Produced by An Anonymous Volunteer





THE ENCHANTED TYPEWRITER

By John Kendrick Bangs




I. THE DISCOVERY


It is a strange fact, for which I do not expect ever satisfactorily to
account, and which will receive little credence even among those who
know that I am not given to romancing--it is a strange fact, I say, that
the substance of the following pages has evolved itself during a period
of six months, more or less, between the hours of midnight and four
o'clock in the morning, proceeding directly from a type-writing machine
standing in the corner of my library, manipulated by unseen hands. The
machine is not of recent make. It is, in fact, a relic of the early
seventies, which I discovered one morning when, suffering from a slight
attack of the grip, I had remained at home and devoted my time to
pottering about in the attic, unearthing old books, bringing to the
light long-forgotten correspondences, my boyhood collections of "stuff,"
and other memory-inducing things. Whence the machine came originally I
do not recall. My impression is that it belonged to a stenographer once
in the employ of my father, who used frequently to come to our house to
take down dictations. However this may be, the machine had lain hidden
by dust and the flotsam and jetsam of the house for twenty years, when,
as I have said, I came upon it unexpectedly. Old man as I am--I shall
soon be thirty--the fascination of a machine has lost none of its
potency. I am as pleased to-day watching the wheels of my watch "go
round" as ever I was, and to "monkey" with a type-writing apparatus has
always brought great joy into my heart--though for composing give me
the pen. Perhaps I should apologize for the use here of the verb monkey,
which savors of what a friend of mine calls the "English slanguage," to
differentiate it from what he also calls the "Andrew Language." But I
shall not do so, because, to whatever branch of our tongue the word may
belong, it is exactly descriptive, and descriptive as no other word can
be, of what a boy does with things that click and "go," and is therefore
not at all out of place in a tale which I trust will be regarded as a
polite one.

The discovery of the machine put an end to my attic potterings. I cared
little for finding old bill-files and collections of Atlantic cable-ends
when, with a whole morning, a type-writing machine, and a screw-driver
before me I could penetrate the mysteries of that useful mechanism. I
shall not endeavor to describe the delightful sensations of that hour of
screwing and unscrewing; they surpass the powers of my pen. Suffice it
to say that I took the whole apparatus apart, cleaned it well, oiled
every joint, and then put it together again. I do not suppose a
seven-year-old boy could have derived more satisfaction from taking a
piano to pieces. It was exhilarating, and I resolved that as a reward
for the pleasure it had given me the machine should have a brand-new
ribbon and as much ink as it could consume. And that, in brief, is how
it came to be that this machine of antiquated pattern was added to the
library bric-a-brac. To say the truth, it was of no more practical
use than Barye's dancing bear, a plaster cast of which adorns my
mantel-shelf, so that when I classify it with the bric-a-brac I do so
advisedly. I frequently tried to write a jest or two upon it, but the
results were extraordinarily like Sir Arthur Sullivan's experience with
the organ into whose depths the lost chord sank, never to return. I
dashed off the jests well enough, but somewhere between the keys and the
types they were lost, and the results, when I came to scan the paper,
were depressing. And once I tried a sonnet on the keys. Exactly how
to classify the jumble that came out of it I do not know, but it was
curious enough to have appealed strongly to D'Israeli or any other
collector of the literary oddity. More singular than the sonnet, though,
was the fact that when I tried to write my name upon this strange
machine, instead of finding it in all its glorious length written upon
the paper, I did find "William Shakespeare" printed there in its stead.
Of course you will say that in putting the machine together I mixed up
the keys and the letters. I have no doubt that I did, but when I tell
you that there have been times when, looking at myself in the glass, I
have fancied that I saw in my mirrored face the lineaments of the great
bard; that the contour of my head is precisely the same as was his; that
when visiting Stratford for the first time every foot of it was pregnant
with clearly defined recollections to me, you will perhaps more easily
picture to yourself my sensations at the moment.

However, enough of describing the machine in its relation to myself. I
have said sufficient, I think, to convince you that whatever its make,
its age, and its limitations, it was an extraordinary affair; and, once
convinced of that, you may the more readily believe me when I tell you
that it has gone into business apparently for itself--and incidentally
for me.

It was on the morning of the 26th of March last that I discovered the
curious condition of affairs concerning which I have essayed to write.
My family do not agree with me as to the date. They say that it was on
the evening of the 25th of March that the episode had its beginning; but
they are not aware, for I have not told them, that it was not evening,
but morning, when I reached home after the dinner at the Aldus Club.
It was at a quarter of three A.M. precisely that I entered my house
and proceeded to remove my hat and coat, in which operation I was
interrupted, and in a startling manner, by a click from the dark
recesses of the library. A man does not like to hear a click which
he cannot comprehend, even before he has dined. After he has dined,
however, and feels a satisfaction with life which cannot come to him
before dinner, to hear a mysterious click, and from a dark corner, at
an hour when the world is at rest, is not pleasing. To say that my heart
jumped into my mouth is mild. I believe it jumped out of my mouth and
rebounded against the wall opposite back though my system into my boots.
All the sins of my past life, and they are many--I once stepped upon a
caterpillar, and I have coveted my neighbor both his man-servant and his
maid-servant, though not his wife nor his ass, because I don't like his
wife and he keeps no live-stock--all my sins, I say, rose up before me,
for I expected every moment that a bullet would penetrate my brain,
or my heart if perchance the burglar whom I suspected of levelling a
clicking revolver at me aimed at my feet.

"Who is there?" I cried, making a vocal display of bravery I did not
feel, hiding behind our hair sofa.

The only answer was another click.

"This is serious," I whispered softly to myself. "There are two of 'em;
I am in the light, unarmed. They are concealed by the darkness and have
revolvers. There is only one way out of this, and that is by strategy.
I'll pretend I think I've made a mistake." So I addressed myself aloud.

"What an idiot you are," I said, so that my words could be heard by the
burglars. "If this is the effect of Aldus Club dinners you'd better give
them up. That click wasn't a click at all, but the ticking of our new
eight-day clock."

I paused, and from the corner there came a dozen more clicks in quick
succession, like the cocking of as many revolvers.

"Great Heavens!" I murmured, under my breath. "It must be Ali Baba with
his forty thieves."

As I spoke, the mystery cleared itself, for following close upon a
thirteenth click came the gentle ringing of a bell, and I knew then
that the type-writing machine was in action; but this was by no means a
reassuring discovery. Who or what could it be that was engaged upon the
type-writer at that unholy hour, 3 A.M.? If a mortal being, why was
my coming no interruption? If a supernatural being, what infernal
complication might not the immediate future have in store for me?

My first impulse was to flee the house, to go out into the night and
pace the fields--possibly to rush out to the golf links and play a few
holes in the dark in order to cool my brow, which was rapidly becoming
fevered. Fortunately, however, I am not a man of impulse. I never yield
to a mere nerve suggestion, and so, instead of going out into the storm
and certainly contracting pneumonia, I walked boldly into the library to
investigate the causes of the very extraordinary incident. You may rest
well assured, however, that I took care to go armed, fortifying myself
with a stout stick, with a long, ugly steel blade concealed within it--a
cowardly weapon, by-the-way, which I permit to rest in my house merely
because it forms a part of a collection of weapons acquired through the
failure of a comic paper to which I had contributed several articles.
The editor, when the crash came, sent me the collection as part payment
of what was owed me, which I think was very good of him, because a great
many people said that it was my stuff that killed the paper. But to
return to the story. Fortifying myself with the sword-cane, I walked
boldly into the library, and, touching the electric button, soon had
every gas-jet in the room giving forth a brilliant flame; but these,
brilliant as they were, disclosed nothing in the chair before the
machine.

The latter, apparently oblivious of my presence, went clicking merrily
and as rapidly along as though some expert young woman were in charge.
Imagine the situation if you can. A type-writing machine of ancient
make, its letters clear, but out of accord with the keys, confronted by
an empty chair, three hours after midnight, rattling off page after page
of something which might or might not be readable, I could not at the
moment determine. For two or three minutes I gazed in open-mouthed
wonder. I was not frightened, but I did experience a sensation which
comes from contact with the uncanny. As I gradually grasped the
situation and became used, somewhat, to what was going on, I ventured a
remark.

"This beats the deuce!" I observed.

The machine stopped for an instant. The sheet of paper upon which the
impressions of letters were being made flew out from under the cylinder,
a pure white sheet was as quickly substituted, and the keys clicked off
the line:

"What does?"

I presumed the line was in response to my assertion, so I replied:

"You do. What uncanny freak has taken possession of you to-night that
you start in to write on your own hook, having resolutely declined to do
any writing for me ever since I rescued you from the dust and dirt and
cobwebs of the attic?"

"You never rescued me from any attic," the machine replied. "You'd
better go to bed; you've dined too well, I imagine. When did you rescue
me from the dust and dirt and the cobwebs of any attic?"

"What an ungrateful machine you are!" I cried. "If you have sense enough
to go into writing on your own account, you ought to have mind enough
to remember the years you spent up-stairs under the roof neglected, and
covered with hammocks, awnings, family portraits, and receipted bills."

"Really, my dear fellow," the machine tapped back, "I must repeat it.
Bed is the place for you. You're not coherent. I'm not a machine, and
upon my honor, I've never seen your darned old attic."

"Not a machine!" I cried. "Then what in Heaven's name are you?--a
sofa-cushion?"

"Don't be sarcastic, my dear fellow," replied the machine. "Of course
I'm not a machine; I'm Jim--Jim Boswell."

"What?" I roared. "You? A thing with keys and type and a bell--"

"I haven't got any keys or any type or a bell. What on earth are you
talking about?" replied the machine. "What have you been eating?"

"What's that?" I asked, putting my hand on the keys.

"That's keys," was the answer.

"And these, and that?" I added, indicating the type and the bell.

"Type and bell," replied the machine.

"And yet you say you haven't got them," I persisted.

"No, I haven't. The machine has got them, not I," was the response. "I'm
not the machine. I'm the man that's using it--Jim--Jim Boswell. What
good would a bell do me? I'm not a cow or a bicycle. I'm the editor of
the Stygian Gazette, and I've come here to copy off my notes of what I
see and hear, and besides all this I do type-writing for various people
in Hades, and as this machine of yours seemed to be of no use to you I
thought I'd try it. But if you object, I'll go."

As I read these lines upon the paper I stood amazed and delighted.

"Go!" I cried, as the full value of his patronage of my machine dawned
upon me, for I could sell his copy and he would be none the worse
off, for, as I understand the copyright laws, they are not designed to
benefit authors, but for the protection of type-setters. "Why, my dear
fellow, it would break my heart if, having found my machine to your
taste, you should ever think of using another. I'll lend you my bicycle,
too, if you'd like it--in fact, anything I have is at your command."

"Thank you very much," returned Boswell through the medium of the keys,
as usual. "I shall not need your bicycle, but this machine is of great
value to me. It has several very remarkable qualities which I have
never found in any other machine. For instance, singular to relate,
Mendelssohn and I were fooling about here the other night, and when he
saw this machine he thought it was a spinet of some new pattern; so what
does he do but sit down and play me one of his songs without words on
it, and, by jove! when he got through, there was the theme of the whole
thing printed on a sheet of paper before him."

"You don't really mean to say--" I began.

"I'm telling you precisely what happened," said Boswell. "Mendelssohn
was tickled to death with it, and he played every song without words
that he ever wrote, and every one of 'em was fitted with words which he
said absolutely conveyed the ideas he meant to bring out with the music.
Then I tried the machine, and discovered another curious thing about
it. It's intensely American. I had a story of Alexander Dumas' about his
Musketeers that he wanted translated from French into American, which is
the language we speak below, in preference to German, French, Volapuk,
or English. I thought I'd copy off a few lines of the French original,
and as true as I'm sitting here before your eyes, where you can't see
me, the copy I got was a good, though rather free, translation. Think of
it! That's an advanced machine for you!"

I looked at the machine wistfully. "I wish I could make it work," I
said; and I tried as before to tap off my name, and got instead only a
confused jumble of letters. It wouldn't even pay me the compliment of
transforming my name into that of Shakespeare, as it had previously
done.

It was thus that the magic qualities of the machine were made known to
me, and out of it the following papers have grown. I have set them
down without much editing or alteration, and now submit them to your
inspection, hoping that in perusing them you will derive as much
satisfaction and delight as I have in being the possessor of so
wonderful a machine, manipulated by so interesting a person as "Jim--Jim
Boswell"--as he always calls himself--and others, who, as you will note,
if perchance you have the patience to read further, have upon occasions
honored my machine by using it.

I must add in behalf of my own reputation for honesty that Mr. Boswell
has given me all right, title, and interest in these papers in this
world as a return for my permission to him to use my machine.

"What if they make a hit and bring in barrels of gold in royalties," he
said. "I can't take it back with me where I live, so keep it yourself."




II. MR. BOSWELL IMPARTS SOME LATE NEWS OF HADES


Boswell was a little late in arriving the next night. He had agreed to
be on hand exactly at midnight, but it was after one o'clock before the
machine began to click and the bell to ring. I had fallen asleep in the
soft upholstered depths of my armchair, feeling pretty thoroughly worn
out by the experiences of the night before, which, in spite of their
pleasant issue, were nevertheless somewhat disturbing to a nervous
organization like mine. Suddenly I waked, and with the awakening there
entered into my mind the notion that the whole thing was merely a dream,
and that in the end it would be the better for me if I were to give up
Aldus and other club dinners with nightmare inducing menus. But I was
soon convinced that the real state of affairs was quite otherwise, and
that everything really had happened as I have already related it to you,
for I had hardly gotten my eyes free from what my poetic son calls "the
seeds of sleep" when I heard the type-writer tap forth:

"Hello, old man!"

Incidentally let me say that this had become another interesting feature
of the machine. Since my first interview with Boswell the taps seemed
to speak, and if some one were sitting before it and writing a line the
mere differentiation of sounds of the various keys would convey to the
mind the ideas conveyed to it by the printed words. So, as I say, my
ears were greeted with a clicking "Hello, old man!" followed immediately
by the bell.

"You are late," said I, looking at my watch.

"I know it," was the response. "But I can't help it. During the campaign
I am kept so infernally busy I hardly know where I am."

"Campaign, eh?" I put in. "Do you have campaigns in Hades?"

"Yes," replied Boswell, "and we are having a--well, to be polite, a
regular Gehenna of a time. Things have changed much in Hades latterly.
There has been a great growth in the democratic spirit below, and his
Majesty is having a deuce of a time running his kingdom. Washington and
Cromwell and Caesar have had the nerve to demand a constitution from the
venerable Nicholas--"

"From whom?" I queried, perplexed somewhat, for I was not yet fully
awake.

"Old Nick," replied Boswell; "and I can tell you there's a pretty fight
on between the supporters of the administration and the opposition.
Secure in his power, the Grand Master of Hades has been somewhat
arbitrary, and he has made the mistake of doing some of his subjects
a little too brown. Take the case of Bonaparte, for instance: the
government has ruled that he was personally responsible for all the wars
of Europe from 1800 up to Waterloo, and it was proposed to hang him once
for every man killed on either side throughout that period. Bonaparte
naturally resisted. He said he had a good neck, which he did not object
to have broken three or four times, because he admitted he deserved it;
but when it came to hanging him five or six million times, once a month,
for, say, five million months, or twelve times a year for 415,000 years,
he didn't like it, and wouldn't stand it, and wanted to submit the
question to arbitration.

"Nicholas observed that the word arbitration was not in his especially
expurgated dictionary, whereupon Bonaparte remarked that he wasn't
responsible for that; that he thought it a good word and worthy of
incorporation in any dictionary and in all vocabularies.

"'I don't care what you think,' retorted his Majesty. 'It's what I don't
think that goes;' and he commanded his imps to prepare the gallows on
the third Thursday of each month for Bonaparte's expiation; ordered his
secretary to send Bonaparte a type-written notice that his presence on
each occasion was expected, and gave orders to the police to see that he
was there willy-nilly. Naturally Bonaparte resisted, and appealed to the
courts. Blackstone sustained his appeal, and Nicholas overruled him.
The first Thursday came, and the police went for the Emperor, but he was
surrounded by a good half of the men who had fought under him, and
the minions of the law could do nothing against them. In consequence,
Bonaparte's brother, Joseph, a quiet, inoffensive citizen, was dragged
from his home and hanged in his place, Nicholas contending that when a
soldier could not, or would not, serve, the government had a right to
expect a substitute. Well," said Boswell, at this point, "that set
all Hades on fire. We were divided as to Bonaparte's deserts, but the
hanging of other people as substitutes was too much. We didn't know
who'd be substituted next. The English backed up Blackstone, of course.
The French army backed up Bonaparte. The inoffensive citizens were
aroused in behalf of Joseph, for they saw at once whither they
were drifting if the substitute idea was carried out to its logical
conclusion; and in half an hour the administration was on the
defensive, which, as you know, is a very, very, very bad thing for an
administration."

"It is, if it desires to be returned to office," said I.

"It is anyhow," replied Boswell through the medium of the keys. "It's
in exactly the same position as that of a humorist who has to print
explanatory diagrams with all of his jokes. The administration papers
were hot over the situation. The king can do no wrong idea was worked
for all it was worth, but beyond this they drew pathetic pictures of
the result of all these deplorable tendencies. What was Hades for, they
asked, if a man, after leading a life of crime in the other world, was
not to receive his punishment there? The attitude of the opposition was
a radical and vicious blow at the vital principles of the sphere itself.
The opposition papers coolly and calmly took the position that the vital
principles of Hades were all right; that it was the extreme view as to
the power of the Emperor taken by that person himself that wouldn't
go in these democratic days. Punishment for Bonaparte was the correct
thing, and Bonaparte expected some, but was not grasping enough to
want it all. They added that recent fully settled ideas as to a humane
application of the laws required the bunching of the indictments or
the selection of one and a fair trial based upon that, and that anyhow,
under no circumstances, should a wholly innocent person be made to
suffer for the crimes of another. These journals were suppressed, but
the next day a set of new papers were started to promulgate the same
theories as to individual rights. The province of Cimmeria declared
itself independent of the throne, and set up in the business of
government for itself. Gehenna declared for the Emperor, but insisted
upon home rule for cities of its own class, and finally, as I informed
you at the beginning, Washington, Cromwell, and Caesar went in person to
Apollyon and demanded a constitution. That was the day before yesterday,
and just what will come of it we don't as yet know, because Washington
and Cromwell and Caesar have not been seen since, but we have great
fears for them, because seventeen car-loads of vitriol and a thousand
extra tons of coal were ordered by the Lord High Steward of the palace
to be delivered to the Minister of Justice last night."

"Quite a complication," said I. "The Americanization of Hades has begun
at last. How does society regard the affair?"

"Variously," observed Boswell. "Society hates the government as much as
anybody, and really believes in curtailing the Emperor's powers, but,
on the other hand, it desires to maintain all of its own aristocratic
privileges. The main trouble in Hades at present is the gradual
disintegration of society; that is to say, its former component parts
are beginning to differentiate themselves the one from the other."

"Like capital and labor here?" I queried.

"In a sense, yes--possibly more like your Colonial Dames, and Daughters
of the Revolution. For instance, great organizations are in process
of formation--people are beginning to flock together for purposes
of protection. Charles the First and Henry the Eighth and Louis the
Fourteenth have established Ye Ancient and Honorable Order of Kings, to
which only those who have actually worn crowns shall be eligible. The
painters have gotten together with a Society of Fine Arts, the sculptors
have formed a Society of Chisellers, and all the authors from Homer
down to myself have got up an Authors' Club where we have a lovely
time talking about ourselves, no man to be eligible who hasn't written
something that has lasted a hundred years. Perhaps, if you are thinking
of coming over soon, you'll let me put you on our waiting-list?"

I smiled at his seeming inconsistency and let myself into his snare.

"I haven't written anything that has lasted a hundred years yet," said
I.

"Oh, yes, I think you have," replied Boswell, and the machine seemed to
laugh as he wrote out his answer. "I saw a joke of yours the other day
that's two hundred centuries old. Diogenes showed it to me and said that
it was a great favorite with his grandfather, who had inherited it from
one of his remote ancestors."

A hot retort was on my lips, but I had no wish to offend my guest, so
I smiled and observed that I had frequently indulged in unconscious
plagiarism of that sort.

"I should imagine," I hastened to add, "that to men like Charles the
First this uncertainty as to the safety of Cromwell would be great joy."

"I hardly know," returned Boswell. "That very question has been
discussed among us. Charles made a great outward show of grief when
he heard of the coal being delivered at the office of the Minister of
Justice, and we all thought him quite magnanimous, but it leaked out,
just before I left to come here, that he sent his private secretary to
the palace with a Panama hat and a palm-leaf fan for Cromwell, with his
congratulations.

"That seems to savor somewhat of sarcasm."

"Oh, ultimately Hades is bound to be a republic," replied Boswell.
"There are too many clever and ambitious politicians among us for the
place to go along as a despotism much longer. If the place were filled
up with poets and society people, and things like that, it might go on
as an autocracy forever, but you see it isn't. To men of the caliber
of Alexander the Great and Bonaparte and Caesar, and a thousand other
warriors who never were used to taking orders from anybody, but were
themselves headquarters, the despotic sway of Apollyon is intolerable,
and he hasn't made any effort to conciliate any of them. If he had
appointed Bonaparte commander-in-chief of his army and made a friend of
him, instead of ordering him to be hanged every month for 415,000 years,
or put Caesar in as Secretary of State, instead of having him roasted
three times a month for seventy or eighty centuries, he would have
strengthened his hold. As it is, he has ignored all these people
officially, treats them like criminals personally; makes friends with
Mazarin and Powhatan, awards the office of Tax Assessor to Dick Turpin,
and makes old Falstaff commander of his Imperial Guard. And just because
poor Ben Jonson scribbled off a rhyme for my paper, The Gazette--a rhyme
running:

        Mazarin And Powhatan,
     Turpin and Falstaff,
        Form, you bet, A cabinet
     To make a donkey laugh.

        Mazarin And Powhatan
     Run Apollyon's state.
        The Dick and Jacks Collect the tax--
     The people pay the freight.

--just because Jonson wrote that and I published it, my paper was
confiscated, Jonson was boiled in oil for ten weeks, and I was seized
and thrown into a dungeon where a lot of savages from the South Sea
Islands tattooed the darned old jingle between my shoulder blades in
green letters, and not satisfied with this barbaric act, right under
the jingle they added the line, in red letters, 'This edition strictly
limited to one copy, for private circulation only,' and they every one
of 'em, Apollyon, Mazarin, and the rest, signed the guarantee personally
with red-hot pens dipped in sulphuric acid. It makes a valuable
collection of autographs, no doubt, but I prefer my back as nature made
it. Talk about enlightened government under a man who'll permit things
like that to be done!"

I ought not to have done it, but I couldn't help smiling.

"I must say," I observed, apologetically, "that the treatment was
barbarous, but really I do think it showed a sense of humor on the part
of the government."

"No doubt," replied Boswell, with a sigh; "but when the joke is on me I
don't enjoy it very much. I'm only human, and should prefer to observe
that the government had some sense of justice."

The apparently empty chair before the machine gave a slight hitch
forward, and the type-writer began to tap again.

"You'll have to excuse me now," observed Boswell through the usual
medium. "I have work to do, and if you'll go to bed like a good fellow,
while I copy off the minutes of the last meeting of the Authors' Club,
I'll see that you don't lose anything by it. After I get the minutes
done I have an interesting story for my Sunday paper from the advance
sheets of Munchausen's Further Recollections, which I shall take great
pleasure in leaving for you when I depart. If you will take the bundle
of manuscript I leave with you and boil it in alcohol for ten minutes,
you will be able to read it, and, no doubt, if you copy it off, sell it
for a goodly sum. It is guaranteed absolutely genuine."

"Very well," said I, rising, "I'll go; but I should think you would put
in most of your time whacking at the government editorially, instead of
going in for minutes and abstract stories of adventure."

"You do, eh?" said Boswell. "Well, if you were in my place you'd change
your mind. After my unexpected endorsement by the Emperor and his
cabinet, I've decided to keep out of politics for a little while. I
can stand having a poem tattooed on my back, but if it came to having
a three-column editorial expressing my emotions etched alongside of my
spine, I'm afraid I'd disappear into thin air."

So I left him at work and retired. The next morning I found the promised
bundle of manuscripts, and, after boiling the pages as instructed,
discovered the following tale.




III. FROM ADVANCE SHEETS OF BARON MUNCHAUSEN'S FURTHER RECOLLECTIONS


It is with some very considerable hesitation that I come to this
portion of my personal recollections, and yet I feel that I owe it to
my fellow-citizens in this delightful Stygian country, where we are
all enjoying our well-earned rest, to lay before them the exact truth
concerning certain incidents which have now passed into history, and
for participation in which a number of familiar figures are improperly
gaining all the credit, or discredit, as the case may be. It is not a
pleasant task to expose an impostor; much less is it agreeable to expose
four impostors; but to one who from the earliest times--and when I say
earliest times I speak advisedly, as you will see as you read on--to
one, I say, who from the earliest times has been actuated by no other
motive than the promulgation of truth, the task of exposing fraud
becomes a duty which cannot be ignored. Therefore, with regret I set
down this chapter of my memoirs, regardless of its consequences to
certain figures which have been of no inconsiderable importance in our
community for many years--figures which in my own favorite club, the
Associated Shades, have been most welcome, but which, as I and they
alone know, have been nothing more than impostures.

In previous volumes I have confined my attention to my memoirs as Baron
Munchausen--but, dear reader, there are others. I WAS NOT ALWAYS BARON
MUNCHAUSEN; I HAVE BEEN OTHERS! I am not aware that it has fallen to the
lot of any but myself in the whole span of universal existence to live
more than one life upon that curious, compact little ball of land
and water called the Earth, but, in any event, to me has fallen that
privilege or distinction, or whatever it may be, and upon the record
made by me in four separate existences, placed centuries apart, four
residents of this sphere are basing their claims to notice, securing
election to our clubs, and even venturing so far at times as to make
themselves personally obnoxious to me, who with a word could expose
their wicked deceit in all its naked villainy to an astounded community.
And in taking this course they have gone too far. There is a limit
beyond which no man shall dare go with me. Satisfied with the ultimate
embodiment of my virtues in the Baron Munchausen, I have been disposed
to allow the impostors to pursue their deception in peace so long as
they otherwise behave themselves, but when Adam chooses to allude to
my writings as frothy lies, when Jonah attacks my right as a literary
person to tell tales of leviathans, when Noah states that my ignorance
in yachting matters is colossal, and when William Shakespeare publicly
brands me as a person unworthy of belief who should be expelled from the
Associated Shades, then do I consider it time to speak out and expose
four of the greatest frauds that have ever been inflicted upon a
long-suffering public.

To begin at the beginning then, let me state that my first recollection
dates back to a beautiful summer morning, when in a lovely garden I
opened my eyes and became conscious of two very material facts: first, a
charming woman arranging her hair in the mirror-like waters of a silver
lake directly before me; and, second, a poignant pain in my side, as
though I had been operated upon for appendicitis, but which in reality
resulted from the loss of a rib which had in turn evoluted into the
charming and very human being I now saw before me. That woman was Eve;
that mirror-like lake was set in the midst of the Garden of Eden; I was
Adam, and not this watery-eyed antediluvian calling himself by my name,
who is a familiar figure in the Anthropological Society, an authority on
evolution, and a blot upon civilization.

I have little to say about this first existence of mine. It was full
of delights. Speech not having been invented, Eve was an attractive
companion to a man burdened as I was with responsibilities, and until
our children were born we went our way in happiness and silence. It is
not in the nature of things, however, that children should not wish to
talk, and it was through the irrepressible efforts of Cain and Abel
to be heard as well as seen that first called the attention of Eve and
myself to the desirability of expressing our thoughts in words rather
than by masonic signs.

I shall not burden my readers with further recollections of this period.
It was excessively primitive, of necessity, but before leaving it I must
ask the reader to put one or two questions to himself in this matter.

1st. How is it that this bearded patriarch, who now poses as the only
original Adam, has never been able, with any degree of positiveness, to
answer the question as to whether or not he was provided with a caudal
appendage--a question which I am prepared to answer definitely, at any
moment, if called upon by the proper authorities, and, if need be, to
produce not only the tail itself, but the fierce and untamed pterodactyl
that bit it off upon that unfortunate autumn afternoon when he and I had
our first and last conflict.

2d. Why is it that when describing a period concerning which he is
supposed to know all, he seems to have given voice to sentiments in
phrases which would have delighted Sheridan and shed added glory upon
the eloquence of Webster, AT A TIME WHEN, AS I HAVE ALREADY SHOWN, THERE
WAS NO SUCH THING AS SPEECH?

Upon these two points alone I rest my case against Adam: the first is
the reticence of guilt--he doesn't know, and he knows he doesn't know;
the second is a deliberate and offensive prevarication, which shows
again that he doesn't know, and assumes that we are all equally
ignorant.

So much for Adam. Now for the cheap and year-ridden person who has
taken unto himself my second personality, Noah; and that other strange
combination of woe and wickedness, Jonah, who has chosen to pre-empt
my third. I shall deal with both at one and the same time, for, taken
separately, they are not worthy of notice.

Noah asserts that I know nothing of yachting. I will accept the charge
with the qualification that I know a great sight more about Arking than
he does; and as for Jonah, I can give Jonah points on whaling, and I
hereby challenge them both to a Memoir Match for $2000 a side, in gold,
to see which can give to the world the most interesting reminiscences
concerning the cruises of the two craft in question, the Ark and the
Whale, upon neither of which did either of these two anachronisms ever
set foot, and of both of which I, in my two respective existences, was
commander-in-chief. The fact is that, as in the case of the fictitious
Adam, these two impersonators are frauds. The man now masquerading as
Noah was my hired man in the latter part of the antediluvian period; was
discharged three years before the flood; was left on shore at the hour
of departure, and when last seen by me was sitting on the top of an
apple-tree, begging to do two men's work for nothing if we'd only let
him out of the wet. If he will at any time submit to a cross-examination
at my hands as to the principal events of that memorable voyage, I will
show to any fair-minded judge how impossible is his claim that he was
in command, or even afloat, after the first week. I have hitherto kept
silent in this matter, in spite of many and repeated outrageous flings,
for the sake of his--or rather my--family, who have been deceived,
as have all the rest of us, barring, of course, myself. References to
portraits of leading citizens of that period will easily show how this
can be. We were all alike as two peas in the olden days, and at a
time when men reached to an advanced age which is not known now, it
frequently became almost impossible to distinguish one old man from
another. I will say, finally, in regard to this person Noah that if he
can give to the public a statement telling the essential differences
between a pterodactyl and a double spondee that will not prove utterly
absurd to an educated person, I will withdraw my accusation and resign
from the club. BUT I KNOW WELL HE CANNOT DO IT, and he does too, and
that is about the extent of his knowledge.

Now as to Jonah. I really dislike very much to tread upon this worthy's
toes, and I should not do it had he not chosen to clap an injunction
upon a volume of Tales of the Whales, which I wrote for children last
summer, claiming that I was infringing upon his copyright, and feeling
that I as a self-respecting man would never claim the discredit of
having myself been the person he claims to have been. I will candidly
confess that I am not proud of my achievements as Jonah. I was a very
oily person even before I embarked upon the seas as Lord High Admiral
of H.M.S. Leviathan. I was not a pleasant person to know. If I spent
the night with a friend, his roof would fall in or his house would burn
down. If I bet on a horse, he would lead up to the home-stretch and fall
down dead an inch from the finish. If I went into a stock speculation,
I was invariably caught on a rising or a falling market. In my youth I
spoiled every yachting-party I went on by attracting a gale. When I came
out the moon went behind a cloud, and people who began by endorsing my
paper ended up in the poor-house. Commerce wouldn't have me. Boards of
Trade everywhere repudiated me, and I gradually sank into that state of
despair which finds no solace anywhere but on the sea or in politics,
and as politics was then unknown I went to sea. The result is known
to the world. I was cast overboard, ingulfed by a whale, which, in his
defence let me be generous enough to say, swallowed me inadvertently
and with the usual result. I came back, and life went on. Finally I
came here, and when it got to the ears of the authorities that I was in
Hades, they sent me back for the fourth time to earth in the person of
William Shakespeare.

That is the whole of the Jonah story. It is a sad story, and I regret
it; and I am sorry for the impostor when I reflect that the character he
has assumed possesses attractions for him. His real life must have
been a fearful thing if he is happy in his impersonation, and for his
punishment let us leave him where he is. Having told the truth, I
have done my duty. I cheerfully resign my claim to the personality he
claims--I relinquish from this time on all right, title, and interest in
the name; but if he ever dares to interfere with me again in the use of
my personal recollections concerning the inside of whales I shall hale
him before the authorities.

And now, finally, I come to Shakespeare, whom I have kept for the last,
not because he was the last chronologically, but because I like to work
up to a climax.

Previous to my existence as Baron Munchausen I lived for a term of years
on earth as William Shakespeare, and what I have to say now is more in
the line of confession than otherwise.

In my boyhood I was wild and I poached. If I were not afraid of having
it set down as a joke, I should say that I poached everything from eggs
to deer. I was not a great joy to my parents. There was no deviltry in
Stratford in which I did not take a leading part, and finally, for the
good of Warwickshire, I was sent to London, where a person of my talents
was more likely to find congenial and appreciative surroundings. A
glance at such of my autographs as are now extant will demonstrate the
fact that I never learned to write; a glance at the first folios of the
plays attributed to me will likewise show that I never learned to spell;
and yet I walked into London with one of the most exquisite poems in the
English language in my pocket. I am still filled with merriment over it.
How was it, the critics of the years since have asked--how was it that
this untutored little savage from leafy Warwickshire, with no training
and little education, came into London with "Venus and Adonis" in
manuscript in his pocket? It is quite evident that the critic fraternity
have no Sherlock Holmes in their midst. It would not take much of an
eye, a true detective's eye, to see the milk in that cocoanut, for it
is but a simple tale after all. The way of it was this: On my way
from Stratford to London I walked through Coventry, and I remained in
Coventry overnight. I was ill-clad and hungry, and, having no money with
which to pay for my supper, I went to the Royal Arms Hotel and offered
my services as porter for the night, having noted that a rich cavalcade
from London, en route to Kenilworth, had arrived unexpectedly at the
Royal Arms. Taken by surprise, and, therefore, unprepared to accommodate
so many guests, the landlord was glad to avail himself of my services,
and I was assigned to the position of boots. Among others whom I served
was Walter Raleigh, who, noting my ragged condition and hearing what a
roisterer and roustabout I had been, immediately took pity upon me, and
gave me a plum-colored court-suit with which he was through, and which
I accepted, put upon my back, and next day wore off to London. It was
in the pocket of this that I found the poem of "Venus and Adonis." That
poem, to keep myself from starving, I published when I reached London,
sending a complimentary copy of course to my benefactor. When Raleigh
saw it he was naturally surprised but gratified, and on his return to
London he sought me out, and suggested the publication of his sonnets.
I was the first man he'd met, he said, who was willing to publish his
stuff on his own responsibility. I immediately put out some of the
sonnets, and in time was making a comfortable living, publishing the
anonymous works of most of the young bucks about town, who paid well for
my imprint. That the public chose to think the works were mine was none
of my fault. I never claimed them, and the line on the title-page, "By
William Shakespeare," had reference to the publisher only, and not, as
many have chosen to believe, to the author. Thus were published Lord
Bacon's "Hamlet," Raleigh's poems, several plays of Messrs. Beaumont
and Fletcher--who were themselves among the cleverest adapters of the
times--and the rest of that glorious monument to human credulity and
memorial to an impossible, wholly apocryphal genius, known as the works
of William Shakespeare. The extent of my writing during this incarnation
was ten autographs for collectors, and one attempt at a comic opera
called "A Midsummer's Nightmare," which was never produced, because no
one would write the music for it, and which was ultimately destroyed
with three of my quatrains and all of Bacon's evidence against my
authorship of "Hamlet," in the fire at the Globe Theatre in the year
1613.

These, then, dear reader, are the revelations which I have to make.
In my next incarnation I was the man I am now known to be, Baron
Munchausen. As I have said, I make the exposure with regret, but the
arrogance of these impudent impersonators of my various personalities
has grown too great to be longer borne. I lay the simple story of their
villany before you for what it is worth. I have done my duty. If after
this exposure the public of Hades choose to receive them in their homes
and at their clubs, and as guests at their functions, they will do it
with a full knowledge of their duplicity.

In conclusion, fearing lest there be some doubters among the readers
of this paper, I have allowed my friend, the editor of this esteemed
journal, which is to publish this story exclusively on Sunday next, free
access to my archives, and he has selected as exhibits of evidence, to
which I earnestly call your attention, the originals of the cuts which
illustrate this chapter--viz:

I. A full-length portrait of Eve as she appeared at our first meeting.

II. Portraits of Cain and Abel at the ages of two, five, and seven.

III. The original plans and specifications of the Ark.

IV. Facsimile of her commission.

V. Portrait-sketch of myself and the false Noah, made at the time, and
showing how difficult it would have been for any member of my family,
save myself, to tell us apart.

VI. A cathode-ray photograph of the whale, showing myself, the original
Jonah, seated inside.

VII. Facsimiles of the Shakespeare autographs, proving that he knew
neither how to write nor to spell, and so of course proving effectually
that I was not the author of his works.


It must be confessed that I read this article of Munchausen's with
amazement, and I awaited with much excited curiosity the coming again of
the manipulator of my type-writing machine. Surely a revelation of this
nature should create a sensation in Hades, and I was anxious to learn
how it was received. Boswell did not materialize, however, and for five
nights I fairly raged with the fever of curiosity, but on the sixth
night the familiar tinkle of the bell announced an arrival, and I flew
to the machine and breathlessly cried:

"Hullo, old chap, how did it come out?"

The reply was as great a surprise as I have yet had, for it was not
Boswell, Jim Boswell, who answered my question.




IV. A CHAT WITH XANTHIPPE


The machine stopped its clicking the moment I spoke, and the words,
"Hullo, old chap!" were no sooner uttered than my face grew red as a
carnation pink. I felt as if I had committed some dreadful faux-pas, and
instead of gazing steadfastly into the vacant chair, as I had been
wont to do in my conversation with Boswell, my eyes fell, as though
the invisible occupant of the chair were regarding me with a look of
indignant scorn.

"I beg your pardon," I said.

"I should think you might," returned the types. "Hullo, old chap! is
no way to address a woman you've never had the honor of meeting, even if
she is of the most advanced sort. No amount of newness in a woman gives
a man the right to be disrespectful to her."

"I didn't know," I explained. "Really, miss, I--"

"Madame," interrupted the machine, "not miss. I am a married woman, sir,
which makes of your rudeness an even more reprehensible act. It is well
enough to affect a good-fellowship with young unmarried females, but
when you attempt to be flippant with a married woman--"

"But I didn't know, I tell you," I appealed. "How should I? I supposed
it was Boswell I was talking to, and he and I have become very good
friends."

"Humph!" said the machine. "You're a chum of Boswell's, eh?"

"Well, not exactly a chum, but--" I began.

"But you go with him?" interrupted the lady.

"To an extent, yes," I confessed.

"And does he GO with you?" was the query. "If he does, permit me to
depart at once. I should not feel quite in my element in a house where
the editor of a Sunday newspaper was an attractive guest. If you like
that sort of thing, your tastes--"

"I do not, madame," I replied, quickly. "I prefer the opium habit to the
Sunday-newspaper habit, and if I thought Boswell was merely a purveyor
of what is known as Sunday literature, which depends on the goodness of
the day to offset its shortcomings, I should forbid him the house."

A distinct sigh of relief emanated from the chair.

"Then I may remain," was the remark rapidly clicked off on the machine.

"I am glad," said I. "And may I ask whom I have the honor of
addressing?"

"Certainly," was the immediate response. "My name is Socrates, nee
Xanthippe."

I instinctively cowered. Candidly, I was afraid. Never in my life before
had I met a woman whom I feared. Never in my life have I wavered in the
presence of the sex which cheers, but I have always felt that while I
could hold my own with Elizabeth, withstand the wiles of Cleopatra, and
manage the recalcitrant Katherine even as did Petruchio, Xanthippe was
another story altogether, and I wished I had gone to the club. My first
impulse was to call up-stairs to my wife and have her come down. She
knows how to handle the new woman far better than I do. She has never
wanted to vote, and my collars are safe in her hands. She has frequently
observed that while she had many things to be thankful for, her greatest
blessing was that she was born a woman and not a man, and the new women
of her native town never leave her presence without wondering in their
own minds whether or not they are mere humorous contributions of the
Almighty to a too serious world. I pulled myself together as best
I could, and feeling that my better-half would perhaps decline the
proffered invitation to meet with one of the most illustrious of her
sex, I decided to fight my own battle. So I merely said:

"Really? How delightful! I have always felt that I should like to meet
you, and here is one of my devoutest wishes gratified."

I felt cheap after the remark, for Mrs. Socrates, nee Xanthippe, covered
five sheets of paper with laughter, with an occasional bracketing of the
word "derisively," such as we find in the daily newspapers interspersed
throughout the after-dinner speeches of a candidate of another party.
Finally, to my relief, the oft-repeated "Ha-ha-ha!" ceased, and
the line, "I never should have guessed it," closed her immediate
contribution to our interchange of ideas.

"May I ask why you laugh?" I observed, when she had at length finished.

"Certainly," she replied. "Far be it from me to dispute the right of
a man to ask any question he sees fit to ask. Is he not the lord of
creation? Is not woman his abject slave? I not the whole difference
between them purely economic? Is it not the law of supply and demand
that rules them both, he by nature demanding and she supplying?"

Dear reader, did you ever encounter a machine, man-made, merely a
mechanism of ivory, iron, and ink, that could sniff contemptuously? I
never did before this encounter, but the infernal power of either this
type-writer or this woman who manipulated its keys imparted to the
atmosphere I was breathing a sniffing contemptuousness which I have
never experienced anywhere outside of a London hotel, and then only
when I ventured, as few Americans have dared, to complain of the ducal
personage who presided over the dining-room, but who, I must confess,
was conquered subsequently by a tip of ten shillings.

At any rate, there was a sniff of contempt imparted, as I have said, to
the atmosphere I was breathing as Xanthippe answered my question,
and the sniff saved me, just as it did in the London hotel, when I
complained of the lordly lack of manners on the part of the head waiter.
I asserted my independence.

"Don't trouble yourself," I put in. "Of course I shall be interested in
anything you may choose to say, but as a gentleman I do not care to put
a woman to any inconvenience and I do not press the question."

And then I tried to crush her by adding, "What a lovely day we have
had," as if any subject other than the most commonplace was not demanded
by the situation.

"If you contemplate discussing the weather," was the retort, "I wish you
would kindly seek out some one else with whom to do it. I am not one of
your latter-day sit-out-on-the-stairs-while-the-others-dance girls. I
am, as I have always been, an ardent admirer of principles, of great
problems. For small talk I have no use."

"Very well, madame--" I began.

"You asked me a moment ago why I laughed," clicked the machine.

"I know it," said I. "But I withdraw the question. There is no great
principle involved in a woman's laughter. I have known women who have
laughed at a broken heart, as well as at jokes, which shows that there
is no principle involved there; and as a problem, I have never cared
enough about why women laugh to inquire deeply into it. If she'll
just consent to laugh, I'm satisfied without inquiring into the causes
thereof. Let us get down to an agreeable basis for yourself. What
problem do you wish to discuss? Servants, baby-food, floor-polish, or
the number of godets proper to the skirt of a well-dressed woman?"

I was regaining confidence in myself, and as I talked I ceased to fear
her. Thought I to myself, "This attitude of supreme patronage is man's
safest weapon against a woman. Keep cool, assume that there is no doubt
of your superiority, and that she knows it. Appear to patronize her,
and her own indignation will defeat her ends." It is a good principle
generally. Among mortal women I have never known it to fail, and when I
find myself worsted in an argument with one of man's greatest blessings,
I always fall back upon it and am saved the ignominy of defeat. But this
time I counted without my antagonist.

"Will you repeat that list of problems?" she asked, coldly.

"Servants, baby-food, floor-polish, and godets," I repeated, somewhat
sheepishly, she took it so coolly.

"Very well," said Xanthippe, with a note of amusement in her
manipulation of the keys. "If those are your subjects, let us discuss
them. I am surprised to find an able-bodied man like yourself bothering
with such problems, but I'll help you out of your difficulties if I can.
No needy man shall ever say that I ignored his cry for help. What do you
want to know about baby-food?"

This turning of the tables nonplussed me, and I didn't really know what
to say, and so wisely said nothing, and the machine grew sharp in its
clicking.

"You men!" it cried. "You don't know how fearfully shallow you are. I
can see through you in a minute."

"Well," I said, modestly, "I suppose you can." Then calling my feeble
wit to my rescue, I added, "It's only natural, since I've made a
spectacle of myself."

"Not you!" cried Xanthippe. "You haven't even made a monocle of
yourself."

And here we both laughed, and the ice was broken.

"What has become of Boswell?" I asked.

"He's been sent to the ovens for ten days for libelling Shakespeare and
Adam and Noah and old Jonah," replied Xanthippe. "He printed an article
alleged to have been written by Baron Munchausen, in which those four
gentlemen were held up to ridicule and libelled grossly."

"And Munchausen?" I cried.

"Oh, the Baron got out of it by confessing that he wrote the article,"
replied the lady. "And as he swore to his confession the jury were
convinced he was telling another one of his lies and acquitted him, so
Boswell was sent up alone. That's why I am here. There isn't a man in
all Hades that dared take charge of Boswell's paper--they're all so
deadly afraid of the government, so I stepped in, and while Boswell is
baking I'm attending to his editorial duties."

"But you spoke contemptuously of the Sunday newspapers awhile ago, Mrs.
Socrates," said I.

"I know that," said Xanthippe, "but I've fixed that. I get out the
Sunday edition on Saturdays."

"Oh--I see. And you like it?" I queried.

"First rate," she replied. "I'm in love with the work. I almost wish
poor old Bos had been sentenced for ten years. I have enough of the
woman in me to love minding other people's business, and, as far as I
can find out, that's about all journalism amounts to. Sewing societies
aren't to be mentioned in the same day with a newspaper for scandal and
gossip, and, besides, I'm an ardent advocate of men's rights--have been
for centuries--and I've got my first chance now to promulgate a few
of my ideas. I'm really a man in all my views of life--that's the
inevitable end of an advanced woman who persists in following her
'newness' to its logical conclusion. Her habits of thought gradually
come to be those of a man. Even I have a great deal more sympathy with
Socrates than I used to have. I used to think I was the one that should
be emancipated, but I'm really reaching that stage in my manhood where I
begin to believe that he needs emancipation."

"Then you admit, do you," I cried, with great glee, "that this new-woman
business is all Tommy-rot?"

"Not by a great deal," snapped the machine. "Far from it. It's the
salvation of the happy life. It is perfectly logical to say that the
more manny a woman becomes, the more she is likely to sympathize with
the troubles and trials which beset men."

I scratched my head and pulled the lobe of my ear in the hope of
loosening an argument to confront her with, not that I disagreed with
her entirely, but because I instinctively desired to oppose her as
pleasantly disagreeably as I could. But the result was nil.

"I'm afraid you are right," I said.

"You're a truthful man," clicked the machine, laughingly. "You are
afraid I'm right. And why are you afraid? Because you are one of those
men who take a cynical view of woman. You want woman to be a mere lump
of sugar, content to be left in a bowl until it pleases you in your
high-and-mightiness to take her in the tongs and drop her into the
coffee of your existence, to sweeten what would otherwise not please
your taste--and like most men you prefer two or three lumps to one."

I could only cough. The lady was more or less right. I am very fond of
sugar, though one lump is my allowance, and I never exceed it, whatever
the temptation. Xanthippe continued.

"You criticise her because she doesn't understand you and your needs,
forgetting that out of twenty-four hours of your daily existence your
wife enjoys personally about twelve hours of your society, during eight
of which you are lying flat on your back, snoring as though your
life depended on it; but when she asks to be allowed to share your
responsibilities as well as what, in her poor little soul, she thinks
are your joys, you flare up and call her 'new' and 'advanced,' as if
advancement were a crime. You ride off on your wheel for forty miles on
your days of rest, and she is glad to have you do it, but when she wants
a bicycle to ride, you think it's all wrong, immoral, and conducive to a
weak heart. Bah!"

"I--ah--" I began.

"Yes you do," she interrupted. "You ah and you hem and you haw, but in
the end you're a poor miserable social mugwump, conscious of your own
magnificence and virtue, but nobody else ever can attain to your lofty
plane. Now what I want to see among women is more good fellows. Suppose
you regarded your wife as good a fellow as you think your friend Jones.
Do you think you'd be running off to the club every night to play
billiards with Jones, leaving your wife to enjoy her own society?"

"Perhaps not," I replied, "but that's just the point. My wife isn't a
good fellow."

"Exactly, and for that reason you seek out Jones. You have a right to
the companionship of the good fellow--that's what I'm going to advocate.
I've advanced far enough to see that on the average in the present state
of woman she is not a suitable companion for man--she has none of the
qualities of a chum to which he is entitled. I'm not so blind but that I
can see the faults of my own sex, particularly now that I have become so
very masculine myself. Both sexes should have their rights, and that
is the great policy I'm going to hammer at as long as I have Boswell's
paper in charge. I wish you might see my editorial page for to-morrow;
it is simply fine. I urge upon woman the necessity of joining in with
her husband in all his pleasures whether she enjoys them or not. When he
lights a cigar, let her do the same; when he calls for a cocktail,
let her call for another. In time she will begin to understand him.
He understands her pleasures, and often he joins in with them--opera,
dances, lectures; she ought to do the same, and join in with him in his
pleasures, and after a while they'll get upon a common basis, have their
clubs together, and when that happy time comes, when either one goes out
the other will also go, and their companionship will be perfect."

"But you objected to my calling you old chap when we first met," said I.
"Is that quite consistent?"

"Of course," retorted the lady. "We had never met before, and, besides,
doctors do not always take their own medicine."

"But that women ought to become good fellows is what you're going to
advocate, eh?" said I.

"Yes," replied Xanthippe. "It's excellent, don't you think?"

"Superb," I answered, "for Hades. It's just my idea of how things ought
to be in Hades. I think, however, that we mortals will stick to the old
plan for a little while yet; most of us prefer to marry wives rather
than old chaps."

The remark seemed so to affect my visitor that I suddenly became
conscious of a sense of loneliness.

"I don't wish to offend you," I said, "but I rather like to keep the two
separate. Aren't you man enough yet to see the value of variety?"

But there was no answer. The lady had gone. It was evident that she
considered me unworthy of further attention.




V. THE EDITING OF XANTHIPPE


After my interview with Xanthippe, I hesitated to approach the
type-writer for a week or two. It did a great deal of clicking after the
midnight hour had struck, and I was consumed with curiosity to know what
was going on, but I did not wish to meet Mrs. Socrates again, so I held
aloof until Boswell should have served his sentence. I was no longer
afraid of the woman, but I do fear the good fellow of the weaker sex,
and I deemed it just as well to keep out of any and all disputes that
might arise from a casual conversation with a creature of that sort. An
agreement with a real good fellow, even when it ends in a row, is more
or less diverting; but a disputation with a female good fellow places
a man at a disadvantage. The argumentum ad hominem is not an easy thing
with men, but with women it is impossible. Hence, I let the type-writer
click and ring for a fortnight.

Finally, to my relief, I recognized Boswell's touch upon the keys and
sauntered up to the side of the machine.

"Is this Boswell--Jim Boswell?" I inquired.

"All that's left of him," was the answer. "How have you been?"

"Very well," said I. And then it seemed to me that tact required that I
should not seem to know that he had been in the superheated jail of the
Stygian country. So I observed, "You've been off on a vacation, eh?"

"How do you know that?" was the immediate response.

"Well," I put in, "you've been absent for a fortnight, and you look more
or less--ah--burned."

"Yes, I am," replied the deceitful editor. "Very much burned, in fact.
I've been--er--I've been playing golf with a friend down in Cimmeria."

"I envy you," I observed, with an inward chuckle.

"You wouldn't if you knew the links," replied Boswell, sadly. "They're
awfully hard. I don't know any harder course than the Cimmerian."

And then I became conscious of a mistrustful gaze fastened upon me.

"See here," clicked the machine. "I thought I was invisible to you? If
so, how do you know I look burned?"

I was cornered, and there was only one way out of it, and that was by
telling the truth. "Well, you are invisible, old chap," I said. "The
fact is, I've been told of your trouble, and I know what you have
undergone."

"And who told you?" queried Boswell.

"Your successor on the Gazette, Madame Socrates, nee Xanthippe," I
replied.

"Oh, that woman--that woman!" moaned Boswell, through the medium of the
keys. "Has she been here, using this machine too? Why didn't you stop
her before she ruined me completely?"

"Ruined you?" I cried.

"Well, next thing to it," replied Boswell. "She's run my paper so far
into the ground that it will take an almighty powerful grip to pull
it out again. Why, my dear boy, when I went to--to the ovens, I had a
circulation of a million, and when I came back that woman had brought it
down to eight copies, seven of which have already been returned. All in
ten days, too."

"How do you account for it?" I asked.

"'Side Talks with Men' helped, and 'The Man's Corner' did a little, but
the editorial page did the most of it. It was given over wholly to the
advancement of certain Xanthippian ideas, which were very offensive to
my women readers, and which found no favor among the men. She wants to
change the whole social structure. She thinks men and women are the same
kind of animal, and that both need to be educated on precisely the same
lines--the girls to be taught business, the boys to go through a course
of domestic training. She called for subscriptions for a cooking-school
for boys, and demanded the endowment of a commercial college for girls,
and wound up by insisting upon a uniform dress for both sexes. I tell
you, if you'd worked for years to establish a dignified newspaper
the way I have, it would have broken your heart to see the suggested
fashion-plates that woman printed. The uniform dress was a holy terror.
It was a combination of all the worst features of modern garb. Trousers
were to be universal and compulsory; sensible masculine coats were
discarded entirely, and puffed-sleeved dress-coats were substituted.
Stiff collars were abolished in favor of ribbons, and rosettes cropped
up everywhere. Imagine it if you can--and everybody in all Hades was to
be forced into garments of that sort!"

"I should enjoy seeing it," I said.

"Possibly--but you wouldn't enjoy wearing it," retorted the machine.
"And then that woman's funny column--it was frightful. You never saw
such jokes in your life; every one of them contained a covert attack
upon man. There was only one good thing in it, and that was a bit of
verse called 'Fair Play for the Little Girls.' It went like this:

    "'If little boys, when they are young,
        Can go about in skirts,
    And wear upon their little backs
        Small broidered girlish shirts,
    Pray why cannot the little girls,
        When infants, have a chance
    To toddle on their little ways
        In little pairs of pants?'"


"That isn't at all bad," said I, smiling in spite of poor Boswell's woe.
"If the rest of the paper was on a par with that I don't see why the
circulation fell off."

"Well, she took liberties, that's all," said Boswell. "For instance, in
her 'Side Talks with Men' she had something like this: 'Napoleon--It
is rather difficult to say just what you can do with your last season's
cocked-hat. If you were to purchase five yards of one-inch blue ribbon,
cut it into three strips of equal length, and fasten one end to each
of the three corners of the hat, tying the other ends into a choux, it
would make a very acceptable work-basket to send to your grandmother
at Christmas.' Now Napoleon never asked that woman for advice on the
subject. Then there was an answer to a purely fictitious inquiry from
Solomon which read: 'It all depends on local custom. In Salt Lake City,
and in London at the time of Henry the Eighth, it was not considered
necessary to be off with the old love before being on with the new, but
latterly the growth of monopolistic ideas tends towards the uniform rate
of one at a time.' A purely gratuitous fling, that was, at one of my
most eminent patrons, or rather two of them, for latterly both Solomon
and Henry the Eighth have yielded to the tendency of the times and gone
into business, which they have paid me well to advertise. Solomon has
established an 'Information Bureau,' where advice can always be had from
the 'Wise-man,' as he calls himself, on payment of a small fee; while
Henry, taking advantage of his superior equipment over any English king
that ever lived, has founded and liberally advertised his 'Chaperon
Company (Limited).' It's a great thing even in Hades for young people
to be chaperoned by an English queen, and Henry has been smart enough to
see it, and having seven or eight queens, all in good standing, he has
been doing a great business. Just look at it from a business point
of view. There are seven nights in every week, and something going on
somewhere all the time, and queens in demand. With a queen quoted so low
as $100 a night, Henry can make nearly $5000 a week, or $260,000 a
year, out of evening chaperonage alone; and when, in addition to this,
yachting-parties up the Styx and slumming-parties throughout the country
are being constantly given, the man's opportunity to make half a million
a year is in plain sight. I'm told that he netted over $500,000 last
year; and of course he had to advertise to get it, and this Xanthippe
woman goes out of her way to get in a nasty little fling at one of my
mainstays for his matrimonial propensities."

"Failing utterly to see," said I, "that, in marrying so many times,
Henry really paid a compliment to her sex which is without parallel in
royal circles."

"Well, nearly so," said Boswell. "There have been other kings who were
quite as complimentary to the ladies, but Henry was the only man among
them who insisted on marrying them all."

"True," said I. "Henry was eminently proper--but then he had to be."

"Yes," said Boswell, with a meditative tap on the letter Y. "Yes--he had
to be. He was the head of the Church, you know."

"I know it," I put in. "I've always had a great deal of sympathy for
Henry. He has been very much misjudged by posterity. He was the father
of the really first new woman, Elizabeth, and his other daughter, Mary,
was such a vindictive person."

"You are a very fair man, for an American," said Boswell. "Not only
fair, but rare. You think about things."

"I try to," said I, modestly. "And I've really thought a great deal
about Henry, and I've truly seen a valid reason for his continuous
matrimonial performances. He set himself up against the Pope, and he had
to be consistent in his antagonism."

"He did, indeed," said Boswell. "A religious discussion is a hard one."

"And Henry was consistent in his opposition," said I. "He didn't yield
a jot on any point, and while a great many people criticise him on the
score of his wives--particularly on their number--I feel that I have in
very truth discovered his principle."

"Which was?" queried Boswell.

"That the Pope was wrong in all things," said I.

"So he said," commented Boswell.

"And being wrong in all things, celibacy was wrong," said I.

"Exactly," ejaculated Boswell.

"Well, then," said I, "if celibacy is wrong, the surest way to protest
against it is to marry as many times as you can."

"By Jove!" said Boswell, tapping the keys yearningly, as though he
wished he might spare his hand to shake mine, "you are a man after my
own heart."

"Thanks, old chap," said I, reaching out my hand and shaking it in the
air with my visionary friend--"thanks. I've studied these things with
some care, and I've tried to find a reason for everything in life as
I know it. I have always regarded Henry as a moral man--as is natural,
since in spite of all you can say he is the real head of the English
Church. He wasn't willing to be married a second or a seventh time
unless he was really a widower. He wasn't as long in taking notice again
as some modern widowers that I have met, but I do not criticise him on
that score. I merely attribute his record to his kingly nature, which
involves necessarily a quickness of decision and a decided perception
of the necessities which is sadly lacking in people who are born to a
lesser station in life. England demanded a queen, and he invariably met
the demand, which shows that he knew something of political economy as
well as of matrimony; and as I see it, being an American, a man needs to
know something of political economy to be a good ruler. So many of our
statesmen have acquired a merely kindergarten knowledge of the science,
that we have had many object-lessons of the disadvantages of a merely
elementary knowledge of the subject. To come right down to it, I am
a great admirer of Henry. At any rate, he had the courage of his
heart-convictions."

"You really surprise me," tapped Boswell. "I never expected to find an
American so thoroughly in sympathy with kings and their needs."

"Oh, as for that," said I, "in America we are all kings and we are not
without our needs, matrimonial and otherwise, only our courts are
not quite so expeditious as Henry's little axe. But what was Henry's
attitude towards this extraordinary flight of Xanthippe's?"

"Wrath," said Boswell. "He was very much enraged, and withdrew his
advertisements, declined to give our society reporters the usual
accounts of the functions his wives chaperoned, and, worst of all, has
withdrawn himself and induced others to withdraw from the symposium I
was preparing for my special Summer Girls' issue, which is to appear
in August, on 'How Men Propose.' He and Brigham Young and Solomon and
Bonaparte had agreed to dictate graphic accounts of how they had done
it on various occasions, and Queen Elizabeth, who probably had more
proposals to the square minute that any other woman on record, was to
write the introduction. This little plan, which was really the idea of
genius, is entirely shattered by Mrs. Socrates's infernal interference."

"Nonsense," said I. "Don't despair. Why don't you come out with a plain
statement of the facts? Apologize."

"You forget, my dear sir," interposed Boswell, "that one of the
fundamental principles of Hades as an institution is that excuses don't
count. It isn't a place for repentance so much as for expiation, and I
might apologize nine times a minute for forty years and would still have
to suffer the penalty of the offence. No, there is nothing to be done
but to begin my newspaper work again, build up again the institution
that Xanthippe has destroyed, and bear my misfortunes like a true
spirit."

"Spoken like a philosopher!" I cried. "And if I can help you, my dear
Boswell, count upon me. In anything you may do, whether you start
a monthly magazine, a sporting weekly, or a purely American Sunday
newspaper, you are welcome to anything I can do for you."

"You are very kind," returned Boswell, appreciatively, "and if I need
your services I shall be glad to avail myself of them. Just at present,
however, my plans are so fully prepared that I do not think I shall
have to call upon you. With Sherlock Holmes engaged to write twelve
new detective stories; Poe to look after my tales of horror; D'Artagnan
dictating his personal memoirs; Lucretia Borgia running my Girls'
Department; and others too numerous to mention, I have a sufficient
supply of stuff to fill up; but if you feel like writing a few poems for
me I may be able to use them as fillers, and they may help to make your
name so well known in Hades that next year I shall be able to print a
Worldly Letter from you every week with a good chance of its proving
popular."

And with this promise Boswell left me to get out the first number of The
Cimmerian: a Sunday Magazine for all. Taking him at his word, I sent him
the following poem a few days later:


    LOCALITY

    Whither do we drift,
    Insensate souls, whose every breath
    Foretells the doom of nothingness?
    Yet onward, upward let it be
    Through all the myriad circles
    Of the ensuing years--
    And then, pray what?
    Alas! 'tis all, and never shall be stated.
    Atoms, yet atomless we drift,
    But whitherward?


I had intended this for one of our leading magazines, but it seemed
so to lack the mystical quality, which is essential to a successful
magazine poem in our sphere, that I deemed it best to try it on Boswell.




VI. THE BOSWELL TOURS: PERSONALLY CONDUCTED


It was and will no doubt be considered, even by those who are not too
friendly towards myself, a daring idea, and it was all my own. One
night, several weeks after the interview with Boswell just narrated, the
idea came to me simultaneously with the first tapping of the keys for
the evening upon the Enchanted Type-Writer. It was Boswell's touch that
summoned me from my divan. My family were on the eve of departure for
a month's rest from care and play in the mountains, and I was
looking forward to a period of very great loneliness. But as Boswell
materialized and began his work upon the machine, the great idea flashed
across my mind, and I resolved to "play it" for all it was worth.

"Jim," said I, as I approached the vacant chair in which he sat--for
by this time the great biographer and I had got upon terms of
familiarity--"Jim," said I, "I've got a very gloomy prospect ahead of
me."

"Well, why not?" he tapped off. "Where do you expect to have your gloomy
prospects? They can't very well be behind you."

"Humph!" said I. "You are facetious this evening."

"Not at all," he replied. "I have been spending the day with my old-time
boss, Samuel Johnson, and I am so saturated with purism that I hardly
know where I am. From the Johnsonian point of view you have expressed
yourself ill--"

"Well, I am ill," I retorted. "I don't know how far you are acquainted
with home life, but I do know that there is no greater homesickness in
the world than that of the man who is sick of home."

"I am not an imitator," said Boswell, "but I must imitate you to the
extent of saying humph! I quote you, and, doing so, I honor you. But
really, I never thought you could be sick of home, as you put it--you
who are so happy at home and who so wildly hate being away from home."

"I'm not surprised at that, my dear Boswell," said I. "But you are, of
course, familiar with the phrase 'Stone walls do not a prison make?'"

"I've heard it," said Boswell.

"Well, there's another equally valid phrase which I have not yet heard
expressed by another, and it is this: 'Stone walls do not a home make.'"

"It isn't very musical, is it?" said he.

"Not very," I answered, "but we don't all live magazine lives, do we? We
have occasionally a sentiment, a feeling, out of which we do not try 'to
make copy.' It is undoubtedly a truth which I have not yet seen voiced
by any modern poet of my acquaintance, not even by the dead-baby poets,
that home is not always preferable to some other things. At any rate,
it is my feeling, and is shortly to represent my condition. My home,
you know. It has its walls and its pictures, and its thousand and one
comforts, and its associations, but when my wife and my children are
away, and the four walls do not re-echo the voices of the children, and
my library lacks the presence of madame, it ceases truly to be home, and
if I've got to stay here during the month of August alone I must have
diversion, else I shall find myself as badly off as the butterfly man,
to whom a vaudeville exhibition is the greatest joy in life."

"I think you are queer," said Boswell.

"Well, I am not," said I. "However low we may set the standard of man,
Mr. B."--and I called him Mr. B. instead of Jim, because I wished to be
severe and yet retain the basis of familiarity--"however low we may set
the standard of man, I think man as a rule prefers his home to the most
seductive roof-garden life in existence."

"Wherefore?" said he, coldly.

"Wherefore my home about to become unattractive through the absence of
my boys and their mother, I shall need some extraordinary diversion to
accomplish my happiness. Now if you can come here, why can't others?
Suppose to-night you dash off on the machine a lot of invitations to the
pleasantest people in Hades to come up here with you and have an evening
on earth, which isn't all bad."

"It's a scheme and a half," said Boswell, with more enthusiasm than I
had expected. "I'll do it, only instead of trying to get these people
to make a pilgrimage to your shrine, which I think they would decline to
do--Shakespeare, for instance, wouldn't give a tuppence to inspect
your birthplace as you have inspected his--I'll institute a series of
'Boswell's Personally Conducted Pleasure Parties,' and make you my agent
here. That, you see, will naturally make your home our headquarters, and
I think the scheme would work a charm, because there are a great many
well-known Stygians who are curious to revisit the scenes of
their earlier state, but who are timid about coming on their own
responsibility."

"I see," said I. "Immortals are but mortal after all, with all the
timidity and weaknesses of mortality. But I agree to the proposition,
and if you wish it I'll prepare to give them a rousing old time."

"And be sure to show them something characteristic," said Boswell.

"I will," I replied; "I may even get up a trolley-party for them."

"I don't know what a trolley-party is, but it sounds well," said
Boswell, "and I'll advertise the enterprise at once. 'Boswell's
Personally Conducted Pleasure Parties. First Series, No. 1. Trolleying
Through Hoboken. For the Round Trip, Four Dollars. Supper and All
Expenses Included. No Tips. Extra Lady's Ticket, One Dollar.'"

"Hold on!" I cried. "That can't be. These affairs will really have to be
stag-parties--with my wife away, you know."

"Not if we secure a suitable chaperon," said Boswell.

"Anyhow!" said I, with great positiveness. "You don't suppose that in
the absence of my family I'm going to have my neighbors see me cavorting
about the country on a trolley-car full of queens and duchesses and
other females of all ages? Not a bit of it, my dear James. I'm not a
strictly conventional person, but there are some points between which I
draw lines. I've got to live on this earth for a little while yet, and
until I leave it I must be guided more or less in what I do by what the
world approves or disapproves."

"Very well," Boswell answered. "I suppose you are right, but in the
autumn, when your family has returned--"

"We can discuss the matter again," said I, resolved to put off the
question for as long a time as I could, for I candidly confess that I
had no wish to make myself responsible for the welfare of such Stygian
ladies as might avail themselves of the opportunity to go off on one
of Boswell's tours. "Show the value and beauties of your plan to the
influential men of Hades first, my dear Boswell," I added, "and then if
they choose they can come again and bring their wives with them on their
own responsibility."

"I fancy that is the best plan, but we ought to have some variety in
these tours," he replied. "A trolley-party, however successful, would
not make a great season for an entertainment bureau, would it?"

"No, indeed," said I. "You are perfectly right about that. What you
want is one function a week during the summer season. Open with the
trolley-party as No. 1 of your first series. Follow this with 'An
Evening of Vaudeville: The Grand Tour of the Roof Gardens.' After that
have a 'Sunday at the Sea-side--Surf Bathing, Summer Girls and Sand.'
That would make a mighty attractive line for your advertisement."

"Magnificent. I don't see why you don't give up poetry and magazine
work and get a position as poster-writer for a circus. You are only a
mediocre magazinist, but in the poster business you'd be a genius."

This was tapped off with such manifest sincerity that I could not take
offence, so I thanked him and resumed.

"The grand finale of your first series might be 'A Tandem Scorch: A
Century Run on a Bicycle Built for Two Hundred!'"

"Magnificent!" cried Boswell, with such enthusiasm that I feared he
would smash the machine. "I'll devote a whole page of my Sunday issue to
the prospectus--but, to return to the woman question, we ought really
to have something to announce for them. Hades hath no fury like a woman
scorned, and I can't afford to scorn the sex. You needn't have anything
to do with them if you don't want to--only tell me something I can
announce, and I'll make Henry the Eighth solid again by putting that
branch of the enterprise in his wives' hands. In that way I'll kill two
birds with one stone."

"That's all very well, Boswell, but I'm afraid I can't," said I. "It's
hard enough to know how to please a mortal woman without attempting to
get up a series of picnics for the rather miscellaneous assortment of
ladies who form your social structure below. All men are alike, and
man's pleasures in all times have been generally the same, but every
woman is unique. I never knew two who were alike, and if it's all the
same to you I'd rather you left me out of your ladies' tours altogether.
Of course I know that even the Queen of Sheba would enjoy a visit to a
Monday sale at one of our big department stores, and I am quite as well
aware that nine out of ten women in Hades or out of it would enjoy
the millinery exhibition at the opera matinee--and if these two ideas
impress you at all you are welcome to them--but beyond this I have
nothing to suggest."

"Well, I'm sure those two ideas are worth a great deal," returned
Boswell, making a note of them; "I shall announce four trips to Monday
sales--"

"Call 'em 'To Bargaindale and Back: The Great Marked-down Tour,' and be
sure you add, 'For Able-bodied Women Only. No Tickets Issued Except on
Recommendation of your Family Physician.' This is especially important,
for next to a war or a football match there's nothing that I know of
that is quite so dangerous to the participants as a bargain day."

"I'll bear what you say in mind," quoth Boswell, and he made a note of
my injunction. "And immediately upon my return to Hades I will request
an audience with Henry's queens, and ask them to devise a number of
other tours likely to prove profitable and popular."

Shortly after my visitor departed and I retired. The next day my family
deserted me and went to the mountains, and all my fears as to the
inordinate sense of loneliness which was to be my lot were realized.
Even Boswell neglected me apparently for a week. I went to my desk
daily and returned at night hoping that my type-writer would bring forth
something of an interesting nature, but naught other than disappointment
awaited me. For a whole blessed week I was thrown back upon the society
of my neighbors for diversion. The type-writer gave no sign of being.

Little did I guess that Boswell was busy working up my scheme in his
Stygian home!

But it came to pass finally that I was roused up. Walking one morning to
my desk to find a bit of memoranda I needed, I discovered a type-written
slip marked, "No time for small talk. Boswell's tours grand success.
Trolley-party to-night. Ten cars wanted. Jim."

It was a large order for a town like mine, where forty thousand people
have to get along with five cars--two open ones for winter and two
closed for summer, and one, which we have never seen, which is kept for
use in the repair-shop. I was in despair. Ten car-loads of immortals
coming to my house for a trolley-party under such conditions! It was
frightful! I did the best I could, however.

I ordered one trolley-car to be ready at eight, and a large variety of
good things edible and drinkable, the latter to be held subject to the
demand-notes of our guests.

As may be imagined, I did little real work that day, and when I returned
home at night I was on tenter-hooks lest something should go wrong; but
fortunately Boswell himself came early and relieved me of my worry--in
fact, he was at the machine when I entered the house.

"Well," he said, "have you the ten cars?"

"What do you take me for," said I, "a trolley-car trust? Of course I
haven't. There are only five cars in town, one of which is kept in the
repair-shop for effect. I've hired one."

"Humph!" he cried. "What will the kings do?"

"Kings!" I cried. "What kings?"

"I have nine kings and one car-load of common souls besides for this
affair," he explained. "Each king wants a special car."

"Kings be jiggered!" said I. "A trolley-party, my much beloved James,
is an essentially democratic institution, and private cars are not de
rigueur. If your kings choose to come, let 'em hang on by the straps."

"But I've charged 'em extra!" cried Boswell.

"That's all right," said I, "they receive extra. They have the ride
plus the straps, with the privilege of standing out on the platform
and ringing the gong if they want to. The great thing about the
trolley-party is that there's no private car business about it."

"Well, I don't know," Boswell murmured, reflectively. "If Charles the
First and Louis Fourteenth don't kick about being crowded in with all
the rest, I can stand anything that Frederick the Great or Nero
might say; but those two fellows are great sticklers for the royal
prerogative."

"There isn't any such thing as royal prerogative on a trolley-car," I
retorted, "and if they don't like what they get they can sit down in the
waiting-room and wait until we get back."

But Boswell's fears were not realized. Charles and Louis were perfectly
delighted with the trolley-party, and long before we reached home the
former had rung up the fare-register to its full capacity, while the
latter, a half-a-dozen times, delightedly occupied himself in mastering
the intricacies of the overhead wire. The trolley-party was an undoubted
success. The same remains to be said of the vaudeville expedition of
the following week. The same guests and potentates attended this, to
the number of twenty, and the Boswell tours were accounted a great
enterprise, and bade fair to redeem the losses of the eminent journalist
incurred during Xanthippe's administration of his affairs; but after
the bicycle night I had to withdraw from the combination to save my
reputation. The fact upon which I had not counted was that my neighbors
began to think me insane. I had failed to remember that none of these
visiting spirits was visible to us in this material world, and while
my fellow-townsmen were disposed to lay up my hiring of a special
trolley-car for my own private and particular use against the
eccentricity of genius, they marvelled greatly that I should purchase
twenty of the best seats at a vaudeville show seemingly for my own
exclusive use. When, besides this, they saw me start off apparently
alone on one tandem bicycle, followed by twenty-eight other empty
wheels, which they could not know were manipulated by some of the most
famous legs in the history of the world, from Noah's down to those
of Henry Fielding the novelist, they began to regard me as something
uncanny.

Nor can I blame them. It seems to me that if I saw one man scorching
along a road alone on a tandem bicycle chatting to an empty front-seat,
I should think him queer, but if following in his wake I perceived
twenty-eight other wheels, scorching up hill and down dale without any
visible motive power, I should regard him as one who was in league with
the devil himself.

Nevertheless, I judge from what Boswell has told me that I am regarded
in Hades as a great benefactor of the people there, for having
established a series of excursions from that world into this, a service
which has done much to convince the Stygians that after all, if only by
contrast, the life below has its redeeming features.




VII. AN IMPORTANT DECISION


For some time after the organization of the Pleasure Tours, the
Enchanted Type-Writer appeared to be deserted. Night after night I
watched over it with great care lest I should lose any item of interest
that might come to me from below, but, much to my sorrow, things in
Hades appeared to be dull--so dull that the machine was not called
into requisition at all. I little guessed what important matters were
transpiring in that wonderful country. Had I done so, I doubt I should
have waited so patiently, although my only method of getting there
was suicide, for which diversion I have very little liking. On the
twenty-fourth night of waiting, however, the welcome sound of the bell
dragged me forth from my comfortable couch, whither, expecting nothing,
I had retired early.

"Glad to hear your pleasant tinkle again," I said. "I've missed you."

"I'm glad to get back," returned Boswell, for it was he who was
manipulating the keys. "I've been so infernally busy, however, over the
court news, that I haven't had a minute to spare."

"Court news, eh?" I said. "You are going to open up a society column,
are you?"

"Not I," he replied. "It's the other kind of a court. We've been having
some pretty hot litigation down in Hades since I was here last. The
city of Cimmeria has been suing the State of Hades for ten years back
dog-taxes."

"For what?" I cried.

"Unpaid dog-taxes for ten years," Boswell explained. "We have just as
much government below in our cities as you have, and I will say for
Hades that our cities are better run than yours."

"I suppose that is due to the fact that when a man gets to Hades
he immediately becomes a reformer," I suggested, with a wink at the
machine, which somehow or other did not seem to appreciate the joke.

"Possibly," observed Boswell. "Whatever the reason, however, the fact
remains that Cimmeria is a well-governed city, and, what is more, it
isn't afraid to assert its rights even as against old Apollyon himself."

"It's safe enough for a corporation," said I. "Much safer for a
corporation which has no soul, than for an individual who has. You can't
torture a city--"

"Oh, can't you!" laughed Boswell. "Humph. Apollyon can make it as hot
for a city as he can for an individual. It is evident that you never
heard of Sodom and Gomorrah--which is surprising to me, since your jokes
about Lot's wife being too fresh and getting salted down, would seem to
indicate that you had heard something about the punishment those cities
underwent."

"You are right, Bozzy," I said. "I had forgotten. But tell me about the
dog-tax. Does the State own a dog?"

"Does it?" roared Boswell. "Why, my dear fellow, where were you brought
up and educated. Does the State own a dog!"

"That's what I asked you," I put in, meekly. "I may be very ignorant,
unless you mean the kind that we have in our legislatures, called the
watch-dogs of the treasury, or, perhaps, the dogs of war. But I never
thought any city would be crazy enough to make the government take out a
license for them."

"Never heard of a beast named Cerberus, I suppose?" said Boswell.

"Yes, I have," I answered. "He guards the gates to the infernal
regions."

"Well--he's the bone of contention," said Boswell. "You see, about ten
years ago the people of Cimmeria got rather tired of the condition of
their streets. They were badly paved. They were full of good intentions,
but the citizens thought they ought to have something more lasting, so
they voted to appropriate an enormous sum for asphalting. They didn't
realize how sloppy asphalt would become in that climate, but after the
asphalt was put down they found out, and a Beelzebub of a time of
it they had. Pegasus sprained his off hind leg by slipping on it,
Bucephalus got into it with all four feet and had to be lifted out with
a derrick, and every other fine horse we had was more or less injured,
and the damage suits against the city were enormous. To remedy this, the
asphalting was taken up and a Nicholson wood pavement was put down. This
was worse than the other. It used to catch fire every other night, and,
finally, to protect their houses, the people rose up en masse and ripped
it all to pieces.

"This necessitated a third new pavement, of Belgian blocks, to pay for
which the already overburdened city of Cimmeria had to issue bonds to
an enormous amount, all of which necessitated an increase of taxes.
Naturally, one of the first taxes to be imposed was a dog-tax, and it
was that which led to this lawsuit, which, I regret to say, the city has
lost, although Judge Blackstone's decision was eminently fair."

"Wouldn't the State pay?" I asked.

"Yes--on Cerberus as one dog," said Boswell. "The city claimed, however,
that Cerberus was more than that, and endeavored to collect on three
dogs--one license for each head. This the State declined to pay, and
out of this grew further complications of a distressing nature. The city
sent its dog-catchers up to abscond with the dog, intending to cut off
two of its heads, and return the balance as being as much of the beast
as the State was entitled to maintain on a single license. It was an
unfortunate move, for when Cerberus himself took the situation in, which
he did at a glance, he nabbed the dog-catcher by the coat-tails with one
pair of jaws, grabbed hold of his collar with another, and shook him as
he would a rat, meanwhile chewing up other portions of the unfortunate
official with his third set of teeth. The functionary was then carried
home on a stretcher, and subsequently sued the city for damages, which
he recovered.

"Another man was sent out to lure the ferocious beast to the pound with
a lasso, but it worked no better than the previous attempt. The lasso
fell all right tight about one of the animal's necks, but his other two
heads immediately set to work and gnawed the rope through, and then set
off after the dog-catcher, overtaking him at the very door of the pound.
This time he didn't do any biting, but lifting the dog-catcher up with
his various sets of teeth, fastened to his collar, coat-tails, and feet
respectively, carried him yelling like a trooper to the end of the
wharf and dropped him into the Styx. The result of this was nervous
prostration for the dog-catcher, another suit for damages for the city,
and a great laugh for the State authorities. In fact," Boswell added,
confidentially, "I think perhaps the reason why the Prime-minister
hasn't got Apollyon to hang the whole city government has been due to
the fun they've got out of seeing Cerberus and the city fighting it out
together. There's no doubt about it that he is a wonderful dog, and is
quite capable of taking care of himself."

"But the outcome of the case?" I asked, much interested.

"Defeat for the city," said Boswell. "Failing to enforce its authority
by means of its servants, the city undertook to recover by due process
of law. The dog-catchers were powerless; the police declined to act on
the advice of the commissioners, since dog-catching was not within their
province; and the fire department averred that it was designed for
the putting out of fires and not for extinguishing fiery canines like
Cerberus. The dog, meanwhile, to show his contempt for the city, chewed
the license-tag off the neck upon which it had been placed, and dropped
it into a smelting-pot inside the gates of the infernal regions that was
reserved to bring political prisoners to their senses, and, worse than
all, made a perfect nuisance of himself by barking all day and baying
all night, rain or shine."

"Papers in a suit at law were then served on Mazarin and the other
members of Apollyon's council, the causes of complaint were recited, and
damages for ten years back taxes on two dogs, plus the amounts recovered
from the city by the two injured dog-catchers, were demanded. The suit
was put upon the calendar, and Apollyon himself sat upon the bench with
Judge Blackstone, before whom the case was to be tried.

"On both sides the arguments were exceedingly strong. Coke appeared for
the city and Catiline for the State. After the complaint was read, the
attorney for the State put in his answer, that the State's contention
was that the ordinance had been complied with, that Cerberus was only
one dog, and that the license had been paid; that the license having
been paid, the dog-catchers had no right to endeavor to abduct the
animal, and that having done so they did it at their own peril; that
the suit ought to be dismissed, but that for the fun of it the State was
perfectly willing to let it go on.

"In rebuttal the plaintiff claimed that Cerberus was three dogs to all
intents and purposes, and the first dog-catcher was called to testify.
After giving his name and address he was asked a few questions of minor
importance, and then Coke asked:

"'Are you familiar with dogs?'

"'Moderately,' was the answer. 'I never got quite so intimate with one
as I did with him.'

"'With whom?' asked Coke.

"'Cerberus,' replied the witness.

"'Do you consider him to be one dog, two dogs or three dogs?'

"'I object!' cried Catiline, springing to his feet. 'The question is a
leading one.'

"'Sustained,' said Blackstone, with a nervous glance at Apollyon, who
smiled reassuringly at him.

"'Ah, you say you know a dog when you see one?' asked Coke.

"'Yes,' said the witness, 'perfectly.'

"'Do you know two dogs when you see them, or even three?' asked Coke.

"'I do,' replied the witness.

"'And how many dogs did you see when you saw Cerberus?' asked Coke,
triumphantly.

"'Three, anyhow,' replied the witness, with feeling, 'though afterwards
I thought there was a whole bench-show atop of me.'

"'Your witness,' said Coke.

"A murmur of applause went through the court-room, at which Apollyon
frowned; but his face cleared in a moment when Catiline rose up.

"'My cross-examination of this witness, your honor, will be confined to
one question.' Then turning to the witness he said, blandly: 'My poor
friend, if you considered Cerberus to be three dogs anyhow, why did you
in your examination a moment since refer to the avalanche of caninity,
of which you so affectingly speak, as him?'

"'He is a him,' said the witness.

"'But if there were three, should he not have been a them?'

"Coke swore profanely beneath his breath, and the witness squirmed
about in his chair, confused and broken, while both Judge Blackstone and
Apollyon smiled broadly. Manifestly the point of the defence had pierced
the armor of the plaintiff.

"'Your witness for re-direct,' said Catiline.

"'No thanks,' retorted Coke; 'there are others,' and, motioning to his
first witness to step down, he called the second dog-catcher.

"'What is your business?' asked Coke, after the usual preliminary
questions.

"'I'm out of business. Livin' on my damages,' said the witness.

"'What damages?' asked Coke.

"'Them I got from the city for injuries did me by that there--I should
say them there--dorgs, Cerberus.'

"'Them there what?' persisted Coke, to emphasize the point.

"'Dorgs,' said the witness, convincingly--'D-o-r-g-s.'

"'Why s?' queried Coke. 'We may admit the r, but why the s?'

"'Because it's the pullural of dorg. Cerberus ain't any single-headed
commission,' said the witness, who was something of a ward politician.

"'Why do you say that Cerberus is more than one dog?'

"'Because I've had experience,' replied the witness. 'I've seen the time
when he was everywhere all at once; that's why I say he's more than one
dorg. If he'd been only one dorg he couldn't have been anywhere else
than where he was.'

"'When was that?'

"'When I lassoed him.'

"'Him?' remonstrated Coke.

"'Yes,' said the witness. 'I only caught one of him, and then the other
two took a hand.'

"'Ah, the other two,' said Coke. 'You know dogs when you see them?'

"'I do, and he was all of 'em in a bunch,' replied the witness.

"'Your witness,' said Coke.

"'My friend,' said Catiline, rising quietly. 'How many men are you?'

"'One, sir,' was the answer.

"'Have you ever been in two places at once?'

"'Yes, sir.'

"'When was that?'

"'When I was in jail and in London all at the same time.'

"'Very good; but were you in two places on the day of this attack upon
you by Cerberus?'

"'No, sir. I wish I had been. I'd have stayed in the other place.'

"'Then if you were in but one place yourself, how do you know that
Cerberus was in more than one place?'

"'Well, I guess if you--'

"'Answer the question,' said Catiline.

"'Oh, well--of course--'

"'Of course,' echoed Catiline. 'That's it, your honor; it is only "of
course,"--and I rest my case. We have no witnesses to call. We have
proven by their own witnesses that there is no evidence of Cerberus
being more than one dog.'

"You ought to have heard the cheers as Catiline sat down," continued
Boswell. "As for poor Coke, he was regularly knocked out, but he rose
up to sum up his case as best he could. Blackstone, however, stopped him
right at the beginning.

"'The counsel for the plaintiff might as well sit down,' he said, 'and
save his breath. I've decided this case in favor of the defendant long
ago. It is plain to every one that Cerberus is only one dog, in spite of
his many talents and manifest ability to be in several places at once,
and inasmuch as the tax which is sued for is merely a dog-tax and not
a poll-tax, I must render judgment for the defendants, with costs. Next
case.'

"And the city of Cimmeria was thrown out of court," concluded Boswell.
"Interesting, eh?"

"Very," said I. "But how will this affect Blackstone? Isn't he a City
Judge?"

"No," replied Boswell; "he was, but his term expired this morning, and
this afternoon Apollyon appointed him Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
of Hades."




VIII. A HAND-BOOK TO HADES


"Boswell," said I, the other night, as the machine began to click
nervously. "I have just received a letter from an unknown friend in
Hawaii who wants to know how the prize-fight between Samson and Goliath
came out that time when Kidd and his pirate crew stole the House-Boat on
the Styx."

"Just wait a minute, please," the machine responded. "I am very busy
just now mapping out the itinerary of the first series of the Boswell
Personally Conducted Tours you suggested some time ago. I laid that
whole proposition before the Entertainment Committee of the Associated
Shades, and they have resolved unanimously to charter the Ex-Great
Eastern from the Styx Navigation Company, and return to the scenes of
their former glory, devoting a year to it."

"Going to take their wives?" I asked.

"I don't know," Boswell replied. "That is a matter outside of the
jurisdiction of the committee and must be decided by a full vote of the
club. I hope they will, however. As manager of the enterprise I need
assistance, and there are some of the men who can't be managed by
anybody except their wives, or mothers-in-law, anyhow. I'll be through
in a few minutes. Meanwhile let me hand you the latest product of the
Boswell press."

With this the genial spirit produced from an invisible pocket a
red-covered book bearing the delicious title of "Baedeker's Hades: A
Hand-book for Travellers," which has entirely superseded, according to
the advertisement on the fly-leaves, such books as Virgil and Dante's
Inferno as the best guide to the lower regions, as well it might, for
it appeared on perusal to have been prepared with as much care as one
of the more material guide-books of the same publisher, which so greatly
assist travellers on this side of the Stygian River.

Some time, if Boswell will permit, I shall endeavor to have this little
volume published in this country since it contains many valuable hints
to the man of a roving disposition, or for the stay-at-home, for that
matter, for all roads lead to Hades. For instance, we do not find in
previous guide-books, like Dante's Inferno, any references whatsoever to
the languages it is well to know before taking the Stygian tour; to the
kind of money needed, or its quantity per capita; no allusion to
the necessity of passports is found in Dante or Virgil; custom-house
requirements are ignored by these authors; no statements as to the
kind of clothing needed, the quality of the hotels--nor indeed any real
information of vital importance to the traveller is to be found in the
older books. In Baedeker's Hades, on the other hand, all these subjects
are exhaustively treated, together with a very comprehensive series
of chapters on "Stygian Wines," "Climate," and "Hellish Art"--the
expression is not mine--and other topics of essential interest.

And of what suggestive quality was this little book. Who would ever have
guessed from a perusal of Dante that as Hades is the place of departed
spirits so also is it the ultimate resting-place of all other departed
things. What delightful anticipations are there in the idea of a visit
to the Alexandrian library, now suitably housed on the south side of
Apollyon Square, Cimmeria, in a building that would drive the trustees
of the Boston Public Library into envious despair, even though living
Bacchantes are found daily improving their minds in the recesses of
its commodious alcoves! What joyous feelings it gives one to think of
visiting the navy-yards of Tyre and finding there the ships concerning
the whereabouts of which poets have vainly asked questions for ages!
Who would ever dream that the question of the balladist, himself an able
dreamer concerning classic things, "Where are the Cities of Old Time,"
could ever find its answer in a simple guide-book telling us where
Carthage is, where Troy and all the lost cities of antiquity!

Then the details of amusements in this wonderful country--who could
gather aught of these from the Italian poet? The theatres of Gehenna,
with "Hamlet" produced under the joint direction of Shakespeare and the
Prince of Denmark himself, the great Zoo of Sheolia, with Jumbo, and the
famous woolly horse of earlier days, not to mention the long series
of menageries which have passed over the dark river in the ages now
forgotten; the hanging gardens of Babylon, where the picnicking element
of Hades flock week after week, chuting the chutes, and clambering
joyously in and out of the Trojan Horse, now set up in all its majesty
therein, with bowling-alleys on its roof, elevators in its legs, and
the original Ferris-wheel in its head; the freak museums in the densely
populated sections of the large cities, where Hop o' my Thumb and Jack
the Giant Killer are exhibited day after day alongside of the great
ogres they have killed; the opera-house, with Siegfried himself singing,
supported by the real Brunhild and the original, bona fide dragon
Fafnir, running of his own motive power, and breathing actual fire and
smoke without the aid of a steam-engine and a plumber to connect him
therewith before he can go out upon the stage to engage Siegfried in
deadly combat.

For the information contained in this last item alone, even if the book
had no other virtue, it would be worthy of careful perusal from the
opening paragraph on language, to the last, dealing with the descent
into the Vitriol Reservoir at Gehenna. The account of the feeding of
Fafnir, to which admission can be had on payment of ten oboli, beginning
with a puree of kerosene, followed by a half-dozen cartridges on the
half-shell, an entree of nitro-glycerine, a solid roast of cannel-coal,
and a salad of gun-cotton, with a mayonnaise dressing of alcohol and a
pinch of powder, topped off with a demi-tasse of benzine and a box of
matches to keep the fires of his spirit going, is one of the most
moving things I have ever read, and yet it may be said without fear of
contradiction that until this guide-book was prepared very few of the
Stygian tourists have imagined that there was such a sight to be seen.
I have gone carefully over Dante, Virgil, and the works of Andrew Lang,
and have found no reference whatsoever in the pages of any of these
talented persons to this marvellous spectacle which takes place three
times a day, and which I doubt not results in a performance of Siegfried
for the delectation of the music lovers of Hades, which is beyond the
power of the human mind to conceive.

The hand-book has an added virtue, which distinguishes it from any other
that I have ever seen, in that it is anecdotal in style at times where
an anecdote is available and appropriate. In connection with this same
Fafnir, as showing how necessary it is for the tourist to be careful of
his personal safety in Hades, it is related that upon one occasion the
keeper of the dragon having taken a grudge against Siegfried for some
unintentional slight, fed Fafnir upon Roman-candles and a sky-rocket,
with the result that in the fight between the hero and the demon of the
wood the Siegfried was seriously injured by the red, white, and
blue balls of fire which the dragon breathed out upon him, while the
sky-rocket flew out into the audience and struck a young man in the top
gallery, knocking him senseless, the stick falling into a grand-tier
box and impaling one of the best known social lights of Cimmeria.
"Therefore," adds the astute editor of the hand-book, "on Siegfried
nights it were well if the tourist were to go provided with an asbestos
umbrella for use in case of an emergency of a similar nature."

In that portion of the book devoted to the trip up the river Styx the
legends surpass any of the Rhine stories in dramatic interest, because,
according to Commodore Charon's excursion system, the tourist can step
ashore and see the chief actors in them, who for a consideration will
give a full-dress rehearsal of the legendary acts for which they have
been famous. The sirens of the Stygian Lorelei, for instance, sit on an
eminence not far above the city of Cimmeria, and make a profession of
luring people ashore and giving away at so much per head locks of their
hair for remembrance' sake, all of which makes of the Stygian trip a
thing of far greater interest than that of the Rhine.

It had been my intention to make a few extracts from this portion of the
volume showing later developments in the legends of the Drachenfels,
and others of more than ordinary interest, but I find that with the
departure of Boswell for the night the treasured hand-book disappeared
with him; but, as I have already stated, if I can secure his consent
to do so I will some day have the book copied off on more material
substance than that employed in the original manuscript, so that the
useful little tome may be printed and scattered broadcast over a waiting
and appreciative world. I may as well state here, too, that I have taken
the precaution to have the title "Baedeker's Hades" and its contents
copyrighted, so that any pirate who recognizes the value of the scheme
will attempt to pirate the work at his peril.

Hardly had I finished the chapter on the legends of the Styx when
Boswell broke in upon me with: "Well, how do you like it?"

"It's great," I said. "May I keep it?"

"You may if you can," he laughed. "But I fancy it can't withstand the
rigors of this climate any more than an unfireproof copy of one of your
books could stand the caniculars of ours."

His words were soon to be verified, for as soon as he left me the book
vanished, but whether it went off into thin air or was repocketed by the
departing Boswell I am not entirely certain.

"What was it you asked me about Samson and Goliath?" Boswell observed,
as he gathered up his manuscript from the floor beside the Enchanted
Typewriter. "Whether they'd ever been in Honolulu?"

"No," I replied. "I got a letter from Hawaii the other day asking for
the result of the prize-fight the day Kidd ran off with the house-boat."

"Oh," replied Boswell. "That? Why, ah, Samson won hands down, but only
because they played according to latter-day rules. If it had been a
regular knock-out fight, like the contests in the old days of the ring
when it was in its prime, Goliath could have managed him with one hand;
but the Samson backers played a sharp game on the Philistine by having
the most recently amended Queensbury rules adopted, and Goliath wasn't
in it five minutes after Samson opened his mouth."

"I don't think I understand," said I.

"Plain enough," explained Boswell. "Goliath didn't know what the modern
rules were, but he thought a fight was a fight under any rules, so, like
a decent chap, he agreed, and when he found that it was nothing but a
talking-match he'd got into he fainted. He never was good at expressing
himself fluently. Samson talked him down in two rounds, just as he did
the other Philistines in the early days on earth."

I laughed. "You're slightly off there," I said. "That was a
stand-up-and-be-knocked-down fight, wasn't it? He used the jawbone of an
ass?"

"Very true," observed Boswell, "but it is evident that it is you who are
slightly off. You haven't kept up with the higher criticism. It has been
proven scientifically that not only did the whale not swallow Jonah, but
that Samson's great feat against the Philistines was comparable only to
the achievements of your modern senators. He talked them to death."

"Then why jawbone of an ass?" I cried.

"Samson was an ass," replied Boswell. "They prove that by the temple
episode, for you see if he hadn't been one he'd have got out of the
building before yanking the foundations from under it. I tell you, old
chap, this higher criticism is a great thing, and as logical as death
itself."

And with this Boswell left me.

I sincerely hope that the result of the fight will prove as satisfactory
to my friend in Hawaii as it was to me; for while I have no particular
admiration for Samson, I have always rejoiced to hear of the
discomfitures of Goliath, who, so far as I have been able to ascertain,
was not only not a gentleman, but, in addition, had no more regard for
the rights of others than a member of the New York police force or the
editor of a Sunday newspaper with a thirst for sensation.




IX. SHERLOCK HOLMES AGAIN


I had intended asking Boswell what had become of my copy of the
Baedeker's Hades when he next returned, but the output of the machine
that evening so interested me that the hand-book was entirely forgotten.
If there ever was a hero in this world who could compare with D'Artagnan
in my estimation for sheer ability in a given line that hero was
Sherlock Holmes. With D'Artagnan and Holmes for my companions I think
I could pass the balance of my days in absolute contentment, no matter
what woful things might befall me. So it was that, when I next heard
the tapping keys and dulcet bell of my Enchanted Type-writer, and, after
listening intently for a moment, realized that my friend Boswell was
making a copy of a Sherlock Holmes Memoir thereon for his next Sunday's
paper, all thought of the interesting little red book of the last
meeting flew out of my head. I rose quickly from my couch at the first
sounding of the gong.

"Got a Holmes story, eh?" I said, walking to his side, and gazing
eagerly over the spot where his shoulder should have been.

"I have that, and it's a winner," he replied, enthusiastically. "If you
don't believe it, read it. I'll have it copied in about two minutes."

"I'll do both," I said. "I believe all the Sherlock Holmes stories I
read. It is so much pleasanter to believe them true. If they weren't
true they wouldn't be so wonderful."

With this I picked up the first page of the manuscript and shortly after
Boswell presented me with the balance, whereon I read the following
extraordinary tale:


                      A MYSTERY SOLVED

           A WONDERFUL ACHIEVEMENT IN FERRETING

                  From Advance Sheets of

                    MEMOIRS I REMEMBER

                             BY

                   SHERLOCK HOLMES, ESQ.

Ferreter Extraordinary by Special Appointment to his Majesty Apollyon

                      ---------------

                     WHO THE LADY WAS!


It was not many days after my solution of the Missing Diamond of the
Nizam of Jigamaree Mystery that I was called upon to take up a case
which has baffled at least one person for some ten or eleven centuries.
The reader will remember the mystery of the missing diamond--the largest
known in all history, which the Nizam of Jigamaree brought from India to
present to the Queen of England, on the occasion of her diamond jubilee.
I had been dead three years at the time, but, by a special dispensation
of his Imperial Highness Apollyon, was permitted to return incog to
London for the jubilee season, where it so happened that I put up at the
same lodging-house as that occupied by the Nizam and his suite. We
sat opposite each other at table d'hote, and for at least three weeks
previous to the losing of his treasure the Indian prince was very
morose, and it was very difficult to get him to speak. I was not
supposed to know, nor, indeed, was any one else, for that matter, at the
lodging-house, that the Nizam was so exalted a personage. He like myself
was travelling incog and was known to the world as Mr. Wilkins, of
Calcutta--a very wise precaution, inasmuch as he had in his possession a
gem valued at a million and a half of dollars. I recognized him at once,
however, by his unlikeness to a wood-cut that had been appearing in the
American Sunday newspapers, labelled with his name, as well as by the
extraordinary lantern which he had on his bicycle, a lantern which to
the uneducated eye was no more than an ordinary lamp, but which to an
eye like mine, familiar with gems, had for its crystal lens nothing more
nor less than the famous stone which he had brought for her Majesty
the Queen, his imperial sovereign. There are few people who can tell
diamonds from plate-glass under any circumstances, and Mr. Wilkins,
otherwise the Nizam, realizing this fact, had taken this bold method of
secreting his treasure. Of course, the moment I perceived the quality of
the man's lamp I knew at once who Mr. Wilkins was, and I determined to
have a little innocent diversion at his expense.

"It has been a fine day, Mr. Wilkins," said I one evening over the pate.

"Yes," he replied, wearily. "Very--but somehow or other I'm depressed
to-night."

"Too bad," I said, lightly, "but there are others. There's that poor
Nizam of Jigamaree, for instance--poor devil, he must be the bluest
brown man that ever lived."

Wilkins started nervously as I mentioned the prince by name.

"Wh-why do you think that?" he asked, nervously fingering his
butter-knife.

"It's tough luck to have to give away a diamond that's worth three or
four times as much as the Koh-i-noor," I said. "Suppose you owned a
stone like that. Would you care to give it away?"

"Not by a damn sight!" cried Wilkins, forcibly, and I noticed great
tears gathering in his eyes.

"Still, he can't help himself, I suppose," I said, gazing abruptly at
his scarf-pin. "That is, he doesn't KNOW that he can. The Queen expects
it. It's been announced, and now the poor devil can't get out of
it--though I'll tell you, Mr. Wilkins, if I were the Nizam of Jigamaree,
I'd get out of it in ten seconds."

I winked at him significantly. He looked at me blankly.

"Yes, sir," I added, merely to arouse him, "in just ten seconds! Ten
short, beautiful seconds."

"Mr. Postlethwaite," said the Nizam--Postlethwaite was the name I
was travelling under--"Mr. Postlethwaite," said the Nizam--otherwise
Wilkins--"your remarks interest me greatly." His face wreathed with a
smile that I had never before seen there. "I have thought as you do in
regard to this poor Indian prince, but I must confess I don't see how
he can get out of giving the Queen that diamond. Have a cigar, Mr.
Postlethwaite, and, waiter, bring us a triple magnum of champagne. Do
you really think, Mr. Postlethwaite, that there is a way out of it? If
you would like a ticket to Westminster for the ceremony, there are a
half-dozen."

He tossed six tickets for seats among the crowned heads across the table
to me. His eagerness was almost too painful to witness.

"Thank you," said I, calmly pocketing the tickets, for they were of rare
value at that time. "The way out of it is very simple."

"Indeed, Mr. Postlethwaite," said he, trying to keep cool. "Ah--are you
interested in rubies, sir? There are a few which I should be pleased to
have you accept"--and with that over came a handful of precious stones
each worth a fortune. These also I pocketed as I replied:

"Why, certainly; if I were the Nizam," said I, "I'd lose that diamond."

A shade of disappointment came over Mr. Wilkins's face.

"Lose it? How? Where?" he asked, with a frown.

"Yes. Lose it. Any way I could. As for the place where it should be
lost, any old place will do as long as it is where he can find it again
when he gets back home. He might leave it in his other clothes, or--"

"Make that two triple magnums, waiter," cried Mr. Wilkins, excitedly,
interrupting me. "Postlethwaite, you're a genius, and if you ever want a
house and lot in Calcutta, just let me know and they're yours."

You never saw such a change come over a man in all your life. Where he
had been all gloom before, he was now all smiles and jollity, and
from that time on to his return to India Mr. Wilkins was as happy as a
school-boy at the beginning of vacation. The next day the diamond was
lost, and whoever may have it at this moment, the British Crown is not
in possession of the Jigamaree gem.

But, as my friend Terence Mulvaney says, that is another story. It is of
the mystery immediately following this concerning which I have set out
to write.

I was sitting one day in my office on Apollyon Square opposite the
Alexandrian library, smoking an absinthe cigarette, which I had rolled
myself from my special mixture consisting of two parts tobacco, one part
hasheesh, one part of opium dampened with a liqueur glass of absinthe,
when an excited knock sounded upon my door.

"Come in," I cried, adopting the usual formula.

The door opened and a beautiful woman stood before me clad in most regal
garments, robust of figure, yet extremely pale. It seemed to me that I
had seen her somewhere before, yet for a time I could not place her.

"Mr. Sherlock Holmes?" said she, in deliciously musical tones, which,
singular to relate, she emitted in a fashion suggestive of a recitative
passage in an opera.

"The same," said I, bowing with my accustomed courtesy.

"The ferret?" she sang, in staccato tones which were ravishing to my
musical soul.

I laughed. "That term has been applied to me, madame," said I, chanting
my answer as best I could. "For myself, however, I prefer to assume the
more modest title of detective. I can work with or without clues, and
have never yet been baffled. I know who wrote the Junius letters, and
upon occasions have been known to see through a stone wall with my naked
eye. What can I do for you?"

"Tell me who I am!" she cried, tragically, taking the centre of the room
and gesticulating wildly.

"Well--really, madame," I replied. "You didn't send up any card--"

"Ah!" she sneered. "This is what your vaunted prowess amounts to, eh?
Ha! Do you suppose if I had a card with my name on it I'd have come
to you to inquire who I am? I can read a card as well as you can, Mr.
Sherlock Holmes."

"Then, as I understand it, madame," I put in, "you have suddenly
forgotten your identity and wish me to--"

"Nothing of the sort. I have forgotten nothing. I never knew for
certain who I am. I have an impression, but it is based only on hearsay
evidence," she interrupted.

For a moment I was fairly puzzled. Still I did not wish to let her know
this, and so going behind my screen and taking a capsule full of cocaine
to steady my nerves, I gained a moment to think. Returning, I said:

"This really is child's play for me, madame. It won't take more than a
week to find out who you are, and possibly, if you have any clews at all
to your identity, I may be able to solve this mystery in a day."

"I have only three," she answered, and taking a piece of swan's-down,
a lock of golden hair, and a pair of silver-tinsel tights from her
portmanteau she handed them over to me.

My first impulse was to ask the lady if she remembered the name of the
asylum from which she had escaped, but I fortunately refrained from
doing so, and she shortly left me, promising to return at the end of the
week.

For three days I puzzled over the clews. Swan's-down, yellow hair, and a
pair of silver-tinsel tights, while very interesting no doubt at times,
do not form a very solid basis for a theory establishing the identity of
so regal a person as my visitor. My first impression was that she was a
vaudeville artist, and that the exhibits she had left me were a part of
her make-up. This I was forced to abandon shortly, because no woman with
the voice of my visitor would sing in vaudeville. The more ambitious
stage was her legitimate field, if not grand opera itself.

At this point she returned to my office, and I of course reported
progress. That is one of the most valuable things I learned while on
earth--when you have done nothing, report progress.

"I haven't quite succeeded as yet," said I, "but I am getting at it
slowly. I do not, however, think it wise to acquaint you with my present
notions until they are verified beyond peradventure. It might help me
somewhat if you were to tell me who it is you think you are. I could
work either forward or backward on that hypothesis, as seemed best, and
so arrive at a hypothetical truth anyhow."

"That's just what I don't want to do," said she. "That information might
bias your final judgment. If, however, acting on the clews which you
have, you confirm my impression that I am such and such a person, as
well as the views which other people have, then will my status be well
defined and I can institute my suit against my husband for a judicial
separation, with back alimony, with some assurance of a successful
issue."

I was more puzzled than ever.

"Well," said I, slowly, "I of course can see how a bit of swan's-down
and a lock of yellow hair backed up by a pair of silver-tinsel tights
might constitute reasonable evidence in a suit for separation, but
wouldn't it--ah--be more to your purpose if I should use these data as
establishing the identity of--er--somebody else?"

"How very dense you are," she replied, impatiently. "That's precisely
what I want you to do."

"But you told me it was your identity you wished proven," I put in,
irritably.

"Precisely," said she.

"Then these bits of evidence are--yours?" I asked, hesitatingly. One
does not like to accuse a lady of an undue liking for tinsel.

"They are all I have left of my husband," she answered with a sob.

"Hum!" said I, my perplexity increasing. "Was the--ah--the gentleman
blown up by dynamite?"

"Excuse me, Mr. Holmes," she retorted, rising and running the scales.
"I think, after all, I have come to the wrong shop. Have you Hawkshaw's
address handy? You are too obtuse for a detective."

My reputation was at stake, so I said, significantly:

"Good! Good! I was merely trying one of my disguises on you, madame, and
you were completely taken in. Of course no one would ever know me for
Sherlock Holmes if I manifested such dullness."

"Ah!" she said, her face lighting up. "You were merely deceiving me by
appearing to be obtuse?"

"Of course," said I. "I see the whole thing in a nutshell. You married
an adventurer; he told you who he was, but you've never been able to
prove it; and suddenly you are deserted by him, and on going over his
wardrobe you find he has left nothing but these articles: and now you
wish to sue him for a separation on the ground of desertion, and secure
alimony if possible."

It was a magnificent guess.

"That is it precisely," said the lady. "Except as to the extent of his
'leavings.' In addition to the things you have he gave my small brother
a brass bugle and a tin sword."

"We may need to see them later," said I. "At present I will do all I can
for you on the evidence in hand. I have got my eye on a gentleman who
wears silver-tinsel tights now, but I am afraid he is not the man we
are after, because his hair is black, and, as far as I have been able to
learn from his valet, he is utterly unacquainted with swan's-down."

We separated again and I went to the club to think. Never in my life
before had I had so baffling a case. As I sat in the cafe sipping a
cocaine cobbler, who should walk in but Hamlet, strangely enough picking
particles of swan's-down from his black doublet, which was literally
covered with it.

"Hello, Sherlock!" he said, drawing up a chair and sitting down beside
me. "What you up to?"

"Trying to make out where you have been," I replied. "I judge from the
swan's-down on your doublet that you have been escorting Ophelia to the
opera in the regulation cloak."

"You're mistaken for once," he laughed. "I've been driving with
Lohengrin. He's got a pair of swans that can do a mile in 2.10--but it
makes them moult like the devil."

"Pair of what?" I cried.

"Swans," said Hamlet. "He's an eccentric sort of a duffer, that
Lohengrin. Afraid of horses, I fancy."

"And so drives swans instead?" said I, incredulously.

"The same," replied Hamlet. "Do I look as if he drove squab?"

"He must be queer," said I. "I'd like to meet him. He'd make quite an
addition to my collection of freaks."

"Very well," observed Hamlet. "He'll be here to-morrow to take
luncheon with me, and if you'll come, too, you'll be most welcome. He's
collecting freaks, too, and I haven't a doubt would be pleased to know
you."

We parted and I sauntered homeward, cogitating over my strange client,
and now and then laughing over the idiosyncrasies of Hamlet's friend the
swan-driver. It never occurred to me at the moment however to connect
the two, in spite of the link of swan's-down. I regarded it merely as
a coincidence. The next day, however, on going to the club and meeting
Hamlet's strange guest, I was struck by the further coincidence that his
hair was of precisely the same shade of yellow as that in my possession.
It was of a hue that I had never seen before except at performances of
grand opera, or on the heads of fool detectives in musical burlesques.
Here, however, was the real thing growing luxuriantly from the man's
head.

"Ho-ho!" thought I to myself. "Here is a fortunate encounter; there may
be something in it," and then I tried to lead him on.

"I understand, Mr. Lohengrin," I said, "that you have a fine span of
swans."

"Yes," he said, and I was astonished to note that he, like my client,
spoke in musical numbers. "Very. They're much finer than horses, in my
opinion. More peaceful, quite as rapid, and amphibious. If I go out for
a drive and come to a lake they trot quite as well across its surface as
on the highways."

"How interesting!" said I. "And so gentle, the swan. Your wife, I
presume--"

Hamlet kicked my shins under the table.

"I think it will rain to-morrow," he said, giving me a glance which if
it said anything said shut up.

"I think so, too," said Lohengrin, a lowering look on his face. "If
it doesn't, it will either snow, or hail, or be clear." And he gazed
abstractedly out of the window.

The kick and the man's confusion were sufficient proof. I was on the
right track at last. Yet the evidence was unsatisfactory because merely
circumstantial. My piece of down might have come from an opera cloak and
not from a well-broken swan, the hair might equally clearly have come
from some other head than Lohengrin's, and other men have had trouble
with their wives. The circumstantial evidence lying in the coincidences
was strong but not conclusive, so I resolved to pursue the matter and
invite the strange individual to a luncheon with me, at which I
proposed to wear the tinsel tights. Seeing them, he might be forced into
betraying himself.

This I did, and while my impressions were confirmed by his demeanor, no
positive evidence grew out of it.

"I'm hungry as a bear!" he said, as I entered the club, clad in a long,
heavy ulster, reaching from my shoulders to the ground, so that the
tights were not visible.

"Good," said I. "I like a hearty eater," and I ordered a luncheon of ten
courses before removing my overcoat; but not one morsel could the man
eat, for on the removal of my coat his eye fell upon my silver garments,
and with a gasp he wellnigh fainted. It was clear. He recognized them
and was afraid, and in consequence lost his appetite. But he was game,
and tried to laugh it off.

"Silver man, I see," he said, nervously, smiling.

"No," said I, taking the lock of golden hair from my pocket and dangling
it before him. "Bimetallist."

His jaw dropped in dismay, but recovering himself instantly he put up a
fairly good fight.

"It is strange, Mr. Lohengrin," said I, "that in the three years I have
been here I've never seen you before."

"I've been very quiet," he said. "Fact is, I have had my reasons, Mr.
Holmes, for preferring the life of a hermit. A youthful indiscretion,
sir, has made me fear to face the world. There was nothing wrong about
it, save that it was a folly, and I have been anxious in these days of
newspapers to avoid any possible revival of what might in some eyes seem
scandalous."

I felt sorry for him, but my duty was clear. Here was my man--but how
to gain direct proof was still beyond me. No further admissions could be
got out of him, and we soon parted.

Two days later the lady called and again I reported progress.

"It needs but one thing, madame, to convince me that I have found
your husband," said I. "I have found a man who might be connected with
swan's-down, from whose luxuriant curls might have come this tow-colored
lock, and who might have worn the silver-tinsel tights--yet it is all
MIGHT and no certainty."

"I will bring my small brother's bugle and the tin sword," said she.
"The sword has certain properties which may induce him to confess. My
brother tells me that if he simply shakes it at a cat the cat falls
dead."

"Do so," said I, "and I will try it on him. If he recognizes the sword
and remembers its properties when I attempt to brandish it at him, he'll
be forced to confess, though it would be awkward if he is the wrong man
and the sword should work on him as it does on the cat."

The next day I was in possession of the famous toy. It was not very
long, and rather more suggestive of a pancake-turner than a sword, but
it was a terror. I tested its qualities on a swarm of gnats in my room,
and the moment I shook it at them they fluttered to the ground as dead
as door-nails.

"I'll have to be careful of this weapon," I thought. "It would be
terrible if I should brandish it at a motor-man trying to get one of the
Gehenna Traction Company's cable-cars to stop and he should drop dead at
his post."

All was now ready for the demonstration. Fortunately the following
Saturday night was club night at the House-Boat, and we were all
expected to come in costume. For dramatic effect I wore a yellow wig, a
helmet, the silver-tinsel tights, and a doublet to match, with the
brass bugle and the tin sword properly slung about my person. I looked
stunning, even if I do say it, and much to my surprise several people
mistook me for the man I was after. Another link in the chain! EVEN THE
PUBLIC UNCONSCIOUSLY RECOGNIZED THE VALUE OF MY DEDUCTIONS. THEY CALLED
ME LOHENGRIN!

And of course it all happened as I expected. It always does. Lohengrin
came into the assembly-room five minutes after I did and was visibly
annoyed at my make-up.

"This is a great liberty," said he, grasping the hilt of his sword; but
I answered by blowing the bugle at him, at which he turned livid and
fell back. He had recognized its soft cadence. I then hauled the sword
from my belt, shook it at a fly on the wall, which immediately died, and
made as if to do the same at Lohengrin, whereupon he cried for mercy and
fell upon his knees.

"Turn that infernal thing the other way!" he shrieked.

"Ah!" said I, lowering my arm. "Then you know its properties?"

"I do--I do!" he cried. "It used to be mine--I confess it!"

"Then," said I, calmly putting the horrid bit of zinc back into my
belt, "that's all I wanted to know. If you'll come up to my office some
morning next week I'll introduce you to your wife," and I turned from
him.

My mission accomplished, I left the festivities and returned to my
quarters where my fair client was awaiting me.

"Well?" she said.

"It's all right, Mrs. Lohengrin," I said, and the lady cried aloud with
joy at the name, for it was the very one she had hoped it would be. "My
man turns out to be your man, and I turn him over therefore to you, only
deal gently with him. He's a pretty decent chap and sings like a bird."

Whereon I presented her with my bill for 5000 oboli, which she paid
without a murmur, as was entirely proper that she should, for upon
the evidence which I had secured the fair plaintiff, in the suit
for separation of Elsa vs. Lohengrin on the ground of desertion and
non-support, obtained her decree, with back alimony of twenty-five per
cent. of Lohengrin's income for a trifle over fifteen hundred years.

How much that amounted to I really do not know, but that it was a large
sum I am sure, for Lohengrin must have been very wealthy. He couldn't
have afforded to dress in solid silver-tinsel tights if he had been
otherwise. I had the tights assayed before returning them to their
owner, and even in a country where free coinage of tights is looked upon
askance they could not be duplicated for less than $850 at a ratio of 32
to 1.




X. GOLF IN HADES


"Jim," said I to Boswell one morning as the type-writer began to work,
"perhaps you can enlighten me on a point concerning which a great many
people have questioned me recently. Has golf taken hold of Hades yet?
You referred to it some time ago, and I've been wondering ever since if
it had become a fad with you."

"Has it?" laughed my visitor; "well, I should rather say it had. The
fact is, it has been a great boon to the country. You remember my
telling you of the projected revolution led by Cromwell, and Caesar, and
the others?"

"I do, very well," said I, "and I have been intending to ask you how it
came out."

"Oh, everything's as fine and sweet as can be now," rejoined Boswell,
somewhat gleefully, "and all because of golf. We are all quiet along the
Styx now. All animosities are buried in the general love of golf, and
every one of us, high or low, autocrat and revolutionist, is hobnobbing
away in peace and happiness on the links. Why, only six weeks ago,
Apollyon was for cooking Bonaparte on a waffle iron, and yesterday
the two went out to the Cimmerian links together and played a mixed
foursome, Bonaparte and Medusa playing against Apollyon and Delilah."

"Dear me! Really?" I cried. "That must have been an interesting match."

"It was, and up to the very last it was nip-and-tuck between 'em," said
Boswell. "Apollyon and Delilah won it with one hole up, and they got
that on the put. They'd have halved the hole if Medusa's back hair
hadn't wiggled loose and bitten her caddie just as she was holeing out."

"It is a remarkable game," said I. "There is no sensation in the world
quite equal to that which comes to a man's soul when he has hit the ball
a solid clip and sees it sail off through the air towards the green,
whizzing musically along like a very bird."

"True," said Boswell; "but I'm rather of the opinion that it's a safer
game for shades than for you purely material persons."

"I don't see why," I answered.

"It is easy to understand," returned Boswell. "For instance, with us
there is no resistance when by a mischance we come into unexpected
contact with the ball. Take the experience of Diogenes and Solomon at
the St. Jonah's Links week before last. The Wiseman's Handicap was
on. Diogenes and Simple Simon were playing just ahead of Solomon and
Montaigne. Solomon was driving in great form. For the first time in his
life he seemed able to keep his eye on the ball, and the way he sent it
flying through the air was a caution. Diogenes and Simple Simon had both
had their second stroke and Solomon drove off. His ball sailed straight
ahead like a missile from a catapult, flew in a bee-line for Diogenes,
struck him at the base of his brain, continued on through, and landed on
the edge of the green."

"Mercy!" I cried. "Didn't it kill him?"

"Of course not," retorted Boswell. "You can't kill a shade. Diogenes
didn't know he'd been hit, but if that had happened to one of you
material golfers there'd have been a sickening end to that tournament."

"There would, indeed," said I. "There isn't much fun in being hit by a
golf-ball. I can testify to that because I have had the experience," and
I called to mind the day at St. Peterkin's when I unconsciously stymied
with my material self the celebrated Willie McGuffin, the Demon Driver
from the Hootmon Links, Scotland. McGuffin made his mark that day if he
never did before, and I bear the evidence thereof even now, although the
incident took place two years ago, when I did not know enough to keep
out of the way of the player who plays so well that he thinks he has a
perpetual right of way everywhere.

"What kind of clubs do you Stygians use?" I asked.

"Oh, very much the same kind that you chaps do," returned Boswell.
"Everybody experiments with new fads, too, just as you do. Old Peter
Stuyvesant, for instance, always drives with his wooden leg, and never
uses anything else unless he gets a lie where he's got to."

"His wooden leg?" I roared, with a laugh. "How on earth does he do
that?"

"He screws the small end of it into a square block shod like a brassey,"
explained Boswell, "tees up his ball, goes back ten yards, makes a run
at it and kicks the ball pretty nearly out of sight. He can put with it
too, like a dream, swinging it sideways."

"But he doesn't call that golf, does he?" I cried.

"What is it?" demanded Boswell.

"I should call it football," I said.

"Not at all," said Boswell. "Not a bit of it. He hasn't any foot on that
leg, and he has a golf-club head with a shaft to it. There isn't any
rule which says that the shaft shall not look like an inverted nine-pin,
nor do any of the accepted authorities require that the club shall be
manipulated by the arms. I admit it's bad form the way he plays, but, as
Stuyvesant himself says, he never did travel on his shape."

"Suppose he gets a cuppy lie?" I asked, very much interested at the
first news from Hades of the famous old Dutchman.

"Oh, he does one of two things," said Boswell. "He stubs it out with his
toe, or goes back and plays two more. Munchausen plays a good game too.
He beat the colonel forty-seven straight holes last Wednesday, and all
Hades has been talking about it ever since."

"Who is the colonel?" I asked, innocently.

"Bogey," returned Boswell. "Didn't you ever hear of Colonel Bogey?"

"Of course," I replied, "but I always supposed Bogey was an imaginary
opponent, not a real one."

"So he is," said Boswell.

"Then you mean--"

"I mean that Munchausen beat him forty-seven up," said Boswell.

"Were there any witnesses?" I demanded, for I had little faith in
Munchausen's regard for the eternal verities, among which a golf-card
must be numbered if the game is to survive.

"Yes, a hundred," said Boswell. "There was only one trouble with 'em."
Here the great biographer laughed. "They were all imaginary, like the
colonel."

"And Munchausen's score?" I queried.

"The same, naturally. But it makes him king-pin in golf circles just
the same, because nobody can go back on his logic," said Boswell.
"Munchausen reasoned it out very logically indeed, and largely, he said,
to protect his own reputation. Here is an imaginary warrior, said he,
who makes a bully, but wholly imaginary, score at golf. He sends me an
imaginary challenge to play him forty-seven holes. I accept, not so much
because I consider myself a golfer as because I am an imaginer--if there
is such a word."

"Ask Dr. Johnson," said I, a little sarcastically. I always grow
sarcastic when golf is mentioned.

"Dr. Johnson be--" began Boswell.

"Boswell!" I remonstrated.

"Dr. Johnson be it, I was about to say," clicked the type-writer,
suavely; but the ink was thick and inclined to spread. "Munchausen
felt that Bogey was encroaching on his preserve as a man with an
imagination."

"I have always considered Colonel Bogey a liar," said I. "He joins
all the clubs and puts up an ideal score before he has played over the
links."

"That isn't the point at all," said Boswell. "Golfers don't lie.
Realists don't lie. Nobody in polite--or say, rather, accepted--society
lies. They all imagine. Munchausen realizes that he has only one claim
to recognition, and that is based entirely upon his imagination. So when
the imaginary Colonel Bogey sent him an imaginary challenge to play him
forty-seven holes at golf--"

"Why forty-seven?" I asked.

"An imaginary number," explained Boswell. "Don't interrupt. As I say,
when the imaginary colonel--"

"I must interrupt," said I. "What was he colonel of?"

"A regiment of perfect caddies," said Boswell.

"Ah, I see," I replied. "Imaginary in his command. There isn't one
perfect caddy, much less a regiment of the little reprobates."

"You are wrong there," said Boswell. "You don't know how to produce a
good caddy--but good caddies can be made."

"How?" I cried, for I have suffered. "I'll have the plan patented."

"Take a flexible brassey, and at the ninth hole, if they deserve it,
give them eighteen strokes across the legs with all your strength," said
Boswell. "But, as I said before, don't interrupt. I haven't much time
left to talk with you."

"But I must ask one more question," I put in, for I was growing excited
over a new idea. "You say give them eighteen strokes across the legs.
Across whose legs?"

"Yours," replied Boswell. "Just take your caddy up, place him across
your knees, and spank him with your brassey. Spank isn't a good golf
term, but it is good enough for the average caddy; in fact, it will do
him good."

"Go on," said I, with a mental resolve to adopt his prescription.

"Well," said Boswell, "Munchausen, having received an imaginary
challenge from an imaginary opponent, accepted. He went out to the
links with an imaginary ball, an imaginary bagful of fanciful clubs, and
licked the imaginary life out of the colonel."

"Still, I don't see," said I, somewhat jealously, perhaps, "how that
makes him king-pin in golf circles. Where did he play?"

"On imaginary links," said Boswell.

"Poh!" I ejaculated.

"Don't sneer," said Boswell. "You know yourself that the links you
imagine are far better than any others."

"What is Munchausen's strongest point?" I asked, seeing that there was
no arguing with the man--"driving, approaching, or putting?"

"None of the three. He cannot put, he foozles every drive, and at
approaching he's a consummate ass," said Boswell.

"Then what can he do?" I cried.

"Count," said Boswell. "Haven't you learned that yet? You can spend
hours learning how to drive, weeks to approach, and months to put. But
if you want to win you must know how to count."

I was silent, and for the first time in my life I realized that
Munchausen was not so very different from certain golfers I have met in
my short day as a golfiac, and then Boswell put in:

"You see, it isn't lofting or driving that wins," he continued. "Cups
aren't won on putting or approaching. It's the man who puts in the best
card who becomes the champion."

"I am afraid you are right," I said, sadly, "but I am sorry to find that
Hades is as badly off as we mortals in that matter."

"Golf, sir," retorted Boswell, sententiously, "is the same everywhere,
and that which is dome in our world is directly in line with what is
developed in yours."

"I'm sorry for Hades," said I; "but to continue about golf--do the
ladies play much on your links?"

"Well, rather," returned Boswell, "and it's rather amusing to watch them
at it, too. Xanthippe with her Greek clothes finds it rather difficult;
but for rare sport you ought to see Queen Elizabeth trying to keep her
eye on the ball over her ruff! It really is one of the finest spectacles
you ever saw."

"But why don't they dress properly?"

"Ah," sighed Boswell, "that is one of the things about Hades that
destroys all the charm of life there. We are but shades."

"Granted," said I, "but your garments can--"

"Our garments can't," said Boswell. "Through all eternity we shades of
our former selves are doomed to wear the shadows of our former clothes."

"Then what the devil does a poor dress-maker do who goes to Hades?" I
cried.

"She makes over the things she made before," said Boswell. "That's why,
my dear fellow," the biographer added, becoming confidential--"that's
why some people confound Hades with--ah--the other place, don't you
know."

"Still, there's golf!" I said; "and that's a panacea for all ills. YOU
enjoy it, don't you?"

"Me?" cried Boswell. "Me enjoy it? Not on all the lives in Christendom.
It is the direst drudgery for me."

"Drudgery?" I said. "Bah! Nonsense, Boswell!"

"You forget--" he began.

"Forget? It must be you who forget, if you call golf drudgery."

"No," sighed the genial spirit. "No, _I_ don't forget. I remember."

"Remember what?" I demanded.

"That I am Dr. Johnson's caddy!" was the answer. And then came a
heart-rending sigh, and from that time on all was silence. I repeatedly
put questions to the machine, made observations to it, derided it,
insulted it, but there was no response.

It has so continued to this day, and I can only conclude the story of my
Enchanted Type-writer by saying that I presume golf has taken the same
hold upon Hades that it has upon this world, and that I need not hope
to hear more from that attractive region until the game has relaxed its
grip, which I know can never be.

Hence let me say to those who have been good enough to follow me through
the realms of the Styx that I bid them an affectionate farewell and
thank them for their kind attention to my chronicles. They are all
truthful; but now that the source of supply is cut off I cannot prove
it. I can only hope that for one and all the future may hold as much of
pleasure as the place of departed spirits has held for me.





End of Project Gutenberg's The Enchanted Typewriter, by John Kendrick Bangs