WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Black Beetles in Amber cover

Black Beetles in Amber

Chapter 170: SLICKENS
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The collection gathers short poems, sketches, and satirical vignettes that blend bitter humor, morbid imagination, and pointed social criticism. Many pieces turn on mortality, revenge, and ironic justice, employing grotesque or supernatural imagery and concise, epigrammatic endings. Political and cultural targets are skewered with sarcasm, while lyrical interludes and philosophical reflections punctuate the tone. Overall the volume alternates whimsy and cynicism, offering compact explorations of human folly, moral ambiguity, and the absurdities of public life.

SLICKENS

  DRAMATIS PERSONF.

  HAYSEED                                          a Granger  NOZZLE                                             a Miner  RINGDIVVY                                      a Statesman  FEEGOBBLE                                         a Lawyer  JUNKET                                         a Committee
  Scene—Yuba Dam.

  Feegobble, Ringdivvy, Nozzle.
  NOZZLE:

  My friends, since '51 I have pursued
  The evil tenor of my watery way,
  Removing hills as by an act of faith—

  RINGDIVVY:

  Just so; the steadfast faith of those who hold,
  In foreign lands beyond the Eastern sea,
  The shares in your concern—a simple, blind,
  Unreasoning belief in dividends,
  Still stimulated by assessments which,
  When the skies fall, ensnaring all the larks,
  Will bring, no doubt, a very great return.

  ALL (singing):

          O the beautiful assessment,
          The exquisite assessment,
          The regular assessment,
            That makes the water flow.

  RINGDIVVY:

          The rascally-assessment!

  FEEGOBBLE:

          The murderous assessment!

  NOZZLE:

          The glorious assessment
            That makes my mare to go!

  FEEGOBBLE:

  But, Nozzle, you, I think, were on the point
  Of making a remark about some rights—
  Some certain vested rights you have acquired
  By long immunity; for still the law
  Holds that if one do evil undisturbed
  His right to do so ripens with the years;
  And one may be a villain long enough
  To make himself an honest gentleman.

  ALL (singing):

          Hail, holy law,
          The soul with awe
            Bows to thy dispensation.

  NOZZLE:

          It breaks my jaw!

  RINGDIVVY:

          It qualms my maw!

  FEEGOBBLE:

          It feeds my jaw,
          It crams my maw,
            It is my soul's salvation!

  NOZZLE:

  Why, yes, I've floated mountains to the sea
  For lo! these many years; though some, they say,
  Do strand themselves along the bottom lands
  And cover up a village here and there,
  And here and there a ranch. 'Tis said, indeed,
  The granger with his female and his young
  Do not infrequently go to the dickens
  By premature burial in slickens.

  ALL (singing):

          Could slickens forever
          Choke up the river,
          And slime's endeavor
            Be tried on grain,
          How small the measure
          Of granger's treasure,
            How keen his pain!

  RINGDIVVY:

  "A consummation devoutly to be wished!"
  These rascal grangers would long since have been
  Submerged in slimes, to the last man of them,
  But for the fact that all their wicked tribes
  Affect our legislation with their bribes.

  ALL (singing):

          O bribery's great—
          'Tis a pillar of State,
            And the people they are free.

  FEEGOBBLE:

          It smashes my slate!

  NOZZLE:

          It is thievery straight!

  RINGDIVVY:

          But it's been the making of me!

  NOZZLE:

  I judge by certain shrewd sensations here
  In these callosities I call my thumbs—
  thrilling sense as of ten thousand pins,
  Red-hot and penetrant, transpiercing all
  The cuticle and tickling through the nerves—
  That some malign and awful thing draws near.

                                     (Enter Hayseed.)

  Good Lord! here are the ghosts and spooks of all
  The grangers I have decently interred,
  Rolled into one!

  FEEGOBBLE:

                  Plead, phantom.

  RINGDIVVY:

                                     You've the floor.

  HAYSEED:

        From the margin of the river
        (Bitter Creek, they sometimes call it)
        Where I cherished once the pumpkin,
        And the summer squash promoted,
        Harvested the sweet potato,
        Dallied with the fatal melon
        And subdued the fierce cucumber,
        I've been driven by the slickens,
        Driven by the slimes and tailings!
        All my family—my Polly
        Ann and all my sons and daughters,
        Dog and baby both included—
        All were swamped in seas of slickens,
        Buried fifty fathoms under,
        Where they lie, prepared to play their
        Gentle prank on geologic
        Gents that shall exhume them later,
        In the dim and distant future,
        Taking them for melancholy
        Relics antedating Adam.
        I alone got up and dusted.

  NOZZLE:

  Avaunt! you horrid and infernal cuss!
  What dire distress have you prepared for us?

  RINGDIVVY:

      Were I a buzzard stooping from the sky
        My craw with filth to fill,
      Into your honorable body I
        Would introduce a bill.

  FEEGOBBLE:

  Defendant, hence, or, by the gods, I'll brain thee!—
  Unless you saved some turneps to retain me.

  HAYSEED:

  As I was saying, I got up and dusted,
  My ranch a graveyard and my business busted!
  But hearing that a fellow from the City,
  Who calls himself a Citizens' Committee,
  Was coming up to play the very dickens,
  With those who cover up our farms with slickens,
  And make himself—unless I am in error—
  To all such miscreants a holy terror,
  I thought if I would join the dialogue
  I maybe might get payment for my dog.

  ALL (Singing):

  O the dog is the head of Creation,
    Prime work of the Master's hand;
  He hasn't a known occupation,
    Yet lives on the fat of the land.
  Adipose, indolent, sleek and orbicular,
  Sun-soaken, door matted, cross and particular,
  Men, women, children, all coddle and wait on him,
  Then, accidentally shutting the gate on him,
  Miss from their calves, ever after, the rifted out
  Mouthful of tendons that doggy has lifted out!
                                (Enter Junket.)

  JUNKET:

  Well met, my hearties! I must trouble you
  Jointly and severally to provide
  A comfortable carriage, with relays
  Of hardy horses. This Committee means
  To move in state about the country here.
  I shall expect at every place I stop
  Good beds, of course, and everything that's nice,
  With bountiful repast of meat and wine.
  For this Committee comes to sea and mark
  And inwardly digest.

  HAYSEED:

                     Digest my dog!

  NOZZLE:

  First square my claim for damages: the gold
  Escaping with the slickens keeps me poor!

  RINGDIVVY:

  I merely would remark that if you'd grease
  My itching palm it would more glibly glide
  Into the public pocket.

  FEEGOBBLE:

                     Sir, the wheels
  Of justice move but slowly till they're oiled.
  I have some certain writs and warrants here,
  Prepared against your advent. You recall
  The tale of Zaccheus, who did climb a tree,
  And Jesus said: "Come down"?

  JUNKET:

                     Why, bless your souls!
  I've got no money; I but came to see
  What all this noisy babble is about,
  Make a report and file the same away.

  NOZZLE, RINGDIVVY, FEEGOBBLE, HAYSEED:

  How'll that help us? Reports are not our style
  Of provender!

  JUNKET:

                     Well, you can gnaw the file.

                      (Curtain.)
  "PEACEABLE EXPULSION"
  DRAMATIS PERSONF.

  MOUNTWAVE                a Politician  HARDHAND                 a Workingman  TOK BAK                    a Chinaman  SATAN           a Friend to Mountwave
  CHORUS OF FOREIGN VOTERS.
  MOUNTWAVE:

  My friend, I beg that you will lend your ears
  (I know 'tis asking a good deal of you)
  While I for your instruction nominate
  Some certain wrongs you suffer. Men like you
  Imperfectly are sensible of all
  The miseries they actually feel.
  Hence, Providence has prudently raised up
  Clear-sighted men like me to diagnose
  Their cases and inform them where they're hurt.
  The wounds of honest workingmen I've made
  A specialty, and probing them's my trade.

  HARDHAND:

  Well, Mister, s'pose you let yer bossest eye
  Camp on my mortal part awhile; then you
  Jes' toot my sufferin's an' tell me what's
  The fashionable caper now in writhes—
  The very swellest wiggle.

  MOUNTWAVE:

                                 Well, my lad,
  'Tis plain as is the long, conspicuous nose
  Borne, ponderous and pendulous, between
  The elephant's remarkable eye-teeth
                                     (Enter Tok Bak.)
  That Chinese competition's what ails you.

  BOTH (Singing):

              O pig-tail Celestial,
              O barbarous bestial,
                Abominable Chinee!
              Simian fellow man,
              Primitive yellow man,
                Joshian devotee!
              Shoe-and-cigar machine,
              Oleomargarine
                You are, and butter are we—
              Fat of the land are we,
                Salt of the earth;
              In God's image planned to be—
                Noble in birth!
              You, on the contrary,
              Modeled upon very
                Different lines indeed,
              Show in conspicuous,
              Base and ridiculous
                Ways your inferior breed.
              Wretched apology,
              Shame of ethnology,
                Monster unspeakably low!
              Fit to be buckshotted—
              Be you 'steboycotted.
                Vanish—vamoose—mosy—Go!

  TOK BAK:

  You listen me! You beatee the big dlum
  An' tell me go to Flowly Kingdom Come.
  You all too muchee fool. You chinnee heap.
  Such talkee like my washee—belly cheap!
                            (Enter Satan.)
  You dlive me outee clunty towns all way;
  Why you no tackle me Safflisco, hay?

  SATAN:

  Methought I heard a murmuring of tongues
  Sound through the ceiling of the hollow earth,
  As if the anti-coolie ques——ha! friends,
  Well met. You see I keep my ancient word:
  Where two or three are gathered in my name,
  There am I in their midst.

  MOUNTWAVE:

                             O monstrous thief!
  To quote the words of Shakespeare as your own.
  I know his work.

  HARDHAND:

                   Who's Shakespeare?—what's his trade?
  I've heard about the work o' that galoot
  Till I'm jest sick!

  TOK BAK:

                      Go Sunny school—you'll know
  Mo' Bible. Bime by pleach—hell-talkee. Tell
  'Bout Abel—mebby so he live too cheap.
  He mebby all time dig on lanch—no dlink,
  No splee—no go plocession fo' make vote—
  No sendee money out of clunty fo'
  To helpee Ilishmen. Cain killum. Josh
  He catchee at it, an' he belly mad—
  Say: "Allee Melicans boycottee Cain."
  Not muchee—you no pleachee that:
  You all same lie.

  MOUNTWAVE:

                     This cuss must be expelled.
                                     (Draws pistol.)

  MOUNTWAVE, HARDHAND, SATAN (singing):

      For Chinese expulsion, hurrah!
        To mobbing and murder, all hail!
      Away with your justice and law—
        We'll make every pagan turn tail.

  CHORUS OF FOREIGN VOTERS:

      Bedad! oof dot tief o'ze vorld—
      Zat Ivan Tchanay vos got hurled
      In Hella, da debil he say:
     "Wor be yer return pairmit, hey?"
      Und gry as 'e shaka da boot:
     "Zis haythen haf nevaire been oot!"

  HARDHAND:

  Too many cooks are working at this broth—
  I think, by thunder, t'will be mostly froth!
  I'm cussed ef I can sarvy, up to date,
  What good this dern fandango does the State.

  MOUNTWAVE:

  The State's advantage, sir, you may not see,
  But think how good it is for me.

  SATAN:

                                  And me.

                   (Curtain.)