Cobwebs from an Empty Skull

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by Ambrose Bierce


  The sun was aflame in a field of gold

  That hung o'er the Western Sea;

  Bright banners of light were broadly unrolled,

  As banners of light should be.

  But no one was "speaking a piece" to that sun,

  And therefore this Medicine Man begun:

  "O much heap of bright! O big ball of warm!

  I've tracked you from sea to sea!

  For the Paleface has been at some pains to inform

  Me, you are the emblem of me .

  He says to me, cheerfully: 'Westward Ho!'

  And westward I've hoed a most difficult row.

  "Since you are the emblem of me, I presume

  That I am the emblem of you,

  And thus, as we're equals, 't is safe to assume,

  That one great law governs us two.

  So now if I set in the ocean with thee,

  With thee I shall rise again out of the sea."

  His eloquence first, and his logic the last!

  Such orators die!-and he died:

  The trump was against him-his luck bad-he "passed"-

  And so he "passed out"-with the tide.

  This Injin is rid of the world with a whim-

  The world it is rid of his speeches and him.

  FEODORA.

  Madame Yonsmit was a decayed gentlewoman who carried on her decomposition in a modest wayside cottage in Thuringia. She was an excellent sample of the Thuringian widow, a species not yet extinct, but trying very hard to become so. The same may be said of the whole genus. Madame Yonsmit was quite young, very comely, cultivated, gracious, and pleasing. Her home was a nest of domestic virtues, but she had a daughter who reflected but little credit upon the nest. Feodora was indeed a "bad egg"-a very wicked and ungrateful egg. You could see she was by her face. The girl had the most vicious countenance-it was repulsive! It was a face in which boldness struggled for the supremacy with cunning, and both were thrashed into subjection by avarice. It was this latter virtue in Feodora which kept her mother from having a taxable income.

  Feodora's business was to beg on the highway. It wrung the heart of the honest amiable gentlewoman to have her daughter do this; but the h.a.g. having been reared in luxury, considered labour degrading-which it is-and there was not much to steal in that part of Thuringia. Feodora's mendicity would have provided an ample fund for their support, but unhappily that ingrate would hardly ever fetch home more than two or three shillings at a time. Goodness knows what she did with the rest.

  Vainly the good woman pointed out the sin of coveteousness; vainly she would stand at the cottage door awaiting the child's return, and begin arguing the point with her the moment she came in sight: the receipts diminished daily until the average was less than tenpence-a sum upon which no born gentlewoman would deign to exist. So it became a matter of some importance to know where Feodora kept her banking account. Madame Yonsmit thought at first she would follow her and see; but although the good lady was as vigorous and sprightly as ever, carrying a crutch more for ornament than use, she abandoned this plan because it did not seem suitable to the dignity of a decayed gentlewoman. She employed a detective.

  The foregoing particulars I have from Madame Yonsmit herself; for those immediately subjoining I am indebted to the detective, a skilful officer named Bowstr.

  No sooner had the scraggy old hag communicated her suspicions than the officer knew exactly what to do. He first distributed hand-bills all over the country, stating that a certain person suspected of concealing money had better look sharp. He then went to the Home Secretary, and by not seeking to understate the real difficulties of the case, induced that functionary to offer a reward of a thousand pounds for the arrest of the malefactor. Next he proceeded to a distant town, and took into custody a clergyman who resembled Feodora in respect of wearing shoes. After these formal preliminaries he took up the case with some zeal. He was not at all actuated by a desire to obtain the reward, but by pure love of justice. The thought of securing the girl's private hoard for himself never for a moment entered his head.

  He began to make frequent calls at the widow's cottage when Feodora was at home, when, by apparently careless conversation, he would endeavour to draw her out; but he was commonly frustrated by her old beast of a mother, who, when the girl's answers did not suit, would beat her unmercifully. So he took to meeting Feodora on the highway, and giving her coppers carefully marked. For months he kept this up with wonderful self-sacrifice-the girl being a mere uninteresting angel. He met her daily in the roads and forest. His patience never wearied, his vigilance never flagged. Her most careless glances were conscientiously noted, her lightest words treasured up in his memory. Meanwhile (the clergyman having been unjustly acquitted) he arrested everybody he could get his hands on. Matters went on in this way until it was time for the grand coup.

  The succeeding-particulars I have from the lips of Feodora herself.

  When that horrid Bowstr first came to the house Feodora thought he was rather impudent, but said, little about it to her mother-not desiring to have her back broken. She merely avoided him as much as she dared, he was so frightfully ugly. But she managed to endure him until he took to waylaying her on the highway, hanging about her all day, interfering with the customers, and walking home with her at night. Then her dislike deepened into disgust; and but for apprehensions not wholly unconnected with a certain crutch, she would have sent him about his business in short order. More than a thousand million times she told him to be off and leave her alone, but men are such fools-particularly this one.

  What made Bowstr exceptionally disagreeable was his shameless habit of making fun of Feodora's mother, whom he declared crazy as a loon. But the maiden bore everything as well as she could, until one day the nasty thing put his arm about her waist and kissed her before her very face; then she felt-well, it is not clear how she felt, but of one thing she was quite sure: after having such a shame put upon her by this insolent brute, she would never go back under her dear mother's roof-never. She was too proud for that, at any rate. So she ran away with Mr. Bowstr, and married him.

  The conclusion of this history I learned for myself.

  Upon hearing of her daughter's desertion Madame Yonsmit went clean daft. She vowed she could bear betrayal, could endure decay, could stand being a widow, would not repine at being left alone in her old age (whenever she should become old), and could patiently submit to the sharper than a serpent's thanks of having a toothless child generally. But to be a mother-in-law! No, no; that was a plane of degradation to which she positively would not descend. So she employed me to cut her throat. It was the toughest throat I ever cut in all my life.

  THE LEGEND OF IMMORTAL TRUTH.

  A bear, having spread him a notable feast,

  Invited a famishing fox to the place.

  "I've killed me," quoth he, "an edible beast

  As ever distended the girdle of priest

  With 'spread of religion,' or 'inward grace.'

  To my den I conveyed her,

  I bled her and flayed her,

  I hung up her skin to dry;

  Then laid her naked, to keep her cool,

  On a slab of ice from the frozen pool;

  And there we will eat her-you and I."

  The fox accepts, and away they walk,

  Beguiling the time with courteous talk.

  You'd ne'er have suspected, to see them smile,

  The bear was thinking, the blessed while,

  How, when his guest should be off his guard,

  With feasting hard,

  He'd give him a "wipe" that would spoil his style.

  You'd never have thought, to see them bow,

  The fox was reflecting deeply how

  He would best proceed, to circumvent

  His host, and prig

  The entire pig-

  Or other bird to the same intent.

  When Strength and Cunning in love combine,

  Be sure 't is to more than merely
dine.

  The while these biters ply the lip,

  A mile ahead the muse shall skip:

  The poet's purpose she best may serve

  Inside the den-if she have the nerve.

  Behold! laid out in dark recess,

  A ghastly goat in stark undress,

  Pallid and still on her gelid bed,

  And indisputably very dead.

  Her skin depends from a couple of pins-

  And here the most singular statement begins;

  For all at once the butchered beast,

  With easy grace for one deceased,

  Upreared her head,

  Looked round, and said,

  Very distinctly for one so dead:

  "The nights are sharp, and the sheets are thin:

  I find it uncommonly cold herein!"

  I answer not how this was wrought:

  All miracles surpass my thought.

  They're vexing, say you? and dementing?

  Peace, peace! they're none of my inventing.

  But lest too much of mystery

  Embarrass this true history,

  I'll not relate how that this goat

  Stood up and stamped her feet, to inform'em

  With-what's the word?-I mean, to warm'em;

  Nor how she plucked her rough capote

  From off the pegs where Bruin threw it,

  And o'er her quaking body drew it;

  Nor how each act could so befall:

  I'll only swear she did them all;

  Then lingered pensive in the grot,

  As if she something had forgot,

  Till a humble voice and a voice of pride

  Were heard, in murmurs of love, outside.

  Then, like a rocket set aflight,

  She sprang, and streaked it for the light!

  Ten million million years and a day

  Have rolled, since these events, away;

  But still the peasant at fall of night,

  Belated therenear, is oft affright

  By sounds of a phantom bear in flight;

  A breaking of branches under the hill;

  The noise of a going when all is still!

  And hens asleep on the perch, they say,

  Cackle sometimes in a startled way,

  As if they were dreaming a dream that mocks

  The lope and whiz of a fleeting fox!

  Half we're taught, and teach to youth,

  And praise by rote,

  Is not, but merely stands for, truth.

  So of my goat:

  She's merely designed to represent

  The truth-"immortal" to this extent:

  Dead she may be, and skinned- frappé -

  Hid in a dreadful den away;

  Prey to the Churches-(any will do,

  Except the Church of me and you.)

  The simplest miracle, even then,

  Will get her up and about again.

  CONVERTING A PRODIGAL.

  Little Johnny was a saving youth-one who from early infancy had cultivated a provident habit. When other little boys were wasting their substance in riotous gingerbread and molasses candy, investing in missionary enterprises which paid no dividends, subscribing to the North Labrador Orphan Fund, and sending capital out of the country gene rally, Johnny would be sticking sixpences into the chimney-pot of a big tin house with "BANK" painted on it in red letters above an illusory door. Or he would put out odd pennies at appalling rates of interest, with his parents, and bank the income. He was never weary of dropping coppers into that insatiable chimney-pot, and leaving them there. In this latter respect he differed notably from his elder brother, Charlie; for, although Charles was fond of banking too, he was addicted to such frequent runs upon the institution with a hatchet, that it kept his parents honourably poor to purchase banks for him; so they were reluctantly compelled to discourage the depositing element in his panicky nature.

  Johnny was not above work, either; to him "the dignity of labour" was not a juiceless platitude, as it is to me, but a living, nourishing truth, as satisfying and wholesome as that two sides of a triangle are equal to one side of bacon. He would hold horses for gentlemen who desired to step into a bar to inquire for letters. He would pursue the fleeting pig at the behest of a drover. He would carry water to the lions of a travelling menagerie, or do anything, for gain. He was sharp-witted too: before conveying a drop of comfort to the parching king of beasts, he would stipulate for six-pence instead of the usual free ticket-or "tasting order," so to speak. He cared not a button for the show.

  The first hard work Johnny did of a morning was to look over the house for fugitive pins, needles, hair-pins, matches, and other unconsidered trifles; and if he sometimes found these where nobody had lost them, he made such reparation as was in his power by losing them again where nobody but he could find them. In the course of time, when he had garnered a good many, he would "realize," and bank the proceeds.

  Nor was he weakly superstitious, this Johnny. You could not fool him with the Santa Claus hoax on Christmas Eve: he would lie awake all night, as sceptical as a priest; and along toward morning, getting quietly out of bed, would examine the pendent stockings of the other children, to satisfy himself the predicted presents were not there; and in the morning it always turned out that they were not. Then, when the other children cried because they did not get anything, and the parents affected surprise (as if they really believed in the venerable fiction), Johnny was too manly to utter a whimper: he would simply slip out of the back door, and engage in traffic with affluent orphans; disposing of woolly horses, tin whistles, marbles, tops, dolls, and sugar archangels, at a ruinous discount for cash. He continued these provident courses for nine long years, always banking his accretions with scrupulous care. Everybody predicted he would one day be a merchant prince or a railway king; and some added he would sell his crown to the junk-dealers.

  His unthrifty brother, meanwhile, kept growing worse and worse. He was so careless of wealth-so so wastefully extravagant of lucre-that Johnny felt it his duty at times to clandestinely assume control of the fraternal finances, lest the habit of squandering should wreck the fraternal moral sense. It was plain that Charles had entered upon the broad road which leads from the cradle to the workhouse-and that he rather liked the travelling. So profuse was his prodigality that there were grave suspicions as to his method of acquiring what he so openly disbursed. There was but one opinion as to the melancholy termination of his career-a termination which he seemed to regard as eminently desirable. But one day, when the good pastor put it at him in so many words, Charles gave token of some apprehension.

  "Do you really think so, sir?" said he, thoughtfully; "ain't you playin' it on me?"

  "I assure you, Charles," said the good man, catching a ray of hope from the boy's dawning seriousness, "you will certainly end your days in a workhouse, unless you speedily abandon your course of extravagance. There is nothing like habit-nothing!"

  Charles may have thought that, considering his frequent and lavish contributions to the missionary fund, the parson was rather hard upon him; but he did not say so. He went away in mournful silence, and began pelting a blind beggar with coppers.

  One day, when Johnny had been more than usually provident, and Charles proportionately prodigal, their father, having exhausted moral suasion to no apparent purpose, determined to have recourse to a lower order of argument: he would try to win Charles to economy by an appeal to his grosser nature. So he convened the entire family, and,

  "Johnny," said he, "do you think you have much money in your bank? You ought to have saved a considerable sum in nine years."

  Johnny took the alarm in a minute: perhaps there was some barefooted little girl to be endowed with Sunday-school books.

  "No," he answered, reflectively, "I don't think there can be much. There's been a good deal of cold weather this winter, and you know how metal shrinks! No-o-o, I'm sure there can't be only a little."

  "Well, Johnny, you go up and bring d
own your bank. We'll see. Perhaps Charles may be right, after all; and it's not worth while to save money. I don't want a son of mine to get into a bad habit unless it pays."

  So Johnny travelled reluctantly up to his garret, and went to the corner where his big tin bank-box had sat on a chest undisturbed for years. He had long ago fortified himself against temptation by vowing never to even shake it; for he remembered that formerly when Charles used to shake his, and rattle the coins inside, he always ended by smashing in the roof. Johnny approached his bank, and taking hold of the cornice on either side, braced himself, gave a strong lift upwards, and keeled over upon his back with the edifice atop of him, like one of the figures in a picture of the great Lisbon earthquake! There was but a single coin in it; and that, by an ingenious device, was suspended in the centre, so that every piece popped in at the chimney would clink upon it in passing through Charlie's little hole into Charlie's little stocking hanging innocently beneath.

  Of course restitution was out of the question; and even Johnny felt that any merely temporal punishment would be weakly inadequate to the demands of justice. But that night, in the dead silence of his chamber, Johnny registered a great and solemn swear that so soon as he could worry together a little capital, he would fling his feeble remaining energies into the spendthrift business. And he did so.

  FOUR JACKS AND A KNAVE.

  In the "backwoods" of Pennsylvania stood a little mill. The miller appertaining unto this mill was a Pennsylvania Dutchman-a species of animal in which for some centuries sauerkraut has been usurping the place of sense. In Hans Donnerspiel the usurpation was not complete; he still knew enough to go in when it rained, but he did not know enough to stay there after the storm had blown over. Hans was known to a large circle of friends and admirers as about the worst miller in those parts; but as he was the only one, people who quarrelled with an exclusively meat diet continued to patronize him. He was honest, as all stupid people are; but he was careless. So absent-minded was he, that sometimes when grinding somebody's wheat he would thoughtlessly turn into the "hopper" a bag of rye, a lot of old beer-bottles, or a basket of fish. This made the flour so peculiar, that the people about there never knew what it was to be well a day in all their lives. There were so many local diseases in that vicinity, that a doctor from twenty miles away could not have killed a patient in a week.

 

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