Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock (motivational books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Stephen Leacock
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I let him muse. In fact I determined to let him muse till he burst before I would ask him what he had been through. I knew it, anyway.
Presently he decided to go on talking.
âWe were at Izzl,â he said, âin the Carpathians, Loo Jones and I. Weâd just made a walking tour from Izzl to Fryzzl and back again.â
âWhy did you come back?â I asked.
âBack where?â
âBack to Izzl,â I explained, âafter youâd once got to Fryzzl. It seems unnecessary, but, never mind, go on.â
âThat was in July,â he continued. âThere wasnât a sign of war, not a sign. We heard that Russia was beginning to mobilize,â (at this word be blew a puff from his cigarette and then repeated âbeginning to mobilizeâ) âbut we thought nothing of it.â
âOf course not,â I said.
âThen we heard that Hungary was calling out the Honveds, but we still thought nothing of it.â
âCertainly not,â I said.
âAnd then we heardââ
âYes, I know,â I said, âyou heard that Italy was calling out the Trombonari, and that Germany was calling in all the Landesgeschutzshaft.â
He looked at me.
âHow did you know that?â he said.
âWe heard it over here,â I answered.
âWell,â he went on, ânext thing we knew we heard that the Russians were at Fryzzl.â
âGreat Heavens!â I exclaimed.
âYes, at Fryzzl, not a hundred miles away. The very place weâd been at only two weeks before.â
âThink of it!â I said. âIf youâd been where you were two weeks after you were there, or if the Russians had been a hundred miles away from where they were, or even if Fryzzl had been a hundred miles nearer to Izzlââ
We both shuddered.
âIt was a close call,â said Parkins. âHowever, I said to Loo Jones, âLoo, itâs time to clear out.â And then, I tell you, our trouble began. First of all we couldnât get any money. We went to the bank at Izzl and tried to get them to give us American dollars for Hungarian paper money; we had nothing else.â
âAnd wouldnât they?â
âAbsolutely refused. They said they hadnât any.â
âBy George,â I exclaimed. âIsnât war dreadful? What on earth did you do?â
âTook a chance,â said Parkins. âWent across to the railway station to buy our tickets with the Hungarian money.â
âDid you get them?â I said.
âYes,â assented Parkins. âThey said theyâd sell us tickets. But they questioned us mighty closely; asked where we wanted to go to, what class we meant to travel by, how much luggage we had to register and so on. I tell you the fellow looked at us mighty closely.â
âWere you in those clothes?â I asked.
âYes,â said Parkins, âbut I guess he suspected we werenât Hungarians. You see, we couldnât either of us speak Hungarian. In fact we spoke nothing but English.â
âThat would give him a clue,â I said.
âHowever,â he went on, âhe was civil enough in a way. We asked when was the next train to the sea coast, and he said there wasnât any.â
âNo trains?â I repeated.
âNot to the coast. The man said the reason was because there wasnât any railway to the coast. But he offered to sell us tickets to Vienna. We asked when the train would go and he said there wouldnât be one for two hours. So there we were waiting on that wretched little platform,âno place to sit down, no shade, unless one went into the waiting room itself,âfor two mortal hours. And even then the train was an hour and a half late!â
âAn hour and a half late!â I repeated.
âYep!â said Parkins, âthatâs what things were like over there. So when we got on board the train we asked a man when it was due to get to Vienna, and he said he hadnât the faintest idea!â
âGood heavens!â
âNot the faintest idea. He told us to ask the conductor or one of the porters. No, sir, Iâll never forget that journey through to Vienna,ânine mortal hours! Nothing to eat, not a bite, except just in the middle of the day when they managed to hitch on a dining-car for a while. And they warned everybody that the dining-car was only on for an hour and a half. Commandeered, I guess after that,â added Parkins, puffing his cigarette.
âWell,â he continued, âwe got to Vienna at last. Iâll never forget the scene there, station full of people, trains coming and going, men, even women, buying tickets, big piles of luggage being shoved on trucks. It gave one a great idea of the reality of things.â
âIt must have,â I said.
âPoor old Loo Jones was getting pretty well used up with it all. However, we determined to see it through somehow.â
âWhat did you do next?â
âTried again to get money: couldnâtâthey changed our Hungarian paper into Italian gold, but they refused to give us American money.â
âHoarding it?â I hinted.
âExactly,â said Parkins, âhoarding it all for the war. Well anyhow we got on a train for Italy and there our troubles began all over again:âtrain stopped at the frontier,âofficials (fellows in Italian uniforms) went all through it, opening hand baggageââ
âNot hand baggage!â I gasped.
âYes, sir, even the hand baggage. Opened it all, or a lot of it anyway, and scribbled chalk marks over it. Yes, and worse than that,âI saw them take two fellows and sling them clear off the train,âthey slung them right out on to the platform.â
âWhat for?â I asked.
âHeaven knows,â said Parkins,ââthey said they had no tickets. In war time you know, when theyâre mobilizing, they wonât let a soul ride on a train without a ticket.â
âInfernal tyranny,â I murmured.
âIsnât it? However, we got to Genoa at last, only to find that not a single one of our trunks had come with us!â
âConfiscated?â I asked.
âI donât know,â said Parkins, âthe head baggage man (he wears a uniform, you know, in Italy just like a soldier) said
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