Struggles and Triumphs P. T. Barnum (the beginning after the end read novel .TXT) đ
- Author: P. T. Barnum
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We took the cars the same evening for Birmingham, where we arrived at ten oâclock, Albert Smith remarking, that never before in his life had he accomplished a dayâs journey on the Yankee go-ahead principle. He afterwards published a chapter in Bentleyâs Magazine entitled âA Day with Barnum,â in which he said we accomplished business with such rapidity, that when he attempted to write out the accounts of the day, he found the whole thing so confused in his brain that he came near locating âPeeping Tomâ in the house of Shakespeare, while Guy of Warwick would stick his head above the ruins of Kenilworth, and the Warwick Vase appeared in Coventry.
XV Return to AmericaThe Wizard of the Northâ âA Juggler Beaten at His Own Tricksâ âSecond Visit to the United Statesâ âReverend Doctor Robert Bairdâ âCaptain Judkins Threatens to Put Me in Ironsâ âViews with Regard to Sectsâ âA Wicked Womanâ âThe Simpsons in Europeâ âReminiscences of Travelâ âSauce and âSassââ âTea Too Sweetâ âA Universal Languageâ âRoast Duckâ âSnow in Augustâ âTales of Travellersâ âSimpson Not to Be Taken Inâ âHollanders in Brusselsâ âWhere All the Dutchmen Come fromâ âThree Years in Europeâ âWarm Personal Friendsâ âDoctor C. S. Brewsterâ âHenry Sumnerâ âGeorge Sandâ âLorenzo Draperâ âGeorge P. Putnamâ âOur Last Performance in Dublinâ âDaniel OâConnellâ âEnd of Our Tourâ âDeparture for Americaâ âArrival in New York.
While I was at Aberdeen, in Scotland, I met Anderson, the âWizard of the North.â I had known him for a long time, and we were on familiar terms. The Generalâs exhibitions were to close on Saturday night, and Anderson was to open in the same hall on Monday evening. He came to our exhibition, and at the close we went to the hotel together to get a little supper. After supper we were having some fun and jokes together, when it occurred to Anderson to introduce me to several persons who were sitting in the room, as the âWizard of the North,â at the same time asking me about my tricks and my forthcoming exhibition. He kept this up so persistently that some of our friends who were present, declared that Anderson was âtoo much for me,â and, meanwhile, fresh introductions to strangers who came in, had made me pretty generally known in that circle as the âWizard of the North,â who was to astonish the town in the following week. I accepted the situation at last, and said:
âWell, gentlemen, as I perform here for the first time, on Monday evening, I like to be liberal, and I should be very happy to give orders of admission to those of you who will attend my exhibition.â
The applications for orders were quite general, and I had written thirty or forty, when Anderson, who saw that I was in a fair way of filling his house with âdeadheads,â cried outâ â
âHold on! I am the âWizard of the North.â Iâll stand the orders already given, but not another one.â
Our friends, including the âWizardâ himself, began to think that I had rather the best of the joke.
During our three yearsâ stay abroad, I made a second hasty visit to America, leaving the General in England in the hands of my agents. I took passage from Liverpool on board a Cunard steamer, commanded by Captain Judkins. One of my fellow passengers was the celebrated divine, Robert Baird. I had known him as the author of an octavo volume, âReligion in Americaâ; and while that work had impressed me as exhibiting great ability and an outspoken honesty of purpose, it had also given me the notion that its author must be very rigid and intolerant as a sectarian. Still I was happy to make his acquaintance on board the steamship, and soon regarded with favor the venerable Presbyterian divine.
Dr. Baird had been for some time a missionary in Sweden. He was now paying a visit to his native land. I found him a shrewd, well-informed Christian gentleman, and I took much pleasure in hearing him converse. One night it was storming furiously. The waves, rolling high, afforded a sight of awful grandeur, to witness which I was tempted to put on a pea-jacket, go upon the deck, and lash myself to the side of the ship. After I had been there nearly an hour, wrapt in meditation and wonder, not unmixed with awe, Dr. Baird came up in the darkness, feeling his way cautiously along the deck. As he came where I was, I hailed him; and he asked what I was doing so long up there.
âListening to the preaching, Doctor,â I replied; âand I think it beats even yours, although I have never had the pleasure of hearing you.â
âAh!â he replied, ânone of us can preach like this. How humble and insignificant we all feel in the presence of such a display of the Almighty power; and how grateful we should be to remember that infinite love guides this power.â
The Sunday following, divine service was held as usual in the large after cabin. Of course it was the Episcopal form of worship. The captain conducted the services, assisted by the clerk and the shipâs surgeon. A dozen or two of the sailors, shaved, washed, and neatly dressed, were marched into the cabin by the mate; most of the passengers were also present.
Those who have witnessed this service, as conducted by Captain Judkins, need not be reminded that he does it much as he performs his duties on deck. He speaks as one having authority; and a listener could hardly help feeling that there would be some danger of a ârowâ if the petitions (made as a sort of command) were not speedily answered.
After dinner I asked Dr. Baird if he would be willing to preach to the passengers in the forward cabin.
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