CHAPTER XXIII - Poor Aunt Carola!
And now here goes my language back
into the small-clothes that it wore at the beginning
of all, when I told you something of that colonial
society, the Selected Salic Scions, dear to the heart
of my Aunt. It were beyond my compass to approach
this august body of men and women with the respect
that is its due, did I attire myself in that modern
garment which, in the phrase of the vulgar, is denoted
pants.
You will scarce have forgot, I must
suppose, the importance set by my Aunt Carola upon
the establishing of the Scions in new territories,
wherever such persons as were both qualified by their
descent and in themselves worthy, should be found;
and you will remember that I was bidden by her to
look in South Carolina for members of the Bombo
connection which she was inclined to suspect existed
in that state. My neglect to make this inquiry
for my kind Aunt now smote me sharply when all seemed
too late. John Mayrant had spoken of Kill-devil
Bombo, the very personage through whom lay Aunt
Carola’s claim to kingly lineage, and I had
let John Mayrant go away upon his honeymoon without
ever questioning him upon this subject. As I
looked back upon the ease with which I might have
settled the matter, and forward to my return empty-handed
to the generous relative to whom I owed this agreeable
experience of travel, I felt guilty indeed. I
wrote a letter to follow John Mayrant into whatever
retreat of bliss he had betaken himself to, and I
begged him earnestly to write me at his early convenience
all that he might know of Bombos in South Carolina.
Consequently, I was able, on reaching home, to meet
Aunt Carola with some sort of countenance, and to
assure her that I expected presently to be furnished
with authentic and valuable particulars.
I now learned that the Selected Salic
Scions had greatly increased in numbers during my
short absence. It appeared that the origin of
the whole movement had sprung from a needy but ingenious
youth in some manufacturing town of New England.
This lad had a cousin, who had amassed from nothing
a noble fortune by inventing one day a speedy and
convenient fashion of opening beer bottles; and this
cousin’s achievement had set him to looking
about him. He soon discovered that in our great
republic everywhere there were living hundreds and
thousands of men and women who were utterly unaware
that they were descended from kings. Borrowing
a little money to float him, he set up The American
Almanach de Gotha and began (for the minimum
sum of fifty dollars a pedigree) to reveal to these
eager people the chain of links that connected them
with royalty. Thus, in a period of time the brevity
of which is incredible, this young man passed from
complete indigence to a wife and four automobiles,
or an automobile and four wives-I don’t
remember which he had the four of. There was so
much royal blood about that it had spilled into several
rival organizations, each bitterly warring with the
other; but my Aunt assured me that her society was
the only one that any respectable person belonged
to.
I am minded to announce a rule of
discreet conduct - Never read aloud any letter
that you have not first read to yourself. Had
I observed this rule-but listen:-
It so happened that Aunt Carola was
at luncheon with us when the postman brought John
Mayrant’s answer to my inquiry, and at the sight
of his handwriting I thoughtlessly exclaimed to my
Aunt that here at last we had all there was to be
known concerning the Bombos in South Carolina;
with this I tore open the missive and embarked upon
a reading of it for the edification of all present.
I pass over the beginning of John’s communication,
because it was merely the observations of a man upon
his honeymoon, and was confined to laudatory accounts
of scenery and weather, and the beauty of all life
when once one saw it with his eyes truly opened.
“No Bombos ever came
to Carolina,” he now continued, “that I
know of, or that Aunt Josephine knows of, which is
more to the point. Aunt Josephine has copied
me a passage from the writings of William Byrd, Esq.,
of Westover, Virginia, in which mention is made, not
of the family, but of a rum punch which seems to have
been concocted first by Admiral Bombo, from a
New England brand of rum so very deadly that it was
not inaptly styled ‘kill-devil’ by the
early planters of the colony. That the punch
drifted to Carolina and still survives there, you have
reason to know. Therefore if any remote ancestors
of yours contracted an alliance with Kill-devil Bombo,
I can imagine no resulting offspring of such union
but a series of severe attacks of delir-
“What?” interrupted Aunt
Carola, at this point, in her most formidable voice.
“What’s that stuff you’re reading,
Augustus?”
I shook in my shoes. “Why, Aunt, it’s
John-
“Not another word, sir!
And never let me hear his name again. To think-to
think-” But here Aunt Carola’s
face grew extremely red, and she choked so decidedly
that Uncle Andrew poured her a glass of water.
The rest of our luncheon was conducted
with remarkable solemnity.
As we were rising from table, my Aunt said:-
“It was high time, Augustus,
that you came home. You seem to have got into
very strange company down there.”
This was the last reference to the
Bombos that my Aunt ever made in my hearing.
Of course it is preposterous to suppose that she traces
her descent from a king through a mere bowl of punch,
and her being still the president of the Selected
Salic Scions is proof irrefutable that her claim rests
upon a more solid foundation.