and it was a matter of absolute and pre-eminent necessity that every body
should look well at his watch. It was evident, however, that just at this
moment the fellow in the steeple was doing something that he had no
business to do with the clock. But as it now began to strike, nobody had
any time to attend to his manœuvres, for they had all to count the
strokes of the bell as it sounded.</p>
<p>“One!” said the clock.</p>
<p>“Von!” echoed every little old gentleman in every leather-bottomed
arm-chair in Vondervotteimittiss. “Von!” said his watch also; “von!” said
the watch of his vrow; and “von!” said the watches of the boys, and the
little gilt repeaters on the tails of the cat and pig.</p>
<p>“Two!” continued the big bell; and</p>
<p>“Doo!” repeated all the repeaters.</p>
<p>“Three! Four! Five! Six! Seven! Eight! Nine! Ten!” said the bell.</p>
<p>“Dree! Vour! Fibe! Sax! Seben! Aight! Noin! Den!” answered the others.</p>
<p>“Eleven!” said the big one.</p>
<p>“Eleben!” assented the little ones.</p>
<p>“Twelve!” said the bell.</p>
<p>“Dvelf!” they replied perfectly satisfied, and dropping their voices.</p>
<p>“Und dvelf it is!” said all the little old gentlemen, putting up their
watches. But the big bell had not done with them yet.</p>
<p>“Thirteen!” said he.</p>
<p>“Der Teufel!” gasped the little old gentlemen, turning pale, dropping
their pipes, and putting down all their right legs from over their left
knees.</p>
<p>“Der Teufel!” groaned they, “Dirteen! Dirteen!!—Mein Gott, it is
Dirteen o’clock!!”</p>
<p>Why attempt to describe the terrible scene which ensued? All
Vondervotteimittiss flew at once into a lamentable state of uproar.</p>
<p>“Vot is cum’d to mein pelly?” roared all the boys—“I’ve been ongry
for dis hour!”</p>
<p>“Vot is com’d to mein kraut?” screamed all the vrows, “It has been done to
rags for this hour!”</p>
<p>“Vot is cum’d to mein pipe?” swore all the little old gentlemen, “Donder
and Blitzen; it has been smoked out for dis hour!”—and they filled
them up again in a great rage, and sinking back in their arm-chairs,
puffed away so fast and so fiercely that the whole valley was immediately
filled with impenetrable smoke.</p>
<p>Meantime the cabbages all turned very red in the face, and it seemed as if
old Nick himself had taken possession of every thing in the shape of a
timepiece. The clocks carved upon the furniture took to dancing as if
bewitched, while those upon the mantel-pieces could scarcely contain
themselves for fury, and kept such a continual striking of thirteen, and
such a frisking and wriggling of their pendulums as was really horrible to
see. But, worse than all, neither the cats nor the pigs could put up any
longer with the behavior of the little repeaters tied to their tails, and
resented it by scampering all over the place, scratching and poking, and
squeaking and screeching, and caterwauling and squalling, and flying into
the faces, and running under the petticoats of the people, and creating
altogether the most abominable din and confusion which it is possible for
a reasonable person to conceive. And to make matters still more
distressing, the rascally little scape-grace in the steeple was evidently
exerting himself to the utmost. Every now and then one might catch a
glimpse of the scoundrel through the smoke. There he sat in the belfry
upon the belfry-man, who was lying flat upon his back. In his teeth the
villain held the bell-rope, which he kept jerking about with his head,
raising such a clatter that my ears ring again even to think of it. On his
lap lay the big fiddle, at which he was scraping, out of all time and
tune, with both hands, making a great show, the nincompoop! of playing
“Judy O’Flannagan and Paddy O’Rafferty.”</p>
<p>Affairs being thus miserably situated, I left the place in disgust, and
now appeal for aid to all lovers of correct time and fine kraut. Let us
proceed in a body to the borough, and restore the ancient order of things
in Vondervotteimittiss by ejecting that little fellow from the steeple.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.2"></SPAN>LIONIZING</h2>
<p class="letter">
—— all people went<br/>
Upon their ten toes in wild wonderment.<br/>
—<i>Bishop Hall’s Satires</i>.</p>
<p>I am—that is to say I was—a great man; but I am neither the
author of Junius nor the man in the mask; for my name, I believe, is
Robert Jones, and I was born somewhere in the city of Fum-Fudge.</p>
<p>The first action of my life was the taking hold of my nose with both
hands. My mother saw this and called me a genius—my father wept for joy
and presented me with a treatise on Nosology. This I mastered before I was
breeched.</p>
<p>I now began to feel my way in the science, and soon came to understand
that, provided a man had a nose sufficiently conspicuous, he might, by
merely following it, arrive at a Lionship. But my attention was not
confined to theories alone. Every morning I gave my proboscis a couple of
pulls and swallowed a half dozen of drams.</p>
<p>When I came of age my father asked me, one day, if I would step with him
into his study.</p>
<p>“My son,” said he, when we were seated, “what is the chief end of your
existence?”</p>
<p>“My father,” I answered, “it is the study of Nosology.”</p>
<p>“And what, Robert,” he inquired, “is Nosology?”</p>
<p>“Sir,” I said, “it is the science of Noses.”</p>
<p>“And can you tell me,” he demanded, “what is the meaning of a nose?”</p>
<p>“A nose, my father;” I replied, greatly softened, “has been variously
defined by about a thousand different authors.” [Here I pulled out my
watch.] “It is now noon or thereabouts—we shall have time enough to
get through with them all before midnight. To commence then:—The
nose, according to Bartholinus, is that protuberance—that bump—that
excrescence—that—”</p>
<p>“Will do, Robert,” interrupted the good old gentleman. “I am thunderstruck
at the extent of your information—I am positively—upon my
soul.” [Here he closed his eyes and placed his hand upon his heart.] “Come
here!” [Here he took me by the arm.] “Your education may now be considered
as finished—it is high time you should scuffle for yourself—and
you cannot do a better thing than merely follow your nose—so—so—so—”
[Here he kicked me downstairs and out of the door.]—“so get out of
my house, and God bless you!”</p>
<p>As I felt within me the divine afflatus, I considered this accident rather
fortunate than otherwise. I resolved to be guided by the paternal advice.
I determined to follow my nose. I gave it a pull or two upon the spot, and
wrote a pamphlet on Nosology forthwith.</p>
<p>All Fum-Fudge was in an uproar.</p>
<p>“Wonderful genius!” said the Quarterly.</p>
<p>“Superb physiologist!” said the Westminster.</p>
<p>“Clever fellow!” said the Foreign.</p>
<p>“Fine writer!” said the Edinburgh.</p>
<p>“Profound thinker!” said the Dublin.</p>
<p>“Great man!” said Bentley.</p>
<p>“Divine soul!” said Fraser.</p>
<p>“One of us!” said Blackwood.</p>
<p>“Who can he be?” said Mrs. Bas-Bleu.</p>
<p>“What can he be?” said big Miss Bas-Bleu.</p>
<p>“Where can he be?” said little Miss Bas-Bleu.—But I paid these
people no attention whatever—I just stepped into the shop of an
artist.</p>
<p>The Duchess of Bless-my-Soul was sitting for her portrait; the Marquis of
So-and-So was holding the Duchess’ poodle; the Earl of This-and-That was
flirting with her salts; and his Royal Highness of Touch-me-Not was
leaning upon the back of her chair.</p>
<p>I approached the artist and turned up my nose.</p>
<p>“Oh, beautiful!” sighed her Grace.</p>
<p>“Oh my!” lisped the Marquis.</p>
<p>“Oh, shocking!” groaned the Earl.</p>
<p>“Oh, abominable!” growled his Royal Highness.</p>
<p>“What will you take for it?” asked the artist.</p>
<p>“For his nose!” shouted her Grace.</p>
<p>“A thousand pounds,” said I, sitting down.</p>
<p>“A thousand pounds?” inquired the artist, musingly.</p>
<p>“A thousand pounds,” said I.</p>
<p>“Beautiful!” said he, entranced.</p>
<p>“A thousand pounds,” said I.</p>
<p>“Do you warrant it?” he asked, turning the nose to the light.</p>
<p>“I do,” said I, blowing it well.</p>
<p>“Is it quite original?” he inquired; touching it with reverence.</p>
<p>“Humph!” said I, twisting it to one side.</p>
<p>“Has no copy been taken?” he demanded, surveying it through a microscope.</p>
<p>“None,” said I, turning it up.</p>
<p>“Admirable!” he ejaculated, thrown quite off his guard by the beauty of
the manœuvre.</p>
<p>“A thousand pounds,” said I.</p>
<p>“A thousand pounds?” said he.</p>
<p>“Precisely,” said I.</p>
<p>“A thousand pounds?” said he.</p>
<p>“Just so,” said I.</p>
<p>“You shall have them,” said he. “What a piece of virtu!” So he drew me a
check upon the spot, and took a sketch of my nose. I engaged rooms in
Jermyn street, and sent her Majesty the ninety-ninth edition of the
“Nosology,” with a portrait of the proboscis.—That sad little rake,
the Prince of Wales, invited me to dinner.</p>
<p>We were all lions and <i>recherchés</i>.</p>
<p>There was a modern Platonist. He quoted Porphyry, Iamblicus, Plotinus,
Proclus, Hierocles, Maximus Tyrius, and Syrianus.</p>
<p>There was a human-perfectibility man. He quoted Turgôt, Price, Priestly,
Condorcêt, De Staël, and the “Ambitious Student in Ill Health.”</p>
<p>There was Sir Positive Paradox. He observed that all fools were
philosophers, and that all philosophers were fools.</p>
<p>There was Æstheticus Ethix. He spoke of fire, unity, and atoms; bi-part
and pre-existent soul; affinity and discord; primitive intelligence and
homoömeria.</p>
<p>There was Theologos Theology. He talked of Eusebius and Arianus; heresy
and the Council of Nice; Puseyism and consubstantialism; Homousios and
Homouioisios.</p>
<p>There was Fricassée from the Rocher de Cancale. He mentioned Muriton of
red tongue; cauliflowers with <i>velouté</i> sauce; veal <i>à la St</i>. Menehoult;
marinade <i>à la</i> St. Florentin; and orange jellies <i>en mosaïques</i>.</p>
<p>There was Bibulus O’Bumper. He touched upon Latour and Markbrünnen; upon
Mousseux and Chambertin; upon Richbourg and St. George; upon Haubrion,
Leonville, and Medoc; upon Barac and Preignac; upon Grâve, upon Sauterne,
upon Lafitte, and upon St. Peray. He shook his head at Clos de Vougeot,
and told, with his eyes shut, the difference between Sherry and
Amontillado.</p>
<p>There was Signor Tintontintino from Florence. He discoursed of Cimabué,
Arpino, Carpaccio, and Argostino—of the gloom of Caravaggio, of the
amenity of Albano, of the colors of Titian, of the frows of Rubens, and of
the waggeries of Jan Steen.</p>
<p>There was the President of the Fum-Fudge University. He was of opinion
that the moon was called Bendis in Thrace, Bubastis in Egypt, Dian in
Rome, and Artemis in Greece.</p>
<p>There was a Grand Turk from Stamboul. He could not help thinking that the
angels were horses, cocks, and bulls; that somebody in the sixth heaven
had seventy thousand heads; and that the earth was supported by a
sky-blue cow with an incalculable number of green horns.</p>
<p>There was Delphinus Polyglott. He told us what had become of the
eighty-three lost tragedies of Æschylus; of the fifty-four orations of
Isæus; of the three hundred and ninety-one speeches of Lysias; of the
hundred and eighty treatises of Theophrastus; of the eighth book of the
conic sections of Apollonius; of Pindar’s hymns and dithyrambics; and of
the five and forty tragedies of Homer Junior.</p>
<p>There was Ferdinand Fitz-Fossillus Feltspar. He informed us all about
internal fires and tertiary formations; about aëriforms, fluidiforms, and
solidiforms; about quartz and marl; about schist and schorl; about gypsum
and trap; about talc and calc; about blende and horn-blende; about
mica-slate and pudding-stone; about cyanite and lepidolite; about hematite
and tremolite; about antimony and calcedony; about manganese and whatever
you please.</p>
<p>There was myself. I spoke of myself;—of myself, of myself, of
myself;—of Nosology, of my pamphlet, and of myself. I turned up my
nose, and I spoke of myself.</p>
<p>“Marvellous clever man!” said the Prince.</p>
<p>“Superb!” said his guests;—and next morning her Grace of
Bless-my-Soul paid me a visit.</p>
<p>“Will you go to Almack’s, pretty creature?” she said, tapping me under the
chin.</p>
<p>“Upon honor,” said I.</p>
<p>“Nose and all?” she asked.</p>
<p>“As I live,” I replied.</p>
<p>“Here then is a card, my life. Shall I say you will be there?”</p>
<p>“Dear Duchess, with all my heart.”</p>
<p>“Pshaw, no!—but with all your nose?”</p>
<p>“Every bit of it, my love,” said I:—so I gave it a twist or two, and found
myself at Almack’s. The rooms were crowded to suffocation.</p>
<p>“He is coming!” said somebody on the staircase.</p>
<p>“He is coming!” said somebody farther up.</p>
<p>“He is coming!” said somebody farther still.</p>
<p>“He is come!” exclaimed the Duchess. “He is come, the little love!”—and,
seizing me firmly by both hands, she kissed me thrice upon the nose. A
marked sensation immediately ensued.</p>
<p>“<i>Diavolo!</i>” cried Count Capricornutti.</p>
<p>“<i>Dios guarda!</i>” muttered Don Stiletto.</p>
<p>“<i>Mille tonnerres!</i>” ejaculated the Prince de Grenouille.</p>
<p>“<i>Tousand teufel!</i>” growled the Elector of Bluddennuff.</p>
<p>It was not to be borne. I grew angry. I turned short upon Bluddennuff.</p>
<p>“Sir!” said I to him, “you are a baboon.”</p>
<p>“Sir,” he replied, after a pause, “<i>Donner und Blitzen!</i>”</p>
<p>This was all that could be desired. We exchanged cards. At Chalk-Farm, the
next morning, I shot off his nose—and then called upon my friends.</p>
<p>“<i>Bête!</i>” said the first.</p>
<p>“Fool!” said the second.</p>
<p>“Dolt!” said the third.</p>
<p>“Ass!” said the fourth.</p>
<p>“Ninny!” said the fifth.</p>
<p>“Noodle!” said the sixth.</p>
<p>“Be off!” said the seventh.</p>
<p>At all this I felt mortified, and so called upon my father.</p>
<p>“Father,” I asked, “what is the chief end of my existence?”</p>
<p>“My son,” he replied, “it is still the study of Nosology; but in hitting
the Elector upon the nose you have overshot your mark. You have a fine
nose, it is true; but then Bluddennuff has none. You are damned, and he
has become the hero of the day. I grant you that in Fum-Fudge the
greatness of a lion is in proportion to the size of his proboscis—but,
good heavens! there is no competing with a lion who has no proboscis at
all.”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.3"></SPAN> X-ING A PARAGRAB</h2>
<p>As it is well known that the ‘wise men’ came ‘from the East,’ and as Mr.
Touch-and-go Bullet-head came from the East, it follows that Mr.
Bullet-head was a wise man; and if collateral proof of the matter be
needed, here we have it—Mr. B. was an editor. Irascibility was his
sole foible, for in fact the obstinacy of which men accused him was
anything but his foible, since he justly considered it his forte. It was
his strong point—his virtue; and it would have required all the
logic of a Brownson to convince him that it was ‘anything else.’</p>
<p>I have shown that Touch-and-go Bullet-head was a wise man; and the only
occasion on which he did not prove infallible, was when, abandoning that
legitimate home for all wise men, the East, he migrated to the city of
Alexander-the-Great-o-nopolis, or some place of a similar title, out West.</p>
<p>I must do him the justice to say, however, that when he made up his mind
finally to settle in that town, it was under the impression that no
newspaper, and consequently no editor, existed in that particular section
of the country. In establishing ‘The Tea-Pot’ he expected to have the
field all to himself. I feel confident he never would have dreamed of
taking up his residence in Alexander-the-Great-o-nopolis had he been aware
that, in Alexander-the-Great-o-nopolis, there lived a gentleman named John
Smith (if I rightly remember), who for many years had there quietly grown
fat in editing and publishing the ‘Alexander-the-Great-o-nopolis Gazette.’
It was solely, therefore, on account of having been misinformed, that Mr.
Bullet-head found himself in Alex—— suppose we call it Nopolis, ‘for short’—but,
as he did find himself there, he determined to keep up his character for
obst—for firmness, and remain. So remain he did; and he did more; he
unpacked his press, type, etc., etc., rented an office exactly opposite to
that of the ‘Gazette,’ and, on the third morning after his arrival, issued
the first number of ‘The Alexan’—that is to say, of ‘The Nopolis
Tea-Pot’—as nearly as I can recollect, this was the name of the new
paper.</p>
<p>The leading article, I must admit, was brilliant—not to say severe.
It was especially bitter about things in general—and as for the
editor of ‘The Gazette,’ he was torn all to pieces in particular. Some of
Bullet-head’s remarks were really so fiery that I have always, since that
time, been forced to look upon John Smith, who is still alive, in the
light of a salamander. I cannot pretend to give all the ‘Tea-Pot’s’
paragraphs verbatim, but one of them runs thus:</p>
<p>‘Oh, yes!—Oh, we perceive! Oh, no doubt! The editor over the way is
a genius—O, my! Oh, goodness, gracious!—what is this world
coming to? Oh, tempora! Oh, Moses!’</p>
<p>A philippic at once so caustic and so classical, alighted like a bombshell
among the hitherto peaceful citizens of Nopolis. Groups of excited
individuals gathered at the corners of the streets. Every one awaited,
with heartfelt anxiety, the reply of the dignified Smith. Next morning it
appeared as follows:</p>
<p>‘We quote from “The Tea-Pot” of yesterday the subjoined paragraph: “Oh,
yes! Oh, we perceive! Oh, no doubt! Oh, my! Oh, goodness! Oh, tempora! Oh,
Moses!” Why, the fellow is all O! That accounts for his reasoning in a
circle, and explains why there is neither beginning nor end to him, nor to
anything he says. We really do not believe the vagabond can write a word
that hasn’t an O in it. Wonder if this O-ing is a habit of his? By-the-by,
he came away from Down-East in a great hurry. Wonder if he O’s as much
there as he does here? “O! it is pitiful.”’</p>
<p>The indignation of Mr. Bullet-head at these scandalous insinuations, I
shall not attempt to describe. On the eel-skinning principle, however, he
did not seem to be so much incensed at the attack upon his integrity as
one might have imagined. It was the sneer at his style that drove him to
desperation. What!—he Touch-and-go Bullet-head!—not able to
write a word without an O in it! He would soon let the jackanapes see that
he was mistaken. Yes! he would let him see how much he was mistaken, the
puppy! He, Touch-and-go Bullet-head, of Frogpondium, would let Mr. John
Smith perceive that he, Bullet-head, could indite, if it so pleased him, a
whole paragraph—aye! a whole article—in which that
contemptible vowel should not once—not even once—make its
appearance. But no;—that would be yielding a point to the said John
Smith. He, Bullet-head, would make no alteration in his style, to suit the
caprices of any Mr. Smith in Christendom. Perish so vile a thought! The O
forever; He would persist in the O. He would be as O-wy as O-wy could be.</p>
<p>Burning with the chivalry of this determination, the great Touch-and-go,
in the next ‘Tea-Pot,’ came out merely with this simple but resolute
paragraph, in reference to this unhappy affair:</p>
<p>‘The editor of the “Tea-Pot” has the honor of advising the editor of the
“Gazette” that he (the “Tea-Pot”) will take an opportunity in tomorrow
morning’s paper, of convincing him (the “Gazette”) that he (the “Tea-Pot”)
both can and will be <i>his own master</i>, as regards style;—he (the “Tea-Pot”)
intending to show him (the “Gazette”) the supreme, and indeed the
withering contempt with which the criticism of him (the “Gazette”)
inspires the independent bosom of him (the “Tea-Pot”) by composing for the
especial gratification (?) of him (the “Gazette”) a leading article, of
some extent, in which the beautiful vowel—the emblem of Eternity—yet
so offensive to the hyper-exquisite delicacy of him (the “Gazette”) shall
most certainly not be avoided by his (the “Gazette’s”) most obedient,
humble servant, the “Tea-Pot.” “So much for Buckingham!”’</p>
<p>In fulfilment of the awful threat thus darkly intimated rather than
decidedly enunciated, the great Bullet-head, turning a deaf ear to all
entreaties for ‘copy,’ and simply requesting his foreman to ‘go to the d——l,’
when he (the foreman) assured him (the ‘Tea-Pot’!) that it was high time
to ‘go to press’: turning a deaf ear to everything, I say, the great
Bullet-head sat up until day-break, consuming the midnight oil, and
absorbed in the composition of the really unparalleled paragraph, which
follows:—</p>
<p>‘So ho, John! how now? Told you so, you know. Don’t crow, another time,
before you’re out of the woods! Does your mother know you’re out? Oh, no,
no!—so go home at once, now, John, to your odious old woods of
Concord! Go home to your woods, old owl—go! You won’t! Oh, poh, poh, John
don’t do so! You’ve <i>got</i> to go, you know! So go at once, and don’t go slow,
for nobody owns you here, you know! Oh! John, John, if you don’t go you’re
no homo—no! You’re only a fowl, an owl; a cow, a sow; a doll,
a poll; a poor, old, good-for-nothing-to-nobody, log, dog, hog, or frog,
come out of a Concord bog. Cool, now—cool! Do be cool, you fool!
None of your crowing, old cock! Don’t frown so—don’t! Don’t hollo,
nor howl nor growl, nor bow-wow-wow! Good Lord, John, how you do look!
Told you so, you know—but stop rolling your goose of an old poll
about so, and go and drown your sorrows in a bowl!’</p>
<p>Exhausted, very naturally, by so stupendous an effort, the great
Touch-and-go could attend to nothing farther that night. Firmly,
composedly, yet with an air of conscious power, he handed his MS. to the
devil in waiting, and then, walking leisurely home, retired, with
ineffable dignity to bed.</p>
<p>Meantime the devil, to whom the copy was entrusted, ran up stairs to his
‘case,’ in an unutterable hurry, and forthwith made a commencement at
‘setting’ the MS. ‘up.’</p>
<p>In the first place, of course,—as the opening word was ‘So,’—he
made a plunge into the capital S hole and came out in triumph with a
capital S. Elated by this success, he immediately threw himself upon the
little-o box with a blindfold impetuosity—but who shall describe his
horror when his fingers came up without the anticipated letter in their
clutch? who shall paint his astonishment and rage at perceiving, as he
rubbed his knuckles, that he had been only thumping them to no purpose,
against the bottom of an empty box. Not a single little-o was in the
little-o hole; and, glancing fearfully at the capital-O partition, he
found <i>that</i>, to his extreme terror, in a precisely similar predicament. Awe-stricken,
his first impulse was to rush to the foreman.</p>
<p>‘Sir!’ said he, gasping for breath, ‘I can’t never set up nothing without
no o’s.’</p>
<p>‘What do you mean by that?’ growled the foreman, who was in a very ill
humor at being kept so late.</p>
<p>‘Why, sir, there beant an o in the office, neither a big un nor a little
un!’</p>
<p>‘What—what the d—l has become of all that were in the case?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know, sir,’ said the boy, ‘but one of them ere “G’zette” devils
is bin prowling ’bout here all night, and I spect he’s gone and cabbaged
‘em every one.’</p>
<p>‘Dod rot him! I haven’t a doubt of it,’ replied the foreman, getting
purple with rage ‘but I tell you what you do, Bob, that’s a good boy—you
go over the first chance you get and hook every one of their i’s and (d——n
them!) their izzards.’</p>
<p>‘Jist so,’ replied Bob, with a wink and a frown—‘I’ll be into ‘em,
I’ll let ‘em know a thing or two; but in de meantime, that ere paragrab?
Mus go in to-night, you know—else there’ll be the d—l to pay, and—’</p>
<p>‘And not a bit of pitch hot,’ interrupted the foreman, with a deep sigh,
and an emphasis on the ‘bit.’ ‘Is it a long paragraph, Bob?’</p>
<p>‘Shouldn’t call it a <i>wery</i> long paragrab,’ said Bob.</p>
<p>‘Ah, well, then! do the best you can with it! We must get to press,’ said
the foreman, who was over head and ears in work; ‘just stick in some other
letter for o; nobody’s going to read the fellow’s trash anyhow.’</p>
<p>‘Wery well,’ replied Bob, ‘here goes it!’ and off he hurried to his case,
muttering as he went: ‘Considdeble vell, them ere expressions, perticcler
for a man as doesn’t swar. So I’s to gouge out all their eyes, eh? and d-n
all their gizzards! Vell! this here’s the chap as is just able for to do
it.’ The fact is that although Bob was but twelve years old and four feet
high, he was equal to any amount of fight, in a small way.</p>
<p>The exigency here described is by no means of rare occurrence in
printing-offices; and I cannot tell how to account for it, but the fact is
indisputable, that when the exigency does occur, it almost always happens
that x is adopted as a substitute for the letter deficient. The true
reason, perhaps, is that x is rather the most superabundant letter in the
cases, or at least was so in the old times—long enough to render the
substitution in question an habitual thing with printers. As for Bob, he
would have considered it heretical to employ any other character, in a
case of this kind, than the x to which he had been accustomed.</p>
<p>‘I shell have to x this ere paragrab,’ said he to himself, as he read it
over in astonishment, ‘but it’s jest about the awfulest o-wy paragrab I
ever did see’: so x it he did, unflinchingly, and to press it went x-ed.</p>
<p>Next morning the population of Nopolis were taken all aback by reading in
‘The Tea-Pot,’ the following extraordinary leader:</p>
<p>‘Sx hx, Jxhn! hxw nxw? Txld yxu sx, yxu knxw. Dxn’t crxw, anxther time,
befxre yxu’re xut xf the wxxds! Dxes yxur mxther knxw yxu’re xut? Xh, nx,
nx!—sx gx hxme at xnce, nxw, Jxhn, tx yxur xdixus xld wxxds xf
Cxncxrd! Gx hxme tx yxur wxxds, xld xwl,—gx! Yxu wxn’t? Xh, pxh,
pxh, Jxhn, dxn’t dx sx! Yxu’ve gxt tx gx, yxu knxw, sx gx at xnce, and
dxn’t gx slxw; fxr nxbxdy xwns yxu here, yxu knxw. Xh, Jxhn, Jxhn, Jxhn,
if yxu dxn’t gx yxu’re nx hxmx—nx! Yxu’re xnly a fxwl, an xwl; a
cxw, a sxw; a dxll, a pxll; a pxxr xld gxxd-fxr-nxthing-tx-nxbxdy, lxg,
dxg, hxg, xr frxg, cxme xut xf a Cxncxrd bxg. Cxxl, nxw—cxxl! Dx be
cxxl, yxu fxxl! Nxne xf yxur crxwing, xld cxck! Dxn’t frxwn sx—dxn’t!
Dxn’t hxllx, nxr hxwl, nxr grxwl, nxr bxw-wxw-wxw! Gxxd Lxrd, Jxhn, hxw
yxu dx lxxk! Txld yxu sx, yxu knxw,—but stxp rxlling yxur gxxse xf
an xld pxll abxut sx, and gx and drxwn yxur sxrrxws in a bxwl!’</p>
<p>The uproar occasioned by this mystical and cabalistical article, is not to
be conceived. The first definite idea entertained by the populace was,
that some diabolical treason lay concealed in the hieroglyphics; and there
was a general rush to Bullet-head’s residence, for the purpose of riding
him on a rail; but that gentleman was nowhere to be found. He had
vanished, no one could tell how; and not even the ghost of him has ever
been seen since.</p>
<p>Unable to discover its legitimate object, the popular fury at length
subsided; leaving behind it, by way of sediment, quite a medley of opinion
about this unhappy affair.</p>
<p>One gentleman thought the whole an X-ellent joke.</p>
<p>Another said that, indeed, Bullet-head had shown much X-uberance of fancy.</p>
<p>A third admitted him X-entric, but no more.</p>
<p>A fourth could only suppose it the Yankee’s design to X-press, in a
general way, his X-asperation.</p>
<p>‘Say, rather, to set an X-ample to posterity,’ suggested a fifth.</p>
<p>That Bullet-head had been driven to an extremity, was clear to all; and in
fact, since that editor could not be found, there was some talk about
lynching the other one.</p>
<p>The more common conclusion, however, was that the affair was, simply,
X-traordinary and in-X-plicable. Even the town mathematician confessed
that he could make nothing of so dark a problem. X, everybody knew, was
an unknown quantity; but in this case (as he properly observed), there was
an unknown quantity of X.</p>
<p>The opinion of Bob, the devil (who kept dark about his having ‘X-ed the
paragrab’), did not meet with so much attention as I think it deserved,
although it was very openly and very fearlessly expressed. He said that,
for his part, he had no doubt about the matter at all, that it was a clear
case, that Mr. Bullet-head ‘never could be persuaded fur to drink like
other folks, but vas continually a-svigging o’ that ere blessed XXX ale,
and as a naiteral consekvence, it just puffed him up savage, and made him
X (cross) in the X-treme.’</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.4"></SPAN>METZENGERSTEIN</h2>
<p class="letter">
Pestis eram vivus—moriens tua mors ero.<br/>
—<i>Martin Luther</i></p>
<p>Horror and fatality have been stalking abroad in all ages. Why then give a
date to this story I have to tell? Let it suffice to say, that at the
period of which I speak, there existed, in the interior of Hungary, a
settled although hidden belief in the doctrines of the Metempsychosis. Of
the doctrines themselves—that is, of their falsity, or of their
probability—I say nothing. I assert, however, that much of our
incredulity—as La Bruyère says of all our unhappiness—“<i>vient
de ne pouvoir être seuls</i>.” {*1}</p>
<p>But there are some points in the Hungarian superstition which were fast
verging to absurdity. They—the Hungarians—differed very
essentially from their Eastern authorities. For example, “<i>The soul</i>,”
said the former—I give the words of an acute and intelligent
Parisian—“<i>ne demeure qu’un seul fois dans un corps sensible: au
reste—un cheval, un chien, un homme même, n’est que la ressemblance
peu tangible de ces animaux.</i>”</p>
<p>The families of Berlifitzing and Metzengerstein had been at variance for
centuries. Never before were two houses so illustrious, mutually
embittered by hostility so deadly. The origin of this enmity seems to be
found in the words of an ancient prophecy—“A lofty name shall have a
fearful fall when, as the rider over his horse, the mortality of
Metzengerstein shall triumph over the immortality of Berlifitzing.”</p>
<p>To be sure the words themselves had little or no meaning. But more trivial
causes have given rise—and that no long while ago—to
consequences equally eventful. Besides, the estates, which were
contiguous, had long exercised a rival influence in the affairs of a busy
government. Moreover, near neighbors are seldom friends; and the
inhabitants of the Castle Berlifitzing might look, from their lofty
buttresses, into the very windows of the palace Metzengerstein. Least of
all had the more than feudal magnificence, thus discovered, a tendency to
allay the irritable feelings of the less ancient and less wealthy
Berlifitzings. What wonder then, that the words, however silly, of that
prediction, should have succeeded in setting and keeping at variance two
families already predisposed to quarrel by every instigation of hereditary
jealousy? The prophecy seemed to imply—if it implied anything—a
final triumph on the part of the already more powerful house; and was of
course remembered with the more bitter animosity by the weaker and less
influential.</p>
<p>Wilhelm, Count Berlifitzing, although loftily descended, was, at the epoch
of this narrative, an infirm and doting old man, remarkable for nothing
but an inordinate and inveterate personal antipathy to the family of his
rival, and so passionate a love of horses, and of hunting, that neither
bodily infirmity, great age, nor mental incapacity, prevented his daily
participation in the dangers of the chase.</p>
<p>Frederick, Baron Metzengerstein, was, on the other hand, not yet of age.
His father, the Minister G—, died young. His mother, the Lady Mary,
followed him quickly after. Frederick was, at that time, in his fifteenth
year. In a city, fifteen years are no long period—a child may be
still a child in his third lustrum: but in a wilderness—in so
magnificent a wilderness as that old principality, fifteen years have a
far deeper meaning.</p>
<p>From some peculiar circumstances attending the administration of his
father, the young Baron, at the decease of the former, entered immediately
upon his vast possessions. Such estates were seldom held before by a
nobleman of Hungary. His castles were without number. The chief in point
of splendor and extent was the “Château Metzengerstein.” The boundary line
of his dominions was never clearly defined; but his principal park
embraced a circuit of fifty miles.</p>
<p>Upon the succession of a proprietor so young, with a character so well
known, to a fortune so unparalleled, little speculation was afloat in
regard to his probable course of conduct. And, indeed, for the space of
three days, the behavior of the heir out-Heroded Herod, and fairly
surpassed the expectations of his most enthusiastic admirers. Shameful
debaucheries—flagrant treacheries—unheard-of atrocities—gave
his trembling vassals quickly to understand that no servile submission on
their part—no punctilios of conscience on his own—were
thenceforward to prove any security against the remorseless fangs of a
petty Caligula. On the night of the fourth day, the stables of the castle
Berlifitzing were discovered to be on fire; and the unanimous opinion of
the neighborhood added the crime of the incendiary to the already hideous
list of the Baron’s misdemeanors and enormities.</p>
<p>But during the tumult occasioned by this occurrence, the young nobleman
himself sat apparently buried in meditation, in a vast and desolate upper
apartment of the family palace of Metzengerstein. The rich although faded
tapestry hangings which swung gloomily upon the walls, represented the
shadowy and majestic forms of a thousand illustrious ancestors. <i>Here</i>,
rich-ermined priests, and pontifical dignitaries, familiarly seated with
the autocrat and the sovereign, put a veto on the wishes of a temporal
king, or restrained with the fiat of papal supremacy the rebellious
sceptre of the Arch-enemy. <i>There</i>, the dark, tall statures of the
Princes Metzengerstein—their muscular war-coursers plunging over the
carcasses of fallen foes—startled the steadiest nerves with their
vigorous expression; and <i>here</i>, again, the voluptuous and swan-like
figures of the dames of days gone by, floated away in the mazes of an
unreal dance to the strains of imaginary melody.</p>
<p>But as the Baron listened, or affected to listen, to the gradually
increasing uproar in the stables of Berlifitzing—or perhaps pondered
upon some more novel, some more decided act of audacity—his eyes
became unwittingly rivetted to the figure of an enormous, and unnaturally
colored horse, represented in the tapestry as belonging to a Saracen
ancestor of the family of his rival. The horse itself, in the foreground
of the design, stood motionless and statue-like—while farther back,
its discomfited rider perished by the dagger of a Metzengerstein.</p>
<p>On Frederick’s lip arose a fiendish expression, as he became aware of the
direction which his glance had, without his consciousness, assumed. Yet he
did not remove it. On the contrary, he could by no means account for the
overwhelming anxiety which appeared falling like a pall upon his senses.
It was with difficulty that he reconciled his dreamy and incoherent
feelings with the certainty of being awake. The longer he gazed the more
absorbing became the spell—the more impossible did it appear that he
could ever withdraw his glance from the fascination of that tapestry. But
the tumult without becoming suddenly more violent, with a compulsory
exertion he diverted his attention to the glare of ruddy light thrown full
by the flaming stables upon the windows of the apartment.</p>
<p>The action, however, was but momentary, his gaze returned mechanically to
the wall. To his extreme horror and astonishment, the head of the gigantic
steed had, in the meantime, altered its position. The neck of the animal,
before arched, as if in compassion, over the prostrate body of its lord,
was now extended, at full length, in the direction of the Baron. The eyes,
before invisible, now wore an energetic and human expression, while they
gleamed with a fiery and unusual red; and the distended lips of the
apparently enraged horse left in full view his gigantic and disgusting
teeth.</p>
<p>Stupefied with terror, the young nobleman tottered to the door. As he
threw it open, a flash of red light, streaming far into the chamber, flung
his shadow with a clear outline against the quivering tapestry, and he
shuddered to perceive that shadow—as he staggered awhile upon the
threshold—assuming the exact position, and precisely filling up the
contour, of the relentless and triumphant murderer of the Saracen
Berlifitzing.</p>
<p>To lighten the depression of his spirits, the Baron hurried into the open
air. At the principal gate of the palace he encountered three equerries.
With much difficulty, and at the imminent peril of their lives, they were
restraining the convulsive plunges of a gigantic and fiery-colored horse.</p>
<p>“Whose horse? Where did you get him?” demanded the youth, in a querulous
and husky tone of voice, as he became instantly aware that the mysterious
steed in the tapestried chamber was the very counterpart of the furious
animal before his eyes.</p>
<p>“He is your own property, sire,” replied one of the equerries, “at least
he is claimed by no other owner. We caught him flying, all smoking and
foaming with rage, from the burning stables of the Castle Berlifitzing.
Supposing him to have belonged to the old Count’s stud of foreign horses,
we led him back as an estray. But the grooms there disclaim any title to
the creature; which is strange, since he bears evident marks of having
made a narrow escape from the flames.</p>
<p>“The letters W. V. B. are also branded very distinctly on his forehead,”
interrupted a second equerry, “I supposed them, of course, to be the
initials of Wilhelm Von Berlifitzing—but all at the castle are
positive in denying any knowledge of the horse.”</p>
<p>“Extremely singular!” said the young Baron, with a musing air, and
apparently unconscious of the meaning of his words. “He is, as you say, a
remarkable horse—a prodigious horse! although, as you very justly
observe, of a suspicious and untractable character; let him be mine,
however,” he added, after a pause, “perhaps a rider like Frederick of
Metzengerstein, may tame even the devil from the stables of Berlifitzing.”</p>
<p>“You are mistaken, my lord; the horse, as I think we mentioned, is <i>not</i>
from the stables of the Count. If such had been the case, we know our duty
better than to bring him into the presence of a noble of your family.”</p>
<p>“True!” observed the Baron, dryly, and at that instant a page of the
bedchamber came from the palace with a heightened color, and a precipitate
step. He whispered into his master’s ear an account of the sudden
disappearance of a small portion of the tapestry, in an apartment which he
designated; entering, at the same time, into particulars of a minute and
circumstantial character; but from the low tone of voice in which these
latter were communicated, nothing escaped to gratify the excited curiosity
of the equerries.</p>
<p>The young Frederick, during the conference, seemed agitated by a variety
of emotions. He soon, however, recovered his composure, and an expression
of determined malignancy settled upon his countenance, as he gave
peremptory orders that a certain chamber should be immediately locked up,
and the key placed in his own possession.</p>
<p>“Have you heard of the unhappy death of the old hunter Berlifitzing?” said
one of his vassals to the Baron, as, after the departure of the page, the
huge steed which that nobleman had adopted as his own, plunged and
curvetted, with redoubled fury, down the long avenue which extended from
the château to the stables of Metzengerstein.</p>
<p>“No!” said the Baron, turning abruptly toward the speaker, “dead! say
you?”</p>
<p>“It is indeed true, my lord; and, to a noble of your name, will be, I
imagine, no unwelcome intelligence.”</p>
<p>A rapid smile shot over the countenance of the listener. “How died he?”</p>
<p>“In his rash exertions to rescue a favorite portion of his hunting stud,
he has himself perished miserably in the flames.”</p>
<p>“I-n-d-e-e-d-!” ejaculated the Baron, as if slowly and deliberately
impressed with the truth of some exciting idea.</p>
<p>“Indeed;” repeated the vassal.</p>
<p>“Shocking!” said the youth, calmly, and turned quietly into the château.</p>
<p>From this date a marked alteration took place in the outward demeanor of
the dissolute young Baron Frederick Von Metzengerstein. Indeed, his
behavior disappointed every expectation, and proved little in accordance
with the views of many a manoeuvering mamma; while his habits and manner,
still less than formerly, offered any thing congenial with those of the
neighboring aristocracy. He was never to be seen beyond the limits of his
own domain, and, in this wide and social world, was utterly companionless—unless,
indeed, that unnatural, impetuous, and fiery-colored horse, which he
henceforward continually bestrode, had any mysterious right to the title
of his friend.</p>
<p>Numerous invitations on the part of the neighborhood for a long time,
however, periodically came in. “Will the Baron honor our festivals with
his presence?” “Will the Baron join us in a hunting of the boar?”—“Metzengerstein
does not hunt;” “Metzengerstein will not attend,” were the haughty and
laconic answers.</p>
<p>These repeated insults were not to be endured by an imperious nobility.
Such invitations became less cordial—less frequent—in time
they ceased altogether. The widow of the unfortunate Count Berlifitzing
was even heard to express a hope “that the Baron might be at home when he
did not wish to be at home, since he disdained the company of his equals;
and ride when he did not wish to ride, since he preferred the society of a
horse.” This to be sure was a very silly explosion of hereditary pique;
and merely proved how singularly unmeaning our sayings are apt to become,
when we desire to be unusually energetic.</p>
<p>The charitable, nevertheless, attributed the alteration in the conduct of
the young nobleman to the natural sorrow of a son for the untimely loss of
his parents—forgetting, however, his atrocious and reckless behavior
during the short period immediately succeeding that bereavement. Some
there were, indeed, who suggested a too haughty idea of self-consequence
and dignity. Others again (among them may be mentioned the family
physician) did not hesitate in speaking of morbid melancholy, and
hereditary ill-health; while dark hints, of a more equivocal nature, were
current among the multitude.</p>
<p>Indeed, the Baron’s perverse attachment to his lately-acquired charger—an
attachment which seemed to attain new strength from every fresh example of
the animal’s ferocious and demon-like propensities—at length became,
in the eyes of all reasonable men, a hideous and unnatural fervor. In the
glare of noon—at the dead hour of night—in sickness or in
health—in calm or in tempest—the young Metzengerstein seemed
rivetted to the saddle of that colossal horse, whose intractable
audacities so well accorded with his own spirit.</p>
<p>There were circumstances, moreover, which coupled with late events, gave
an unearthly and portentous character to the mania of the rider, and to
the capabilities of the steed. The space passed over in a single leap had
been accurately measured, and was found to exceed, by an astounding
difference, the wildest expectations of the most imaginative. The Baron,
besides, had no particular <i>name</i> for the animal, although all the
rest in his collection were distinguished by characteristic appellations.
His stable, too, was appointed at a distance from the rest; and with
regard to grooming and other necessary offices, none but the owner in
person had ventured to officiate, or even to enter the enclosure of that
particular stall. It was also to be observed, that although the three
grooms, who had caught the steed as he fled from the conflagration at
Berlifitzing, had succeeded in arresting his course, by means of a
chain-bridle and noose—yet no one of the three could with any
certainty affirm that he had, during that dangerous struggle, or at any
period thereafter, actually placed his hand upon the body of the beast.
Instances of peculiar intelligence in the demeanor of a noble and
high-spirited horse are not to be supposed capable of exciting
unreasonable attention—especially among men who, daily trained to
the labors of the chase, might appear well acquainted with the sagacity of
a horse—but there were certain circumstances which intruded
themselves per force upon the most skeptical and phlegmatic; and it is
said there were times when the animal caused the gaping crowd who stood
around to recoil in horror from the deep and impressive meaning of his
terrible stamp—times when the young Metzengerstein turned pale and
shrunk away from the rapid and searching expression of his earnest and
human-looking eye.</p>
<p>Among all the retinue of the Baron, however, none were found to doubt the
ardor of that extraordinary affection which existed on the part of the
young nobleman for the fiery qualities of his horse; at least, none but an
insignificant and misshapen little page, whose deformities were in
everybody’s way, and whose opinions were of the least possible importance.
He—if his ideas are worth mentioning at all—had the effrontery
to assert that his master never vaulted into the saddle without an
unaccountable and almost imperceptible shudder, and that, upon his return
from every long-continued and habitual ride, an expression of triumphant
malignity distorted every muscle in his countenance.</p>
<p>One tempestuous night, Metzengerstein, awaking from a heavy slumber,
descended like a maniac from his chamber, and, mounting in hot haste,
bounded away into the mazes of the forest. An occurrence so common
attracted no particular attention, but his return was looked for with
intense anxiety on the part of his domestics, when, after some hours’
absence, the stupendous and magnificent battlements of the Chateau
Metzengerstein, were discovered crackling and rocking to their very
foundation, under the influence of a dense and livid mass of ungovernable
fire.</p>
<p>As the flames, when first seen, had already made so terrible a progress
that all efforts to save any portion of the building were evidently
futile, the astonished neighborhood stood idly around in silent and
pathetic wonder. But a new and fearful object soon rivetted the attention
of the multitude, and proved how much more intense is the excitement
wrought in the feelings of a crowd by the contemplation of human agony,
than that brought about by the most appalling spectacles of inanimate
matter.</p>
<p>Up the long avenue of aged oaks which led from the forest to the main
entrance of the Château Metzengerstein, a steed, bearing an unbonneted and
disordered rider, was seen leaping with an impetuosity which outstripped
the very Demon of the Tempest.</p>
<p>The career of the horseman was indisputably, on his own part,
uncontrollable. The agony of his countenance, the convulsive struggle of
his frame, gave evidence of superhuman exertion: but no sound, save a
solitary shriek, escaped from his lacerated lips, which were bitten
through and through in the intensity of terror. One instant, and the
clattering of hoofs resounded sharply and shrilly above the roaring of the
flames and the shrieking of the winds—another, and, clearing at a
single plunge the gate-way and the moat, the steed bounded far up the
tottering staircases of the palace, and, with its rider, disappeared amid
the whirlwind of chaotic fire.</p>
<p>The fury of the tempest immediately died away, and a dead calm sullenly
succeeded. A white flame still enveloped the building like a shroud, and,
streaming far away into the quiet atmosphere, shot forth a glare of
preternatural light; while a cloud of smoke settled heavily over the
battlements in the distinct colossal figure of—<i>a horse</i>.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.5"></SPAN>THE SYSTEM OF DOCTOR TARR AND PROFESSOR FETHER</h2>
<p>During the autumn of 18—, while on a tour through the extreme
southern provinces of France, my route led me within a few miles of a
certain <i>Maison de Santé</i> or private mad-house, about which I had heard much,
in Paris, from my medical friends. As I had never visited a place of the
kind, I thought the opportunity too good to be lost; and so proposed to my
travelling companion (a gentleman with whom I had made casual acquaintance
a few days before), that we should turn aside, for an hour or so, and look
through the establishment. To this he objected—pleading haste in the
first place, and, in the second, a very usual horror at the sight of a
lunatic. He begged me, however, not to let any mere courtesy towards
himself interfere with the gratification of my curiosity, and said that he
would ride on leisurely, so that I might overtake him during the day, or,
at all events, during the next. As he bade me good-bye, I bethought me
that there might be some difficulty in obtaining access to the premises,
and mentioned my fears on this point. He replied that, in fact, unless I
had personal knowledge of the superintendent, Monsieur Maillard, or some
credential in the way of a letter, a difficulty might be found to exist,
as the regulations of these private mad-houses were more rigid than the
public hospital laws. For himself, he added, he had, some years since,
made the acquaintance of Maillard, and would so far assist me as to ride
up to the door and introduce me; although his feelings on the subject of
lunacy would not permit of his entering the house.</p>
<p>I thanked him, and, turning from the main road, we entered a grass-grown
by-path, which, in half an hour, nearly lost itself in a dense forest,
clothing the base of a mountain. Through this dank and gloomy wood we rode
some two miles, when the <i>Maison de Santé</i> came in view. It was a fantastic
château, much dilapidated, and indeed scarcely tenantable through age and
neglect. Its aspect inspired me with absolute dread, and, checking my
horse, I half resolved to turn back. I soon, however, grew ashamed of my
weakness, and proceeded.</p>
<p>As we rode up to the gate-way, I perceived it slightly open, and the
visage of a man peering through. In an instant afterward, this man came
forth, accosted my companion by name, shook him cordially by the hand, and
begged him to alight. It was Monsieur Maillard himself. He was a portly,
fine-looking gentleman of the old school, with a polished manner, and a
certain air of gravity, dignity, and authority which was very impressive.</p>
<p>My friend, having presented me, mentioned my desire to inspect the
establishment, and received Monsieur Maillard’s assurance that he would
show me all attention, now took leave, and I saw him no more.</p>
<p>When he had gone, the superintendent ushered me into a small and
exceedingly neat parlor, containing, among other indications of refined
taste, many books, drawings, pots of flowers, and musical instruments. A
cheerful fire blazed upon the hearth. At a piano, singing an aria from
Bellini, sat a young and very beautiful woman, who, at my entrance, paused
in her song, and received me with graceful courtesy. Her voice was low,
and her whole manner subdued. I thought, too, that I perceived the traces
of sorrow in her countenance, which was excessively, although to my taste,
not unpleasingly, pale. She was attired in deep mourning, and excited in
my bosom a feeling of mingled respect, interest, and admiration.</p>
<p>I had heard, at Paris, that the institution of Monsieur Maillard was
managed upon what is vulgarly termed the “system of soothing”—that
all punishments were avoided—that even confinement was seldom
resorted to—that the patients, while secretly watched, were left
much apparent liberty, and that most of them were permitted to roam about
the house and grounds in the ordinary apparel of persons in right mind.</p>
<p>Keeping these impressions in view, I was cautious in what I said before
the young lady; for I could not be sure that she was sane; and, in fact,
there was a certain restless brilliancy about her eyes which half led me
to imagine she was not. I confined my remarks, therefore, to general
topics, and to such as I thought would not be displeasing or exciting even
to a lunatic. She replied in a perfectly rational manner to all that I
said; and even her original observations were marked with the soundest
good sense, but a long acquaintance with the metaphysics of mania, had
taught me to put no faith in such evidence of sanity, and I continued to
practise, throughout the interview, the caution with which I commenced it.</p>
<p>Presently a smart footman in livery brought in a tray with fruit, wine,
and other refreshments, of which I partook, the lady soon afterward
leaving the room. As she departed I turned my eyes in an inquiring manner
toward my host.</p>
<p>“No,” he said, “oh, no—a member of my family—my niece, and a
most accomplished woman.”</p>
<p>“I beg a thousand pardons for the suspicion,” I replied, “but of course
you will know how to excuse me. The excellent administration of your
affairs here is well understood in Paris, and I thought it just possible,
you know—”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes—say no more—or rather it is myself who should thank
you for the commendable prudence you have displayed. We seldom find so
much of forethought in young men; and, more than once, some unhappy
contre-temps has occurred in consequence of thoughtlessness on the part of
our visitors. While my former system was in operation, and my patients
were permitted the privilege of roaming to and fro at will, they were
often aroused to a dangerous frenzy by injudicious persons who called to
inspect the house. Hence I was obliged to enforce a rigid system of
exclusion; and none obtained access to the premises upon whose discretion
I could not rely.”</p>
<p>“While your former system was in operation!” I said, repeating his words—“do
I understand you, then, to say that the ‘soothing system’ of which I have
heard so much is no longer in force?”</p>
<p>“It is now,” he replied, “several weeks since we have concluded to
renounce it forever.”</p>
<p>“Indeed! you astonish me!”</p>
<p>“We found it, sir,” he said, with a sigh, “absolutely necessary to return
to the old usages. The danger of the soothing system was, at all times,
appalling; and its advantages have been much overrated. I believe, sir,
that in this house it has been given a fair trial, if ever in any. We did
every thing that rational humanity could suggest. I am sorry that you
could not have paid us a visit at an earlier period, that you might have
judged for yourself. But I presume you are conversant with the soothing
practice—with its details.”</p>
<p>“Not altogether. What I have heard has been at third or fourth hand.”</p>
<p>“I may state the system, then, in general terms, as one in which the
patients were <i>menagés</i>—humored. We contradicted no fancies which entered
the brains of the mad. On the contrary, we not only indulged but
encouraged them; and many of our most permanent cures have been thus
effected. There is no argument which so touches the feeble reason of the
madman as the argumentum ad absurdum. We have had men, for example, who
fancied themselves chickens. The cure was, to insist upon the thing as a
fact—to accuse the patient of stupidity in not sufficiently
perceiving it to be a fact—and thus to refuse him any other diet for
a week than that which properly appertains to a chicken. In this manner a
little corn and gravel were made to perform wonders.”</p>
<p>“But was this species of acquiescence all?”</p>
<p>“By no means. We put much faith in amusements of a simple kind, such as
music, dancing, gymnastic exercises generally, cards, certain classes of
books, and so forth. We affected to treat each individual as if for some
ordinary physical disorder; and the word ‘lunacy’ was never employed. A
great point was to set each lunatic to guard the actions of all the
others. To repose confidence in the understanding or discretion of a
madman, is to gain him body and soul. In this way we were enabled to
dispense with an expensive body of keepers.”</p>
<p>“And you had no punishments of any kind?”</p>
<p>“None.”</p>
<p>“And you never confined your patients?”</p>
<p>“Very rarely. Now and then, the malady of some individual growing to a
crisis, or taking a sudden turn of fury, we conveyed him to a secret cell,
lest his disorder should infect the rest, and there kept him until we
could dismiss him to his friends—for with the raging maniac we have
nothing to do. He is usually removed to the public hospitals.”</p>
<p>“And you have now changed all this—and you think for the better?”</p>
<p>“Decidedly. The system had its disadvantages, and even its dangers. It is
now, happily, exploded throughout all the <i>Maisons de Santé</i> of France.”</p>
<p>“I am very much surprised,” I said, “at what you tell me; for I made sure
that, at this moment, no other method of treatment for mania existed in
any portion of the country.”</p>
<p>“You are young yet, my friend,” replied my host, “but the time will arrive
when you will learn to judge for yourself of what is going on in the
world, without trusting to the gossip of others. Believe nothing you hear,
and only one-half that you see. Now about our <i>Maisons de Santé</i>, it is
clear that some ignoramus has misled you. After dinner, however, when you
have sufficiently recovered from the fatigue of your ride, I will be happy
to take you over the house, and introduce to you a system which, in my
opinion, and in that of every one who has witnessed its operation, is
incomparably the most effectual as yet devised.”</p>
<p>“Your own?” I inquired—“one of your own invention?”</p>
<p>“I am proud,” he replied, “to acknowledge that it is—at least in
some measure.”</p>
<p>In this manner I conversed with Monsieur Maillard for an hour or two,
during which he showed me the gardens and conservatories of the place.</p>
<p>“I cannot let you see my patients,” he said, “just at present. To a
sensitive mind there is always more or less of the shocking in such
exhibitions; and I do not wish to spoil your appetite for dinner. We will
dine. I can give you some veal a la Menehoult, with cauliflowers in
<i>velouté</i> sauce—after that a glass of Clos de Vougeot—then your
nerves will be sufficiently steadied.”</p>
<p>At six, dinner was announced; and my host conducted me into a large <i>salle
à manger</i>, where a very numerous company were assembled—twenty-five
or thirty in all. They were, apparently, people of rank—certainly of high
breeding—although their habiliments, I thought, were extravagantly
rich, partaking somewhat too much of the ostentatious finery of the <i>vielle
cour</i>. I noticed that at least two-thirds of these guests were ladies; and
some of the latter were by no means accoutred in what a Parisian would
consider good taste at the present day. Many females, for example, whose
age could not have been less than seventy were bedecked with a profusion
of jewelry, such as rings, bracelets, and earrings, and wore their bosoms
and arms shamefully bare. I observed, too, that very few of the dresses
were well made—or, at least, that very few of them fitted the
wearers. In looking about, I discovered the interesting girl to whom
Monsieur Maillard had presented me in the little parlor; but my surprise
was great to see her wearing a hoop and farthingale, with high-heeled
shoes, and a dirty cap of Brussels lace, so much too large for her that it
gave her face a ridiculously diminutive expression. When I had first seen
her, she was attired, most becomingly, in deep mourning. There was an air
of oddity, in short, about the dress of the whole party, which, at first,
caused me to recur to my original idea of the “soothing system,” and to
fancy that Monsieur Maillard had been willing to deceive me until after
dinner, that I might experience no uncomfortable feelings during the
repast, at finding myself dining with lunatics; but I remembered having
been informed, in Paris, that the southern provincialists were a
peculiarly eccentric people, with a vast number of antiquated notions; and
then, too, upon conversing with several members of the company, my
apprehensions were immediately and fully dispelled.</p>
<p>The dining-room itself, although perhaps sufficiently comfortable and of
good dimensions, had nothing too much of elegance about it. For example,
the floor was uncarpeted; in France, however, a carpet is frequently
dispensed with. The windows, too, were without curtains; the shutters,
being shut, were securely fastened with iron bars, applied diagonally,
after the fashion of our ordinary shop-shutters. The apartment, I
observed, formed, in itself, a wing of the château, and thus the windows
were on three sides of the parallelogram, the door being at the other.
There were no less than ten windows in all.</p>
<p>The table was superbly set out. It was loaded with plate, and more than
loaded with delicacies. The profusion was absolutely barbaric. There were
meats enough to have feasted the Anakim. Never, in all my life, had I
witnessed so lavish, so wasteful an expenditure of the good things of
life. There seemed very little taste, however, in the arrangements; and my
eyes, accustomed to quiet lights, were sadly offended by the prodigious
glare of a multitude of wax candles, which, in silver candelabra, were
deposited upon the table, and all about the room, wherever it was possible
to find a place. There were several active servants in attendance; and,
upon a large table, at the farther end of the apartment, were seated seven
or eight people with fiddles, fifes, trombones, and a drum. These fellows
annoyed me very much, at intervals, during the repast, by an infinite
variety of noises, which were intended for music, and which appeared to
afford much entertainment to all present, with the exception of myself.</p>
<p>Upon the whole, I could not help thinking that there was much of the
bizarre about every thing I saw—but then the world is made up of all
kinds of persons, with all modes of thought, and all sorts of conventional
customs. I had travelled, too, so much, as to be quite an adept at the nil
admirari; so I took my seat very coolly at the right hand of my host, and,
having an excellent appetite, did justice to the good cheer set before me.</p>
<p>The conversation, in the meantime, was spirited and general. The ladies,
as usual, talked a great deal. I soon found that nearly all the company
were well educated; and my host was a world of good-humored anecdote in
himself. He seemed quite willing to speak of his position as
superintendent of a<i>Maison de Santé</i>; and, indeed, the topic of lunacy was,
much to my surprise, a favorite one with all present. A great many amusing
stories were told, having reference to the <i>whims</i> of the patients.</p>
<p>“We had a fellow here once,” said a fat little gentleman, who sat at my
right,—“a fellow that fancied himself a tea-pot; and by the way, is
it not especially singular how often this particular crotchet has entered
the brain of the lunatic? There is scarcely an insane asylum in France
which cannot supply a human tea-pot. Our gentleman was a Britannia-ware
tea-pot, and was careful to polish himself every morning with buckskin and
whiting.”</p>
<p>“And then,” said a tall man just opposite, “we had here, not long ago, a
person who had taken it into his head that he was a donkey—which
allegorically speaking, you will say, was quite true. He was a troublesome
patient; and we had much ado to keep him within bounds. For a long time he
would eat nothing but thistles; but of this idea we soon cured him by
insisting upon his eating nothing else. Then he was perpetually kicking
out his heels—so—so—”</p>
<p>“Mr. De Kock! I will thank you to behave yourself!” here interrupted an
old lady, who sat next to the speaker. “Please keep your feet to yourself!
You have spoiled my brocade! Is it necessary, pray, to illustrate a remark
in so practical a style? Our friend here can surely comprehend you without
all this. Upon my word, you are nearly as great a donkey as the poor
unfortunate imagined himself. Your acting is very natural, as I live.”</p>
<p>“Mille pardons! Ma’m’selle!” replied Monsieur De Kock, thus addressed—“a
thousand pardons! I had no intention of offending. Ma’m’selle Laplace—Monsieur
De Kock will do himself the honor of taking wine with you.”</p>
<p>Here Monsieur De Kock bowed low, kissed his hand with much ceremony, and
took wine with Ma’m’selle Laplace.</p>
<p>“Allow me, mon ami,” now said Monsieur Maillard, addressing myself, “allow
me to send you a morsel of this veal <i>à la St. Menehoult</i>—you will find
it particularly fine.”</p>
<p>At this instant three sturdy waiters had just succeeded in depositing
safely upon the table an enormous dish, or trencher, containing what I
supposed to be the “<i>monstrum, horrendum, informe, ingens, cui lumen
ademptum</i>.” A closer scrutiny assured me, however, that it was only a small
calf roasted whole, and set upon its knees, with an apple in its mouth, as
is the English fashion of dressing a hare.</p>
<p>“Thank you, no,” I replied; “to say the truth, I am not particularly
partial to veal <i>à la St</i>.—what is it?—for I do not find that it
altogether agrees with me. I will change my plate, however, and try some
of the rabbit.”</p>
<p>There were several side-dishes on the table, containing what appeared to
be the ordinary French rabbit—a very delicious morceau, which I can
recommend.</p>
<p>“Pierre,” cried the host, “change this gentleman’s plate, and give him a
side-piece of this rabbit au-chat.”</p>
<p>“This what?” said I.</p>
<p>“This rabbit <i>au-chat</i>.”</p>
<p>“Why, thank you—upon second thoughts, no. I will just help myself to
some of the ham.”</p>
<p>There is no knowing what one eats, thought I to myself, at the tables of
these people of the province. I will have none of their rabbit <i>au-chat</i>—and,
for the matter of that, none of their <i>cat-au-rabbit</i> either.</p>
<p>“And then,” said a cadaverous looking personage, near the foot of the
table, taking up the thread of the conversation where it had been broken
off,—“and then, among other oddities, we had a patient, once upon a
time, who very pertinaciously maintained himself to be a Cordova cheese,
and went about, with a knife in his hand, soliciting his friends to try a
small slice from the middle of his leg.”</p>
<p>“He was a great fool, beyond doubt,” interposed some one, “but not to be
compared with a certain individual whom we all know, with the exception of
this strange gentleman. I mean the man who took himself for a bottle of
champagne, and always went off with a pop and a fizz, in this fashion.”</p>
<p>Here the speaker, very rudely, as I thought, put his right thumb in his
left cheek, withdrew it with a sound resembling the popping of a cork, and
then, by a dexterous movement of the tongue upon the teeth, created a
sharp hissing and fizzing, which lasted for several minutes, in imitation
of the frothing of champagne. This behavior, I saw plainly, was not very
pleasing to Monsieur Maillard; but that gentleman said nothing, and the
conversation was resumed by a very lean little man in a big wig.</p>
<p>“And then there was an ignoramus,” said he, “who mistook himself for a
frog, which, by the way, he resembled in no little degree. I wish you
could have seen him, sir,”—here the speaker addressed myself—“it
would have done your heart good to see the natural airs that he put on.
Sir, if that man was not a frog, I can only observe that it is a pity he
was not. His croak thus—o-o-o-o-gh—o-o-o-o-gh! was the finest
note in the world—B flat; and when he put his elbows upon the table
thus—after taking a glass or two of wine—and distended his
mouth, thus, and rolled up his eyes, thus, and winked them with excessive
rapidity, thus, why then, sir, I take it upon myself to say, positively,
that you would have been lost in admiration of the genius of the man.”</p>
<p>“I have no doubt of it,” I said.</p>
<p>“And then,” said somebody else, “then there was Petit Gaillard, who
thought himself a pinch of snuff, and was truly distressed because he
could not take himself between his own finger and thumb.”</p>
<p>“And then there was Jules Desoulières, who was a very singular genius,
indeed, and went mad with the idea that he was a pumpkin. He persecuted
the cook to make him up into pies—a thing which the cook indignantly
refused to do. For my part, I am by no means sure that a pumpkin pie <i>à la
Desoulières</i> would not have been very capital eating indeed!”</p>
<p>“You astonish me!” said I; and I looked inquisitively at Monsieur
Maillard.</p>
<p>“Ha! ha! ha!” said that gentleman—“he! he! he!—hi! hi! hi!—ho!
ho! ho!—hu! hu! hu!—very good indeed! You must not be
astonished, <i>mon ami;</i> our friend here is a wit—a <i>drôle</i>—you must
not understand him to the letter.”</p>
<p>“And then,” said some other one of the party,—“then there was
Bouffon Le Grand—another extraordinary personage in his way. He grew
deranged through love, and fancied himself possessed of two heads. One of
these he maintained to be the head of Cicero; the other he imagined a
composite one, being Demosthenes’ from the top of the forehead to the
mouth, and Lord Brougham’s from the mouth to the chin. It is not
impossible that he was wrong; but he would have convinced you of his being
in the right; for he was a man of great eloquence. He had an absolute
passion for oratory, and could not refrain from display. For example, he
used to leap upon the dinner-table thus, and—and—”</p>
<p>Here a friend, at the side of the speaker, put a hand upon his shoulder
and whispered a few words in his ear; upon which he ceased talking with
great suddenness, and sank back within his chair.</p>
<p>“And then,” said the friend who had whispered, “there was Boullard, the
tee-totum. I call him the tee-totum because, in fact, he was seized with
the droll, but not altogether irrational, crotchet, that he had been
converted into a tee-totum. You would have roared with laughter to see him
spin. He would turn round upon one heel by the hour, in this manner—so—”</p>
<p>Here the friend whom he had just interrupted by a whisper, performed an
exactly similar office for himself.</p>
<p>“But then,” cried the old lady, at the top of her voice,
“your Monsieur Boullard was a madman, and a very silly madman at
best; for who, allow me to ask you, ever heard of a human tee-totum? The
thing is absurd. Madame Joyeuse was a more sensible person, as you know.
She had a crotchet, but it was instinct with common sense, and gave
pleasure to all who had the honor of her acquaintance. She found, upon
mature deliberation, that, by some accident, she had been turned into a
chicken-cock; but, as such, she behaved with propriety. She flapped her
wings with prodigious effect—so—so—so—and, as for
her crow, it was delicious!
Cock-a-doodle-doo!—cock-a-doodle-doo!—cock-a-doodle-de-doo
dooo-do-o-o-o-o-o-o!”</p>
<p>“Madame Joyeuse, I will thank you to behave yourself!” here interrupted
our host, very angrily. “You can either conduct yourself as a lady should
do, or you can quit the table forthwith—take your choice.”</p>
<p>The lady (whom I was much astonished to hear addressed as Madame Joyeuse,
after the description of Madame Joyeuse she had just given) blushed up to
the eyebrows, and seemed exceedingly abashed at the reproof. She hung down
her head, and said not a syllable in reply. But another and younger lady
resumed the theme. It was my beautiful girl of the little parlor.</p>
<p>“Oh, Madame Joyeuse was a fool!” she exclaimed, “but there was really much
sound sense, after all, in the opinion of Eugénie Salsafette. She was a
very beautiful and painfully modest young lady, who thought the ordinary
mode of habiliment indecent, and wished to dress herself, always, by
getting outside instead of inside of her clothes. It is a thing very
easily done, after all. You have only to do so—and then so—so—so—and
then so—so—so—and then so—so—and then—”</p>
<p>“Mon dieu! Ma’m’selle Salsafette!” here cried a dozen voices at once.
“What are you about?—forbear!—that is sufficient!—we
see, very plainly, how it is done!—hold! hold!” and several persons
were already leaping from their seats to withhold Ma’m’selle Salsafette
from putting herself upon a par with the Medicean Venus, when the point
was very effectually and suddenly accomplished by a series of loud
screams, or yells, from some portion of the main body of the <i>château</i>.</p>
<p>My nerves were very much affected, indeed, by these yells; but the rest of
the company I really pitied. I never saw any set of reasonable people so
thoroughly frightened in my life. They all grew as pale as so many
corpses, and, shrinking within their seats, sat quivering and gibbering
with terror, and listening for a repetition of the sound. It came again—louder
and seemingly nearer—and then a third time very loud, and then a
fourth time with a vigor evidently diminished. At this apparent dying away
of the noise, the spirits of the company were immediately regained, and
all was life and anecdote as before. I now ventured to inquire the cause
of the disturbance.</p>
<p>“A mere <i>bagatelle</i>,” said Monsieur Maillard. “We are used to these things,
and care really very little about them. The lunatics, every now and then,
get up a howl in concert; one starting another, as is sometimes the case
with a bevy of dogs at night. It occasionally happens, however, that the
<i>concerto</i> yells are succeeded by a simultaneous effort at breaking loose;
when, of course, some little danger is to be apprehended.”</p>
<p>“And how many have you in charge?”</p>
<p>“At present we have not more than ten, altogether.”</p>
<p>“Principally females, I presume?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no—every one of them men, and stout fellows, too, I can tell
you.”</p>
<p>“Indeed! I have always understood that the majority of lunatics were of
the gentler sex.”</p>
<p>“It is generally so, but not always. Some time ago, there were about
twenty-seven patients here; and, of that number, no less than eighteen
were women; but, lately, matters have changed very much, as you see.”</p>
<p>“Yes—have changed very much, as you see,” here interrupted the
gentleman who had broken the shins of Ma’m’selle Laplace.</p>
<p>“Yes—have changed very much, as you see!” chimed in the whole
company at once.</p>
<p>“Hold your tongues, every one of you!” said my host, in a great rage.
Whereupon the whole company maintained a dead silence for nearly a minute.
As for one lady, she obeyed Monsieur Maillard to the letter, and thrusting
out her tongue, which was an excessively long one, held it very
resignedly, with both hands, until the end of the entertainment.</p>
<p>“And this gentlewoman,” said I, to Monsieur Maillard, bending over and
addressing him in a whisper—“this good lady who has just spoken, and
who gives us the cock-a-doodle-de-doo—she, I presume, is harmless—quite
harmless, eh?”</p>
<p>“Harmless!” ejaculated he, in unfeigned surprise, “why—why, what can
you mean?”</p>
<p>“Only slightly touched?” said I, touching my head. “I take it for granted
that she is not particularly not dangerously affected, eh?”</p>
<p>“<i>Mon dieu!</i> what is it you imagine? This lady, my particular old friend
Madame Joyeuse, is as absolutely sane as myself. She has her little
eccentricities, to be sure—but then, you know, all old women—all
<i>very</i> old women—are more or less eccentric!”</p>
<p>“To be sure,” said I,—“to be sure—and then the rest of these
ladies and gentlemen—”</p>
<p>“Are my friends and keepers,” interupted Monsieur Maillard, drawing
himself up with <i>hauteur</i>,—“my very good friends and assistants.”</p>
<p>“What! all of them?” I asked,—“the women and all?”</p>
<p>“Assuredly,” he said,—“we could not do at all without the women;
they are the best lunatic nurses in the world; they have a way of their
own, you know; their bright eyes have a marvellous effect—something
like the fascination of the snake, you know.”</p>
<p>“To be sure,” said I,—“to be sure! They behave a little odd, eh?—they
are a little queer, eh?—don’t you think so?”</p>
<p>“Odd!—queer!—why, do you really think so? We are not very
prudish, to be sure, here in the South—do pretty much as we please—enjoy
life, and all that sort of thing, you know—”</p>
<p>“To be sure,” said I,—“to be sure.”</p>
<p>“And then, perhaps, this Clos de Vougeot is a little heady, you know—a
little strong—you understand, eh?”</p>
<p>“To be sure,” said I,—“to be sure. By the bye, Monsieur, did I
understand you to say that the system you have adopted, in place of the
celebrated soothing system, was one of very rigorous severity?”</p>
<p>“By no means. Our confinement is necessarily close; but the treatment—the
medical treatment, I mean—is rather agreeable to the patients than
otherwise.”</p>
<p>“And the new system is one of your own invention?”</p>
<p>“Not altogether. Some portions of it are referable to Professor Tarr, of
whom you have, necessarily, heard; and, again, there are modifications in
my plan which I am happy to acknowledge as belonging of right to the
celebrated Fether, with whom, if I mistake not, you have the honor of an
intimate acquaintance.”</p>
<p>“I am quite ashamed to confess,” I replied, “that I have never even heard
the names of either gentleman before.”</p>
<p>“Good heavens!” ejaculated my host, drawing back his chair abruptly, and
uplifting his hands. “I surely do not hear you aright! You did not intend
to say, eh? that you had never heard either of the learned Doctor Tarr, or
of the celebrated Professor Fether?”</p>
<p>“I am forced to acknowledge my ignorance,” I replied; “but the truth
should be held inviolate above all things. Nevertheless, I feel humbled to
the dust, not to be acquainted with the works of these, no doubt,
extraordinary men. I will seek out their writings forthwith, and peruse
them with deliberate care. Monsieur Maillard, you have really—I must
confess it—you have really—made me ashamed of myself!”</p>
<p>And this was the fact.</p>
<p>“Say no more, my good young friend,” he said kindly, pressing my hand,—“join
me now in a glass of Sauterne.”</p>
<p>We drank. The company followed our example without stint. They chatted—they
jested—they laughed—they perpetrated a thousand absurdities—the
fiddles shrieked—the drum row-de-dowed—the trombones bellowed
like so many brazen bulls of Phalaris—and the whole scene, growing
gradually worse and worse, as the wines gained the ascendancy, became at
length a sort of pandemonium in petto. In the meantime, Monsieur Maillard
and myself, with some bottles of Sauterne and Vougeot between us,
continued our conversation at the top of the voice. A word spoken in an
ordinary key stood no more chance of being heard than the voice of a fish
from the bottom of Niagara Falls.</p>
<p>“And, sir,” said I, screaming in his ear, “you mentioned something before
dinner about the danger incurred in the old system of soothing. How is
that?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” he replied, “there was, occasionally, very great danger indeed.
There is no accounting for the caprices of madmen; and, in my opinion as
well as in that of Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether, it is never safe to
permit them to run at large unattended. A lunatic may be ‘soothed,’ as it
is called, for a time, but, in the end, he is very apt to become
obstreperous. His cunning, too, is proverbial and great. If he has a
project in view, he conceals his design with a marvellous wisdom; and the
dexterity with which he counterfeits sanity, presents, to the
metaphysician, one of the most singular problems in the study of mind.
When a madman appears thoroughly sane, indeed, it is high time to put him
in a straitjacket.”</p>
<p>“But the danger, my dear sir, of which you were speaking, in your own
experience—during your control of this house—have you had
practical reason to think liberty hazardous in the case of a lunatic?”</p>
<p>“Here?—in my own experience?—why, I may say, yes. For example:—no
very long while ago, a singular circumstance occurred in this very house.
The ‘soothing system,’ you know, was then in operation, and the patients
were at large. They behaved remarkably well—especially so—any one of
sense might have known that some devilish scheme was brewing from that
particular fact, that the fellows behaved so remarkably well. And, sure
enough, one fine morning the keepers found themselves pinioned hand and
foot, and thrown into the cells, where they were attended, as if they were
the lunatics, by the lunatics themselves, who had usurped the offices of
the keepers.”</p>
<p>“You don’t tell me so! I never heard of any thing so absurd in my life!”</p>
<p>“Fact—it all came to pass by means of a stupid fellow—a
lunatic—who, by some means, had taken it into his head that he had
invented a better system of government than any ever heard of before—of
lunatic government, I mean. He wished to give his invention a trial, I
suppose, and so he persuaded the rest of the patients to join him in a
conspiracy for the overthrow of the reigning powers.”</p>
<p>“And he really succeeded?”</p>
<p>“No doubt of it. The keepers and kept were soon made to exchange places.
Not that exactly either—for the madmen had been free, but the
keepers were shut up in cells forthwith, and treated, I am sorry to say,
in a very cavalier manner.”</p>
<p>“But I presume a counter-revolution was soon effected. This condition of
things could not have long existed. The country people in the
neighborhood—visitors coming to see the establishment—would have
given the alarm.”</p>
<p>“There you are out. The head rebel was too cunning for that. He admitted
no visitors at all—with the exception, one day, of a very
stupid-looking young gentleman of whom he had no reason to be afraid. He
let him in to see the place—just by way of variety,—to have a
little fun with him. As soon as he had gammoned him sufficiently, he let
him out, and sent him about his business.”</p>
<p>“And how long, then, did the madmen reign?”</p>
<p>“Oh, a very long time, indeed—a month certainly—how much
longer I can’t precisely say. In the meantime, the lunatics had a jolly
season of it—that you may swear. They doffed their own shabby
clothes, and made free with the family wardrobe and jewels. The cellars of
the château were well stocked with wine; and these madmen are just the
devils that know how to drink it. They lived well, I can tell you.”</p>
<p>“And the treatment—what was the particular species of treatment
which the leader of the rebels put into operation?”</p>
<p>“Why, as for that, a madman is not necessarily a fool, as I have already
observed; and it is my honest opinion that his treatment was a much better
treatment than that which it superseded. It was a very capital system
indeed—simple—neat—no trouble at all—in fact it
was delicious—it was—”</p>
<p>Here my host’s observations were cut short by another series of yells, of
the same character as those which had previously disconcerted us. This
time, however, they seemed to proceed from persons rapidly approaching.</p>
<p>“Gracious heavens!” I ejaculated—“the lunatics have most undoubtedly
broken loose.”</p>
<p>“I very much fear it is so,” replied Monsieur Maillard, now becoming
excessively pale. He had scarcely finished the sentence, before loud
shouts and imprecations were heard beneath the windows; and, immediately
afterward, it became evident that some persons outside were endeavoring to
gain entrance into the room. The door was beaten with what appeared to be
a sledge-hammer, and the shutters were wrenched and shaken with prodigious
violence.</p>
<p>A scene of the most terrible confusion ensued. Monsieur Maillard, to my
excessive astonishment threw himself under the side-board. I had expected
more resolution at his hands. The members of the orchestra, who, for the
last fifteen minutes, had been seemingly too much intoxicated to do duty,
now sprang all at once to their feet and to their instruments, and,
scrambling upon their table, broke out, with one accord, into, “Yankee
Doodle,” which they performed, if not exactly in tune, at least with an
energy superhuman, during the whole of the uproar.</p>
<p>Meantime, upon the main dining-table, among the bottles and glasses,
leaped the gentleman who, with such difficulty, had been restrained from
leaping there before. As soon as he fairly settled himself, he commenced
an oration, which, no doubt, was a very capital one, if it could only have
been heard. At the same moment, the man with the teetotum predilection,
set himself to spinning around the apartment, with immense energy, and
with arms outstretched at right angles with his body; so that he had all
the air of a tee-totum in fact, and knocked everybody down that happened
to get in his way. And now, too, hearing an incredible popping and fizzing
of champagne, I discovered at length, that it proceeded from the person
who performed the bottle of that delicate drink during dinner. And then,
again, the frog-man croaked away as if the salvation of his soul depended
upon every note that he uttered. And, in the midst of all this, the
continuous braying of a donkey arose over all. As for my old friend,
Madame Joyeuse, I really could have wept for the poor lady, she appeared
so terribly perplexed. All she did, however, was to stand up in a corner,
by the fireplace, and sing out incessantly at the top of her voice,
“Cock-a-doodle-de-dooooooh!”</p>
<p>And now came the climax—the catastrophe of the drama. As no
resistance, beyond whooping and yelling and cock-a-doodling, was offered
to the encroachments of the party without, the ten windows were very
speedily, and almost simultaneously, broken in. But I shall never forget
the emotions of wonder and horror with which I gazed, when, leaping
through these windows, and down among us <i>pêle-mêle</i>, fighting, stamping,
scratching, and howling, there rushed a perfect army of what I took to be
chimpanzees, ourang-outangs, or big black baboons of the Cape of Good
Hope.</p>
<p>I received a terrible beating—after which I rolled under a sofa and
lay still. After lying there some fifteen minutes, during which time I
listened with all my ears to what was going on in the room, I came to same
satisfactory <i>dénouement</i> of this tragedy. Monsieur Maillard, it appeared,
in giving me the account of the lunatic who had excited his fellows to
rebellion, had been merely relating his own exploits. This gentleman had,
indeed, some two or three years before, been the superintendent of the
establishment, but grew crazy himself, and so became a patient. This fact
was unknown to the travelling companion who introduced me. The keepers,
ten in number, having been suddenly overpowered, were first well tarred,
then carefully feathered, and then shut up in underground cells.
They had been so imprisoned for more than a month, during which period
Monsieur Maillard had generously allowed them not only the tar and
feathers (which constituted his “system”), but some bread and abundance of
water. The latter was pumped on them daily. At length, one escaping
through a sewer, gave freedom to all the rest.</p>
<p>The “soothing system,” with important modifications, has been resumed at
the <i>château;</i> yet I cannot help agreeing with Monsieur Maillard, that his
own “treatment” was a very capital one of its kind. As he justly observed,
it was “simple—neat—and gave no trouble at all—not the
least.”</p>
<p>I have only to add that, although I have searched every library in Europe
for the works of Doctor <i>Tarr</i> and Professor <i>Fether</i>, I have, up to the
present day, utterly failed in my endeavors at procuring an edition.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.6"></SPAN>THE LITERARY LIFE OF THINGUM BOB, ESQ.</h2>
<h3>LATE EDITOR OF THE “GOOSETHERUMFOODLE.”<br/> By Himself</h3>
<p>I am now growing in years, and—since I understand that Shakespeare
and Mr. Emmons are deceased—it is not impossible that I may even
die. It has occurred to me, therefore, that I may as well retire from the
field of Letters and repose upon my laurels. But I am ambitious of
signalizing my abdication of the literary sceptre by some important
bequest to posterity; and, perhaps, I cannot do a better thing than just
pen for it an account of my earlier career. My name, indeed, has been so
long and so constantly before the public eye, that I am not only willing
to admit the naturalness of the interest which it has everywhere excited,
but ready to satisfy the extreme curiosity which it has inspired. In fact,
it is no more than the duty of him who achieves greatness to leave behind
him, in his ascent, such landmarks as may guide others to be great. I
propose, therefore, in the present paper, (which I had some idea of
calling “Memoranda to serve for the Literary History of America,”) to give
a detail of those important, yet feeble and tottering first steps, by
which, at length, I attained the high road to the pinnacle of human
renown.</p>
<p>Of one’s very remote ancestors it is superfluous to say much. My father,
Thomas Bob, Esq., stood for many years at the summit of his profession,
which was that of a merchant-barber, in the city of Smug. His warehouse
was the resort of all the principal people of the place, and especially of
the editorial corps—a body which inspires all about it with profound
veneration and awe. For my own part, I regarded them as gods, and drank in
with avidity the rich wit and wisdom which continuously flowed from their
august mouths during the process of what is styled “lather.” My first
moment of positive inspiration must be dated from that ever-memorable
epoch, when the brilliant conductor of the “Gad-Fly,” in the intervals of
the important process just mentioned, recited aloud, before a conclave of
our apprentices, an inimitable poem in honor of the “Only Genuine
Oil-of-Bob,” (so called from its talented inventor, my father,) and for
which effusion the editor of the “Fly” was remunerated with a regal
liberality by the firm of Thomas Bob & company, merchant-barbers.</p>
<p>The genius of the stanzas to the “Oil-of-Bob” first breathed into me, I
say, the divine <i>afflatus</i>. I resolved at once to become a great man,
and to commence by becoming a great poet. That very evening I fell upon my
knees at the feet of my father.</p>
<p>“Father,” I said, “pardon me!—but I have a soul above lather. It is
my firm intention to cut the shop. I would be an editor—I would be a
poet—I would pen stanzas to the ‘Oil-of-Bob.’ Pardon me and aid me
to be great!”</p>
<p>“My dear Thingum,” replied my father, (I had been christened Thingum after
a wealthy relative so surnamed,) “My dear Thingum,” he said, raising me
from my knees by the ears—“Thingum, my boy, you’re a trump, and take
after your father in having a soul. You have an immense head, too, and it
must hold a great many brains. This I have long seen, and therefore had
thoughts of making you a lawyer. The business, however, has grown
ungenteel, and that of a politician don’t pay. Upon the whole you judge
wisely;—the trade of editor is best:—and if you can be a poet
at the same time,—as most of the editors are, by the by,—why
you will kill two birds with one stone. To encourage you in the beginning
of things, I will allow you a garret; pen, ink, and paper; a rhyming
dictionary; and a copy of the ‘Gad-Fly.’ I suppose you would scarcely
demand any more.”</p>
<p>“I would be an ungrateful villain if I did,” I replied with enthusiasm.
“Your generosity is boundless. I will repay it by making you the father of
a genius.”</p>
<p>Thus ended my conference with the best of men, and immediately upon its
termination, I betook myself with zeal to my poetical labors; as upon
these, chiefly, I founded my hopes of ultimate elevation to the editorial
chair.</p>
<p>In my first attempts at composition I found the stanzas to “The
Oil-of-Bob” rather a draw-back than otherwise. Their splendor more dazzled
than enlightened me. The contemplation of their excellence tended,
naturally, to discourage me by comparison with my own abortions; so that
for a long time I labored in vain. At length there came into my head one
of those exquisitely original ideas which now and then <i>will</i>
permeate the brain of a man of genius. It was this:—or, rather, thus
was it carried into execution. From the rubbish of an old book-stall, in a
very remote corner of the town, I got together several antique and
altogether unknown or forgotten volumes. The bookseller sold them to me
for a song. From one of these, which purported to be a translation of one
Dante’s “Inferno,” I copied with remarkable neatness a long passage about
a man named Ugolino, who had a parcel of brats. From another which
contained a good many old plays by some person whose name I forget, I
extracted in the same manner, and with the same care, a great number of
lines about “angels” and “ministers saying grace,” and “goblins damned,”
and more besides of that sort. From a third, which was the composition of
some blind man or other, either a Greek or a Choctaw—I cannot be at
the pains of remembering every trifle exactly—I took about fifty
verses beginning with “Achilles’ wrath,” and “grease,” and something else.
From a fourth, which I recollect was also the work of a blind man, I
selected a page or two all about “hail” and “holy light”; and although a
blind man has no business to write about light, still the verses were
sufficiently good in their way.</p>
<p>Having made fair copies of these poems, I signed every one of them
“Oppodeldoc,” (a fine sonorous name,) and, doing each up nicely in a
separate envelope, I despatched one to each of the four principal
Magazines, with a request for speedy insertion and prompt pay. The result
of this well conceived plan, however, (the success of which would have
saved me much trouble in after life,) served to convince me that some
editors are not to be bamboozled, and gave the <i>coup-de-grace</i> (as
they say in France,) to my nascent hopes, (as they say in the city of the
transcendentals.)</p>
<p>The fact is, that each and every one of the Magazines in question, gave
Mr. “Oppodeldoc” a complete using-up, in the “Monthly Notices to
Correspondents.” The “Hum-Drum” gave him a dressing after this fashion:</p>
<p>“‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) has sent us a long <i>tirade</i>
concerning a bedlamite whom he styles ‘Ugolino,’ who had a great many
children that should have been all whipped and sent to bed without their
suppers. The whole affair is exceedingly tame—not to say <i>flat</i>.
‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) is entirely devoid of imagination—and
imagination, in our humble opinion, is not only the soul of Poesy, but
also its very heart. ‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) has the audacity to
demand of us, for his twattle, a ‘speedy insertion and prompt pay.’ We
neither insert nor purchase any stuff of the sort. There can be no doubt,
however, that he would meet with a ready sale for all the balderdash he
can scribble, at the office of either the ‘Rowdy-Dow,’ the ‘Lollipop,’ or
the ‘Goosetherumfoodle.’”</p>
<p>All this, it must be acknowledged, was very severe upon “Oppodeldoc”—but
the unkindest cut was putting the word Poesy in small caps. In those five
pre-eminent letters what a world of bitterness is there not involved!</p>
<p>But “Oppodeldoc” was punished with equal severity in the “Rowdy-Dow,”
which spoke thus:</p>
<p>“We have received a most singular and insolent communication from a person
(whoever he is,) signing himself ‘Oppodeldoc’—thus desecrating the
greatness of the illustrious Roman Emperor so named. Accompanying the
letter of ‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) we find sundry lines of most
disgusting and unmeaning rant about ‘angels and ministers of grace’—rant
such as no madman short of a Nat Lee, or an ‘Oppodeldoc,’ could possibly
perpetrate. And for this trash of trash, we are modestly requested to ‘pay
promptly.’ No sir—no! We pay for nothing of <i>that</i> sort. Apply
to the ‘Hum-Drum,’ the ‘Lollipop,’ or the ‘Goosetherumfoodle.’ These <i>periodicals</i>
will undoubtedly accept any literary offal you may send them—and as
undoubtedly <i>promise</i> to pay for it.”</p>
<p>This was bitter indeed upon poor “Oppodeldoc”; but, in this instance, the
weight of the satire falls upon the “Hum-drum,” the “Lollipop,” and the
“Goosetherumfoodle,” who are pungently styled “<i>periodicals</i>”—in
Italics, too—a thing that must have cut them to the heart.</p>
<p>Scarcely less savage was the “Lollipop,” which thus discoursed:</p>
<p>“Some <i>individual</i>, who rejoices in the appellation ‘Oppodeldoc,’ (to
what low uses are the names of the illustrious dead too often applied!)
has enclosed us some fifty or sixty <i>verses</i> commencing after this
fashion:</p>
<p class="poem">
Achilles’ wrath, to Greece the direful spring<br/>
Of woes unnumbered, &c., &c., &c., &c.</p>
<p>“‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) is respectfully informed that there is not
a printer’s devil in our office who is not in the daily habit of composing
better <i>lines</i>. Those of ‘Oppodeldoc’ will not <i>scan</i>.
‘Oppodeldoc’ should learn to <i>count</i>. But why he should have
conceived the idea that <i>we</i>, (of all others, <i>we!</i>) would
disgrace our pages with his ineffable nonsense, is utterly beyond
comprehension. Why, the absurd twattle is scarcely good enough for the
‘Hum-Drum,’ the ‘Rowdy-Dow,’ the ‘Goosetherumfoodle’—things that are
in the practice of publishing ‘Mother Goose’s Melodies’ as original
lyrics. And ‘Oppodeldoc’ (whoever he is,) has even the assurance to demand
<i>pay</i> for this drivel. Does ‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) know—is
he aware that we could not be paid to insert it?”</p>
<p>As I perused this I felt myself growing gradually smaller and smaller, and
when I came to the point at which the editor sneered at the poem as
“verses” there was little more than an ounce of me left. As for
“Oppodeldoc,” I began to experience <i>compassion</i> for the poor fellow.
But the “Goosetherumfoodle” showed, if possible, less mercy than the
“Lollipop.” It was the “Goosetherumfoodle” that said:</p>
<p>“A wretched poetaster, who signs himself ‘Oppodeldoc,’ is silly enough to
fancy that <i>we</i> will print and <i>pay for</i> a medley of incoherent
and ungrammatical bombast which he has transmitted to us, and which
commences with the following most <i>intelligible</i> line:</p>
<p class="poem">
‘Hail, Holy Light! Offspring of Heaven, first born.’</p>
<p>“We say, ‘most <i>intelligible</i>.’ ‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) will be
kind enough to tell us, perhaps, how ‘<i>hail</i>’ can be ‘<i>holy light</i>’
We always regarded it as <i>frozen rain</i>. Will he inform us, also, how
frozen rain can be, at one and the same time, both ‘holy light,’ (whatever
that is,) and an ‘offspring?’—which latter term, (if we understand
any thing about English,) is only employed, with propriety, in reference
to small babies of about six weeks old. But it is preposterous to descant
upon such absurdity—although ‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) has the
unparalleled effrontery to suppose that we will not only ‘insert’ his
ignorant ravings, but (absolutely) <i>pay for them!</i></p>
<p>“Now this is fine—it is rich!—and we have half a mind to
punish this young scribbler for his egotism, by really publishing his
effusion, <i>verbatim et literatim</i>, as he has written it. We could
inflict no punishment so severe, and we <i>would</i> inflict it, but for
the boredom which we should cause our readers in so doing.</p>
<p>“Let ‘Oppodeldoc,’ (whoever he is,) send any future <i>composition</i> of
like character to the ‘Hum-Drum,’ the ‘Lollipop,’ or the ‘Rowdy-Dow,’ <i>They</i>
will ‘insert’ it. <i>They</i> ‘insert’ every month just such stuff. Send
it to them. WE are not to be insulted with impunity.”</p>
<p>This made an end of me; and as for the “Hum-Drum,” the “Rowdy-Dow,” and the
“Lollipop,” I never could comprehend how they survived it. The putting <i>them</i>
in the smallest possible <i>minion</i>, (that was the rub—thereby
insinuating their lowness—their baseness,) while WE stood looking
down upon them in gigantic capitals!—oh it was <i>too</i> bitter!—it
was wormwood—it was gall. Had I been either of these periodicals I
would have spared no pains to have the “Goosetherumfoodle” prosecuted. It
might have been done under the Act for the “Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals.” As for “Oppodeldoc,” (whoever he was), I had by this time lost
all patience with the fellow, and sympathized with him no longer. He was a
fool, beyond doubt, (whoever he was,) and got not a kick more than he
deserved.</p>
<p>The result of my experiment with the old books, convinced me, in the first
place, that “honesty is the best policy,” and, in the second, that if I
could not write better than Mr. Dante, and the two blind men, and the rest
of the old set, it would, at least, be a difficult matter to write worse.
I took heart, therefore, and determined to prosecute the “entirely
original,” (as they say on the covers of the magazines,) at whatever cost
of study and pains. I again placed before my eyes, as a model, the
brilliant stanzas on “The Oil-of-Bob” by the editor of the “Gad-Fly,” and
resolved to construct an ode on the same sublime theme, in rivalry of what
had already been done.</p>
<p>With my first verse I had no material difficulty. It ran thus:</p>
<p class="poem">
“To pen an Ode upon the ‘Oil-of-Bob.’”</p>
<p>Having carefully looked out, however, all the legitimate rhymes to “Bob,”
I found it impossible to proceed. In this dilemma I had recourse to
paternal aid; and, after some hours of mature thought, my father and
myself thus constructed the poem:</p>
<p class="poem">
<i>“To pen an Ode upon the ‘Oil-of-Bob’<br/>
Is all sorts of a job.</i><br/>
“(Signed) Snob.”</p>
<p>To be sure, this composition was of no very great length—but I “have
yet to learn” as they say in the Edinburgh Review, that the mere extent of
a literary work has any thing to do with its merit. As for the Quarterly
cant about “sustained effort,” it is impossible to see the sense of it.
Upon the whole, therefore, I was satisfied with the success of my maiden
attempt, and now the only question regarded the disposal I should make of
it. My father suggested that I should send it to the “Gad-Fly”—but
there were two reasons which operated to prevent me from so doing. I
dreaded the jealousy of the editor—and I had ascertained that he did
not pay for original contributions. I therefore, after due deliberation,
consigned the article to the more dignified pages of the “Lollipop,” and
awaited the event in anxiety, but with resignation.</p>
<p>In the very next published number I had the proud satisfaction of seeing
my poem printed at length, as the leading article, with the following
significant words, prefixed in italics and between brackets:</p>
<p><i>We call the attention of our readers to the subjoined admirable stanza
on “The Oil of Bob.” We need say nothing of their sublimity, or their
pathos:—it is impossible to peruse them without tears. Those who
have been nauseated with a sad dose on the same august topic from the
goose quill of the editor of the “Gad Fly” will do well to compare the two
compositions.</i></p>
<p>P. S.—We are consumed with anxiety to probe the mystery which envelops the
evident pseudonym “Snob.” May we hope for a personal interview?</p>
<p>All this was scarcely more than justice, but it was, I confess, rather
more than I had expected:—I acknowledged this, be it observed, to
the everlasting disgrace of my country and of mankind. I lost no time,
however, in calling upon the editor of the “Lollipop,” and had the good
fortune to find this gentleman at home. He saluted me with an air of
profound respect, slightly blended with a fatherly and patronizing
admiration, wrought in him, no doubt, by my appearance of extreme youth
and inexperience. Begging me to be seated, he entered at once upon the
subject of my poem;—but modesty will ever forbid me to repeat the
thousand compliments which he lavished upon me. The eulogies of Mr. Crab,
(such was the editor’s name,) were, however, by no means fulsomely
indiscriminate. He analyzed my composition with much freedom and great
ability—not hesitating to point out a few trivial defects—a
circumstance which elevated him highly in my esteem. The “Gad-Fly” was, of
course, brought upon the <i>tapis</i>, and I hope never to be subjected to
a criticism so searching, or to rebukes so withering, as were bestowed by
Mr. Crab upon that unhappy effusion. I had been accustomed to regard the
editor of the “Gad-Fly” as something superhuman; but Mr. Crab soon
disabused me of that idea. He set the literary as well as the personal
character of the Fly (so Mr. C. satirically designated the rival editor,)
in its true light. He, the Fly, was very little better than he should be.
He had written infamous things. He was a penny-a-liner, and a buffoon. He
was a villain. He had composed a tragedy which set the whole country in a
guffaw, and a farce which deluged the universe in tears. Besides all this,
he had the impudence to pen what he meant for a lampoon upon himself, (Mr.
Crab,) and the temerity to style him “an ass.” Should I at any time wish
to express my opinion of Mr. Fry, the pages of the “Lollipop,” Mr. Crab
assured me, were at my unlimited disposal. In the meantime, as it was very
certain that I would be attacked in the Fly for my attempt at composing a
rival poem on the “Oil-of-Bob,” he (Mr. Crab,) would take it upon himself
to attend, pointedly, to my private and personal interests. If I were not
made a man of at once, it should not be the fault of himself, (Mr. Crab.)</p>
<p>Mr. Crab having now paused in his discourse, (the latter portion of which
I found it impossible to comprehend,) I ventured to suggest something
about the remuneration which I had been taught to expect for my poem, by
an announcement on the cover of the “Lollipop,” declaring that it, (the
“Lollipop,”) “insisted upon being permitted to pay exorbitant prices for
all accepted contributions—frequently expending more money for a
single brief poem than the whole annual cost of the ‘Hum-Drum,’ the
‘Rowdy-Dow,’ and the ‘Goosetherumfoodle’ combined.”</p>
<p>As I mentioned the word “remuneration,” Mr. Crab first opened his eyes,
and then his mouth, to quite a remarkable extent; causing his personal
appearance to resemble that of a highly-agitated elderly duck in the act
of quacking; and in this condition he remained, (ever and anon
pressing his hands tightly to his forehead, as if in a state of desperate
bewilderment) until I had nearly made an end of what I had to say.</p>
<p>Upon my conclusion, he sank back into his seat, as if much overcome,
letting his arms fall lifelessly by his side, but keeping his mouth still
rigorously open, after the fashion of the duck. While I remained in
speechless astonishment at behavior so alarming, he suddenly leaped to his
feet and made a rush at the bell-rope; but just as he reached this, he
appeared to have altered his intention, whatever it was, for he dived
under a table and immediately re-appeared with a cudgel. This he was in
the act of uplifting, (for what purpose I am at a loss to imagine,) when,
all at once, there came a benign smile over his features, and he sank
placidly back in his chair.</p>
<p>“Mr. Bob,” he said, (for I had sent up my card before ascending myself,)
“Mr. Bob, you are a young man, I presume—<i>very?</i>”</p>
<p>I assented; adding that I had not yet concluded my third lustrum.</p>
<p>“Ah!” he replied, “very good! I see how it is—say no more! Touching
this matter of compensation, what you observe is very just: in fact it is
excessively so. But ah—ah—the <i>first</i> contribution—the
<i>first</i>, I say,—it is never the Magazine custom to pay for—you
comprehend, eh? The truth is, we are usually the <i>recipients</i> in such
case.” [Mr. Crab smiled blandly as he emphasized the word “recipients.”]
“For the most part, we are <i>paid</i> for the insertion of a maiden
attempt—especially in verse. In the second place, Mr. Bob, the
Magazine rule is never to disburse what we term in France the <i>argent
comptant</i>—I have no doubt you understand. In a quarter or two
after publication of the article—or in a year or two—we make
no objection to giving our note at nine months; provided always that
we can so arrange our affairs as to be quite certain of a ‘burst up’ in
six. I really <i>do</i> hope, Mr. Bob, that you will look upon this
explanation as satisfactory.” Here Mr. Crab concluded, and the tears stood
in his eyes.</p>
<p>Grieved to the soul at having been, however innocently, the cause of pain
to so eminent and so sensitive a man, I hastened to apologize, and to
reassure him, by expressing my perfect coincidence with his views, as well
as my entire appreciation of the delicacy of his position. Having done all
this in a neat speech, I took leave.</p>
<p>One fine morning, very shortly afterwards, “I awoke and found myself
famous.” The extent of my renown will be best estimated by reference to
the editorial opinions of the day. These opinions, it will be seen, were
embodied in critical notices of the number of the “Lollipop” containing my
poem, and are perfectly satisfactory, conclusive and clear with the
exception, perhaps, of the hieroglyphical marks, “<i>Sep</i>. 15—1
t.” appended to each of the critiques.</p>
<p>The “Owl,” a journal of profound sagacity, and well known for the
deliberate gravity of its literary decisions—the “Owl,” I say, spoke
as follows:</p>
<p>“‘The Lollipop!’ The October number of this delicious Magazine
surpasses its predecessors, and sets competition at defiance. In the
beauty of its typography and paper—in the number and excellence of
its steel plates—as well as in the literary merit of its
contributions—the ‘Lollipop’ compares with its slow-paced rivals as
Hyperion with a Satyr. The ‘Hum-Drum,’ the ‘Rowdy-Dow,’ and the
‘Goosetherumfoodle,’ excel, it is true, in braggadocio, but, in all other
points, give us the ‘Lollipop!’ How this celebrated journal can sustain
its evidently tremendous expenses, is more than we can understand. To be
sure, it has a circulation of 100,000, and its subscription-list has
increased one-fourth during the last month; but, on the other hand, the
sums it disburses constantly for contributions are inconceivable. It is
reported that Mr. Slyass received no less than thirty-seven and a half
cents for his inimitable paper on ‘Pigs.’ With Mr. Crab, as editor, and
with such names upon the list of contributors as Snob and Slyass, there
can be no such word as ‘fail’ for the Lollipop.’ Go and subscribe. <i>Sep</i>. 15—1
<i>t.”</i></p>
<p>I must say that I was gratified with this high-toned notice from a paper
so respectable as the “Owl.” The placing my name—that is to say, my
<i>nom de guerre</i>—in priority of station to that of the great
Slyass, was a compliment as happy as I felt it to be deserved.</p>
<p>My attention was next arrested by these paragraphs in the “Toad”—a
print highly distinguished for its uprightness, and independence—for
its entire freedom from sycophancy and subservience to the givers of
dinners:</p>
<p>“The ‘Lollipop’ for October is out in advance of all its
contemporaries, and infinitely surpasses them, of course, in the splendor
of its embellishments, as well as in the richness of its literary
contents. The ‘Hum-Drum,’ the ‘Rowdy-Dow,’ and the ‘Goosetherumfoodle’
excel, we admit, in braggadocio, but, in all other points, give us the
‘Lollipop. How this celebrated Magazine can sustain its evidently
tremendous expenses, is more than we can understand. To be sure, it has a
circulation of 200,000, and its subscription list has increased one-third
during the last fortnight, but on the other hand, the sums it disburses,
monthly, for contributions, are fearfully great. We learn that Mr.
Mumblethumb received no less than fifty cents for his late ‘Monody in a
Mud-Puddle.’</p>
<p>“Among the original contributors to the present number we notice, (besides
the eminent editor, Mr. Crab,) such men as Snob, Slyass, and Mumblethumb.
Apart from the editorial matter, the most valuable paper, nevertheless,
is, we think, a poetical gem by Snob, on the ‘Oil-of-Bob’—but our
readers must not suppose from the title of this incomparable <i>bijou</i>,
that it bears any similitude to some balderdash on the same subject by a
certain contemptible individual whose name is unmentionable to ears
polite. The present poem ‘On the Oil-of-Bob,’ has excited universal
anxiety and curiosity in respect to the owner of the evident pseudonym,
‘Snob’—a curiosity which, happily, we have it in our power to
satisfy. ‘Snob’ is the nom de plume of Mr. Thingum Bob, of this city,—a
relative of the great Mr. Thingum, (after whom he is named,) and otherwise
connected with the most illustrious families of the State. His father,
Thomas Bob, Esq., is an opulent merchant in Smug. <i>Sep</i>. 15—1 <i>t.”</i></p>
<p>This generous approbation touched me to the heart—the more
especially as it emanated from a source so avowedly—so proverbially
pure as the “Toad.” The word “balderdash,” as applied to the “Oil-of-Bob”
of the Fly, I considered singularly pungent and appropriate. The words
“gem” and “<i>bijou</i>,” however, used in reference to my composition,
struck me as being, in some degree, feeble, and seemed to me to be
deficient in force. They were not sufficiently <i>prononcés</i>, (as we
have it in France).</p>
<p>I had hardly finished reading the “Toad,” when a friend placed in my hands
a copy of the “Mole,” a daily, enjoying high reputation for the keenness
of its perception about matters in general, and for the open, honest,
above-ground style of its editorials. The “Mole” spoke of the “Lollipop”
as follows:</p>
<p>“We have just received the ‘Lollipop’ for October, and must say that
never before have we perused any single number of any periodical which
afforded us a felicity so supreme. We speak advisedly. The ‘Hum-Drum,’ the
‘Rowdy-Dow’ and the ‘Goosetherumfoodle’ must look well to their laurels.
These prints, no doubt, surpass every thing in loudness of pretension,
but, in all other points, give us the ‘Lollipop!’ How this celebrated
Magazine can sustain its evidently tremendous expenses, is more than we
can comprehend. To be sure, it has a circulation of 300,000 and its
subscription-list has increased one-half within the last week, but then
the sum it disburses, monthly, for contributions, is astoundingly
enormous. We have it upon good authority, that Mr. Fatquack received no
less than sixty-two cents and a half for his late domestic nouvelette, the
‘Dish-Clout.’</p>
<p>“The contributors to the number before us are Mr. Crab, (the eminent
editor,) Snob, Mumblethumb, Fatquack, and others; but, after the
inimitable compositions of the editor himself, we prefer a diamond-like
effusion from the pen of a rising poet who writes over the signature
‘Snob’—a nom de guerre which we predict will one day extinguish the
radiance of ‘Boz.’ ‘Snob,’ we learn, is a Mr. Thingum Bob, Esq., sole heir
of a wealthy merchant of this city, Thomas Bob, Esq., and a near relative
of the distinguished Mr. Thingum. The title of Mr. B.‘s admirable poem is
the ‘Oil-of-Bob’—a somewhat unfortunate name, by-the-by, as some
contemptible vagabond connected with the penny press has already disgusted
the town with a great deal of drivel upon the same topic. There will be no
danger, however, of confounding the compositions. Sep. 15—1 t.”</p>
<p>The generous approbation of so clear-sighted a journal as the “Mole”
penetrated my soul with delight. The only objection which occurred to me
was, that the terms “contemptible vagabond” might have been better written
“<i>odious and</i> contemptible <i>wretch, villain and</i> vagabond.”
This would have sounded more gracefully, I think. “Diamond-like,” also,
was scarcely, it will be admitted, of sufficient intensity to express what
the “Mole” evidently <i>thought</i> of the brilliancy of the “Oil-of-Bob.”</p>
<p>On the same afternoon in which I saw these notices in the “Owl,” the
“Toad,” and the “Mole” I happened to meet with a copy of the
“Daddy-Long-Legs,” a periodical proverbial for the extreme extent of its
understanding. And it was the “Daddy-Long-Legs” which spoke thus:</p>
<p>“The ‘Lollipop!!’ This gorgeous magazine is already before the public
for October. The question of preeminence is forever put to rest, and
hereafter it will be excessively preposterous in the ‘Hum-Drum,’ the
‘Rowdy-Dow,’ or the ‘Goosetherumfoodle,’ to make any farther spasmodic
attempts at competition. These journals may excel the ‘Lollipop’ in
outcry, but, in all other points, give us the ‘Lollipop!’ How this
celebrated Magazine can sustain its evidently tremendous expenses, is past
comprehension. To be sure it has a circulation of precisely half a
million, and its subscription-list has increased seventy-five per cent,
within the last couple of days; but then the sums it disburses, monthly,
for contributions, are scarcely credible; we are cognizant of the fact,
that Mademoiselle Cribalittle received no less than eighty-seven cents and
a half for her late valuable Revolutionary Tale, entitled ‘The York-Town
Katy-Did, and the Bunker-Hill Katy-Didn’t.’</p>
<p>“The most able papers in the present number, are, of course, those
furnished by the editor, (the eminent Mr. Crab,) but there are numerous
magnificent contributions from such names as Snob, Mademoiselle
Cribalittle, Slyass, Mrs. Fibalittle, Mumblethumb, Mrs. Squibalittle, and
last, though not least, Fatquack. The world may well be challenged to
produce so rich a galaxy of genius.</p>
<p>“The poem over the signature ‘Snob’ is, we find, attracting universal
commendation, and, we are constrained to say, deserves, if possible, even
more applause than it has received. The ‘Oil-of-Bob’ is the title of this
masterpiece of eloquence and art. One or two of our readers <i>may</i> have a
<i>very</i> faint, although sufficiently disgusting recollection of a poem
(?) similarly entitled, the perpetration of a miserable penny-a-liner,
mendicant, and cut-throat, connected in the capacity of scullion, we
believe, with one of the indecent prints about the purlieus of the city;
we beg them, for God’s sake, not to confound the compositions. The author
of the ‘Oil-of-Bob’ is, we hear, Thingum Bob, Esq., a gentleman of high
genius, and a scholar. ‘Snob’ is merely a <i>nom-de-guerre. Sept</i>. 15—1
<i>t.”</i></p>
<p>I could scarcely restrain my indignation while I perused the concluding
portions of this diatribe. It was clear to me that the yea-nay manner—not
to say the gentleness—the positive forbearance with which the
“Daddy-Long-Legs” spoke of that pig, the editor of the “Gad-Fly”—it
was evident to me, I say, that this gentleness of speech could proceed
from nothing else than a partiality for the Fly—whom it was clearly
the intention of the “Daddy-Long-Legs” to elevate into reputation at my
expense. Any one, indeed, might perceive, with half an eye, that, had the
real design of the “Daddy” been what it wished to appear, it, (the
“Daddy”) might have expressed itself in terms more direct, more pungent,
and altogether more to the purpose. The words “penny-a-liner,”
“mendicant,” “scullion,” and “cut-throat,” were epithets so intentionally
inexpressive and equivocal, as to be worse than nothing when applied to
the author of the very worst stanzas ever penned by one of the human race.
We all know what is meant by “damning with faint praise,” and, on the
other hand, who could fail seeing through the covert purpose of the
“Daddy”—that of glorifying with feeble abuse?</p>
<p>What the “Daddy” chose to say of the Fly, however, was no business of
mine. What it said of myself <i>was</i>. After the noble manner in which
the “Owl,” the “Toad,” the “Mole,” had expressed themselves in respect to
my ability, it was rather too much to be coolly spoken of by a thing like
the “Daddy-Long-Legs,” as merely “a gentleman of high genius and a
scholar.” Gentleman indeed! I made up my mind at once, either to get a
written apology from the “Daddy-Long-Legs,” or to call it out.</p>
<p>Full of this purpose, I looked about me to find a friend whom I could
entrust with a message to his Daddyship, and as the editor of the
“Lollipop” had given me marked tokens of regard, I at length concluded to
seek assistance upon the present occasion.</p>
<p>I have never yet been able to account, in a manner satisfactory to my own
understanding, for the <i>very</i> peculiar countenance and demeanor with
which Mr. Crab listened to me, as I unfolded to him my design. He again
went through the scene of the bell-rope and cudgel, and did not omit the
duck. At one period I thought he really intended to quack. His fit,
nevertheless, finally subsided as before, and he began to act and speak in
a rational way. He declined bearing the cartel, however, and in fact,
dissuaded me from sending it at all; but was candid enough to admit that
the “Daddy-Long-Legs” had been disgracefully in the wrong—more
especially in what related to the epithets “gentleman and scholar.”</p>
<p>Towards the end of this interview with Mr. Crab, who really appeared to
take a paternal interest in my welfare, he suggested to me that I might
turn an honest penny, and, at the same time, advance my reputation, by
occasionally playing Thomas Hawk for the “Lollipop.”</p>
<p>I begged Mr. Crab to inform me who was Mr. Thomas Hawk, and how it was
expected that I should play him.</p>
<p>Here Mr. Crab again “made great eyes,” (as we say in Germany,) but at
length, recovering himself from a profound attack of astonishment, he
assured me that he employed the words “Thomas Hawk” to avoid the
colloquialism, Tommy, which was low—but that the true idea was Tommy
Hawk—or tomahawk—and that by “playing tomahawk” he referred to
scalping, brow-beating and otherwise using-up the herd of poor-devil
authors.</p>
<p>I assured my patron that, if this was all, I was perfectly resigned to the
task of playing Thomas Hawk. Hereupon Mr. Crab desired me to use-up the
editor of the “Gad-Fly” forthwith, in the fiercest style within the scope
of my ability, and as a specimen of my powers. This I did, upon the spot,
in a review of the original “Oil-of-Bob,” occupying thirty-six pages of
the “Lollipop.” I found playing Thomas Hawk, indeed, a far less onerous
occupation than poetizing; for I went upon <i>system</i> altogether, and
thus it was easy to do the thing thoroughly and well. My practice was
this. I bought auction copies (cheap) of “Lord Brougham’s Speeches,”
“Cobbett’s Complete Works,” the “New Slang-Syllabus,” the “Whole Art of
Snubbing,” “Prentice’s Billingsgate” (folio edition,) and “Lewis G.
Clarke on Tongue.” These works I cut up thoroughly with a currycomb, and
then, throwing the shreds into a sieve, sifted out carefully all that
might be thought decent, (a mere trifle); reserving the hard phrases,
which I threw into a large tin pepper-castor with longitudinal holes, so
that an entire sentence could get through without material injury. The
mixture was then ready for use. When called upon to play Thomas Hawk, I
anointed a sheet of fools-cap with the white of a gander’s egg; then,
shredding the thing to be reviewed as I had previously shredded the books,—only
with more care, so as to get every word separate—I threw the latter
shreds in with the former, screwed on the lid of the castor, gave it a
shake, and so dusted out the mixture upon the egged foolscap; where it
stuck. The effect was beautiful to behold. It was captivating. Indeed, the
reviews I brought to pass by this simple expedient have never been
approached, and were the wonder of the world. At first, through
bashfulness—the result of inexperience—I was a little put out
by a certain inconsistency—a certain air of the <i>bizarre</i>, (as
we say in France,) worn by the composition as a whole. All the phrases did
not <i>fit</i>, (as we say in the Anglo-Saxon). Many were quite awry.
Some, even, were up-side-down; and there were none of them which were not,
in some measure, injured in regard to effect, by this latter species of
accident, when it occurred—with the exception of Mr. Lewis Clarke’s
paragraphs, which were so vigorous, and altogether stout, that they seemed
not particularly disconcerted by any extreme of position, but looked
equally happy and satisfactory, whether on their heads, or on their heels.</p>
<p>What became of the editor of the “Gad-Fly,” after the publication of my
criticism on his “Oil-of-Bob,” it is somewhat difficult to determine. The
most reasonable conclusion is, that he wept himself to death. At all
events he disappeared instantaneously from the face of the earth, and no
man has seen even the ghost of him since.</p>
<p>This matter having been properly accomplished, and the Furies appeased, I
grew at once into high favor with Mr. Crab. He took me into his
confidence, gave me a permanent situation as Thomas Hawk of the
“Lollipop,” and, as for the present, he could afford me no salary, allowed
me to profit, at discretion, by his advice.</p>
<p>“My dear Thingum,” said he to me one day after dinner, “I respect your
abilities and love you as a son. You shall be my heir. When I die I will
bequeath you the ‘Lollipop.’ In the meantime I will make a man of you—I
<i>will</i>—provided always that you follow my counsel. The first
thing to do is to get rid of the old bore.”</p>
<p>“Boar?” said I inquiringly—“pig, eh?—<i>aper?</i> (as we say
in Latin)—who?—where?”</p>
<p>“Your father,” said he.</p>
<p>“Precisely,” I replied,—“pig.”</p>
<p>“You have your fortune to make, Thingum,” resumed Mr. Crab, “and that
governor of yours is a millstone about your neck. We must cut him at
once.” [Here I took out my knife.] “We must cut him,” continued Mr. Crab,
“decidedly and forever. He won’t do—he <i>won’t</i>. Upon second
thoughts, you had better kick him, or cane him, or something of that
kind.”</p>
<p>“What do you say,” I suggested modestly, “to my kicking him in the first
instance, caning him afterwards, and winding up by tweaking his nose?”</p>
<p>Mr. Crab looked at me musingly for some moments, and then answered:</p>
<p>“I think, Mr. Bob, that what you propose would answer sufficiently well—indeed
remarkably well—that is to say, as far as it went—but barbers
are exceedingly hard to cut, and I think, upon the whole, that, having
performed upon Thomas Bob the operations you suggest, it would be
advisable to blacken, with your fists, both his eyes, very carefully and
thoroughly, to prevent his ever seeing you again in fashionable
promenades. After doing this, I really do not perceive that you can do any
more. However—it might be just as well to roll him once or twice in
the gutter, and then put him in charge of the police. Any time the next
morning you can call at the watch-house and swear an assault.”</p>
<p>I was much affected by the kindness of feeling towards me personally,
which was evinced in this excellent advice of Mr. Crab, and I did not fail
to profit by it forthwith. The result was, that I got rid of the old bore,
and began to feel a little independent and gentleman-like. The want of
money, however, was, for a few weeks, a source of some discomfort; but at
length, by carefully putting to use my two eyes, and observing how matters
went just in front of my nose, I perceived how the thing was to be brought
about. I say “thing”—be it observed—for they tell me the Latin
for it is <i>rem</i>. By the way, talking of Latin, can any one tell me
the meaning of <i>quocunque</i>—or what is the meaning of <i>modo?</i></p>
<p>My plan was exceedingly simple. I bought, for a song, a sixteenth of the
“Snapping-Turtle”:—that was all. The thing was
<i>done</i>, and I put money in my purse. There were some trivial
arrangements afterwards, to be sure; but these formed no portion of the
plan. They were a consequence—a result. For example, I bought pen,
ink, and paper, and put them into furious activity. Having thus completed
a Magazine article, I gave it, for appellation, “Fol-Lol, <i>by the
Author of</i> ‘The Oil-of-Bob,’” and enveloped it to
the “Goosetherumfoodle.” That journal, however, having
pronounced it “twattle” in the “Monthly Notices to
Correspondents,” I reheaded the paper
“‘Hey-Diddle-Diddle,’ by Thingum Bob, Esq., Author of
the Ode on ‘The Oil-of-Bob,’ <i>and</i> Editor of the
‘Snapping-Turtle.’” With this amendment, I re-enclosed
it to the “Goosetherumfoodle,” and, while I awaited a reply,
published daily, in the “Turtle,” six columns of what may be
termed philosophical and analytical investigation of the literary merits
of the “Goosetherumfoodle,” as well as of the personal
character of the editor of the “Goosetherumfoodle.” At the
end of a week the “Goosetherumfoodle” discovered that it had,
by some odd mistake, “confounded a stupid article, headed
‘Hey-Diddle-Diddle’ and composed by some unknown ignoramus,
with a gem of resplendent lustre similarly entitled, the work of Thingum
Bob, Esq., the celebrated author of ‘The Oil-of-Bob.’”
The “Goosetherumfoodle” deeply “regretted this very
natural accident,” and promised, moreover, an insertion of the
<i>genuine</i> “Hey-Diddle-Diddle” in the very next number of
the Magazine.</p>
<p>The fact is, I <i>thought</i>—I <i>really</i> thought—I
thought at the time—I thought <i>then</i>—and have no reason
for thinking otherwise <i>now</i>—that the “Goosetherumfoodle” <i>did</i>
make a mistake. With the best intentions in the world, I never knew any
thing that made as many singular mistakes as the “Goosetherumfoodle.” From
that day I took a liking to the “Goosetherumfoodle,” and the result was I
soon saw into the very depths of its literary merits, and did not fail to
expatiate upon them, in the “Turtle,” whenever a fitting opportunity
occurred. And it is to be regarded as a very peculiar coincidence—as
one of those positively <i>remarkable</i> coincidences which set a man to
serious thinking—that just such a total revolution of opinion—just
such entire <i>bouleversement</i>, (as we say in French,)—just such
thorough <i>topsiturviness</i>, (if I may be permitted to employ a rather
forcible term of the Choctaws,) as happened, <i>pro</i> and <i>con</i>,
between myself on the one part, and the “Goosetherumfoodle” on the other,
did actually again happen, in a brief period afterwards, and with
precisely similar circumstances, in the case of myself and the
“Rowdy-Dow,” and in the case of myself and the “Hum-Drum.”</p>
<p>Thus it was that, by a master-stroke of genius, I at length consummated my
triumphs by “putting money in my purse,” and thus may be said really and
fairly to have commenced that brilliant and eventful career which rendered
me illustrious, and which now enables me to say, with Chateaubriand, “I
have made history”—“<i>J’ai fait l’histoire</i>.”</p>
<p>I have indeed “made history.” From the bright epoch which I now record, my
actions—my works—are the property of mankind. They are
familiar to the world. It is, then, needless for me to detail how, soaring
rapidly, I fell heir to the “Lollipop”—how I merged this journal in
the “Hum-Drum”—how again I made purchase of the “Rowdy-Dow,” thus
combining the three periodicals—how, lastly, I effected a bargain
for the sole remaining rival, and united all the literature of the country
in one magnificent Magazine, known everywhere as the</p>
<p class="center">
“Rowdy-Dow, Lollipop, Hum-Drum,<br/>
and<br/>
goosetherumfoodle.”</p>
<p>Yes; I have made history. My fame is universal. It extends to the
uttermost ends of the earth. You cannot take up a common newspaper in
which you shall not see some allusion to the immortal Thingum Bob. It is
Mr. Thingum Bob said so, and Mr. Thingum Bob wrote this, and Mr. Thingum
Bob did that. But I am meek and expire with an humble heart. After all,
what is it?—this indescribable something which men will persist in
terming “genius?” I agree with Buffon—with Hogarth—it is but
<i>diligence</i> after all.</p>
<p>Look at <i>me!</i>—how I labored—how I toiled—how I
wrote! Ye Gods, did I <i>not</i> write? I knew not the word “ease.” By day
I adhered to my desk, and at night, a pale student, I consumed the
midnight oil. You should have seen me—you <i>should</i>. I leaned to
the right. I leaned to the left. I sat forward. I sat backward. I sat upon
end. I sat <i>tete baissée</i>, (as they have it in the Kickapoo,) bowing
my head close to the alabaster page. And, through all, I—<i>wrote</i>.
Through joy and through sorrow, I—<i>wrote</i>. Through hunger and
through thirst, I—<i>wrote</i>. Through good report and through ill
report, I—<i>wrote</i>. Through sunshine and through moonshine, I—<i>wrote.
What</i> I wrote it is unnecessary to say. The <i>style!</i>—that
was the thing. I caught it from Fatquack—whizz!—fizz!——
and I am giving you a specimen of it now.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.7"></SPAN>HOW TO WRITE A “BLACKWOOD” ARTICLE</h2>
<p class="letter">
“In the name of the Prophet—figs!!”<br/>
—<i>Cry of the Turkish fig-peddler.</i></p>
<p>I presume everybody has heard of me. My name is the Signora Psyche
Zenobia. This I know to be a fact. Nobody but my enemies ever calls me
Suky Snobbs. I have been assured that Suky is but a vulgar corruption of
Psyche, which is good Greek, and means “the soul” (that’s me, I’m all
soul) and sometimes “a butterfly,” which latter meaning undoubtedly
alludes to my appearance in my new crimson satin dress, with the sky-blue
Arabian mantelet, and the trimmings of green agraffas, and the seven
flounces of orange-colored auriculas. As for Snobbs—any person who
should look at me would be instantly aware that my name wasn’t Snobbs.
Miss Tabitha Turnip propagated that report through sheer envy. Tabitha
Turnip indeed! Oh the little wretch! But what can we expect from a turnip?
Wonder if she remembers the old adage about “blood out of a turnip,” &c.?
[Mem. put her in mind of it the first opportunity.] [Mem. again—pull
her nose.] Where was I? Ah! I have been assured that Snobbs is a mere
corruption of Zenobia, and that Zenobia was a queen—(So am I. Dr.
Moneypenny always calls me the Queen of the Hearts)—and that
Zenobia, as well as Psyche, is good Greek, and that my father was “a
Greek,” and that consequently I have a right to our patronymic, which is
Zenobia and not by any means Snobbs. Nobody but Tabitha Turnip calls me
Suky Snobbs. I am the Signora Psyche Zenobia.</p>
<p>As I said before, everybody has heard of me. I am that very Signora Psyche
Zenobia, so justly celebrated as corresponding secretary to the
“Philadelphia, Regular, Exchange, Tea, Total, Young, Belles, Lettres,
Universal, Experimental, Bibliographical, Association, To, Civilize,
Humanity.” Dr. Moneypenny made the title for us, and says he chose it
because it sounded big like an empty rum-puncheon. (A vulgar man that
sometimes—but he’s deep.) We all sign the initials of the society
after our names, in the fashion of the R. S. A., Royal Society of Arts—the
S. D. U. K., Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, &c, &c.
Dr. Moneypenny says that S. stands for stale, and that D. U. K. spells
duck, (but it don’t,) that S. D. U. K. stands for Stale Duck and not for
Lord Brougham’s society—but then Dr. Moneypenny is such a queer man
that I am never sure when he is telling me the truth. At any rate we
always add to our names the initials P. R. E. T. T. Y. B. L. U. E. B. A.
T. C. H.—that is to say, Philadelphia, Regular, Exchange, Tea,
Total, Young, Belles, Lettres, Universal, Experimental, Bibliographical,
Association, To, Civilize, Humanity—one letter for each word, which
is a decided improvement upon Lord Brougham. Dr. Moneypenny will have it
that our initials give our true character—but for my life I can’t
see what he means.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the good offices of the Doctor, and the strenuous
exertions of the association to get itself into notice, it met with no
very great success until I joined it. The truth is, the members indulged
in too flippant a tone of discussion. The papers read every Saturday
evening were characterized less by depth than buffoonery. They were all
whipped syllabub. There was no investigation of first causes, first
principles. There was no investigation of any thing at all. There was no
attention paid to that great point, the “fitness of things.” In short
there was no fine writing like this. It was all low—very! No
profundity, no reading, no metaphysics—nothing which the learned
call spirituality, and which the unlearned choose to stigmatize as cant.
[Dr. M. says I ought to spell “cant” with a capital K—but I know
better.]</p>
<p>When I joined the society it was my endeavor to introduce a better style
of thinking and writing, and all the world knows how well I have
succeeded. We get up as good papers now in the P. R. E. T. T. Y. B. L. U.
E. B. A. T. C. H. as any to be found even in Blackwood. I say, Blackwood,
because I have been assured that the finest writing, upon every subject,
is to be discovered in the pages of that justly celebrated Magazine. We
now take it for our model upon all themes, and are getting into rapid
notice accordingly. And, after all, it’s not so very difficult a matter to
compose an article of the genuine Blackwood stamp, if one only goes
properly about it. Of course I don’t speak of the political articles.
Everybody knows how they are managed, since Dr. Moneypenny explained it.
Mr. Blackwood has a pair of tailor’s-shears, and three apprentices who
stand by him for orders. One hands him the “Times,” another the “Examiner”
and a third a “Culley’s New Compendium of Slang-Whang.” Mr. B. merely cuts
out and intersperses. It is soon done—nothing but “Examiner,”
“Slang-Whang,” and “Times”—then “Times,” “Slang-Whang,” and
“Examiner”—and then “Times,” “Examiner,” and “Slang-Whang.”</p>
<p>But the chief merit of the Magazine lies in its miscellaneous articles;
and the best of these come under the head of what Dr. Moneypenny calls the
bizarreries (whatever that may mean) and what everybody else calls the
intensities. This is a species of writing which I have long known how to
appreciate, although it is only since my late visit to Mr. Blackwood
(deputed by the society) that I have been made aware of the exact method
of composition. This method is very simple, but not so much so as the
politics. Upon my calling at Mr. B.‘s, and making known to him the wishes
of the society, he received me with great civility, took me into his
study, and gave me a clear explanation of the whole process.</p>
<p>“My dear madam,” said he, evidently struck with my majestic appearance,
for I had on the crimson satin, with the green agraffas, and
orange-colored auriclas. “My dear madam,” said he, “sit down. The matter
stands thus: In the first place your writer of intensities must have very
black ink, and a very big pen, with a very blunt nib. And, mark me, Miss
Psyche Zenobia!” he continued, after a pause, with the most expressive
energy and solemnity of manner, “mark me!—that pen—must—never
be mended! Herein, madam, lies the secret, the soul, of intensity. I
assume upon myself to say, that no individual, of however great genius
ever wrote with a good pen—understand me,—a good article. You
may take, it for granted, that when manuscript can be read it is never
worth reading. This is a leading principle in our faith, to which if you
cannot readily assent, our conference is at an end.”</p>
<p>He paused. But, of course, as I had no wish to put an end to the
conference, I assented to a proposition so very obvious, and one, too, of
whose truth I had all along been sufficiently aware. He seemed pleased,
and went on with his instructions.</p>
<p>“It may appear invidious in me, Miss Psyche Zenobia, to refer you to any
article, or set of articles, in the way of model or study, yet perhaps I
may as well call your attention to a few cases. Let me see. There was ‘The
Dead Alive,’ a capital thing!—the record of a gentleman’s sensations
when entombed before the breath was out of his body—full of tastes,
terror, sentiment, metaphysics, and erudition. You would have sworn that
the writer had been born and brought up in a coffin. Then we had the
‘Confessions of an Opium-eater’—fine, very fine!—glorious
imagination—deep philosophy acute speculation—plenty of fire
and fury, and a good spicing of the decidedly unintelligible. That was a
nice bit of flummery, and went down the throats of the people
delightfully. They would have it that Coleridge wrote the paper—but
not so. It was composed by my pet baboon, Juniper, over a rummer of
Hollands and water, ‘hot, without sugar.’” [This I could scarcely have
believed had it been anybody but Mr. Blackwood, who assured me of it.]
“Then there was ‘The Involuntary Experimentalist,’ all about a gentleman
who got baked in an oven, and came out alive and well, although certainly
done to a turn. And then there was ‘The Diary of a Late Physician,’ where
the merit lay in good rant, and indifferent Greek—both of them
taking things with the public. And then there was ‘The Man in the Bell,’ a
paper by-the-by, Miss Zenobia, which I cannot sufficiently recommend to
your attention. It is the history of a young person who goes to sleep
under the clapper of a church bell, and is awakened by its tolling for a
funeral. The sound drives him mad, and, accordingly, pulling out his
tablets, he gives a record of his sensations. Sensations are the great
things after all. Should you ever be drowned or hung, be sure and make a
note of your sensations—they will be worth to you ten guineas a
sheet. If you wish to write forcibly, Miss Zenobia, pay minute attention
to the sensations.”</p>
<p>“That I certainly will, Mr. Blackwood,” said I.</p>
<p>“Good!” he replied. “I see you are a pupil after my own heart. But I must
put you au fait to the details necessary in composing what may be
denominated a genuine Blackwood article of the sensation stamp—the
kind which you will understand me to say I consider the best for all
purposes.</p>
<p>“The first thing requisite is to get yourself into such a scrape as no one
ever got into before. The oven, for instance,—that was a good hit.
But if you have no oven or big bell, at hand, and if you cannot
conveniently tumble out of a balloon, or be swallowed up in an earthquake,
or get stuck fast in a chimney, you will have to be contented with simply
imagining some similar misadventure. I should prefer, however, that you
have the actual fact to bear you out. Nothing so well assists the fancy,
as an experimental knowledge of the matter in hand. ‘Truth is strange,’
you know, ‘stranger than fiction’—besides being more to the
purpose.”</p>
<p>Here I assured him I had an excellent pair of garters, and would go and
hang myself forthwith.</p>
<p>“Good!” he replied, “do so;—although hanging is somewhat hacknied.
Perhaps you might do better. Take a dose of Brandreth’s pills, and then
give us your sensations. However, my instructions will apply equally well
to any variety of misadventure, and in your way home you may easily get
knocked in the head, or run over by an omnibus, or bitten by a mad dog, or
drowned in a gutter. But to proceed.</p>
<p>“Having determined upon your subject, you must next consider the tone, or
manner, of your narration. There is the tone didactic, the tone
enthusiastic, the tone natural—all commonplace enough. But
then there is the tone laconic, or curt, which has lately come much into
use. It consists in short sentences. Somehow thus: Can’t be too brief.
Can’t be too snappish. Always a full stop. And never a paragraph.</p>
<p>“Then there is the tone elevated, diffusive, and interjectional. Some of
our best novelists patronize this tone. The words must be all in a whirl,
like a humming-top, and make a noise very similar, which answers
remarkably well instead of meaning. This is the best of all possible
styles where the writer is in too great a hurry to think.</p>
<p>“The tone metaphysical is also a good one. If you know any big words this
is your chance for them. Talk of the Ionic and Eleatic schools—of
Archytas, Gorgias, and Alcmaeon. Say something about objectivity and
subjectivity. Be sure and abuse a man named Locke. Turn up your nose at
things in general, and when you let slip any thing a little too absurd,
you need not be at the trouble of scratching it out, but just add a
footnote and say that you are indebted for the above profound observation
to the ‘Kritik der reinem Vernunft,’ or to the ‘Metaphysithe Anfongsgrunde
der Noturwissenchaft.’ This would look erudite and—and—and
frank.</p>
<p>“There are various other tones of equal celebrity, but I shall mention
only two more—the tone transcendental and the tone heterogeneous. In
the former the merit consists in seeing into the nature of affairs a very
great deal farther than anybody else. This second sight is very efficient
when properly managed. A little reading of the ‘Dial’ will carry you a
great way. Eschew, in this case, big words; get them as small as possible,
and write them upside down. Look over Channing’s poems and quote what he
says about a ‘fat little man with a delusive show of Can.’ Put in
something about the Supernal Oneness. Don’t say a syllable about the
Infernal Twoness. Above all, study innuendo. Hint everything—assert
nothing. If you feel inclined to say ‘bread and butter,’ do not by any
means say it outright. You may say any thing and every thing approaching
to ‘bread and butter.’ You may hint at buck-wheat cake, or you may even go
so far as to insinuate oat-meal porridge, but if bread and butter be your
real meaning, be cautious, my dear Miss Psyche, not on any account to say
‘bread and butter!’”</p>
<p>I assured him that I should never say it again as long as I lived. He
kissed me and continued:</p>
<p>“As for the tone heterogeneous, it is merely a judicious mixture, in equal
proportions, of all the other tones in the world, and is consequently made
up of every thing deep, great, odd, piquant, pertinent, and pretty.</p>
<p>“Let us suppose now you have determined upon your incidents and tone. The
most important portion—in fact, the soul of the whole business, is
yet to be attended to—I allude to the filling up. It is not to be
supposed that a lady, or gentleman either, has been leading the life of a
book worm. And yet above all things it is necessary that your article have
an air of erudition, or at least afford evidence of extensive general
reading. Now I’ll put you in the way of accomplishing this point. See
here!” (pulling down some three or four ordinary-looking volumes, and
opening them at random). “By casting your eye down almost any page of any
book in the world, you will be able to perceive at once a host of little
scraps of either learning or <i>bel-esprit-ism</i>, which are the very thing for
the spicing of a Blackwood article. You might as well note down a few
while I read them to you. I shall make two divisions: first, Piquant Facts
for the Manufacture of Similes, and, second, Piquant Expressions to be
introduced as occasion may require. Write now!”—and I wrote as he
dictated.</p>
<p>“P<small>IQUANT</small> F<small>ACTS FOR</small>
S<small>IMILES</small>. ‘There were originally but three
Muses—Melete, Mneme, Aœde—meditation, memory, and
singing.’ You may make a good deal of that little fact if properly
worked. You see it is not generally known, and looks <i>recherché</i>.
You must be careful and give the thing with a downright improviso air.</p>
<p>“Again. ‘The river Alpheus passed beneath the sea, and emerged without
injury to the purity of its waters.’ Rather stale that, to be sure, but,
if properly dressed and dished up, will look quite as fresh as ever.</p>
<p>“Here is something better. ‘The Persian Iris appears to some persons to
possess a sweet and very powerful perfume, while to others it is perfectly
scentless.’ Fine that, and very delicate! Turn it about a little, and it
will do wonders. We’ll have some thing else in the botanical line. There’s
nothing goes down so well, especially with the help of a little Latin.
Write!</p>
<p>“‘<i>The Epidendrum Flos Aeris</i>, of Java, bears a very beautiful flower, and
will live when pulled up by the roots. The natives suspend it by a cord
from the ceiling, and enjoy its fragrance for years.’ That’s capital! That
will do for the similes. Now for the Piquant Expressions.</p>
<p>“P<small>IQUANT</small> E<small>XPRESSIONS</small>. ‘<i>The
Venerable Chinese novel Ju-Kiao-Li</i>.’ Good! By introducing these
few words with dexterity you will evince your intimate acquaintance with
the language and literature of the Chinese. With the aid of this you may
either get along without either Arabic, or Sanscrit, or Chickasaw. There
is no passing muster, however, without Spanish, Italian, German, Latin,
and Greek. I must look you out a little specimen of each. Any scrap will
answer, because you must depend upon your own ingenuity to make it fit
into your article. Now write!</p>
<p>“‘<i>Aussi tendre que Zaire</i>’—as tender as Zaire-French. Alludes to the
frequent repetition of the phrase, <i>la tendre Zaire</i>, in the French tragedy
of that name. Properly introduced, will show not only your knowledge of
the language, but your general reading and wit. You can say, for instance,
that the chicken you were eating (write an article about being choked to
death by a chicken-bone) was not altogether <i>aussi tendre que Zaire</i>. Write!</p>
<p class="poem">
‘Van muerte tan escondida,<br/>
Que no te sienta venir,<br/>
Porque el plazer del morir,<br/>
No mestorne a dar la vida.’</p>
<p>“That’s Spanish—from Miguel de Cervantes. ‘Come quickly, O death!
but be sure and don’t let me see you coming, lest the pleasure I shall
feel at your appearance should unfortunately bring me back again to life.’
This you may slip in quite a propos when you are struggling in the last
agonies with the chicken-bone. Write!</p>
<p class="poem">
‘Il pover ‘huomo che non se’n era accorto,<br/>
Andava combattendo, e era morto.‘</p>
<p>“That’s Italian, you perceive—from Ariosto. It means that a great
hero, in the heat of combat, not perceiving that he had been fairly
killed, continued to fight valiantly, dead as he was. The application of
this to your own case is obvious—for I trust, Miss Psyche, that you
will not neglect to kick for at least an hour and a half after you have
been choked to death by that chicken-bone. Please to write!</p>
<p class="poem">
‘Und sterb’ich doch, no sterb’ich denn<br/>
Durch sie—durch sie!’’</p>
<p>“That’s German—from Schiller. ‘And if I die, at least I die—for
thee—for thee!’ Here it is clear that you are apostrophizing the
cause of your disaster, the chicken. Indeed what gentleman (or lady
either) of sense, wouldn’t die, I should like to know, for a well fattened
capon of the right Molucca breed, stuffed with capers and mushrooms, and
served up in a salad-bowl, with orange-jellies <i>en mosaïques</i>. Write! (You
can get them that way at Tortoni’s)—Write, if you please!</p>
<p>“Here is a nice little Latin phrase, and rare too, (one can’t be too
<i>recherché</i> or brief in one’s Latin, it’s getting so common—ignoratio
elenchi. He has committed an ignoratio elenchi—that is to say, he
has understood the words of your proposition, but not the idea. The man
was a fool, you see. Some poor fellow whom you address while choking with
that chicken-bone, and who therefore didn’t precisely understand what you
were talking about. Throw the ignoratio elenchi in his teeth, and, at
once, you have him annihilated. If he dares to reply, you can tell him
from Lucan (here it is) that speeches are mere anemonae verborum, anemone
words. The anemone, with great brilliancy, has no smell. Or, if he begins
to bluster, you may be down upon him with insomnia Jovis, reveries of
Jupiter—a phrase which Silius Italicus (see here!) applies to
thoughts pompous and inflated. This will be sure and cut him to the heart.
He can do nothing but roll over and die. Will you be kind enough to write?</p>
<p>“In Greek we must have some thing pretty—from Demosthenes, for
example. Ανερο φευων και παλιν μαχεσεται.
[Aner o pheugoen kai palin makesetai.] There is a tolerably good
translation of it in Hudibras—</p>
<p class="poem">
‘For he that flies may fight again,<br/>
Which he can never do that’s slain.’</p>
<p>In a Blackwood article nothing makes so fine a show as your Greek. The
very letters have an air of profundity about them. Only observe, madam,
the astute look of that Epsilon! That Phi ought certainly to be a bishop!
Was ever there a smarter fellow than that Omicron? Just twig that Tau! In
short, there is nothing like Greek for a genuine sensation-paper. In the
present case your application is the most obvious thing in the world. Rap
out the sentence, with a huge oath, and by way of ultimatum at the
good-for-nothing dunder-headed villain who couldn’t understand your plain
English in relation to the chicken-bone. He’ll take the hint and be off,
you may depend upon it.”</p>
<p>These were all the instructions Mr. B. could afford me upon the topic in
question, but I felt they would be entirely sufficient. I was, at length,
able to write a genuine Blackwood article, and determined to do it
forthwith. In taking leave of me, Mr. B. made a proposition for the
purchase of the paper when written; but as he could offer me only fifty
guineas a sheet, I thought it better to let our society have it, than
sacrifice it for so paltry a sum. Notwithstanding this niggardly spirit,
however, the gentleman showed his consideration for me in all other
respects, and indeed treated me with the greatest civility. His parting
words made a deep impression upon my heart, and I hope I shall always
remember them with gratitude.</p>
<p>“My dear Miss Zenobia,” he said, while the tears stood in his eyes, “is
there anything else I can do to promote the success of your laudable
undertaking? Let me reflect! It is just possible that you may not be able,
so soon as convenient, to—to—get yourself drowned, or—choked
with a chicken-bone, or—or hung,—or—bitten by a—but
stay! Now I think me of it, there are a couple of very excellent bull-dogs
in the yard—fine fellows, I assure you—savage, and all that—indeed
just the thing for your money—they’ll have you eaten up, auricula
and all, in less than five minutes (here’s my watch!)—and then only
think of the sensations! Here! I say—Tom!—Peter!—Dick,
you villain!—let out those”—but as I was really in a great
hurry, and had not another moment to spare, I was reluctantly forced to
expedite my departure, and accordingly took leave at once—somewhat
more abruptly, I admit, than strict courtesy would have otherwise allowed.</p>
<p>It was my primary object upon quitting Mr. Blackwood, to get into some
immediate difficulty, pursuant to his advice, and with this view I spent
the greater part of the day in wandering about Edinburgh, seeking for
desperate adventures—adventures adequate to the intensity of my
feelings, and adapted to the vast character of the article I intended to
write. In this excursion I was attended by one negro servant,
Pompey, and my little lap-dog Diana, whom I had brought with me from
Philadelphia. It was not, however, until late in the afternoon that I
fully succeeded in my arduous undertaking. An important event then
happened of which the following Blackwood article, in the tone
heterogeneous, is the substance and result.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.8"></SPAN>A PREDICAMENT</h2>
<p class="letter">
What chance, good lady, hath bereft you thus?—C<small>OMUS</small>.</p>
<p>It was a quiet and still afternoon when I strolled forth in the goodly
city of Edina. The confusion and bustle in the streets were terrible. Men
were talking. Women were screaming. Children were choking. Pigs were
whistling. Carts they rattled. Bulls they bellowed. Cows they lowed.
Horses they neighed. Cats they caterwauled. Dogs they danced. <i>Danced!</i>
Could it then be possible? Danced! Alas, thought I, my dancing days are
over! Thus it is ever. What a host of gloomy recollections will ever and
anon be awakened in the mind of genius and imaginative contemplation,
especially of a genius doomed to the everlasting, and eternal, and
continual, and, as one might say, the—continued—yes, the
continued and continuous, bitter, harassing, disturbing, and, if I may be
allowed the expression, the very disturbing influence of the serene, and
godlike, and heavenly, and exalted, and elevated, and purifying effect of
what may be rightly termed the most enviable, the most truly enviable—nay!
the most benignly beautiful, the most deliciously ethereal, and, as it
were, the most pretty (if I may use so bold an expression) thing (pardon
me, gentle reader!) in the world—but I am always led away by my
feelings. In such a mind, I repeat, what a host of recollections are
stirred up by a trifle! The dogs danced! I—I could not! They frisked—I
wept. They capered—I sobbed aloud. Touching circumstances! which
cannot fail to bring to the recollection of the classical reader that
exquisite passage in relation to the fitness of things, which is to be
found in the commencement of the third volume of that admirable and
venerable Chinese novel the Jo-Go-Slow.</p>
<p>In my solitary walk through, the city I had two humble but faithful
companions. Diana, my poodle! sweetest of creatures! She had a quantity of
hair over her one eye, and a blue ribbon tied fashionably around her
neck. Diana was not more than five inches in height, but her head was
somewhat bigger than her body, and her tail being cut off exceedingly
close, gave an air of injured innocence to the interesting animal which
rendered her a favorite with all.</p>
<p>And Pompey, my negro!—sweet Pompey! how shall I ever forget thee? I
had taken Pompey’s arm. He was three feet in height (I like to be
particular) and about seventy, or perhaps eighty, years of age. He had
bow-legs and was corpulent. His mouth should not be called small, nor his
ears short. His teeth, however, were like pearl, and his large full eyes
were deliciously white. Nature had endowed him with no neck, and had
placed his ankles (as usual with that race) in the middle of the upper
portion of the feet. He was clad with a striking simplicity. His sole
garments were a stock of nine inches in height, and a nearly-new
drab overcoat which had formerly been in the service of the tall, stately,
and illustrious Dr. Moneypenny. It was a good overcoat. It was well cut.
It was well made. The coat was nearly new. Pompey held it up out of the
dirt with both hands.</p>
<p>There were three persons in our party, and two of them have already been
the subject of remark. There was a third—that person was myself. I
am the Signora Psyche Zenobia. I am not Suky Snobbs. My appearance is
commanding. On the memorable occasion of which I speak I was habited in a
crimson satin dress, with a sky-blue Arabian mantelet. And the dress had
trimmings of green agraffas, and seven graceful flounces of the
orange-colored auricula. I thus formed the third of the party. There was
the poodle. There was Pompey. There was myself. We were three. Thus it is
said there were originally but three Furies—Melty, Nimmy, and Hetty—Meditation,
Memory, and Fiddling.</p>
<p>Leaning upon the arm of the gallant Pompey, and attended at a respectable
distance by Diana, I proceeded down one of the populous and very pleasant
streets of the now deserted Edina. On a sudden, there presented itself to
view a church—a Gothic cathedral—vast, venerable, and with a
tall steeple, which towered into the sky. What madness now possessed me?
Why did I rush upon my fate? I was seized with an uncontrollable desire to
ascend the giddy pinnacle, and then survey the immense extent of the city.
The door of the cathedral stood invitingly open. My destiny prevailed. I
entered the ominous archway. Where then was my guardian angel?—if
indeed such angels there be. If! Distressing monosyllable! what world of
mystery, and meaning, and doubt, and uncertainty is there involved in thy
two letters! I entered the ominous archway! I entered; and, without injury
to my orange-colored auriculas, I passed beneath the portal, and emerged
within the vestibule. Thus it is said the immense river Alfred passed,
unscathed, and unwetted, beneath the sea.</p>
<p>I thought the staircase would never have an end. Round! Yes, they went
round and up, and round and up and round and up, until I could not help
surmising, with the sagacious Pompey, upon whose supporting arm I leaned
in all the confidence of early affection—I could not help surmising
that the upper end of the continuous spiral ladder had been accidentally,
or perhaps designedly, removed. I paused for breath; and, in the meantime,
an accident occurred of too momentous a nature in a moral, and also in a
metaphysical point of view, to be passed over without notice. It appeared
to me—indeed I was quite confident of the fact—I could not be
mistaken—no! I had, for some moments, carefully and anxiously
observed the motions of my Diana—I say that I could not be mistaken—Diana
smelt a rat! At once I called Pompey’s attention to the subject, and he—he
agreed with me. There was then no longer any reasonable room for doubt.
The rat had been smelled—and by Diana. Heavens! shall I ever forget
the intense excitement of the moment? Alas! what is the boasted intellect
of man? The rat!—it was there—that is to say, it was
somewhere. Diana smelled the rat. I—I could not! Thus it is said the
Prussian Isis has, for some persons, a sweet and very powerful perfume,
while to others it is perfectly scentless.</p>
<p>The staircase had been surmounted, and there were now only three or four
more upward steps intervening between us and the summit. We still
ascended, and now only one step remained. One step! One little, little
step! Upon one such little step in the great staircase of human life how
vast a sum of human happiness or misery depends! I thought of myself, then
of Pompey, and then of the mysterious and inexplicable destiny which
surrounded us. I thought of Pompey!—alas, I thought of love! I
thought of my many false steps which have been taken, and may be taken
again. I resolved to be more cautious, more reserved. I abandoned the arm
of Pompey, and, without his assistance, surmounted the one remaining step,
and gained the chamber of the belfry. I was followed immediately afterward
by my poodle. Pompey alone remained behind. I stood at the head of the
staircase, and encouraged him to ascend. He stretched forth to me his
hand, and unfortunately in so doing was forced to abandon his firm hold
upon the overcoat. Will the gods never cease their persecution? The
overcoat is dropped, and, with one of his feet, Pompey stepped upon the
long and trailing skirt of the overcoat. He stumbled and fell—this
consequence was inevitable. He fell forward, and, with his accursed head,
striking me full in the—in the breast, precipitated me headlong,
together with himself, upon the hard, filthy, and detestable floor of the
belfry. But my revenge was sure, sudden, and complete. Seizing him
furiously by the wool with both hands, I tore out a vast quantity of
black, and crisp, and curling material, and tossed it from me with every
manifestation of disdain. It fell among the ropes of the belfry and
remained. Pompey arose, and said no word. But he regarded me piteously
with his large eyes and—sighed. Ye Gods—that sigh! It sunk
into my heart. And the hair—the wool! Could I have reached that wool
I would have bathed it with my tears, in testimony of regret. But alas! it
was now far beyond my grasp. As it dangled among the cordage of the bell,
I fancied it alive. I fancied that it stood on end with indignation. Thus
the happy-dandy Flos Aeris of Java bears, it is said, a beautiful flower,
which will live when pulled up by the roots. The natives suspend it by a
cord from the ceiling and enjoy its fragrance for years.</p>
<p>Our quarrel was now made up, and we looked about the room for an aperture
through which to survey the city of Edina. Windows there were none. The
sole light admitted into the gloomy chamber proceeded from a square
opening, about a foot in diameter, at a height of about seven feet from
the floor. Yet what will the energy of true genius not effect? I resolved
to clamber up to this hole. A vast quantity of wheels, pinions, and other
cabalistic-looking machinery stood opposite the hole, close to it;
and through the hole there passed an iron rod from the machinery. Between
the wheels and the wall where the hole lay there was barely room for my
body—yet I was desperate, and determined to persevere. I called
Pompey to my side.</p>
<p>“You perceive that aperture, Pompey. I wish to look through it. You will
stand here just beneath the hole—so. Now, hold out one of your
hands, Pompey, and let me step upon it—thus. Now, the other hand,
Pompey, and with its aid I will get upon your shoulders.”</p>
<p>He did every thing I wished, and I found, upon getting up, that I could
easily pass my head and neck through the aperture. The prospect was
sublime. Nothing could be more magnificent. I merely paused a moment to
bid Diana behave herself, and assure Pompey that I would be considerate
and bear as lightly as possible upon his shoulders. I told him I would be
tender of his feelings—ossi tender que beefsteak. Having done this
justice to my faithful friend, I gave myself up with great zest and
enthusiasm to the enjoyment of the scene which so obligingly spread itself
out before my eyes.</p>
<p>Upon this subject, however, I shall forbear to dilate. I will not describe
the city of Edinburgh. Every one has been to the city of Edinburgh. Every
one has been to Edinburgh—the classic Edina. I will confine myself
to the momentous details of my own lamentable adventure. Having, in some
measure, satisfied my curiosity in regard to the extent, situation, and
general appearance of the city, I had leisure to survey the church in
which I was, and the delicate architecture of the steeple. I observed that
the aperture through which I had thrust my head was an opening in the
dial-plate of a gigantic clock, and must have appeared, from the street,
as a large key-hole, such as we see in the face of the French watches. No
doubt the true object was to admit the arm of an attendant, to adjust,
when necessary, the hands of the clock from within. I observed also, with
surprise, the immense size of these hands, the longest of which could not
have been less than ten feet in length, and, where broadest, eight or nine
inches in breadth. They were of solid steel apparently, and their edges
appeared to be sharp. Having noticed these particulars, and some others, I
again turned my eyes upon the glorious prospect below, and soon became
absorbed in contemplation.</p>
<p>From this, after some minutes, I was aroused by the voice of Pompey, who
declared that he could stand it no longer, and requested that I would be
so kind as to come down. This was unreasonable, and I told him so in a
speech of some length. He replied, but with an evident misunderstanding of
my ideas upon the subject. I accordingly grew angry, and told him in plain
words, that he was a fool, that he had committed an ignoramus
e-clench-eye, that his notions were mere insommary Bovis, and his words
little better than an ennemywerrybor’em. With this he appeared satisfied,
and I resumed my contemplations.</p>
<p>It might have been half an hour after this altercation when, as I was
deeply absorbed in the heavenly scenery beneath me, I was startled by
something very cold which pressed with a gentle pressure on the back of my
neck. It is needless to say that I felt inexpressibly alarmed. I knew that
Pompey was beneath my feet, and that Diana was sitting, according to my
explicit directions, upon her hind legs, in the farthest corner of the
room. What could it be? Alas! I but too soon discovered. Turning my head
gently to one side, I perceived, to my extreme horror, that the huge,
glittering, scimetar-like minute-hand of the clock had, in the course of
its hourly revolution, descended upon my neck. There was, I knew, not a
second to be lost. I pulled back at once—but it was too late. There
was no chance of forcing my head through the mouth of that terrible trap
in which it was so fairly caught, and which grew narrower and narrower
with a rapidity too horrible to be conceived. The agony of that moment is
not to be imagined. I threw up my hands and endeavored, with all my
strength, to force upward the ponderous iron bar. I might as well have
tried to lift the cathedral itself. Down, down, down it came, closer and
yet closer. I screamed to Pompey for aid; but he said that I had hurt his
feelings by calling him “an ignorant old squint-eye.” I yelled to Diana;
but she only said “bow-wow-wow,” and that I had told her “on no account to
stir from the corner.” Thus I had no relief to expect from my associates.</p>
<p>Meantime the ponderous and terrific Scythe of Time (for I now discovered
the literal import of that classical phrase) had not stopped, nor was it
likely to stop, in its career. Down and still down, it came. It had
already buried its sharp edge a full inch in my flesh, and my sensations
grew indistinct and confused. At one time I fancied myself in Philadelphia
with the stately Dr. Moneypenny, at another in the back parlor of Mr.
Blackwood receiving his invaluable instructions. And then again the sweet
recollection of better and earlier times came over me, and I thought of
that happy period when the world was not all a desert, and Pompey not
altogether cruel.</p>
<p>The ticking of the machinery amused me. Amused me, I say, for my
sensations now bordered upon perfect happiness, and the most trifling
circumstances afforded me pleasure. The eternal click-clak, click-clak,
click-clak of the clock was the most melodious of music in my ears, and
occasionally even put me in mind of the graceful sermonic harangues of Dr.
Ollapod. Then there were the great figures upon the dial-plate—how
intelligent how intellectual, they all looked! And presently they took to
dancing the Mazurka, and I think it was the figure V. who performed the
most to my satisfaction. She was evidently a lady of breeding. None of
your swaggerers, and nothing at all indelicate in her motions. She did the
pirouette to admiration—whirling round upon her apex. I made an
endeavor to hand her a chair, for I saw that she appeared fatigued with
her exertions—and it was not until then that I fully perceived my
lamentable situation. Lamentable indeed! The bar had buried itself two
inches in my neck. I was aroused to a sense of exquisite pain. I prayed
for death, and, in the agony of the moment, could not help repeating those
exquisite verses of the poet Miguel De Cervantes:</p>
<p class="poem">
Vanny Buren, tan escondida<br/>
Query no te senty venny<br/>
Pork and pleasure, delly morry<br/>
Nommy, torny, darry, widdy!</p>
<p>But now a new horror presented itself, and one indeed sufficient to
startle the strongest nerves. My eyes, from the cruel pressure of the
machine, were absolutely starting from their sockets. While I was thinking
how I should possibly manage without them, one actually tumbled out of my
head, and, rolling down the steep side of the steeple, lodged in the rain
gutter which ran along the eaves of the main building. The loss of the eye
was not so much as the insolent air of independence and contempt with
which it regarded me after it was out. There it lay in the gutter just
under my nose, and the airs it gave itself would have been ridiculous had
they not been disgusting. Such a winking and blinking were never before
seen. This behavior on the part of my eye in the gutter was not only
irritating on account of its manifest insolence and shameful ingratitude,
but was also exceedingly inconvenient on account of the sympathy which
always exists between two eyes of the same head, however far apart. I was
forced, in a manner, to wink and to blink, whether I would or not, in
exact concert with the scoundrelly thing that lay just under my nose. I
was presently relieved, however, by the dropping out of the other eye. In
falling it took the same direction (possibly a concerted plot) as its
fellow. Both rolled out of the gutter together, and in truth I was very
glad to get rid of them.</p>
<p>The bar was now four inches and a half deep in my neck, and there was only
a little bit of skin to cut through. My sensations were those of entire
happiness, for I felt that in a few minutes, at farthest, I should be
relieved from my disagreeable situation. And in this expectation I was not
at all deceived. At twenty-five minutes past five in the afternoon,
precisely, the huge minute-hand had proceeded sufficiently far on its
terrible revolution to sever the small remainder of my neck. I was not
sorry to see the head which had occasioned me so much embarrassment at
length make a final separation from my body. It first rolled down the side
of the steeple, then lodge, for a few seconds, in the gutter, and then
made its way, with a plunge, into the middle of the street.</p>
<p>I will candidly confess that my feelings were now of the most singular—nay,
of the most mysterious, the most perplexing and incomprehensible
character. My senses were here and there at one and the same moment. With
my head I imagined, at one time, that I, the head, was the real Signora
Psyche Zenobia—at another I felt convinced that myself, the body,
was the proper identity. To clear my ideas on this topic I felt in my
pocket for my snuff-box, but, upon getting it, and endeavoring to apply a
pinch of its grateful contents in the ordinary manner, I became
immediately aware of my peculiar deficiency, and threw the box at once
down to my head. It took a pinch with great satisfaction, and smiled me an
acknowledgement in return. Shortly afterward it made me a speech, which I
could hear but indistinctly without ears. I gathered enough, however, to
know that it was astonished at my wishing to remain alive under such
circumstances. In the concluding sentences it quoted the noble words of
Ariosto—</p>
<p class="poem">
Il pover hommy che non sera corty<br/>
And have a combat tenty erry morty;</p>
<p>thus comparing me to the hero who, in
the heat of the combat, not perceiving that he was dead, continued to
contest the battle with inextinguishable valor. There was nothing now to
prevent my getting down from my elevation, and I did so. What it was that
Pompey saw so very peculiar in my appearance I have never yet been able to
find out. The fellow opened his mouth from ear to ear, and shut his two
eyes as if he were endeavoring to crack nuts between the lids. Finally,
throwing off his overcoat, he made one spring for the staircase and
disappeared. I hurled after the scoundrel these vehement words of
Demosthenes—</p>
<p class="poem">
Andrew O’Phlegethon, you really make haste to fly,</p>
<p>and then turned to the darling of my heart, to the one-eyed! the
shaggy-haired Diana. Alas! what a horrible vision affronted my eyes? Was
that a rat I saw skulking into his hole? Are these the picked bones of
the little angel who has been cruelly devoured by the monster? Ye gods!
and what do I behold—is that the departed spirit, the shade, the
ghost, of my beloved puppy, which I perceive sitting with a grace so
melancholy, in the corner? Hearken! for she speaks, and, heavens! it is
in the German of Schiller—</p>
<p class="poem">
“Unt stubby duk, so stubby dun<br/>
Duk she! duk she!”</p>
<p>Alas! and are not her words too true?</p>
<p class="poem">
“And if I died, at least I died<br/>
For thee—for thee.”</p>
<p>Sweet creature! she too has sacrificed herself in my behalf. Dogless,
niggerless, headless, what now remains for the unhappy Signora Psyche
Zenobia? Alas—nothing! I have done.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.9"></SPAN>MYSTIFICATION</h2>
<p class="letter">
Slid, if these be your “passados” and “montantes,”
I’ll have none o’ them.<br/>
—N<small>ED</small> K<small>NOWLES</small>.</p>
<p>The Baron Ritzner von Jung was a noble Hungarian family, every member of
which (at least as far back into antiquity as any certain records extend)
was more or less remarkable for talent of some description—the
majority for that species of <i>grotesquerie</i> in conception of which
Tieck, a scion of the house, has given a vivid, although by no means the
most vivid exemplifications. My acquaintance with Ritzner commenced at
the magnificent Chateau Jung, into which a train of droll adventures, not
to be made public, threw me during the summer months of the year
18—. Here it was that I obtained a place in his regard, and here,
with somewhat more difficulty, a partial insight into his mental
conformation. In later days this insight grew more clear, as the intimacy
which had at first permitted it became more close; and when, after three
years separation, we met at G——n, I knew all that it was
necessary to know of the character of the Baron Ritzner von Jung.</p>
<p>I remember the buzz of curiosity which his advent excited within the
college precincts on the night of the twenty-fifth of June. I remember
still more distinctly, that while he was pronounced by all parties at
first sight “the most remarkable man in the world,” no person made any
attempt at accounting for his opinion. That he was unique appeared so
undeniable, that it was deemed impertinent to inquire wherein the uniquity
consisted. But, letting this matter pass for the present, I will merely
observe that, from the first moment of his setting foot within the limits
of the university, he began to exercise over the habits, manners, persons,
purses, and propensities of the whole community which surrounded him, an
influence the most extensive and despotic, yet at the same time the most
indefinite and altogether unaccountable. Thus the brief period of his
residence at the university forms an era in its annals, and is
characterized by all classes of people appertaining to it or its
dependencies as “that very extraordinary epoch forming the domination of
the Baron Ritzner von Jung.”</p>
<p>Upon his advent to G——n, he sought me out in my apartments.
He was then of no particular age, by which I mean that it was impossible
to form a guess respecting his age by any data personally afforded. He
might have been fifteen or fifty, and was twenty-one years and seven
months. He was by no means a handsome man—perhaps the reverse. The
contour of his face was somewhat angular and harsh. His forehead was
lofty and very fair; his nose a snub; his eyes large, heavy, glassy, and
meaningless. About the mouth there was more to be observed. The lips were
gently protruded, and rested the one upon the other, after such a fashion
that it is impossible to conceive any, even the most complex, combination
of human features, conveying so entirely, and so singly, the idea of
unmitigated gravity, solemnity and repose.</p>
<p>It will be perceived, no doubt, from what I have already said, that the
Baron was one of those human anomalies now and then to be found, who make
the science of mystification the study and the business of their lives.
For this science a peculiar turn of mind gave him instinctively the cue,
while his physical appearance afforded him unusual facilities for
carrying his prospects into effect. I firmly believe that no student at
G——n, during that renowned epoch so quaintly termed the
domination of the Baron Ritzner von Jung, ever rightly entered into the
mystery which overshadowed his character. I truly think that no person at
the university, with the exception of myself, ever suspected him to be
capable of a joke, verbal or practical:—the old bull-dog at the
garden-gate would sooner have been accused,—the ghost of
Heraclitus,—or the wig of the Emeritus Professor of Theology. This,
too, when it was evident that the most egregious and unpardonable of all
conceivable tricks, whimsicalities and buffooneries were brought about,
if not directly by him, at least plainly through his intermediate agency
or connivance. The beauty, if I may so call it, of his art mystifique,
lay in that consummate ability (resulting from an almost intuitive
knowledge of human nature, and a most wonderful self-possession,) by
means of which he never failed to make it appear that the drolleries he
was occupied in bringing to a point, arose partly in spite, and partly in
consequence of the laudable efforts he was making for their prevention,
and for the preservation of the good order and dignity of Alma Mater. The
deep, the poignant, the overwhelming mortification, which upon each such
failure of his praise worthy endeavors, would suffuse every lineament of
his countenance, left not the slightest room for doubt of his sincerity
in the bosoms of even his most skeptical companions. The adroitness, too,
was no less worthy of observation by which he contrived to shift the
sense of the grotesque from the creator to the created—from his own
person to the absurdities to which he had given rise. In no instance
before that of which I speak, have I known the habitual mystific escape
the natural consequence of his manoevres—an attachment of the
ludicrous to his own character and person. Continually enveloped in an
atmosphere of whim, my friend appeared to live only for the severities of
society; and not even his own household have for a moment associated
other ideas than those of the rigid and august with the memory of the
Baron Ritzner von Jung.</p>
<p>During the epoch of his residence at G——n it really appeared
that the demon of the <i>dolce far niente</i> lay like an incubus upon
the university. Nothing, at least, was done beyond eating and drinking
and making merry. The apartments of the students were converted into so
many pot-houses, and there was no pot-house of them all more famous or
more frequented than that of the Baron. Our carousals here were many, and
boisterous, and long, and never unfruitful of events.</p>
<p>Upon one occasion we had protracted our sitting until nearly daybreak, and
an unusual quantity of wine had been drunk. The company consisted of seven
or eight individuals besides the Baron and myself. Most of these were
young men of wealth, of high connection, of great family pride, and all
alive with an exaggerated sense of honor. They abounded in the most ultra
German opinions respecting the duello. To these Quixotic notions some
recent Parisian publications, backed by three or four desperate and fatal
rencounters at G——n, had given new vigor and impulse; and thus the
conversation, during the greater part of the night, had run wild upon the
all-engrossing topic of the times. The Baron, who had been unusually
silent and abstracted in the earlier portion of the evening, at length
seemed to be aroused from his apathy, took a leading part in the
discourse, and dwelt upon the benefits, and more especially upon the
beauties, of the received code of etiquette in passages of arms with an
ardor, an eloquence, an impressiveness, and an affectionateness of manner,
which elicited the warmest enthusiasm from his hearers in general, and
absolutely staggered even myself, who well knew him to be at heart a
ridiculer of those very points for which he contended, and especially to
hold the entire fanfaronade of duelling etiquette in the sovereign
contempt which it deserves.</p>
<p>Looking around me during a pause in the Baron’s discourse (of which
my readers may gather some faint idea when I say that it bore resemblance
to the fervid, chanting, monotonous, yet musical sermonic manner of
Coleridge), I perceived symptoms of even more than the general interest
in the countenance of one of the party. This gentleman, whom I shall call
Hermann, was an original in every respect—except, perhaps, in the
single particular that he was a very great fool. He contrived to bear,
however, among a particular set at the university, a reputation for deep
metaphysical thinking, and, I believe, for some logical talent. As a
duellist he had acquired great renown, even at G——n. I forget
the precise number of victims who had fallen at his hands; but they were
many. He was a man of courage undoubtedly. But it was upon his minute
acquaintance with the etiquette of the duello, and the nicety of his
sense of honor, that he most especially prided himself. These things were
a hobby which he rode to the death. To Ritzner, ever upon the lookout for
the grotesque, his peculiarities had for a long time past afforded food
for mystification. Of this, however, I was not aware; although, in the
present instance, I saw clearly that something of a whimsical nature was
upon the tapis with my friend, and that Hermann was its especial object.</p>
<p>As the former proceeded in his discourse, or rather monologue, I perceived
the excitement of the latter momently increasing. At length he spoke;
offering some objection to a point insisted upon by R., and giving his
reasons in detail. To these the Baron replied at length (still maintaining
his exaggerated tone of sentiment) and concluding, in what I thought very
bad taste, with a sarcasm and a sneer. The hobby of Hermann now took the
bit in his teeth. This I could discern by the studied hair-splitting
farrago of his rejoinder. His last words I distinctly remember. “Your
opinions, allow me to say, Baron von Jung, although in the main correct,
are, in many nice points, discreditable to yourself and to the university
of which you are a member. In a few respects they are even unworthy of
serious refutation. I would say more than this, sir, were it not for the
fear of giving you offence (here the speaker smiled blandly), I would say,
sir, that your opinions are not the opinions to be expected from a
gentleman.”</p>
<p>As Hermann completed this equivocal sentence, all eyes were turned upon
the Baron. He became pale, then excessively red; then, dropping his
pocket-handkerchief, stooped to recover it, when I caught a glimpse of
his countenance, while it could be seen by no one else at the table. It
was radiant with the quizzical expression which was its natural
character, but which I had never seen it assume except when we were alone
together, and when he unbent himself freely. In an instant afterward he
stood erect, confronting Hermann; and so total an alteration of
countenance in so short a period I certainly never saw before. For a
moment I even fancied that I had misconceived him, and that he was in
sober earnest. He appeared to be stifling with passion, and his face was
cadaverously white. For a short time he remained silent, apparently
striving to master his emotion. Having at length seemingly succeeded, he
reached a decanter which stood near him, saying as he held it firmly
clenched—“The language you have thought proper to employ,
Mynheer Hermann, in addressing yourself to me, is objectionable in so
many particulars, that I have neither temper nor time for specification.
That my opinions, however, are not the opinions to be expected from a
gentleman, is an observation so directly offensive as to allow me but one
line of conduct. Some courtesy, nevertheless, is due to the presence of
this company, and to yourself, at this moment, as my guest. You will
pardon me, therefore, if, upon this consideration, I deviate slightly
from the general usage among gentlemen in similar cases of personal
affront. You will forgive me for the moderate tax I shall make upon your
imagination, and endeavor to consider, for an instant, the reflection of
your person in yonder mirror as the living Mynheer Hermann himself. This
being done, there will be no difficulty whatever. I shall discharge this
decanter of wine at your image in yonder mirror, and thus fulfil all the
spirit, if not the exact letter, of resentment for your insult, while the
necessity of physical violence to your real person will be
obviated.”</p>
<p>With these words he hurled the decanter, full of wine, against the mirror
which hung directly opposite Hermann; striking the reflection of his
person with great precision, and of course shattering the glass into
fragments. The whole company at once started to their feet, and, with the
exception of myself and Ritzner, took their departure. As Hermann went
out, the Baron whispered me that I should follow him and make an offer of
my services. To this I agreed; not knowing precisely what to make of so
ridiculous a piece of business.</p>
<p>The duellist accepted my aid with his stiff and <i>ultra recherché</i> air, and,
taking my arm, led me to his apartment. I could hardly forbear laughing in
his face while he proceeded to discuss, with the profoundest gravity, what
he termed “the refinedly peculiar character” of the insult he had
received. After a tiresome harangue in his ordinary style, he took down
from his book shelves a number of musty volumes on the subject of the
duello, and entertained me for a long time with their contents; reading
aloud, and commenting earnestly as he read. I can just remember the titles
of some of the works. There were the “Ordonnance of Philip le Bel on
Single Combat”; the “Theatre of Honor,” by Favyn, and a treatise “On the
Permission of Duels,” by Andiguier. He displayed, also, with much
pomposity, Brantome’s “Memoirs of Duels,” published at Cologne,
1666, in the types of Elzevir—a precious and unique vellum-paper
volume, with a fine margin, and bound by Derome. But he requested my
attention particularly, and with an air of mysterious sagacity, to a thick
octavo, written in barbarous Latin by one Hedelin, a Frenchman, and having
the quaint title, “Duelli Lex Scripta, et non; aliterque.” From this he
read me one of the drollest chapters in the world concerning “Injuriae per
applicationem, per constructionem, et per se,” about half of which, he
averred, was strictly applicable to his own “refinedly peculiar” case,
although not one syllable of the whole matter could I understand for the
life of me. Having finished the chapter, he closed the book, and demanded
what I thought necessary to be done. I replied that I had entire
confidence in his superior delicacy of feeling, and would abide by what he
proposed. With this answer he seemed flattered, and sat down to write a
note to the Baron. It ran thus:</p>
<p class="p2">
Sir,—My friend, M. P.-, will hand you this note. I find it incumbent
upon me to request, at your earliest convenience, an explanation of this
evening’s occurrences at your chambers. In the event of your declining
this request, Mr. P. will be happy to arrange, with any friend whom you
may appoint, the steps preliminary to a meeting.</p>
<p>With sentiments of perfect respect,</p>
<p class="right">
Your most humble servant,<br/>
J<small>OHANN</small> H<small>ERMAN</small>.</p>
<p class="letter">
“<i>To the Baron Ritzner von Jung,<br/>
August 18th, 18</i>—.”</p>
<p>Not knowing what better to do, I called upon Ritzner with this epistle. He
bowed as I presented it; then, with a grave countenance, motioned me to a
seat. Having perused the cartel, he wrote the following reply, which I
carried to Hermann.</p>
<p>“S<small>IR</small>,—Through our common friend, Mr. P., I have received your note of
this evening. Upon due reflection I frankly admit the propriety of the
explanation you suggest. This being admitted, I still find great
difficulty, (owing to the refinedly peculiar nature of our disagreement,
and of the personal affront offered on my part,) in so wording what I have
to say by way of apology, as to meet all the minute exigencies, and all
the variable shadows, of the case. I have great reliance, however, on that
extreme delicacy of discrimination, in matters appertaining to the rules
of etiquette, for which you have been so long and so pre-eminently
distinguished. With perfect certainty, therefore, of being comprehended, I
beg leave, in lieu of offering any sentiments of my own, to refer you to
the opinions of Sieur Hedelin, as set forth in the ninth paragraph of the
chapter of “<i>Injuriae per applicationem, per constructionem, et per se</i>,” in
his “<i>Duelli Lex scripta, et non; aliterque</i>.” The nicety of your
discernment in all the matters here treated, will be sufficient, I am
assured, to convince you <i>that the mere circumstance of me referring you</i> to
this admirable passage, ought to satisfy your request, as a man of honor,
for explanation.</p>
<p>“With sentiments of profound respect,</p>
<p class="right">
“Your most obedient servant,<br/>
“V<small>ON</small> J<small>UNG</small>.”</p>
<p class="letter">
“The Herr Johann Hermann,<br/>
August 18th, 18—”</p>
<p>Hermann commenced the perusal of this epistle with a scowl, which,
however, was converted into a smile of the most ludicrous self-complacency
as he came to the rigmarole about Injuriae per applicationem, per
constructionem, et per se. Having finished reading, he begged me, with the
blandest of all possible smiles, to be seated, while he made reference to
the treatise in question. Turning to the passage specified, he read it
with great care to himself, then closed the book, and desired me, in my
character of confidential acquaintance, to express to the Baron von Jung
his exalted sense of his chivalrous behavior, and, in that of second, to
assure him that the explanation offered was of the fullest, the most
honorable, and the most unequivocally satisfactory nature.</p>
<p>Somewhat amazed at all this, I made my retreat to the Baron. He seemed to
receive Hermann’s amicable letter as a matter of course, and after a few
words of general conversation, went to an inner room and brought out the
everlasting treatise “<i>Duelli Lex scripta, et non; aliterque</i>.” He handed me
the volume and asked me to look over some portion of it. I did so, but to
little purpose, not being able to gather the least particle of meaning. He
then took the book himself, and read me a chapter aloud. To my surprise,
what he read proved to be a most horribly absurd account of a duel between
two baboons. He now explained the mystery; showing that the volume, as it
appeared <i>prima facie</i>, was written upon the plan of the nonsense verses of
Du Bartas; that is to say, the language was ingeniously framed so as to
present to the ear all the outward signs of intelligibility, and even of
profundity, while in fact not a shadow of meaning existed. The key to the
whole was found in leaving out every second and third word alternately,
when there appeared a series of ludicrous quizzes upon a single combat as
practised in modern times.</p>
<p>The Baron afterwards informed me that he had purposely thrown the treatise
in Hermann’s way two or three weeks before the adventure, and that he was
satisfied, from the general tenor of his conversation, that he had studied
it with the deepest attention, and firmly believed it to be a work of
unusual merit. Upon this hint he proceeded. Hermann would have died a
thousand deaths rather than acknowledge his inability to understand
anything and everything in the universe that had ever been written about
the <i>duello</i>.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.10"></SPAN>DIDDLING</h2>
<h3>CONSIDERED AS ONE OF THE EXACT SCIENCES.</h3>
<p class="poem">
Hey, diddle diddle<br/>
The cat and the fiddle</p>
<p>Since the world began there have been two Jeremys. The one wrote a
Jeremiad about usury, and was called Jeremy Bentham. He has been much
admired by Mr. John Neal, and was a great man in a small way. The other
gave name to the most important of the Exact Sciences, and was a great man
in a great way—I may say, indeed, in the very greatest of ways.</p>
<p>Diddling—or the abstract idea conveyed by the verb to diddle—is
sufficiently well understood. Yet the fact, the deed, the thing <i>diddling</i>,
is somewhat difficult to define. We may get, however, at a tolerably
distinct conception of the matter in hand, by defining—not the
thing, diddling, in itself—but man, as an animal that diddles. Had
Plato but hit upon this, he would have been spared the affront of the
picked chicken.</p>
<p>Very pertinently it was demanded of Plato, why a picked chicken, which was
clearly “a biped without feathers,” was not, according to his own
definition, a man? But I am not to be bothered by any similar query. Man
is an animal that diddles, and there is no animal that diddles but man. It
will take an entire hen-coop of picked chickens to get over that.</p>
<p>What constitutes the essence, the nare, the principle of diddling is, in
fact, peculiar to the class of creatures that wear coats and pantaloons. A
crow thieves; a fox cheats; a weasel outwits; a man diddles. To diddle is
his destiny. “Man was made to mourn,” says the poet. But not so:—he
was made to diddle. This is his aim—his object—his end. And
for this reason when a man’s diddled we say he’s “<i>done</i>.”</p>
<p>Diddling, rightly considered, is a compound, of which the ingredients are
minuteness, interest, perseverance, ingenuity, audacity, <i>nonchalance</i>,
originality, impertinence, and grin.</p>
<p><i>Minuteness:</i>—Your diddler is minute. His operations are upon a small
scale. His business is retail, for cash, or approved paper at sight.
Should he ever be tempted into magnificent speculation, he then, at once,
loses his distinctive features, and becomes what we term “financier.” This
latter word conveys the diddling idea in every respect except that of
magnitude. A diddler may thus be regarded as a banker <i>in petto</i>—a
“financial operation,” as a diddle at Brobdignag. The one is to the other,
as Homer to “Flaccus”—as a Mastodon to a mouse—as the tail of
a comet to that of a pig.</p>
<p><i>Interest:</i>—Your diddler is guided by self-interest. He scorns to
diddle for the mere <i>sake</i> of the diddle. He has an object in view—his
pocket—and yours. He regards always the main chance. He looks to
Number One. You are Number Two, and must look to yourself.</p>
<p><i>Perseverance:</i>—Your diddler perseveres. He is not readily
discouraged. Should even the banks break, he cares nothing about it. He
steadily pursues his end, and</p>
<p class="poem">
‘Ut canis a corio nunquam absterrebitur uncto,’</p>
<p>so he never lets go of his game.</p>
<p><i>Ingenuity:</i>—Your diddler is ingenious. He has constructiveness large.
He understands plot. He invents and circumvents. Were he not Alexander he
would be Diogenes. Were he not a diddler, he would be a maker of patent
rat-traps or an angler for trout.</p>
<p><i>Audacity:</i>—Your diddler is audacious.—He is a bold man. He
carries the war into Africa. He conquers all by assault. He would not fear
the daggers of Frey Herren. With a little more prudence Dick Turpin would
have made a good diddler; with a trifle less blarney, Daniel O’Connell;
with a pound or two more brains, Charles the Twelfth.</p>
<p><i>Nonchalance:</i>—Your diddler is nonchalant. He is not at all nervous.
He never had any nerves. He is never seduced into a flurry. He is never
put out—unless put out of doors. He is cool—cool as a
cucumber. He is calm—“calm as a smile from Lady Bury.” He is easy—easy
as an old glove, or the damsels of ancient Baiæ.</p>
<p><i>Originality:</i>—Your diddler is original—conscientiously so. His
thoughts are his own. He would scorn to employ those of another. A stale
trick is his aversion. He would return a purse, I am sure, upon
discovering that he had obtained it by an unoriginal diddle.</p>
<p><i>Impertinence:</i>—Your diddler is impertinent. He swaggers. He sets his
arms a-kimbo. He thrusts his hands in his trowsers’ pockets. He sneers in
your face. He treads on your corns. He eats your dinner, he drinks your
wine, he borrows your money, he pulls your nose, he kicks your poodle, and
he kisses your wife.</p>
<p><i>Grin:</i>—Your true diddler winds up all with a grin. But this nobody
sees but himself. He grins when his daily work is done—when his
allotted labors are accomplished—at night in his own closet, and
altogether for his own private entertainment. He goes home. He locks his
door. He divests himself of his clothes. He puts out his candle. He gets
into bed. He places his head upon the pillow. All this done, and your
diddler grins. This is no hypothesis. It is a matter of course. I reason <i>à
priori</i>, and a diddle would be no diddle without a grin.</p>
<p>The origin of the diddle is referrable to the infancy of the Human Race.
Perhaps the first diddler was Adam. At all events, we can trace the
science back to a very remote period of antiquity. The moderns, however,
have brought it to a perfection never dreamed of by our thick-headed
progenitors. Without pausing to speak of the “old saws,” therefore, I
shall content myself with a compendious account of some of the more
“modern instances.”</p>
<p>A very good diddle is this. A housekeeper in want of a sofa, for instance,
is seen to go in and out of several cabinet warehouses. At length she
arrives at one offering an excellent variety. She is accosted, and invited
to enter, by a polite and voluble individual at the door. She finds a sofa
well adapted to her views, and upon inquiring the price, is surprised and
delighted to hear a sum named at least twenty per cent. lower than her
expectations. She hastens to make the purchase, gets a bill and receipt,
leaves her address, with a request that the article be sent home as
speedily as possible, and retires amid a profusion of bows from the
shopkeeper. The night arrives and no sofa. A servant is sent to make
inquiry about the delay. The whole transaction is denied. No sofa has been
sold—no money received—except by the diddler, who played
shop-keeper for the nonce.</p>
<p>Our cabinet warehouses are left entirely unattended, and thus afford every
facility for a trick of this kind. Visitors enter, look at furniture, and
depart unheeded and unseen. Should any one wish to purchase, or to inquire
the price of an article, a bell is at hand, and this is considered amply
sufficient.</p>
<p>Again, quite a respectable diddle is this. A well-dressed individual
enters a shop, makes a purchase to the value of a dollar; finds, much to
his vexation, that he has left his pocket-book in another coat pocket; and
so says to the shopkeeper—</p>
<p>“My dear sir, never mind; just oblige me, will you, by sending the bundle
home? But stay! I really believe that I have nothing less than a five
dollar bill, even there. However, you can send four dollars in change with
the bundle, you know.”</p>
<p>“Very good, sir,” replies the shop-keeper, who entertains, at once, a
lofty opinion of the high-mindedness of his customer. “I know fellows,” he
says to himself, “who would just have put the goods under their arm, and
walked off with a promise to call and pay the dollar as they came by in
the afternoon.”</p>
<p>A boy is sent with the parcel and change. On the route, quite
accidentally, he is met by the purchaser, who exclaims:</p>
<p>“Ah! This is my bundle, I see—I thought you had been home with it,
long ago. Well, go on! My wife, Mrs. Trotter, will give you the five
dollars—I left instructions with her to that effect. The change you
might as well give to me—I shall want some silver for the Post
Office. Very good! One, two, is this a good quarter?—three, four—quite
right! Say to Mrs. Trotter that you met me, and be sure now and do not
loiter on the way.”</p>
<p>The boy doesn’t loiter at all—but he is a very long time in getting
back from his errand—for no lady of the precise name of Mrs. Trotter
is to be discovered. He consoles himself, however, that he has not been
such a fool as to leave the goods without the money, and re-entering his
shop with a self-satisfied air, feels sensibly hurt and indignant when his
master asks him what has become of the change.</p>
<p>A very simple diddle, indeed, is this. The captain of a ship, which is
about to sail, is presented by an official looking person with an
unusually moderate bill of city charges. Glad to get off so easily, and
confused by a hundred duties pressing upon him all at once, he discharges
the claim forthwith. In about fifteen minutes, another and less reasonable
bill is handed him by one who soon makes it evident that the first
collector was a diddler, and the original collection a diddle.</p>
<p>And here, too, is a somewhat similar thing. A steamboat is casting loose
from the wharf. A traveller, portmanteau in hand, is discovered running
toward the wharf, at full speed. Suddenly, he makes a dead halt, stoops,
and picks up something from the ground in a very agitated manner. It is a
pocket-book, and—“Has any gentleman lost a pocketbook?” he cries. No
one can say that he has exactly lost a pocket-book; but a great excitement
ensues, when the treasure trove is found to be of value. The boat,
however, must not be detained.</p>
<p>“Time and tide wait for no man,” says the captain.</p>
<p>“For God’s sake, stay only a few minutes,” says the finder of the book—“the
true claimant will presently appear.”</p>
<p>“Can’t wait!” replies the man in authority; “cast off there, d’ye hear?”</p>
<p>“What <i>am</i> I to do?” asks the finder, in great tribulation. “I am about to
leave the country for some years, and I cannot conscientiously retain this
large amount in my possession. I beg your pardon, sir,” [here he addresses
a gentleman on shore,] “but you have the air of an honest man. <i>Will</i> you
confer upon me the favor of taking charge of this pocket-book—I <i>know</i>
I can trust you—and of advertising it? The notes, you see, amount to
a very considerable sum. The owner will, no doubt, insist upon rewarding
you for your trouble—”</p>
<p>“<i>Me!</i>—no, <i>you!</i>—it was you who found the book.”</p>
<p>“Well, if you <i>must</i> have it so—<i>I</i> will take a small reward—just
to satisfy your scruples. Let me see—why these notes are all
hundreds—bless my soul! a hundred is too much to take—fifty
would be quite enough, I am sure—”</p>
<p>“Cast off there!” says the captain.</p>
<p>“But then I have no change for a hundred, and upon the whole, <i>you</i> had
better—”</p>
<p>“Cast off there!” says the captain.</p>
<p>“Never mind!” cries the gentleman on shore, who has been examining his own
pocket-book for the last minute or so—“never mind! <i>I</i> can fix it—here
is a fifty on the Bank of North America—throw the book.”</p>
<p>And the over-conscientious finder takes the fifty with marked reluctance,
and throws the gentleman the book, as desired, while the steamboat fumes
and fizzes on her way. In about half an hour after her departure, the
“large amount” is seen to be a “counterfeit presentment,” and the whole
thing a capital diddle.</p>
<p>A bold diddle is this. A camp-meeting, or something similar, is to be held
at a certain spot which is accessible only by means of a free bridge. A
diddler stations himself upon this bridge, respectfully informs all
passers by of the new county law, which establishes a toll of one cent for
foot passengers, two for horses and donkeys, and so forth, and so forth.
Some grumble but all submit, and the diddler goes home a wealthier man by
some fifty or sixty dollars well earned. This taking a toll from a great
crowd of people is an excessively troublesome thing.</p>
<p>A neat diddle is this. A friend holds one of the diddler’s promises to
pay, filled up and signed in due form, upon the ordinary blanks printed in
red ink. The diddler purchases one or two dozen of these blanks, and every
day dips one of them in his soup, makes his dog jump for it, and finally
gives it to him as a bonne bouche. The note arriving at maturity, the
diddler, with the diddler’s dog, calls upon the friend, and the promise to
pay is made the topic of discussion. The friend produces it from his
escritoire, and is in the act of reaching it to the diddler, when up jumps
the diddler’s dog and devours it forthwith. The diddler is not only
surprised but vexed and incensed at the absurd behavior of his dog, and
expresses his entire readiness to cancel the obligation at any moment when
the evidence of the obligation shall be forthcoming.</p>
<p>A very mean diddle is this. A lady is insulted in the street by a
diddler’s accomplice. The diddler himself flies to her assistance, and,
giving his friend a comfortable thrashing, insists upon attending the lady
to her own door. He bows, with his hand upon his heart, and most
respectfully bids her adieu. She entreats him, as her deliverer, to walk
in and be introduced to her big brother and her papa. With a sigh, he
declines to do so. “Is there no way, then, sir,” she murmurs, “in which I
may be permitted to testify my gratitude?”</p>
<p>“Why, yes, madam, there is. Will you be kind enough to lend me a couple of
shillings?”</p>
<p>In the first excitement of the moment the lady decides upon fainting
outright. Upon second thought, however, she opens her purse-strings and
delivers the specie. Now this, I say, is a diddle minute—for one
entire moiety of the sum borrowed has to be paid to the gentleman who had
the trouble of performing the insult, and who had then to stand still and
be thrashed for performing it.</p>
<p>Rather a small but still a scientific diddle is this. The diddler
approaches the bar of a tavern, and demands a couple of twists of tobacco.
These are handed to him, when, having slightly examined them, he says:</p>
<p>“I don’t much like this tobacco. Here, take it back, and give me a glass
of brandy and water in its place.” The brandy and water is furnished and
imbibed, and the diddler makes his way to the door. But the voice of the
tavern-keeper arrests him.</p>
<p>“I believe, sir, you have forgotten to pay for your brandy and water.”</p>
<p>“Pay for my brandy and water!—didn’t I give you the tobacco for the
brandy and water? What more would you have?”</p>
<p>“But, sir, if you please, I don’t remember that you paid me for the
tobacco.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean by that, you scoundrel?—Didn’t I give you back
your tobacco? Isn’t that your tobacco lying there? Do you expect me to pay
for what I did not take?”</p>
<p>“But, sir,” says the publican, now rather at a loss what to say, “but
sir—”</p>
<p>“But me no buts, sir,” interrupts the diddler, apparently in very high
dudgeon, and slamming the door after him, as he makes his escape.—“But
me no buts, sir, and none of your tricks upon travellers.”</p>
<p>Here again is a very clever diddle, of which the simplicity is not its
least recommendation. A purse, or pocket-book, being really lost, the
loser inserts in one of the daily papers of a large city a fully
descriptive advertisement.</p>
<p>Whereupon our diddler copies the facts of this advertisement, with a
change of heading, of general phraseology and address. The original, for
instance, is long, and verbose, is headed “A Pocket-Book Lost!” and
requires the treasure, when found, to be left at No. 1 Tom Street. The
copy is brief, and being headed with “Lost” only, indicates No. 2 Dick, or
No. 3 Harry Street, as the locality at which the owner may be seen.
Moreover, it is inserted in at least five or six of the daily papers of
the day, while in point of time, it makes its appearance only a few hours
after the original. Should it be read by the loser of the purse, he would
hardly suspect it to have any reference to his own misfortune. But, of
course, the chances are five or six to one, that the finder will repair to
the address given by the diddler, rather than to that pointed out by the
rightful proprietor. The former pays the reward, pockets the treasure and
decamps.</p>
<p>Quite an analogous diddle is this. A lady of ton has dropped, some where
in the street, a diamond ring of very unusual value. For its recovery, she
offers some forty or fifty dollars reward—giving, in her
advertisement, a very minute description of the gem, and of its settings,
and declaring that, on its restoration at No. so and so, in such and such
Avenue, the reward would be paid instanter, without a single question
being asked. During the lady’s absence from home, a day or two afterwards,
a ring is heard at the door of No. so and so, in such and such Avenue; a
servant appears; the lady of the house is asked for and is declared to be
out, at which astounding information, the visitor expresses the most
poignant regret. His business is of importance and concerns the lady
herself. In fact, he had the good fortune to find her diamond ring. But
perhaps it would be as well that he should call again. “By no means!” says
the servant; and “By no means!” says the lady’s sister and the lady’s
sister-in-law, who are summoned forthwith. The ring is clamorously
identified, the reward is paid, and the finder nearly thrust out of doors.
The lady returns and expresses some little dissatisfaction with her sister
and sister-in-law, because they happen to have paid forty or fifty dollars
for a fac-simile of her diamond ring—a fac-simile made out of real
pinch-beck and unquestionable paste.</p>
<p>But as there is really no end to diddling, so there would be none to this
essay, were I even to hint at half the variations, or inflections, of
which this science is susceptible. I must bring this paper, perforce, to a
conclusion, and this I cannot do better than by a summary notice of a very
decent, but rather elaborate diddle, of which our own city was made the
theatre, not very long ago, and which was subsequently repeated with
success, in other still more verdant localities of the Union. A
middle-aged gentleman arrives in town from parts unknown. He is remarkably
precise, cautious, staid, and deliberate in his demeanor. His dress is
scrupulously neat, but plain, unostentatious. He wears a white cravat, an
ample waistcoat, made with an eye to comfort alone; thick-soled
cosy-looking shoes, and pantaloons without straps. He has the whole air,
in fact, of your well-to-do, sober-sided, exact, and respectable “man of
business,” <i>par excellence</i>—one of the stern and outwardly hard,
internally soft, sort of people that we see in the crack high comedies—fellows
whose words are so many bonds, and who are noted for giving away guineas,
in charity, with the one hand, while, in the way of mere bargain, they
exact the uttermost fraction of a farthing with the other.</p>
<p>He makes much ado before he can get suited with a boarding house. He
dislikes children. He has been accustomed to quiet. His habits are
methodical—and then he would prefer getting into a private and
respectable small family, piously inclined. Terms, however, are no object—only
he must insist upon settling his bill on the first of every month, (it is
now the second) and begs his landlady, when he finally obtains one to his
mind, not on any account to forget his instructions upon this point—but
to send in a bill, and receipt, precisely at ten o’clock, on the first day
of every month, and under no circumstances to put it off to the second.</p>
<p>These arrangements made, our man of business rents an office in a
reputable rather than a fashionable quarter of the town. There is nothing
he more despises than pretense. “Where there is much show,” he says,
“there is seldom any thing very solid behind”—an observation which
so profoundly impresses his landlady’s fancy, that she makes a pencil
memorandum of it forthwith, in her great family Bible, on the broad margin
of the Proverbs of Solomon.</p>
<p>The next step is to advertise, after some such fashion as this, in the
principal business six-pennies of the city—the pennies are eschewed
as not “respectable”—and as demanding payment for all advertisements
in advance. Our man of business holds it as a point of his faith that work
should never be paid for until done.</p>
<p>“W<small>ANTED</small>.—The advertisers, being about to
commence extensive business operations in this city, will require the
services of three or four intelligent and competent clerks, to whom a
liberal salary will be paid. The very best recommendations, not so much
for capacity, as for integrity, will be expected. Indeed, as the duties
to be performed involve high responsibilities, and large amounts of money
must necessarily pass through the hands of those engaged, it is deemed
advisable to demand a deposit of fifty dollars from each clerk employed.
No person need apply, therefore, who is not prepared to leave this sum in
the possession of the advertisers, and who cannot furnish the most
satisfactory testimonials of morality. Young gentlemen piously inclined
will be preferred. Application should be made between the hours of ten
and eleven <small>A. M.</small>, and four and five <small>P. M.</small>,
of Messrs.</p>
<p class="right">
“Bogs, Hogs, Logs, Frogs & Co.,<br/>
“No. 110 Dog Street.”</p>
<p>By the thirty-first day of the month, this advertisement has brought to
the office of Messrs. Bogs, Hogs, Logs, Frogs, and Company, some fifteen
or twenty young gentlemen piously inclined. But our man of business is in
no hurry to conclude a contract with any—no man of business is ever
precipitate—and it is not until the most rigid catechism in respect
to the piety of each young gentleman’s inclination, that his services are
engaged and his fifty dollars receipted for, just by way of proper
precaution, on the part of the respectable firm of Bogs, Hogs, Logs,
Frogs, and Company. On the morning of the first day of the next month, the
landlady does not present her bill, according to promise—a piece of
neglect for which the comfortable head of the house ending in ogs would no
doubt have chided her severely, could he have been prevailed upon to
remain in town a day or two for that purpose.</p>
<p>As it is, the constables have had a sad time of it, running hither and
thither, and all they can do is to declare the man of business most
emphatically, a “hen knee high”—by which some persons imagine them
to imply that, in fact, he is n. e. i.—by which again the very
classical phrase <i>non est inventus</i>, is supposed to be understood. In the
meantime the young gentlemen, one and all, are somewhat less piously
inclined than before, while the landlady purchases a shilling’s worth of
the Indian rubber, and very carefully obliterates the pencil memorandum
that some fool has made in her great family Bible, on the broad margin of
the Proverbs of Solomon.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.11"></SPAN>THE ANGEL OF THE ODD</h2>
<h3>AN EXTRAVAGANZA.</h3>
<p>It was a chilly November afternoon. I had just consummated an unusually
hearty dinner, of which the dyspeptic <i>truffe</i> formed not the least
important item, and was sitting alone in the dining-room, with my feet
upon the fender, and at my elbow a small table which I had rolled up to
the fire, and upon which were some apologies for dessert, with some
miscellaneous bottles of wine, spirit and <i>liqueur</i>. In the morning I
had been reading Glover’s “Leonidas,” Wilkie’s “Epigoniad,” Lamartine’s
“Pilgrimage,” Barlow’s “Columbiad,” Tuckermann’s “Sicily,” and Griswold’s
“Curiosities”; I am willing to confess, therefore, that I now felt a
little stupid. I made effort to arouse myself by aid of frequent Lafitte,
and, all failing, I betook myself to a stray newspaper in despair. Having
carefully perused the column of “houses to let,” and the column of “dogs
lost,” and then the two columns of “wives and apprentices runaway,” I
attacked with great resolution the editorial matter, and, reading it from
beginning to end without understanding a syllable, conceived the
possibility of its being Chinese, and so re-read it from the end to the
beginning, but with no more satisfactory result. I was about throwing
away, in disgust,</p>
<p class="poem">
“This folio of four pages, happy work<br/>
Which not even critics criticise,”</p>
<p>when I felt my attention somewhat aroused by the paragraph which follows:</p>
<p>“The avenues to death are numerous and strange. A London paper mentions
the decease of a person from a singular cause. He was playing at ‘puff the
dart,’ which is played with a long needle inserted in some worsted, and
blown at a target through a tin tube. He placed the needle at the wrong
end of the tube, and drawing his breath strongly to puff the dart forward
with force, drew the needle into his throat. It entered the lungs, and in
a few days killed him.”</p>
<p>Upon seeing this I fell into a great rage, without exactly knowing why.
“This thing,” I exclaimed, “is a contemptible falsehood—a poor hoax—the
lees of the invention of some pitiable penny-a-liner—of some
wretched concoctor of accidents in Cocaigne. These fellows, knowing the
extravagant gullibility of the age, set their wits to work in the
imagination of improbable possibilities—-of odd accidents, as they
term them; but to a reflecting intellect (like mine,” I added, in
parenthesis, putting my forefinger unconsciously to the side of my nose,)
“to a contemplative understanding such as I myself possess, it seems
evident at once that the marvelous increase of late in these ‘odd
accidents’ is by far the oddest accident of all. For my own part, I intend
to believe nothing henceforward that has anything of the ‘singular’ about
it.”</p>
<p>“Mein Gott, den, vat a vool you bees for dat!” replied one of the most
remarkable voices I ever heard. At first I took it for a rumbling in my
ears—such as a man sometimes experiences when getting very drunk—but,
upon second thought, I considered the sound as more nearly resembling that
which proceeds from an empty barrel beaten with a big stick; and, in fact,
this I should have concluded it to be, but for the articulation of the
syllables and words. I am by no means naturally nervous, and the very few
glasses of Lafitte which I had sipped served to embolden me no little, so
that I felt nothing of trepidation, but merely uplifted my eyes with a
leisurely movement, and looked carefully around the room for the intruder.
I could not, however, perceive any one at all.</p>
<p>“Humph!” resumed the voice, as I continued my survey, “you mus pe so dronk
as de pig, den, for not zee me as I zit here at your zide.”</p>
<p>Hereupon I bethought me of looking immediately before my nose, and there,
sure enough, confronting me at the table sat a personage nondescript,
although not altogether indescribable. His body was a wine-pipe, or a
rum-puncheon, or something of that character, and had a truly Falstaffian
air. In its nether extremity were inserted two kegs, which seemed to
answer all the purposes of legs. For arms there dangled from the upper
portion of the carcass two tolerably long bottles, with the necks outward
for hands. All the head that I saw the monster possessed of was one of
those Hessian canteens which resemble a large snuff-box with a hole in the
middle of the lid. This canteen (with a funnel on its top, like a cavalier
cap slouched over the eyes) was set on edge upon the puncheon, with the
hole toward myself; and through this hole, which seemed puckered up like
the mouth of a very precise old maid, the creature was emitting certain
rumbling and grumbling noises which he evidently intended for intelligible
talk.</p>
<p>“I zay,” said he, “you mos pe dronk as de pig, vor zit dare and not zee me
zit ere; and I zay, doo, you mos pe pigger vool as de goose, vor to
dispelief vat iz print in de print. ’Tiz de troof—dat it iz—eberry
vord ob it.”</p>
<p>“Who are you, pray?” said I, with much dignity, although somewhat puzzled;
“how did you get here? and what is it you are talking about?”</p>
<p>“Az vor ow I com’d ere,” replied the figure, “dat iz none of your
pizzness; and as vor vat I be talking apout, I be talk apout vat I tink
proper; and as vor who I be, vy dat is de very ting I com’d here for to
let you zee for yourzelf.”</p>
<p>“You are a drunken vagabond,” said I, “and I shall ring the bell and order
my footman to kick you into the street.”</p>
<p>“He! he! he!” said the fellow, “hu! hu! hu! dat you can’t do.”</p>
<p>“Can’t do!” said I, “what do you mean?—I can’t do what?”</p>
<p>“Ring de pell,” he replied, attempting a grin with his little villanous
mouth.</p>
<p>Upon this I made an effort to get up, in order to put my threat into
execution; but the ruffian just reached across the table very
deliberately, and hitting me a tap on the forehead with the neck of one of
the long bottles, knocked me back into the arm-chair from which I had half
arisen. I was utterly astounded; and, for a moment, was quite at a loss
what to do. In the meantime, he continued his talk.</p>
<p>“You zee,” said he, “it iz te bess vor zit still; and now you shall know
who I pe. Look at me! zee! I am te <i>Angel ov te Odd</i>.”</p>
<p>“And odd enough, too,” I ventured to reply; “but I was always under the
impression that an angel had wings.”</p>
<p>“Te wing!” he cried, highly incensed, “vat I pe do mit te wing? Mein Gott!
do you take me vor a shicken?”</p>
<p>“No—oh no!” I replied, much alarmed, “you are no chicken—certainly
not.”</p>
<p>“Well, den, zit still and pehabe yourself, or I’ll rap you again mid me
vist. It iz te shicken ab te wing, und te owl ab te wing, und te imp ab te
wing, und te head-teuffel ab te wing. Te angel ab <i>not</i> te wing, and
I am te <i>Angel ov te Odd</i>.”</p>
<p>“And your business with me at present is—is—”</p>
<p>“My pizzness!” ejaculated the thing, “vy vat a low bred buppy you mos pe
vor to ask a gentleman und an angel apout his pizziness!”</p>
<p>This language was rather more than I could bear, even from an angel; so,
plucking up courage, I seized a salt-cellar which lay within reach, and
hurled it at the head of the intruder. Either he dodged, however, or my
aim was inaccurate; for all I accomplished was the demolition of the
crystal which protected the dial of the clock upon the mantel-piece. As
for the Angel, he evinced his sense of my assault by giving me two or
three hard consecutive raps upon the forehead as before. These reduced me
at once to submission, and I am almost ashamed to confess that either
through pain or vexation, there came a few tears into my eyes.</p>
<p>“Mein Gott!” said the Angel of the Odd, apparently much softened at my
distress; “mein Gott, te man is eder ferry dronk or ferry zorry. You mos
not trink it so strong—you mos put te water in te wine. Here, trink
dis, like a goot veller, und don’t gry now—don’t!”</p>
<p>Hereupon the Angel of the Odd replenished my goblet (which was about a
third full of Port) with a colorless fluid that he poured from one of his
hand bottles. I observed that these bottles had labels about their necks,
and that these labels were inscribed “Kirschenwasser.”</p>
<p>The considerate kindness of the Angel mollified me in no little measure;
and, aided by the water with which he diluted my Port more than once, I at
length regained sufficient temper to listen to his very extraordinary
discourse. I cannot pretend to recount all that he told me, but I gleaned
from what he said that he was the genius who presided over the <i>contretemps</i>
of mankind, and whose business it was to bring about the <i>odd accidents</i>
which are continually astonishing the skeptic. Once or twice, upon my
venturing to express my total incredulity in respect to his pretensions,
he grew very angry indeed, so that at length I considered it the wiser
policy to say nothing at all, and let him have his own way. He talked on,
therefore, at great length, while I merely leaned back in my chair with my
eyes shut, and amused myself with munching raisins and filliping the stems
about the room. But, by and by, the Angel suddenly construed this behavior
of mine into contempt. He arose in a terrible passion, slouched his funnel
down over his eyes, swore a vast oath, uttered a threat of some character
which I did not precisely comprehend, and finally made me a low bow and
departed, wishing me, in the language of the archbishop in Gil-Blas, “<i>beaucoup
de bonheur et un peu plus de bon sens</i>.”</p>
<p>His departure afforded me relief. The <i>very</i> few glasses of Lafitte
that I had sipped had the effect of rendering me drowsy, and I felt
inclined to take a nap of some fifteen or twenty minutes, as is my custom
after dinner. At six I had an appointment of consequence, which it was
quite indispensable that I should keep. The policy of insurance for my
dwelling house had expired the day before; and, some dispute having
arisen, it was agreed that, at six, I should meet the board of directors
of the company and settle the terms of a renewal. Glancing upward at the
clock on the mantel-piece, (for I felt too drowsy to take out my watch), I
had the pleasure to find that I had still twenty-five minutes to spare. It
was half past five; I could easily walk to the insurance office in five
minutes; and my usual siestas had never been known to exceed five and
twenty. I felt sufficiently safe, therefore, and composed myself to my
slumbers forthwith.</p>
<p>Having completed them to my satisfaction, I again looked toward the
time-piece and was half inclined to believe in the possibility of odd
accidents when I found that, instead of my ordinary fifteen or twenty
minutes, I had been dozing only three; for it still wanted seven and
twenty of the appointed hour. I betook myself again to my nap, and at
length a second time awoke, when, to my utter amazement, it <i>still</i>
wanted twenty-seven minutes of six. I jumped up to examine the clock, and
found that it had ceased running. My watch informed me that it was half
past seven; and, of course, having slept two hours, I was too late for my
appointment. “It will make no difference,” I said: “I can call at the
office in the morning and apologize; in the meantime what can be the
matter with the clock?” Upon examining it I discovered that one of the
raisin stems which I had been filliping about the room during the
discourse of the Angel of the Odd, had flown through the fractured
crystal, and lodging, singularly enough, in the key-hole, with an end
projecting outward, had thus arrested the revolution of the minute hand.</p>
<p>“Ah!” said I, “I see how it is. This thing speaks for itself. A natural
accident, such as <i>will</i> happen now and then!”</p>
<p>I gave the matter no further consideration, and at my usual hour retired
to bed. Here, having placed a candle upon a reading stand at the bed head,
and having made an attempt to peruse some pages of the “Omnipresence of
the Deity,” I unfortunately fell asleep in less than twenty seconds,
leaving the light burning as it was.</p>
<p>My dreams were terrifically disturbed by visions of the Angel of the Odd.
Methought he stood at the foot of the couch, drew aside the curtains, and,
in the hollow, detestable tones of a rum puncheon, menaced me with the
bitterest vengeance for the contempt with which I had treated him. He
concluded a long harangue by taking off his funnel-cap, inserting the tube
into my gullet, and thus deluging me with an ocean of Kirschenwässer,
which he poured, in a continuous flood, from one of the long necked
bottles that stood him instead of an arm. My agony was at length
insufferable, and I awoke just in time to perceive that a rat had ran off
with the lighted candle from the stand, but <i>not</i> in season to
prevent his making his escape with it through the hole. Very soon, a
strong suffocating odor assailed my nostrils; the house, I clearly
perceived, was on fire. In a few minutes the blaze broke forth with
violence, and in an incredibly brief period the entire building was
wrapped in flames. All egress from my chamber, except through a window,
was cut off. The crowd, however, quickly procured and raised a long
ladder. By means of this I was descending rapidly, and in apparent safety,
when a huge hog, about whose rotund stomach, and indeed about whose whole
air and physiognomy, there was something which reminded me of the Angel of
the Odd,—when this hog, I say, which hitherto had been quietly
slumbering in the mud, took it suddenly into his head that his left
shoulder needed scratching, and could find no more convenient rubbing-post
than that afforded by the foot of the ladder. In an instant I was
precipitated and had the misfortune to fracture my arm.</p>
<p>This accident, with the loss of my insurance, and with the more serious
loss of my hair, the whole of which had been singed off by the fire,
predisposed me to serious impressions, so that, finally, I made up my mind
to take a wife. There was a rich widow disconsolate for the loss of her
seventh husband, and to her wounded spirit I offered the balm of my vows.
She yielded a reluctant consent to my prayers. I knelt at her feet in
gratitude and adoration. She blushed and bowed her luxuriant tresses into
close contact with those supplied me, temporarily, by Grandjean. I know
not how the entanglement took place, but so it was. I arose with a shining
pate, wigless; she in disdain and wrath, half buried in alien hair. Thus
ended my hopes of the widow by an accident which could not have been
anticipated, to be sure, but which the natural sequence of events had
brought about.</p>
<p>Without despairing, however, I undertook the siege of a less implacable
heart. The fates were again propitious for a brief period; but again a
trivial incident interfered. Meeting my betrothed in an avenue thronged
with the <i>élite</i> of the city, I was hastening to greet her with one
of my best considered bows, when a small particle of some foreign matter,
lodging in the corner of my eye, rendered me, for the moment, completely
blind. Before I could recover my sight, the lady of my love had
disappeared—irreparably affronted at what she chose to consider my
premeditated rudeness in passing her by ungreeted. While I stood
bewildered at the suddenness of this accident, (which might have happened,
nevertheless, to any one under the sun), and while I still continued
incapable of sight, I was accosted by the Angel of the Odd, who proffered
me his aid with a civility which I had no reason to expect. He examined my
disordered eye with much gentleness and skill, informed me that I had a
drop in it, and (whatever a “drop” was) took it out, and afforded me
relief.</p>
<p>I now considered it high time to die, (since fortune had so determined to
persecute me,) and accordingly made my way to the nearest river. Here,
divesting myself of my clothes, (for there is no reason why we cannot die
as we were born), I threw myself headlong into the current; the sole
witness of my fate being a solitary crow that had been seduced into the
eating of brandy-saturated corn, and so had staggered away from his
fellows. No sooner had I entered the water than this bird took it into its
head to fly away with the most indispensable portion of my apparel.
Postponing, therefore, for the present, my suicidal design, I just slipped
my nether extremities into the sleeves of my coat, and betook myself to a
pursuit of the felon with all the nimbleness which the case required and
its circumstances would admit. But my evil destiny attended me still. As I
ran at full speed, with my nose up in the atmosphere, and intent only upon
the purloiner of my property, I suddenly perceived that my feet rested no
longer upon <i>terra-firma</i>; the fact is, I had thrown myself over a
precipice, and should inevitably have been dashed to pieces but for my
good fortune in grasping the end of a long guide-rope, which depended from
a passing balloon.</p>
<p>As soon as I sufficiently recovered my senses to comprehend the terrific
predicament in which I stood or rather hung, I exerted all the power of my
lungs to make that predicament known to the æronaut overhead. But for a
long time I exerted myself in vain. Either the fool could not, or the
villain would not perceive me. Meantime the machine rapidly soared, while
my strength even more rapidly failed. I was soon upon the point of
resigning myself to my fate, and dropping quietly into the sea, when my
spirits were suddenly revived by hearing a hollow voice from above, which
seemed to be lazily humming an opera air. Looking up, I perceived the
Angel of the Odd. He was leaning with his arms folded, over the rim of the
car; and with a pipe in his mouth, at which he puffed leisurely, seemed to
be upon excellent terms with himself and the universe. I was too much
exhausted to speak, so I merely regarded him with an imploring air.</p>
<p>For several minutes, although he looked me full in the face, he said
nothing. At length removing carefully his meerschaum from the right to the
left corner of his mouth, he condescended to speak.</p>
<p>“Who pe you,” he asked, “und what der teuffel you pe do dare?”</p>
<p>To this piece of impudence, cruelty and affectation, I could reply only by
ejaculating the monosyllable “Help!”</p>
<p>“Elp!” echoed the ruffian—“not I. Dare iz te pottle—elp
yourself, und pe tam’d!”</p>
<p>With these words he let fall a heavy bottle of Kirschenwasser which,
dropping precisely upon the crown of my head, caused me to imagine that my
brains were entirely knocked out. Impressed with this idea, I was about to
relinquish my hold and give up the ghost with a good grace, when I was
arrested by the cry of the Angel, who bade me hold on.</p>
<p>“Old on!” he said; “don’t pe in te urry—don’t. Will you pe take de
odder pottle, or ave you pe got zober yet and come to your zenzes?”</p>
<p>I made haste, hereupon, to nod my head twice—once in the negative,
meaning thereby that I would prefer not taking the other bottle at present—and
once in the affirmative, intending thus to imply that I <i>was</i> sober
and <i>had</i> positively come to my senses. By these means I somewhat
softened the Angel.</p>
<p>“Und you pelief, ten,” he inquired, “at te last? You pelief, ten, in te
possibilty of te odd?”</p>
<p>I again nodded my head in assent.</p>
<p>“Und you ave pelief in <i>me</i>, te Angel of te Odd?”</p>
<p>I nodded again.</p>
<p>“Und you acknowledge tat you pe te blind dronk and te vool?”</p>
<p>I nodded once more.</p>
<p>“Put your right hand into your left hand preeches pocket, ten, in token ov
your vull zubmizzion unto te Angel ov te Odd.”</p>
<p>This thing, for very obvious reasons, I found it quite impossible to do.
In the first place, my left arm had been broken in my fall from the
ladder, and, therefore, had I let go my hold with the right hand, I must
have let go altogether. In the second place, I could have no breeches
until I came across the crow. I was therefore obliged, much to my regret,
to shake my head in the negative—intending thus to give the Angel to
understand that I found it inconvenient, just at that moment, to comply
with his very reasonable demand! No sooner, however, had I ceased shaking
my head than—</p>
<p>“Go to der teuffel, ten!” roared the Angel of the Odd.</p>
<p>In pronouncing these words, he drew a sharp knife across the guide-rope by
which I was suspended, and as we then happened to be precisely over my own
house, (which, during my peregrinations, had been handsomely rebuilt,) it
so occurred that I tumbled headlong down the ample chimney and alit upon
the dining-room hearth.</p>
<p>Upon coming to my senses, (for the fall had very thoroughly stunned me,) I
found it about four o’clock in the morning. I lay outstretched where I had
fallen from the balloon. My head grovelled in the ashes of an extinguished
fire, while my feet reposed upon the wreck of a small table, overthrown,
and amid the fragments of a miscellaneous dessert, intermingled with a
newspaper, some broken glass and shattered bottles, and an empty jug of
the Schiedam Kirschenwasser. Thus revenged himself the Angel of the Odd.</p>
<p>[Mabbott states that Griswold “obviously had a revised form” for use in
the 1856 volume of Poe’s works. Mabbott does not substantiate this claim,
but it is surely not unreasonable. An editor, and even typographical
errors, may have produced nearly all of the very minor changes made in
this version. (Indeed, two very necessary words were clearly dropped by
accident.) An editor might have corrected “Wickliffe’s ‘Epigoniad’” to
“Wilkie’s ‘Epigoniad’,” but is unlikely to have added “Tuckerman’s
‘Sicily’” to the list of books read by the narrator. Griswold was not
above forgery (in Poe’s letters) when it suited his purpose, but would
have too little to gain by such an effort in this instance.]</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.12"></SPAN>MELLONTA TAUTA</h2>
<h3>TO THE EDITORS OF THE LADY’S BOOK:</h3>
<p>I have the honor of sending you, for your magazine, an article which I
hope you will be able to comprehend rather more distinctly than I do
myself. It is a translation, by my friend, Martin Van Buren Mavis,
(sometimes called the “Poughkeepsie Seer”) of an odd-looking MS. which I
found, about a year ago, tightly corked up in a jug floating in the Mare
Tenebrarum—a sea well described by the Nubian geographer, but seldom
visited now-a-days, except for the transcendentalists and divers for
crotchets.</p>
<p>Truly yours,</p>
<p>EDGAR A. POE</p>
<p class="letter">
{this paragraph not in the volume—ED}</p>
<h3>ON BOARD BALLOON “SKYLARK”</h3>
<p class="right">
<i>April</i>, 1, 2848</p>
<p>Now, my dear friend—now, for your sins, you are to suffer the
infliction of a long gossiping letter. I tell you distinctly that I am
going to punish you for all your impertinences by being as tedious, as
discursive, as incoherent and as unsatisfactory as possible. Besides, here
I am, cooped up in a dirty balloon, with some one or two hundred of the
canaille, all bound on a pleasure excursion, (what a funny idea some
people have of pleasure!) and I have no prospect of touching terra firma
for a month at least. Nobody to talk to. Nothing to do. When one has
nothing to do, then is the time to correspond with ones friends. You
perceive, then, why it is that I write you this letter—it is on
account of my ennui and your sins.</p>
<p>Get ready your spectacles and make up your mind to be annoyed. I mean to
write at you every day during this odious voyage.</p>
<p>Heigho! when will any Invention visit the human pericranium? Are we
forever to be doomed to the thousand inconveniences of the balloon? Will
nobody contrive a more expeditious mode of progress? The jog-trot
movement, to my thinking, is little less than positive torture. Upon my
word we have not made more than a hundred miles the hour since leaving
home! The very birds beat us—at least some of them. I assure you
that I do not exaggerate at all. Our motion, no doubt, seems slower than
it actually is—this on account of our having no objects about us by
which to estimate our velocity, and on account of our going with the wind.
To be sure, whenever we meet a balloon we have a chance of perceiving our
rate, and then, I admit, things do not appear so very bad. Accustomed as I
am to this mode of travelling, I cannot get over a kind of giddiness
whenever a balloon passes us in a current directly overhead. It always
seems to me like an immense bird of prey about to pounce upon us and carry
us off in its claws. One went over us this morning about sunrise, and so
nearly overhead that its drag-rope actually brushed the network suspending
our car, and caused us very serious apprehension. Our captain said that if
the material of the bag had been the trumpery varnished “silk” of five
hundred or a thousand years ago, we should inevitably have been damaged.
This silk, as he explained it to me, was a fabric composed of the entrails
of a species of earth-worm. The worm was carefully fed on mulberries—a kind
of fruit resembling a water-melon—and, when sufficiently fat, was
crushed in a mill. The paste thus arising was called papyrus in its
primary state, and went through a variety of processes until it finally
became “silk.” Singular to relate, it was once much admired as an article
of female dress! Balloons were also very generally constructed from it. A
better kind of material, it appears, was subsequently found in the down
surrounding the seed-vessels of a plant vulgarly called euphorbium, and at
that time botanically termed milk-weed. This latter kind of silk was
designated as silk-buckingham, on account of its superior durability, and
was usually prepared for use by being varnished with a solution of gum
caoutchouc—a substance which in some respects must have resembled
the gutta percha now in common use. This caoutchouc was occasionally
called Indian rubber or rubber of twist, and was no doubt one of the
numerous fungi. Never tell me again that I am not at heart an antiquarian.</p>
<p>Talking of drag-ropes—our own, it seems, has this moment knocked a
man overboard from one of the small magnetic propellers that swarm in
ocean below us—a boat of about six thousand tons, and, from all
accounts, shamefully crowded. These diminutive barques should be
prohibited from carrying more than a definite number of passengers. The
man, of course, was not permitted to get on board again, and was soon out
of sight, he and his life-preserver. I rejoice, my dear friend, that we
live in an age so enlightened that no such a thing as an individual is
supposed to exist. It is the mass for which the true Humanity cares.
By-the-by, talking of Humanity, do you know that our immortal Wiggins is
not so original in his views of the Social Condition and so forth, as his
contemporaries are inclined to suppose? Pundit assures me that the same
ideas were put nearly in the same way, about a thousand years ago, by an
Irish philosopher called Furrier, on account of his keeping a retail shop
for cat peltries and other furs. Pundit knows, you know; there can be no
mistake about it. How very wonderfully do we see verified every day, the
profound observation of the Hindoo Aries Tottle (as quoted by Pundit)—“Thus
must we say that, not once or twice, or a few times, but with almost
infinite repetitions, the same opinions come round in a circle among men.”</p>
<p>April 2.—Spoke to-day the magnetic cutter in charge of the middle
section of floating telegraph wires. I learn that when this species of
telegraph was first put into operation by Horse, it was considered quite
impossible to convey the wires over sea, but now we are at a loss to
comprehend where the difficulty lay! So wags the world. Tempora mutantur—excuse
me for quoting the Etruscan. What would we do without the Atalantic
telegraph? (Pundit says Atlantic was the ancient adjective.) We lay to a
few minutes to ask the cutter some questions, and learned, among other
glorious news, that civil war is raging in Africa, while the plague is
doing its good work beautifully both in Yurope and Ayesher. Is it not
truly remarkable that, before the magnificent light shed upon philosophy
by Humanity, the world was accustomed to regard War and Pestilence as
calamities? Do you know that prayers were actually offered up in the
ancient temples to the end that these evils (!) might not be visited upon
mankind? Is it not really difficult to comprehend upon what principle of
interest our forefathers acted? Were they so blind as not to perceive that
the destruction of a myriad of individuals is only so much positive
advantage to the mass!</p>
<p>April 3.—It is really a very fine amusement to ascend the
rope-ladder leading to the summit of the balloon-bag, and thence survey
the surrounding world. From the car below you know the prospect is not so
comprehensive—you can see little vertically. But seated here (where
I write this) in the luxuriously-cushioned open piazza of the summit, one
can see everything that is going on in all directions. Just now there is
quite a crowd of balloons in sight, and they present a very animated
appearance, while the air is resonant with the hum of so many millions of
human voices. I have heard it asserted that when Yellow or (Pundit will
have it) Violet, who is supposed to have been the first aeronaut,
maintained the practicability of traversing the atmosphere in all
directions, by merely ascending or descending until a favorable current
was attained, he was scarcely hearkened to at all by his contemporaries,
who looked upon him as merely an ingenious sort of madman, because the
philosophers (?) of the day declared the thing impossible. Really now it
does seem to me quite unaccountable how any thing so obviously feasible
could have escaped the sagacity of the ancient savans. But in all ages the
great obstacles to advancement in Art have been opposed by the so-called
men of science. To be sure, our men of science are not quite so bigoted as
those of old:—oh, I have something so queer to tell you on this
topic. Do you know that it is not more than a thousand years ago since the
metaphysicians consented to relieve the people of the singular fancy that
there existed but two possible roads for the attainment of Truth! Believe
it if you can! It appears that long, long ago, in the night of Time, there
lived a Turkish philosopher (or Hindoo possibly) called Aries Tottle. This
person introduced, or at all events propagated what was termed the
deductive or a priori mode of investigation. He started with what he
maintained to be axioms or “self-evident truths,” and thence proceeded
“logically” to results. His greatest disciples were one Neuclid, and one
Cant. Well, Aries Tottle flourished supreme until advent of one Hog,
surnamed the “Ettrick Shepherd,” who preached an entirely different
system, which he called the a posteriori or inductive. His plan referred
altogether to Sensation. He proceeded by observing, analyzing, and
classifying facts-instantiae naturae, as they were affectedly called—into
general laws. Aries Tottle’s mode, in a word, was based on noumena; Hog’s
on phenomena. Well, so great was the admiration excited by this latter
system that, at its first introduction, Aries Tottle fell into disrepute;
but finally he recovered ground and was permitted to divide the realm of
Truth with his more modern rival. The savans now maintained the
Aristotelian and Baconian roads were the sole possible avenues to
knowledge. “Baconian,” you must know, was an adjective invented as
equivalent to Hog-ian and more euphonious and dignified.</p>
<p>Now, my dear friend, I do assure you, most positively, that I represent
this matter fairly, on the soundest authority; and you can easily
understand how a notion so absurd on its very face must have operated to
retard the progress of all true knowledge—which makes its advances
almost invariably by intuitive bounds. The ancient idea confined
investigations to crawling; and for hundreds of years so great was the
infatuation about Hog especially, that a virtual end was put to all
thinking, properly so called. No man dared utter a truth to which he felt
himself indebted to his Soul alone. It mattered not whether the truth was
even demonstrably a truth, for the bullet-headed savans of the time
regarded only the road by which he had attained it. They would not even
look at the end. “Let us see the means,” they cried, “the means!” If, upon
investigation of the means, it was found to come under neither the
category Aries (that is to say Ram) nor under the category Hog, why then
the savans went no farther, but pronounced the “theorist” a fool, and
would have nothing to do with him or his truth.</p>
<p>Now, it cannot be maintained, even, that by the crawling system the
greatest amount of truth would be attained in any long series of ages, for
the repression of imagination was an evil not to be compensated for by any
superior certainty in the ancient modes of investigation. The error of
these Jurmains, these Vrinch, these Inglitch, and these Amriccans (the
latter, by the way, were our own immediate progenitors), was an error
quite analogous with that of the wiseacre who fancies that he must
necessarily see an object the better the more closely he holds it to his
eyes. These people blinded themselves by details. When they proceeded
Hoggishly, their “facts” were by no means always facts—a matter of
little consequence had it not been for assuming that they were facts and
must be facts because they appeared to be such. When they proceeded on the
path of the Ram, their course was scarcely as straight as a ram’s horn,
for they never had an axiom which was an axiom at all. They must have been
very blind not to see this, even in their own day; for even in their own
day many of the long “established” axioms had been rejected. For example—“Ex
nihilo nihil fit”; “a body cannot act where it is not”; “there cannot
exist antipodes”; “darkness cannot come out of light”—all these, and
a dozen other similar propositions, formerly admitted without hesitation
as axioms, were, even at the period of which I speak, seen to be
untenable. How absurd in these people, then, to persist in putting faith
in “axioms” as immutable bases of Truth! But even out of the mouths of
their soundest reasoners it is easy to demonstrate the futility, the
impalpability of their axioms in general. Who was the soundest of their
logicians? Let me see! I will go and ask Pundit and be back in a
minute.... Ah, here we have it! Here is a book written nearly a thousand
years ago and lately translated from the Inglitch—which, by the way,
appears to have been the rudiment of the Amriccan. Pundit says it is
decidedly the cleverest ancient work on its topic, Logic. The author (who
was much thought of in his day) was one Miller, or Mill; and we find it
recorded of him, as a point of some importance, that he had a mill-horse
called Bentham. But let us glance at the treatise!</p>
<p>Ah!—“Ability or inability to conceive,” says Mr. Mill, very
properly, “is in no case to be received as a criterion of axiomatic
truth.” What modern in his senses would ever think of disputing this
truism? The only wonder with us must be, how it happened that Mr. Mill
conceived it necessary even to hint at any thing so obvious. So far good—but
let us turn over another paper. What have we here?—“Contradictories
cannot both be true—that is, cannot co-exist in nature.” Here Mr.
Mill means, for example, that a tree must be either a tree or not a tree—that
it cannot be at the same time a tree and not a tree. Very well; but I ask
him why. His reply is this—and never pretends to be any thing else
than this—“Because it is impossible to conceive that contradictories
can both be true.” But this is no answer at all, by his own showing, for
has he not just admitted as a truism that “ability or inability to
conceive is in no case to be received as a criterion of axiomatic truth.”</p>
<p>Now I do not complain of these ancients so much because their logic is, by
their own showing, utterly baseless, worthless and fantastic altogether,
as because of their pompous and imbecile proscription of all other roads
of Truth, of all other means for its attainment than the two preposterous
paths—the one of creeping and the one of crawling—to which
they have dared to confine the Soul that loves nothing so well as to soar.</p>
<p>By the by, my dear friend, do you not think it would have puzzled these
ancient dogmaticians to have determined by which of their two roads it was
that the most important and most sublime of all their truths was, in
effect, attained? I mean the truth of Gravitation. Newton owed it to
Kepler. Kepler admitted that his three laws were guessed at—these
three laws of all laws which led the great Inglitch mathematician to his
principle, the basis of all physical principle—to go behind which we
must enter the Kingdom of Metaphysics: Kepler guessed—that is to say
imagined. He was essentially a “theorist”—that word now of so much
sanctity, formerly an epithet of contempt. Would it not have puzzled these
old moles too, to have explained by which of the two “roads” a
cryptographist unriddles a cryptograph of more than usual secrecy, or by
which of the two roads Champollion directed mankind to those enduring and
almost innumerable truths which resulted from his deciphering the
Hieroglyphics.</p>
<p>One word more on this topic and I will be done boring you. Is it not
passing strange that, with their eternal prattling about roads to Truth,
these bigoted people missed what we now so clearly perceive to be the
great highway—that of Consistency? Does it not seem singular how
they should have failed to deduce from the works of God the vital fact
that a perfect consistency must be an absolute truth! How plain has been
our progress since the late announcement of this proposition!
Investigation has been taken out of the hands of the ground-moles and
given, as a task, to the true and only true thinkers, the men of ardent
imagination. These latter theorize. Can you not fancy the shout of scorn
with which my words would be received by our progenitors were it possible
for them to be now looking over my shoulder? These men, I say, theorize;
and their theories are simply corrected, reduced, systematized—cleared,
little by little, of their dross of inconsistency—until, finally, a
perfect consistency stands apparent which even the most stolid admit,
because it is a consistency, to be an absolute and an unquestionable
truth.</p>
<p>April 4.—The new gas is doing wonders, in conjunction with the new
improvement with gutta percha. How very safe, commodious, manageable, and
in every respect convenient are our modern balloons! Here is an immense
one approaching us at the rate of at least a hundred and fifty miles an
hour. It seems to be crowded with people—perhaps there are three or
four hundred passengers—and yet it soars to an elevation of nearly a
mile, looking down upon poor us with sovereign contempt. Still a hundred
or even two hundred miles an hour is slow travelling after all. Do you
remember our flight on the railroad across the Kanadaw continent?—fully
three hundred miles the hour—that was travelling. Nothing to be seen
though—nothing to be done but flirt, feast and dance in the
magnificent saloons. Do you remember what an odd sensation was experienced
when, by chance, we caught a glimpse of external objects while the cars
were in full flight? Every thing seemed unique—in one mass. For my
part, I cannot say but that I preferred the travelling by the slow train
of a hundred miles the hour. Here we were permitted to have glass windows—even
to have them open—and something like a distinct view of the country
was attainable.... Pundit says that the route for the great Kanadaw
railroad must have been in some measure marked out about nine hundred
years ago! In fact, he goes so far as to assert that actual traces of a
road are still discernible—traces referable to a period quite as
remote as that mentioned. The track, it appears was double only; ours, you
know, has twelve paths; and three or four new ones are in preparation. The
ancient rails were very slight, and placed so close together as to be,
according to modern notions, quite frivolous, if not dangerous in the
extreme. The present width of track—fifty feet—is considered,
indeed, scarcely secure enough. For my part, I make no doubt that a track
of some sort must have existed in very remote times, as Pundit asserts;
for nothing can be clearer, to my mind, than that, at some period—not
less than seven centuries ago, certainly—the Northern and Southern
Kanadaw continents were united; the Kanawdians, then, would have been
driven, by necessity, to a great railroad across the continent.</p>
<p>April 5.—I am almost devoured by <i>ennui</i>. Pundit is the only
conversible person on board; and he, poor soul! can speak of nothing but
antiquities. He has been occupied all the day in the attempt to convince
me that the ancient Amriccans governed themselves!—did ever anybody
hear of such an absurdity?—that they existed in a sort of
every-man-for-himself confederacy, after the fashion of the “prairie dogs”
that we read of in fable. He says that they started with the queerest idea
conceivable, viz: that all men are born free and equal—this in the
very teeth of the laws of <i>gradation</i> so visibly impressed upon all things
both in the moral and physical universe. Every man “voted,” as they called
it—that is to say meddled with public affairs—until at length,
it was discovered that what is everybody’s business is nobody’s, and that
the “Republic” (so the absurd thing was called) was without a government
at all. It is related, however, that the first circumstance which
disturbed, very particularly, the self-complacency of the philosophers who
constructed this “Republic,” was the startling discovery that universal
suffrage gave opportunity for fraudulent schemes, by means of which any
desired number of votes might at any time be polled, without the
possibility of prevention or even detection, by any party which should be
merely villainous enough not to be ashamed of the fraud. A little
reflection upon this discovery sufficed to render evident the
consequences, which were that rascality must predominate—in a word,
that a republican government could never be any thing but a rascally one.
While the philosophers, however, were busied in blushing at their
stupidity in not having foreseen these inevitable evils, and intent upon
the invention of new theories, the matter was put to an abrupt issue by a
fellow of the name of Mob, who took every thing into his own hands and set
up a despotism, in comparison with which those of the fabulous Zeros and
Hellofagabaluses were respectable and delectable. This Mob (a foreigner,
by-the-by), is said to have been the most odious of all men that ever
encumbered the earth. He was a giant in stature—insolent, rapacious,
filthy, had the gall of a bullock with the heart of a hyena and the brains
of a peacock. He died, at length, by dint of his own energies, which
exhausted him. Nevertheless, he had his uses, as every thing has, however
vile, and taught mankind a lesson which to this day it is in no danger of
forgetting—never to run directly contrary to the natural analogies.
As for Republicanism, no analogy could be found for it upon the face of
the earth—unless we except the case of the “prairie dogs,” an
exception which seems to demonstrate, if anything, that democracy is a
very admirable form of government—for dogs.</p>
<p>April 6.—Last night had a fine view of Alpha Lyrae, whose disk,
through our captain’s spy-glass, subtends an angle of half a degree,
looking very much as our sun does to the naked eye on a misty day. Alpha
Lyrae, although so very much larger than our sun, by the by, resembles him
closely as regards its spots, its atmosphere, and in many other
particulars. It is only within the last century, Pundit tells me, that the
binary relation existing between these two orbs began even to be
suspected. The evident motion of our system in the heavens was (strange to
say!) referred to an orbit about a prodigious star in the centre of the
galaxy. About this star, or at all events about a centre of gravity common
to all the globes of the Milky Way and supposed to be near Alcyone in the
Pleiades, every one of these globes was declared to be revolving, our own
performing the circuit in a period of 117,000,000 of years! We, with our
present lights, our vast telescopic improvements, and so forth, of course
find it difficult to comprehend the ground of an idea such as this. Its
first propagator was one Mudler. He was led, we must presume, to this wild
hypothesis by mere analogy in the first instance; but, this being the
case, he should have at least adhered to analogy in its development. A
great central orb was, in fact, suggested; so far Mudler was consistent.
This central orb, however, dynamically, should have been greater than all
its surrounding orbs taken together. The question might then have been
asked—“Why do we not see it?”—we, especially, who occupy the
mid region of the cluster—the very locality near which, at least,
must be situated this inconceivable central sun. The astronomer, perhaps,
at this point, took refuge in the suggestion of non-luminosity; and here
analogy was suddenly let fall. But even admitting the central orb
non-luminous, how did he manage to explain its failure to be rendered
visible by the incalculable host of glorious suns glaring in all
directions about it? No doubt what he finally maintained was merely a
centre of gravity common to all the revolving orbs—but here again
analogy must have been let fall. Our system revolves, it is true, about a
common centre of gravity, but it does this in connection with and in
consequence of a material sun whose mass more than counterbalances the
rest of the system. The mathematical circle is a curve composed of an
infinity of straight lines; but this idea of the circle—this idea of
it which, in regard to all earthly geometry, we consider as merely the
mathematical, in contradistinction from the practical, idea—is, in
sober fact, the practical conception which alone we have any right to
entertain in respect to those Titanic circles with which we have to deal,
at least in fancy, when we suppose our system, with its fellows, revolving
about a point in the centre of the galaxy. Let the most vigorous of human
imaginations but attempt to take a single step toward the comprehension of
a circuit so unutterable! It would scarcely be paradoxical to say that a
flash of lightning itself, travelling forever upon the circumference of
this inconceivable circle, would still forever be travelling in a straight
line. That the path of our sun along such a circumference—that the
direction of our system in such an orbit—would, to any human
perception, deviate in the slightest degree from a straight line even in a
million of years, is a proposition not to be entertained; and yet these
ancient astronomers were absolutely cajoled, it appears, into believing
that a decisive curvature had become apparent during the brief period of
their astronomical history—during the mere point—during the
utter nothingness of two or three thousand years! How incomprehensible,
that considerations such as this did not at once indicate to them the true
state of affairs—that of the binary revolution of our sun and Alpha
Lyrae around a common centre of gravity!</p>
<p>April 7.—Continued last night our astronomical amusements. Had a
fine view of the five Neptunian asteroids, and watched with much interest
the putting up of a huge impost on a couple of lintels in the new temple
at Daphnis in the moon. It was amusing to think that creatures so
diminutive as the lunarians, and bearing so little resemblance to
humanity, yet evinced a mechanical ingenuity so much superior to our own.
One finds it difficult, too, to conceive the vast masses which these
people handle so easily, to be as light as our own reason tells us they
actually are.</p>
<p>April 8.—Eureka! Pundit is in his glory. A balloon from Kanadaw
spoke us to-day and threw on board several late papers; they contain some
exceedingly curious information relative to Kanawdian or rather Amriccan
antiquities. You know, I presume, that laborers have for some months been
employed in preparing the ground for a new fountain at Paradise, the
Emperor’s principal pleasure garden. Paradise, it appears, has been,
literally speaking, an island time out of mind—that is to say, its
northern boundary was always (as far back as any record extends) a
rivulet, or rather a very narrow arm of the sea. This arm was gradually
widened until it attained its present breadth—a mile. The whole
length of the island is nine miles; the breadth varies materially. The
entire area (so Pundit says) was, about eight hundred years ago, densely
packed with houses, some of them twenty stories high; land (for some most
unaccountable reason) being considered as especially precious just in this
vicinity. The disastrous earthquake, however, of the year 2050, so totally
uprooted and overwhelmed the town (for it was almost too large to be
called a village) that the most indefatigable of our antiquarians have
never yet been able to obtain from the site any sufficient data (in the
shape of coins, medals or inscriptions) wherewith to build up even the
ghost of a theory concerning the manners, customs, &c., &c., &c.,
of the aboriginal inhabitants. Nearly all that we have hitherto known of
them is, that they were a portion of the Knickerbocker tribe of savages
infesting the continent at its first discovery by Recorder Riker, a knight
of the Golden Fleece. They were by no means uncivilized, however, but
cultivated various arts and even sciences after a fashion of their own. It
is related of them that they were acute in many respects, but were oddly
afflicted with monomania for building what, in the ancient Amriccan, was
denominated “churches”—a kind of pagoda instituted for the worship
of two idols that went by the names of Wealth and Fashion. In the end, it
is said, the island became, nine tenths of it, church. The women, too, it
appears, were oddly deformed by a natural protuberance of the region just
below the small of the back—although, most unaccountably, this
deformity was looked upon altogether in the light of a beauty. One or two
pictures of these singular women have in fact, been miraculously
preserved. They look very odd, very—like something between a
turkey-cock and a dromedary.</p>
<p>Well, these few details are nearly all that have descended to us
respecting the ancient Knickerbockers. It seems, however, that while
digging in the centre of the emperors garden, (which, you know, covers the
whole island), some of the workmen unearthed a cubical and evidently
chiseled block of granite, weighing several hundred pounds. It was in good
preservation, having received, apparently, little injury from the
convulsion which entombed it. On one of its surfaces was a marble slab
with (only think of it!) an inscription—a legible inscription.
Pundit is in ecstacies. Upon detaching the slab, a cavity appeared,
containing a leaden box filled with various coins, a long scroll of names,
several documents which appear to resemble newspapers, with other matters
of intense interest to the antiquarian! There can be no doubt that all
these are genuine Amriccan relics belonging to the tribe called
Knickerbocker. The papers thrown on board our balloon are filled with
fac-similes of the coins, MSS., typography, &c., &c. I copy for
your amusement the Knickerbocker inscription on the marble slab:—</p>
<p class="center">
This Corner Stone of a Monument to<br/>
The Memory of<br/>
GEORGE WASHINGTON<br/>
Was Laid With Appropriate Ceremonies<br/>
on the<br/>
19th Day of October, 1847<br/>
The anniversary of the surrender of<br/>
Lord Cornwallis<br/>
to General Washington at Yorktown<br/>
A. D. 1781<br/>
Under the Auspices of the<br/>
Washington Monument Association of<br/>
the city of New York</p>
<p>This, as I give it, is a verbatim translation done by Pundit himself, so
there can be no mistake about it. From the few words thus preserved, we
glean several important items of knowledge, not the least interesting of
which is the fact that a thousand years ago actual monuments had fallen
into disuse—as was all very proper—the people contenting
themselves, as we do now, with a mere indication of the design to erect a
monument at some future time; a corner-stone being cautiously laid by
itself “solitary and alone” (excuse me for quoting the great American poet
Benton!), as a guarantee of the magnanimous intention. We ascertain, too,
very distinctly, from this admirable inscription, the how as well as the
where and the what, of the great surrender in question. As to the where,
it was Yorktown (wherever that was), and as to the what, it was General
Cornwallis (no doubt some wealthy dealer in corn). He was surrendered. The
inscription commemorates the surrender of—what?—why, “of Lord
Cornwallis.” The only question is what could the savages wish him
surrendered for. But when we remember that these savages were undoubtedly
cannibals, we are led to the conclusion that they intended him for
sausage. As to the how of the surrender, no language can be more explicit.
Lord Cornwallis was surrendered (for sausage) “under the auspices of the
Washington Monument Association”—no doubt a charitable institution
for the depositing of corner-stones.—But, Heaven bless me! what is
the matter? Ah, I see—the balloon has collapsed, and we shall have a
tumble into the sea. I have, therefore, only time enough to add that, from
a hasty inspection of the fac-similes of newspapers, &c., &c., I
find that the great men in those days among the Amriccans, were one John,
a smith, and one Zacchary, a tailor.</p>
<p>Good-bye, until I see you again. Whether you ever get this letter or not
is point of little importance, as I write altogether for my own amusement.
I shall cork the MS. up in a bottle, however, and throw it into the sea.</p>
<p class="right">
Yours everlastingly,<br/>
P<small>UNDITA</small>.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.13"></SPAN>THE DUC DE L’OMELETTE.</h2>
<p class="letter">
And stepped at once into a cooler clime.—<i>Cowper</i>.</p>
<p>Keats fell by a criticism. Who was it died of “The Andromache”? {*1}
Ignoble souls!—De L’Omelette perished of an ortolan. <i>L’histoire en
est brève</i>. Assist me, Spirit of Apicius!</p>
<p>A golden cage bore the little winged wanderer, enamored, melting,
indolent, to the <i>Chaussée D’Antin</i>, from its home in far Peru. From its
queenly possessor La Bellissima, to the Duc De L’Omelette, six peers of
the empire conveyed the happy bird.</p>
<p>That night the Duc was to sup alone. In the privacy of his bureau he
reclined languidly on that ottoman for which he sacrificed his loyalty in
outbidding his king—the notorious ottoman of Cadêt.</p>
<p>He buries his face in the pillow. The clock strikes! Unable to restrain
his feelings, his Grace swallows an olive. At this moment the door gently
opens to the sound of soft music, and lo! the most delicate of birds is
before the most enamored of men! But what inexpressible dismay now
overshadows the countenance of the Duc?—“<i>Horreur!—chien!
Baptiste!—l’oiseau! ah, bon Dieu! cet oiseau modeste que tu as
déshabillé de ses plumes, et que tu as servi sans papier!</i>” It is
superfluous to say more:—the Duc expired in a paroxysm of disgust.</p>
<p>“Ha! ha! ha!” said his Grace on the third day after his decease.</p>
<p>“He! he! he!” replied the Devil faintly, drawing himself up with an air of
<i>hauteur</i>.</p>
<p>“Why, surely you are not serious,” retorted De L’Omelette. “I have sinned—c’est
vrai—but, my good sir, consider!—you have no actual intention
of putting such—such barbarous threats into execution.”</p>
<p>“No <i>what?</i>” said his majesty—“come, sir, strip!”</p>
<p>“Strip, indeed! very pretty i’ faith! no, sir, I shall <i>not</i> strip. Who are
you, pray, that I, Duc De L’Omelette, Prince de Foie-Gras, just come of
age, author of the ‘Mazurkiad,’ and Member of the Academy, should divest
myself at your bidding of the sweetest pantaloons ever made by Bourdon,
the daintiest <i>robe-de-chambre</i> ever put together by Rombêrt—to say
nothing of the taking my hair out of paper—not to mention the
trouble I should have in drawing off my gloves?”</p>
<p>“Who am I?—ah, true! I am Baal-Zebub, Prince of the Fly. I took
thee, just now, from a rose-wood coffin inlaid with ivory. Thou wast
curiously scented, and labelled as per invoice. Belial sent thee,—my
Inspector of Cemeteries. The pantaloons, which thou sayest were made by
Bourdon, are an excellent pair of linen drawers, and thy <i>robe-de-chambre</i>
is a shroud of no scanty dimensions.”</p>
<p>“Sir!” replied the Duc, “I am not to be insulted with impunity!—Sir!
I shall take the earliest opportunity of avenging this insult!—Sir!
you shall hear from me! in the meantime <i>au revoir!</i>”—and the Duc was
bowing himself out of the Satanic presence, when he was interrupted and
brought back by a gentleman in waiting. Hereupon his Grace rubbed his
eyes, yawned, shrugged his shoulders, reflected. Having become satisfied
of his identity, he took a bird’s eye view of his whereabouts.</p>
<p>The apartment was superb. Even De L’Omelette pronounced it <i>bien comme il
faut</i>. It was not its length nor its breadth,—but its height—ah,
that was appalling!—There was no ceiling—certainly none—but
a dense whirling mass of fiery-colored clouds. His Grace’s brain reeled as
he glanced upward. From above, hung a chain of an unknown blood-red metal—its
upper end lost, like the city of Boston, <i>parmi les nues</i>. From its nether
extremity swung a large cresset. The Duc knew it to be a ruby; but from it
there poured a light so intense, so still, so terrible, Persia never
worshipped such—Gheber never imagined such—Mussulman never
dreamed of such when, drugged with opium, he has tottered to a bed of
poppies, his back to the flowers, and his face to the God Apollo. The Duc
muttered a slight oath, decidedly approbatory.</p>
<p>The corners of the room were rounded into niches. Three of these were
filled with statues of gigantic proportions. Their beauty was Grecian,
their deformity Egyptian, their <i>tout ensemble</i> French. In the fourth niche
the statue was veiled; it was <i>not</i> colossal. But then there was a taper
ankle, a sandalled foot. De L’Omelette pressed his hand upon his heart,
closed his eyes, raised them, and caught his Satanic Majesty—in a
blush.</p>
<p>But the paintings!—Kupris! Astarte! Astoreth!—a thousand and
the same! And Rafaelle has beheld them! Yes, Rafaelle has been here, for
did he not paint the—? and was he not consequently damned? The
paintings—the paintings! O luxury! O love!—who, gazing on
those forbidden beauties, shall have eyes for the dainty devices of the
golden frames that besprinkled, like stars, the hyacinth and the porphyry
walls?</p>
<p>But the Duc’s heart is fainting within him. He is not, however, as you
suppose, dizzy with magnificence, nor drunk with the ecstatic breath of
those innumerable censers. <i>C’est vrai que de toutes ces choses il a pensé
beaucoup—mais!</i> The Duc De L’Omelette is terror-stricken; for,
through the lurid vista which a single uncurtained window is affording,
lo! gleams the most ghastly of all fires!</p>
<p><i>Le pauvre Duc!</i> He could not help imagining that the glorious, the
voluptuous, the never-dying melodies which pervaded that hall, as they
passed filtered and transmuted through the alchemy of the enchanted
window-panes, were the wailings and the howlings of the hopeless and the
damned! And there, too!—there!—upon the ottoman!—who
could <i>he</i> be?—he, the <i>petitmaître</i>—no, the Deity—who sat
as if carved in marble, <i>et qui sourit</i>, with his pale countenance, <i>si
amèrement?</i></p>
<p><i>Mais il faut agir</i>—that is to say, a Frenchman never faints
outright. Besides, his Grace hated a scene—De L’Omelette is
himself again. There were some foils upon a table—some points also.
The Duc had studied under B——; <i>il avait tué ses six
hommes.</i> Now, then, <i>il peut s’échapper</i>. He measures two
points, and, with a grace inimitable, offers his Majesty the choice.
<i>Horreur!</i> his Majesty does not fence!</p>
<p><i>Mais il joue!</i>—how happy a thought!—but his Grace had always an
excellent memory. He had dipped in the “<i>Diable</i>” of Abbé Gualtier. Therein
it is said “<i>que le Diable n’ose pas refuser un jeu d’écarté.</i>”</p>
<p>But the chances—the chances! True—desperate: but scarcely
more desperate than the Duc. Besides, was he not in the secret?—had
he not skimmed over Père Le Brun?—was he not a member of the Club
Vingt-un? “<i>Si je perds</i>,” said he, “<i>je serai
deux fois perdu</i>—I shall be doubly damned—<i>voilà
tout!</i> (Here his Grace shrugged his shoulders.) <i>Si je gagne, je
reviendrai a mes ortolans—que les cartes soient
préparées!</i>”</p>
<p>His Grace was all care, all attention—his Majesty all confidence. A
spectator would have thought of Francis and Charles. His Grace thought of
his game. His Majesty did not think; he shuffled. The Duc cut.</p>
<p>The cards were dealt. The trump is turned—it is—it is—the
king! No—it was the queen. His Majesty cursed her masculine
habiliments. De L’Omelette placed his hand upon his heart.</p>
<p>They play. The Duc counts. The hand is out. His Majesty counts heavily,
smiles, and is taking wine. The Duc slips a card.</p>
<p>“<i>C’est à vous à faire</i>,” said his Majesty, cutting. His Grace bowed, dealt,
and arose from the table <i>en presentant le Roi</i>.</p>
<p>His Majesty looked chagrined.</p>
<p>Had Alexander not been Alexander, he would have been Diogenes; and the Duc
assured his antagonist in taking leave, “<i>que s’il n’eût été De L’Omelette
il n’aurait point d’objection d’être le Diable.</i>”</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.14"></SPAN>THE OBLONG BOX.</h2>
<p>Some years ago, I engaged passage from Charleston, S. C., to the city of
New York, in the fine packet-ship “Independence,” Captain Hardy. We were
to sail on the fifteenth of the month (June), weather permitting; and on
the fourteenth, I went on board to arrange some matters in my state-room.</p>
<p>I found that we were to have a great many passengers, including a more
than usual number of ladies. On the list were several of my acquaintances,
and among other names, I was rejoiced to see that of Mr. Cornelius Wyatt,
a young artist, for whom I entertained feelings of warm friendship. He had
been with me a fellow-student at C—— University, where we were very
much together. He had the ordinary temperament of genius, and was a
compound of misanthropy, sensibility, and enthusiasm. To these qualities
he united the warmest and truest heart which ever beat in a human bosom.</p>
<p>I observed that his name was carded upon three state-rooms; and, upon
again referring to the list of passengers, I found that he had engaged
passage for himself, wife, and two sisters—his own. The state-rooms
were sufficiently roomy, and each had two berths, one above the other.
These berths, to be sure, were so exceedingly narrow as to be insufficient
for more than one person; still, I could not comprehend why there were
three state-rooms for these four persons. I was, just at that epoch, in
one of those moody frames of mind which make a man abnormally inquisitive
about trifles: and I confess, with shame, that I busied myself in a
variety of ill-bred and preposterous conjectures about this matter of the
supernumerary state-room. It was no business of mine, to be sure, but with
none the less pertinacity did I occupy myself in attempts to resolve the
enigma. At last I reached a conclusion which wrought in me great wonder
why I had not arrived at it before. “It is a servant of course,” I said;
“what a fool I am, not sooner to have thought of so obvious a solution!”
And then I again repaired to the list—but here I saw distinctly that
no servant was to come with the party, although, in fact, it had been the
original design to bring one—for the words “and servant” had been
first written and then overscored. “Oh, extra baggage, to be sure,” I now
said to myself—“something he wishes not to be put in the hold—something
to be kept under his own eye—ah, I have it—a painting or so—and
this is what he has been bargaining about with Nicolino, the Italian Jew.”
This idea satisfied me, and I dismissed my curiosity for the nonce.</p>
<p>Wyatt’s two sisters I knew very well, and most amiable and clever girls
they were. His wife he had newly married, and I had never yet seen her. He
had often talked about her in my presence, however, and in his usual style
of enthusiasm. He described her as of surpassing beauty, wit, and
accomplishment. I was, therefore, quite anxious to make her acquaintance.</p>
<p>On the day in which I visited the ship (the fourteenth), Wyatt and party
were also to visit it—so the captain informed me—and I waited
on board an hour longer than I had designed, in hope of being presented to
the bride, but then an apology came. “Mrs. W. was a little indisposed, and
would decline coming on board until to-morrow, at the hour of sailing.”</p>
<p>The morrow having arrived, I was going from my hotel to the wharf, when
Captain Hardy met me and said that, “owing to circumstances” (a stupid but
convenient phrase), “he rather thought the ‘Independence’ would not sail
for a day or two, and that when all was ready, he would send up and let me
know.” This I thought strange, for there was a stiff southerly breeze; but
as “the circumstances” were not forthcoming, although I pumped for them
with much perseverance, I had nothing to do but to return home and digest
my impatience at leisure.</p>
<p>I did not receive the expected message from the captain for nearly a week.
It came at length, however, and I immediately went on board. The ship was
crowded with passengers, and every thing was in the bustle attendant upon
making sail. Wyatt’s party arrived in about ten minutes after myself.
There were the two sisters, the bride, and the artist—the latter in
one of his customary fits of moody misanthropy. I was too well used to
these, however, to pay them any special attention. He did not even
introduce me to his wife—this courtesy devolving, per force, upon
his sister Marian—a very sweet and intelligent girl, who, in a few
hurried words, made us acquainted.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wyatt had been closely veiled; and when she raised her veil, in
acknowledging my bow, I confess that I was very profoundly astonished. I
should have been much more so, however, had not long experience advised me
not to trust, with too implicit a reliance, the enthusiastic descriptions
of my friend, the artist, when indulging in comments upon the loveliness
of woman. When beauty was the theme, I well knew with what facility he
soared into the regions of the purely ideal.</p>
<p>The truth is, I could not help regarding Mrs. Wyatt as a decidedly
plain-looking woman. If not positively ugly, she was not, I think, very
far from it. She was dressed, however, in exquisite taste—and then I
had no doubt that she had captivated my friend’s heart by the more
enduring graces of the intellect and soul. She said very few words, and
passed at once into her state-room with Mr. W.</p>
<p>My old inquisitiveness now returned. There was no servant—that was a
settled point. I looked, therefore, for the extra baggage. After some
delay, a cart arrived at the wharf, with an oblong pine box, which was
every thing that seemed to be expected. Immediately upon its arrival we
made sail, and in a short time were safely over the bar and standing out
to sea.</p>
<p>The box in question was, as I say, oblong. It was about six feet in length
by two and a half in breadth; I observed it attentively, and like to be
precise. Now this shape was peculiar; and no sooner had I seen it, than I
took credit to myself for the accuracy of my guessing. I had reached the
conclusion, it will be remembered, that the extra baggage of my friend,
the artist, would prove to be pictures, or at least a picture; for I knew
he had been for several weeks in conference with Nicolino:—and now
here was a box, which, from its shape, could possibly contain nothing in
the world but a copy of Leonardo’s “Last Supper;” and a copy of this very
“Last Supper,” done by Rubini the younger, at Florence, I had known, for
some time, to be in the possession of Nicolino. This point, therefore, I
considered as sufficiently settled. I chuckled excessively when I thought
of my acumen. It was the first time I had ever known Wyatt to keep from me
any of his artistical secrets; but here he evidently intended to steal a
march upon me, and smuggle a fine picture to New York, under my very nose;
expecting me to know nothing of the matter. I resolved to quiz him well,
now and hereafter.</p>
<p>One thing, however, annoyed me not a little. The box did not go into the
extra state-room. It was deposited in Wyatt’s own; and there, too, it
remained, occupying very nearly the whole of the floor—no doubt to
the exceeding discomfort of the artist and his wife;—this the more
especially as the tar or paint with which it was lettered in sprawling
capitals, emitted a strong, disagreeable, and, to my fancy, a peculiarly
disgusting odor. On the lid were painted the words—“Mrs. Adelaide
Curtis, Albany, New York. Charge of Cornelius Wyatt, Esq. This side up. To
be handled with care.”</p>
<p>Now, I was aware that Mrs. Adelaide Curtis, of Albany, was the artist’s
wife’s mother,—but then I looked upon the whole address as a
mystification, intended especially for myself. I made up my mind, of
course, that the box and contents would never get farther north than the
studio of my misanthropic friend, in Chambers Street, New York.</p>
<p>For the first three or four days we had fine weather, although the wind
was dead ahead; having chopped round to the northward, immediately upon
our losing sight of the coast. The passengers were, consequently, in high
spirits and disposed to be social. I must except, however, Wyatt and his
sisters, who behaved stiffly, and, I could not help thinking,
uncourteously to the rest of the party. Wyatt’s conduct I did not so much
regard. He was gloomy, even beyond his usual habit—in fact he was
morose—but in him I was prepared for eccentricity. For the sisters,
however, I could make no excuse. They secluded themselves in their
staterooms during the greater part of the passage, and absolutely refused,
although I repeatedly urged them, to hold communication with any person on
board.</p>
<p>Mrs. Wyatt herself was far more agreeable. That is to say, she was chatty;
and to be chatty is no slight recommendation at sea. She became
excessively intimate with most of the ladies; and, to my profound
astonishment, evinced no equivocal disposition to coquet with the men. She
amused us all very much. I say “amused”—and scarcely know how to
explain myself. The truth is, I soon found that Mrs. W. was far oftener
laughed at than with. The gentlemen said little about her; but the ladies,
in a little while, pronounced her “a good-hearted thing, rather
indifferent looking, totally uneducated, and decidedly vulgar.” The great
wonder was, how Wyatt had been entrapped into such a match. Wealth was the
general solution—but this I knew to be no solution at all; for Wyatt
had told me that she neither brought him a dollar nor had any expectations
from any source whatever. “He had married,” he said, “for love, and for
love only; and his bride was far more than worthy of his love.” When I
thought of these expressions, on the part of my friend, I confess that I
felt indescribably puzzled. Could it be possible that he was taking leave
of his senses? What else could I think? He, so refined, so intellectual,
so fastidious, with so exquisite a perception of the faulty, and so keen
an appreciation of the beautiful! To be sure, the lady seemed especially
fond of him—particularly so in his absence—when she made
herself ridiculous by frequent quotations of what had been said by her
“beloved husband, Mr. Wyatt.” The word “husband” seemed forever—to
use one of her own delicate expressions—forever “on the tip of her
tongue.” In the meantime, it was observed by all on board, that he avoided
her in the most pointed manner, and, for the most part, shut himself up
alone in his state-room, where, in fact, he might have been said to live
altogether, leaving his wife at full liberty to amuse herself as she
thought best, in the public society of the main cabin.</p>
<p>My conclusion, from what I saw and heard, was, that, the artist, by some
unaccountable freak of fate, or perhaps in some fit of enthusiastic and
fanciful passion, had been induced to unite himself with a person
altogether beneath him, and that the natural result, entire and speedy
disgust, had ensued. I pitied him from the bottom of my heart—but
could not, for that reason, quite forgive his incommunicativeness in the
matter of the “Last Supper.” For this I resolved to have my revenge.</p>
<p>One day he came upon deck, and, taking his arm as had been my wont, I
sauntered with him backward and forward. His gloom, however (which I
considered quite natural under the circumstances), seemed entirely
unabated. He said little, and that moodily, and with evident effort. I
ventured a jest or two, and he made a sickening attempt at a smile. Poor
fellow!—as I thought of his wife, I wondered that he could have
heart to put on even the semblance of mirth. I determined to commence a
series of covert insinuations, or innuendoes, about the oblong box—just
to let him perceive, gradually, that I was not altogether the butt, or
victim, of his little bit of pleasant mystification. My first observation
was by way of opening a masked battery. I said something about the
“peculiar shape of <i>that</i> box”; and, as I spoke the words, I smiled
knowingly, winked, and touched him gently with my forefinger in the ribs.</p>
<p>The manner in which Wyatt received this harmless pleasantry convinced me,
at once, that he was mad. At first he stared at me as if he found it
impossible to comprehend the witticism of my remark; but as its point
seemed slowly to make its way into his brain, his eyes, in the same
proportion, seemed protruding from their sockets. Then he grew very red—then
hideously pale—then, as if highly amused with what I had insinuated,
he began a loud and boisterous laugh, which, to my astonishment, he kept
up, with gradually increasing vigor, for ten minutes or more. In
conclusion, he fell flat and heavily upon the deck. When I ran to uplift
him, to all appearance he was dead.</p>
<p>I called assistance, and, with much difficulty, we brought him to himself.
Upon reviving he spoke incoherently for some time. At length we bled him
and put him to bed. The next morning he was quite recovered, so far as
regarded his mere bodily health. Of his mind I say nothing, of course. I
avoided him during the rest of the passage, by advice of the captain, who
seemed to coincide with me altogether in my views of his insanity, but
cautioned me to say nothing on this head to any person on board.</p>
<p>Several circumstances occurred immediately after this fit of Wyatt which
contributed to heighten the curiosity with which I was already possessed.
Among other things, this: I had been nervous—drank too much strong
green tea, and slept ill at night—in fact, for two nights I could
not be properly said to sleep at all. Now, my state-room opened into the
main cabin, or dining-room, as did those of all the single men on board.
Wyatt’s three rooms were in the after-cabin, which was separated from the
main one by a slight sliding door, never locked even at night. As we were
almost constantly on a wind, and the breeze was not a little stiff, the
ship heeled to leeward very considerably; and whenever her starboard side
was to leeward, the sliding door between the cabins slid open, and so
remained, nobody taking the trouble to get up and shut it. But my berth
was in such a position, that when my own state-room door was open, as well
as the sliding door in question (and my own door was always open on
account of the heat,) I could see into the after-cabin quite distinctly,
and just at that portion of it, too, where were situated the state-rooms
of Mr. Wyatt. Well, during two nights (not consecutive) while I lay awake,
I clearly saw Mrs. W., about eleven o’clock upon each night, steal
cautiously from the state-room of Mr. W., and enter the extra room, where
she remained until daybreak, when she was called by her husband and went
back. That they were virtually separated was clear. They had separate
apartments—no doubt in contemplation of a more permanent divorce;
and here, after all I thought was the mystery of the extra state-room.</p>
<p>There was another circumstance, too, which interested me much. During the
two wakeful nights in question, and immediately after the disappearance of
Mrs. Wyatt into the extra state-room, I was attracted by certain singular
cautious, subdued noises in that of her husband. After listening to them
for some time, with thoughtful attention, I at length succeeded perfectly
in translating their import. They were sounds occasioned by the artist in
prying open the oblong box, by means of a chisel and mallet—the
latter being apparently muffled, or deadened, by some soft woollen or
cotton substance in which its head was enveloped.</p>
<p>In this manner I fancied I could distinguish the precise moment when he
fairly disengaged the lid—also, that I could determine when he
removed it altogether, and when he deposited it upon the lower berth in
his room; this latter point I knew, for example, by certain slight taps
which the lid made in striking against the wooden edges of the berth, as
he endeavored to lay it down very gently—there being no room for it
on the floor. After this there was a dead stillness, and I heard nothing
more, upon either occasion, until nearly daybreak; unless, perhaps, I may
mention a low sobbing, or murmuring sound, so very much suppressed as to
be nearly inaudible—if, indeed, the whole of this latter noise were
not rather produced by my own imagination. I say it seemed to resemble
sobbing or sighing—but, of course, it could not have been either. I
rather think it was a ringing in my own ears. Mr. Wyatt, no doubt,
according to custom, was merely giving the rein to one of his hobbies—indulging
in one of his fits of artistic enthusiasm. He had opened his oblong box,
in order to feast his eyes on the pictorial treasure within. There was
nothing in this, however, to make him sob. I repeat, therefore, that it
must have been simply a freak of my own fancy, distempered by good Captain
Hardy’s green tea. Just before dawn, on each of the two nights of which I
speak, I distinctly heard Mr. Wyatt replace the lid upon the oblong box,
and force the nails into their old places by means of the muffled mallet.
Having done this, he issued from his state-room, fully dressed, and
proceeded to call Mrs. W. from hers.</p>
<p>We had been at sea seven days, and were now off Cape Hatteras, when there
came a tremendously heavy blow from the southwest. We were, in a measure,
prepared for it, however, as the weather had been holding out threats for
some time. Every thing was made snug, alow and aloft; and as the wind
steadily freshened, we lay to, at length, under spanker and foretopsail,
both double-reefed.</p>
<p>In this trim we rode safely enough for forty-eight hours—the ship
proving herself an excellent sea-boat in many respects, and shipping no
water of any consequence. At the end of this period, however, the gale
had freshened into a hurricane, and our after-sail split into ribbons,
bringing us so much in the trough of the water that we shipped several
prodigious seas, one immediately after the other. By this accident we
lost three men overboard with the caboose, and nearly the whole of the
larboard bulwarks. Scarcely had we recovered our senses, before the
foretopsail went into shreds, when we got up a storm stay-sail and with
this did pretty well for some hours, the ship heading the sea much more
steadily than before.</p>
<p>The gale still held on, however, and we saw no signs of its abating. The
rigging was found to be ill-fitted, and greatly strained; and on the third
day of the blow, about five in the afternoon, our mizzen-mast, in a heavy
lurch to windward, went by the board. For an hour or more, we tried in
vain to get rid of it, on account of the prodigious rolling of the ship;
and, before we had succeeded, the carpenter came aft and announced four
feet of water in the hold. To add to our dilemma, we found the pumps
choked and nearly useless.</p>
<p>All was now confusion and despair—but an effort was made to lighten
the ship by throwing overboard as much of her cargo as could be reached,
and by cutting away the two masts that remained. This we at last
accomplished—but we were still unable to do any thing at the pumps;
and, in the meantime, the leak gained on us very fast.</p>
<p>At sundown, the gale had sensibly diminished in violence, and as the sea
went down with it, we still entertained faint hopes of saving ourselves in
the boats. At eight P. M., the clouds broke away to windward, and we had
the advantage of a full moon—a piece of good fortune which served
wonderfully to cheer our drooping spirits.</p>
<p>After incredible labor we succeeded, at length, in getting the longboat
over the side without material accident, and into this we crowded the
whole of the crew and most of the passengers. This party made off
immediately, and, after undergoing much suffering, finally arrived, in
safety, at Ocracoke Inlet, on the third day after the wreck.</p>
<p>Fourteen passengers, with the captain, remained on board, resolving to
trust their fortunes to the jolly-boat at the stern. We lowered it without
difficulty, although it was only by a miracle that we prevented it from
swamping as it touched the water. It contained, when afloat, the captain
and his wife, Mr. Wyatt and party, a Mexican officer, wife, four children,
and myself, with a negro valet.</p>
<p>We had no room, of course, for any thing except a few positively necessary
instruments, some provisions, and the clothes upon our backs. No one had
thought of even attempting to save any thing more. What must have been the
astonishment of all, then, when having proceeded a few fathoms from the
ship, Mr. Wyatt stood up in the stern-sheets, and coolly demanded of
Captain Hardy that the boat should be put back for the purpose of taking
in his oblong box!</p>
<p>“Sit down, Mr. Wyatt,” replied the captain, somewhat sternly, “you will
capsize us if you do not sit quite still. Our gunwhale is almost in the
water now.”</p>
<p>“The box!” vociferated Mr. Wyatt, still standing—“the box, I say!
Captain Hardy, you cannot, you will not refuse me. Its weight will be but
a trifle—it is nothing—mere nothing. By the mother who bore
you—for the love of Heaven—by your hope of salvation, I
implore you to put back for the box!”</p>
<p>The captain, for a moment, seemed touched by the earnest appeal of the
artist, but he regained his stern composure, and merely said:</p>
<p>“Mr. Wyatt, you are mad. I cannot listen to you. Sit down, I say, or you
will swamp the boat. Stay—hold him—seize him!—he is
about to spring overboard! There—I knew it—he is over!”</p>
<p>As the captain said this, Mr. Wyatt, in fact, sprang from the boat, and,
as we were yet in the lee of the wreck, succeeded, by almost superhuman
exertion, in getting hold of a rope which hung from the fore-chains. In
another moment he was on board, and rushing frantically down into the
cabin.</p>
<p>In the meantime, we had been swept astern of the ship, and being quite out
of her lee, were at the mercy of the tremendous sea which was still
running. We made a determined effort to put back, but our little boat was
like a feather in the breath of the tempest. We saw at a glance that the
doom of the unfortunate artist was sealed.</p>
<p>As our distance from the wreck rapidly increased, the madman (for as such
only could we regard him) was seen to emerge from the companion—way,
up which by dint of strength that appeared gigantic, he dragged, bodily,
the oblong box. While we gazed in the extremity of astonishment, he
passed, rapidly, several turns of a three-inch rope, first around the box
and then around his body. In another instant both body and box were in the
sea—disappearing suddenly, at once and forever.</p>
<p>We lingered awhile sadly upon our oars, with our eyes riveted upon the
spot. At length we pulled away. The silence remained unbroken for an hour.
Finally, I hazarded a remark.</p>
<p>“Did you observe, captain, how suddenly they sank? Was not that an
exceedingly singular thing? I confess that I entertained some feeble hope
of his final deliverance, when I saw him lash himself to the box, and
commit himself to the sea.”</p>
<p>“They sank as a matter of course,” replied the captain, “and that like a
shot. They will soon rise again, however—but not till the salt
melts.”</p>
<p>“The salt!” I ejaculated.</p>
<p>“Hush!” said the captain, pointing to the wife and sisters of the
deceased. “We must talk of these things at some more appropriate time.”</p>
<hr />
<p>We suffered much, and made a narrow escape; but fortune befriended us, as
well as our mates in the long-boat. We landed, in fine, more dead than
alive, after four days of intense distress, upon the beach opposite
Roanoke Island. We remained here a week, were not ill-treated by the
wreckers, and at length obtained a passage to New York.</p>
<p>About a month after the loss of the “Independence,” I happened to meet
Captain Hardy in Broadway. Our conversation turned, naturally, upon the
disaster, and especially upon the sad fate of poor Wyatt. I thus learned
the following particulars.</p>
<p>The artist had engaged passage for himself, wife, two sisters and a
servant. His wife was, indeed, as she had been represented, a most lovely,
and most accomplished woman. On the morning of the fourteenth of June (the
day in which I first visited the ship), the lady suddenly sickened and
died. The young husband was frantic with grief—but circumstances
imperatively forbade the deferring his voyage to New York. It was
necessary to take to her mother the corpse of his adored wife, and, on the
other hand, the universal prejudice which would prevent his doing so
openly was well known. Nine-tenths of the passengers would have abandoned
the ship rather than take passage with a dead body.</p>
<p>In this dilemma, Captain Hardy arranged that the corpse, being first
partially embalmed, and packed, with a large quantity of salt, in a box of
suitable dimensions, should be conveyed on board as merchandise. Nothing
was to be said of the lady’s decease; and, as it was well understood that
Mr. Wyatt had engaged passage for his wife, it became necessary that some
person should personate her during the voyage. This the deceased
lady’s-maid was easily prevailed on to do. The extra state-room,
originally engaged for this girl during her mistress’ life, was now merely
retained. In this state-room the pseudo-wife, slept, of course, every
night. In the daytime she performed, to the best of her ability, the part
of her mistress—whose person, it had been carefully ascertained, was
unknown to any of the passengers on board.</p>
<p>My own mistake arose, naturally enough, through too careless, too
inquisitive, and too impulsive a temperament. But of late, it is a rare
thing that I sleep soundly at night. There is a countenance which haunts
me, turn as I will. There is an hysterical laugh which will forever ring
within my ears.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.15"></SPAN>LOSS OF BREATH</h2>
<p class="letter">
O breathe not, etc.<br/>
—Moore’s <i>Melodies</i></p>
<p>The most notorious ill-fortune must in the end yield to the untiring
courage of philosophy—as the most stubborn city to the ceaseless
vigilance of an enemy. Shalmanezer, as we have it in holy writings, lay
three years before Samaria; yet it fell. Sardanapalus—see
Diodorus—maintained himself seven in Nineveh; but to no purpose.
Troy expired at the close of the second lustrum; and Azoth, as Aristaeus
declares upon his honour as a gentleman, opened at last her gates to
Psammetichus, after having barred them for the fifth part of a
century....</p>
<p>“Thou wretch!—thou vixen!—thou shrew!” said I to
my wife on the morning after our wedding; “thou witch!—thou
hag!—thou whippersnapper—thou sink of iniquity!—thou
fiery-faced quintessence of all that is
abominable!—thou—thou—” here standing upon
tiptoe, seizing her by the throat, and placing my mouth close to her ear,
I was preparing to launch forth a new and more decided epithet of
opprobrium, which should not fail, if ejaculated, to convince her of her
insignificance, when to my extreme horror and astonishment I discovered
that I had lost my breath.</p>
<p>The phrases “I am out of breath,” “I have lost my breath,” etc., are often
enough repeated in common conversation; but it had never occurred to me
that the terrible accident of which I speak could <i>bona fide</i> and actually
happen! Imagine—that is if you have a fanciful turn—imagine, I
say, my wonder—my consternation—my despair!</p>
<p>There is a good genius, however, which has never entirely deserted me. In
my most ungovernable moods I still retain a sense of propriety, <i>et le
chemin des passions me conduit</i>—as Lord Edouard in the “Julie” says
it did him—<i>à la philosophie véritable</i>.</p>
<p>Although I could not at first precisely ascertain to what degree the
occurrence had affected me, I determined at all events to conceal the
matter from my wife, until further experience should discover to me the
extent of this my unheard of calamity. Altering my countenance, therefore,
in a moment, from its bepuffed and distorted appearance, to an expression
of arch and coquettish benignity, I gave my lady a pat on the one cheek,
and a kiss on the other, and without saying one syllable (Furies! I could
not), left her astonished at my drollery, as I pirouetted out of the room
in a <i>pas de zephyr</i>.</p>
<p>Behold me then safely ensconced in my private boudoir, a fearful instance
of the ill consequences attending upon irascibility—alive, with the
qualifications of the dead—dead, with the propensities of the living—an
anomaly on the face of the earth—being very calm, yet breathless.</p>
<p>Yes! breathless. I am serious in asserting that my breath was entirely
gone. I could not have stirred with it a feather if my life had been at
issue, or sullied even the delicacy of a mirror. Hard fate!—yet
there was some alleviation to the first overwhelming paroxysm of my
sorrow. I found, upon trial, that the powers of utterance which, upon my
inability to proceed in the conversation with my wife, I then concluded to
be totally destroyed, were in fact only partially impeded, and I
discovered that had I, at that interesting crisis, dropped my voice to a
singularly deep guttural, I might still have continued to her the
communication of my sentiments; this pitch of voice (the guttural)
depending, I find, not upon the current of the breath, but upon a certain
spasmodic action of the muscles of the throat.</p>
<p>Throwing myself upon a chair, I remained for some time absorbed in
meditation. My reflections, be sure, were of no consolatory kind. A
thousand vague and lachrymatory fancies took possession of my soul—and
even the idea of suicide flitted across my brain; but it is a trait in the
perversity of human nature to reject the obvious and the ready, for the
far-distant and equivocal. Thus I shuddered at self-murder as the most
decided of atrocities while the tabby cat purred strenuously upon the rug,
and the very water-dog wheezed assiduously under the table, each taking to
itself much merit for the strength of its lungs, and all obviously done in
derision of my own pulmonary incapacity.</p>
<p>Oppressed with a tumult of vague hopes and fears, I at length heard the
footsteps of my wife descending the staircase. Being now assured of her
absence, I returned with a palpitating heart to the scene of my disaster.</p>
<p>Carefully locking the door on the inside, I commenced a vigorous search.
It was possible, I thought, that, concealed in some obscure corner, or
lurking in some closet or drawer, might be found the lost object of my
inquiry. It might have a vapory—it might even have a tangible form.
Most philosophers, upon many points of philosophy, are still very
unphilosophical. William Godwin, however, says in his “Mandeville,” that
“invisible things are the only realities,” and this, all will allow, is a
case in point. I would have the judicious reader pause before accusing
such asseverations of an undue quantum of absurdity. Anaxagoras, it will
be remembered, maintained that snow is black, and this I have since found
to be the case.</p>
<p>Long and earnestly did I continue the investigation: but the contemptible
reward of my industry and perseverance proved to be only a set of false
teeth, two pair of hips, an eye, and a bundle of billets-doux from Mr.
Windenough to my wife. I might as well here observe that this confirmation
of my lady’s partiality for Mr. W. occasioned me little uneasiness. That
Mrs. Lackobreath should admire anything so dissimilar to myself was a
natural and necessary evil. I am, it is well known, of a robust and
corpulent appearance, and at the same time somewhat diminutive in stature.
What wonder, then, that the lath-like tenuity of my acquaintance, and his
altitude, which has grown into a proverb, should have met with all due
estimation in the eyes of Mrs. Lackobreath. But to return.</p>
<p>My exertions, as I have before said, proved fruitless. Closet after closet—drawer
after drawer—corner after corner—were scrutinized to no
purpose. At one time, however, I thought myself sure of my prize, having,
in rummaging a dressing-case, accidentally demolished a bottle of
Grandjean’s Oil of Archangels—which, as an agreeable perfume, I here
take the liberty of recommending.</p>
<p>With a heavy heart I returned to my boudoir—there to ponder upon
some method of eluding my wife’s penetration, until I could make
arrangements prior to my leaving the country, for to this I had already
made up my mind. In a foreign climate, being unknown, I might, with some
probability of success, endeavor to conceal my unhappy calamity—a
calamity calculated, even more than beggary, to estrange the affections of
the multitude, and to draw down upon the wretch the well-merited
indignation of the virtuous and the happy. I was not long in hesitation.
Being naturally quick, I committed to memory the entire tragedy of
“Metamora.” I had the good fortune to recollect that in the accentuation
of this drama, or at least of such portion of it as is allotted to the
hero, the tones of voice in which I found myself deficient were altogether
unnecessary, and the deep guttural was expected to reign monotonously
throughout.</p>
<p>I practised for some time by the borders of a well frequented marsh;—herein,
however, having no reference to a similar proceeding of Demosthenes, but
from a design peculiarly and conscientiously my own. Thus armed at all
points, I determined to make my wife believe that I was suddenly smitten
with a passion for the stage. In this, I succeeded to a miracle; and to
every question or suggestion found myself at liberty to reply in my most
frog-like and sepulchral tones with some passage from the tragedy—any
portion of which, as I soon took great pleasure in observing, would apply
equally well to any particular subject. It is not to be supposed, however,
that in the delivery of such passages I was found at all deficient in the
looking asquint—the showing my teeth—the working my knees—the
shuffling my feet—or in any of those unmentionable graces which are
now justly considered the characteristics of a popular performer. To be
sure they spoke of confining me in a strait-jacket—but, good God!
they never suspected me of having lost my breath.</p>
<p>Having at length put my affairs in order, I took my seat very early one
morning in the mail stage for ——, giving it to be understood, among my
acquaintances, that business of the last importance required my immediate
personal attendance in that city.</p>
<p>The coach was crammed to repletion; but in the uncertain twilight the
features of my companions could not be distinguished. Without making any
effectual resistance, I suffered myself to be placed between two gentlemen
of colossal dimensions; while a third, of a size larger, requesting pardon
for the liberty he was about to take, threw himself upon my body at full
length, and falling asleep in an instant, drowned all my guttural
ejaculations for relief, in a snore which would have put to blush the
roarings of the bull of Phalaris. Happily the state of my respiratory
faculties rendered suffocation an accident entirely out of the question.</p>
<p>As, however, the day broke more distinctly in our approach to the
outskirts of the city, my tormentor, arising and adjusting his
shirt-collar, thanked me in a very friendly manner for my civility. Seeing
that I remained motionless (all my limbs were dislocated and my head
twisted on one side), his apprehensions began to be excited; and arousing
the rest of the passengers, he communicated, in a very decided manner, his
opinion that a dead man had been palmed upon them during the night for a
living and responsible fellow-traveller; here giving me a thump on the
right eye, by way of demonstrating the truth of his suggestion.</p>
<p>Hereupon all, one after another (there were nine in company), believed it
their duty to pull me by the ear. A young practising physician, too,
having applied a pocket-mirror to my mouth, and found me without breath,
the assertion of my persecutor was pronounced a true bill; and the whole
party expressed a determination to endure tamely no such impositions for
the future, and to proceed no farther with any such carcasses for the
present.</p>
<p>I was here, accordingly, thrown out at the sign of the “Crow” (by which
tavern the coach happened to be passing), without meeting with any farther
accident than the breaking of both my arms, under the left hind wheel of
the vehicle. I must besides do the driver the justice to state that he did
not forget to throw after me the largest of my trunks, which,
unfortunately falling on my head, fractured my skull in a manner at once
interesting and extraordinary.</p>
<p>The landlord of the “Crow,” who is a hospitable man, finding that my trunk
contained sufficient to indemnify him for any little trouble he might take
in my behalf, sent forthwith for a surgeon of his acquaintance, and
delivered me to his care with a bill and receipt for ten dollars.</p>
<p>The purchaser took me to his apartments and commenced operations
immediately. Having cut off my ears, however, he discovered signs of
animation. He now rang the bell, and sent for a neighboring apothecary
with whom to consult in the emergency. In case of his suspicions with
regard to my existence proving ultimately correct, he, in the meantime,
made an incision in my stomach, and removed several of my viscera for
private dissection.</p>
<p>The apothecary had an idea that I was actually dead. This idea I
endeavored to confute, kicking and plunging with all my might, and making
the most furious contortions—for the operations of the surgeon had,
in a measure, restored me to the possession of my faculties. All, however,
was attributed to the effects of a new galvanic battery, wherewith the
apothecary, who is really a man of information, performed several curious
experiments, in which, from my personal share in their fulfillment, I
could not help feeling deeply interested. It was a course of mortification
to me, nevertheless, that although I made several attempts at
conversation, my powers of speech were so entirely in abeyance, that I
could not even open my mouth; much less, then, make reply to some
ingenious but fanciful theories of which, under other circumstances, my
minute acquaintance with the Hippocratian pathology would have afforded me
a ready confutation.</p>
<p>Not being able to arrive at a conclusion, the practitioners remanded me
for farther examination. I was taken up into a garret; and the surgeon’s
lady having accommodated me with drawers and stockings, the surgeon
himself fastened my hands, and tied up my jaws with a pocket-handkerchief—then
bolted the door on the outside as he hurried to his dinner, leaving me
alone to silence and to meditation.</p>
<p>I now discovered to my extreme delight that I could have spoken had not my
mouth been tied up with the pocket-handkerchief. Consoling myself with
this reflection, I was mentally repeating some passages of the
“Omnipresence of the Deity,” as is my custom before resigning myself to
sleep, when two cats, of a greedy and vituperative turn, entering at a
hole in the wall, leaped up with a flourish a la Catalani, and alighting
opposite one another on my visage, betook themselves to indecorous
contention for the paltry consideration of my nose.</p>
<p>But, as the loss of his ears proved the means of elevating to the throne
of Cyrus, the Magian or Mige-Gush of Persia, and as the cutting off his
nose gave Zopyrus possession of Babylon, so the loss of a few ounces of my
countenance proved the salvation of my body. Aroused by the pain, and
burning with indignation, I burst, at a single effort, the fastenings and
the bandage. Stalking across the room I cast a glance of contempt at the
belligerents, and throwing open the sash to their extreme horror and
disappointment, precipitated myself, very dexterously, from the window.</p>
<p>The mail-robber W——, to whom I bore a singular resemblance,
was at this moment passing from the city jail to the scaffold erected for
his execution in the suburbs. His extreme infirmity and long continued
ill health had obtained him the privilege of remaining unmanacled; and
habited in his gallows costume—one very similar to my own,—he
lay at full length in the bottom of the hangman’s cart (which
happened to be under the windows of the surgeon at the moment of my
precipitation) without any other guard than the driver, who was asleep,
and two recruits of the sixth infantry, who were drunk.</p>
<p>As ill-luck would have it, I alit upon my feet within the vehicle.
W——, who was an acute fellow, perceived his opportunity.
Leaping up immediately, he bolted out behind, and turning down an alley,
was out of sight in the twinkling of an eye. The recruits, aroused by the
bustle, could not exactly comprehend the merits of the transaction.
Seeing, however, a man, the precise counterpart of the felon, standing
upright in the cart before their eyes, they were of the opinion that the
rascal (meaning W——) was after making his escape, (so they
expressed themselves), and, having communicated this opinion to one
another, they took each a dram, and then knocked me down with the
butt-ends of their muskets.</p>
<p>It was not long ere we arrived at the place of destination. Of course
nothing could be said in my defence. Hanging was my inevitable fate. I
resigned myself thereto with a feeling half stupid, half acrimonious.
Being little of a cynic, I had all the sentiments of a dog. The hangman,
however, adjusted the noose about my neck. The drop fell.</p>
<p>I forbear to depict my sensations upon the gallows; although here,
undoubtedly, I could speak to the point, and it is a topic upon which
nothing has been well said. In fact, to write upon such a theme it is
necessary to have been hanged. Every author should confine himself to
matters of experience. Thus Mark Antony composed a treatise upon getting
drunk.</p>
<p>I may just mention, however, that die I did not. My body was, but I had no
breath to be, suspended; and but for the knot under my left ear (which had
the feel of a military stock) I dare say that I should have experienced
very little inconvenience. As for the jerk given to my neck upon the
falling of the drop, it merely proved a corrective to the twist afforded
me by the fat gentleman in the coach.</p>
<p>For good reasons, however, I did my best to give the crowd the worth of
their trouble. My convulsions were said to be extraordinary. My spasms it
would have been difficult to beat. The populace encored. Several gentlemen
swooned; and a multitude of ladies were carried home in hysterics. Pinxit
availed himself of the opportunity to retouch, from a sketch taken upon
the spot, his admirable painting of the “Marsyas flayed alive.”</p>
<p>When I had afforded sufficient amusement, it was thought proper to remove
my body from the gallows;—this the more especially as the real
culprit had in the meantime been retaken and recognized, a fact which I
was so unlucky as not to know.</p>
<p>Much sympathy was, of course, exercised in my behalf, and as no one made
claim to my corpse, it was ordered that I should be interred in a public
vault.</p>
<p>Here, after due interval, I was deposited. The sexton departed, and I was
left alone. A line of Marston’s “Malcontent”—</p>
<p class="poem">
Death’s a good fellow and keeps open house—</p>
<p>struck me at that moment as a palpable lie.</p>
<p>I knocked off, however, the lid of my coffin, and stepped out. The place
was dreadfully dreary and damp, and I became troubled with ennui. By way
of amusement, I felt my way among the numerous coffins ranged in order
around. I lifted them down, one by one, and breaking open their lids,
busied myself in speculations about the mortality within.</p>
<p>“This,” I soliloquized, tumbling over a carcass, puffy, bloated, and
rotund—“this has been, no doubt, in every sense of the word, an
unhappy—an unfortunate man. It has been his terrible lot not to walk
but to waddle—to pass through life not like a human being, but like
an elephant—not like a man, but like a rhinoceros.</p>
<p>“His attempts at getting on have been mere abortions, and his
circumgyratory proceedings a palpable failure. Taking a step forward, it
has been his misfortune to take two toward the right, and three toward the
left. His studies have been confined to the poetry of Crabbe. He can have
no idea of the wonder of a pirouette. To him a pas de papillon has been an
abstract conception. He has never ascended the summit of a hill. He has
never viewed from any steeple the glories of a metropolis. Heat has been
his mortal enemy. In the dog-days his days have been the days of a dog.
Therein, he has dreamed of flames and suffocation—of mountains upon
mountains—of Pelion upon Ossa. He was short of breath—to say
all in a word, he was short of breath. He thought it extravagant to play
upon wind instruments. He was the inventor of self-moving fans,
wind-sails, and ventilators. He patronized Du Pont the bellows-maker, and
he died miserably in attempting to smoke a cigar. His was a case in which
I feel a deep interest—a lot in which I sincerely sympathize.</p>
<p>“But here,”—said I—“here”—and I dragged spitefully from
its receptacle a gaunt, tall and peculiar-looking form, whose remarkable
appearance struck me with a sense of unwelcome familiarity—“here is
a wretch entitled to no earthly commiseration.” Thus saying, in order to
obtain a more distinct view of my subject, I applied my thumb and
forefinger to its nose, and causing it to assume a sitting position upon
the ground, held it thus, at the length of my arm, while I continued my
soliloquy.</p>
<p>“Entitled,” I repeated, “to no earthly commiseration. Who indeed would
think of compassioning a shadow? Besides, has he not had his full share of
the blessings of mortality? He was the originator of tall monuments—shot-towers—lightning-rods—Lombardy
poplars. His treatise upon “Shades and Shadows” has immortalized him. He
edited with distinguished ability the last edition of “South on the
Bones.” He went early to college and studied pneumatics. He then came
home, talked eternally, and played upon the French-horn. He patronized the
bagpipes. Captain Barclay, who walked against Time, would not walk against
him. Windham and Allbreath were his favorite writers,—his favorite
artist, Phiz. He died gloriously while inhaling gas—levique flatu
corrupitur, like the fama pudicitae in Hieronymus. {*1} He was indubitably
a—”</p>
<p>“How can you?—how—can—you?”—interrupted the
object of my animadversions, gasping for breath, and tearing off, with a
desperate exertion, the bandage around its jaws—“how can you, Mr.
Lackobreath, be so infernally cruel as to pinch me in that manner by the nose?
Did you not see how they had fastened up my mouth—and you must
know—if you know any thing—how vast a superfluity of breath I have
to dispose of! If you do not know, however, sit down and you shall see. In my
situation it is really a great relief to be able to open ones mouth—to be
able to expatiate—to be able to communicate with a person like yourself,
who do not think yourself called upon at every period to interrupt the thread
of a gentleman’s discourse. Interruptions are annoying and should
undoubtedly be abolished—don’t you think so?—no reply, I beg
you,—one person is enough to be speaking at a time.—I shall be done
by and by, and then you may begin.—How the devil sir, did you get into
this place?—not a word I beseech you—been here some time
myself—terrible accident!—heard of it, I suppose?—awful
calamity!—walking under your windows—some short while
ago—about the time you were stage-struck—horrible
occurrence!—heard of “catching one’s breath,”
eh?—hold your tongue I tell you!—I caught somebody
else’s!—had always too much of my own—met Blab at the corner
of the street—wouldn’t give me a chance for a
word—couldn’t get in a syllable edgeways—attacked,
consequently, with epilepsis—Blab made his escape—damn all
fools!—they took me up for dead, and put me in this place—pretty
doings all of them!—heard all you said about me—every word a
lie—horrible!—wonderful!—outrageous!—hideous!—incomprehensible!—et
cetera—et cetera—et cetera—et cetera—”</p>
<p>It is impossible to conceive my astonishment at so unexpected a
discourse, or the joy with which I became gradually convinced that the
breath so fortunately caught by the gentleman (whom I soon recognized as
my neighbor Windenough) was, in fact, the identical expiration mislaid by
myself in the conversation with my wife. Time, place, and circumstances
rendered it a matter beyond question. I did not, however, immediately
release my hold upon Mr. W.’s proboscis—not at least during
the long period in which the inventor of Lombardy poplars continued to
favor me with his explanations.</p>
<p>In this respect I was actuated by that habitual prudence which has ever
been my predominating trait. I reflected that many difficulties might
still lie in the path of my preservation which only extreme exertion on my
part would be able to surmount. Many persons, I considered, are prone to
estimate commodities in their possession—however valueless to the
then proprietor—however troublesome, or distressing—in direct
ratio with the advantages to be derived by others from their attainment,
or by themselves from their abandonment. Might not this be the case with
Mr. Windenough? In displaying anxiety for the breath of which he was at
present so willing to get rid, might I not lay myself open to the
exactions of his avarice? There are scoundrels in this world, I remembered
with a sigh, who will not scruple to take unfair opportunities with even a
next door neighbor, and (this remark is from Epictetus) it is precisely at
that time when men are most anxious to throw off the burden of their own
calamities that they feel the least desirous of relieving them in others.</p>
<p>Upon considerations similar to these, and still retaining my grasp upon
the nose of Mr. W., I accordingly thought proper to model my reply.</p>
<p>“Monster!” I began in a tone of the deepest indignation—“monster and
double-winded idiot!—dost thou, whom for thine iniquities it has
pleased heaven to accurse with a two-fold respimtion—dost thou, I
say, presume to address me in the familiar language of an old
acquaintance?—‘I lie,’ forsooth! and ‘hold my tongue,’ to be sure!—pretty
conversation indeed, to a gentleman with a single breath!—all this,
too, when I have it in my power to relieve the calamity under which thou
dost so justly suffer—to curtail the superfluities of thine unhappy
respiration.”</p>
<p>Like Brutus, I paused for a reply—with which, like a tornado, Mr.
Windenough immediately overwhelmed me. Protestation followed upon
protestation, and apology upon apology. There were no terms with which he
was unwilling to comply, and there were none of which I failed to take the
fullest advantage.</p>
<p>Preliminaries being at length arranged, my acquaintance delivered me the
respiration; for which (having carefully examined it) I gave him afterward
a receipt.</p>
<p>I am aware that by many I shall be held to blame for speaking in a manner
so cursory, of a transaction so impalpable. It will be thought that I
should have entered more minutely, into the details of an occurrence by
which—and this is very true—much new light might be thrown
upon a highly interesting branch of physical philosophy.</p>
<p>To all this I am sorry that I cannot reply. A hint is the only answer
which I am permitted to make. There were circumstances—but I think
it much safer upon consideration to say as little as possible about an
affair so delicate—so delicate, I repeat, and at the time involving
the interests of a third party whose sulphurous resentment I have not the
least desire, at this moment, of incurring.</p>
<p>We were not long after this necessary arrangement in effecting an escape
from the dungeons of the sepulchre. The united strength of our
resuscitated voices was soon sufficiently apparent. Scissors, the Whig
editor, republished a treatise upon “the nature and origin of subterranean
noises.” A reply—rejoinder—confutation—and justification—followed
in the columns of a Democratic gazette. It was not until the opening of
the vault to decide the controversy, that the appearance of Mr. Windenough
and myself proved both parties to have been decidedly in the wrong.</p>
<p>I cannot conclude these details of some very singular passages in a life
at all times sufficiently eventful, without again recalling to the
attention of the reader the merits of that indiscriminate philosophy which
is a sure and ready shield against those shafts of calamity which can
neither be seen, felt nor fully understood. It was in the spirit of this
wisdom that, among the ancient Hebrews, it was believed the gates of
Heaven would be inevitably opened to that sinner, or saint, who, with good
lungs and implicit confidence, should vociferate the word “Amen!” It was
in the spirit of this wisdom that, when a great plague raged at Athens,
and every means had been in vain attempted for its removal, Epimenides, as
Laërtius relates, in his second book, of that philosopher, advised the
erection of a shrine and temple “to the proper God.”</p>
<p class="right">
L<small>YTTLETON</small> B<small>ARRY</small>.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.16"></SPAN>THE MAN THAT WAS USED UP</h2>
<h3>A TALE OF THE LATE BUGABOO AND KICKAPOO CAMPAIGN.</h3>
<p class="poem">
<i>Pleurez, pleurez, mes yeux, et fondez vous en eau!</i><br/>
<i>La moitié de ma vie a mis l’ autre au tombeau.</i><br/>
—C<small>ORNEILLE</small>.</p>
<p>I cannot just now remember when or where I first made the acquaintance of
that truly fine-looking fellow, Brevet Brigadier General John A. B. C.
Smith. Some one <i>did</i> introduce me to the gentleman, I am sure—at
some public meeting, I know very well—held about something of great
importance, no doubt—at some place or other, I feel convinced,—whose
name I have unaccountably forgotten. The truth is—that the
introduction was attended, upon my part, with a degree of anxious
embarrassment which operated to prevent any definite impressions of either
time or place. I am constitutionally nervous—this, with me, is a
family failing, and I can’t help it. In especial, the slightest appearance
of mystery—of any point I cannot exactly comprehend—puts me at
once into a pitiable state of agitation.</p>
<p>There was something, as it were, remarkable—yes, <i>remarkable</i>,
although this is but a feeble term to express my full meaning—about
the entire individuality of the personage in question. He was, perhaps,
six feet in height, and of a presence singularly commanding. There was an
<i>air distingué</i> pervading the whole man, which spoke of high
breeding, and hinted at high birth. Upon this topic—the topic of
Smith’s personal appearance—I have a kind of melancholy satisfaction
in being minute. His head of hair would have done honor to a Brutus; nothing
could be more richly flowing, or possess a brighter gloss. It was of a
jetty black;—which was also the color, or more properly the no color
of his unimaginable whiskers. You perceive I cannot speak of these latter
without enthusiasm; it is not too much to say that they were the
handsomest pair of whiskers under the sun. At all events, they encircled,
and at times partially overshadowed, a mouth utterly unequalled. Here were
the most entirely even, and the most brilliantly white of all conceivable
teeth. From between them, upon every proper occasion, issued a voice of
surpassing clearness, melody, and strength. In the matter of eyes, also,
my acquaintance was pre-eminently endowed. Either one of such a pair was
worth a couple of the ordinary ocular organs. They were of a deep hazel,
exceedingly large and lustrous; and there was perceptible about them, ever
and anon, just that amount of interesting obliquity which gives pregnancy
to expression.</p>
<p>The bust of the General was unquestionably the finest bust I ever saw. For
your life you could not have found a fault with its wonderful proportion.
This rare peculiarity set off to great advantage a pair of shoulders which
would have called up a blush of conscious inferiority into the countenance
of the marble Apollo. I have a passion for fine shoulders, and may say
that I never beheld them in perfection before. The arms altogether were
admirably modelled. Nor were the lower limbs less superb. These were,
indeed, the <i>ne plus ultra</i> of good legs. Every connoisseur in such
matters admitted the legs to be good. There was neither too much flesh,
nor too little,—neither rudeness nor fragility. I could not imagine
a more graceful curve than that of the <i>os femoris</i>, and there was
just that due gentle prominence in the rear of the <i>fibula</i> which
goes to the conformation of a properly proportioned calf. I wish to God my
young and talented friend Chiponchipino, the sculptor, had but seen the
legs of Brevet Brigadier General John A. B. C. Smith.</p>
<p>But although men so absolutely fine-looking are neither as plenty as
reasons or blackberries, still I could not bring myself to believe that <i>the
remarkable</i> something to which I alluded just now,—that the odd
air of <i>je ne sais quoi</i> which hung about my new acquaintance,—lay
altogether, or indeed at all, in the supreme excellence of his bodily
endowments. Perhaps it might be traced to the <i>manner</i>;—yet
here again I could not pretend to be positive. There <i>was</i> a
primness, not to say stiffness, in his carriage—a degree of
measured, and, if I may so express it, of rectangular precision, attending
his every movement, which, observed in a more diminutive figure, would
have had the least little savor in the world, of affectation, pomposity or
constraint, but which noticed in a gentleman of his undoubted dimensions,
was readily placed to the account of reserve, <i>hauteur</i>—of a
commendable sense, in short, of what is due to the dignity of colossal
proportion.</p>
<p>The kind friend who presented me to General Smith whispered in my ear some
few words of comment upon the man. He was a <i>remarkable</i> man—a
<i>very</i> remarkable man—indeed one of the <i>most</i> remarkable
men of the age. He was an especial favorite, too, with the ladies—chiefly
on account of his high reputation for courage.</p>
<p>“In <i>that</i> point he is unrivalled—indeed he is a perfect
desperado—a down-right fire-eater, and no mistake,” said my friend,
here dropping his voice excessively low, and thrilling me with the mystery
of his tone.</p>
<p>“A downright fire-eater, and <i>no</i> mistake. Showed <i>that</i>, I
should say, to some purpose, in the late tremendous swamp-fight away down
South, with the Bugaboo and Kickapoo Indians.” [Here my friend opened his
eyes to some extent.] “Bless my soul!—blood and thunder, and all
that!—<i>prodigies</i> of valor!—heard of him of course?—you
know he’s the man—”</p>
<p>“Man alive, how <i>do</i> you do? why, how <i>are</i> ye? <i>very</i> glad
to see ye, indeed!” here interrupted the General himself, seizing my
companion by the hand as he drew near, and bowing stiffly, but profoundly,
as I was presented. I then thought, (and I think so still,) that I never
heard a clearer nor a stronger voice, nor beheld a finer set of teeth: but
I <i>must</i> say that I was sorry for the interruption just at that
moment, as, owing to the whispers and insinuations aforesaid, my interest
had been greatly excited in the hero of the Bugaboo and Kickapoo campaign.</p>
<p>However, the delightfully luminous conversation of Brevet Brigadier
General John A. B. C. Smith soon completely dissipated this chagrin. My
friend leaving us immediately, we had quite a long <i>tête-à-tête</i>, and
I was not only pleased but <i>really</i>—instructed. I never heard a
more fluent talker, or a man of greater general information. With becoming
modesty, he forebore, nevertheless, to touch upon the theme I had just
then most at heart—I mean the mysterious circumstances attending the
Bugaboo war—and, on my own part, what I conceive to be a proper
sense of delicacy forbade me to broach the subject; although, in truth, I
was exceedingly tempted to do so. I perceived, too, that the gallant
soldier preferred topics of philosophical interest, and that he delighted,
especially, in commenting upon the rapid march of mechanical invention.
Indeed, lead him where I would, this was a point to which he invariably
came back.</p>
<p>“There is nothing at all like it,” he would say; “we are a wonderful
people, and live in a wonderful age. Parachutes and rail-roads—man-traps
and spring-guns! Our steam-boats are upon every sea, and the Nassau
balloon packet is about to run regular trips (fare either way only twenty
pounds sterling) between London and Timbuctoo. And who shall calculate the
immense influence upon social life—upon arts—upon commerce—upon
literature—which will be the immediate result of the great
principles of electro-magnetics! Nor, is this all, let me assure you!
There is really no end to the march of invention. The most wonderful—the
most ingenious—and let me add, Mr.—Mr.—Thompson, I
believe, is your name—let me add, I say, the most <i>useful</i>—the
most truly <i>useful</i>—mechanical contrivances, are daily springing up
like mushrooms, if I may so express myself, or, more figuratively, like—ah—grasshoppers—like
grasshoppers, Mr. Thompson—about us and ah—ah—ah—around
us!”</p>
<p>Thompson, to be sure, is not my name; but it is needless to say that I
left General Smith with a heightened interest in the man, with an exalted
opinion of his conversational powers, and a deep sense of the valuable
privileges we enjoy in living in this age of mechanical invention. My
curiosity, however, had not been altogether satisfied, and I resolved to
prosecute immediate inquiry among my acquaintances touching the Brevet
Brigadier General himself, and particularly respecting the tremendous
events <i>quorum pars magna fuit</i>, during the Bugaboo and Kickapoo
campaign.</p>
<p>The first opportunity which presented itself, and which (<i>horresco
referens</i>) I did not in the least scruple to seize, occurred at the
Church of the Reverend Doctor Drummummupp, where I found myself
established, one Sunday, just at sermon time, not only in the pew, but by
the side, of that worthy and communicative little friend of mine, Miss
Tabitha T. Thus seated, I congratulated myself, and with much reason, upon
the very flattering state of affairs. If any person knew anything about
Brevet Brigadier General John A. B. C. Smith, that person, it was clear to
me, was Miss Tabitha T. We telegraphed a few signals, and then commenced,
<i>sotto voce</i>, a brisk <i>tête-à-tête</i>.</p>
<p>“Smith!” said she, in reply to my very earnest inquiry; “Smith!—why,
not General John A. B. C.? Bless me, I thought you <i>knew</i> all about
<i>him!</i> This is a wonderfully inventive age! Horrid affair that!—a
bloody set of wretches, those Kickapoos!—fought like a hero—prodigies
of valor—immortal renown. Smith!—Brevet Brigadier General John
A. B. C.! why, you know he’s the man—”</p>
<p>“Man,” here broke in Doctor Drummummupp, at the top of his voice, and with
a thump that came near knocking the pulpit about our ears—“man that is
born of a woman hath but a short time to live; he cometh up and is cut
down like a flower!” I started to the extremity of the pew, and perceived
by the animated looks of the divine, that the wrath which had nearly
proved fatal to the pulpit had been excited by the whispers of the lady
and myself. There was no help for it; so I submitted with a good grace,
and listened, in all the martyrdom of dignified silence, to the balance of
that very capital discourse.</p>
<p>Next evening found me a somewhat late visitor at the Rantipole Theatre,
where I felt sure of satisfying my curiosity at once, by merely stepping
into the box of those exquisite specimens of affability and omniscience,
the Misses Arabella and Miranda Cognoscenti. That fine tragedian, Climax,
was doing Iago to a very crowded house, and I experienced some little
difficulty in making my wishes understood; especially, as our box was next
the slips, and completely overlooked the stage.</p>
<p>“Smith!” said Miss Arabella, as she at length comprehended the purport of
my query; “Smith!—why, not General John A. B. C.?”</p>
<p>“Smith!” inquired Miranda, musingly. “God bless me, did you ever behold a
finer figure?”</p>
<p>“Never, madam, but <i>do</i> tell me—”</p>
<p>“Or so inimitable grace?”</p>
<p>“Never, upon my word!—But pray inform me—”</p>
<p>“Or so just an appreciation of stage effect?”</p>
<p>“Madam!”</p>
<p>“Or a more delicate sense of the true beauties of Shakespeare? Be so good
as to look at that leg!”</p>
<p>“The devil!” and I turned again to her sister.</p>
<p>“Smith!” said she, “why, not General John A. B. C.? Horrid affair that,
wasn’t it?—great wretches, those Bugaboos—savage and so on—but
we live in a wonderfully inventive age!—Smith!—O yes! great
man!—perfect desperado!—immortal renown!—prodigies of
valor! <i>Never heard!</i>” [This was given in a scream.] “Bless my soul!
why, he’s the man—”</p>
<p class="poem">
“——mandragora<br/>
Nor all the drowsy syrups of the world<br/>
Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep<br/>
Which thou owd’st yesterday!”</p>
<p>here roared our Climax just in my ear, and shaking his fist in my face all
the time, in a way that I <i>couldn’t</i> stand, and I <i>wouldn’t</i>. I
left the Misses Cognoscenti immediately, went behind the scenes forthwith,
and gave the beggarly scoundrel such a thrashing as I trust he will
remember to the day of his death.</p>
<p>At the <i>soirée</i> of the lovely widow, Mrs. Kathleen O’Trump, I was
confident that I should meet with no similar disappointment. Accordingly,
I was no sooner seated at the card-table, with my pretty hostess for a <i>vis-à-vis</i>,
than I propounded those questions the solution of which had become a
matter so essential to my peace.</p>
<p>“Smith!” said my partner, “why, not General John A. B.
C.? Horrid affair that, wasn’t it?—diamonds, did you
say?—terrible wretches those Kickapoos!—we are playing
<i>whist</i>, if you please, Mr. Tattle—however, this is the age of
invention, most certainly <i>the</i> age, one may say—<i>the</i>
age <i>par excellence</i>—speak French?—oh, quite a
hero—perfect desperado!—<i>no hearts</i>, Mr. Tattle? I
don’t believe it.—immortal renown and all
that!—prodigies of valor! <i>Never heard!!</i>—why, bless me,
he’s the man—”</p>
<p>“Mann!—<i>Captain</i> Mann?” here screamed some little feminine
interloper from the farthest corner of the room. “Are you talking about
Captain Mann and the duel?—oh, I <i>must</i> hear—do tell—go
on, Mrs. O’Trump!—do now go on!” And go on Mrs. O’Trump did—all
about a certain Captain Mann, who was either shot or hung, or should have
been both shot and hung. Yes! Mrs. O’Trump, she went on, and I—I
went off. There was no chance of hearing anything farther that evening in
regard to Brevet Brigadier General John A. B. C. Smith.</p>
<p>Still I consoled myself with the reflection that the tide of ill luck
would not run against me forever, and so determined to make a bold push
for information at the rout of that bewitching little angel, the graceful
Mrs. Pirouette.</p>
<p>“Smith!” said Mrs. P., as we twirled about together in a <i>pas de zephyr</i>,
“Smith!—why, not General John A. B. C.? Dreadful business that of
the Bugaboos, wasn’t it?—dreadful creatures, those Indians!—<i>do</i>
turn out your toes! I really am ashamed of you—man of great courage,
poor fellow!—but this is a wonderful age for invention—O dear
me, I’m out of breath—quite a desperado—prodigies of valor—<i>never
heard!</i>—can’t believe it—I shall have to sit down and
enlighten you—Smith! why, he’s the man—”</p>
<p>“Man-<i>Fred</i>, I tell you!” here bawled out Miss Bas-Bleu, as I led
Mrs. Pirouette to a seat. “Did ever anybody hear the like? It’s Man-<i>Fred</i>,
I say, and not at all by any means Man-<i>Friday</i>.” Here Miss Bas-Bleu
beckoned to me in a very peremptory manner; and I was obliged, will I nill
I, to leave Mrs. P. for the purpose of deciding a dispute touching the
title of a certain poetical drama of Lord Byron’s. Although I pronounced,
with great promptness, that the true title was Man-<i>Friday</i>, and not
by any means Man-<i>Fred</i>, yet when I returned to seek Mrs. Pirouette
she was not to be discovered, and I made my retreat from the house in a
very bitter spirit of animosity against the whole race of the Bas-Bleus.</p>
<p>Matters had now assumed a really serious aspect, and I resolved to call at
once upon my particular friend, Mr. Theodore Sinivate; for I knew that
here at least I should get something like definite information.</p>
<p>“Smith!” said he, in his well-known peculiar way of drawling out his
syllables; “Smith!—why, not General John A. B. C.? Savage affair
that with the Kickapo-o-o-os, wasn’t it? Say! don’t you think so?—perfect
despera-a-ado—great pity, ‘pon my honor!—wonderfully inventive
age!—pro-o-odigies of valor! By the by, did you ever hear about
Captain Ma-a-a-a-n?”</p>
<p>“Captain Mann be d—d!” said I; “please to go on with your story.”</p>
<p>“Hem!—oh well!—quite <i>la même cho-o-ose</i>, as we say in
France. Smith, eh? Brigadier-General John A.—B.—C.? I say”—[here Mr.
S. thought proper to put his finger to the side of his nose]—“I say,
you don’t mean to insinuate now, really and truly, and conscientiously,
that you don’t know all about that affair of Smith’s, as well as I do, eh?
Smith? John A—B—C.? Why, bless me, he’s the ma-a-an—”</p>
<p>“<i>Mr</i>. Sinivate,” said I, imploringly, “<i>is</i> he the man in the
mask?”</p>
<p>“No-o-o!” said he, looking wise, “nor the man in the mo-o-on.”</p>
<p>This reply I considered a pointed and positive insult, and so left the
house at once in high dudgeon, with a firm resolve to call my friend, Mr.
Sinivate, to a speedy account for his ungentlemanly conduct and
ill-breeding.</p>
<p>In the meantime, however, I had no notion of being thwarted touching the
information I desired. There was one resource left me yet. I would go to
the fountain-head. I would call forthwith upon the General himself, and
demand, in explicit terms, a solution of this abominable piece of mystery.
Here, at least, there should be no chance for equivocation. I would be
plain, positive, peremptory—as short as pie-crust—as concise
as Tacitus or Montesquieu.</p>
<p>It was early when I called, and the General was dressing; but I pleaded
urgent business, and was shown at once into his bed-room by an old negro
valet, who remained in attendance during my visit. As I entered the
chamber, I looked about, of course, for the occupant, but did not
immediately perceive him. There was a large and exceedingly odd-looking
bundle of something which lay close by my feet on the floor, and, as I was
not in the best humor in the world, I gave it a kick out of the way.</p>
<p>“Hem! ahem! rather civil that, I should say!” said the bundle, in one of
the smallest, and altogether the funniest little voices, between a squeak
and a whistle, that I ever heard in all the days of my existence.</p>
<p>“Ahem! rather civil that, I should observe.”</p>
<p>I fairly shouted with terror, and made off, at a tangent, into the
farthest extremity of the room.</p>
<p>“God bless me! my dear fellow,” here again whistled the bundle, “what—what—what—why,
what <i>is</i> the matter? I really believe you don’t know me at all.”</p>
<p>What <i>could</i> I say to all this—what <i>could</i> I? I staggered
into an arm-chair, and, with staring eyes and open mouth, awaited the
solution of the wonder.</p>
<p>“Strange you shouldn’t know me though, isn’t it?” presently re-squeaked
the nondescript, which I now perceived was performing, upon the floor,
some inexplicable evolution, very analogous to the drawing on of a
stocking. There was only a single leg, however, apparent.</p>
<p>“Strange you shouldn’t know me, though, isn’t it? Pompey, bring me that
leg!” Here Pompey handed the bundle, a very capital cork leg, already
dressed, which it screwed on in a trice; and then it stood up before my
eyes.</p>
<p>“And a bloody action it <i>was</i>,” continued the thing, as if in a
soliloquy; “but then one mustn’t fight with the Bugaboos and Kickapoos,
and think of coming off with a mere scratch. Pompey, I’ll thank you now
for that arm. Thomas” [turning to me] “is decidedly the best hand at a
cork leg; but if you should ever want an arm, my dear fellow, you must
really let me recommend you to Bishop.” Here Pompey screwed on an arm.</p>
<p>“We had rather hot work of it, that you may say. Now, you dog, slip on my
shoulders and bosom! Pettitt makes the best shoulders, but for a bosom you
will have to go to Ducrow.”</p>
<p>“Bosom!” said I.</p>
<p>“Pompey, will you <i>never</i> be ready with that wig? Scalping is a rough
process after all; but then you can procure such a capital scratch at De
L’Orme’s.”</p>
<p>“Scratch!”</p>
<p>“Now, you nigger, my teeth! For a <i>good</i> set of these you had better
go to Parmly’s at once; high prices, but excellent work. I swallowed some
very capital articles, though, when the big Bugaboo rammed me down with
the butt end of his rifle.”</p>
<p>“Butt end! ram down!! my eye!!”</p>
<p>“O yes, by-the-by, my eye—here, Pompey, you scamp, screw it in !
Those Kickapoos are not so very slow at a gouge; but he’s a belied man,
that Dr. Williams, after all; you can’t imagine how well I see with the
eyes of his make.”</p>
<p>I now began very clearly to perceive that the object before me was nothing
more nor less than my new acquaintance, Brevet Brigadier General John A.
B. C. Smith. The manipulations of Pompey had made, I must confess, a very
striking difference in the appearance of the personal man. The voice,
however, still puzzled me no little; but even this apparent mystery was
speedily cleared up.</p>
<p>“Pompey, you black rascal,” squeaked the General, “I really do believe you
would let me go out without my palate.”</p>
<p>Hereupon, the negro, grumbling out an apology, went up to his master,
opened his mouth with the knowing air of a horse-jockey, and adjusted
therein a somewhat singular-looking machine, in a very dexterous manner,
that I could not altogether comprehend. The alteration, however, in the
entire expression of the General’s countenance was instantaneous and
surprising. When he again spoke, his voice had resumed all that rich
melody and strength which I had noticed upon our original introduction.</p>
<p>“D—n the vagabonds!” said he, in so clear a tone that I positively
started at the change, “D—n the vagabonds! they not only knocked in
the roof of my mouth, but took the trouble to cut off at least
seven-eighths of my tongue. There isn’t Bonfanti’s equal, however, in
America, for really good articles of this description. I can recommend you
to him with confidence,” [here the General bowed,] “and assure you that I
have the greatest pleasure in so doing.”</p>
<p>I acknowledged his kindness in my best manner, and took leave of him at
once, with a perfect understanding of the true state of affairs—with
a full comprehension of the mystery which had troubled me so long. It was
evident. It was a clear case. Brevet Brigadier General John A. B. C. Smith
was the man—was <i>the man that was used up</i>.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.17"></SPAN>THE BUSINESS MAN</h2>
<p class="letter">
Method is the soul of business.—O<small>LD</small> S<small>AYING</small>.</p>
<p>I am a business man. I am a methodical man. Method is the thing, after
all. But there are no people I more heartily despise than your eccentric
fools who prate about method without understanding it; attending strictly
to its letter, and violating its spirit. These fellows are always doing
the most out-of-the-way things in what they call an orderly manner. Now
here, I conceive, is a positive paradox. True method appertains to the
ordinary and the obvious alone, and cannot be applied to the <i>outré</i>. What
definite idea can a body attach to such expressions as “methodical Jack o’
Dandy,” or “a systematical Will o’ the Wisp”?</p>
<p>My notions upon this head might not have been so clear as they are, but
for a fortunate accident which happened to me when I was a very little
boy. A good-hearted old Irish nurse (whom I shall not forget in my will)
took me up one day by the heels, when I was making more noise than was
necessary, and swinging me round two or three times, d—d my eyes
for “a skreeking little spalpeen,” and then knocked my head
into a cocked hat against the bedpost. This, I say, decided my fate, and
made my fortune. A bump arose at once on my sinciput, and turned out to
be as pretty an organ of order as one shall see on a summer’s day.
Hence that positive appetite for system and regularity which has made me
the distinguished man of business that I am.</p>
<p>If there is any thing on earth I hate, it is a genius. Your geniuses are
all arrant asses—the greater the genius the greater the ass—and
to this rule there is no exception whatever. Especially, you cannot make a
man of business out of a genius, any more than money out of a Jew, or the
best nutmegs out of pine-knots. The creatures are always going off at a
tangent into some fantastic employment, or ridiculous speculation,
entirely at variance with the “fitness of things,” and having no business
whatever to be considered as a business at all. Thus you may tell these
characters immediately by the nature of their occupations. If you ever
perceive a man setting up as a merchant or a manufacturer, or going into
the cotton or tobacco trade, or any of those eccentric pursuits; or
getting to be a drygoods dealer, or soap-boiler, or something of that
kind; or pretending to be a lawyer, or a blacksmith, or a physician—any
thing out of the usual way—you may set him down at once as a genius,
and then, according to the rule-of-three, he’s an ass.</p>
<p>Now I am not in any respect a genius, but a regular business man. My
day-book and ledger will evince this in a minute. They are well kept,
though I say it myself; and, in my general habits of accuracy and
punctuality, I am not to be beat by a clock. Moreover, my occupations have
been always made to chime in with the ordinary habitudes of my fellowmen.
Not that I feel the least indebted, upon this score, to my exceedingly
weak-minded parents, who, beyond doubt, would have made an arrant genius
of me at last, if my guardian angel had not come, in good time, to the
rescue. In biography the truth is every thing, and in autobiography it is
especially so—yet I scarcely hope to be believed when I state,
however solemnly, that my poor father put me, when I was about fifteen
years of age, into the counting-house of what be termed “a respectable
hardware and commission merchant doing a capital bit of business!” A
capital bit of fiddlestick! However, the consequence of this folly was,
that in two or three days, I had to be sent home to my button-headed
family in a high state of fever, and with a most violent and dangerous
pain in the sinciput, all around about my organ of order. It was nearly a
gone case with me then—just touch-and-go for six weeks—the
physicians giving me up and all that sort of thing. But, although I
suffered much, I was a thankful boy in the main. I was saved from being a
“respectable hardware and commission merchant, doing a capital bit of
business,” and I felt grateful to the protuberance which had been the
means of my salvation, as well as to the kindhearted female who had
originally put these means within my reach.</p>
<p>The most of boys run away from home at ten or twelve years of age, but I
waited till I was sixteen. I don’t know that I should have gone even then,
if I had not happened to hear my old mother talk about setting me up on my
own hook in the grocery way. The grocery way!—only think of that! I
resolved to be off forthwith, and try and establish myself in some decent
occupation, without dancing attendance any longer upon the caprices of
these eccentric old people, and running the risk of being made a genius of
in the end. In this project I succeeded perfectly well at the first
effort, and by the time I was fairly eighteen, found myself doing an
extensive and profitable business in the Tailor’s Walking-Advertisement
line.</p>
<p>I was enabled to discharge the onerous duties of this profession, only by
that rigid adherence to system which formed the leading feature of my
mind. A scrupulous method characterized my actions as well as my accounts.
In my case it was method—not money—which made the man: at
least all of him that was not made by the tailor whom I served. At nine,
every morning, I called upon that individual for the clothes of the day.
Ten o’clock found me in some fashionable promenade or other place of
public amusement. The precise regularity with which I turned my handsome
person about, so as to bring successively into view every portion of the
suit upon my back, was the admiration of all the knowing men in the trade.
Noon never passed without my bringing home a customer to the house of my
employers, Messrs. Cut & Comeagain. I say this proudly, but with tears
in my eyes—for the firm proved themselves the basest of ingrates.
The little account, about which we quarreled and finally parted, cannot,
in any item, be thought overcharged, by gentlemen really conversant with
the nature of the business. Upon this point, however, I feel a degree of
proud satisfaction in permitting the reader to judge for himself. My bill
ran thus:</p>
<p class="center">
<i>Messrs. Cut & Comeagain, Merchant Tailors.<br/>
To Peter Proffit, Walking Advertiser,</i> Drs.</p>
<table summary="" >
<tr>
<td>July 10.</td><td>to promenade, as usual and customer brought home</td><td>$00 25</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>July 11.</td><td>To do do do</td><td>25</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>July 12.</td><td>To one lie, second class; damaged black cloth sold for
invisible green</td><td>25</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>July 13.</td><td>To one lie, first class, extra quality and size;
recommended milled satinet as broadcloth,</td><td>75</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>July 20.</td><td>To purchasing bran new paper shirt collar or dickey, to
set off gray Petersham</td><td>02</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Aug. 15.</td><td>To wearing double-padded bobtail frock, (thermometer 106
in the shade)</td><td>25</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Aug. 16.</td><td>Standing on one leg three hours, to show off new-style
strapped pants at 12 1/2 cents per leg per hour</td><td>37½</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Aug. 17.</td><td>To promenade, as usual, and large customer brought (fat
man)</td><td>50</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Aug. 18.</td><td>To do do (medium size)</td><td>25</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Aug. 19.</td><td>To do do (small man and bad pay)</td><td>6</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td></td><td>TOTAL</td><td>$2 95½</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>The item chiefly disputed in this bill was the very moderate charge of two
pennies for the dickey. Upon my word of honor, this was not an
unreasonable price for that dickey. It was one of the cleanest and
prettiest little dickeys I ever saw; and I have good reason to believe
that it effected the sale of three Petershams. The elder partner of the
firm, however, would allow me only one penny of the charge, and took it
upon himself to show in what manner four of the same sized conveniences
could be got out of a sheet of foolscap. But it is needless to say that I
stood upon the principle of the thing. Business is business, and should be
done in a business way. There was no system whatever in swindling me out
of a penny—a clear fraud of fifty per cent—no method in any
respect. I left at once the employment of Messrs. Cut & Comeagain, and
set up in the Eye-Sore line by myself—one of the most lucrative,
respectable, and independent of the ordinary occupations.</p>
<p>My strict integrity, economy, and rigorous business habits, here again
came into play. I found myself driving a flourishing trade, and soon
became a marked man upon “Change.” The truth is, I never
dabbled in flashy matters, but jogged on in the good old sober routine of
the calling—a calling in which I should, no doubt, have remained to
the present hour, but for a little accident which happened to me in the
prosecution of one of the usual business operations of the profession.
Whenever a rich old hunks or prodigal heir or bankrupt corporation gets
into the notion of putting up a palace, there is no such thing in the
world as stopping either of them, and this every intelligent person
knows. The fact in question is indeed the basis of the Eye-Sore trade. As
soon, therefore, as a building-project is fairly afoot by one of these
parties, we merchants secure a nice corner of the lot in contemplation,
or a prime little situation just adjoining, or tight in front. This done,
we wait until the palace is half-way up, and then we pay some tasty
architect to run us up an ornamental mud hovel, right against it; or a
Down-East or Dutch Pagoda, or a pig-sty, or an ingenious little bit of
fancy work, either Esquimau, Kickapoo, or Hottentot. Of course we
can’t afford to take these structures down under a bonus of five
hundred per cent upon the prime cost of our lot and plaster. Can we? I
ask the question. I ask it of business men. It would be irrational to
suppose that we can. And yet there was a rascally corporation which asked
me to do this very thing—this very thing! I did not reply to their
absurd proposition, of course; but I felt it a duty to go that same
night, and lamp-black the whole of their palace. For this the
unreasonable villains clapped me into jail; and the gentlemen of the
Eye-Sore trade could not well avoid cutting my connection when I came
out.</p>
<p>The Assault-and-Battery business, into which I was now forced to adventure
for a livelihood, was somewhat ill-adapted to the delicate nature of my
constitution; but I went to work in it with a good heart, and found my
account here, as heretofore, in those stern habits of methodical accuracy
which had been thumped into me by that delightful old nurse—I would
indeed be the basest of men not to remember her well in my will. By
observing, as I say, the strictest system in all my dealings, and keeping
a well-regulated set of books, I was enabled to get over many serious
difficulties, and, in the end, to establish myself very decently in the
profession. The truth is, that few individuals, in any line, did a snugger
little business than I. I will just copy a page or so out of my Day-Book;
and this will save me the necessity of blowing my own trumpet—a
contemptible practice of which no high-minded man will be guilty. Now, the
Day-Book is a thing that don’t lie.</p>
<p>“Jan. 1.—New Year’s Day. Met Snap in the street, groggy. Mem—he’ll
do. Met Gruff shortly afterward, blind drunk. Mem—he’ll answer, too.
Entered both gentlemen in my Ledger, and opened a running account with
each.</p>
<p>“Jan. 2.—Saw Snap at the Exchange, and went up and trod on his toe.
Doubled his fist and knocked me down. Good!—got up again. Some
trifling difficulty with Bag, my attorney. I want the damages at a
thousand, but he says that for so simple a knock down we can’t lay them at
more than five hundred. Mem—must get rid of Bag—no system at
all.</p>
<p>“Jan. 3.—Went to the theatre, to look for Gruff. Saw him
sitting in a side box, in the second tier, between a fat lady and a lean
one. Quizzed the whole party through an opera-glass, till I saw the fat
lady blush and whisper to G. Went round, then, into the box, and put my
nose within reach of his hand. Wouldn’t pull it—no go. Blew
it, and tried again—no go. Sat down then, and winked at the lean
lady, when I had the high satisfaction of finding him lift me up by the
nape of the neck, and fling me over into the pit. Neck dislocated, and
right leg capitally splintered. Went home in high glee, drank a bottle of
champagne, and booked the young man for five thousand. Bag says
it’ll do.</p>
<p>“Feb. 15.—Compromised the case of Mr. Snap. Amount entered in
Journal—fifty cents—which see.</p>
<p>“Feb. 16.—Cast by that ruffian, Gruff, who made me a present of five
dollars. Costs of suit, four dollars and twenty-five cents. Nett profit,—see
Journal,—seventy-five cents.”</p>
<p>Now, here is a clear gain, in a very brief period, of no less than one
dollar and twenty-five cents—this is in the mere cases of Snap and
Gruff; and I solemnly assure the reader that these extracts are taken at
random from my Day-Book.</p>
<p>It’s an old saying, and a true one, however, that money is nothing in
comparison with health. I found the exactions of the profession somewhat
too much for my delicate state of body; and, discovering, at last, that I
was knocked all out of shape, so that I didn’t know very well what to make
of the matter, and so that my friends, when they met me in the street,
couldn’t tell that I was Peter Proffit at all, it occurred to me that the
best expedient I could adopt was to alter my line of business. I turned my
attention, therefore, to Mud-Dabbling, and continued it for some years.</p>
<p>The worst of this occupation is, that too many people take a fancy to it,
and the competition is in consequence excessive. Every ignoramus of a
fellow who finds that he hasn’t brains in sufficient quantity to make his
way as a walking advertiser, or an eye-sore prig, or a salt-and-batter
man, thinks, of course, that he’ll answer very well as a dabbler of mud.
But there never was entertained a more erroneous idea than that it
requires no brains to mud-dabble. Especially, there is nothing to be made
in this way without method. I did only a retail business myself, but my
old habits of system carried me swimmingly along. I selected my
street-crossing, in the first place, with great deliberation, and I never
put down a broom in any part of the town but that. I took care, too, to
have a nice little puddle at hand, which I could get at in a minute. By
these means I got to be well known as a man to be trusted; and this is
one-half the battle, let me tell you, in trade. Nobody ever failed to
pitch me a copper, and got over my crossing with a clean pair of
pantaloons. And, as my business habits, in this respect, were sufficiently
understood, I never met with any attempt at imposition. I wouldn’t have
put up with it, if I had. Never imposing upon any one myself, I suffered
no one to play the possum with me. The frauds of the banks of course I
couldn’t help. Their suspension put me to ruinous inconvenience. These,
however, are not individuals, but corporations; and corporations, it is
very well known, have neither bodies to be kicked nor souls to be damned.</p>
<p>I was making money at this business when, in an evil moment, I was induced
to merge it in the Cur-Spattering—a somewhat analogous, but, by no
means, so respectable a profession. My location, to be sure, was an
excellent one, being central, and I had capital blacking and brushes. My
little dog, too, was quite fat and up to all varieties of snuff. He had
been in the trade a long time, and, I may say, understood it. Our general
routine was this:—Pompey, having rolled himself well in the mud, sat
upon end at the shop door, until he observed a dandy approaching in bright
boots. He then proceeded to meet him, and gave the Wellingtons a rub or
two with his wool. Then the dandy swore very much, and looked about for a
boot-black. There I was, full in his view, with blacking and brushes. It
was only a minute’s work, and then came a sixpence. This did moderately
well for a time;—in fact, I was not avaricious, but my dog was. I
allowed him a third of the profit, but he was advised to insist upon half.
This I couldn’t stand—so we quarrelled and parted.</p>
<p>I next tried my hand at the Organ-Grinding for a while, and may say that I
made out pretty well. It is a plain, straightforward business, and
requires no particular abilities. You can get a music-mill for a mere
song, and to put it in order, you have but to open the works, and give
them three or four smart raps with a hammer. It improves the tone of the
thing, for business purposes, more than you can imagine. This done, you
have only to stroll along, with the mill on your back, until you see
tanbark in the street, and a knocker wrapped up in buckskin. Then you stop
and grind; looking as if you meant to stop and grind till doomsday.
Presently a window opens, and somebody pitches you a sixpence, with a
request to “Hush up and go on,” etc. I am aware that some grinders have
actually afforded to “go on” for this sum; but for my part, I found the
necessary outlay of capital too great to permit of my “going on” under a
shilling.</p>
<p>At this occupation I did a good deal; but, somehow, I was not quite
satisfied, and so finally abandoned it. The truth is, I labored under the
disadvantage of having no monkey—and American streets are so muddy,
and a Democratic rabble is so obstrusive, and so full of demnition
mischievous little boys.</p>
<p>I was now out of employment for some months, but at length succeeded, by
dint of great interest, in procuring a situation in the Sham-Post. The
duties, here, are simple, and not altogether unprofitable. For example:—very
early in the morning I had to make up my packet of sham letters. Upon the
inside of each of these I had to scrawl a few lines on any subject which
occurred to me as sufficiently mysterious—signing all the epistles
Tom Dobson, or Bobby Tompkins, or anything in that way. Having folded and
sealed all, and stamped them with sham postmarks—New Orleans,
Bengal, Botany Bay, or any other place a great way off—I set out,
forthwith, upon my daily route, as if in a very great hurry. I always
called at the big houses to deliver the letters, and receive the postage.
Nobody hesitates at paying for a letter—especially for a double one—people
are such fools—and it was no trouble to get round a corner before
there was time to open the epistles. The worst of this profession was,
that I had to walk so much and so fast; and so frequently to vary my
route. Besides, I had serious scruples of conscience. I can’t bear to hear
innocent individuals abused—and the way the whole town took to
cursing Tom Dobson and Bobby Tompkins was really awful to hear. I washed
my hands of the matter in disgust.</p>
<p>My eighth and last speculation has been in the Cat-Growing way. I have
found that a most pleasant and lucrative business, and, really, no trouble
at all. The country, it is well known, has become infested with cats—so
much so of late, that a petition for relief, most numerously and
respectably signed, was brought before the Legislature at its late
memorable session. The Assembly, at this epoch, was unusually
well-informed, and, having passed many other wise and wholesome
enactments, it crowned all with the Cat-Act. In its original form, this
law offered a premium for cat-heads (fourpence a-piece), but the Senate
succeeded in amending the main clause, so as to substitute the word
“tails” for “heads.” This amendment was so obviously proper, that the
House concurred in it nem. con.</p>
<p>As soon as the governor had signed the bill, I invested my whole estate in
the purchase of Toms and Tabbies. At first I could only afford to feed
them upon mice (which are cheap), but they fulfilled the scriptural
injunction at so marvellous a rate, that I at length considered it my best
policy to be liberal, and so indulged them in oysters and turtle. Their
tails, at a legislative price, now bring me in a good income; for I have
discovered a way, in which, by means of Macassar oil, I can force three
crops in a year. It delights me to find, too, that the animals soon get
accustomed to the thing, and would rather have the appendages cut off than
otherwise. I consider myself, therefore, a made man, and am bargaining for
a country-seat on the Hudson.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.18"></SPAN>THE LANDSCAPE GARDEN</h2>
<p class="poem">
The garden like a lady fair was cut<br/>
That lay as if she slumbered in delight,<br/>
And to the open skies her eyes did shut;<br/>
The azure fields of heaven were ’sembled right<br/>
In a large round set with flow’rs of light:<br/>
The flowers de luce and the round sparks of dew<br/>
That hung upon their azure leaves, did show<br/>
Like twinkling stars that sparkle in the ev’ning blue.<br/>
—G<small>ILES</small> F<small>LETCHER</small></p>
<p>No more remarkable man ever lived than my friend, the young Ellison. He
was remarkable in the entire and continuous profusion of good gifts ever
lavished upon him by fortune. From his cradle to his grave, a gale of the
blandest prosperity bore him along. Nor do I use the word Prosperity in
its mere wordly or external sense. I mean it as synonymous with happiness.
The person of whom I speak, seemed born for the purpose of foreshadowing
the wild doctrines of Turgot, Price, Priestley, and Condorcet—of
exemplifying, by individual instance, what has been deemed the mere
chimera of the perfectionists. In the brief existence of Ellison, I fancy,
that I have seen refuted the dogma—that in man’s physical and
spiritual nature, lies some hidden principle, the antagonist of Bliss. An
intimate and anxious examination of his career, has taught me to
understand that, in general, from the violation of a few simple laws of
Humanity, arises the Wretchedness of mankind; that, as a species, we have
in our possession the as yet unwrought elements of Content,—and that
even now, in the present blindness and darkness of all idea on the great
question of the Social Condition, it is not impossible that Man, the
individual, under certain unusual and highly fortuitous conditions, may be
happy.</p>
<p>With opinions such as these was my young friend fully imbued; and thus is
it especially worthy of observation that the uninterrupted enjoyment which
distinguished his life was in great part the result of preconcert. It is,
indeed evident, that with less of the instinctive philosophy which, now
and then, stands so well in the stead of experience, Mr. Ellison would
have found himself precipitated, by the very extraordinary successes of
his life, into the common vortex of Unhappiness which yawns for those of
preeminent endowments. But it is by no means my present object to pen an
essay on Happiness. The ideas of my friend may be summed up in a few
words. He admitted but four unvarying laws, or rather elementary
principles, of Bliss. That which he considered chief, was (strange to
say!) the simple and purely physical one of free exercise in the open air.
“The health,” he said, “attainable by other means than this is scarcely
worth the name.” He pointed to the tillers of the earth—the only
people who, as a class, are proverbially more happy than others—and
then he instanced the high ecstasies of the fox-hunter. His second
principle was the love of woman. His third was the contempt of ambition.
His fourth was an object of unceasing pursuit; and he held that, other
things being equal, the extent of happiness was proportioned to the
spirituality of this object.</p>
<p>I have said that Ellison was remarkable in the continuous profusion of
good gifts lavished upon him by Fortune. In personal grace and beauty he
exceeded all men. His intellect was of that order to which the attainment
of knowledge is less a labor than a necessity and an intuition. His family
was one of the most illustrious of the empire. His bride was the loveliest
and most devoted of women. His possessions had been always ample; but,
upon the attainment of his one and twentieth year, it was discovered that
one of those extraordinary freaks of Fate had been played in his behalf
which startle the whole social world amid which they occur, and seldom
fail radically to alter the entire moral constitution of those who are
their objects. It appears that about one hundred years prior to Mr.
Ellison’s attainment of his majority, there had died, in a remote
province, one Mr. Seabright Ellison. This gentlemen had amassed a princely
fortune, and, having no very immediate connexions, conceived the whim of
suffering his wealth to accumulate for a century after his decease.
Minutely and sagaciously directing the various modes of investment, he
bequeathed the aggregate amount to the nearest of blood, bearing the name
Ellison, who should be alive at the end of the hundred years. Many futile
attempts had been made to set aside this singular bequest; their ex post
facto character rendered them abortive; but the attention of a jealous
government was aroused, and a decree finally obtained, forbidding all
similar accumulations. This act did not prevent young Ellison, upon his
twenty-first birth-day, from entering into possession, as the heir of his
ancestor, Seabright, of a fortune of four hundred and fifty millions of
dollars. {*1}</p>
<p>When it had become definitely known that such was the enormous wealth
inherited, there were, of course, many speculations as to the mode of its
disposal. The gigantic magnitude and the immediately available nature of
the sum, dazzled and bewildered all who thought upon the topic. The
possessor of any appreciable amount of money might have been imagined to
perform any one of a thousand things. With riches merely surpassing those
of any citizen, it would have been easy to suppose him engaging to supreme
excess in the fashionable extravagances of his time; or busying himself
with political intrigues; or aiming at ministerial power; or purchasing
increase of nobility, or devising gorgeous architectural piles; or
collecting large specimens of Virtu; or playing the munificent patron of
Letters and Art; or endowing and bestowing his name upon extensive
institutions of charity. But, for the inconceivable wealth in the actual
possession of the young heir, these objects and all ordinary objects were
felt to be inadequate. Recourse was had to figures; and figures but
sufficed to confound. It was seen, that even at three per cent, the annual
income of the inheritance amounted to no less than thirteen millions and
five hundred thousand dollars; which was one million and one hundred and
twenty-five thousand per month; or thirty-six thousand, nine hundred and
eighty-six per day, or one thousand five hundred and forty-one per hour,
or six and twenty dollars for every minute that flew. Thus the usual track
of supposition was thoroughly broken up. Men knew not what to imagine.
There were some who even conceived that Mr. Ellison would divest himself
forthwith of at least two-thirds of his fortune as of utterly superfluous
opulence; enriching whole troops of his relatives by division of his
superabundance.</p>
<p>I was not surprised, however, to perceive that he had long made up his
mind upon a topic which had occasioned so much of discussion to his
friends. Nor was I greatly astonished at the nature of his decision. In
the widest and noblest sense, he was a poet. He comprehended, moreover,
the true character, the august aims, the supreme majesty and dignity of
the poetic sentiment. The proper gratification of the sentiment he
instinctively felt to lie in the creation of novel forms of Beauty. Some
peculiarities, either in his early education, or in the nature of his
intellect, had tinged with what is termed materialism the whole cast of
his ethical speculations; and it was this bias, perhaps, which
imperceptibly led him to perceive that the most advantageous, if not the
sole legitimate field for the exercise of the poetic sentiment, was to be
found in the creation of novel moods of purely physical loveliness. Thus
it happened that he became neither musician nor poet; if we use this
latter term in its every-day acceptation. Or it might have been that
he became neither the one nor the other, in pursuance of an idea of his
which I have already mentioned—the idea, that in the contempt of
ambition lay one of the essential principles of happiness on earth. Is it
not, indeed, possible that while a high order of genius is necessarily
ambitious, the highest is invariably above that which is termed ambition?
And may it not thus happen that many far greater than Milton, have
contentedly remained “mute and inglorious?” I believe the world has never
yet seen, and that, unless through some series of accidents goading the
noblest order of mind into distasteful exertion, the world will never
behold, that full extent of triumphant execution, in the richer
productions of Art, of which the human nature is absolutely capable.</p>
<p>Mr. Ellison became neither musician nor poet; although no man lived more
profoundly enamored both of Music and the Muse. Under other circumstances
than those which invested him, it is not impossible that he would have
become a painter. The field of sculpture, although in its nature rigidly
poetical, was too limited in its extent and in its consequences, to have
occupied, at any time, much of his attention. And I have now mentioned all
the provinces in which even the most liberal understanding of the poetic
sentiment has declared this sentiment capable of expatiating. I mean the
most liberal public or recognized conception of the idea involved in the
phrase “poetic sentiment.” But Mr. Ellison imagined that the richest, and
altogether the most natural and most suitable province, had been blindly
neglected. No definition had spoken of the Landscape-Gardener, as of the
poet; yet my friend could not fail to perceive that the creation of the
Landscape-Garden offered to the true muse the most magnificent of
opportunities. Here was, indeed, the fairest field for the display of
invention, or imagination, in the endless combining of forms of novel
Beauty; the elements which should enter into combination being, at all
times, and by a vast superiority, the most glorious which the earth could
afford. In the multiform of the tree, and in the multicolor of the flower,
he recognized the most direct and the most energetic efforts of Nature at
physical loveliness. And in the direction or concentration of this effort,
or, still more properly, in its adaption to the eyes which were to behold
it upon earth, he perceived that he should be employing the best means—laboring
to the greatest advantage—in the fulfilment of his destiny as Poet.</p>
<p>“Its adaptation to the eyes which were to behold it upon earth.” In his
explanation of this phraseology, Mr. Ellison did much towards solving what
has always seemed to me an enigma. I mean the fact (which none but the
ignorant dispute) that no such combinations of scenery exist in Nature as
the painter of genius has in his power to produce. No such Paradises are
to be found in reality as have glowed upon the canvass of Claude. In the
most enchanting of natural landscapes, there will always be found a defect
or an excess—many excesses and defects. While the component parts
may exceed, individually, the highest skill of the artist, the arrangement
of the parts will always be susceptible of improvement. In short, no
position can be attained, from which an artistical eye, looking steadily,
will not find matter of offence, in what is technically termed the
composition of a natural landscape. And yet how unintelligible is this! In
all other matters we are justly instructed to regard Nature as supreme.
With her details we shrink from competition. Who shall presume to imitate
the colors of the tulip, or to improve the proportions of the lily of the
valley? The criticism which says, of sculpture or of portraiture, that
“Nature is to be exalted rather than imitated,” is in error. No pictorial
or sculptural combinations of points of human loveliness, do more than
approach the living and breathing human beauty as it gladdens our daily
path. Byron, who often erred, erred not in saying, I’ve seen more living
beauty, ripe and real, than all the nonsense of their stone ideal. In
landscape alone is the principle of the critic true; and, having felt its
truth here, it is but the headlong spirit of generalization which has
induced him to pronounce it true throughout all the domains of Art.
Having, I say, felt its truth here. For the feeling is no affectation or
chimera. The mathematics afford no more absolute demonstrations, than the
sentiment of his Art yields to the artist. He not only believes, but
positively knows, that such and such apparently arbitrary arrangements of
matter, or form, constitute, and alone constitute, the true Beauty. Yet
his reasons have not yet been matured into expression. It remains for a
more profound analysis than the world has yet seen, fully to investigate
and express them. Nevertheless is he confirmed in his instinctive
opinions, by the concurrence of all his compeers. Let a composition be
defective; let an emendation be wrought in its mere arrangement of form;
let this emendation be submitted to every artist in the world; by each
will its necessity be admitted. And even far more than this, in remedy of
the defective composition, each insulated member of the fraternity will
suggest the identical emendation.</p>
<p>I repeat that in landscape arrangements, or collocations alone, is the
physical Nature susceptible of “exaltation” and that, therefore, her
susceptibility of improvement at this one point, was a mystery which,
hitherto I had been unable to solve. It was Mr. Ellison who first
suggested the idea that what we regarded as improvement or exaltation of
the natural beauty, was really such, as respected only the mortal or human
point of view; that each alteration or disturbance of the primitive
scenery might possibly effect a blemish in the picture, if we could
suppose this picture viewed at large from some remote point in the
heavens. “It is easily understood,” says Mr. Ellison, “that what might
improve a closely scrutinized detail, might, at the same time, injure a
general and more distantly observed effect.” He spoke upon this
topic with warmth: regarding not so much its immediate or obvious
importance (which is little), as the character of the conclusions to
which it might lead, or of the collateral propositions which it might
serve to corroborate or sustain. There might be a class of beings, human
once, but now to humanity invisible, for whose scrutiny and for whose
refined appreciation of the beautiful, more especially than for our own,
had been set in order by God the great landscape-garden of the whole
earth.</p>
<p>In the course of our discussion, my young friend took occasion to quote
some passages from a writer who has been supposed to have well treated
this theme.</p>
<p>“There are, properly,” he writes, “but two styles of landscape-gardening,
the natural and the artificial. One seeks to recall the original beauty of
the country, by adapting its means to the surrounding scenery; cultivating
trees in harmony with the hills or plain of the neighboring land;
detecting and bringing into practice those nice relations of size,
proportion and color which, hid from the common observer, are revealed
everywhere to the experienced student of nature. The result of the natural
style of gardening, is seen rather in the absence of all defects and
incongruities—in the prevalence of a beautiful harmony and order,
than in the creation of any special wonders or miracles. The artificial
style has as many varieties as there are different tastes to gratify. It
has a certain general relation to the various styles of building. There
are the stately avenues and retirements of Versailles; Italian terraces;
and a various mixed old English style, which bears some relation to the
domestic Gothic or English Elizabethan architecture. Whatever may be said
against the abuses of the artificial landscape-gardening, a mixture of
pure art in a garden scene, adds to it a great beauty. This is partly
pleasing to the eye, by the show of order and design, and partly moral. A
terrace, with an old moss-covered balustrade, calls up at once to the eye,
the fair forms that have passed there in other days. The slightest
exhibition of art is an evidence of care and human interest.”</p>
<p>“From what I have already observed,” said Mr. Ellison, “you will
understand that I reject the idea, here expressed, of ‘recalling the
original beauty of the country.’ The original beauty is never so great as
that which may be introduced. Of course, much depends upon the selection
of a spot with capabilities. What is said in respect to the ‘detecting and
bringing into practice those nice relations of size, proportion and
color,’ is a mere vagueness of speech, which may mean much, or little, or
nothing, and which guides in no degree. That the true ‘result of the
natural style of gardening is seen rather in the absence of all defects
and incongruities, than in the creation of any special wonders or
miracles,’ is a proposition better suited to the grovelling apprehension
of the herd, than to the fervid dreams of the man of genius. The merit
suggested is, at best, negative, and appertains to that hobbling criticism
which, in letters, would elevate Addison into apotheosis. In truth, while
that merit which consists in the mere avoiding demerit, appeals directly
to the understanding, and can thus be foreshadowed in Rule, the loftier
merit, which breathes and flames in invention or creation, can be
apprehended solely in its results. Rule applies but to the excellences of
avoidance—to the virtues which deny or refrain. Beyond these the
critical art can but suggest. We may be instructed to build an Odyssey,
but it is in vain that we are told how to conceive a ‘Tempest,’ an
‘Inferno,’ a ‘Prometheus Bound,’ a ‘Nightingale,’ such as that of Keats,
or the ‘Sensitive Plant’ of Shelley. But, the thing done, the wonder
accomplished, and the capacity for apprehension becomes universal. The
sophists of the negative school, who, through inability to create, have
scoffed at creation, are now found the loudest in applause. What, in its
chrysalis condition of principle, affronted their demure reason, never
fails, in its maturity of accomplishment, to extort admiration from their
instinct of the beautiful or of the sublime.</p>
<p>“Our author’s observations on the artificial style of gardening,”
continued Mr. Ellison, “are less objectionable. ‘A mixture of pure art in
a garden scene, adds to it a great beauty.’ This is just, and the
reference to the sense of human interest is equally so. I repeat that the
principle here expressed, is incontrovertible; but there may be something
even beyond it. There may be an object in full keeping with the principle
suggested—an object unattainable by the means ordinarily in
possession of mankind, yet which, if attained, would lend a charm to the
landscape-garden immeasurably surpassing that which a merely human
interest could bestow. The true poet possessed of very unusual pecuniary
resources, might possibly, while retaining the necessary idea of art or
interest or culture, so imbue his designs at once with extent and novelty
of Beauty, as to convey the sentiment of spiritual interference. It will
be seen that, in bringing about such result, he secures all the advantages
of interest or design, while relieving his work of all the harshness and
technicality of Art. In the most rugged of wildernesses—in the most
savage of the scenes of pure Nature—there is apparent the art of a
Creator; yet is this art apparent only to reflection; in no respect has it
the obvious force of a feeling. Now, if we imagine this sense of the
Almighty Design to be harmonized in a measurable degree, if we suppose a
landscape whose combined strangeness, vastness, definitiveness, and
magnificence, shall inspire the idea of culture, or care, or
superintendence, on the part of intelligences superior yet akin to
humanity—then the sentiment of interest is preserved, while the Art
is made to assume the air of an intermediate or secondary Nature—a
Nature which is not God, nor an emanation of God, but which still is
Nature, in the sense that it is the handiwork of the angels that hover
between man and God.”</p>
<p>It was in devoting his gigantic wealth to the practical embodiment of a
vision such as this—in the free exercise in the open air, which
resulted from personal direction of his plans—in the continuous and
unceasing object which these plans afforded—in the high
spirituality of the object itself—in the contempt of ambition
which it enabled him more to feel than to affect—and, lastly, it
was in the companionship and sympathy of a devoted wife, that Ellison
thought to find, and found, an exemption from the ordinary cares of
Humanity, with a far greater amount of positive happiness than ever
glowed in the rapt day-dreams of De Staël.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.19"></SPAN>MAELZEL’S CHESS-PLAYER</h2>
<p>Perhaps no exhibition of the kind has ever elicited so general attention
as the Chess-Player of Maelzel. Wherever seen it has been an object of
intense curiosity, to all persons who think. Yet the question of its <i>modus
operandi</i> is still undetermined. Nothing has been written on this topic
which can be considered as decisive—and accordingly we find every
where men of mechanical genius, of great general acuteness, and
discriminative understanding, who make no scruple in pronouncing the
Automaton a <i>pure machine</i>, unconnected with human agency in its
movements, and consequently, beyond all comparison, the most astonishing
of the inventions of mankind. And such it would undoubtedly be, were they
right in their supposition. Assuming this hypothesis, it would be grossly
absurd to compare with the Chess-Player, any similar thing of either
modern or ancient days. Yet there have been many and wonderful automata.
In Brewster’s Letters on Natural Magic, we have an account of the most
remarkable. Among these may be mentioned, as having beyond doubt existed,
firstly, the coach invented by M. Camus for the amusement of Louis XIV
when a child. A table, about four feet square, was introduced, into the
room appropriated for the exhibition. Upon this table was placed a
carriage, six inches in length, made of wood, and drawn by two horses of
the same material. One window being down, a lady was seen on the back
seat. A coachman held the reins on the box, and a footman and page were in
their places behind. M. Camus now touched a spring; whereupon the coachman
smacked his whip, and the horses proceeded in a natural manner, along the
edge of the table, drawing after them the carriage. Having gone as far as
possible in this direction, a sudden turn was made to the left, and the
vehicle was driven at right angles to its former course, and still closely
along the edge of the table. In this way the coach proceeded until it
arrived opposite the chair of the young prince. It then stopped, the page
descended and opened the door, the lady alighted, and presented a petition
to her sovereign. She then re-entered. The page put up the steps, closed
the door, and resumed his station. The coachman whipped his horses, and
the carriage was driven back to its original position.</p>
<p>The magician of M. Maillardet is also worthy of notice. We copy the
following account of it from the <i>Letters</i> before mentioned of Dr.
B., who derived his information principally from the Edinburgh
Encyclopaedia.</p>
<p>“One of the most popular pieces of mechanism which we have seen, Is the
Magician constructed by M. Maillardet, for the purpose of answering
certain given questions. A figure, dressed like a magician, appears seated
at the bottom of a wall, holding a wand in one hand, and a book in the
other A number of questions, ready prepared, are inscribed on oval
medallions, and the spectator takes any of these he chooses and to which
he wishes an answer, and having placed it in a drawer ready to receive it,
the drawer shuts with a spring till the answer is returned. The magician
then arises from his seat, bows his head, describes circles with his wand,
and consulting the book as If in deep thought, he lifts it towards his
face. Having thus appeared to ponder over the proposed question he raises
his wand, and striking with it the wall above his head, two folding doors
fly open, and display an appropriate answer to the question. The doors
again close, the magician resumes his original position, and the drawer
opens to return the medallion. There are twenty of these medallions, all
containing different questions, to which the magician returns the most
suitable and striking answers. The medallions are thin plates of brass, of
an elliptical form, exactly resembling each other. Some of the medallions
have a question inscribed on each side, both of which the magician
answered in succession. If the drawer is shut without a medallion being
put into it, the magician rises, consults his book, shakes his head, and
resumes his seat. The folding doors remain shut, and the drawer is
returned empty. If two medallions are put into the drawer together, an
answer is returned only to the lower one. When the machinery is wound up,
the movements continue about an hour, during which time about fifty
questions may be answered. The inventor stated that the means by which the
different medallions acted upon the machinery, so as to produce the proper
answers to the questions which they contained, were extremely simple.”</p>
<p>The duck of Vaucanson was still more remarkable. It was <i>of </i>the size
of life, and so perfect an imitation of the living animal that all the
spectators were deceived. It executed, says Brewster, all the natural
movements and gestures, it ate and drank with avidity, performed all the
quick motions of the head and throat which are peculiar to the duck, and
like it muddled the water which it drank with its bill. It produced also
the sound of quacking in the most natural manner. In the anatomical
structure the artist exhibited the highest skill. Every bone in the real
duck had its representative In the automaton, and its wings were
anatomically exact. Every cavity, apophysis, and curvature was imitated,
and each bone executed its proper movements. When corn was thrown down
before it, the duck stretched out its neck to pick it up, swallowed, and
digested it. {*1}</p>
<p>But if these machines were ingenious, what shall we think of the
calculating machine of Mr. Babbage? What shall we think of an engine of
wood and metal which can not only compute astronomical and navigation
tables to any given extent, but render the exactitude of its operations
mathematically certain through its power of correcting its possible
errors? What shall we think of a machine which can not only accomplish all
this, but actually print off its elaborate results, when obtained, without
the slightest intervention of the intellect of man? It will, perhaps, be
said, in reply, that a machine such as we have described is altogether
above comparison with the Chess-Player of Maelzel. By no means—it is
altogether beneath it—that is to say provided we assume (what should
never for a moment be assumed) that the Chess-Player is a <i>pure machine,
</i>and performs its operations without any immediate human agency.
Arithmetical or algebraical calculations are, from their very nature,
fixed and determinate. Certain <i>data </i>being given, certain results
necessarily and inevitably follow. These results have dependence upon
nothing, and are influenced by nothing but the <i>data </i>originally
given. And the question to be solved proceeds, or should proceed, to its
final determination, by a succession of unerring steps liable to no
change, and subject to no modification. This being the case, we can
without difficulty conceive the <i>possibility </i>of so arranging a piece
of mechanism, that upon starting In accordance with the <i>data </i>of the
question to be solved, it should continue its movements regularly,
progressively, and undeviatingly towards the required solution, since
these movements, however complex, are never imagined to be otherwise than
finite and determinate. But the case is widely different with the
Chess-Player. With him there is no determinate progression. No one move in
chess necessarily follows upon any one other. From no particular
disposition of the men at one period of a game can we predicate their
disposition at a different period. Let us place the <i>first move </i>in a
game of chess, in juxta-position with the <i>data </i>of an algebraical
question, and their great difference will be immediately perceived. From
the latter—from the <i>data—</i>the second step of the
question, dependent thereupon, inevitably follows. It is modelled by the
<i>data. </i>It must be <i>thus </i>and not otherwise. But from the first
move in the game of chess no especial second move follows of necessity. In
the algebraical question, as it proceeds towards solution, the <i>certainty
</i>of its operations remains altogether unimpaired. The second step
having been a consequence of the <i>data, </i>the third step is equally a
consequence of the second, the fourth of the third, the fifth of the
fourth, and so on, <i>and not possibly otherwise, </i>to the end. But in
proportion to the progress made in a game of chess, is the <i>uncertainty
</i>of each ensuing move. A few moves having been made, <i>no </i>step is
certain. Different spectators of the game would advise different moves.
All is then dependent upon the variable judgment of the players. Now even
granting (what should not be granted) that the movements of the Automaton
Chess-Player were in themselves determinate, they would be necessarily
interrupted and disarranged by the indeterminate will of his antagonist.
There is then no analogy whatever between the operations of the
Chess-Player, and those of the calculating machine of Mr. Babbage, and if
we choose to call the former a <i>pure machine </i>we must be prepared to
admit that it is, beyond all comparison, the most wonderful of the
inventions of mankind. Its original projector, however, Baron Kempelen,
had no scruple in declaring it to be a “very ordinary piece of mechanism—a
<i>bagatelle </i>whose effects appeared so marvellous only from the
boldness of the conception, and the fortunate choice of the methods
adopted for promoting the illusion.” But it is needless to dwell upon this
point. It is quite certain that the operations of the Automaton are
regulated by <i>mind, </i>and by nothing else. Indeed this matter is
susceptible of a mathematical demonstration, <i>a priori. </i>The only
question then is of the <i>manner </i>in which human agency is brought to
bear. Before entering upon this subject it would be as well to give a
brief history and description of the Chess-Player for the benefit of such
of our readers as may never have had an opportunity of witnessing Mr.
Maelzel’s exhibition.</p>
<p>The Automaton Chess-Player was invented in 1769, by Baron Kempelen, a
nobleman of Presburg, in Hungary, who afterwards disposed of it, together
with the secret of its operations, to its present possessor. {2*} Soon
after its completion it was exhibited in Presburg, Paris, Vienna, and
other continental cities. In 1783 and 1784, it was taken to London by Mr.
Maelzel. Of late years it has visited the principal towns in the United
States. Wherever seen, the most intense curiosity was excited by its
appearance, and numerous have been the attempts, by men of all classes, to
fathom the mystery of its evolutions. The cut on this page gives a
tolerable representation of the figure as seen by the citizens of Richmond
a few weeks ago. The right arm, however, should lie more at length upon
the box, a chess-board should appear upon it, and the cushion should not
be seen while the pipe is held. Some immaterial alterations have been made
in the costume of the player since it came into the possession of Maelzel—the
plume, for example, was not originally worn. {image of automaton}</p>
<p>At the hour appointed for exhibition, a curtain is withdrawn, or folding
doors are thrown open, and the machine rolled to within about twelve feet
of the nearest of the spectators, between whom and it (the machine) a rope
is stretched. A figure is seen habited as a Turk, and seated, with its
legs crossed, at a large box apparently of maple wood, which serves it as
a table. The exhibiter will, if requested, roll the machine to any portion
of the room, suffer it to remain altogether on any designated spot, or
even shift its location repeatedly during the progress of a game. The
bottom of the box is elevated considerably above the floor by means of the
castors or brazen rollers on which it moves, a clear view of the surface
immediately beneath the Automaton being thus afforded to the spectators.
The chair on which the figure sits is affixed permanently to the box. On
the top of this latter is a chess-board, also permanently affixed. The
right arm of the Chess-Player is extended at full length before him, at
right angles with his body, and lying, in an apparently careless position,
by the side of the board. The back of the hand is upwards. The board
itself is eighteen inches square. The left arm of the figure is bent at
the elbow, and in the left hand is a pipe. A green drapery conceals the
back of the Turk, and falls partially over the front of both shoulders. To
judge from the external appearance of the box, it is divided into five
compartments—three cupboards of equal dimensions, and two drawers
occupying that portion of the chest lying beneath the cupboards. The
foregoing observations apply to the appearance of the Automaton upon its
first introduction into the presence of the spectators.</p>
<p>Maelzel now informs the company that he will disclose to their view the
mechanism of the machine. Taking from his pocket a bunch of keys he
unlocks with one of them, door marked ~ in the cut above, and throws the
cupboard fully open to the inspection of all present. Its whole interior
is apparently filled with wheels, pinions, levers, and other machinery,
crowded very closely together, so that the eye can penetrate but a little
distance into the mass. Leaving this door open to its full extent, he goes
now round to the back of the box, and raising the drapery of the figure,
opens another door situated precisely in the rear of the one first opened.
Holding a lighted candle at this door, and shifting the position of the
whole machine repeatedly at the same time, a bright light is thrown
entirely through the cupboard, which is now clearly seen to be full,
completely full, of machinery. The spectators being satisfied of this
fact, Maelzel closes the back door, locks it, takes the key from the lock,
lets fall the drapery of the figure, and comes round to the front. The
door marked I, it will be remembered, is still open. The exhibiter now
proceeds to open the drawer which lies beneath the cupboards at the bottom
of the box—for although there are apparently two drawers, there is
really only one—the two handles and two key holes being intended
merely for ornament. Having opened this drawer to its full extent, a small
cushion, and a set of chessmen, fixed in a frame work made to support them
perpendicularly, are discovered. Leaving this drawer, as well as cupboard
No. 1 open, Maelzel now unlocks door No. 2, and door No. 3, which are
discovered to be folding doors, opening into one and the same compartment.
To the right of this compartment, however, (that is to say the spectators’
right) a small division, six inches wide, and filled with machinery, is
partitioned off. The main compartment itself (in speaking of that portion
of the box visible upon opening doors 2 and 3, we shall always call it the
main compartment) is lined with dark cloth and contains no machinery
whatever beyond two pieces of steel, quadrant-shaped, and situated one in
each of the rear top corners of the compartment. A small protuberance
about eight inches square, and also covered with dark cloth, lies on the
floor of the compartment near the rear corner on the spectators’ left
hand. Leaving doors No. 2 and No. 3 open as well as the drawer, and door
No. I, the exhibiter now goes round to the back of the main compartment,
and, unlocking another door there, displays clearly all the interior of
the main compartment, by introducing a candle behind it and within it. The
whole box being thus apparently disclosed to the scrutiny of the company,
Maelzel, still leaving the doors and drawer open, rolls the Automaton
entirely round, and exposes the back of the Turk by lifting up the
drapery. A door about ten inches square is thrown open in the loins of the
figure, and a smaller one also in the left thigh. The interior of the
figure, as seen through these apertures, appears to be crowded with
machinery. In general, every spectator is now thoroughly satisfied of
having beheld and completely scrutinized, at one and the same time, every
individual portion of the Automaton, and the idea of any person being
concealed in the interior, during so complete an exhibition of that
interior, if ever entertained, is immediately dismissed as preposterous in
the extreme.</p>
<p>M. Maelzel, having rolled the machine back into its original position, now
informs the company that the Automaton will play a game of chess with any
one disposed to encounter him. This challenge being accepted, a small
table is prepared for the antagonist, and placed close by the rope, but on
the spectators’ side of it, and so situated as not to prevent the company
from obtaining a full view of the Automaton. From a drawer in this table
is taken a set of chess-men, and Maelzel arranges them generally, but not
always, with his own hands, on the chess board, which consists merely of
the usual number of squares painted upon the table. The antagonist having
taken his seat, the exhibiter approaches the drawer of the box, and takes
therefrom the cushion, which, after removing the pipe from the hand of the
Automaton, he places under its left arm as a support. Then taking also
from the drawer the Automaton’s set of chess-men, he arranges them upon
the chessboard before the figure. He now proceeds to close the doors and
to lock them—leaving the bunch of keys in door No. 1. He also closes
the drawer, and, finally, winds up the machine, by applying a key to an
aperture in the left end (the spectators’ left) of the box. The game now
commences—the Automaton taking the first move. The duration of the
contest is usually limited to half an hour, but if it be not finished at
the expiration of this period, and the antagonist still contend that he
can beat the Automaton, M. Maelzel has seldom any objection to continue
it. Not to weary the company, is the ostensible, and no doubt the real
object of the limitation. It Wits of course be understood that when a move
is made at his own table, by the antagonist, the corresponding move is
made at the box of the Automaton, by Maelzel himself, who then acts as the
representative of the antagonist. On the other hand, when the Turk moves,
the corresponding move is made at the table of the antagonist, also by M.
Maelzel, who then acts as the representative of the Automaton. In this
manner it is necessary that the exhibiter should often pass from one table
to the other. He also frequently goes in rear of the figure to remove the
chess-men which it has taken, and which it deposits, when taken, on the
box to the left (to its own left) of the board. When the Automaton
hesitates in relation to its move, the exhibiter is occasionally seen to
place himself very near its right side, and to lay his hand, now and then,
in a careless manner upon the box. He has also a peculiar shuffle with his
feet, calculated to induce suspicion of collusion with the machine in
minds which are more cunning than sagacious. These peculiarities are, no
doubt, mere mannerisms of M. Maelzel, or, if he is aware of them at all,
he puts them in practice with a view of exciting in the spectators a false
idea of the pure mechanism in the Automaton.</p>
<p>The Turk plays with his left hand. All the movements of the arm are at
right angles. In this manner, the hand (which is gloved and bent in a
natural way,) being brought directly above the piece to be moved, descends
finally upon it, the fingers receiving it, in most cases, without
difficulty. Occasionally, however, when the piece is not precisely in its
proper situation, the Automaton fails in his attempt at seizing it. When
this occurs, no second effort is made, but the arm continues its movement
in the direction originally intended, precisely as if the piece were in
the fingers. Having thus designated the spot whither the move should have
been made, the arm returns to its cushion, and Maelzel performs the
evolution which the Automaton pointed out. At every movement of the figure
machinery is heard in motion. During the progress of the game, the figure
now and then rolls its eyes, as if surveying the board, moves its head,
and pronounces the word <i>echec </i>(check) when necessary. {*3} If a
false move be made by his antagonist, he raps briskly on the box with the
fingers of his right hand, shakes his head roughly, and replacing the
piece falsely moved, in its former situation, assumes the next move
himself. Upon beating the game, he waves his head with an air of triumph,
looks round complacently upon the spectators, and drawing his left arm
farther back than usual, suffers his fingers alone to rest upon the
cushion. In general, the Turk is victorious—once or twice he has
been beaten. The game being ended, Maelzel will again if desired, exhibit
the mechanism of the box, in the same manner as before. The machine is
then rolled back, and a curtain hides it from the view of the company.</p>
<p>There have been many attempts at solving the mystery of the Automaton. The
most general opinion in relation to it, an opinion too not unfrequently
adopted by men who should have known better, was, as we have before said,
that no immediate human agency was employed—in other words, that the
machine was purely a machine and nothing else. Many, however maintained
that the exhibiter himself regulated the movements of the figure by
mechanical means operating through the feet of the box. Others again,
spoke confidently of a magnet. Of the first of these opinions we shall say
nothing at present more than we have already said. In relation to the
second it is only necessary to repeat what we have before stated, that the
machine is rolled about on castors, and will, at the request of a
spectator, be moved to and fro to any portion of the room, even during the
progress of a game. The supposition of the magnet is also untenable—for
if a magnet were the agent, any other magnet in the pocket of a spectator
would disarrange the entire mechanism. The exhibiter, however, will suffer
the most powerful loadstone to remain even upon the box during the whole
of the exhibition.</p>
<p>The first attempt at a written explanation of the secret, at least the
first attempt of which we ourselves have any knowledge, was made in a
large pamphlet printed at Paris in 1785. The author’s hypothesis amounted
to this—that a dwarf actuated the machine. This dwarf he supposed to
conceal himself during the opening of the box by thrusting his legs into
two hollow cylinders, which were represented to be (but which are not)
among the machinery in the cupboard No. I, while his body was out of the
box entirely, and covered by the drapery of the Turk. When the doors were
shut, the dwarf was enabled to bring his body within the box—the
noise produced by some portion of the machinery allowing him to do so
unheard, and also to close the door by which he entered. The interior of
the automaton being then exhibited, and no person discovered, the
spectators, says the author of this pamphlet, are satisfied that no one is
within any portion of the machine. This whole hypothesis was too obviously
absurd to require comment, or refutation, and accordingly we find that it
attracted very little attention.</p>
<p>In 1789 a book was published at Dresden by M. I. F. Freyhere in which
another endeavor was made to unravel the mystery. Mr. Freyhere’s book was
a pretty large one, and copiously illustrated by colored engravings. His
supposition was that “a well-taught boy very thin and tall of his age
(sufficiently so that he could be concealed in a drawer almost immediately
under the chess-board”) played the game of chess and effected all the
evolutions of the Automaton. This idea, although even more silly than that
of the Parisian author, met with a better reception, and was in some
measure believed to be the true solution of the wonder, until the inventor
put an end to the discussion by suffering a close examination of the top
of the box.</p>
<p>These bizarre attempts at explanation were followed by others equally
bizarre. Of late years however, an anonymous writer, by a course of
reasoning exceedingly unphilosophical, has contrived to blunder upon a
plausible solution—although we cannot consider it altogether the
true one. His Essay was first published in a Baltimore weekly paper, was
illustrated by cuts, and was entitled “An attempt to analyze the Automaton
Chess-Player of M. Maelzel.” This Essay we suppose to have been the
original of the <i>pamphlet to </i>which Sir David Brewster alludes in his
letters on Natural Magic, and which he has no hesitation in declaring a
thorough and satisfactory explanation. The <i>results </i>of the analysis
are undoubtedly, in the main, just; but we can only account for Brewster’s
pronouncing the Essay a thorough and satisfactory explanation, by
supposing him to have bestowed upon it a very cursory and inattentive
perusal. In the compendium of the Essay, made use of in the Letters on
Natural Magic, it is quite impossible to arrive at any distinct conclusion
in regard to the adequacy or inadequacy of the analysis, on account of the
gross misarrangement and deficiency of the letters of reference employed.
The same fault is to be found in the “Attempt &c.,” as we originally
saw it. The solution consists in a series of minute explanations,
(accompanied by wood-cuts, the whole occupying many pages) in which the
object is to show the <i>possibility </i>of <i>so shifting the partitions
</i>of the box, as to allow a human being, concealed in the interior, to
move portions of his body from one part of the box to another, during the
exhibition of the mechanism—thus eluding the scrutiny of the
spectators. There can be no doubt, as we have before observed, and as we
will presently endeavor to show, that the principle, or rather the result,
of this solution is the true one. Some person is concealed in the box
during the whole time of exhibiting the interior. We object, however, to
the whole verbose description of the <i>manner </i>in which the partitions
are shifted, to accommodate the movements of the person concealed. We
object to it as a mere theory assumed in the first place, and to which
circumstances are afterwards made to adapt themselves. It was not, and
could not have been, arrived at by any inductive reasoning. In whatever
way the shifting is managed, it is of course concealed at every step from
observation. To show that certain movements might possibly be effected in
a certain way, is very far from showing that they are actually so
effected. There may be an infinity of other methods by which the same
results may be obtained. The probability of the one assumed proving the
correct one is then as unity to infinity. But, in reality, this particular
point, the shifting of the partitions, is of no consequence whatever. It
was altogether unnecessary to devote seven or eight pages for the purpose
of proving what no one in his senses would deny—viz: that the
wonderful mechanical genius of Baron Kempelen could invent the necessary
means for shutting a door or slipping aside a pannel, with a human agent
too at his service in actual contact with the pannel or the door, and the
whole operations carried on, as the author of the Essay himself shows, and
as we shall attempt to show more fully hereafter, entirely out of reach of
the observation of the spectators.</p>
<p>In attempting ourselves an explanation of the Automaton, we will, in the
first place, endeavor to show how its operations are effected, and
afterwards describe, as briefly as possible, the nature of the <i>observations
</i>from which we have deduced our result.</p>
<p>It will be necessary for a proper understanding of the subject, that we
repeat here in a few words, the routine adopted by the exhibiter in
disclosing the interior of the box—a routine from which he <i>never
</i>deviates in any material particular. In the first place he opens the
door No. I. Leaving this open, he goes round to the rear of the box, and
opens a door precisely at the back of door No. I. To this back door he
holds a lighted candle. He then <i>closes the back door, </i>locks it,
and, coming round to the front, opens the drawer to its full extent. This
done, he opens the doors No. 2 and No. 3, (the folding doors) and displays
the interior of the main compartment. Leaving open the main compartment,
the drawer, and the front door of cupboard No. I, he now goes to the rear
again, and throws open the back door of the main compartment. In shutting
up the box no particular order is observed, except that the folding doors
are always closed before the drawer.</p>
<p>Now, let us suppose that when the machine is first rolled into the
presence of the spectators, a man is already within it. His body is
situated behind the dense machinery in cupboard No. T. (the rear portion
of which machinery is so contrived as to slip <i>en masse, </i>from the
main compartment to the cupboard No. I, as occasion may require,) and his
legs lie at full length in the main compartment. When Maelzel opens the
door No. I, the man within is not in any danger of discovery, for the
keenest eye cannot penetrate more than about two inches into the darkness
within. But the case is otherwise when the back door of the cupboard No.
I, is opened. A bright light then pervades the cupboard, and the body of
the man would be discovered if it were there. But it is not. The putting
the key in the lock of the back door was a signal on hearing which the
person concealed brought his body forward to an angle as acute as possible—throwing
it altogether, or nearly so, into the main compartment. This, however, is
a painful position, and cannot be long maintained. Accordingly we find
that Maelzel <i>closes the back door. </i>This being done, there is no
reason why the body of the man may not resume its former situation—for
the cupboard is again so dark as to defy scrutiny. The drawer is now
opened, and the legs of the person within drop down behind it in the space
it formerly occupied. {*4} There is, consequently, now no longer any part
of the man in the main compartment—his body being behind the
machinery in cupboard No. 1, and his legs in the space occupied by the
drawer. The exhibiter, therefore, finds himself at liberty to display the
main compartment. This he does—opening both its back and front doors—and
no person Is discovered. The spectators are now satisfied that the whole
of the box is exposed to view—and exposed too, all portions of it at
one and the same time. But of course this is not the case. They neither
see the space behind the drawer, nor the interior of cupboard No. 1—the
front door of which latter the exhibiter virtually shuts in shutting its
back door. Maelzel, having now rolled the machine around, lifted up the
drapery of the Turk, opened the doors in his back and thigh, and shown his
trunk to be full of machinery, brings the whole back into its original
position, and closes the doors. The man within is now at liberty to move
about. He gets up into the body of the Turk just so high as to bring his
eyes above the level of the chess-board. It is very probable that he seats
himself upon the little square block or protuberance which is seen in a
corner of the main compartment when the doors are open. In this position
he sees the chess-board through the bosom of the Turk which is of gauze.
Bringing his right arm across his breast he actuates the little machinery
necessary to guide the left arm and the fingers of the figure. This
machinery is situated just beneath the left shoulder of the Turk, and is
consequently easily reached by the right hand of the man concealed, if we
suppose his right arm brought across the breast. The motions of the head
and eyes, and of the right arm of the figure, as well as the sound <i>echec
</i>are produced by other mechanism in the interior, and actuated at will
by the man within. The whole of this mechanism—that is to say all
the mechanism essential to the machine—is most probably contained
within the little cupboard (of about six inches in breadth) partitioned
off at the right (the spectators’ right) of the main compartment.</p>
<p>In this analysis of the operations of the Automaton, we have purposely
avoided any allusion to the manner in which the partitions are shifted,
and it will now be readily comprehended that this point is a matter of no
importance, since, by mechanism within the ability of any common
carpenter, it might be effected in an infinity of different ways, and
since we have shown that, however performed, it is performed out of the
view of the spectators. Our result is founded upon the following <i>observations
</i>taken during frequent visits to the exhibition of Maelzel. {*5}</p>
<p>I. The moves of the Turk are not made at regular intervals of time, but
accommodate themselves to the moves of the antagonist—although this
point (of regularity) so important in all kinds of mechanical contrivance,
might have been readily brought about by limiting the time allowed for the
moves of the antagonist. For example, if this limit were three minutes,
the moves of the Automaton might be made at any given intervals longer
than three minutes. The fact then of irregularity, when regularity might
have been so easily attained, goes to prove that regularity is unimportant
to the action of the Automaton—in other words, that the Automaton is
not a <i>pure machine.</i></p>
<p>2. When the Automaton is about to move a piece, a distinct motion is
observable just beneath the left shoulder, and which motion agitates in a
slight degree, the drapery covering the front of the left shoulder. This
motion invariably precedes, by about two seconds, the movement of the arm
itself—and the arm never, in any instance, moves without this
preparatory motion in the shoulder. Now let the antagonist move a piece,
and let the corresponding move be made by Maelzel, as usual, upon the
board of the Automaton. Then let the antagonist narrowly watch the
Automaton, until he detect the preparatory motion in the shoulder.
Immediately upon detecting this motion, and before the arm itself begins
to move, let him withdraw his piece, as if perceiving an error in his
manœuvre. It will then be seen that the movement of the arm, which, in
all other cases, immediately succeeds the motion in the shoulder, is
withheld—is not made—although Maelzel has not yet performed,
on the board of the Automaton, any move corresponding to the withdrawal of
the antagonist. In this case, that the Automaton was about to move is
evident—and that he did not move, was an effect plainly produced by
the withdrawal of the antagonist, and without any intervention of Maelzel.</p>
<p>This fact fully proves, 1—that the intervention of Maelzel, in
performing the moves of the antagonist on the board of the Automaton, is
not essential to the movements of the Automaton, 2—that its
movements are regulated by <i>mind—</i>by some person who sees the
board of the antagonist, 3—that its movements are not regulated by
the mind of Maelzel, whose back was turned towards the antagonist at the
withdrawal of his move.</p>
<p>3. The Automaton does not invariably win the game. Were the machine a pure
machine this would not be the case—it would always win. The <i>principle
</i>being discovered by which a machine can be made to <i>play </i>a game
of chess, an extension of the same principle would enable it to win a game—a
farther extension would enable it to win <i>all </i>games—that is,
to beat any possible game of an antagonist. A little consideration will
convince any one that the difficulty of making a machine beat all games,
Is not in the least degree greater, as regards the principle of the
operations necessary, than that of making it beat a single game. If then
we regard the Chess-Player as a machine, we must suppose, (what is highly
improbable,) that its inventor preferred leaving it incomplete to
perfecting it—a supposition rendered still more absurd, when we
reflect that the leaving it incomplete would afford an argument against
the possibility of its being a pure machine—the very argument we now
adduce.</p>
<p>4. When the situation of the game is difficult or complex, we never
perceive the Turk either shake his head or roll his eyes. It is only when
his next move is obvious, or when the game is so circumstanced that to a
man in the Automaton’s place there would be no necessity for reflection.
Now these peculiar movements of the head and eyes are movements customary
with persons engaged in meditation, and the ingenious Baron Kempelen would
have adapted these movements (were the machine a pure machine) to
occasions proper for their display—that is, to occasions of
complexity. But the reverse is seen to be the case, and this reverse
applies precisely to our supposition of a man in the interior. When
engaged in meditation about the game he has no time to think of setting in
motion the mechanism of the Automaton by which are moved the head and the
eyes. When the game, however, is obvious, he has time to look about him,
and, accordingly, we see the head shake and the eyes roll.</p>
<p>5. When the machine is rolled round to allow the spectators an examination
of the back of the Turk, and when his drapery is lifted up and the doors
in the trunk and thigh thrown open, the interior of the trunk is seen to
be crowded with machinery. In scrutinizing this machinery while the
Automaton was in motion, that is to say while the whole machine was moving
on the castors, it appeared to us that certain portions of the mechanism
changed their shape and position in a degree too great to be accounted for
by the simple laws of perspective; and subsequent examinations convinced
us that these undue alterations were attributable to mirrors in the
interior of the trunk. The introduction of mirrors among the machinery
could not have been intended to influence, in any degree, the machinery
itself. Their operation, whatever that operation should prove to be, must
necessarily have reference to the eye of the spectator. We at once
concluded that these mirrors were so placed to multiply to the vision some
few pieces of machinery within the trunk so as to give it the appearance
of being crowded with mechanism. Now the direct inference from this is
that the machine is not a pure machine. For if it were, the inventor, so
far from wishing its mechanism to appear complex, and using deception for
the purpose of giving it this appearance, would have been especially
desirous of convincing those who witnessed his exhibition, of the <i>simplicity
</i>of the means by which results so wonderful were brought about.</p>
<p>6. The external appearance, and, especially, the deportment of the Turk,
are, when we consider them as imitations of <i>life, </i>but very
indifferent imitations. The countenance evinces no ingenuity, and is
surpassed, in its resemblance to the human face, by the very commonest of
wax-works. The eyes roll unnaturally in the head, without any
corresponding motions of the lids or brows. The arm, particularly,
performs its operations in an exceedingly stiff, awkward, jerking, and
rectangular manner. Now, all this is the result either of inability in
Maelzel to do better, or of intentional neglect—accidental neglect
being out of the question, when we consider that the whole time of the
ingenious proprietor is occupied in the improvement of his machines. Most
assuredly we must not refer the unlife-like appearances to inability—for
all the rest of Maelzel’s automata are evidence of his full ability to
copy the motions and peculiarities of life with the most wonderful
exactitude. The rope-dancers, for example, are inimitable. When the clown
laughs, his lips, his eyes, his eye-brows, and eyelids—indeed, all
the features of his countenance—are imbued with their appropriate
expressions. In both him and his companion, every gesture is so entirely
easy, and free from the semblance of artificiality, that, were it not for
the diminutiveness of their size, and the fact of their being passed from
one spectator to another previous to their exhibition on the rope, it
would be difficult to convince any assemblage of persons that these wooden
automata were not living creatures. We cannot, therefore, doubt Mr.
Maelzel’s ability, and we must necessarily suppose that he intentionally
suffered his Chess Player to remain the same artificial and unnatural
figure which Baron Kempelen (no doubt also through design) originally made
it. What this design was it is not difficult to conceive. Were the
Automaton life-like in its motions, the spectator would be more apt to
attribute its operations to their true cause, (that is, to human agency
within) than he is now, when the awkward and rectangular manœuvres convey
the idea of pure and unaided mechanism.</p>
<p>7. When, a short time previous to the commencement of the game, the
Automaton is wound up by the exhibiter as usual, an ear in any degree
accustomed to the sounds produced in winding up a system of machinery,
will not fail to discover, instantaneously, that the axis turned by the
key in the box of the Chess-Player, cannot possibly be connected with
either a weight, a spring, or any system of machinery whatever. The
inference here is the same as in our last observation. The winding up is
inessential to the operations of the Automaton, and is performed with the
design of exciting in the spectators the false idea of mechanism.</p>
<p>8. When the question is demanded explicitly of Maelzel—“Is the
Automaton a pure machine or not?” his reply is invariably the same—“I
will say nothing about it.” Now the notoriety of the Automaton, and the
great curiosity it has every where excited, are owing more especially to
the prevalent opinion that it is a pure machine, than to any other
circumstance. Of course, then, it is the interest of the proprietor to
represent it as a pure machine. And what more obvious, and more effectual
method could there be of impressing the spectators with this desired idea,
than a positive and explicit declaration to that effect? On the other
hand, what more obvious and effectual method could there be of exciting a
disbelief in the Automaton’s being a pure machine, than by withholding
such explicit declaration? For, people will naturally reason thus,—It
is Maelzel’s interest to represent this thing a pure machine—he
refuses to do so, directly, in words, although he does not scruple, and is
evidently anxious to do so, indirectly by actions—were it actually
what he wishes to represent it by actions, he would gladly avail himself
of the more direct testimony of words—the inference is, that a
consciousness of its not being a pure machine, is the reason of his
silence—his actions cannot implicate him in a falsehood—his
words may.</p>
<p>9. When, in exhibiting the interior of the box, Maelzel has thrown open
the door No. I, and also the door immediately behind it, he holds a
lighted candle at the back door (as mentioned above) and moves the entire
machine to and fro with a view of convincing the company that the cupboard
No. 1 is entirely filled with machinery. When the machine is thus moved
about, it will be apparent to any careful observer, that whereas that
portion of the machinery near the front door No. 1, is perfectly steady
and unwavering, the portion farther within fluctuates, in a very slight
degree, with the movements of the machine. This circumstance first aroused
in us the suspicion that the more remote portion of the machinery was so
arranged as to be easily slipped, <i>en masse, </i>from its position when
occasion should require it. This occasion we have already stated to occur
when the man concealed within brings his body into an erect position upon
the closing of the back door.</p>
<p>10. Sir David Brewster states the figure of the Turk to be of the size of
life—but in fact it is far above the ordinary size. Nothing is more
easy than to err in our notions of magnitude. The body of the Automaton is
generally insulated, and, having no means of immediately comparing it with
any human form, we suffer ourselves to consider it as of ordinary
dimensions. This mistake may, however, be corrected by observing the
Chess-Player when, as is sometimes the case, the exhibiter approaches it.
Mr. Maelzel, to be sure, is not very tall, but upon drawing near the
machine, his head will be found at least eighteen inches below the head of
the Turk, although the latter, it will be remembered, is in a sitting
position.</p>
<p>11. The box behind which the Automaton is placed, is precisely three feet
six inches long, two feet four inches deep, and two feet six inches high.
These dimensions are fully sufficient for the accommodation of a man very
much above the common size—and the main compartment alone is capable
of holding any ordinary man in the position we have mentioned as assumed
by the person concealed. As these are facts, which any one who doubts them
may prove by actual calculation, we deem it unnecessary to dwell upon
them. We will only suggest that, although the top of the box is apparently
a board of about three inches in thickness, the spectator may satisfy
himself by stooping and looking up at it when the main compartment is
open, that it is in reality very thin. The height of the drawer also will
be misconceived by those who examine it in a cursory manner. There is a
space of about three inches between the top of the drawer as seen from the
exterior, and the bottom of the cupboard—a space which must be
included in the height of the drawer. These contrivances to make the room
within the box appear less than it actually is, are referrible to a design
on the part of the inventor, to impress the company again with a false
idea, viz. that no human being can be accommodated within the box.</p>
<p>12. The interior of the main compartment is lined throughout with <i>cloth.
</i>This cloth we suppose to have a twofold object. A portion of <i>it
</i>may form, when tightly stretched, the only partitions which there is
any necessity for removing during the changes of the man’s position, viz:
the partition between the rear of the main compartment and the rear of the
cupboard No. 1, and the partition between the main compartment, and the
space behind the drawer when open. If we imagine this to be the case, the
difficulty of shifting the partitions vanishes at once, if indeed any such
difficulty could be supposed under any circumstances to exist. The second
object of the cloth is to deaden and render indistinct all sounds
occasioned by the movements of the person within.</p>
<p>13. The antagonist (as we have before observed) is not suffered to play at
the board of the Automaton, but is seated at some distance from the
machine. The reason which, most probably, would be assigned for this
circumstance, if the question were demanded, is, that were the antagonist
otherwise situated, his person would intervene between the machine and the
spectators, and preclude the latter from a distinct view. But this
difficulty might be easily obviated, either by elevating the seats of the
company, or by turning the end of the box towards them during the game.
The true cause of the restriction is, perhaps, very different. Were the
antagonist seated in contact with the box, the secret would be liable to
discovery, by his detecting, with the aid of a quick car, the breathings
of the man concealed.</p>
<p>14. Although M. Maelzel, in disclosing the interior of the machine,
sometimes slightly deviates from the <i>routine </i>which we have pointed
out, yet <i>reeler in </i>any instance does he <i>so </i>deviate from it
as to interfere with our solution. For example, he has been known to open,
first of all, the drawer—but he never opens the main compartment
without first closing the back door of cupboard No. 1—he never opens
the main compartment without first pulling out the drawer—he never
shuts the drawer without first shutting the main compartment—he
never opens the back door of cupboard No. 1 while the main compartment is
open—and the game of chess is never commenced until the whole
machine is closed. Now if it were observed that <i>never, in any single
instance, </i>did M. Maelzel differ from the routine we have pointed out
as necessary to our solution, it would be one of the strongest possible
arguments in corroboration of it—but the argument becomes infinitely
strengthened if we duly consider the circumstance that he <i>does
occasionally </i>deviate from the routine but never does <i>so </i>deviate
as to falsify the solution.</p>
<p>15. There are six candles on the board of the Automaton during exhibition.
The question naturally arises—“Why are so many employed, when a
single candle, or, at farthest, two, would have been amply sufficient to
afford the spectators a clear view of the board, in a room otherwise so
well lit up as the exhibition room always is—when, moreover, if we
suppose the machine a <i>pure machine, </i>there can be no necessity for
so much light, or indeed any light at all, to enable <i>it </i>to perform
its operations—and when, especially, only a single candle is placed
upon the table of the antagonist?” The first and most obvious inference
is, that so strong a light is requisite to enable the man within to see
through the transparent material (probably fine gauze) of which the breast
of the Turk is composed. But when we consider the arrangement of the
candles, another reason immediately presents itself. There are six lights
(as we have said before) in all. Three of these are on each side of the
figure. Those most remote from the spectators are the longest—those
in the middle are about two inches shorter—and those nearest the
company about two inches shorter still—and the candles on one side
differ in height from the candles respectively opposite on the other, by a
ratio different from two inches—that is to say, the longest candle
on one side is about three inches shorter than the longest candle on the
other, and so on. Thus it will be seen that no two of the candles are of
the same height, and thus also the difficulty of ascertaining the <i>material
</i>of the breast of the figure (against which the light is especially
directed) is greatly augmented by the dazzling effect of the complicated
crossings of the rays—crossings which are brought about by placing
the centres of radiation all upon different levels.</p>
<p>16. While the Chess-Player was in possession of Baron Kempelen, it was
more than once observed, first, that an Italian in the suite of the Baron
was never visible during the playing of a game at chess by the Turk, and,
secondly, that the Italian being taken seriously ill, the exhibition was
suspended until his recovery. This Italian professed a <i>total </i>ignorance
of the game of chess, although all others of the suite played well.
Similar observations have been made since the Automaton has been purchased
by Maelzel. There is a man, <i>Schlumberoer, </i>who attends him wherever
he goes, but who has no ostensible occupation other than that of assisting
in the packing and unpacking of the automata. This man is about the medium
size, and has a remarkable stoop in the shoulders. Whether he professes to
play chess or not, we are not informed. It is quite certain, however, that
he is never to be seen during the exhibition of the Chess-Player, although
frequently visible just before and just after the exhibition. Moreover,
some years ago Maelzel visited Richmond with his automata, and exhibited
them, we believe, in the house now occupied by M. Bossieux as a Dancing
Academy. <i>Schlumberg</i>er was suddenly taken ill, and during his
illness there was no exhibition of the Chess-Player. These facts are well
known to many of our citizens. The reason assigned for the suspension of
the Chess-Player’s performances, was <i>not </i>the illness of <i>Schlumberger.
</i>The inferences from all this we leave, without farther comment, to the
reader.</p>
<p>17. The Turk plays with his <i>left</i> arm. A circumstance so remarkable
cannot be accidental. Brewster takes no notice of it whatever beyond a
mere statement, we believe, that such is the fact. The early writers of
treatises on the Automaton, seem not to have observed the matter at all,
and have no reference to it. The author of the pamphlet alluded to by
Brewster, mentions it, but acknowledges his inability to account for it.
Yet it is obviously from such prominent discrepancies or incongruities as
this that deductions are to be made (if made at all) which shall lead us
to the truth.</p>
<p>The circumstance of the Automaton’s playing with his left hand cannot have
connexion with the operations of the machine, considered merely as such.
Any mechanical arrangement which would cause the figure to move, in any
given manner, the left arm—could, if reversed, cause it to move, in
the same manner, the right. But these principles cannot be extended to the
human organization, wherein there is a marked and radical difference in
the construction, and, at all events, in the powers, of the right and left
arms. Reflecting upon this latter fact, we naturally refer the incongruity
noticeable in the Chess-Player to this peculiarity in the human
organization. If so, we must imagine some <i>reversion—</i>for the
Chess-Player plays precisely as a man <i>would not. </i>These ideas, once
entertained, are sufficient of themselves, to suggest the notion of a man
in the interior. A few more imperceptible steps lead us, finally, to the
result. The Automaton plays with his left arm, because under no other
circumstances could the man within play with his right—a <i>desideratum
</i>of course. Let us, for example, imagine the Automaton to play with his
right arm. To reach the machinery which moves the arm, and which we have
before explained to lie just beneath the shoulder, it would be necessary
for the man within either to use his right arm in an exceedingly painful
and awkward position, (viz. brought up close to his body and tightly
compressed between his body and the side of the Automaton,) or else to use
his left arm brought across his breast. In neither case could he act with
the requisite ease or precision. On the contrary, the Automaton playing,
as it actually does, with the left arm, all difficulties vanish. The right
arm of the man within is brought across his breast, and his right fingers
act, without any constraint, upon the machinery in the shoulder of the
figure.</p>
<p>We do not believe that any reasonable objections can be urged against this
solution of the Automaton Chess-Player.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.20"></SPAN>THE POWER OF WORDS</h2>
<p>OINOS. Pardon, Agathos, the weakness of a spirit new-fledged with
immortality!</p>
<p>AGATHOS. You have spoken nothing, my Oinos, for which pardon is to be
demanded. Not even here is knowledge a thing of intuition. For wisdom, ask
of the angels freely, that it may be given!</p>
<p>OINOS. But in this existence, I dreamed that I should be at once cognizant
of all things, and thus at once be happy in being cognizant of all.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. Ah, not in knowledge is happiness, but in the acquisition of
knowledge! In for ever knowing, we are for ever blessed; but to know all
were the curse of a fiend.</p>
<p>OINOS. But does not The Most High know all?</p>
<p>AGATHOS. That (since he is The Most Happy) must be still the one thing
unknown even to Him.</p>
<p>OINOS. But, since we grow hourly in knowledge, must not at last all things
be known?</p>
<p>AGATHOS. Look down into the abysmal distances!—attempt to force the
gaze down the multitudinous vistas of the stars, as we sweep slowly
through them thus—and thus—and thus! Even the spiritual
vision, is it not at all points arrested by the continuous golden walls of
the universe?—the walls of the myriads of the shining bodies that
mere number has appeared to blend into unity?</p>
<p>OINOS. I clearly perceive that the infinity of matter is no dream.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. There are <i>no</i> dreams in Aidenn—but it is here whispered
that, of this infinity of matter, the <i>sole</i> purpose is to afford infinite
springs, at which the soul may allay the thirst <i>to know</i>, which is for ever
unquenchable within it—since to quench it, would be to extinguish
the soul’s self. Question me then, my Oinos, freely and without fear.
Come! we will leave to the left the loud harmony of the Pleiades, and
swoop outward from the throne into the starry meadows beyond Orion, where,
for pansies and violets, and heart’s-ease, are the beds of the
triplicate and triple-tinted suns.</p>
<p>OINOS. And now, Agathos, as we proceed, instruct me!—speak to me in
the earth’s familiar tones. I understand not what you hinted to me, just
now, of the modes or of the method of what, during mortality, we were
accustomed to call Creation. Do you mean to say that the Creator is not
God?</p>
<p>AGATHOS. I mean to say that the Deity does not create.</p>
<p>OINOS. Explain.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. In the beginning only, he created. The seeming creatures which
are now, throughout the universe, so perpetually springing into being, can
only be considered as the mediate or indirect, not as the direct or
immediate results of the Divine creative power.</p>
<p>OINOS. Among men, my Agathos, this idea would be considered heretical in
the extreme.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. Among angels, my Oinos, it is seen to be simply true.</p>
<p>OINOS. I can comprehend you thus far—that certain operations of what
we term Nature, or the natural laws, will, under certain conditions, give
rise to that which has all the <i>appearance</i> of creation. Shortly before the
final overthrow of the earth, there were, I well remember, many very
successful experiments in what some philosophers were weak enough to
denominate the creation of animalculæ.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. The cases of which you speak were, in fact, instances of the
secondary creation—and of the only species of creation which has
ever been, since the first word spoke into existence the first law.</p>
<p>OINOS. Are not the starry worlds that, from the abyss of nonentity, burst
hourly forth into the heavens—are not these stars, Agathos, the
immediate handiwork of the King?</p>
<p>AGATHOS. Let me endeavor, my Oinos, to lead you, step by step, to the
conception I intend. You are well aware that, as no thought can perish, so
no act is without infinite result. We moved our hands, for example, when
we were dwellers on the earth, and, in so doing, gave vibration to the
atmosphere which engirdled it. This vibration was indefinitely extended,
till it gave impulse to every particle of the earth’s air, which
thenceforward, and for ever, was actuated by the one movement of the hand.
This fact the mathematicians of our globe well knew. They made the special
effects, indeed, wrought in the fluid by special impulses, the subject of
exact calculation—so that it became easy to determine in what
precise period an impulse of given extent would engirdle the orb, and
impress (for ever) every atom of the atmosphere circumambient.
Retrograding, they found no difficulty, from a given effect, under given
conditions, in determining the value of the original impulse. Now the
mathematicians who saw that the results of any given impulse were
absolutely endless—and who saw that a portion of these results were
accurately traceable through the agency of algebraic analysis—who
saw, too, the facility of the retrogradation—these men saw, at the
same time, that this species of analysis itself, had within itself a
capacity for indefinite progress—that there were no bounds
conceivable to its advancement and applicability, except within the
intellect of him who advanced or applied it. But at this point our
mathematicians paused.</p>
<p>OINOS. And why, Agathos, should they have proceeded?</p>
<p>AGATHOS. Because there were some considerations of deep interest beyond.
It was deducible from what they knew, that to a being of infinite
understanding—one to whom the perfection of the algebraic analysis
lay unfolded—there could be no difficulty in tracing every impulse
given the air—and the ether through the air—to the remotest
consequences at any even infinitely remote epoch of time. It is indeed
demonstrable that every such impulse given the air, must, in the end,
impress every individual thing that exists within the universe;—and
the being of infinite understanding—the being whom we have imagined—might
trace the remote undulations of the impulse—trace them upward and
onward in their influences upon all particles of an matter—upward
and onward for ever in their modifications of old forms—or, in other
words, in their creation of new—until he found them reflected—unimpressive
at last—back from the throne of the Godhead. And not only could such
a thing do this, but at any epoch, should a given result be afforded him—should
one of these numberless comets, for example, be presented to his
inspection—he could have no difficulty in determining, by the
analytic retrogradation, to what original impulse it was due. This power
of retrogradation in its absolute fulness and perfection—this
faculty of referring at all epochs, all effects to all causes—is of
course the prerogative of the Deity alone—but in every variety of
degree, short of the absolute perfection, is the power itself exercised by
the whole host of the Angelic intelligences.</p>
<p>OINOS. But you speak merely of impulses upon the air.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. In speaking of the air, I referred only to the earth; but the
general proposition has reference to impulses upon the ether—which,
since it pervades, and alone pervades all space, is thus the great medium
of creation.</p>
<p>OINOS. Then all motion, of whatever nature, creates?</p>
<p>AGATHOS. It must: but a true philosophy has long taught that the source of
all motion is thought—and the source of all thought is—</p>
<p>OINOS. God.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. I have spoken to you, Oinos, as to a child of the fair Earth
which lately perished—of impulses upon the atmosphere of the Earth.</p>
<p>OINOS. You did.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. And while I thus spoke, did there not cross your mind some
thought of the physical power of words? Is not every word an impulse on
the air?</p>
<p>OINOS. But why, Agathos, do you weep—and why, oh why do your wings
droop as we hover above this fair star—which is the greenest and yet
most terrible of all we have encountered in our flight? Its brilliant
flowers look like a fairy dream—but its fierce volcanoes like the
passions of a turbulent heart.</p>
<p>AGATHOS. They are!—they are! This wild star—it is now three
centuries since, with clasped hands, and with streaming eyes, at the feet
of my beloved—I spoke it—with a few passionate sentences—into
birth. Its brilliant flowers are the dearest of all unfulfilled dreams,
and its raging volcanoes are the passions of the most turbulent and
unhallowed of hearts.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.21"></SPAN>THE COLLOQUY OF MONOS AND UNA</h2>
<p class="letter">
Μελλοντα
ταυτα.—S<small>OPHOCLES</small>—<i>Antig.</i><br/>
“These things are in the near future.”</p>
<p><i> Una.</i> “Born again?”</p>
<p><i> Monos.</i> Yes, fairest and best beloved Una, “born again.” These were
the words upon whose mystical meaning I had so long pondered, rejecting
the explanations of the priesthood, until Death himself resolved for me
the secret.</p>
<p><i>Una.</i> Death!</p>
<p><i>Monos.</i> How strangely, sweet Una, you echo my words! I observe, too,
a vacillation in your step—a joyous inquietude in your eyes. You are
confused and oppressed by the majestic novelty of the Life Eternal. Yes,
it was of Death I spoke. And here how singularly sounds that word which of
old was wont to bring terror to all hearts—throwing a mildew upon
all pleasures!</p>
<p><i>Una.</i> Ah, Death, the spectre which sate at all feasts! How often,
Monos, did we lose ourselves in speculations upon its nature! How
mysteriously did it act as a check to human bliss—saying unto it
“thus far, and no farther!” That earnest mutual love, my own
Monos, which burned within our bosoms—how vainly did we flatter
ourselves, feeling happy in its first up-springing, that our happiness
would strengthen with its strength! Alas! as it grew, so grew in our
hearts the dread of that evil hour which was hurrying to separate us
forever! Thus, in time, it became painful to love. Hate would have been
mercy then.</p>
<p><i>Monos.</i> Speak not here of these griefs, dear Una—mine, mine,
forever now!</p>
<p><i> Una.</i> But the memory of past sorrow—is it not present joy? I
have much to say yet of the things which have been. Above all, I burn to
know the incidents of your own passage through the dark Valley and Shadow.</p>
<p><i> Monos.</i> And when did the radiant Una ask anything of her Monos in
vain? I will be minute in relating all—but at what point shall the
weird narrative begin?</p>
<p><i>Una.</i> At what point?</p>
<p><i>Monos.</i> You have said.</p>
<p><i>Una.</i> Monos, I comprehend you. In Death we have both learned the
propensity of man to define the indefinable. I will not say, then,
commence with the moment of life’s cessation—but commence with that
sad, sad instant when, the fever having abandoned you, you sank into a
breathless and motionless torpor, and I pressed down your pallid eyelids
with the passionate fingers of love.</p>
<p><i> Monos.</i> One word first, my Una, in regard to man’s general
condition at this epoch. You will remember that one or two of the wise
among our forefathers—wise in fact, although not in the world’s
esteem—had ventured to doubt the propriety of the term
“improvement,” as applied to the progress of our civilization. There were
periods in each of the five or six centuries immediately preceding our
dissolution, when arose some vigorous intellect, boldly contending for
those principles whose truth appears now, to our disenfranchised reason,
so utterly obvious—principles which should have taught our race to
submit to the guidance of the natural laws, rather than attempt their
control. At long intervals some masterminds appeared, looking upon each
advance in practical science as a retro-gradation in the true utility.
Occasionally the poetic intellect—that intellect which we now feel
to have been the most exalted of all—since those truths which to us
were of the most enduring importance could only be reached by that analogy
which speaks in proof tones to the imagination alone and to the unaided
reason bears no weight—occasionally did this poetic intellect
proceed a step farther in the evolving of the vague idea of the
philosophic, and find in the mystic parable that tells of the tree of
knowledge, and of its forbidden fruit, death-producing, a distinct
intimation that knowledge was not meet for man in the infant condition of
his soul. And these men—the poets—living and perishing amid
the scorn of the “utilitarians”—of rough pedants, who arrogated to
themselves a title which could have been properly applied only to the
scorned—these men, the poets, pondered piningly, yet not unwisely,
upon the ancient days when our wants were not more simple than our
enjoyments were keen—days when mirth was a word unknown, so solemnly
deep-toned was happiness—holy, august and blissful days, when blue
rivers ran undammed, between hills unhewn, into far forest solitudes,
primæval, odorous, and unexplored.</p>
<p>Yet these noble exceptions from the general misrule served but to
strengthen it by opposition. Alas! we had fallen upon the most evil of
all our evil days. The great “movement”—that was the
cant term—went on: a diseased commotion, moral and physical.
Art—the Arts—arose supreme, and, once enthroned, cast chains
upon the intellect which had elevated them to power. Man, because he
could not but acknowledge the majesty of Nature, fell into childish
exultation at his acquired and still-increasing dominion over her
elements. Even while he stalked a God in his own fancy, an infantine
imbecility came over him. As might be supposed from the origin of his
disorder, he grew infected with system, and with abstraction. He
enwrapped himself in generalities. Among other odd ideas, that of
universal equality gained ground; and in the face of analogy and of
God—in despite of the loud warning voice of the laws of
<i>gradation</i> so visibly pervading all things in Earth and
Heaven—wild attempts at an omni-prevalent Democracy were made. Yet
this evil sprang necessarily from the leading evil—Knowledge. Man
could not both know and succumb. Meantime huge smoking cities arose,
innumerable. Green leaves shrank before the hot breath of furnaces. The
fair face of Nature was deformed as with the ravages of some loathsome
disease. And methinks, sweet Una, even our slumbering sense of the forced
and of the far-fetched might have arrested us here. But now it appears
that we had worked out our own destruction in the perversion of our
taste, or rather in the blind neglect of its culture in the schools. For,
in truth, it was at this crisis that taste alone—that faculty
which, holding a middle position between the pure intellect and the moral
sense, could never safely have been disregarded—it was now that
taste alone could have led us gently back to Beauty, to Nature, and to
Life. But alas for the pure contemplative spirit and majestic intuition
of Plato! Alas for the μουσικη which
he justly regarded as an all-sufficient education for the soul! Alas for
him and for it!—since both were most desperately needed when both
were most entirely forgotten or despised. {*1}</p>
<p>Pascal, a philosopher whom we both love, has said, how truly!—“que
tout notre raisonnement se rèduit à céder au sentiment;” and it is not
impossible that the sentiment of the natural, had time permitted it, would
have regained its old ascendancy over the harsh mathematical reason of the
schools. But this thing was not to be. Prematurely induced by intemperance
of knowledge the old age of the world drew on. This the mass of mankind
saw not, or, living lustily although unhappily, affected not to see. But,
for myself, the Earth’s records had taught me to look for widest ruin as
the price of highest civilization. I had imbibed a prescience of our Fate
from comparison of China the simple and enduring, with Assyria the
architect, with Egypt the astrologer, with Nubia, more crafty than either,
the turbulent mother of all Arts. In history {*2} of these regions I met
with a ray from the Future. The individual artificialities of the three
latter were local diseases of the Earth, and in their individual
overthrows we had seen local remedies applied; but for the infected world
at large I could anticipate no regeneration save in death. That man, as a
race, should not become extinct, I saw that he must be “born again.”</p>
<p>And now it was, fairest and dearest, that we wrapped our spirits, daily,
in dreams. Now it was that, in twilight, we discoursed of the days to
come, when the Art-scarred surface of the Earth, having undergone that
purification {*3} which alone could efface its rectangular obscenities,
should clothe itself anew in the verdure and the mountain-slopes and the
smiling waters of Paradise, and be rendered at length a fit dwelling-place
for man:—for man the Death purged—for man to whose now exalted
intellect there should be poison in knowledge no more—for the
redeemed, regenerated, blissful, and now immortal, but still for the
material, man.</p>
<p><i>Una.</i> Well do I remember these conversations, dear Monos; but the
epoch of the fiery overthrow was not so near at hand as we believed, and
as the corruption you indicate did surely warrant us in believing. Men
lived; and died individually. You yourself sickened, and passed into the
grave; and thither your constant Una speedily followed you. And though the
century which has since elapsed, and whose conclusion brings us thus
together once more, tortured our slumbering senses with no impatience of
duration, yet, my Monos, it was a century still.</p>
<p><i>Monos.</i> Say, rather, a point in the vague infinity. Unquestionably,
it was in the Earth’s dotage that I died. Wearied at heart with anxieties
which had their origin in the general turmoil and decay, I succumbed to
the fierce fever. After some few days of pain, and many of dreamy delirium
replete with ecstasy, the manifestations of which you mistook for pain,
while I longed but was impotent to undeceive you—after some days
there came upon me, as you have said, a breathless and motionless torpor;
and this was termed Death by those who stood around me.</p>
<p>Words are vague things. My condition did not deprive me of sentience. It
appeared to me not greatly dissimilar to the extreme quiescence of him,
who, having slumbered long and profoundly, lying motionless and fully
prostrate in a midsummer noon, begins to steal slowly back into
consciousness, through the mere sufficiency of his sleep, and without
being awakened by external disturbances.</p>
<p>I breathed no longer. The pulses were still. The heart had ceased to beat.
Volition had not departed, but was powerless. The senses were unusually
active, although eccentrically so—assuming often each other’s
functions at random. The taste and the smell were inextricably confounded,
and became one sentiment, abnormal and intense. The rose-water with which
your tenderness had moistened my lips to the last, affected me with sweet
fancies of flowers—fantastic flowers, far more lovely than any of
the old Earth, but whose prototypes we have here blooming around us. The
eyelids, transparent and bloodless, offered no complete impediment to
vision. As volition was in abeyance, the balls could not roll in their
sockets but all objects within the range of the visual hemisphere were
seen with more or less distinctness; the rays which fell upon the external
retina, or into the corner of the eye, producing a more vivid effect than
those which struck the front or interior surface. Yet, in the former
instance, this effect was so far anomalous that I appreciated it only as
sound—sound sweet or discordant as the matters presenting themselves
at my side were light or dark in shade—curved or angular in outline.
The hearing, at the same time, although excited in degree, was not
irregular in action—estimating real sounds with an extravagance of
precision, not less than of sensibility. Touch had undergone a
modification more peculiar. Its impressions were tardily received, but
pertinaciously retained, and resulted always in the highest physical
pleasure. Thus the pressure of your sweet fingers upon my eyelids, at
first only recognised through vision, at length, long after their removal,
filled my whole being with a sensual delight immeasurable. I say with a
sensual delight. All my perceptions were purely sensual. The materials
furnished the passive brain by the senses were not in the least degree
wrought into shape by the deceased understanding. Of pain there was some
little; of pleasure there was much; but of moral pain or pleasure none at
all. Thus your wild sobs floated into my ear with all their mournful
cadences, and were appreciated in their every variation of sad tone; but
they were soft musical sounds and no more; they conveyed to the extinct
reason no intimation of the sorrows which gave them birth; while the large
and constant tears which fell upon my face, telling the bystanders of a
heart which broke, thrilled every fibre of my frame with ecstasy alone.
And this was in truth the Death of which these bystanders spoke
reverently, in low whispers—you, sweet Una, gaspingly, with loud
cries.</p>
<p>They attired me for the coffin—three or four dark figures which
flitted busily to and fro. As these crossed the direct line of my vision
they affected me as forms; but upon passing to my side their images
impressed me with the idea of shrieks, groans, and other dismal
expressions of terror, of horror, or of wo. You alone, habited in a white
robe, passed in all directions musically about me.</p>
<p>The day waned; and, as its light faded away, I became possessed by a vague
uneasiness—an anxiety such as the sleeper feels when sad real sounds
fall continuously within his ear—low distant bell-tones, solemn, at
long but equal intervals, and mingling with melancholy dreams. Night
arrived; and with its shadows a heavy discomfort. It oppressed my limbs
with the oppression of some dull weight, and was palpable. There was also
a moaning sound, not unlike the distant reverberation of surf, but more
continuous, which, beginning with the first twilight, had grown in
strength with the darkness. Suddenly lights were brought into the room,
and this reverberation became forthwith interrupted into frequent unequal
bursts of the same sound, but less dreary and less distinct. The ponderous
oppression was in a great measure relieved; and, issuing from the flame of
each lamp, (for there were many,) there flowed unbrokenly into my ears a
strain of melodious monotone. And when now, dear Una, approaching the bed
upon which I lay outstretched, you sat gently by my side, breathing odor
from your sweet lips, and pressing them upon my brow, there arose
tremulously within my bosom, and mingling with the merely physical
sensations which circumstances had called forth, a something akin to
sentiment itself—a feeling that, half appreciating, half responded
to your earnest love and sorrow; but this feeling took no root in the
pulseless heart, and seemed indeed rather a shadow than a reality, and
faded quickly away, first into extreme quiescence, and then into a purely
sensual pleasure as before.</p>
<p>And now, from the wreck and the chaos of the usual senses, there appeared
to have arisen within me a sixth, all perfect. In its exercise I found a
wild delight—yet a delight still physical, inasmuch as the
understanding had in it no part. Motion in the animal frame had fully
ceased. No muscle quivered; no nerve thrilled; no artery throbbed. But
there seemed to have sprung up in the brain, that of which no words could
convey to the merely human intelligence even an indistinct conception. Let
me term it a mental pendulous pulsation. It was the moral embodiment of
man’s abstract idea of Time. By the absolute equalization of this movement—or
of such as this—had the cycles of the firmamental orbs themselves,
been adjusted. By its aid I measured the irregularities of the clock upon
the mantel, and of the watches of the attendants. Their tickings came
sonorously to my ears. The slightest deviations from the true proportion—and
these deviations were omni-prevalent—affected me just as violations
of abstract truth were wont, on earth, to affect the moral sense. Although
no two of the time-pieces in the chamber struck the individual seconds
accurately together, yet I had no difficulty in holding steadily in mind
the tones, and the respective momentary errors of each. And this—this
keen, perfect, self-existing sentiment of duration—this sentiment
existing (as man could not possibly have conceived it to exist)
independently of any succession of events—this idea—this sixth
sense, upspringing from the ashes of the rest, was the first obvious and
certain step of the intemporal soul upon the threshold of the temporal
Eternity.</p>
<p>It was midnight; and you still sat by my side. All others had departed
from the chamber of Death. They had deposited me in the coffin. The lamps
burned flickeringly; for this I knew by the tremulousness of the
monotonous strains. But, suddenly these strains diminished in distinctness
and in volume. Finally they ceased. The perfume in my nostrils died away.
Forms affected my vision no longer. The oppression of the Darkness
uplifted itself from my bosom. A dull shock like that of electricity
pervaded my frame, and was followed by total loss of the idea of contact.
All of what man has termed sense was merged in the sole consciousness of
entity, and in the one abiding sentiment of duration. The mortal body had
been at length stricken with the hand of the deadly Decay.</p>
<p>Yet had not all of sentience departed; for the consciousness and the
sentiment remaining supplied some of its functions by a lethargic
intuition. I appreciated the direful change now in operation upon the
flesh, and, as the dreamer is sometimes aware of the bodily presence of
one who leans over him, so, sweet Una, I still dully felt that you sat by
my side. So, too, when the noon of the second day came, I was not
unconscious of those movements which displaced you from my side, which
confined me within the coffin, which deposited me within the hearse, which
bore me to the grave, which lowered me within it, which heaped heavily the
mould upon me, and which thus left me, in blackness and corruption, to my
sad and solemn slumbers with the worm.</p>
<p>And here, in the prison-house which has few secrets to disclose, there
rolled away days and weeks and months; and the soul watched narrowly each
second as it flew, and, without effort, took record of its flight—without
effort and without object.</p>
<p>A year passed. The consciousness of being had grown hourly more
indistinct, and that of mere locality had, in great measure, usurped its
position. The idea of entity was becoming merged in that of place. The
narrow space immediately surrounding what had been the body, was now
growing to be the body itself. At length, as often happens to the sleeper
(by sleep and its world alone is Death imaged)—at length, as
sometimes happened on Earth to the deep slumberer, when some flitting
light half startled him into awaking, yet left him half enveloped in
dreams—so to me, in the strict embrace of the Shadow came that light
which alone might have had power to startle—the light of enduring
Love. Men toiled at the grave in which I lay darkling. They upthrew the
damp earth. Upon my mouldering bones there descended the coffin of Una.</p>
<p>And now again all was void. That nebulous light had been extinguished.
That feeble thrill had vibrated itself into quiescence. Many lustra had
supervened. Dust had returned to dust. The worm had food no more. The
sense of being had at length utterly departed, and there reigned in its
stead—instead of all things—dominant and perpetual—the
autocrats Place and Time. For that which was not—for that which had
no form—for that which had no thought—for that which had no
sentience—for that which was soulless, yet of which matter formed no
portion—for all this nothingness, yet for all this immortality, the
grave was still a home, and the corrosive hours, co-mates.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.22"></SPAN>THE CONVERSATION OF EIROS AND CHARMION</h2>
<p class="letter">
Πυρ σοι
προσοισω.<br/>
I will bring fire to thee.<br/>
—E<small>URIPIDES</small>—<i>Androm.</i></p>
<p class="drama">
EIROS.<br/>
Why do you call me Eiros?</p>
<p class="drama">
CHARMION.<br/>
So henceforward will you always be called. You must forget too, my earthly
name, and speak to me as Charmion.</p>
<p class="drama">
EIROS.<br/>
This is indeed no dream!</p>
<p class="drama">
CHARMION.<br/>
Dreams are with us no more; but of these mysteries anon. I rejoice to see
you looking life-like and rational. The film of the shadow has already
passed from off your eyes. Be of heart and fear nothing. Your allotted
days of stupor have expired and, to-morrow, I will myself induct you into
the full joys and wonders of your novel existence.</p>
<p class="drama">
EIROS.<br/>
True—I feel no stupor—none at all. The wild sickness and the
terrible darkness have left me, and I hear no longer that mad, rushing,
horrible sound, like the “voice of many waters.” Yet my senses are
bewildered, Charmion, with the keenness of their perception of the new.</p>
<p class="drama">
CHARMION.<br/>
A few days will remove all this;—but I fully understand you, and
feel for you. It is now ten earthly years since I underwent what you
undergo—yet the remembrance of it hangs by me still. You have now
suffered all of pain, however, which you will suffer in Aidenn.</p>
<p class="drama">
EIROS.<br/>
In Aidenn?</p>
<p class="drama">
CHARMION.<br/>
In Aidenn.</p>
<p class="drama">
EIROS.<br/>
Oh God!—pity me, Charmion!—I am overburthened with the majesty
of all things—of the unknown now known—of the speculative
Future merged in the august and certain Present.</p>
<p class="drama">
CHARMION.<br/>
Grapple not now with such thoughts. To-morrow we will speak of this. Your
mind wavers, and its agitation will find relief in the exercise of simple
memories. Look not around, nor forward—but back. I am burning with
anxiety to hear the details of that stupendous event which threw you among
us. Tell me of it. Let us converse of familiar things, in the old familiar
language of the world which has so fearfully perished.</p>
<p class="drama">
EIROS.<br/>
Most fearfully, fearfully!—this is indeed no dream.</p>
<p class="drama">
CHARMION.<br/>
Dreams are no more. Was I much mourned, my Eiros?</p>
<p class="drama">
EIROS.<br/>
Mourned, Charmion?—oh deeply. To that last hour of all, there hung a
cloud of intense gloom and devout sorrow over your household.</p>
<p class="drama">
CHARMION.<br/>
And that last hour—speak of it. Remember that, beyond the naked fact
of the catastrophe itself, I know nothing. When, coming out from among
mankind, I passed into Night through the Grave—at that period, if I
remember aright, the calamity which overwhelmed you was utterly
unanticipated. But, indeed, I knew little of the speculative philosophy of
the day.</p>
<p class="drama">
EIROS.<br/>
The individual calamity was as you say entirely unanticipated; but
analogous misfortunes had been long a subject of discussion with
astronomers. I need scarce tell you, my friend, that, even when you left
us, men had agreed to understand those passages in the most holy writings
which speak of the final destruction of all things by fire, as having
reference to the orb of the earth alone. But in regard to the immediate
agency of the ruin, speculation had been at fault from that epoch in
astronomical knowledge in which the comets were divested of the terrors of
flame. The very moderate density of these bodies had been well
established. They had been observed to pass among the satellites of
Jupiter, without bringing about any sensible alteration either in the
masses or in the orbits of these secondary planets. We had long regarded
the wanderers as vapory creations of inconceivable tenuity, and as
altogether incapable of doing injury to our substantial globe, even in the
event of contact. But contact was not in any degree dreaded; for the
elements of all the comets were accurately known. That among them we
should look for the agency of the threatened fiery destruction had been
for many years considered an inadmissible idea. But wonders and wild
fancies had been, of late days, strangely rife among mankind; and,
although it was only with a few of the ignorant that actual apprehension
prevailed, upon the announcement by astronomers of a new comet, yet this
announcement was generally received with I know not what of agitation and
mistrust.</p>
<p>The elements of the strange orb were immediately calculated, and it was at
once conceded by all observers, that its path, at perihelion, would bring
it into very close proximity with the earth. There were two or three
astronomers, of secondary note, who resolutely maintained that a contact
was inevitable. I cannot very well express to you the effect of this
intelligence upon the people. For a few short days they would not believe
an assertion which their intellect so long employed among worldly
considerations could not in any manner grasp. But the truth of a vitally
important fact soon makes its way into the understanding of even the most
stolid. Finally, all men saw that astronomical knowledge lied not, and
they awaited the comet. Its approach was not, at first, seemingly rapid;
nor was its appearance of very unusual character. It was of a dull red,
and had little perceptible train. For seven or eight days we saw no
material increase in its apparent diameter, and but a partial alteration
in its color. Meantime, the ordinary affairs of men were discarded and all
interests absorbed in a growing discussion, instituted by the philosophic,
in respect to the cometary nature. Even the grossly ignorant aroused their
sluggish capacities to such considerations. The learned now gave their
intellect—their soul—to no such points as the allaying of
fear, or to the sustenance of loved theory. They sought—they panted
for right views. They groaned for perfected knowledge. Truth arose in the
purity of her strength and exceeding majesty, and the wise bowed down and
adored.</p>
<p>That material injury to our globe or to its inhabitants would result from
the apprehended contact, was an opinion which hourly lost ground among the
wise; and the wise were now freely permitted to rule the reason and the
fancy of the crowd. It was demonstrated, that the density of the comet’s
nucleus was far less than that of our rarest gas; and the harmless passage
of a similar visitor among the satellites of Jupiter was a point strongly
insisted upon, and which served greatly to allay terror. Theologists with
an earnestness fear-enkindled, dwelt upon the biblical prophecies, and
expounded them to the people with a directness and simplicity of which no
previous instance had been known. That the final destruction of the earth
must be brought about by the agency of fire, was urged with a spirit that
enforced every where conviction; and that the comets were of no fiery
nature (as all men now knew) was a truth which relieved all, in a great
measure, from the apprehension of the great calamity foretold. It is
noticeable that the popular prejudices and vulgar errors in regard to
pestilences and wars—errors which were wont to prevail upon every
appearance of a comet—were now altogether unknown. As if by some
sudden convulsive exertion, reason had at once hurled superstition from
her throne. The feeblest intellect had derived vigor from excessive
interest.</p>
<p>What minor evils might arise from the contact were points of elaborate
question. The learned spoke of slight geological disturbances, of probable
alterations in climate, and consequently in vegetation, of possible
magnetic and electric influences. Many held that no visible or perceptible
effect would in any manner be produced. While such discussions were going
on, their subject gradually approached, growing larger in apparent
diameter, and of a more brilliant lustre. Mankind grew paler as it came.
All human operations were suspended.</p>
<p>There was an epoch in the course of the general sentiment when the comet
had attained, at length, a size surpassing that of any previously recorded
visitation. The people now, dismissing any lingering hope that the
astronomers were wrong, experienced all the certainty of evil. The
chimerical aspect of their terror was gone. The hearts of the stoutest of
our race beat violently within their bosoms. A very few days sufficed,
however, to merge even such feelings in sentiments more unendurable We
could no longer apply to the strange orb any accustomed thoughts. Its
historical attributes had disappeared. It oppressed us with a hideous
novelty of emotion. We saw it not as an astronomical phenomenon in the
heavens, but as an incubus upon our hearts, and a shadow upon our brains.
It had taken, with inconceivable rapidity, the character of a gigantic
mantle of rare flame, extending from horizon to horizon.</p>
<p>Yet a day, and men breathed with greater freedom. It was clear that we
were already within the influence of the comet; yet we lived. We even felt
an unusual elasticity of frame and vivacity of mind. The exceeding tenuity
of the object of our dread was apparent; for all heavenly objects were
plainly visible through it. Meantime, our vegetation had perceptibly
altered; and we gained faith, from this predicted circumstance, in the
foresight of the wise. A wild luxuriance of foliage, utterly unknown
before, burst out upon every vegetable thing.</p>
<p>Yet another day—and the evil was not altogether upon us. It was now
evident that its nucleus would first reach us. A wild change had come over
all men; and the first sense of pain was the wild signal for general
lamentation and horror. This first sense of pain lay in a rigorous
constriction of the breast and lungs, and an insufferable dryness of the
skin. It could not be denied that our atmosphere was radically affected;
the conformation of this atmosphere and the possible modifications to
which it might be subjected, were now the topics of discussion. The result
of investigation sent an electric thrill of the intensest terror through
the universal heart of man.</p>
<p>It had been long known that the air which encircled us was a compound of
oxygen and nitrogen gases, in the proportion of twenty-one measures of
oxygen, and seventy-nine of nitrogen in every one hundred of the
atmosphere. Oxygen, which was the principle of combustion, and the vehicle
of heat, was absolutely necessary to the support of animal life, and was
the most powerful and energetic agent in nature. Nitrogen, on the
contrary, was incapable of supporting either animal life or flame. An
unnatural excess of oxygen would result, it had been ascertained in just
such an elevation of the animal spirits as we had latterly experienced. It
was the pursuit, the extension of the idea, which had engendered awe. What
would be the result of a total extraction of the nitrogen? A combustion
irresistible, all-devouring, omni-prevalent, immediate;—the entire
fulfilment, in all their minute and terrible details, of the fiery and
horror-inspiring denunciations of the prophecies of the Holy Book.</p>
<p>Why need I paint, Charmion, the now disenchained frenzy of mankind? That
tenuity in the comet which had previously inspired us with hope, was now
the source of the bitterness of despair. In its impalpable gaseous
character we clearly perceived the consummation of Fate. Meantime a day
again passed—bearing away with it the last shadow of Hope. We gasped
in the rapid modification of the air. The red blood bounded tumultuously
through its strict channels. A furious delirium possessed all men; and,
with arms rigidly outstretched towards the threatening heavens, they
trembled and shrieked aloud. But the nucleus of the destroyer was now upon
us; even here in Aidenn, I shudder while I speak. Let me be brief—brief
as the ruin that overwhelmed. For a moment there was a wild lurid light
alone, visiting and penetrating all things. Then—let us bow down,
Charmion, before the excessive majesty of the great God!—then, there
came a shouting and pervading sound, as if from the mouth itself of HIM;
while the whole incumbent mass of ether in which we existed, burst at once
into a species of intense flame, for whose surpassing brilliancy and
all-fervid heat even the angels in the high Heaven of pure knowledge have
no name. Thus ended all.</p>
<h2><SPAN name="chap4.23"></SPAN>SHADOW—A PARABLE</h2>
<p class="letter">
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the <i>Shadow.</i><br/>
—<i>Psalm of David</i>.</p>
<p>Ye who read are still among the living; but I who write shall have long
since gone my way into the region of shadows. For indeed strange things
shall happen, and secret things be known, and many centuries shall pass
away, ere these memorials be seen of men. And, when seen, there will be
some to disbelieve, and some to doubt, and yet a few who will find much to
ponder upon in the characters here graven with a stylus of iron.</p>
<p>The year had been a year of terror, and of feelings more intense than
terror for which there is no name upon the earth. For many prodigies and
signs had taken place, and far and wide, over sea and land, the black
wings of the Pestilence were spread abroad. To those, nevertheless,
cunning in the stars, it was not unknown that the heavens wore an aspect
of ill; and to me, the Greek Oinos, among others, it was evident that now
had arrived the alternation of that seven hundred and ninety-fourth year
when, at the entrance of Aries, the planet Jupiter is conjoined with the
red ring of the terrible Saturnus. The peculiar spirit of the skies, if I
mistake not greatly, made itself manifest, not only in the physical orb of
the earth, but in the souls, imaginations, and meditations of mankind.</p>
<p>Over some flasks of the red Chian wine, within the walls of a noble hall,
in a dim city called Ptolemais, we sat, at night, a company of seven. And
to our chamber there was no entrance save by a lofty door of brass: and
the door was fashioned by the artisan Corinnos, and, being of rare
workmanship, was fastened from within. Black draperies, likewise, in the
gloomy room, shut out from our view the moon, the lurid stars, and the
peopleless streets—but the boding and the memory of Evil, they would
not be so excluded. There were things around us and about of which I can
render no distinct account—things material and spiritual—heaviness
in the atmosphere—a sense of suffocation—anxiety—and,
above all, that terrible state of existence which the nervous experience
when the senses are keenly living and awake, and meanwhile the powers of
thought lie dormant. A dead weight hung upon us. It hung upon our limbs—upon
the household furniture—upon the goblets from which we drank; and
all things were depressed, and borne down thereby—all things save
only the flames of the seven lamps which illumined our revel. Uprearing
themselves in tall slender lines of light, they thus remained burning all
pallid and motionless; and in the mirror which their lustre formed upon
the round table of ebony at which we sat, each of us there assembled
beheld the pallor of his own countenance, and the unquiet glare in the
downcast eyes of his companions. Yet we laughed and were merry in our
proper way—which was hysterical; and sang the songs of Anacreon—which
are madness; and drank deeply—although the purple wine reminded us
of blood. For there was yet another tenant of our chamber in the person of
young Zoilus. Dead, and at full length he lay, enshrouded; the genius and
the demon of the scene. Alas! he bore no portion in our mirth, save that
his countenance, distorted with the plague, and his eyes, in which Death
had but half extinguished the fire of the pestilence, seemed to take such
interest in our merriment as the dead may haply take in the merriment of
those who are to die. But although I, Oinos, felt that the eyes of the
departed were upon me, still I forced myself not to perceive the
bitterness of their expression, and gazing down steadily into the depths
of the ebony mirror, sang with a loud and sonorous voice the songs of the
son of Teios. But gradually my songs they ceased, and their echoes,
rolling afar off among the sable draperies of the chamber, became weak,
and undistinguishable, and so faded away. And lo! from among those sable
draperies where the sounds of the song departed, there came forth a dark
and undefined shadow—a shadow such as the moon, when low in heaven,
might fashion from the figure of a man: but it was the shadow neither of
man nor of God, nor of any familiar thing. And quivering awhile among the
draperies of the room, it at length rested in full view upon the surface
of the door of brass. But the shadow was vague, and formless, and
indefinite, and was the shadow neither of man nor of God—neither God
of Greece, nor God of Chaldaea, nor any Egyptian God. And the shadow
rested upon the brazen doorway, and under the arch of the entablature of
the door, and moved not, nor spoke any word, but there became stationary
and remained. And the door whereupon the shadow rested was, if I remember
aright, over against the feet of the young Zoilus enshrouded. But we, the
seven there assembled, having seen the shadow as it came out from among
the draperies, dared not steadily behold it, but cast down our eyes, and
gazed continually into the depths of the mirror of ebony. And at length I,
Oinos, speaking some low words, demanded of the shadow its dwelling and
its appellation. And the shadow answered, “I am SHADOW, and my dwelling is
near to the Catacombs of Ptolemais, and hard by those dim plains of
Helusion which border upon the foul Charonian canal.” And then did we, the
seven, start from our seats in horror, and stand trembling, and
shuddering, and aghast, for the tones in the voice of the shadow were not
the tones of any one being, but of a multitude of beings, and, varying in
their cadences from syllable to syllable fell duskly upon our ears in the
well-remembered and familiar accents of many thousand departed friends.</p>
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