It was Story-tellers’ Night
at the house-boat, and the best talkers of Hades were
impressed into the service. Doctor Johnson was
made chairman of the evening.
“Put him in the chair,”
said Raleigh. “That’s the only way
to keep him from telling a story himself. If
he starts in on a tale he’ll make it a serial
sure as fate, but if you make him the medium through
which other story-tellers are introduced to the club
he’ll be finely epigrammatic. He can be
very short and sharp when he’s talking about
somebody else. Personality is his forte.”
“Great scheme,” said Diogenes,
who was chairman of the entertainment committee.
“The nights over here are long, but if Johnson
started on a story they’d have to reach twice
around eternity and halfway back to give him time
to finish all he had to say.”
“He’s not very witty,
in my judgment,” said Carlyle, who since his
arrival in the other world has manifested some jealousy
of Solomon and Doctor Johnson.
“That’s true enough,”
said Raleigh; “but he’s strong, and he’s
bound to say something that will put the audience
in sympathy with the man that he introduces, and that’s
half the success of a Story-tellers’ Night.
I’ve told stories myself. If your audience
doesn’t sympathize with you you’d be better
off at home putting the baby to bed.”
And so it happened. Doctor Johnson
was made chairman, and the evening came. The
Doctor was in great form. A list of the story-tellers
had been sent him in advance, and he was prepared.
The audience was about as select a one as can be
found in Hades. The doors were thrown open to
the friends of the members, and the smoke-furnace
had been filled with a very superior quality of Arcadian
mixture which Scott had brought back from a haunting-trip
to the home of “The Little Minister,” at
Thrums.
“Friends and fellow-spooks,”
the Doctor began, when all were seated on the visionary
camp-stools which, by the way, are far superior
to those in use in a world of realities, because they
do not creak in the midst of a fine point demanding
absolute silence for appreciation “I
do not know why I have been chosen to preside over
this gathering of phantoms; it is the province of
the presiding officer on occasions of this sort to
say pleasant things, which he does not necessarily
endorse, about the sundry persons who are to do the
story-telling. Now, I suppose you all know me
pretty well by this time. If there is anybody
who doesn’t, I’ll be glad to have him
presented after the formal work of the evening is over,
and if I don’t like him I’ll tell him
so. You know that if I can be counted upon for
any one thing it is candor, and if I hurt the feelings
of any of these individuals whom I introduce to-night,
I want them distinctly to understand that it is not
because I love them less, but that I love truth more.
With this ah blanket apology,
as it were, to cover all possible emergencies that
may arise during the evening, I will begin. The
first speaker on the programme, I regret to observe,
is my friend Goldsmith. Affairs of this kind
ought to begin with a snap, and while Oliver is a
most excellent writer, as a speaker he is a pebbleless
Demosthenes. If I had had the arrangement of
the programme I should have had Goldsmith tell his
story while the rest of us were down-stairs at supper.
However, we must abide by our programme, which is
unconscionably long, for otherwise we will never get
through it. Those of you who agree with me as
to the pleasure of listening to my friend Goldsmith
will do well to join me in the grill-room while he
is speaking, where, I understand, there is a very
fine line of punches ready to be served. Modest
Noll, will you kindly inflict yourself upon the gathering,
and send me word when you get through, if you ever
do, so that I may return and present number two to
the assembly, whoever or whatever he may be?”
With these words the Doctor retired,
and poor Goldsmith, pale with fear, rose up to speak.
It was evident that he was quite as doubtful of his
ability as a talker as was Johnson.
“I’m not much of a talker,
or, as some say, speaker,” he said. “Talking
is not my forte, as Doctor Johnson has told you, and
I am therefore not much at it. Speaking is not
in my line. I cannot speak or talk, as it were,
because I am not particularly ready at the making of
a speech, due partly to the fact that I am not much
of a talker anyhow, and seldom if ever speak.
I will therefore not bore you by attempting to speak,
since a speech by one who like myself is, as you are
possibly aware, not a fluent nor indeed in any sense
an eloquent speaker, is apt to be a bore to those
who will be kind enough to listen to my remarks, but
will read instead the first five chapters of the Vicar
of Wakefield.”
“Who suggested any such night
as this, anyhow?” growled Carlyle. “Five
chapters of the Vicar of Wakefield for a starter!
Lord save us, we’ll need a Vicar of Sleepfield
if he’s allowed to do this!”
“I move we adjourn,” said Darwin.
“Can’t something be done
to keep these younger members quiet?” asked
Solomon, frowning upon Carlyle and Darwin.
“Yes,” said Douglas Jerrold.
“Let Goldsmith go on. He’ll have
them asleep in ten minutes.”
Meanwhile, Goldsmith was plodding
earnestly through his stint, utterly and happily oblivious
of the effect he was having upon his audience.
“This is awful,” whispered Wellington
to Bonaparte.
“Worse than Waterloo,”
replied the ex-Emperor, with a grin; “but we
can stop it in a minute. Artemas Ward told me
once how a camp-meeting he attended in the West broke
up to go outside and see a dog-fight. Can’t
you and I pretend to quarrel? A personal assault
by you on me will wake these people up and discombobulate
Goldsmith. Say the word only don’t
hit too hard.”
“I’m with you,”
said Wellington. Whereupon, with a great show
of heat, he roared out, “You? Never!
I’m more afraid of a boy with a bean-snapper
that I ever was of you!” and followed up his
remark by pulling Bonaparte’s camp-chair from
under him, and letting the conqueror of Austerlitz
fall to the floor with a thud which I have since heard
described as dull and sickening.
The effect was instantaneous.
Compared to a personal encounter between the two
great figures of Waterloo, a reading from his own works
by Goldsmith seemed lacking in the elements essential
to the holding of an audience. Consequently,
attention was centred in the belligerent warriors,
and, by some odd mistake, when a peace-loving member
of the assemblage, realizing the indecorousness of
the incident, cried out, “Put him out! put him
out!” the attendants rushed in, and, taking poor
Goldsmith by his collar, hustled him out through the
door, across the deck, and tossed him ashore without
reference to the gang-plank. This accomplished,
a personal explanation of their course was made by
the quarrelling generals, and, peace having been restored,
a committee was sent in search of Goldsmith with suitable
apologies. The good and kindly soul returned,
but having lost his book in the melee, much to his
own gratification, as well as to that of the audience,
he was permitted to rest in quiet the balance of the
evening.
“Is he through?” said
Johnson, poking his head in at the door when order
was restored.
“Yes, sir,” said Boswell;
“that is to say, he has retired permanently
from the field. He didn’t finish, though.”
“Fellow-spooks,” began
Johnson once more, “now that you have been delighted
with the honeyed eloquence of the last speaker, it
is my privilege to present to you that eminent fabulist
Baron Munchausen, the greatest unrealist of all time,
who will give you an exhibition of his paradoxical
power of lying while standing.”
The applause which greeted the Baron
was deafening. He was, beyond all doubt, one
of the most popular members of the club.
“Speaking of whales,”
said he, leaning gracefully against the table.
“Nobody has mentioned ’em,” said
Johnson.
“True,” retorted the Baron;
“but you always suggest them by your apparently
unquenchable thirst for spouting speaking
of whales, my friend Jonah, as well as the rest of
you, may be interested to know that I once had an
experience similar to his own, and, strange to say,
with the identical whale.”
Jonah arose from his seat in the back
of the room. “I do not wish to be unpleasant,”
he said, with a strong effort to be calm, “but
I wish to ask if Judge Blackstone is in the room.”
“I am,” said the Judge, rising.
“What can I do for you?”
“I desire to apply for an injunction
restraining the Baron from using my whale in his story.
That whale, your honor, is copyrighted,” said
Jonah. “If I had any other claim to the
affection of mankind than the one which is based on
my experience with that leviathan, I would willingly
permit the Baron to introduce him into his story;
but that whale, your honor, is my stock in trade he
is my all.”
“I think Jonah’s point
is well taken,” said Blackstone, turning to the
Baron. “It would be a distinct hardship,
I think, if the plaintiff in this action were to be
deprived of the exclusive use of his sole accessory.
The injunction prayed for is therefore granted.
The court would suggest, however, that the Baron
continue with his story, using another whale for the
purpose.”
“It is impossible,” said
Munchausen, gloomily. “The whole point
of the story depends upon its having been Jonah’s
whale. Under the circumstances, the only thing
I can do is to sit down. I regret the narrowness
of mind exhibited by my friend Jonah, but I must respect
the decision of the court.”
“I must take exception to the
Baron’s allusion to my narrowness of mind,”
said Jonah, with some show of heat. “I
am simply defending my rights, and I intend to continue
to do so if the whole world unites in considering
my mind a mere slot scarcely wide enough for the insertion
of a nickel. That whale was my discovery, and
the personal discomfort I endured in perfecting my
experience was such that I resolved to rest my reputation
upon his broad proportions only to sink
or swim with him and I cannot at this late
day permit another to crowd me out of his exclusive
use.”
Jonah sat down and fanned himself,
and the Baron, with a look of disgust on his face,
left the room.
“Up to his old tricks,”
he growled as he went. “He queers everything
he goes into. If I’d known he was a member
of this club I’d never have joined.”
“We do not appear to be progressing
very rapidly,” said Doctor Johnson, rising.
“So far we have made two efforts to have stories
told, and have met with disaster each time.
I don’t know but what you are to be congratulated,
however, on your escape. Very few of you, I observe,
have as yet fallen asleep. The next number on
the programme, I see, is Boswell, who was to have
entertained you with a few reminiscences; I say was
to have done so, because he is not to do so.”
“I’m ready,” said Boswell, rising.
“No doubt,” retorted Johnson,
severely, “but I am not. You are a man
with one subject myself. I admit it’s
a good subject, but you are not the man to treat of
it here. You may suffice for mortals,
but here it is different. I can speak for myself.
You can go out and sit on the banks of the Vitriol
Reservoir and lecture to the imps if you want to,
but when it comes to reminiscences of me I’m
on deck myself, and I flatter myself I remember what
I said and did more accurately than you do.
Therefore, gentlemen, instead of listening to Boswell
at this point, you will kindly excuse him and listen
to me. Ahem! When I was a boy ”
“Excuse me,” said Solomon,
rising; “about how long is this ah this
entertaining discourse of yours to continue?”
“Until I get through,” returned Johnson,
wrathfully.
“Are you aware, sir, that I am on the programme?”
asked Solomon.
“I am,” said the Doctor.
“With that in mind, for the sake of our fellow-spooks
who are present, I am very much inclined to keep on
forever. When I was a boy ”
Carlyle rose up at this point.
“I should like to ask,”
he said, mildly, “if this is supposed to be an
audience of children? I, for one, have no wish
to listen to the juvenile stories of Doctor Johnson.
Furthermore, I have come here particularly to-night
to hear Boswell. I want to compare him with Froude.
I therefore protest against ”
“There is a roof to this house-boat,”
said Doctor Johnson. “If Mr. Carlyle will
retire to the roof with Boswell I have no doubt he
can be accommodated. As for Solomon’s
interruption, I can afford to pass that over with
the silent contempt it deserves, though I may add with
propriety that I consider his most famous proverbs
the most absurd bits of hack-work I ever encountered;
and as for that story about dividing a baby between
two mothers by splitting it in two, it was grossly
inhuman unless the baby was twins. When I was
a boy ”
As the Doctor proceeded, Carlyle and
Solomon, accompanied by the now angry Boswell, left
the room, and my account of the Story-tellers’
Night must perforce stop; because, though I have never
heretofore confessed it, all my information concerning
the house-boat on the Styx has been derived from the
memoranda of Boswell. It may be interesting to
the reader to learn, however, that, according to Boswell’s
account, the Story-tellers’ Night was never
finished; but whether this means that it broke up
immediately afterwards in a riot, or that Doctor Johnson
is still at work detailing his reminiscences, I am
not aware, and I cannot at the moment of writing ascertain,
for Boswell, when I have the pleasure of meeting him,
invariably avoids the subject.