YOU SHOULD WORRY ABOUT BEING IN LOVE
Say! have you ever noticed that when
a gink with an aluminum headpiece is handed the “This-Way-Out”
signal by his adored one, he either hikes for a pickle
parlor and begins to festoon his system with hops,
or he stands in front of a hardware store and gazes
gloomily at the guns?
You haven’t noticed it! Why, you astonish
me.
Friend wife met me by appointment
to take dinner at the Saint Astormore the other evening
and with her was her little brother, Stephen, aged
nine.
“I brought Stevie with me because
I had some shopping to do and he’s so much company,”
Peaches explained as we sat down in the restaurant.
“Stevie is always pleasant company,”
I agreed, politely, but with a watchful eye on my
youthful brother-in-law all the while.
That kid was born with an abnormal
bump of mischief and, by painstaking endeavor, he
has won the world’s championship as an organizer
of impromptu riots.
“Oh, John!” said Peaches,
when I began to make faces at the menu card, “I
didn’t notice until now how pale you look.
Have you had a busy day?”
“Busy!” I repeated; “well,
rather. I’ve been giving imitations of a
bull fight. Everybody I met was the bull and I
was the fight. Nominate your eats! What’ll
it be, Stevie?”
“Sponge cake,” said Stephen, promptly.
“What else?” asked Peaches.
“More sponge cake,” the
youth replied, and just then the smiling and sympathetic
waiter stooped down to pick up a fork Stephen had dropped.
In his anxiety not to miss anything,
Stevie rubbered acrobatically with the result that
he upset a glass of ice water down the waiter’s
neck, and three seconds later the tray-trotter had
issued an Extra and was saying things in French that
would sound scandalous if translated.
It cost me a dollar to bring the dish-dragger
back to earth, and Stevie said I could break his bank
open when we got home and take all the money if I’d
let him do it again.
Just then I got a flash of Dike Lawrence
bearing down in our direction under a full head of
benzine.
Dike was escorting a three days’
jag and whispering words of encouragement to it.
A good fellow, Dike, but he shouldn’t
permit a distillery to use his thirst as a testing
station he’s too temperamental.
“H’ar’ye, Mrs. John?”
he gurgled as the waiter pushed an extra chair under
him. “Howdy, John? How de do, little
man! ’Scuse me for int’rupting a
perf’ly splendid family party my mistake! I’m
all in that’s it I’m
all in and it’s your fault, John; all your fault!”
“What’s wrong, Dike?” I inquired.
“Ev’thing!” he martinied;
“ev’thing all wrong lesh have
drink my mistake didn’t
think of it before. Your little son growing to
be a splendid boy, Mrs. John!”
“This is Stephen, my little
brother, not my little son,” Peaches explained;
“we haven’t any children,” she added
nervously.
Dike carefully closed one eye and
focussed the other on her. “Haven’t
any little son my mistake!” Then he
turned the open gig-lamp on me and began again.
“S’prised at you, John; little son is the
most won’erful thing any father and mother could
possess with the possible ’ception of a li’l
daughter ain’t that so, Mrs. John?
Little brother is all right, but don’t compare
with little son. Look at me, Mrs. John; can’t
ever have little son when I think about
it I could bust right out cryin’ Grief
has made me almost hystalical, hystorical, hystollified I
mean, I’m nervous lesh have drink!”
“What’s gone wrong, Dike?”
I asked; “each minute you look more and more
like Mona Lisa without the smile what’s
the trouble?”
“All your fault, John,”
he plunged on again. “Most bew’ful
girl she was, Mrs. John; perf’ly bew’ful,
with won’erful gray hair and golden eyes, perf’ly
bew’ful girl. I told your husban’
all about her I made confession that I
was madly in love with this bew’ful girl, and
your husban’ told me to go and propose to her
and drag her off to a minister and I did
propose my mistake. After I made my
speech she said to me, this bew’ful girl said
to me, ’That’s all right; no doubt you
do love me, but are you eugenic?’ and I said,
‘No, I’m Presbyterian.’”
Dike paused to let the horror of the
scene sink in and then he fell overboard again with
a moist splash.
“That bew’ful girl jus’
glanced at me coldly jus’ merely indicated
the door, that bew’ful girl, and I passed out
of her life f’rever. Two days later I found
out jus’ what eugenic meant, and, b’lieve
me, from my heart, my sincere regret is that I was
not college bred before I met that bew’ful girl!”
Saying this he grabbed a wine-glass
from the table and held it close to his heart in order
to illustrate the intensity of his feeling.
The next instant a thick, reddish
liquid began to flow sluggishly over the bosom of
his immaculate white shirt and was lost in the region
of his equator, seeing which Dike gave vent to a yell
that brought the waiters on the hot foot.
“I’m stabbed; stabbed!”
groaned the startled jag-carpenter, clutching wildly
at his shirt-front as the plate-passers bore him away
to a haven of rest.
“It’s my clam cocktail,”
whispered Stephen to me; “I poured it in his
wine-glass ’cause they was too much tobascum
sauce in it for me!”
“Brave boy!” I answered. “It
was a kindly deed.”
Then we finished our dinner in all
the refined silence the Saint Astormore so carefully
furnishes.
Dike’s sad story of misplaced
affection and an unused dictionary puts us wise to
the fact that in these changeful days even the old-fashioned
idea of courtship has been chased to the woods.
It used to be that on a Saturday evening
the Young Gent would draw down his six dollars worth
of salary and chase himself to the barber shop, where
the Bolivian lawn trimmer would put a crimp in his
mustache and plaster his forehead with three cents
worth of hair and a dollar’s worth of axle-grease.
Then the Young Gent would go out and
spread 40 cents around among the tradesmen for a mess
of water-lilies and a bag of peanut brittle.
The lilies of the valley were to put
on the dining-table so mother would be pleased, and
with the peanut brittle he intended to fill in the
weary moments when he and his little geisha girl were
not making goo-goo eyes at each other.
But nowadays it is different.
What with eugenics and the high speed
of living Dan Cupid spends most of his time on the
hot foot between the coroner’s office and the
divorce court.
Nowadays when a clever young man goes
to visit his sweetheart he hikes over the streets
in a benzine buggy, and when he pulls the bell-rope
at the front door he has a rapid-fire revolver in
one pocket and a bottle of carbolic acid in the other.
His intentions are honorable and he
wishes to prove them so by shooting his lady love,
if she renigs when he makes a play for her hand.
I think the old style was the best,
because when young people quarreled they didn’t
need an ambulance and a hospital surgeon to help them
make up.
In the old days Simpson Green would
draw the stove brush cheerfully across his dog-skin
shoes and rush with eager feet to see Lena Jones,
the girl he wished to make the wife of his bosom.
“Darling!” Simpson would
say, “I am sure to the bad for love of you.
Pipe the downcast droop in this eye of mine and notice
the way my heart is bubbling over like a bottle of
sarsaparilla on a hot day! Be mine, Lena! be
mine!”
Then Lena would giggle. Not once,
but seven giggles, something like those used in a
spasm.
Then she would reply, “No, Simpson;
it cannot be. Fate wills it otherwise.”
Then Simpson would bite his finger-nails,
pick his hat up out of the coal-scuttle, and say to
Lena, “False one! You love Conrad, the
floorwalker in the butcher shop. Curses on Conrad,
and see what you have missed, Lena. I have tickets
for a swell chowder party next Tuesday. Ah! farewell
forever!”
Then Simpson would walk out and hunt
up one of those places that can’t get an all-night
license and there, with one arm glued tight around
the bar rail, he would fasten his system to a jag
which would last a week.
Despair would grab him and, like Dike,
he’d be Simpson with the souse thing for sure.
When he would recover strength enough
to walk down town without attracting the attention
of the other side of the street, he would call on
Lena and say, “Lena, forgive me for what I done,
but love is blind and, besides, I mixed
my drinks. Lena, I was on the downward path,
and I nearly went to Heligoland.”
Then Lena would say, “Oh, Simpsey,
I wanted you to prove your love, but I thought you’d
prove it with beer and not red-eye forgive
me, darling!”
Then they would kiss and make up,
and the wedding bells would ring just as soon as Simp’s
salary grew large enough to tease a pocketbook.
But these days the idea is altogether different.
Children are hardly out of the cradle
before they are arrested for butting into the speed
limit with a smoke wagon.
Even when they go courting they have
to play to the gallery.
Nowadays Gonsalvo H. Puffenlotz walks
into the parlor to see Miss Imogene Cordelia Hoffbrew.
“Wie geht’s, Imogene!” says
Gonsalvo.
“Simlich!” says Imogene,
standing at right angles near the piano because she
thinks she is a Gibson girl.
“Imogene, dearest,” Gonsalvo
continues; “I called on your papa in Wall Street
yesterday to find out how much money you have, but
he refused to name the sum, therefore you have untold
wealth!”
Gonsalvo pauses to let the Parisian
clock on the mantle tick, tick, tick!
He is making the bluff of his life,
you see, and he has to do even that on tick.
Besides, this furnishes the local color.
Then Gonsalvo bursts forth again,
“Imogene! Oh! Imogene! will you be
mine and I will be thine without money and without
the price.”
Gonsalvo pauses to let this idea get
noised about a little.
Then he goes on, “Be mine, Imogene!
You will be minus the money while I will have the
price!”
Gonsalvo trembles with the passion
which is consuming his pocketbook, and then Imogene
turns languidly from a right angle triangle into more
of a straight front and hands Gonsalvo a bitter look
of scorn.
Then Gonsalvo grabs his revolver and,
aiming it at her marble brow, exclaims, “Marry
me this minute or I will shoot you in the topknot,
because I love you.”
Then papa rushes into the room and
Gonsalvo politely requests the old gentleman to hold
two or three bullets for him for a few moments.
Gonsalvo then bites deeply into a
bottle of carbolic acid and, just as the Coroner climbs
into the house, the pictures of the modern lover and
loveress appear in the newspapers, and fashionable
society receives a jolt.
This is the new and up-to-date way of making love.
However, I think the old style of
courting is the best, because you can generally stop
a jag before it gets to the undertaker.
What do you think?