The Dreamers: A Club by John Kendrick Bangs (ebook pdf reader for pc txt) đ
- Author: John Kendrick Bangs
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âThe poem reads as follows,â continued Paterson, ignoring the chairmanâs ill-timed remark:
RETRIBUTIONWrit a pome about a kid.
Finest one I ever did.
Heaped it full oâ sentimentâ
Very best I could invent.
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Talked about his little toys;
How he played with other boys;
How the beasts anâ birdies all
Come when little Jamieâd call.
âNâ âen I took that little lad,
Gave him fever, mighty bad.
âNâ âen it sorter pleased my whim
To have him die and bury him.
It got printed, too, it did
That small pome about the kid,
In a paper in the West;
Put ten dollars in my vest.
Every pa anâ ma about
Cried like mightyâcried right out.
I jess took each grandmaâs heart,
Lammed and bruised it, made it smart;
âNâ everybody said oâ me,
âFinest pote we ever see,â
âCept one beggar, he got mad.
Got worst lickinâ ever had;
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Got my head atween his fists,
Called me âPrince oâ anarchists.â
Clipped me one behind my earâ
Laid me up for âmost a year.
ââCause,â he said, âmy poetry
âD made his wife anâ mother cry;
ââTwarnât no poetâs bizness to
Make the wimmin all boo-hoo.â
âNâ âat is why to-day, by Jings!
I donât fool with hearts anâ things.
I donât care how high the bids,
Iâve stopped scribblinâ âbout dead kids;
âR if I havenât, kinder sorter
Think âat maybe pârâaps Iâd oughter.
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The lines were received with hearty appreciation by all save Dobbs Ferry, who looked a trifle gloomy.
âIt is a strange thing,â said the latter, âbut that mince-pie affected me in precisely the same way, as you will see for [57] yourselves when I read my contribution, which, holding ball number four as I do, I will proceed to give you.â
Mr. Ferry then read the following poem, which certainly did seem to indicate that the man who prepared the fatal pie had certain literary ideas which he mixed in with other ingredients:
I bought a book of verse the other day,
And when I read, it filled me with dismay.
I wanted it to take home to my wife,
To bring a bit of joy into her life;
And Iâd been told the author of those pomes
Was called the laureate of simple homes.
But, Jove! I read, and found it full of rhyme
That kept my eyes a-filling all the time.
One told about a pretty little miss
Whose father had denied a simple kiss,
And as she left, unhappy, full of cares,
She fell and broke her neck upon the stairs.
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And then he wrote a lot of tearful lines
Of children who had trouble with their spines;
And âstead of joys, he penned so many woes
I sought him out and gave him curvature âf the nose;
And all the nation, witnessing his plight,
Did crown me King, and cry, âIt served him right.â
âA remarkable coincidence,â said Thomas Snobbe. âIn fact, the coincidence is rather more remarkable than the poetry.â
âIt certainly is,â said Billie Jones; âbut what a wonderfully suggestive pie, considering that it was a mince!â
After which dictum the presiding officer called upon the holder of the fifth ball, who turned out to be none other than Bedford Parke, who blushingly rose up and delivered himself of what he called âThe Overcoat, a Magazine Farce.â
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IV BEING THE CONTRIBUTION OF MR. BEDFORD PARKE THE OVERCOATA FARCE. IN TWO SCENES
SCENE FIRST
Time: Morning at Boston
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âI think it will rain to-day, but there is no need to worry about that. Robert has his umbrella and his mackintosh, and I donât think he is idiotic enough to lend both of them. If he does, heâll get wet, thatâs all.â Mrs. Edwards is speaking to herself in the sewing-room of the apartment occupied by herself and her husband in the Hotel[60] Hammingbell at Boston. It is not a large room, but cosey. A frieze one foot deep runs about the ceiling, and there is a carpet on the floor. Three pins are seen scattered about the room, in one corner of which is a cane-bottomed chair holding across its back two black vests and a cutaway coat. Mrs. Edwards sits before a Wilcox & Wilson sewing-machine sewing a button on a light spring overcoat. The overcoat has one outside and three inside pockets, and is single-breasted. âIt is curious,â Mrs. Edwards continues, âwhat men will do with umbrellas and mackintoshes on a rainy day. They lend them here and there, and the worst part of it is they never remember where.â A knock is heard at the door. âWhoâs there?â
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Voice (without). âMe.â
Mrs. Robert Edwards (with a nervous shudder). âCome in.â Enter Mary the house-maid. She is becomingly attired in blue alpaca, with green ribbons and puffed sleeves. She holds a feather duster in [63] her right hand, and in her left is a jar of Royal Worcester. âMary,â Mrs. Edwards says, severely, âwhere are we at?â
Mary (meekly). âBoston, maâam.â
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âSouth Boston or Boston proper?â
Mary. âBoston proper, maâam.â
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âThen when I say âWhoâs there?â donât say âMe.â That manner of speaking may do at New York, Brooklyn, South Boston, or Congress, but at Boston proper it is extremely gauche. âIâ is the word.â
Mary. âYes, maâam; but you know, maâam, I donât pretend to be literary, maâam, and so these little points baffles I very often.â Mrs. Edwards sighs, and, walking over to the window, looks out upon the trolley-cars for ten minutes; then, picking up one of the pins from the floor and putting it in a pink silk pin-cushion which stands next to an alarm-clock on the mantel-piece, a marble affair with plain caryatids and a brass fender around the hearth, she resumes her seat[64] before the sewing-machine, and threads a needle. Thenâ
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âWell, Mary, what do you want?â
Mary. âPlease, Mrs. Edwards, the butcher is came, and he says they have some very fine perairie-chickens to-day.â
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âWe donât want any prairie-chickens. The prairies are so very vulgar. Tell him never to suggest such a thing again. Have we any potatoes in the house?â
Mary. âThereâs three left, maâam, and two slices of cold roast beef.â
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âThen tell him to bring five more potatoes, a steak, andâWas all the pickled salmon eaten?â
Mary. âAll but the can, maâam.â
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âWellâMr. Edwards is very fond of fish. Tell him to bring two boxes of sardines and a bottle of anchovy paste.â
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Mary. âVery well, Mrs. Edwards.â
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âAndâahâMary, tell him to bring some Brussels [67] sprouts for breakfast. What are you doing with that Worcester vase?â
Mary. âI was takinâ it to cook, maâam. Sure she broke the bean-pot this morninâ, and she wanted somethinâ to cook the beans in.â
Mrs. Robert Edwards. âOh, I see. Well, take good care of it, Mary. Itâs a rare piece. In fact, I think youâd better leave that here and remove the rubber plant from the jardiniĂšre, and let Nora cook the beans in that. Times are a little too hard to cook beans in Royal Worcester.â
Mary. âVery well, maâam.â Mary goes out through the door. Mrs. Edwards resumes her sewing. Fifteen minutes elapse, interrupted only by the ticking of the alarm-clock and the occasional ringing of the bell on passing trolley-cars. âIf it does rain,â Mrs. Edwards says at last, with an anxious glance through the window, âI suppose Robert wonât care about going to see the pantomime to-night. It will be too bad if we donât go, for this is[68] the last night of the season, and Iâve been very anxious to renew my acquaintance with âHumpty Dumpty.â It is so very dramatic, and I do so like dramatic things. Even when they happen in my own life I like dramatic things. Iâll never forget how I enjoyed the thrill that came over me, even in my terror, that night last winter when the trolley-car broke down in front of this house; and last summer, too, when the oar-lock broke in our row-boat thirty-three feet from shore; that was a situation that I enjoyed in spite of its peril. How people can say that life is humdrum, I canât see. Exciting things, real third-act situations, climaxes I might even call them, are always happening in my life, and yet some novelists pretend that life is humdrum just to excuse their books for being humdrum. Iâd just like to show these apostles of realism the diary I could have kept if I had wanted to. Beginning with the fall my brother George had from the hay-wagon, back in 1876, running down through my[69] first meeting with Robert, which was romantic enoughâhe paid my car-fare in from Brookline the day I lost my pocket-bookâeven to yesterday, when an entire stranger called me up on the telephone, my life has fairly bubbled with dramatic situations that would take the humdrum theory and utterly annihilate it.â As Mrs. Edwards is speaking she is also sewing the button already alluded to on Mr. Edwardsâs coat as described. âThere,â taking the last stitch in the coat, âthatâs done, and now I can go and get ready for luncheon.â She folds up the coat, glances at the clock, and goes out. A half-hour elapses. The silence is broken only by occasional noises from the street, the rattling of the wheels of a herdic over the pavement, the voices of newsboys, and an occasional strawberry-venderâs cry. At the end of the half-hour the alarm-clock goes off and the curtain falls.[70]
SCENE SECOND
Time: Evening at Boston
The scene is laid in the drawing-room of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Edwards. Mrs. Edwards is discovered reading Pendennis, and seems in imminent danger of going to sleep over it. Mr. Edwards is stretched out upon the sofa, quite asleep, with Ivanhoe lying open upon his chest. Twenty-five minutes elapse, when the door-bell rings.
Mr. Edwards (drowsily). âLet me off at the next corner, conductor.â
Mrs. Edwards. âWhy, Robertâwhat nonsense you are talking!â
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Mr. Edwards (rubbing his eyes and sitting up). âEh? What? Nonsense? I talk nonsense? Really, my dear, that is a serious charge to bring against one of the leading characters in a magazine farce. Wit, perhaps, I may indulge in, but nonsense, never!â
Mrs. Edwards. âThat is precisely what [73] I complain about. The idea of a well-established personage like yourself lying off on a sofa in his own apartment and asking a conductor to let him off at the next corner! Itâsââ
Mr. Edwards. âI didnât do anything of the sort.â
Mrs. Edwards. âYou did, too, Robert Edwards. And I can prove it. If you will read back to the opening lines of this scene you will find that I have spoken the truthâunless you forgot your lines. If you admit that, I have nothing to say, but I will add that if you are going to forget lines that give the key-note of the whole situation, youâve got no business in a farce. Youâll make the whole thing fall flat some day, and then you will be discharged.â
Mr. Edwards. âWell, I wish I might be discharged; Iâm tired of the whole business. Anybodyâd take me for an idiot, the way I have to go on. Every bit of fun there is to be had in these farces is based upon some predicament into which[74] my idiocy or yours gets me. Are we idiots? I ask you that. Are we? You may be, but, Mrs. Edwards, I am not. The idea of my falling asleep over Ivanhoe! Would I do that if I had my way? Well, I guess not! Would I even dare to say âI guess notâ in a magazine farce? Again, I guess not. Iâm going to write to the editor this very night, and resign my situation. I want to be me. I donât want to be what some author thinks I ought to be. Do you know what I think?â
Mrs. Edwards (warningly). âTake care, Robert. Take care. You arenât employed to think.â
Mr. Edwards. âPrecisely. Thatâs what makes me so immortally mad. The author doesnât give me time to think. I could think real thoughts if heâd let me, but then! The curtain wouldnât stay up half a second if I did that; and where would the farce be? The audience would go home tired, because they wouldnât get their nap if the curtain was down. Itâs hard luck; and as for me, I wouldnât keep
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