<SPAN name="chapter_15"></SPAN><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page168" title="168"> </SPAN>
<h2><span class="chapter_no" title="fifteen">XV</span><br/> A LUCKY STROKE</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph">“Mr. Munchausen,” said Ananias, as he
and the famous warrior drove off from
the first hole at the Missing Links, “you never
seem to weary of the game of golf. What is its
precise charm in your eyes,—the health-giving
qualities of the game or its capacity for bad lies?”</p>
<p>“I owe my life to it,” replied the Baron. “That
is to say to my precision as a player I owe one of
the many preservations of my existence which have
passed into history. Furthermore it is ever varying
in its interest. Like life itself it is full of
hazards and no man knows at the beginning of his
stroke what will be the requirements of the next.
I never told you of the bovine lie I got once while
playing a match with Bonaparte, did I?”</p>
<p>“I do not recall it,” said Ananias, foozling his
second stroke into the stone wall.</p>
<p>“I was playing with my friend Bonaparte, for
the Cosmopolitan Championship,” said Munchausen,
“and we were all even at the thirty-sixth hole.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page169" title="169"> </SPAN>Bonaparte had sliced his ball into a stubble field
from the tee, whereat he was inclined to swear,
until by an odd mischance I drove mine into the
throat of a bull that was pasturing on the fair
green two hundred and ninety-eight yards distant.
‘Shall we take it over?’ I asked. ‘No,’ laughed
Bonaparte, thinking he had me. ‘We must play
the game. I shall play my lie. You must play
yours.’ ‘Very well,’ said I. ‘So be it. Golf is
golf, bull or no bull.’ And off we went. It took
Bonaparte seven strokes to get on the green again,
which left me a like number to extricate my ball
from the throat of the unwelcome bovine. It was
a difficult business, but I made short work of it.
Tying my red silk handkerchief to the end of my
brassey I stepped in front of the great creature
and addressing an imaginary ball before him made
the usual swing back and through stroke. The
bull, angered by the fluttering red handkerchief,
reared up and made a dash at me. I ran in the
direction of the hole, the bull in pursuit for two
hundred yards. Here I hid behind a tree while Mr.
Bull stopped short and snorted again. Still there
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page170" title="170"> </SPAN>was no sign of the ball, and after my pursuer had
quieted a little I emerged from my hiding place
and with the same club and in the same manner
played three. The bull surprised at my temerity
threw his head back with an angry toss and tried to
bellow forth his wrath, as I had designed he should,
but the obstruction in his throat prevented him.
The ball had stuck in his pharynx. Nothing came
of his spasm but a short hacking cough and a
wheeze—then silence. ‘I’ll play four,’ I cried to
Bonaparte, who stood watching me from a place of
safety on the other side of the stone wall. Again
I swung my red-flagged brassey in front of the
angry creature’s face and what I had hoped for
followed. The second attempt at a bellow again
resulted in a hacking cough and a sneeze, and lo
the ball flew out of his throat and landed dead to
the hole. The caddies drove the bull away. Bonaparte
played eight, missed a putt for a nine, stymied
himself in a ten, holed out in twelve and I went
down in five.”</p>
<p>“Jerusalem!” cried Ananias. “What did Bonaparte
say?”</p>
<div id="illo14" class="illo">
<SPAN href="images/illo14.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illo14-thumb.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="413" alt="Baron swings a golf club at a cow" /></SPAN>
<p class="caption">“Again I swung my red-flagged brassey in
front of the angry creature’s face, and what I
had hoped for followed.” <span class="illo_ch">Chapter XV.</span></p>
</div>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page171" title="171"> </SPAN>“He delivered a short, quick nervous address in
Corsican and retired to the club-house where he
spent the afternoon drowning his sorrows in Absinthe
high-balls. ‘Great hole that, Bonaparte,’
said I when his geniality was about to return.
‘Yes,’ said he. ‘A regular lu-lu, eh?’ said I.
‘More than that, Baron,’ said he. ‘It was a Waterlooloo.’
It was the first pun I ever heard the
Emperor make.”</p>
<p>“We all have our weak moments,” said Ananias
drily, playing nine from behind the wall. “I give
the hole up,” he added angrily.</p>
<p>“Let’s play it out anyhow,” said Munchausen,
playing three to the green.</p>
<p>“All right,” Ananias agreed, taking a ten and
rimming the cup.</p>
<p>Munchausen took three to go down, scoring six
in all.</p>
<p>“Two up,” said he, as Ananias putted out in
eleven.</p>
<p>“How the deuce do you make that out? This is
only the first hole,” cried Ananias with some show
of heat.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page172" title="172"> </SPAN>“You gave up a hole, didn’t you?” demanded
Munchausen.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“And I won a hole, didn’t I?”</p>
<p>“You did—but—”</p>
<p>“Well that’s two holes. Fore!” cried Munchausen.</p>
<p>The two walked along in silence for a few minutes,
and the Baron resumed.</p>
<p>“Yes, golf is a splendid game and I love it,
though I don’t think I’d ever let a good canvasback
duck get cold while I was talking about it.
When I have a canvasback duck before me I don’t
think of anything else while it’s there. But unquestionably
I’m fond of golf, and I have a very
good reason to be. It has done a great deal for me,
and as I have already told you, once it really saved
my life.”</p>
<p>“Saved your life, eh?” said Ananias.</p>
<p>“That’s what I said,” returned Mr. Munchausen,
“and so of course that is the way it was.”</p>
<p>“I should admire to hear the details,” said Ananias.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page173" title="173"> </SPAN>“I presume you were going into a decline
and it restored your strength and vitality.”</p>
<p>“No,” said Mr. Munchausen, “it wasn’t that
way at all. It saved my life when I was attacked
by a fierce and ravenously hungry lion. If I hadn’t
known how to play golf it would have been farewell
forever to Mr. Munchausen, and Mr. Lion
would have had a fine luncheon that day, at which
I should have been the turkey and cranberry sauce
and mince pie all rolled into one.”</p>
<p>Ananias laughed.</p>
<p>“It’s easy enough to laugh at my peril now,”
said Mr. Munchausen, “but if you’d been with me
you wouldn’t have laughed very much. On the
contrary, Ananias, you’d have ruined what little
voice you ever had screeching.”</p>
<p>“I wasn’t laughing at the danger you were in,”
said Ananias. “I don’t see anything funny in
that. What I was laughing at was the idea of a
lion turning up on a golf course. They don’t have
lions on any of the golf courses that I am familiar
with.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page174" title="174"> </SPAN>“That may be, my dear Ananias,” said Mr. Munchausen,
“but it doesn’t prove anything. What
you are familiar with has no especial bearing upon
the ordering of the Universe. They had lions by
the hundreds on the particular links I refer to. I
laid the links out myself and I fancy I know what
I am talking about. They were in the desert of
Sahara. And I tell you what it is,” he added,
slapping his knee enthusiastically, “they were the
finest links I ever played on. There wasn’t a hole
shorter than three miles and a quarter, which gives
you plenty of elbow room, and the fair green had
all the qualities of a first class billiard table, so
that your ball got a magnificent roll on it.”</p>
<p>“What did you do for hazards?” asked Ananias.</p>
<p>“Oh we had ’em by the dozen,” replied Mr. Munchausen.
“There weren’t any ponds or stone
walls, of course, but there were plenty of others
that were quite as interesting. There was the
Sphynx for instance; and for bunkers the pyramids
can’t be beaten. Then occasionally right in
the middle of a game a caravan ten or twelve miles
long, would begin to drag its interminable length
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page175" title="175"> </SPAN>across the middle of the course, and it takes mighty
nice work with the lofting iron to lift a ball over a
caravan without hitting a camel or killing an Arab,
I can tell you. Then finally I’m sure I don’t know
of any more hazardous hazard for a golf player—or
for anybody else for that matter—than a real
hungry African lion out in search of breakfast,
especially when you meet him on the hole furthest
from home and have a stretch of three or four miles
between him and assistance with no revolver or
other weapon at hand. That’s hazard enough for
me and it took the best work I could do with my
brassey to get around it.”</p>
<p>“You always were strong at a brassey lie,” said
Ananias.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said Mr. Munchausen. “There
are few lies I can’t get around. But on this morning
I was playing for the Mid-African Championship.
I’d been getting along splendidly. My
record for fifteen holes was about seven hundred
and eighty-three strokes, and I was flattering myself
that I was about to turn in the best card that
had ever been seen in a medal play contest in all
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page176" title="176"> </SPAN>Africa. My drive from the sixteenth tee was a
simple beauty. I thought the ball would never
stop, I hit it such a tremendous whack. It had a
flight of three hundred and eighty-two yards and a
roll of one hundred and twenty more, and when it
finally stopped it turned up in a mighty good lie
on a natural tee, which the wind had swirled up.
Calling to the monkey who acted as my caddy—we
used monkeys for caddies always in Africa, and
they were a great success because they don’t talk
and they use their tails as a sort of extra hand,—I
got out my brassey for the second stroke, took my
stance on the hardened sand, swung my club back,
fixed my eye on the ball and was just about to carry
through, when I heard a sound which sent my heart
into my boots, my caddy galloping back to the club
house, and set my teeth chattering like a pair of
castanets. It was unmistakable, that sound. When
a hungry lion roars you know precisely what it is
the moment you hear it, especially if you have
heard it before. It doesn’t sound a bit like the
miauing of a cat; nor is it suggestive of the rumble
of artillery in an adjacent street. There is no mistaking
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page177" title="177"> </SPAN>it for distant thunder, as some writers would
have you believe. It has none of the gently mournful
quality that characterises the soughing of the
wind through the leafless branches of the autumnal
forest, to which a poet might liken it; it is just a
plain lion-roaring and nothing else, and when you
hear it you know it. The man who mistakes it for
distant thunder might just as well be struck by
lightning there and then for all the chance he has
to get away from it ultimately. The poet who confounds
it with the gentle soughing breeze never
lives to tell about it. He gets himself eaten up for
his foolishness. It doesn’t require a Daniel come
to judgment to recognise a lion’s roar on sight.</p>
<p>“I should have perished myself that morning if
I had not known on the instant just what were the
causes of the disturbance. My nerve did not desert
me, however, frightened as I was. I stopped
my play and looked out over the sand in the direction
whence the roaring came, and there he stood
a perfect picture of majesty, and a giant among
lions, eyeing me critically as much as to say, ‘Well
this is luck, here’s breakfast fit for a king!’ but he
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page178" title="178"> </SPAN>reckoned without his host. I was in no mood to
be served up to stop his ravening appetite and I
made up my mind at once to stay and fight. I’m a
good runner, Ananias, but I cannot beat a lion
in a three mile sprint on a sandy soil, so fight it
was. The question was how. My caddy gone, the
only weapons I had with me were my brassey and
that one little gutta percha ball, but thanks to my
golf they were sufficient.</p>
<p>“Carefully calculating the distance at which the
huge beast stood, I addressed the ball with unusual
care, aiming slightly to the left to overcome my
tendency to slice, and drove the ball straight
through the lion’s heart as he poised himself on his
hind legs ready to spring upon me. It was a superb
stroke and not an instant too soon, for just as
the ball struck him he sprang forward, and even as
it was landed but two feet away from where I stood,
but, I am happy to say, dead.</p>
<p>“It was indeed a narrow escape, and it tried my
nerves to the full, but I extracted the ball and resumed
my play in a short while, adding the lucky
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page179" title="179"> </SPAN>stroke to my score meanwhile. But I lost the
match,—not because I lost my nerve, for this I did
not do, but because I lifted from the lion’s heart.
The committee disqualified me because I did not
play from my lie and the cup went to my competitor.
However, I was satisfied to have escaped
with my life. I’d rather be a live runner-up than
a dead champion any day.”</p>
<p>“A wonderful experience,” said Ananias. “Perfectly
wonderful. I never heard of a stroke to
equal that.”</p>
<p>“You are too modest, Ananias,” said Mr. Munchausen
drily. “Too modest by half. You and
Sapphira hold the record for that, you know.”</p>
<p>“I have forgotten the episode,” said Ananias.</p>
<p>“Didn’t you and she make your last hole on a
single stroke?” demanded Munchausen with an inward
chuckle.</p>
<p>“Oh—yes,” said Ananias grimly, as he recalled
the incident. “But you know we didn’t win any
more than you did.”</p>
<p>“Oh, didn’t you?” asked Munchausen.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page180" title="180"> </SPAN>“No,” replied Ananias. “You forget that Sapphira
and I were two down at the finish.”</p>
<p>And Mr. Munchausen played the rest of the game
in silence. Ananias had at last got the best of him.</p>
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