A MEDIAEVAL LEGEND
The church clocks in San Francisco
were striking ten. The Devil, who had been flying
over the city that evening, just then alighted on the
roof of a church near the corner of Bush and Montgomery
Streets. It will be perceived that the popular
belief that the Devil avoids holy edifices, and vanishes
at the sound of a Credo or Pater-noster,
is long since exploded. Indeed, modern scepticism
asserts that he is not averse to these orthodox discourses,
which particularly bear reference to himself, and
in a measure recognize his power and importance.
I am inclined to think, however, that
his choice of a resting-place was a good deal influenced
by its contiguity to a populous thoroughfare.
When he was comfortably seated, he began pulling out
the joints of a small rod which he held in his hand,
and which presently proved to be an extraordinary
fishing-pole, with a telescopic adjustment that permitted
its protraction to a marvellous extent. Affixing
a line thereto, he selected a fly of a particular
pattern from a small box which he carried with him,
and, making a skilful cast, threw his line into the
very centre of that living stream which ebbed and
flowed through Montgomery Street.
Either the people were very virtuous
that evening or the bait was not a taking one.
In vain the Devil whipped the stream at an eddy in
front of the Occidental, or trolled his line into
the shadows of the Cosmopolitan; five minutes passed
without even a nibble. “Dear me!”
quoth the Devil, “that’s very singular;
one of my most popular flies, too! Why, they’d
have risen by shoals in Broadway or Beacon Street
for that. Well, here goes another.”
And, fitting a new fly from his well-filled box, he
gracefully recast his line.
For a few moments there was every
prospect of sport. The line was continually bobbing
and the nibbles were distinct and gratifying.
Once or twice the bait was apparently gorged and carried
off in the upper stories of the hotels to be digested
at leisure. At such times the professional manner
in which the Devil played out his line would have
thrilled the heart of Izaak Walton. But his efforts
were unsuccessful; the bait was invariably carried
off without hooking the victim, and the Devil finally
lost his temper. “I’ve heard of these
San Franciscans before,” he muttered; “wait
till I get hold of one, that’s all!”
he added malevolently, as he rebaited his hook.
A sharp tug and a wriggle foiled his next trial, and
finally, with considerable effort, he landed a portly
two-hundred-pound broker upon the church roof.
As the victim lay there gasping, it
was evident that the Devil was in no hurry to remove
the hook from his gills; nor did he exhibit in this
delicate operation that courtesy of manner and graceful
manipulation which usually distinguished him.
“Come,” he said, gruffly,
as he grasped the broker by the waistband, “quit
that whining and grunting. Don’t flatter
yourself that you’re a prize either. I
was certain to have had you. It was only a question
of time.”
“It is not that, my lord, which
troubles me,” whined the unfortunate wretch,
as he painfully wriggled his head, “but that
I should have been fooled by such a paltry bait.
What will they say of me down there? To have
let ‘bigger things’ go by, and to be taken
in by this cheap trick,” he added, as he groaned
and glanced at the fly which the Devil was carefully
rearranging, “is what, pardon me,
my lord, is what gets me!”
“Yes,” said the Devil,
philosophically, “I never caught anybody yet
who didn’t say that; but tell me, ain’t
you getting somewhat fastidious down there? Here
is one of my most popular flies, the greenback,”
he continued, exhibiting an emerald-looking insect,
which he drew from his box. “This, so generally
considered excellent in election season, has not even
been nibbled at. Perhaps your sagacity, which,
in spite of this unfortunate contretemps, no one can
doubt,” added the Devil, with a graceful return
to his usual courtesy, “may explain the reason
or suggest a substitute.”
The broker glanced at the contents
of the box with a supercilious smile. “Too
old-fashioned, my lord, long ago played
out. Yet,” he added, with a gleam of interest,
“for a consideration I might offer something ahem! that
would make a taking substitute for these trifles.
Give me,” he continued, in a brisk, business-like
way, “a slight percentage and a bonus down,
and I’m your man.”
“Name your terms,” said the Devil, earnestly.
“My liberty and a percentage on all you take,
and the thing’s done.”
The Devil caressed his tail thoughtfully,
for a few moments. He was certain of the broker
any way, and the risk was slight. “Done!”
he said.
“Stay a moment,” said
the artful broker. “There are certain contingencies.
Give me your fishing-rod and let me apply the bait
myself. It requires a skilful hand, my lord; even
your well-known experience might fail. Leave
me alone for half an hour, and if you have reason
to complain of my success I will forfeit my deposit, I
mean my liberty.”
The Devil acceded to his request,
bowed, and withdrew. Alighting gracefully in
Montgomery Street, he dropped into Meade & Co.’s
clothing store, where, having completely equipped
himself a la mode, he sallied forth intent on his
personal enjoyment. Determining to sink his professional
character, he mingled with the current of human life,
and enjoyed, with that immense capacity for excitement
peculiar to his nature, the whirl, bustle, and feverishness
of the people, as a purely aesthetic gratification
unalloyed by the cares of business. What he did
that evening does not belong to our story. We
return to the broker, whom we left on the roof.
When he made sure that the Devil had
retired, he carefully drew from his pocket-book a
slip of paper and affixed it on the hook. The
line had scarcely reached the current before he felt
a bite. The hook was swallowed. To bring
up his victim rapidly, disengage him from the hook,
and reset his line, was the work of a moment.
Another bite and the same result. Another, and
another. In a very few minutes the roof was covered
with his panting spoil. The broker could himself
distinguish that many of them were personal friends;
nay, some of them were familiar frequenters of the
building on which they were now miserably stranded.
That the broker felt a certain satisfaction in being
instrumental in thus misleading his fellow-brokers
no one acquainted with human nature will for a moment
doubt. But a stronger pull on his line caused
him to put forth all his strength and skill.
The magic pole bent like a coach-whip. The broker
held firm, assisted by the battlements of the church.
Again and again it was almost wrested from his hand,
and again and again he slowly reeled in a portion
of the tightening line. At last, with one mighty
effort, he lifted to the level of the roof a struggling
object. A howl like Pandemonium rang through the
air as the broker successfully landed at his feet the
Devil himself!
The two glared fiercely at each other.
The broker, perhaps mindful of his former treatment,
evinced no haste to remove the hook from his antagonist’s
jaw. When it was finally accomplished, he asked
quietly if the Devil was satisfied. That gentleman
seemed absorbed in the contemplation of the bait which
he had just taken from his mouth. “I am,”
he said, finally, “and forgive you; but what
do you call this?”
“Bend low,” replied the
broker, as he buttoned up his coat ready to depart.
The Devil inclined his ear. “I call it wild
cat!”