YOU SHOULD WORRY ABOUT SNAP SHOTS
When Aunt Martha gave friend wife
that newfangled camera this Spring I had a hunch that
the dealers in photographic supplies would be joyously
shrieking the return of good times and hot-footing
it to the bank with the contents of my wallet.
Peaches just grabbed that camera and
went after everybody and everything in the neighborhood.
She took about 800 views of Uncle
Peter’s country home before she discovered that
the camera wasn’t loaded properly, which was
tough on Peaches but good for the bungalow.
Like everything else in this world
picture pinching from still life depends entirely
on the point of view.
If your point of view is all right
it’s an easy matter to make a four-dollar dog-house
look like the villa of a Wall Street broker at Newport.
Ten minutes after friend wife had
been given the camera she had me set up as a statue
all over Uncle Peter’s lawn, and she was snapping
at me like a Spitz doggie at a peddler.
I sat for two hundred and nineteen
pictures that forenoon and I posed for every hero
in history, from William the Conqueror down to Doctor
Cook, with both feet in a slushy little snowbank representing
nearly-the-North-pole.
But when she tried to coax me to climb
up on a limb of a tree and stay there till she got
a picture of me looking like an owl I swore softly
in three languages, fell over the back fence, and
ran for my life.
When I rubbershoed it back that afternoon
friend wife was busy developing her crimes.
The proper and up-to-date caper in
connection with taking snap-shots these days is to
buy a developing outfit and upset the household from
pit to dome while you are squeezing out pictures of
every dearly beloved friend that crosses your pathway.
Friend wife selected a spare room
on the top floor of Uncle Peter’s home where
she could await developments.
A half hour later ghostly noises began
to come from that room and mysterious whisperings
fell out of the window and bumped over the lawn.
When I reached the front door I found
that the gardener had left, the waitress was leaving,
and the cook was telephoning for a policeman.
“Where is Mrs. Henry?” I asked Mary, the
cook.
“She is still developing,” said Mary.
“What has she developed?” I inquired.
“Up to the present time she
has developed your Uncle’s temper and she has
developed your Aunt’s appetite, and a couple
of bill collectors developed a pain in the neck when
she took their pictures, and, if things go on in this
way, I think this will soon develop into a foolish
house!” said Mary, the cook.
A half hour later, while I was hiding
behind the pianola in the living room, not daring
to breathe above a whisper for fear I would get my
picture taken again, friend wife rushed in exclaiming,
“Oh, joy! Oh, joy! John, I have developed
two pictures!”
I wish you could have seen the expression
on Peaches’ face.
In order to develop the films a picturesque
assortment of drugs and chemicals have to be used.
Well, friend wife had used them.
A silent little stream of wood alcohol
was trickling down over her left ear into her Psyche
knot, and on the end of her nose about six grains of
extract of potash was sending out signals of distress
to some spirits of turpentine which was burning on
the top of her right eyebrow.
Something dark and lingering like
iodine had given her chin the double-cross and her
apron looked like the remnants of a porous plaster.
Her right hand had red, white, green,
purple, and magenta marks all over it, and her left
hand looked like the Fourth of July.
“John!” she yelled; “here
it is! My goodness, I am so excited! See
what a fine picture of you I took!”
She handed me the picture, but all
I could see was a woodshed with the door wide open.
“A good picture of the woodshed,”
I said; “but whose woodshed is it?”
“A woodshed!” exclaimed
friend wife; “why, that is your face, John.
And where you think the door is open is only your
mouth!”
I looked crestfallen and then I looked
at the picture again, but my better nature asserted
itself and I made no attempt to strike this defenseless
woman.
Then she handed me another picture
and said, “John, isn’t this wonderful?”
I looked at the picture and muttered,
“All I can see is Theodore, the colored gardener,
walking across lots with a sack of flour on his back!”
“John, you are so stupid,”
said friend wife. “How can you expect to
see what it is when you are holding the picture upside
down?”
I turned the picture around, and then
I was quite agreeably surprised.
“It’s immense!”
I shouted. “It’s the real thing, all
right! Why this is aces! I suppose it is
called, ‘Moonlight on Lake Champlain’?
Did this one come with the camera or did you draw
it from memory?”
“The idea of such a thing,”
friend wife snapped, “can’t you see that
you’re holding the picture the wrong way.
Turn it around and you will see what it is!”
I gave the thing another turn.
“Gee whiz!” I said, “now
I have it! Oh, the limit! You wished to
surprise me with a picture of the sunset at Governor’s
Island. How lovely it is! See, over here
in this corner there’s a bunch of soldiers listening
to what’s cooking for supper, and over here is
the smoke from the gun that sets the sun I
like it!”
Then my wife grabbed the picture out
of my hands and burst into speech.
“Why do you try to discourage
my efforts to be artistic?” she volleyed and
thundered. “This is a picture of you holding
Mrs. McIlvaine’s baby in your arms, and I think
it’s perfectly lovely, even if the baby is the
only intelligent thing in the picture.”
When the exercises were over I inquired
casually, “Where, my dear, where are the other
21,219 pictures you snapped to-day?”
“Only these two came out good
because, don’t you see, I’m an amateur
yet,” was her come-back.
Then she looked lovingly at the result
of her day’s work and began to peel some bicarbonate
of magnesia off her knuckles with the nutcracker.
“Only two out of 21,219 I
think you ought to call it a long shot instead of
a snap shot,” I whispered, after I had dodged
behind a sofa.
She went out of the room without saying
a word, and I took out my pocketbook and looked at
it wistfully.