The Dreamers: A Club by John Kendrick Bangs (best books for 8th graders .txt) š
- Author: John Kendrick Bangs
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Hennessey departed in search of his club sandwich, which was subsequently alluded to in my bill, and for which I paid with pleasure, for Hennessey is a good fellow. I then found myself listening to the conversation between Dolly and Dooley.
āRoscommon, of course,ā Dolly was saying. What marvellous adaptability that woman has! āHow could you think, my dear cousin, that I belonged to the farmer Dooleys?ā
āI tāought as much,ā said Mr. Dooley, genially, ānow that Iāve seen ye. Whin you put thā wor-rds āat homeā on yer car-rd, I had me doots. No Dooley iv thā right sor-rt iver liked annytāing a landlord gave him; anā whin yā expreshed satisfaction[153] wid thā Hippojorium, I didnāt at first tāink ye was a true Dooley. Since Iāve seen ye, I love ye properly, maāamālike thā cousin I am. Iāve read iv ye, just as Iāve read iv yer hoosband, Cousin Roopert here be marritch, in thā biojographies of Mr. Antāny Hawp, anā while I cudnāt help likinā ye, I must say I didnāt tāink ye was very deep on thā surface, anā when I read iv your elopinā with Cousin Roop, I says to Hennessey, I says, āHennessey,ā I says, āthatās all right, theyād bote iv āem better die, but let us not be asashinators,ā I says; ālet āem be joined in marritch. Thatās punishment enough,ā I says to Hennessey. Ye see, Miss Dooley, I have been marrit meself.ā
āBut I have found married life far from punishment,ā I heard Dolly say. āI fear youāre a sad pessimist, Mr. Dooley,ā she added.
āIām not,ā Mr. Dooley replied. āIām a Jimmycrat out anā out, if ye refer to me politics; but if your remark is a reflection on me religion, let me tell ye, maāam,[154] that, like all me countrymen in this beautiful land, Iām a Uni-tarrian, anā prood iv it.ā
I ventured to interpose at this point.
āDooley,ā said I, āyour cousin Roop, as you call him, is very glad to meet you, whatever your politics or your religion.ā
āMosht people are,ā said he, dryly.
āThat shows good taste,ā said I. āBut how about your book? It has been accepted on the strength of its illustrations, you say. How about them? Can we see them anywhere? Are they on exhibition?ā
āYou can not only see thim, but you can drink āem free anny time you come out to Archie Road,ā Dooley replied, cordially.
āDrinkāa picture?ā I asked.
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āYis,ā said Dooley. āDidnāt ye iver hear iv dhrinkinā in a picture, Cousin Roopert? Didnāt ye hear thā tark about thā āAngelusā whin ātwas here? Ye cud hear thā bells ringinā troo thā paint iv it. Ye cud almost hear thā couple in front just back iv thā varnish quarālin as tāwhether ātwas thā Angelus er the facthery bell that [157] was goinā off. āTwas big anā little felt thā inflooance iv Misther Millerās jaynius, just be lukinā at utāthough as fer me, thā fir-rst time I see the tāing I says, says I, āIs ut lukinā for bait to go fishinā with they are?ā I says. āCanāt ye hear the pealinā iv the bells?ā says Hennessey, who was with me. āThat anā more,ā I says. āI can hear the pealinā oā thā petayties,ā I says. āDo ye dhrink in thā feelinā iv it?ā says Hennessey. āNaw, tāank ye,ā I says. āIām not thirsty,ā I says. āBesides, Iāve swore off dhrinkinā ile-paintinās,ā I says. āWathercoolers is gud enough fer me,ā I says. Anā wid that we wint back to the Road. But that was thā fir-rst time I iver heard iv dhrinkinā a work iv ar-rt.ā
āBut some of the things youāahāyou Americans drink,ā put in Dolly, āare works of art, my dear Mr. Dooley. Your cousin Rupert gave me a cocktail at dinner last nightāā
āYeāve hit ut, Miss Dooley,ā returned the philosopher, with a beautiful enthusiasm. āYeāve hit ut square. I see[158] now yāre a thrue Dooley. Anā wid yer kind permission Iāll dedicate me book to ye. Utās cocktails that bookās about, maāam. Fifty Cocktails I Have Met is thā na-ame iv ut. Anā whin I submitted thā mannyscripā wid thā illusthrations to the publisher, he dhrank āem all, anā he says, āDooley,ā he says, āutās a go. Iāll do yer book,ā he says, āanā Iāll pay ye wan hoondred anā siventy-five per cent.,ā he says. āSet āem up again, Dooley,ā he says; anā I mixed āem. āI tāink, Dooley,ā he says, afther goinā troo thā illusthrations thā second toimeāāI tāink,ā he says, āyeād ought to get two hoondred anā wan per cent. on thā retail price iv thā book,ā he says. āCanāt I take a bottle iv these illusthrations to me office?ā he says. āIād like to look āem over,ā he says; anā I mixed āim up a quar-rt iv thā illusthrations to thā chapther on thā Mar-rtinney, anā sent him back to his partner in thā ambylanch.ā
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āI shall look forward to the publication of your book with much interest, Mr. Dooley,ā said Dolly. āNow that I have discovered our cousinship, I am even more interested in you than I was before; and let me tell you that, before I met you, I thought of you as the most vital figure in American humor that has been produced in many years.ā
[161]āI know nothinā iv American humor,ā said Dooley, āfor I havenāt met anny lately, anā I know nothinā iv victuals save what I ate, anā me appytite is as satisfoid wid itself as Hobson is wid thā kisses brawt onto him by thā sinkinā iv thā Merrimickinley. But for you anā Misther Rassendyll, maāam, Iāve nothinā but good wishes anā ahāillusthrations to me book whenever ye give yer orders. Kape your hoosband home, Miss Dooley,ā he added. āHeās scrapped wanst too often already wiā thā Ruraltarriers, anā heās been killed off wanst by Mr. Antāny Hawp; but heāll niver die if ye only kape him home. If he goes out heāll git fightinā agin. If he attimpts a sayquil to the sayquil, heās dead sure enough!ā
And with this Dolly and Dooley parted.[162]
For myself, Rupert Rassendyll, I think Dooleyās advice was good, and as long as Dolly will keep me home, Iāll stay. For is it not better to be the happy husband of Dolly of the Dialogues, than to be going about like a knight of the Middle Ages clad in the evening dress of the nineteenth century, doing impossible things?
As for Dooleyās impression of Dolly, I can only quote what I heard he had said after meeting her.
āSheās a Dooley sure,ā said he, being novel to compliment. And I am glad she is, for despite the charms of Flavia of pleasant memory, thereās nobody like Dolly for me, and if Dolly can only be acknowledged by the Dooleys, her fame, I am absolutely confident, is assured.
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IX IN WHICH YELLOW JOURNALISM CREEPS INThe applause which followed the reading of the Dooley Dialogue showed very clearly that, among the diners at least, neither Dooley nor Dolly had waned in popularity. If the dilution, the faint echo of the originals, evoked such applause, how potent must have been the genius of the men who first gave life to Dooley and the fair Dolly!
āThatās good stuff, Greenwich,ā said Billie Jones. āYou must have eaten a particularly digestible meal. Now for the tenth ball. Who has it?ā
āI,ā said Dick Snobbe, rising majestically from his chair. āAnd I can tell you what it is; I had a tough time of it in my[164] dream, as you will perceive when I recite to you the story of my experiences at the battle of Manila.ā
āGreat Scott, Dick!ā cried Bedford Parke. āYou werenāt in that, were you?ā
āSir,ā returned Dick, āI was not only in it, I was the thing itself. I was the war correspondent of the Sunday Whirnal, attached to Deweyās fleet.ā
Whereupon the talented Mr. Snobbe proceeded to read the following cable despatch from the special correspondent of the Whirnal:
MANILA FALLS
THE SPANISH FLEET DESTROYED
THE SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT OF THE WHIRNAL
Aided by Commodore Dewey and his Fleet
CAPTURES THE PHILIPPINES
Manila, May 1, 1898.āI have glorious news. I have this day destroyed the Spanish fleet and captured the Philippine Islands. According to my instructions [165] from the City Editor of the Whirnal, I boarded the Olympia, the flag-ship of the fleet under Commodore Dewey at Hong-kong, on Wednesday last. Upon reading my credentials the Commodore immediately surrendered the command of the fleet to me, and retired to his state-room, where he has since remained. I deemed it well to keep him there until after the battle was over, fearing lest he should annoy me with suggestions, and not knowing but that he might at any time spread dissension among the officers and men, who, after the habit of seamen, frequently manifest undue affection and sympathy for a deposed commander. I likewise, according to your wishes, concealed from the officers and crew the fact that the Commodore had been deposed, furthering the concealment by myself making up as Dewey. Indeed, it was not until after the battle this morning that any but Dewey and the shipās barber were aware of the substitution, since my disguise was perfect. The shipās barber I had to take [166]into my confidence, for unfortunately on leaving Hong-kong I had forgotten to provide myself with a false mustache, so that in concealing the deposition of the Commodore by myself assuming his personality I was compelled to have the gentlemanās mustache removed from his upper lip and transferred to my own. This the barber did with neatness and despatch, I having first chloroformed the Commodore, from whom some resistance might have been expected, owing to his peculiar temperament. Fortunately the fellow was an expert wig-maker, and within an hour of the shaving of Dewey I was provided with a mustache which could not fail to be recognized as the Commodoreās, since it was indeed that very same object. When five hundred miles at sea I dropped the barber overboard, fearing lest he should disturb my plans by talking too much. I hated to do it, but in the interest of the Whirnal I hold life itself as of little consequence, particularly if it is the life of some one elseāand who knows but the [167] poor fellow was an expert swimmer, and has by this time reached Borneo or some other bit of dry land? He was alive when I last saw him, and yelling right lustily. If it so happen that he has swum ashore somewhere, kindly let me know at your convenience; for beneath a correspondentās exterior I have a warm heart, and it sometimes troubles me to think that the poor fellow may have foundered, since the sea was stressful and the nearest dry point was four hundred and sixty knots away to S.E. by N.G., while the wind was blowing N.W. by N.Y.C. & H.R.R. But to my despatch.
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THE SHIPāS BARBER AT WORK[169]
Dewey done for, despoiled of his mustache and rifled of his place, with a heavy sea running and a dense fog listing to starboard, I summoned my officers to the flag-ship, and, on the evening of April 30th, the fog-horns of CavitƩ having indicated the approach of the Philippine coast, gave them, one and all, their final instructions. These were, in brief, never to do anything without consulting with me.
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āTo facilitate matters, gentlemen,ā said I, ordering an extra supply of grog for the captains, and milk punches for the lieutenants, āwe must connect the various vessels of the fleet with telephone wires. Who will undertake this perilous duty?ā
They rose up as one man, and, with the precision of a grand-opera chorus, replied: āCommodoreāāfor they had not penetrated my disguiseāācall upon us. If you will provide the wires and the āphones, we will do the rest.ā And they followed these patriotic words with cheers for me.
Their heroism so affected me that I had difficulty in frowning upon the head-butlerās suggestion that my glass should be filled again.
āGentlemen,ā said I, huskilyāfor I was visibly affectedāāI have provided for all. I could not do otherwise and remain myself. You will find ten thousand miles of wire and sixty-six telephones in the larder.ā
That night every ship in the fleet was provided with telephone service. I appointed[171] the Olympia to be the central office, so that I might myself control all the messages, or at least hear them as they passed to and fro. In the absence of ladies from the fleet, I appointed a somewhat effeminate subaltern to the post of āHello Officer,ā with complete control over the switch-board. And, as it transpired, this was a very wise precaution, because the central office was placed
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