It was Washington’s Birthday,
and the gentleman who had the pleasure of being Father
of his Country decided to celebrate it at the Associated
Shades’ floating palace on the Styx, as the Elysium
Weekly Gossip, “a Journal of Society,”
called it, by giving a dinner to a select number of
friends. Among the invited guests were Baron
Munchausen, Doctor Johnson, Confucius, Napoleon Bonaparte,
Diogenes, and Ptolemy. Boswell was also present,
but not as a guest. He had a table off to one
side all to himself, and upon it there were no china
plates, silver spoons, knives, forks, and dishes of
fruit, but pads, pens, and ink in great quantity.
It was evident that Boswell’s reportorial duties
did not end with his labors in the mundane sphere.
The dinner was set down to begin at
seven o’clock, so that the guests, as was proper,
sauntered slowly in between that hour and eight.
The menu was particularly choice, the shades of countless
canvas-back ducks, terrapin, and sheep having been
called into requisition, and cooked by no less a person
than Brillat-Savarin, in the hottest oven he could
find in the famous cooking establishment superintended
by the government. Washington was on hand early,
sampling the olives and the celery and the wines,
and giving to Charon final instructions as to the manner
in which he wished things served.
The first guest to arrive was Confucius,
and after him came Diogenes, the latter in great excitement
over having discovered a comparatively honest man,
whose name, however, he had not been able to ascertain,
though he was under the impression that it was something
like Burpin, or Turpin, he said.
At eight the brilliant company was
arranged comfortably about the board. An orchestra
of five, under the leadership of Mozart, discoursed
sweet music behind a screen, and the feast of reason
and flow of soul began.
“This is a great day,”
said Doctor Johnson, assisting himself copiously to
the olives.
“Yes,” said Columbus,
who was also a guest “yes, it is a
great day, but it isn’t a marker to a little
day in October I wot of.”
“Still sore on that point?”
queried Confucius, trying the edge of his knife on
the shade of a salted almond.
“Oh no,” said Columbus,
calmly. “I don’t feel jealous of
Washington. He is the Father of his Country
and I am not. I only discovered the orphan.
I knew the country before it had a father or a mother.
There wasn’t anybody who was willing to be
even a sister to it when I knew it. But G. W.
here took it in hand, groomed it down, spanked it when
it needed it, and started it off on the career which
has made it worth while for me to let my name be known
in connection with it. Why should I be jealous
of him?”
“I am sure I don’t know
why anybody anywhere should be jealous of anybody
else anyhow,” said Diogenes. “I never
was and I never expect to be. Jealousy is a quality
that is utterly foreign to the nature of an honest
man. Take my own case, for instance. When
I was what they call alive, how did I live?”
“I don’t know,”
said Doctor Johnson, turning his head as he spoke so
that Boswell could not fail to hear. “I
wasn’t there.”
Boswell nodded approvingly, chuckled
slightly, and put the Doctor’s remark down for
publication in The Gossip.
“You’re doubtless right,
there,” retorted Diogenes. “What
you don’t know would fill a circulating library.
Well I lived in a tub. Now, if I
believed in envy, I suppose you think I’d be
envious of people who live in brownstone fronts with
back yards and mortgages, eh?”
“I’d rather live under
a mortgage than in a tub,” said Bonaparte, contemptuously.
“I know you would,” said
Diogenes. “Mortgages never bothered you but
I wouldn’t. In the first place, my tub
was warm. I never saw a house with a brownstone
front that was, except in summer, and then the owner
cursed it because it was so. My tub had no plumbing
in it to get out of order. It hadn’t any
flights of stairs in it that had to be climbed after
dinner, or late at night when I came home from the
club. It had no front door with a wandering
key-hole calculated to elude the key ninety-nine times
out of every hundred efforts to bring the two together
and reconcile their differences, in order that their
owner may get into his own house late at night.
It wasn’t chained down to any particular neighborhood,
as are most brownstone fronts. If the neighborhood
ran down, I could move my tub off into a better neighborhood,
and it never lost value through the deterioration
of its location. I never had to pay taxes on
it, and no burglar was ever so hard up that he thought
of breaking into my habitation to rob me. So
why should I be jealous of the brownstone-house dwellers?
I am a philosopher, gentlemen. I tell you,
philosophy is the thief of jealousy, and I had the
good-luck to find it out early in life.”
“There is much in what you say,”
said Confucius. “But there’s another
side to the matter. If a man is an aristocrat
by nature, as I was, his neighborhood never could
run down. Wherever he lived would be the swell
section, so that really your last argument isn’t
worth a stewed icicle.”
“Stewed icicles are pretty good,
though,” said Baron Munchausen, with an ecstatic
smack of his lips. “I’ve eaten them
many a time in the polar regions.”
“I have no doubt of it,”
put in Doctor Johnson. “You’ve eaten
fried pyramids in Africa, too, haven’t you?”
“Only once,” said the
Baron, calmly. “And I can’t say I
enjoyed them. They are rather heavy for the digestion.”
“That’s so,” said
Ptolemy. “I’ve had experience with
pyramids myself.”
“You never ate one, did you, Ptolemy?”
queried Bonaparte.
“Not raw,” said Ptolemy,
with a chuckle. “Though I’ve been
tempted many a time to call for a second joint of
the Sphinx.”
There was a laugh at this, in which
all but Baron Munchausen joined.
“I think it is too bad,”
said the Baron, as the laughter subsided “I
think it is very much too bad that you shades have
brought mundane prejudice with you into this sphere.
Just because some people with finite minds profess
to disbelieve my stories, you think it well to be
sceptical yourselves. I don’t care, however,
whether you believe me or not. The fact remains
that I have eaten one fried pyramid and countless
stewed icicles, and the stewed icicles were finer than
any diamond-back rat Confucius ever had served at
a state banquet.”
“Where’s Shakespeare to-night?”
asked Confucius, seeing that the Baron was beginning
to lose his temper, and wishing to avoid trouble by
changing the subject. “Wasn’t he
invited, General?”
“Yes,” said Washington,
“he was invited, but he couldn’t come.
He had to go over the river to consult with an autograph
syndicate they’ve formed in New York.
You know, his autographs sell for about one thousand
dollars apiece, and they’re trying to get up
a scheme whereby he shall contribute an autograph
a week to the syndicate, to be sold to the public.
It seems like a rich scheme, but there’s one
thing in the way. Posthumous autographs haven’t
very much of a market, because the mortals can’t
be made to believe that they are genuine; but the syndicate
has got a man at work trying to get over that.
These Yankees are a mighty inventive lot, and they
think perhaps the scheme can be worked. The
Yankee is an inventive genius.”
“It was a Yankee invented that
tale about your not being able to prevaricate, wasn’t
it, George?” asked Diogenes.
Washington smiled acquiescence, and
Doctor Johnson returned to Shakespeare.
“I’d rather have a morning-glory
vine than one of Shakespeare’s autographs,”
said he. “They are far prettier, and quite
as legible.”
“Mortals wouldn’t,” said Bonaparte.
“What fools they be!” chuckled Johnson.
At this point the canvas-back ducks
were served, one whole shade of a bird for each guest.
“Fall to, gentlemen,”
said Washington, gazing hungrily at his bird.
“When canvas-back ducks are on the table conversation
is not required of any one.”
“It is fortunate for us that
we have so considerate a host,” said Confucius,
unfastening his robe and preparing to do justice to
the fare set before him. “I have dined
often, but never before with one who was willing to
let me eat a bird like this in silence. Washington,
here’s to you. May your life be chequered
with birthdays, and may ours be equally well supplied
with feasts like this at your expense!”
The toast was drained, and the diners
fell to as requested.
“They’re great, aren’t
they?” whispered Bonaparte to Munchausen.
“Well, rather,” returned
the Baron. “I don’t see why the mortals
don’t erect a statue to the canvas-back.”
“Did anybody at this board ever
have as much canvas-back duck as he could eat?”
asked Doctor Johnson.
“Yes,” said the Baron. “I
did. Once.”
“Oh, you!” sneered Ptolemy. “You’ve
had everything.”
“Except the mumps,” retorted
Munchausen. “But, honestly, I did once
have as much canvas-back duck as I could eat.”
“It must have cost you a million,”
said Bonaparte. “But even then they’d
be cheap, especially to a man like yourself who could
perform miracles. If I could have performed miracles
with the ease which was so characteristic of all your
efforts, I’d never have died at St. Helena.”
“What’s the odds where
you died?” said Doctor Johnson. “If
it hadn’t been at St. Helena it would have been
somewhere else, and you’d have found death as
stuffy in one place as in another.”
“Don’t let’s talk
of death,” said Washington. “I am
sure the Baron’s tale of how he came to have
enough canvas-back is more diverting.”
“I’ve no doubt it is more perverting,”
said Johnson.
“It happened this way,”
said Munchausen. “I was out for sport,
and I got it. I was alone, my servant having
fallen ill, which was unfortunate, since I had always
left the filling of my cartridge-box to him, and underestimated
its capacity. I started at six in the morning,
and, not having hunted for several months, was not
in very good form, so, no game appearing for a time,
I took a few practice shots, trying to snip off the
slender tops of the pine-trees that I encountered with
my bullets, succeeding tolerably well for one who
was a little rusty, bringing down ninety-nine out
of the first one hundred and one, and missing the
remaining two by such a close margin that they swayed
to and fro as though fanned by a slight breeze.
As I fired my one hundred and first shot what should
I see before me but a flock of these delicate birds
floating upon the placid waters of the bay!”
“Was this the Bay of Biscay,
Baron?” queried Columbus, with a covert smile
at Ptolemy.
“I counted them,” said
the Baron, ignoring the question, “and there
were just sixty-eight. ‘Here’s a
chance for the record, Baron,’ said I to myself,
and then I made ready to shoot them. Imagine
my dismay, gentlemen, when I discovered that while
I had plenty of powder left I had used up all my bullets.
Now, as you may imagine, to a man with no bullets
at hand, the sight of sixty-eight fat canvas-backs
is hardly encouraging, but I was resolved to have
every one of those birds; the question was, how shall
I do it? I never can think on water, so I paddled
quietly ashore and began to reflect. As I lay
there deep in thought, I saw lying upon the beach
before me a superb oyster, and as reflection makes
me hungry I seized upon the bivalve and swallowed him.
As he went down something stuck in my throat, and,
extricating it, what should it prove to be but a pearl
of surpassing beauty. My first thought was to
be content with my day’s find. A pearl
worth thousands surely was enough to satisfy the most
ardent lover of sport; but on looking up I saw those
ducks still paddling contentedly about, and I could
not bring myself to give them up. Suddenly the
idea came, the pearl is as large as a bullet, and
fully as round. Why not use it? Then, as
thoughts come to me in shoals, I next reflected, ’Ah but
this is only one bullet as against sixty-eight birds:’
immediately a third thought came, ’why not shoot
them all with a single bullet? It is possible,
though not probable.’ I snatched out a
pad of paper and a pencil, made a rapid calculation
based on the doctrine of chances, and proved to my
own satisfaction that at some time or another within
the following two weeks those birds would doubtless
be sitting in a straight line and paddling about,
Indian file, for an instant. I resolved to await
that instant. I loaded my gun with the pearl
and a sufficient quantity of powder to send the charge
through every one of the ducks if, perchance, the first
duck were properly hit. To pass over wearisome
details, let me say that it happened just as I expected.
I had one week and six days to wait, but finally
the critical moment came. It was at midnight,
but fortunately the moon was at the full, and I could
see as plainly as though it had been day. The
moment the ducks were in line I aimed and fired.
They every one squawked, turned over, and died.
My pearl had pierced the whole sixty-eight.”
Boswell blushed.
“Ahem!” said Doctor Johnson. “It
was a pity to lose the pearl.”
“That,” said Munchausen,
“was the most interesting part of the story.
I had made a second calculation in order to save
the pearl. I deduced the amount of powder necessary
to send the gem through sixty-seven and a half birds,
and my deduction was strictly accurate. It fulfilled
its mission of death on sixty-seven and was found
buried in the heart of the sixty-eighth, a trifle
discolored, but still a pearl, and worth a king’s
ransom.”
Napoleon gave a derisive laugh, and
the other guests sat with incredulity depicted upon
every line of their faces.
“Do you believe that story yourself,
Baron?” asked Confucius.
“Why not?” asked the Baron.
“Is there anything improbable in it? Why
should you disbelieve it? Look at our friend
Washington here. Is there any one here who knows
more about truth than he does? He doesn’t
disbelieve it. He’s the only man at this
table who treats me like a man of honor.”
“He’s host and has to,”
said Johnson, shrugging his shoulders.
“Well, Washington, let me put
the direct question to you,” said the Baron.
“Say you aren’t host and are under no
obligation to be courteous. Do you believe I
haven’t been telling the truth?”
“My dear Munchausen,”
said the General, “don’t ask me.
I’m not an authority. I can’t tell
a lie not even when I hear one. If
you say your story is true, I must believe it, of
course; but ah really, if I
were you, I wouldn’t tell it again unless I could
produce the pearl and the wish-bone of one of the
ducks at least.”
Whereupon, as the discussion was beginning
to grow acrimonious, Washington hailed Charon, and,
ordering a boat, invited his guests to accompany him
over into the world of realities, where they passed
the balance of the evening haunting a vaudeville performance
at one of the London music-halls.