By F. Hopkinson Smith
1909
It began to snow half an hour after
the train started a fine-grained, slanting,
determined snow that forced its way between the bellows
of the vestibules, and deposited itself in mounds
of powdered salt all over the platforms and steps.
Even the porter had caught some puffs on his depot
coat with the red cape, and so had the conductor, from
the way he thrashed his cap on the back of the seat
in front of mine. “Yes, gettin’ worse,”
he said in answer to an inquiring lift of my eyebrows.
“Everything will be balled up if this keeps on.”
“Shall we make the connection
at Bondville?” I was to lecture fifty miles
from Bondville Junction, and had but half an hour lee-way.
If the man with the punch heard, he
made no answer. The least said the soonest mended
in crises like this. If we arrived on time every
passenger would grab his bag and bolt out without thanking
him or the road, or the engineer who took the full
blast of the storm on his chest and cheeks. If
we missed the connection, any former hopeful word would
only add another hot coal to everybody’s anger.
I fell back on the porter.
“Yes’ sir, she’ll
be layin’ jes’ ’cross de platform.
She knows we’re comin’. Sometimes
she waits ten minutes sometimes she don’t;
more times I seen her pullin’ out while we was
pullin’ in.”
Not very reassuring this. Only
one statement was of value the position
of the connecting train when we rolled into Bondville.
I formulated a plan: The porter
would take one bag, I the other we would
both stand on the lower step of the Pullman, then make
a dash. If she was pulling out as we pulled in,
a goatlike spring on my part might succeed; the bags
being hurled after me to speed the animal’s motion.
One hour later we took up our position.
“Dat’s good! Dar
she is jes’ movin’ out: thank ye,
sar. I got de bag dis way!”
There came a jolt, a Saturday-afternoon
slide across the ice-covered platform, an outstretched
greasy hand held down from the step of the moving
train, followed by the chug of a bag that missed my
knees by a hand’s breadth and I was
hauled on board.
The contrast between a warm, velvet-lined
Pullman and a cane-seated car with both doors opened
every ten minutes was anything but agreeable; but
no discomfort should count when a lecturer is trying
to make his connection. That is what he is paid
for and that he must do at all hazards and at any
cost, even to chartering a special train, the price
devouring his fee.
Once in my seat an account of stock
was taken two bags, an umbrella, overcoat,
two gum shoes (one off, one on), manuscript of lecture
in bag, eye-glasses in outside pocket of waistcoat.
This over, I spread myself upon the cane seat and
took in the situation. It was four o’clock
(the lecture was at eight); Sheffield was two hours
away; this would give time to change my dress and
get something to eat. The committee, moreover,
were to meet me at the depot with a carriage and drive
me to where I was “to spend the night and dine” so
the chairman’s letter read. The suppressed
smile on the second conductor’s face when he
punched my ticket and read the name of “Sheffield”
sent my hand into my pocket in search of this same
letter. Yes there was no mistake about
it, “Our carriage,” it read,
“will meet you,” etc., etc.
The confirmation brought with it a
certain thrill; not a carriage picked up out of the
street, or a lumbering omnibus a mere go-between
from station to hotels but “our carriage!”
Nothing like these lecture associations, I thought, nothing
like these committees, for making strangers comfortable.
That was why it was often a real pleasure to appear
before them. This one would, no doubt, receive
me in a big yellow and white Colonial club-house built
by the women of the town (I know of a dozen just such
structures), with dressing and lunch rooms, spacious
lecture hall, and janitor in gray edged with black.
This thought called up my own responsibility
in the matter; I was glad I had caught the train;
it was a bad night to bring people out and then disappoint
them, even if most of them did come in their own carriages.
Then again, I had kept my word; none of my fault, of
course, if I hadn’t but I had! that
was a source of satisfaction. Now that I thought
of it, I had, in all my twenty years of lecturing,
failed only twice to reach the platform. In one
instance a bridge was washed away, and in the other
my special train (the price I paid for that train still
keeps me hot against the Trusts) ran into a snowdrift
and stayed there until after midnight, instead of
delivering me on time, as agreed. I had arrived
late, of course, many times, gone without my supper
often, and more than once had appeared without the
proper habiliments and I am particular
about my dress coat and white waistcoat but
only twice had the gas been turned off and the people
turned out. Another time I had
“Sheffield! Shef-fie-l-d!
All out for Shef-f-i-e-l-d!” yelled the conductor.
The two bags once more, the conductor
helping me on with my overcoat, down the snow-blocked
steps and out into the night.
“Step lively! more’n an hour
late now.”
I looked about me. I was the
only passenger. Not a light of any kind not
a building of any kind, sort, or description, except
a box-car of a station set up on end, pitch dark inside
and out, and shut tight. No carriage. No
omnibus; nothing on runners; nothing on wheels.
Only a dreary waste of white, roofed by a vast expanse
of black.
“Is this Sheffield?” I gasped.
“Yes, all there is here; the balance
is two miles over the hills.”
“The town?”
“Town? no, the settlement; ain’t
more’s two dozen houses in it.”
“They were to send a carriage and ”
“Yes that’s
an old yarn better foot it for short.”
Here he swung his lantern to the engineer craning
his head from the cab of the locomotive, and sprang
aboard. Then this fragment came whirling through
the steam and smoke: “There’s
a farmhouse somewhere’s over the hill, follow
the fence and turn to ” the rest
was lost in the roar of the on-speeding train.
I am no longer young. Furthermore,
I hate to carry things bags especially.
One bag might be possible a very small one;
two bags, both big, are an insult.
I deposited the two outside the box-car,
tried the doors, inserted my fingers under the sash
of one window, looked at the chimney with a half-formed
Santa Claus idea of scaling the roof and sliding down
to some possible fireplace below; examined the wind-swept
snow for carriage tracks, peered into the gloom, and,
as a last resort, leaned up against the sheltered
side of the box to think.
There was no question that if a vehicle
of any kind had been sent to meet me it had long since
departed; the trackless roadway showed that.
It was equally evident that if one was coming, I had
better meet it on the way than stay where I was and
freeze to death. The fence was still visible the
near end and there was a farmhouse somewhere so
the conductor had said, and he seemed to be an honest,
truthful man. Whether to right or left of the
invisible road, the noise of the train and the howl
of the wind had prevented my knowing but
somewhere’s That was a consolation.
The bags were the most serious obstacles.
If I carried one in each hand the umbrella would have
to be cached, for some future relief expedition to
find in the spring.
There was a way, of course,
to carry bags any number of bags. All
that was needed was a leather strap with a buckle at
each end; I had helped to hang half a dozen bags across
the shoulders of as many porters meeting trains all
over Europe. Of course, I didn’t wear leather
straps. Suspenders were my stronghold. They
might! No, it was too cold to get at them
in that wind. And if I did they were of the springy,
wabbly kind that would seesaw the load from my hips
to my calves.
The only thing was to press on.
Some one had blundered, of course.
“Half a league, half a league into
the jaws,” etc.
“Theirs not to reason why ”
But my duty was plain; the audience were already assembling;
the early ones in their seats by this time.
Then an inspiration surged through
me. Why not slip the umbrella through the handle
of one bag, as Pat carries his shillalah and bundle
of duds, and grab the other in my free hand!
Our carriage couldn’t be far off. The exercise
would keep my blood active and my feet from freezing,
and as to the road, was there not the fence, its top
rail making rabbit jumps above the drifts?
So I trudged on, stumbling into holes,
flopping into treacherous ruts, halting in the steeper
places to catch my breath, till I reached the top
of the hill. There I halted stopped
short, in fact: the fence had given out!
In its place was a treacherous line of bushes that
faded into a delusive clump of trees. Beyond,
and on both sides, stretched a great white silence still
as death.
Another council of war. I could
retrace my steps, smash in the windows of the station,
and camp for the night, taking my chances of stopping
some east-bound train as it whizzed past, with a match
and my necktie or I could stumble on, perhaps
in a circle, and be found in the morning by the early
milk.
On! On once more maybe
the clump of trees hid something maybe
Here a light flashed a
mere speck of a light not to the right,
where lay the clump of trees but to my
left; then a faint wave of warm color rose from a
chimney and curled over a low roof buried in snow.
Again the light flashed this time through
a window with four panes of glass each
one a beacon to a storm-tossed mariner!
On once more into a low
hollow up a steep slope slipping,
falling, shoving the hand-gripped bag ahead of me
to help my footing, until I reached a snow-choked
porch and a closed door.
Here I knocked.
For some seconds there was no sound;
then came a heavy tread, and a man in overalls threw
wide the door.
“Well, what do you want at this
time of night?” (Time of night, and it but seven-thirty!)
“I’m the lecturer,” I panted.
“Oh, come! Ain’t
they sent for ye? Here, I’ll take ’em.
Walk in and welcome. You look beat out.
Well well wife and I was won-derin’
why nothin’ driv past for the six-ten.
We knowed you was comin’. Then agin, the
station master’s sick, and I ’spose ye
couldn’t warm up none. And they ain’t
sent for ye? And they let ye tramp all Well well!”
I did not answer. I hadn’t
breath enough left for sustained conversation; moreover,
there was a red-hot stove ahead of me, and a rocking-chair, comforts
I had never expected to see again and there
was a pine table oh, a lovely pine table,
with a most exquisite white oil-cloth cover, holding
the most beautiful kerosene lamp with a piece of glorious
red flannel floating in its amber fluid; and in the
corner a wife a sweet-faced,
angelic-looking young wife, with a baby in her arms
too beautiful for words must have been!
I dropped into the chair, spread my
fingers to the stove and looked around warmth rest-peace comfort companionship all
in a minute!
“No, they didn’t send
anything,” I wheezed when my breath came.
“The conductor told me I should find the farmhouse
over the hill and ”
“Yes, that’s so; it’s
back a piece, you must have missed it.”
“Yes I must have missed it,”
I continued in a dazed way.
“The folks at the farmhouse
is goin’ to hear ye speak, so they told me.
Must be startin’ now.”
“Would you please let them know I am here, and ”
“Sure! Wait till I get on my boots!
Hello! that’s him now.”
Again the door swung wide. This
time it let in a fur overcoat, coon-skin cap, two
gray yarn mittens, a pair of raw-beefsteak cheeks and
a voice like a fog-horn.
“Didn’t send for ye?
Wall, I’ll be gol-durned! And yer had
to fût it? Well, don’ that beat all.
And yer ain’t the fust one they’ve left
down here to get up the best way they could.
Last winter Jan’ry, warn’t it,
Bill?” Bill nodded “there come
a woman from New York and they dumped her out jes’
same as you. I happened to come along in time,
as luck would have it I was haulin’
a load of timber on my bob-sled and there
warn’t nothin’ else, so I took her up to
the village. She got in late, of course, but
they was a-waitin’ for her. I really wasn’t
goin’ to hear you speak to-night we
git so much of that sort of thing since the old man
who left the money to pay you fellers for talkin’
died been goin’ on ten years now but
I’ll take yer ’long with me, and glad to.
But yer oughter have somethin’ warmer’n
what yer got on. Wind’s kinder nippy down
here, but it ain’t nothin’ to the way it
bites up on the ridge.”
This same thought had passed through
my own mind. The unusual exertion had started
every pore in my body; the red-hot stove had put on
the finishing touches and I was in a Russian bath.
To face that wind meant all sorts of calamities.
The Madonna-like wife with the cherub
in her arms rose to her feet.
“Would you mind wearing my fur
tippet?” she said in her soft voice; “’tain’t
much, but it ’ud keep out the cold from yer neck
and maybe this shawl’d help some, if I tied
it round your shoulders. Father got his death
ridin’ to the village when he was overhet.”
She put them on with her own hands,
bless her kind heart! her husband holding the baby;
then she followed me out into the cold and helped draw
the horse-blanket over my knees; the man in the coon-skin
cap lugging the bags and the umbrella.
I looked at my watch. After eight
o’clock, and two miles to drive!
“Oh, I’ll git yer there,”
came a voice from inside the fur overcoat. “Darter
wanted to go, but I said ’twarn’t no night
to go nowhars. Got to see a man who owes me some
money, or I’d stay home myself. Git up,
Joe.”
It was marvellous, the intelligence
of this man. More than marvellous when my again
blinded eyes the red flannel in the lamp
helped began to take in the landscape.
Fences were evidently of no use to him; clumps of
trees didn’t count. If he had a compass
anywhere about his clothes, he never once consulted
it. Drove right on across trackless
Siberian steppes; by the side of endless glaciers,
and through primeval forests, his voice keeping up
its volume of sound, as he laid bare for me the scandals
of the village particularly the fight going
on between the two churches one hard and
one soft this lecture course being one of
the bones of contention.
I saved my voice and kept quiet.
If a runner did not give out or “Joe”
break a leg, we would reach the hall in time; half
an hour late, perhaps but in time; the
man beside me had said so and the man beside
me knew.
With a turn of the fence a
new one had thrust its hands out of a drift a
big building big in the white waste loomed
up. My companion flapped the reins the whole
length of Joe’s back.
“Git up! No, by gosh! they
ain’t tired yet; they’re still
a-waitin’. See them lights that’s
the hall.”
I gave a sigh of relief. The
ambitious young man with one ear open for stellar
voices, and the overburdened John Bunyan, and any number
of other short-winded pedestrians, could no longer
monopolize the upward and onward literature of our
own or former times. I too had arrived.
Another jerk to the right a
trot up an incline, and we stopped at a steep flight
of steps a regular Jacob’s-ladder
flight leading to a corridor dimly lighted
by the flare of a single gas jet. Up this I stumbled,
lugging the bags once more, my whole mind bent on reaching
the platform at the earliest possible moment a
curious mental attitude, I am aware, for a man who
had eaten nothing since noon, was still wet and shivering
inside, and half frozen outside nose, cheeks,
and fingers –from a wind that cut
like a circular saw.
As I landed the last bag on the top
step the fog-horn couldn’t leave
his horse I became conscious of the movements
of a short, rotund, shad-shaped gentleman in immaculate
white waistcoat, stiff choker and wide expanse of
shirt front. He was approaching me from the door
of the lecture hall in which sat the audience; then
a clammy hand was thrust out and a thin
voice trickled this sentence:
“You’re considerable late
sir our people have been in their ”
“I am what!” I cried, straightening
up.
“I said you were forty minutes
late, sir. We expect our lecturers to be on ”
That was the fulminate that exploded
the bomb. Up to now I had held myself in hand.
I was carrying, I knew, 194 pounds of steam, and I
also knew that one shovel more of coal would send
the entire boiler into space, but through it all I
had kept my hand on the safety-valve. It might
have been the white waistcoat or the way the curved
white collar cupped his billiard-ball of a chin, or
it might have been the slight frown about his eyebrows,
or the patronizing smile that drifted over his freshly
laundered face; or it might have been the deprecating
gesture with which he consulted his watch: whatever
it was, out went the boiler.
“Late! Are you the man
that’s running this lecture course?”
“Well, sir, I have the management of it.”
“You have, have you? Then
permit me to tell you right here, my friend, that
you ought to sublet the contract to a five-year-old
boy. You let me get out in the cold send
no conveyance as you agreed ”
“We sent our wagon, sir, to
the station. You could have gone in and warmed
yourself, and if it had not arrived you could have
telephoned the station is always warm.”
“You have the impudence to tell
me that I don’t know whether a station is closed
or not, and that I can’t see a wagon when it
is hauled up alongside a depot?”
The clammy hands went up in protest:
“If you will listen, sir, I will ”
“No, sir, I will listen to nothing.”
and I forged ahead into a small room where five or
six belated people were hanging up their coats and
hats.
But the Immaculate still persisted:
“This is not where Will
you come into the dressing-room, sir? We have
a nice warm room for the lecturers on the other side
of the ”
“No sir; I won’t
go another step, except on to that platform, and I’m
not very anxious now to get there not until
I put something inside of me ” (here
I unstrapped my bag) “to save me from an attack
of pneumonia.” (I had my flask out now and the
cup filled to the brim.) “When I think of how
hard I worked to get here and how little you ”
(and down it went at one gulp).
The expression of disgust that wrinkled
the placid face of the Immaculate as the half-empty
flask went back to its place, was pathetic but
I wouldn’t have given him a drop to have saved
his life.
I turned on him again.
“Do you think it would be possible
to get a vehicle of any kind to take me where I am
to sleep?”
“I think so, sir.” His self-control
was admirable.
“Well, will you please do it?”
“A sleigh has already been ordered,
sir.” This came through tightly closed
lips.
“All right. Now down which aisle is the
entrance to the platform?”
“This way, sir.”
The highest glacier on Mont Blanc couldn’t have
been colder or more impassive.
Just here a calming thought wedged
itself into my brain-storm. These patient, long-suffering
people were not to blame; many of them had come several
miles through the storm to hear me speak and were entitled
to the best that was in me. To vent upon them
my spent steam because No, that was impossible.
“Hold on, my friend,”
I said, “stop where you are, let me pull myself
together. This isn’t their fault ”
We were passing behind the screen hiding the little
stage.
But he didn’t hold on; he marched
straight ahead; so did I, past the pitcher of ice
water and the two last winter’s palms, where
he motioned me to a chair.
His introduction was not long, nor
was it discursive. There was nothing eulogistic
of my various acquirements, occupations, talents; no
remark about the optimistic trend of my literature,
the affection in which my characters were held; nothing
of this at all. Nor did I expect it. What
interested me more was the man himself.
The steam of my wrath had blurred
his outline and make-up before; now I got a closer,
although a side, view of his person. He was a
short man, much thicker at the middle than he was
at either end a defect all the more apparent
by reason of a long-tailed, high-waisted, unbuttonable
black coat which, while it covered his back and sides,
would have left his front exposed, but for his snowy
white waistcoat, which burst like a ball of cotton
from its pod.
His only gesture was the putting together
of his ten fingers, opening and touching them again
to accentuate his sentences. What passed through
my mind as I sat and watched him, was not the audience,
nor what I was going to say to them, but the Christianlike
self-control of this gentleman a control
which seemed to carry with it a studied reproof.
Under its influence I unconsciously closed both furnace
doors and opened my forced draft. Even then I
should have reached for the safety-valve, but for
an oily, martyr-like smile which flickered across his
face, accompanied by a deprecating movement of his
elbows, both indicating his patience under prolonged
suffering, and his instant readiness to turn the other
cheek if further smiting on my part was in store for
him. I strode to the edge of the platform:
“I know, good people,” I exploded, “that
you are not responsible for what has happened, but
I want to tell you before I begin, that I have been
boiling mad for ten minutes and am still at white
heat, and that it is going to take me some time to
get cool enough to be of the slightest service to
you. You notice that I appear before you without
a proper suit of clothes a mark of respect
which every lecturer should pay his audience.
You are also aware that I am nearly an hour late.
What I regret is, first, the cause of my frame of
mind, second, that you should have been kept waiting.
Now, let me tell you exactly what I have gone through,
and I do it simply because this is not the first time
that this has happened to your lecturers, and it ought
to be your last. It certainly will be the last
for me.” Then followed the whole incident,
including the Immaculate’s protest about my
being late, my explosion, etc., etc., even
to the incident of my flask.
There was a dead silence so
dead and lifeless that I could not tell whether they
were offended or not; but I made my bow as usual, and
began my discourse.
The lecture over, the Immaculate paid
me my fee with punctilious courtesy, waiving the customary
receipt; followed me to the cloak-room, helped me
on with my coat, picked up one of the bags, an
auditor the other, and the two followed me down Jacob’s
ladder into the night. Outside stood a sleigh
shaped like the shell of Dr. Holmes’s Nautilus,
its body hardly large enough to hold a four-months-old
baby. This was surrounded by half the audience,
anxious, I afterward learned, for a closer view of
the man who had “sassed” the Manager.
Some of them expected it to continue.
I squeezed in beside the bags and
was about to draw up the horse blanket, when a voice
rang out:
“Mis’ Plimsole’s
goin’ in that sleigh, too.” It was
at Mrs. Plimsole’s that I was to spend the night.
Then a faint voice answered back:
“No, I can just as well walk.”
She evidently knew the danger of sitting next to an
overcharged boiler.
Mrs. Plimsole! a woman walk on
a night like this I was out of the sleigh
before she had ceased to speak.
“No, madam, you are going to
do nothing of the kind; if anybody is to walk it will
be I; I’m getting used to it.”
She allowed me to tuck her in.
It was too dark for me to see what she was like she
was so swathed and tied up. Being still mad fires
drawn but still dangerous, I concluded that my companion
was sour, and skinny, with a parrot nose and one tooth
gone. That I was to pass the night at her house
did not improve the estimate; there would be mottoes
on the walls “What is home without
a mother,” and the like; tidies on the chairs,
and a red-hot stove smelling of drying socks.
There would also be a basin and pitcher the size of
a cup and saucer, and a bed that sagged in the middle
and was covered with a cotton quilt.
The Nautilus stopped at a gate,
beyond which was a smaller Jacob’s ladder leading
to a white cottage. Was there nothing built on
a level in Sheffield? I asked myself. The
bags which had been hung on the shafts came first,
then I, then the muffled head and cloak. Upward
and onward again, through a door, past a pretty girl
who stood with her hand on the knob in welcome, and
into a hall. Here the girl helped unmummy her
mother, and then turned up the hall-lamp.
Oh, such a dear, sweet gray-haired
old lady! The kind of an old lady you would have
wanted to stay not a night with but
a year. An old lady with plump fresh cheeks and
soft brown eyes and a smile that warmed you through
and through. And such an all-embracing restful
room with its open wood fire, andirons and polished
fender and the plants and books and easy-chairs!
And the cheer of it all!
“Now you just sit there and
get comfortable,” she said, patting my shoulder (the
second time in one night that a woman’s hand
had been that of an angel). “Maggie’ll
get you some supper. We had it all ready, expecting
you on the six-ten. Hungry, aren’t you?”
Hungry! I could have gnawed a
hole in a sofa to get at the straw stuffing.
She drew up a chair, waited till her
daughter had left the room, and said with a twinkle
in her eyes:
“Oh, I was glad you gave it
to ’em the way you did, and when you sailed
into that snivelling old Hard-shell deacon, I just
put my hands down under my petticoats and clapped
them for joy. There isn’t anybody running
anything up here. They don’t have to pay
for this lecture course. It was given to them
by a man who is dead. All they think they’ve
got to do is to dress themselves up. They’re
all officers; there’s a recording secretary
and a corresponding secretary and an executive committee
and a president and two vice-presidents, and a lot
more that I can’t remember. Everyone of
them is leaving everything to somebody else to attend
to. I know, because I take care of all the lecturers
that come. Only last winter a lady lecturer arrived
here on a load of wood; she didn’t lose her
temper and get mad like you did. Maybe you know
her; she told us all about the Indians and her husband,
the great general, who was surrounded and massacred
by them.”
“Know her, Madam, not only do
I know and love her, but the whole country loves her.
She is a saint, Madam, that the good Lord only allows
to live in this world because if she was transferred
there would be no standard left.”
“Yes, but then you had considerable
cause. The hired girl next door she
sat next to my daughter said she didn’t
blame you a mite.” (Somebody was on my side,
anyhow.) “Now come in to supper.”
The next morning I was up at dawn:
I had to get up at dawn because the omnibus made only
one trip to the station, to catch the seven-o’clock
train. I went by the eight-ten, but a little thing
like that never makes any difference in Sheffield.
When the omnibus arrived it came on
runners. Closer examination from the window of
the cosey room the bedroom was even more
delightful revealed a square furniture
van covered on the outside with white canvas, the
door being in the middle, like a box-car. I bade
the dear old lady and her daughter good-by, opened
the hall door and stood on the top step. The
driver, a stout, fat-faced fellow, looked up with an
inquiring glance.
“Nice morning,” I cried
in my customary cheerful tone the dear woman
had wrought the change.
“You bet! Got over your mad?”
The explosion had evidently been heard all over the
village.
“Yes,” I laughed, as I crawled in beside
two other passengers.
“You was considerable het up
last night, so Si was tellin’ me,” remarked
the passenger, helping me with one bag.
I nodded. Who Si might be was
not of special interest, and then again the subject
had now lost its inflammatory feature.
The woman made no remark; she was
evidently one of the secretaries.
“Well, by gum, if they had left
me where they left you last night, and you a plumb
stranger, I’d rared and pitched a little myself,”
continued the man. “When you come again ”
“Come again! Not by a ”
“Oh, yes, you will. You
did them Hard-shells a lot of good! You just bet
your bottom dollar they’ll look out for the next
one of you fellows that comes up here!”
The woman continued silent. She
would have something to say about any return visit
of mine, and she intended to say it out loud if the
time ever came!
The station now loomed into sight.
I sprang out and tried the knob. I knew all about
that knob every twist and turn of it.
“Locked again!” I shouted,
“and I’ve got to wait here an hour in this ”
“Hold on hold
on ” shouted back the driver.
“Don’t break loose again. I got the
key.”
My mail a week later brought me a
county paper containing this statement: “The
last lecturer, owing to some error on the part of the
committee, was not met at the train and was considerably
vexed. He said so to the audience and to the
committee. Everybody was satisfied with his talk
until they heard what they had to pay for it.
He also said that he had left his dress suit in his
trunk. If what we hear is true, he left his manners
with it.” On reflection, the editor was
right I had.