Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy by Stephen Leacock (motivational books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Stephen Leacock
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A few days later Mr. Butt gave me a further report. âYes,â he said, âthe furniture is all unpacked and straightened out but I donât like it. Thereâs a lot of it I donât quite like. I half feel like advising Jones to sell it and get some more. But I donât want to do that till Iâm quite certain about it.â
After that Mr. Butt seemed much occupied and I didnât see him at the club for some time.
âHow about the Everleigh-Joneses?â I asked. âAre they comfortable in their new house?â
Mr. Butt shook his head. âIt wonât do,â he said. âI was afraid of it from the first. Iâm moving Jones in nearer to town. Iâve been out all morning looking for an apartment; when I get the right one I shall move him. I like an apartment far better than a house.â
So the Joneses in due course of time were moved. After that Mr. Butt was very busy selecting a piano, and advising them on wall paper and woodwork.
They were hardly settled in their new home when fresh trouble came to them.
âHave you heard about Everleigh-Jones?â said Mr. Butt one day with an anxious face.
âNo,â I answered.
âHeâs illâsome sort of feverâpoor chapâbeen ill three days, and they never told me or sent for meâjust like their gritâmeant to fight it out alone. Iâm going out there at once.â
From day to day I had reports from Mr. Butt of the progress of Jonesâs illness.
âI sit with him every day,â he said. âPoor chap,âhe was very bad yesterday for a while,âmind wanderedâquite deliriousâI could hear him from the next roomâseemed to think some one was hunting himââIs that damn old fool gone,â I heard him say.
âI went in and soothed him. âThere is no one here, my dear boy,â I said, âno one, only Butt.â He turned over and groaned. Mrs. Jones begged me to leave him. âYou look quite used up,â she said. âGo out into the open air.â âMy dear Mrs. Jones,â I said, âwhat DOES it matter about me?ââ
Eventually, thanks no doubt to Mr. Buttâs assiduous care, Everleigh-Jones got well.
âYes,â said Mr. Butt to me a few weeks later, âJones is all right again now, but his illness has been a long hard pull. I havenât had an evening to myself since it began. But Iâm paid, sir, now, more than paid for anything Iâve done,âthe gratitude of those two peopleâitâs unbelievable âyou ought to see it. Why do you know that dear little woman is so worried for fear that my strength has been overtaxed that she wants me to take a complete rest and go on a long trip somewhereâsuggested first that I should go south. âMy dear Mrs. Jones,â I said laughing, âthatâs the ONE place I will not go. Heat is the one thing I CANâT stand.â She wasnât nonplussed for a moment. âThen go north,â she said. âGo up to Canada, or better still go to Labrador,ââand in a minute that kind little woman was hunting up railway maps to see how far north I could get by rail. âAfter that,â she said, âyou can go on snowshoes.â Sheâs found that thereâs a steamer to Ungava every spring and she wants me to run up there on one steamer and come back on the next.â
âIt must be very gratifying,â I said.
âOh, it is, it is,â said Mr. Butt warmly. âItâs well worth anything I do. It more than repays me. Iâm alone in the world and my friends are all I have. I canât tell you how it goes to my heart when I think of all my friends, here in the club and in the town, always glad to see me, always protesting against my little kindnesses and yet never quite satisfied about anything unless they can get my advice and hear what I have to say.
âTake Jones for instance,â he continuedââdo you know, really now as a fact,âthe hall porter assures me of it,âevery time Everleigh-Jones enters the club here the first thing he does is to sing out, âIs Mr. Butt in the club?â It warms me to think of it.â Mr. Butt paused, one would have said there were tears in his eyes. But if so the kindly beam of his spectacles shone through them like the sun through April rain. He left me and passed into the cloak room.
He had just left the hall when a stranger entered, a narrow, meek man with a hunted face. He came in with a furtive step and looked about him apprehensively.
âIs Mr. Butt in the club?â he whispered to the hall porter.
âYes, sir, heâs just gone into the cloak room, sir, shall Iââ
But the man had turned and made a dive for the front door and had vanished.
âWho is that?â I asked.
âThatâs a new member, sir, Mr. Everleigh-Jones,â said the hall porter.
IV-RAM SPUDD THE NEW WORLD SINGER. Is He Divinely Inspired? Or Is He Not? At Any Rate We Discovered Him.
[Footnote: Mr. Spudd was discovered by the author for the New York Life. He is already recognized as superior to Tennyson and second only, as a writer of imagination, to the Sultan of Turkey.]
The discovery of a new poet is always a joy to the cultivated world. It is therefore with the greatest pleasure that we are able to announce that we ourselves, acting quite independently and without aid from any of the English reviews of the day, have discovered one. In the person of Mr. Ram Spudd, of whose work we give specimens below, we feel that we reveal to our readers a genius of the first order. Unlike one of the most recently discovered English poets who is a Bengalee, and another who is a full-blooded Yak, Mr. Spudd is, we believe, a Navajo Indian. We believe this from the character of his verse. Mr. Spudd himself we have not seen. But when he forwarded his poems to our office and offered with characteristic modesty to sell us his entire works for seventy-five cents, we felt in closing with his offer that we were dealing not only with a poet, but with one of natureâs gentlemen.
Mr. Spudd, we understand, has had no education. Other newly discovered poets have had, apparently, some. Mr. Spudd has had, evidently, none. We lay stress on this point. Without it we claim it is impossible to understand his work.
What we particularly like about Ram Spudd, and we do not say this because we discovered him but because we believe it and must say it, is that he belongs not to one school but to all of them. As a nature poet we doubt very much if he has his equal; as a psychologist, we are sure he
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