Daily ope the portal; let
To insure the safety of the
traveling public, the Maroon Taxicab Company is putting out a line of
armored cabs. These will also be equipped with automatic brakes, so that
when a driver for a [p 92] />rival
taxicab company shoots a Maroon, the cab will come to a stop.
A neat and serviceable
Christmas gift is a sawed-off shotgun. Carried in your limousine, it may
aid in saving your jewels when returning from the opera.
“The entertainment
committee of the Union League Club,” so it says, “is with
considerable effort spending some of your money to please you.” In
the clubs to which we belong there is no observable effort.
Certain toadstools are colored
a pizenous pink underneath; a shade which is also found on the cheeks of
damosels and dames whom you see on the avenue. Poor kalsomining, we call
it.
When we begin to read a book we
begin with the title page; but many people, probably most, begin at
“Chapter I.” We have recommended books to friends, and they
have read them; and then they have said, “Tell me something about
the author.” The preface would have told them, but they do not
read prefaces. Do you?
Although ongweed to the
extinction point by the subject of names, we have no right to assume
that the subject is not of lively interest to other [p 93] />people. So let
it be recorded that George Demon was arrested in Council Bluffs for
beating his wife. Also, Miss Elsie Hugger is director of dancing in the
Ithaca Conservatory of Music. Furthermore, S. W. Henn of the Iowa
State College was selected as a judge for the National Poultry Show.
Moreover, G. O. Wildhack is in the automobile business in
Indianapolis, and Mrs. Cataract takes in washing in Peoria. Sleepy
weather, isn’t it?
SUCH A ONE MIGHT HAVE DRAWN PRIAM’S CURTAIN IN THE DEAD OF NIGHT,
AND TOLD HIM HALF HIS TROY WAS BURNED.
[From the Eagle Grove,
Ia., Eagle.]
The Rev. Winter was pastor of the M. E. Church many years ago, at the time it was destroyed by a cyclone. Engineer Sam Wood broke the news to Mr. Winter gently by shouting: “Your church has all blown to hell, Elder!”
THE ENRAPTURED REPORTER.
[From the Lewisville, Ark.,
Recorder.]
The evening was most propitious. The air was balmy. The fragrance of flowers was patent in the breeze. The limpid moonlight, in a glow of beauty, kissed the hills and valleys. While from the vines and bushes the merry twitter of playful birds, symphonies soft and low, entranced with other delight, the romantic party goers. Now a [p 94] />still other delight was in store—some fine music and good singing, which every recipient enjoyed to the highest note. Thanks and compliments for such a model evening were ornate and lavish and all left truly glad that they had been.
FULL OF HIS SUBJECT.
[From the Evansville, Ind., Courier.]
Dr. Hamilton A. Hymes, pastor of Grace Memorial Presbyterian church, has recovered from a recent illness, caused from a carbuncle on his neck. His subject for Sunday night will be “Is There a Hell?”
THAT TRIOLET DRIVEL.
For we always let go
Sir Oliver Lodge has seen so
many tables move and heard so many tambourines, that he now keeps an
open mind on miracles. We hope he believes that the three angels
appeared to Joan of Arc, as that is our favorite miracle. Had they
appeared only once we might have doubted the apparition; but, as we
remember the story, they appeared three times.
Sir Oliver may be interested in
a case reported to us by L. J. S. His company had issued a
tourist policy to a lady who lost her trunk on the way to Tulsa, Okla.,
and who put in a claim for $800. The adjuster at Dallas wrote:
“Assured is the famous mind reader, and one of her best stunts is answering questions in regard to the location of stolen property, but she was unable to be of any assistance to me.”
Some of the members of the
Cosmopolitan club are about as cosmopolitan as the inhabitants of
Cosmopolis, Mich.
At the request of a benedick we
are rushing to the Cannery by parcel-post Jar 617: “Don’t
they make a nice-looking couple!”
[p
96]
ENGLISH
AS SHE IS MURDERED.
Sir: After Pedagogicus’ class gets through with Senator Borah’s masterpiece, it might look over this legend which the Herald and Examiner has been carrying: “Buy bonds like the victors fought.” E. E. E.
The Illinois War Savings
Bulletin speaks of “personal self-interest.” This means you!
“Graduation from the
worst to the best stuff,” is Mr. W. L. George’s method
of acquiring literary taste. Something can be said for the method, and
Mr. George says it well, and we are sorry, in a manner of speaking, not
to believe a word of it; unless, as is possible, we both believe the
same thing fundamentally. Taste, in literature and music, and in other
things, is, we are quite sure, natural. It can be trained, but this
training is a matter of new discoveries. A taste that has to be led by
steps from Owen Meredith to George Meredith, which could not recognize
the worth of the latter before passing through the former, is no true
taste. Graduation from the simple to the complex is compatible with a
natural taste, but this simple may be first class, as much music and
literature is. New forms of beauty may puzzle the possessor of natural
taste, but not for long. He does not require preparation in inferior
stuff.
[p 97]
Speaking of George Meredith, we are told again (they
dig the thing up every two or three years) that, when a reader for
Chapman & Hall, he turned down “East Lynne,” “Erewhon,”
and other books that afterward became celebrated. What of it? Meredith
may not have known anything about literature, but he knew what he liked.
Moreover, he was a marked and original writer, and as that tolerant
soul, Jules Lemaitre, has noted, the most marked and original of writers
are those who do not understand everything, nor feel everything, nor
love everything, but those whose knowledge, intelligence, and tastes
have definite limitations.
BUT WOULD IT NOT REQUIRE A GEOLOGIC PERIOD?
Sir: You are kind enough to refer to my lecture on “Literary Taste and How to Acquire It.” I venture to suggest that your summary—viz.: “It is to read only first-class stuff,” not only fails to meet the problem, but represents exactly the view that I am out to demolish. If, as I presume, you mean that the ambitious person who now reads Harold Bell Wright should sit down to the works of Shakespeare, I can tell you at once that the process will be a failure. My method is one of graduation from the worst to the best stuff. W. L. George.
[p 98]
We do not wish to crab W. L. George’s act,
“Literary Taste and How to Acquire It,” but we know the
answer. It is to read only first-class stuff. Circumstances may oblige a
man to write second-class books, but there is no reason why he should
read such.
THE STORM.
(By a girl of ten years.)
The little poet of the foregoing knew where she was going, which is more than can be said for many modern bards.
THE EIGHTH VEIL.
(By J-mes Hun-k-r.)
There was a wedding under way. From the bright-lit mansion came the evocations of a loud bassoon. Ulick Guffle, in whom the thought of matrimony always produced a bitter nausea, glowered upon the house and spat acridly upon the [p 99] />pave. “Imbeciles! Humbugs! Romantic rot!” he raged.
Three young men drew toward the scene. Ulick barred their way, but two of the trio slipped by him and escaped. The third was nailed by Guffle’s glittering eye. Ulick laid an ineluctable hand upon the stranger’s arm. “Listen!” he commanded. “Matrimony and Art are sworn and natural foes. Ingeborg Bunck was right; there are no illegitimate children; all children are valid. Sounds like Lope de Vega, doesn’t it? But it isn’t. It is Bunck. Whitman, too, divined the truth. Love is a germ; sunlight kills it. It needs l’obscurité and a high temperature. As Baudelaire said—or was it Maurice Barrès?—dans la nuit tous les chats sont gris. Remy de Gourmont …”
The wedding guest beat his shirtfront; he could hear the bassoon doubling the cello. But Ulick continued ineluctably. “Woman is a sink of iniquity. Only Gounod is more loathsome. That Ave Maria—Grand Dieu! But Frédéric Chopin, nuance, cadence, appoggiatura—there you have it. En amour, les vieux fous sont plus fous que les jeunes. Listen to Rochefoucauld! And Montaigne has said, C’est le jouir et non le posséder qui rend heureux. And Pascal has added, Les affaires sont les affaires. As for Stendhal, Flaubert, Nietzsche, Edgar Saltus, Balzac, Gautier, [p 100] />Dostoievsky, Rabelais, Maupassant, Anatole France, Bourget, Turgenev, Verlaine, Renan, Walter Pater, Landor, Cardinal Newman and the Brothers Goncourt …”
Ulick seized his head with both hands, and the wedding guest seized the opportunity to beat it, as the saying is. “Swine!” Ulick flung after him. “Swine, before whom I have cast a hatful of pearls!” He spat even more acridly upon the pave and turned away. “After all,” he growled, “Stendhal was right. Or was it Huysmans? No, it was neither. It was Cambronne.”
Though there has been little
enough to encourage it, the world is growing kinder; at least
friendliness is increasing. Every other day we read of some woman living
pleasantly in a well appointed apartment, supplied with fine raiment and
an automobile, the fruit of Platonism. “No,” she testifies,
“there was nothing between us. He was merely a friend.”
What heaven hath cleansed let
no man put asunder. Emma Durdy and Raymond Bathe, of Nokomis, have been
j. in the h. b. of w.
THE TRACERS ARE AT WORK.
Sir: Please consult the genealogical files of the Academy and advise me if Mr. Harm Poppen of [p 101] />Gurley, Nebraska, is a lineal descendant of the w. k. Helsa Poppen, famous in profane history. E. E. M.
Our opinion, already recorded,
is that if Keats had spent fifteen or twenty minutes more on his Grecian
Urn, all of the stanzas would be as good as three of them. And so we
think that if A. B. had put in, say, a half hour more on her sonnet
she would not have rhymed “worldliness” and “moodiness.”
Of the harmony, counterpoint, thoroughbass, etc., of verse we know next
to nothing—we play on our tin whistle entirely by ear—but
there are things which we avoid, perhaps needlessly. One of these is the
rhyming of words like utterly, monody, lethargy, etc.; these endings
seem weak when they are bunched. Our assistants will apprehend that we
are merely offering a suggestion or two, which we hope they will follow
up by exploring the authorities.
Music like Brahms’ Second
Symphony is peculiarly satisfying to the listener. The first few
measures disclose that the composer is in complete control of his ideas
and his expression of them. He has something to say, and he says it
without uncertainty or redundancy. Only a man who has something
to say may dare to say it only once.
[p 102]
Those happy beings who “don’t know a
thing about art, but know what they like,” are restricted to the
obvious because of ignorance of form; their enjoyment ends where that of
the cultivated person begins. Take music. The person who knows what he
likes takes his pleasure in the tune, but gets little or nothing from
the tune’s development; hence his favorite music is music which is
all tune.
We recall a naïve query by the publisher of a magazine, at a musicale in Gotham. Our hostess, an accomplished pianist, had played a Chopin Fantasia, and the magazine man was expressing his qualified enjoyment. “What I can’t understand,” said he, “is why the tune quits just when it’s running along nicely.” This phenomenon, no doubt, has mystified thousands of other “music lovers.”
A Boston woman complains that
school seats have worn out three pairs of pants (her son’s) in
three months. “Is a wheeze about the seat of learning too obvious?”
queries Genevieve. Oh, quite too, my dear!
Mr. Frederick Harrison at 89
observes: “May my end be early, speedy, and peaceful! I regret
nothing done or said in my long and busy life. I withdraw nothing, and,
as I said before, am not conscious of any change in mind. In youth I was
[p
103] />called
a revolutionary; in old age I am called a reactionary; both names alike
untrue.… I ask nothing. I seek nothing. I fear nothing. I have
done and said all that I ever could have done and said. There is nothing
more. I am ready, and await the call.”
A very good prose version of Henley’s well known poem. As for regretting nothing, a man at forty would be glad to unsay and undo many things. At seventy, and decidedly at eighty-nine, these things have so diminished in importance that it is not worth while withdrawing them.
A DAY WITH LORD DID-MORE.
“Mr. Hearst is the home brew; no
other hope.”
—The Trib.
This day, outside Lord Did-More’s door,
THE SECOND POST.
[From a genius in Geneseo, Ill.]
Dear sir: I am the champion Cornhusker I have given exhibitions in different places and theater managers and moveing picture men have asked me why I dont have my show put into moves (Film). I beleave it would make a very [p 105] />interesting Picture. We could have it taken right in the Cornfield and also on the stage. It would be very interesting for farmer boys and would be a good drawing card in small towns. I beleave we could make 1000 feet of it by showing me driveing into the field with my extra made wagon. then show them my style and speed of husking and perheps let a common husker husk a while. I could also give my exibition on the stage in a theater includeing the playing of six or eight different Instruments. For instence when I plow with a traction engine or tresh I also lead bands and Orchestra’s.
There is a stage in almost
everybody’s musical education when Chopin’s Funeral March
seems the most significant composition in the world.
The two stenogs in the L coach
were discussing the opera. “I see,” said one, “that
they’re going to sing ‘Flagstaff.’” “That’s
Verdi’s latest opera,” said the other. “Yes,”
contributed the gentleman in the adjacent seat, leaning forward; “and
the scene is laid in Arizona.”
Mr. Shanks voxpops that traffic
should be relieved, not prevented, as “the automobile is
absolutely important in modern business life.” Now, the fact is
that the automobile has become a nuisance; one can get about much faster
and [p
106] />cheaper
in the city on Mr. Shanks’ w. k. mare. Life to-day is scaled to
the automobile, whereas, as our gossip Andy Rebori contends, it ought to
be scaled to the baby carriage. Many lines of industry are short of
labor because this labor has been withdrawn for the care of automobiles.
“Do you remember,”
asks a fair correspondent (who protests that she is only academically
fair), “when we used to read ‘A Shropshire Lad,’ and
A. E., and Arthur Symons, and Yeats? And you used to print so many
of the beautiful things they wrote?” Ah, yes, we do remember; but
that, my dear, was a long, long time ago, in the period which has just
closed, as Bennett puts it. How worth while those things used to seem,
and what pleasant days those were. Men say that they will come again.
But men said that Arthur would come again.
Our method: We select only
things that interest us, assuming that other people will be interested;
if they are not—why, chacun à son goût, as the cannibal king
remarked, adding a little salt. We printed “The Spires of Oxford”
a long time ago because it interested us exceedingly.
A valued colleague quotes the
emotional line—
“This is my own, my native land!”—
[p
107]
as
palliation, if not justification, for the “simple, homely, and
comprehensive adjuration, ‘Own Your Own Home.’” We
acknowledge the homeliness and comprehensiveness, but we deny the value
of poetic testimony. Said Dr. Johnson:
“Let observation with extensive view
Survey mankind from China
to Peru,”
which, De Quincey or Tennyson declared, should have run: “Let observation with extended observation observe mankind extensively.” Poets and tautology go walking like the Walrus and the Carpenter.
BOLSHEVISM OF LONG AGO.
“A radical heaven is a place where every man does what he pleases, and there is a general division of property every Saturday night.”—George S. Hillard (1853).
LULLABY.
[p 108]
“A thing of beauty is a joy forever.” But if,
miraculously, it happens in Chicago, it can, despite the poet’s
word, “pass into nothingness.” The old Field Museum, seen
beneath a summer moon, when the mist is on the lake, is as beautiful as
anything on the earth’s crust. Not to preserve the exterior were a
sin against Beauty, which is the unforgivable sin.
“LEMME UP, DARLING! LEMME UP!”
[From the Detroit
Free Press.]
My advertisement of Feb. 24 was error. I will be responsible for my wife’s debts. Leo Tyo.
“I’ll make the Line
some day or jump into Great Salt Lake,” warns C. W. O.
Pick out a soft spot, friend. We jumped into it one day and sprained an
ankle.
[p
109]
Alice
in Cartoonland.
I.
“Hello!” said the Hatter. “I haven’t seen you for a long time.”
“No,” said Alice; “I’ve been all over—in Wonderland, in Bookland, in Stageland, and forty other lands. People must be tired of my adventures. Where am I now? I never know.”
“In Cartoonland,” said the Hatter.
“And what are you doing here?” inquired Alice.
“I’m searching for an original cartoon idea,” replied the Hatter. “Would you like to come along?”
“Ever so much,” said Alice.
“The first thing we have to do is to get across that chasm,” said the Hatter, pointing.
Alice saw a huge legend on the far wall of the chasm, and spelled it out—“O-b-l-i-v-i-o-n.”
“Yes, Oblivion,” said the Hatter. “That’s where they dump defeated candidates and other undesirables. Come on, we can cross a little below here.”
He indicated a thin plank that lay across the Chasm of Oblivion.
“Will it hold us?” said Alice.
“It has held the G. O. P. Elephant and the Democratic Donkey, and all sorts of people and [p 110] />things. Let’s hurry over, as here comes the Elephant now, with Mr. Taft riding it, and the plank might give way.”
II.
“By the way,” said the Hatter, “here is my hat store.”
There were only two kinds in the window—square paper caps and high silk hats. Alice had never seen paper caps before.
“They’re worn by the laboring man,” said the Hatter; “but you never see them outside of Cartoonland. The plug hats are for Capitalists. I also keep whiskers; siders for Capital and ordinary for Labor.”
“O, there’s a railroad train!” said Alice, suddenly.
“No use taking that train,” said the Hatter; “it doesn’t go. Did you ever see an engine like that outside Cartoonland? And even if it did work we shouldn’t get very far, as the rock Obstruction is always on the track.”
“I’d just as soon walk,” said Alice.
III.
“Mercy! there’s a giant!” exclaimed Alice.
“Don’t be alarmed,” said the Hatter; “he’s perfectly good natured.”
“What an awful-looking creature!” said Alice.
[p
111]
“He’s
awfully out of drawing,” said the Hatter, critically; “but,
then, almost everything in Cartoonland is. It’s the idea that
counts.”
“You said you were searching for an original idea,” Alice reminded him.
“But I don’t expect to find one,” the Hatter replied. “You see, it wouldn’t be any use; nobody would understand it. People like the old familiar things, you know.”
“Still, we might happen on one,” said Alice. “Let’s walk along.”
IV.
Suddenly a door opened, and a great quantity of rubbish was swept briskly into the street.
“That’s the New Broom,” said the Hatter. “There’s been another election. Evidently the Democrats won, as there goes the Donkey, waving his ears and hee-hawing.”
“Oh, is that a fruit store?” asked Alice.
“No; the Republican headquarters,” replied the Hatter. “That huge cornucopia you see is a symbol of Prosperity. Prosperity in Cartoonland is always represented by a horn of plenty with a pineapple in the muzzle. You’ve heard the expression, ‘The pineapple of prosperity.’”
“No,” said Alice, “but I’ve heard about the ‘pineapple of politeness.’”
[p
112]
“That,”
said the Hatter, “is something else again.”
V.
Presently they came to a collection of factories, the tall chimneys of which poured out smoke in great volume.
“Those are the Smoking Stacks of Industry,” said the Hatter.
“What do they manufacture here?” asked Alice.
“Cartoonatums,” said the Hatter. “A cartoonatum,” he explained, “is a combination of wheels, rods, cogs, hoppers, cranks, etc., which sometimes looks like a sausage grinder and sometimes like a try-your-weight machine. It couldn’t possibly go, any more than the locomotives in Cartoonland.”
“Why don’t the Cartoonlanders have machines that can go?” inquired Alice.
“That,” replied the Hatter, “would require a little study and observation.”
VI.
As Alice and the Hatter walked along they passed many curious things, such as Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing, the skin of a Tiger nailed to a barn door, St. George and the Dragon, Father Knickerbocker, barrels of political mud, a huge [p 113] />serpent labeled “Anarchy,” a drug store window full of bottles of Political Dope and boxes of Political Pills, an orchard of Political Plum Trees, and other objects which the Hatter said were as old as the hills. “I’m afraid there’s nothing to hold us here,” he declared.
Alice’s attention was suddenly attracted by a little girl in a thin and ragged dress who, with an empty basket on her arm, was gazing wistfully at the goodies in a bakeshop window.
“She represents Poverty,” said the Hatter. “When she isn’t staring at a bakeshop she’s looking at a proclamation by the ice trust, or something like that.”
Alice spoke to the child and learned that she was one of a large family. Her father, she said, was a New York cartoonist who one day had been visited by an Original Idea.
“Where is he?” cried the Hatter excitedly.
“He dropped dead!” replied the child, weeping bitterly.
“Good night!” said the Hatter, and walked away.
High his poetic position,
IT HAS BEEN DONE.
Sir: Broke friend wife’s favorite Victrola record. Told her about it. She came back with, “Well, that’s the only record you ever broke.” Do you think she was bawling me out or was she paying me a compliment? E. P. P.
“Will the Devil complete
the capture of the modern church?” inquires the Rev. Mr. Straton
of New York. Why is it assumed that the Old Boy is attempting to capture
it? People go to the Devil; the Devil doesn’t have to chase after
them. The notion that Old Nick, is always around drumming up business is
an example of the inordinate vanity of man.
[p 117]
Dean Jones of Yale is credited with this definition
of freedom of speech: “The liberty to say what you think without
thinking what you say.”
“ON SUCH A NIGHT …”
[From the
Bethany, Mo., Clipper.]
After the serving of light refreshments the young ladies repaired to the third floor and “tripped the light fantastic” while music waved eternal wands. And then the whole company flocked in and enjoyed the beauties of this grand home, lingering and chatting, with the enchanted spell of the glorious evening still strong upon each one, until the crescent moon had veiled her face and the vain young night trembled over her own beauty. And then with expressed regrets that the hours had flown so rapidly the guests bade a fair good night to their charming hostess.
TEMPERATURE.
An idea pushed along to us by L. O. K. has no doubt been seriously considered by the Congress. It is to move the tubes of all thermometers up an inch on the scale every fall, and down an inch in the spring. This would make our winter temperature much more endurable, and our summer temp. delightful.
[p
118]
LET
US PERISH, RATHER, BY DEGREES.
Sir: Before the Congress adopts the idea of L. O. K. to move the tubes of all thermometers up an inch on the scale every fall and down an inch in the spring, I rush to inquire how shall we, who possess only a two inch thermometer, on which an inch covers at least 70 degrees, be able to withstand the extremes of climate? May I not suggest that the Congress be petitioned to make the move by degrees instead of inches, and thus avoid great suffering? L. J. R.
You may have noted—nearly
everybody else did—that Jean Paige and Albert Smith were married
in Paris, Ill., “at the farm residence of Mr. and Mrs. Wigfall O’Hair.”
The Academy of Immortals attended in a body.
Commuters discuss many
interesting topics, including the collection of garbage. Mac was
reminded of a Michigan lady of his acquaintance who, with a new maid,
was trying to pull off a very correct luncheon. In the midst of it the
maid appeared and said, “Oh, Mrs. Kennedy, the garbage man wants a
dime.” The hostess, without batting an eye, replied: “We are
having company to-day. Better get a quarter’s worth.”
“‘My mind is open
on the question of garbage disposal,’ Alderman Link declared.”
You know what he means.