his
private office to present it. I had been selected for
spokesman, and I made a little speech that I had been
preparing for a week.
It made a hit. It was full of puns and epigrams and funny
twists that brought down the house--which was a very solid
one in the wholesale hardware line. Old Marlowe himself
actually grinned, and the employees took their cue and
roared.
My
reputation as a humorist dates from half-past nine o'clock
on that morning. For weeks afterward my fellow clerks
fanned the flame of my self-esteem. One by one they came
to me, saying what an awfully clever speech that was,
old man, and carefully explained to me the point of each
one of my jokes.
Gradually
I found that I was expected to keep it up. Others might
speak sanely on business matters and the day's topics,
but from me something gamesome and airy was required.
I
was expected to crack jokes about the crockery and lighten
up the granite ware with persiflage. I was second bookkeeper,
and if I failed to show up a balance sheet without something
comic about the footings or could find no cause for laughter
in an invoice of plows, the other clerks were disappointed.
By degrees my fame spread, and I became a local "character."
Our town was small enough to make this possible. The daily
newspaper quoted me. At social gatherings I was indispensable.
I
believe I did possess considerable wit and a facility
for quick and spontaneous repartee. This gift I cultivated
and improved by practice. And the nature of it was kindly
and genial, not running to sarcasm or offending others.
People began to smile when they saw me coming, and by
the time we had met I generally had the word ready to
broaden the smile into a laugh.
I
had married early. We had a charming boy of three and
a girl of five. Naturally, we lived in a vine-covered
cottage, and were happy. My salary as bookkeeper in the
hardware concern kept at a distance those ills attendant
upon superfluous wealth.
At
sundry times I had written out a few jokes and conceits
that I considered peculiarly happy, and had sent them
to certain periodicals that print such things. All of
them had been instantly accepted. Several of the editors
had written to request further contributions.
One
day I received a letter from the editor of a famous weekly
publication. He suggested that I submit to him a humorous
composition to fill a column of space; hinting that he
would make it a regular feature of each issue if the work
proved satisfactory. I did so, and at the end of two weeks
he offered to make a contract with me for a year at a
figure that was considerably higher than the amount paid
me by the hardware firm.
I
was filled with delight. My wife already crowned me in
her mind with the imperishable evergreens of literary
success. We had lobster croquettes and a bottle of blackberry
wine for supper that night. Here was the chance to liberate
myself from drudgery. I talked over the matter very seriously
with Louisa. We agreed that I must resign my place at
the store and devote myself to humor.
I
resigned. My fellow clerks gave me a farewell banquet.
The speech I made there coruscated. It was printed in
full by the Gazette. The next morning I awoke and looked
at the clock.
"Late,
by George!" I exclaimed, and grabbed for my clothes. Louisa
reminded me that I was no longer a slave to hardware and
contractors' supplies. I was now a professional humorist.
After
breakfast she proudly led me to the little room off the
kitchen. Dear girl! There was my table and chair, writing
pad, ink, and pipe tray. And all the author's trappings--the
celery stand full of fresh roses and honeysuckle, last
year's calendar on the wall, the dictionary, and a little
bag of chocolates to nibble between inspirations. Dear
girl!
I
sat me to work. The wall paper is patterned with arabesques
or odalisks or--perhaps--it is trapezoids. Upon one of
the figures I fixed my eyes. I bethought me of humor.
A
voice startled me--Louisa's voice.
"If
you aren't too busy, dear," it said, "come to dinner."
I
looked at my watch. Yes, five hours had been gathered
in by the grim scytheman. I went to dinner.
"You
mustn't work too hard at first," said Louisa. "Goethe--or
was it Napoleon?--said five hours a day is enough for
mental labor. Couldn't you take me and the children to
the woods this afternoon?"
"I
am a little tired," I admitted. So we went to the woods.
But
I soon got the swing of it. Within a month I was turning
out copy as regular as shipments of hardware.
And
I had success. My column in the weekly made some stir,
and I was referred to in a gossipy way by the critics
as something fresh in the line of humorists. I augmented
my income considerably by contributing to other publications.
I
picked up the tricks of the trade. I could take a funny
idea and make a two-line joke of it, earning a dollar.
With false whiskers on, it would serve up cold as a quatrain,
doubling its producing value. By turning the skirt and
adding a ruffle of rhyme you would hardly recognize it
as vers de societe with neatly shod feet and a fashion-plate
illustration.
I
began to save up money, and we had new carpets, and a
parlor organ. My townspeople began to look upon me as
a citizen of some consequence instead of the merry trifier
I had been when I clerked in the hardware store.
After
five or six months the spontaniety seemed to depart from
my humor. Quips and droll sayings no longer fell carelessly
from my lips. I was sometimes hard run for material. I
found myself listening to catch available ideas from the
conversation of my friends. Sometimes I chewed my pencil
and gazed at the wall paper for hours trying to build
up some gay little bubble of unstudied fun.
And
then I became a harpy, a Moloch, a Jonah, a vampire, to
my acquaintances. Anxious, haggard, greedy, I stood among
them like a veritable killjoy. Let a bright saying, a
witty comparison, a piquant phrase fall from their lips
and I was after it like a hound springing upon a bone.
I dared not trust my memory; but, turning aside guiltily
and meanly, I would make a note of it in my ever-present
memorandum book or upon my cuff for my own future use.
My
friends regarded me in sorrow and wonder. I was not the
same man. Where once I had furnished them entertainment
and jollity, I now preyed upon them. No jests from me
ever bid for their smiles now. They were too precious.
I could not afford to dispense gratuitously the means
of my livelihood.
I
was a lugubrious fox praising the singing of my friends,
the crow's, that they might drop from their beaks the
morsels of wit that I coveted.
Nearly
every one began to avoid me. I even forgot how to smile,
not even paying that much for the sayings I appropriated.
No
persons, places, times, or subjects were exempt from my
plundering in search of material. Even in church my demoralized
fancy went hunting among the solemn aisles and pillars
for spoil.
Did
the minister give out the long-meter doxology, at once
I began: "Doxology --sockdology--sockdolager--meter--meet
her."
The
sermon ran through my mental sieve, its precepts filtering
unheeded, could I but glean a suggestion of a pun or a
bon mot. The solemnest anthems of the choir were but an
accompaniment to my thoughts as I conceived new changes
to ring upon the ancient comicalities concerning the jealousies
of soprano, tenor, and basso.
My
own home became a hunting ground. My wife is a singularly
feminine creature, candid, sympathetic, and impulsive.
Once her conversation was my delight, and her ideas a
source of unfailing pleasure. Now I worked her. She was
a gold mine of those amusing but lovable inconsistencies
that distinguish the female mind.
I
began to market those pearls of unwisdom and humor that
should have enriched only the sacred precincts of home.
With devilish cunning I encouraged her to talk. Unsuspecting,
she laid her heart bare. Upon the cold, conspicuous, common,
printed page I offered it to the public gaze.
A
literary Judas, I kissed her and betrayed her. For pieces
of silver I dressed her sweet confidences in the pantalettes
and frills of folly and made them dance in the market
place.
Dear
Louisa! Of nights I have bent over her cruel as a wolf
above a tender lamb, hearkening even to her soft words
murmured in sleep, hoping to catch an idea for my next
day's grind. There is worse to come.
God
help me! Next my fangs were buried deep in the neck of
the fugitive sayings of my little children.
Guy
and Viola were two bright fountains of childish, quaint
thoughts and speeches. I found a ready sale for this kind
of humor, and was furnishing a regular department in a
magazine with "Funny Fancies of Childhood." I began to
stalk them as an Indian stalks the antelope. I would hide
behind sofas and doors, or crawl on my hands and knees
among the bushes in the yard to eavesdrop while they were
at play. I had all the qualities of a harpy except remorse.
Once,
when I was barren of ideas, and my copy must leave in
the next mail, I covered myself in a pile of autumn leaves
in the yard, where I knew they intended to come to play.
I cannot bring myself to believe that Guy was aware of
my hiding place, but even if he was, I would be loath
to blame him for his setting fire to the leaves, causing
the destruction of my new suit of clothes, and nearly
cremating a parent.
Soon
my own children began to shun me as a pest. Often, when
I was creeping upon them like a melancholy ghoul, I would
hear them say to each other: "Here comes papa," and they
would gather their toys and scurry away to some safer
hiding place. Miserable wretch that I was!
And
yet I was doing well financially. Before the first year
had passed I had saved a thousand dollars, and we had
lived in comfort.
But
at what a cost! I am not quite clear as to what a pariah
is, but I was everything that it sounds like. I had no
friends, no amusements, no enjoyment of life. The happiness
of my family had been sacrificed. I was a bee, sucking
sordid honey from life's fairest flowers, dreaded and
shunned on account of my stingo.
One
day a man spoke to me, with a pleasant and friendly smile.
Not in months had the thing happened. I was passing the
undertaking establishment of Peter Heffelbower. Peter
stood in the door and saluted me. I stopped, strangely
wrung in my heart by his greeting. He asked me inside.
The
day was chill and rainy. We went into the back room, where
a fire burned, in a little stove. A customer came, and
Peter left me alone for a while. Presently I felt a new
feeling stealing over me --a sense of beautiful calm and
content, I looked around the place. There were rows of
shining rosewood caskets, black palls, trestles, hearse
plumes, mourning streamers, and all the paraphernalia
of the solemn trade. Here was peace, order, silence, the
abode of grave and dignified reflections. Here, on the
brink of life, was a little niche pervaded by the spirit
of eternal rest.
When
I entered it, the follies of the world abandoned me at
the door. I felt no inclination to wrest a humorous idea
from those sombre and stately trappings. My mind seemed
to stretch itself to grateful repose upon a couch draped
with gentle thoughts.
A
quarter of an hour ago I was an abandoned humorist. Now
I was a philosopher, full of serenity and ease. I had
found a refuge from humor, from the hot chase of the shy
quip, from the degrading pursuit of the panting joke,
from the restless reach after the nimble repartee.
I
had not known Heffelbower well. When he came back, I let
him talk, fearful that he might prove to be a jarring
note in the sweet, dirgelike harmony of his establishment.
But,
no. He chimed truly. I gave a long sigh of happiness.
Never have I known a man's talk to be as magnificently
dull as Peter's was. Compared with it the Dead Sea is
a geyser. Never a sparkle or a glimmer of wit marred his
words. Commonplaces as trite and as plentiful as blackberries
flowed from his lips no more stirring in quality than
a last week's tape running from a ticker. Quaking a little,
I tried upon him one of my best pointed jokes. It fell
back ineffectual, with the point broken. I loved that
man from then on.
Two
or three evenings each week I would steal down to Heffelbower's
and revel in his back room. That was my only joy. I began
to rise early and hurry through my work, that I might
spend more time in my haven. In no other place could I
throw off my habit of extracting humorous ideas from my
surroundings. Peter's talk left me no opening had I besieged
it ever so hard.
Under
this influence I began to improve in spirits. It was the
recreation from one's labor which every man needs. I surprised
one or two of my former friends by throwing them a smile
and a cheery word as I passed them on the streets. Several
times I dumfounded my family by relaxing long enough to
make a jocose remark in their presence.
I
had so long been ridden by the incubus of humor that I
seized my hours of holiday with a schoolboy's zest.
Mv
work began to suffer. It was not the pain and burden to
me that it had been. I often whistled at my desk, and
wrote with far more fluency than before. I accomplished
my tasks impatiently, as anxious to be off to my helpful
retreat as a drunkard is to get to his tavern.
My
wife had some anxious hours in conjecturing where I spent
my afternoons. I thought it best not to tell her; women
do not understand these things. Poor girl!--she had one
shock out of it.
One
day I brought home a silver coffin handle for a paper
weight and a fine, fluffy hearse plume to dust my papers
with.
I
loved to see them on my desk, and think of the beloved
back room down at Heffelbower's. But Louisa found them,
and she shrieked with horror. I had to console her with
some lame excuse for having them, but I saw in her eyes
that the prejudice was not removed. I had to remove the
articles, though, at double-quick time.
One
day Peter Heffelbower laid before me a temptation that
swept me off my feet. In his sensible, uninspired way
he showed me his books, and explained that his profits
and his business were increasing rapidly. He had thought
of taking in a partner with some cash. He would rather
have me than any one he knew. When I left his place that
afternoon Peter had my check for the thousand dollars
I had in the bank, and I was a partner in his undertaking
business.
I
went home with feelings of delirious joy, mingled with
a certain amount of doubt. I was dreading to tell my wife
about it. But I walked on air. To give up the writing
of humorous stuff, once more to enjoy the apples of life,
instead of squeezing them to a pulp for a few drops of
hard cider to make the pubic feel funny--what a boon that
would be!
At
the supper table Louisa handed me some letters that had
come during my absence. Several of them contained rejected
manuscript. Ever since I first began going to Heffelbower's
my stuff had been coming back with alarming frequency.
Lately I had been dashing off my jokes and articles with
the greatest fluency. Previously I had labored like a
bricklayer, slowly and with agony.
Presently
I opened a letter from the editor of the weekly with which
I had a regular contract. The checks for that weekly article
were still our main dependence. The letter ran thus:
DEAR
SIR: As you are aware, our contract for the year expires
with the present month. While regretting the necessity
for so doing, we must say that we do not care to renew
same for the coming year. We were quite pleased with your
style of humor, which seems to have delighted quite a
large proportion of our readers. But for the past two
months we have noticed a decided falling off in its quality.
Your earlier work showed a spontaneous, easy, natural
flow of fun and wit. Of late it is labored, studied, and
unconvincing, giving painful evidence of hard toil and
drudging mechanism. Again regretting that we do not consider
your contributions available any longer, we are, yours
sincerely, THE EDITOR. I handed this letter to my wife.
After she had read it her face grew extremely long, and
there were tears in her eyes.
"The
mean old thing!" she exclaimed indignantly. "I'm sure
your pieces are just as good as they ever were. And it
doesn't take you half as long to write them as it did."
And then, I suppose, Louisa thought of the checks that
would cease coming. "Oh, John," she wailed, "what will
you do now?"
For
an answer I got up and began to do a polka step around
the supper table. I am sure Louisa thought the trouble
had driven me mad; and I think the children hoped it had,
for they tore after me, yelling with glee and emulating
my steps. I was now something like their old playmate
as of yore.
"The
theatre for us to-night!" I shouted; "nothing less. And
a late, wild, disreputable supper for all of us at the
Palace Restaurant. Lumpty-diddle-de-dee-de-dum!"
And
then I explained my glee by declaring that I was now a
partner in a prosperous undertaking establishment, and
that written jokes might go hide their heads in sackcloth
and ashes for all me.
With
the editor's letter in her hand to justify the deed I
had done, my wife could advance no objections save a few
mild ones based on the feminine inability to appreciate
a good thing such as the little back room of Peter Hef--no,
of Heffelbower & Co's. undertaking establishment.
In
conclusion, I will say that to-day you will find no man
in our town as well liked, as jovial, and full of merry
sayings as I. My jokes are again noised about and quoted;
once more I take pleasure in my wife's confidential chatter
without a mercenary thought, while Guy and Viola play
at my feet distributing gems of childish humor without
fear of the ghastly tormentor who used to dog their steps,
notebook in hand.
Our
business has prospered finely. I keep the books and look
after the shop, while Peter attends to outside matters.
He says that my levity and high spirits would simply turn
any funeral into a regular Irish wake.