502 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
502 lines
28 KiB
Plaintext
1835
|
|
|
|
KING PEST
|
|
|
|
by Edgar Allan Poe
|
|
|
|
KING PEST
|
|
|
|
A Tale Containing an Allegory
|
|
|
|
The gods do bear and will allow in kings
|
|
|
|
The things which they abhor in rascal routes.
|
|
|
|
Buckhurst's Tragedy of Ferrex and Porrex.
|
|
|
|
ABOUT twelve o'clock, one night in the month of October, and
|
|
during the chivalrous reign of the third Edward, two seamen
|
|
belonging to the crew of the "Free and Easy," a trading schooner
|
|
plying between Sluys and the Thames, and then at anchor in that river,
|
|
were much astonished to find themselves seated in the tap-room of an
|
|
ale-house in the parish of St. Andrews, London --which ale-house
|
|
bore for sign the portraiture of a "Jolly Tar."
|
|
|
|
The room, although ill-contrived, smoke-blackened, low-pitched,
|
|
and in every other respect agreeing with the general character of such
|
|
places at the period --was, nevertheless, in the opinion of the
|
|
grotesque groups scattered here and there within it, sufficiently well
|
|
adapted to its purpose.
|
|
|
|
Of these groups our two seamen formed, I think, the most
|
|
interesting, if not the most conspicuous.
|
|
|
|
The one who appeared to be the elder, and whom his companion
|
|
addressed by the characteristic appellation of "Legs," was at the same
|
|
time much the taller of the two. He might have measured six feet and a
|
|
half, and an habitual stoop in the shoulders seemed to have been the
|
|
necessary consequence of an altitude so enormous.--Superfluities in
|
|
height were, however, more than accounted for by deficiencies in other
|
|
respects. He was exceedingly thin; and might, as his associates
|
|
asserted, have answered, when drunk, for a pennant at the mast-head,
|
|
or, when sober, have served for a jib-boom. But these jests, and
|
|
others of a similar nature, had evidently produced, at no time, any
|
|
effect upon the cachinnatory muscles of the tar. With high
|
|
cheek-bones, a large hawk-nose, retreating chin, fallen under-jaw, and
|
|
huge protruding white eyes, the expression of his countenance,
|
|
although tinged with a species of dogged indifference to matters and
|
|
things in general, was not the less utterly solemn and serious
|
|
beyond all attempts at imitation or description.
|
|
|
|
The younger seaman was, in all outward appearance, the converse of
|
|
his companion. His stature could not have exceeded four feet. A pair
|
|
of stumpy bow-legs supported his squat, unwieldy figure, while his
|
|
unusually short and thick arms, with no ordinary fists at their
|
|
extremities, swung off dangling from his sides like the fins of a
|
|
sea-turtle. Small eyes, of no particular color, twinkled far back in
|
|
his head. His nose remained buried in the mass of flesh which
|
|
enveloped his round, full, and purple face; and his thick upper-lip
|
|
rested upon the still thicker one beneath with an air of complacent
|
|
self-satisfaction, much heightened by the owner's habit of licking
|
|
them at intervals. He evidently regarded his tall shipmate with a
|
|
feeling half-wondrous, half-quizzical; and stared up occasionally in
|
|
his face as the red setting sun stares up at the crags of Ben Nevis.
|
|
|
|
Various and eventful, however, had been the peregrinations of
|
|
the worthy couple in and about the different tap-houses of the
|
|
neighbourhood during the earlier hours of the night. Funds even the
|
|
most ample, are not always everlasting: and it was with empty
|
|
pockets our friends had ventured upon the present hostelrie.
|
|
|
|
At the precise period, then, when this history properly commences,
|
|
Legs, and his fellow Hugh Tarpaulin, sat, each with both elbows
|
|
resting upon the large oaken table in the middle of the floor, and
|
|
with a hand upon either cheek. They were eyeing, from behind a huge
|
|
flagon of unpaid-for "humming-stuff," the portentous words, "No
|
|
Chalk," which to their indignation and astonishment were scored over
|
|
the doorway by means of that very mineral whose presence they
|
|
purported to deny. Not that the gift of decyphering written characters
|
|
--a gift among the commonalty of that day considered little less
|
|
cabalistical than the art of inditing --could, in strict justice, have
|
|
been laid to the charge of either disciple of the sea; but there
|
|
was, to say the truth, a certain twist in the formation of the letters
|
|
--an indescribable lee-lurch about the whole ---which foreboded, in
|
|
the opinion of both seamen, a long run of dirty weather; and
|
|
determined them at once, in the allegorical words of Legs himself,
|
|
to "pump ship, clew up all sail, and scud before the wind."
|
|
|
|
Having accordingly disposed of what remained of the ale, and
|
|
looped up the points of their short doublets, they finally made a bolt
|
|
for the street. Although Tarpaulin rolled twice into the fire-place,
|
|
mistaking it for the door, yet their escape was at length happily
|
|
effected --and half after twelve o'clock found our heroes ripe for
|
|
mischief, and running for life down a dark alley in the direction of
|
|
St. Andrew's Stair, hotly pursued by the landlady of the "Jolly Tar."
|
|
|
|
At the epoch of this eventful tale, and periodically, for many
|
|
years before and after, all England, but more especially the
|
|
metropolis, resounded with the fearful cry of "Plague!" The city was
|
|
in a great measure depopulated --and in those horrible regions, in the
|
|
vicinity of the Thames, where amid the dark, narrow, and filthy
|
|
lanes and alleys, the Demon of Disease was supposed to have had his
|
|
nativity, Awe, Terror, and Superstition were alone to be found
|
|
stalking abroad.
|
|
|
|
By authority of the king such districts were placed under ban, and
|
|
all persons forbidden, under pain of death, to intrude upon their
|
|
dismal solitude. Yet neither the mandate of the monarch, nor the
|
|
huge barriers erected at the entrances of the streets, nor the
|
|
prospect of that loathsome death which, with almost absolute
|
|
certainty, overwhelmed the wretch whom no peril could deter from the
|
|
adventure, prevented the unfurnished and untenanted dwellings from
|
|
being stripped, by the hand of nightly rapine, of every article,
|
|
such as iron, brass, or lead-work, which could in any manner be turned
|
|
to a profitable account.
|
|
|
|
Above all, it was usually found, upon the annual winter opening of
|
|
the barriers, that locks, bolts, and secret cellars, had proved but
|
|
slender protection to those rich stores of wines and liquors which, in
|
|
consideration of the risk and trouble of removal, many of the numerous
|
|
dealers having shops in the neighbourhood had consented to trust,
|
|
during the period of exile, to so insufficient a security.
|
|
|
|
But there were very few of the terror-stricken people who
|
|
attributed these doings to the agency of human hands. Pest-spirits,
|
|
plague-goblins, and fever-demons, were the popular imps of mischief;
|
|
and tales so blood-chilling were hourly told, that the whole mass of
|
|
forbidden buildings was, at length, enveloped in terror as in a
|
|
shroud, and the plunderer himself was often scared away by the horrors
|
|
his own depreciations had created; leaving the entire vast circuit
|
|
of prohibited district to gloom, silence, pestilence, and death.
|
|
|
|
It was by one of the terrific barriers already mentioned, and
|
|
which indicated the region beyond to be under the Pest-ban, that, in
|
|
scrambling down an alley, Legs and the worthy Hugh Tarpaulin found
|
|
their progress suddenly impeded. To return was out of the question,
|
|
and no time was to be lost, as their pursuers were close upon their
|
|
heels. With thorough-bred seamen to clamber up the roughly fashioned
|
|
plank-work was a trifle; and, maddened with the twofold excitement
|
|
of exercise and liquor, they leaped unhesitatingly down within the
|
|
enclosure, and holding on their drunken course with shouts and
|
|
yellings, were soon bewildered in its noisome and intricate recesses.
|
|
|
|
Had they not, indeed, been intoxicated beyond moral sense, their
|
|
reeling footsteps must have been palsied by the horrors of their
|
|
situation. The air was cold and misty. The paving-stones, loosened
|
|
from their beds, lay in wild disorder amid the tall, rank grass, which
|
|
sprang up around the feet and ankles. Fallen houses choked up the
|
|
streets. The most fetid and poisonous smells everywhere prevailed;
|
|
--and by the aid of that ghastly light which, even at midnight,
|
|
never fails to emanate from a vapory and pestilential at atmosphere,
|
|
might be discerned lying in the by-paths and alleys, or rotting in the
|
|
windowless habitations, the carcass of many a nocturnal plunderer
|
|
arrested by the hand of the plague in the very perpetration of his
|
|
robbery.
|
|
|
|
--But it lay not in the power of images, or sensations, or
|
|
impediments such as these, to stay the course of men who, naturally
|
|
brave, and at that time especially, brimful of courage and of
|
|
"humming-stuff!" would have reeled, as straight as their condition
|
|
might have permitted, undauntedly into the very jaws of Death.
|
|
Onward --still onward stalked the grim Legs, making the desolate
|
|
solemnity echo and re-echo with yells like the terrific war-whoop of
|
|
the Indian: and onward, still onward rolled the dumpy Tarpaulin,
|
|
hanging on to the doublet of his more active companion, and far
|
|
surpassing the latter's most strenuous exertions in the way of vocal
|
|
music, by bull-roarings in basso, from the profundity of his
|
|
stentorian lungs.
|
|
|
|
They had now evidently reached the strong hold of the
|
|
pestilence. Their way at every step or plunge grew more noisome and
|
|
more horrible --the paths more narrow and more intricate. Huge
|
|
stones and beams falling momently from the decaying roofs above
|
|
them, gave evidence, by their sullen and heavy descent, of the vast
|
|
height of the surrounding houses; and while actual exertion became
|
|
necessary to force a passage through frequent heaps of rubbish, it was
|
|
by no means seldom that the hand fell upon a skeleton or rested upon a
|
|
more fleshly corpse.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, as the seamen stumbled against the entrance of a tall
|
|
and ghastly-looking building, a yell more than usually shrill from the
|
|
throat of the excited Legs, was replied to from within, in a rapid
|
|
succession of wild, laughter-like, and fiendish shrieks. Nothing
|
|
daunted at sounds which, of such a nature, at such a time, and in such
|
|
a place, might have curdled the very blood in hearts less
|
|
irrevocably on fire, the drunken couple rushed headlong against the
|
|
door, burst it open, and staggered into the midst of things with a
|
|
volley of curses.
|
|
|
|
The room within which they found themselves proved to be the
|
|
shop of an undertaker; but an open trap-door, in a corner of the floor
|
|
near the entrance, looked down upon a long range of wine-cellars,
|
|
whose depths the occasional sound of bursting bottles proclaimed to be
|
|
well stored with their appropriate contents. In the middle of the room
|
|
stood a table --in the centre of which again arose a huge tub of
|
|
what appeared to be punch. Bottles of various wines and cordials,
|
|
together with jugs, pitchers, and flagons of every shape and
|
|
quality, were scattered profusely upon the board. Around it, upon
|
|
coffin-tressels, was seated a company of six. This company I will
|
|
endeavor to delineate one by one.
|
|
|
|
Fronting the entrance, and elevated a little above his companions,
|
|
sat a personage who appeared to be the president of the table. His
|
|
stature was gaunt and tall, and Legs was confounded to behold in him a
|
|
figure more emaciated than himself. His face was as yellow as
|
|
saffron --but no feature excepting one alone, was sufficiently
|
|
marked to merit a particular description. This one consisted in a
|
|
forehead so unusually and hideously lofty, as to have the appearance
|
|
of a bonnet or crown of flesh superadded upon the natural head. His
|
|
mouth was puckered and dimpled into an expression of ghastly
|
|
affability, and his eyes, as indeed the eyes of all at table, were
|
|
glazed over with the fumes of intoxication. This gentleman was clothed
|
|
from head to foot in a richly-embroidered black silk-velvet pall,
|
|
wrapped negligently around his form after the fashion of a Spanish
|
|
cloak. --His head was stuck full of sable hearse-plumes, which he
|
|
nodded to and fro with a jaunty and knowing air; and, in his right
|
|
hand, he held a huge human thigh-bone, with which he appeared to
|
|
have been just knocking down some member of the company for a song.
|
|
|
|
Opposite him, and with her back to the door, was a lady of no whit
|
|
the less extraordinary character. Although quite as tall as the person
|
|
just described, she had no right to complain of his unnatural
|
|
emaciation. She was evidently in the last stage of a dropsy; and her
|
|
figure resembled nearly that of the huge puncheon of October beer
|
|
which stood, with the head driven in, close by her side, in a corner
|
|
of the chamber. Her face was exceedingly round, red, and full; and the
|
|
same peculiarity, or rather want of peculiarity, attached itself to
|
|
her countenance, which I before mentioned in the case of the president
|
|
--that is to say, only one feature of her face was sufficiently
|
|
distinguished to need a separate characterization: indeed the acute
|
|
Tarpaulin immediately observed that the same remark might have applied
|
|
to each individual person of the party; every one of whom seemed to
|
|
possess a monopoly of some particular portion of physiognomy. With the
|
|
lady in question this portion proved to be the mouth. Commencing at
|
|
the right ear, it swept with a terrific chasm to the left --the
|
|
short pendants which she wore in either auricle continually bobbing
|
|
into the aperture. She made, however, every exertion to keep her mouth
|
|
closed and look dignified, in a dress consisting of a newly starched
|
|
and ironed shroud coming up close under her chin, with a crimpled
|
|
ruffle of cambric muslin.
|
|
|
|
At her right hand sat a diminutive young lady whom she appeared to
|
|
patronise. This delicate little creature, in the trembling of her
|
|
wasted fingers, in the livid hue of her lips, and in the slight hectic
|
|
spot which tinged her otherwise leaden complexion, gave evident
|
|
indications of a galloping consumption. An air of gave extreme haut
|
|
ton, however, pervaded her whole appearance; she wore in a graceful
|
|
and degage manner, a large and beautiful winding-sheet of the finest
|
|
India lawn; her hair hung in ringlets over her neck; a soft smile
|
|
played about her mouth; but her nose, extremely long, thin, sinuous,
|
|
flexible and pimpled, hung down far below her under lip, and in
|
|
spite of the delicate manner in which she now and then moved it to one
|
|
side or the other with her tongue, gave to her countenance a
|
|
somewhat equivocal expression.
|
|
|
|
Over against her, and upon the left of the dropsical lady, was
|
|
seated a little puffy, wheezing, and gouty old man, whose cheeks
|
|
reposed upon the shoulders of their owner, like two huge bladders of
|
|
Oporto wine. With his arms folded, and with one bandaged leg deposited
|
|
upon the table, he seemed to think himself entitled to some
|
|
consideration. He evidently prided himself much upon every inch of his
|
|
personal appearance, but took more especial delight in calling
|
|
attention to his gaudy-colored surtout. This, to say the truth, must
|
|
have cost him no little money, and was made to fit him exceedingly
|
|
well --being fashioned from one of the curiously embroidered silken
|
|
covers appertaining to those glorious escutcheons which, in England
|
|
and elsewhere, are customarily hung up, in some conspicuous place,
|
|
upon the dwellings of departed aristocracy.
|
|
|
|
Next to him, and at the right hand of the president, was a
|
|
gentleman in long white hose and cotton drawers. His frame shook, in a
|
|
ridiculous manner, with a fit of what Tarpaulin called "the
|
|
horrors." His jaws, which had been newly shaved, were tightly tied
|
|
up by a bandage of muslin; and his arms being fastened in a similar
|
|
way at the wrists, I I prevented him from helping himself too freely
|
|
to the liquors upon the table; a precaution rendered necessary, in the
|
|
opinion of Legs, by the peculiarly sottish and wine-bibbing cast of
|
|
his visage. A pair of prodigious ears, nevertheless, which it was no
|
|
doubt found impossible to confine, towered away into the atmosphere of
|
|
the apartment, and were occasionally pricked up in a spasm, at the
|
|
sound of the drawing of a cork.
|
|
|
|
Fronting him, sixthly and lastly, was situated a singularly
|
|
stiff-looking personage, who, being afflicted with paralysis, must, to
|
|
speak seriously, have felt very ill at ease in his unaccommodating
|
|
habiliments. He was habited, somewhat uniquely, in a new and
|
|
handsome mahogany coffin. Its top or head-piece pressed upon the skull
|
|
of the wearer, and extended over it in the fashion of a hood, giving
|
|
to the entire face an air of indescribable interest. Arm-holes had
|
|
been cut in the sides, for the sake not more of elegance than of
|
|
convenience; but the dress, nevertheless, prevented its proprietor
|
|
from sitting as erect as his associates; and as he lay reclining
|
|
against his tressel, at an angle of forty-five degrees, a pair of huge
|
|
goggle eyes rolled up their awful whites towards the celling in
|
|
absolute amazement at their own enormity.
|
|
|
|
Before each of the party lay a portion of a skull, which was
|
|
used as a drinking cup. Overhead was suspended a human skeleton, by
|
|
means of a rope tied round one of the legs and fastened to a ring in
|
|
the ceiling. The other limb, confined by no such fetter, stuck off
|
|
from the body at right angles, causing the whole loose and rattling
|
|
frame to dangle and twirl about at the caprice of every occasional
|
|
puff of wind which found its way into the apartment. In the cranium of
|
|
this hideous thing lay quantity of ignited charcoal, which threw a
|
|
fitful but vivid light over the entire scene; while coffins, and other
|
|
wares appertaining to the shop of an undertaker, were piled high up
|
|
around the room, and against the windows, preventing any ray from
|
|
escaping into the street.
|
|
|
|
At sight of this extraordinary assembly, and of their still more
|
|
extraordinary paraphernalia, our two seamen did not conduct themselves
|
|
with that degree of decorum which might have been expected. Legs,
|
|
leaning against the wall near which he happened to be standing,
|
|
dropped his lower jaw still lower than usual, and spread open his eyes
|
|
to their fullest extent: while Hugh Tarpaulin, stooping down so as
|
|
to bring his nose upon a level with the table, and spreading out a
|
|
palm upon either knee, burst into a long, loud, and obstreperous
|
|
roar of very ill-timed and immoderate laughter.
|
|
|
|
Without, however, taking offence at behaviour so excessively rude,
|
|
the tall president smiled very graciously upon the intruders
|
|
--nodded to them in a dignified manner with his head of sable plumes
|
|
--and, arising, took each by an arm, and led him to a seat which
|
|
some others of the company had placed in the meantime for his
|
|
accommodation. Legs to all this offered not the slightest
|
|
resistance, but sat down as he was directed; while tile gallant
|
|
Hugh, removing his coffin tressel from its station near the head of
|
|
the table, to the vicinity of the little consumptive lady in the
|
|
winding sheet, plumped down by her side in high glee, and pouring
|
|
out a skull of red wine, quaffed it to their better acquaintance.
|
|
But at this presumption the stiff gentleman in the coffin seemed
|
|
exceedingly nettled; and serious consequences might have ensued, had
|
|
not the president, rapping upon the table with his truncheon, diverted
|
|
the attention of all present to the following speech:
|
|
|
|
"It becomes our duty upon the present happy occasion"--
|
|
|
|
"Avast there!" interrupted Legs, looking very serious, "avast
|
|
there a bit, I say, and tell us who the devil ye all are, and what
|
|
business ye have here, rigged off like the foul fiends, and swilling
|
|
the snug blue ruin stowed away for the winter by my honest shipmate,
|
|
Will Wimble the undertaker!"
|
|
|
|
At this unpardonable piece of ill-breeding, all the original
|
|
company half started to their feet, and uttered the same rapid
|
|
succession of wild fiendish shrieks which had before caught the
|
|
attention of the seamen. The president, however, was the first to
|
|
recover his composure, and at length, turning to Legs with great
|
|
dignity, recommenced:
|
|
|
|
"Most willingly will we gratify any reasonable curiosity on the
|
|
part of guests so illustrious, unbidden though they be. Know then that
|
|
in these dominions I am monarch, and here rule with undivided empire
|
|
under the title of 'King Pest the First.'
|
|
|
|
"This apartment, which you no doubt profanely suppose to be the
|
|
shop of Will Wimble the undertaker --a man whom we know not, and whose
|
|
plebeian appellation has never before this night thwarted our royal
|
|
ears --this apartment, I say, is the Dais-Chamber of our Palace,
|
|
devoted to the councils of our kingdom, and to other sacred and
|
|
lofty purposes.
|
|
|
|
"The noble lady who sits opposite is Queen Pest, our Serene
|
|
Consort. The other exalted personages whom you behold are all of our
|
|
family, and wear the insignia of the blood royal under the
|
|
respective titles of 'His Grace the Arch Duke Pest-Iferous' --'His
|
|
Grace the Duke Pest-Ilential' --'His Grace the Duke Tem-Pest' --and
|
|
'Her Serene Highness the Arch Duchess Ana-Pest.'
|
|
|
|
"As regards," continued he, "your demand of the business upon
|
|
which we sit here in council, we might be pardoned for replying that
|
|
it concerns, and concerns alone, our own private and regal interest,
|
|
and is in no manner important to any other than ourself. But in
|
|
consideration of those rights to which as guests and strangers you may
|
|
feel yourselves entitled, we will furthermore explain that we are here
|
|
this night, prepared by deep research and accurate investigation, to
|
|
examine, analyze, and thoroughly determine the indefinable spirit
|
|
--the incomprehensible qualities and nature --of those inestimable
|
|
treasures of the palate, the wines, ales, and liqueurs of this
|
|
goodly metropolis: by so doing to advance not more our own designs
|
|
than the true welfare of that unearthly sovereign whose reign is
|
|
over us all, whose dominions are unlimited, and whose name is 'Death.'
|
|
|
|
"Whose name is Davy Jones!" ejaculated Tarpaulin, helping the lady
|
|
by his side to a skull of liqueur, and pouring out a second for
|
|
himself.
|
|
|
|
"Profane varlet!" said the president, now turning his attention to
|
|
the worthy Hugh, "profane and execrable wretch! --we have said, that
|
|
in consideration of those rights which, even in thy filthy person,
|
|
we feel no inclination to violate, we have condescended to make
|
|
reply to thy rude and unseasonable inquiries. We nevertheless, for
|
|
your unhallowed intrusion upon our councils, believe it our duty to
|
|
mulct thee and thy companion in each a gallon of Black Strap
|
|
--having imbibed which to the prosperity of our kingdom --at a
|
|
single draught --and upon your bended knees --ye shall be forthwith
|
|
free either to proceed upon your way, or remain and be admitted to the
|
|
privileges of our table, according to your respective and individual
|
|
pleasures."
|
|
|
|
"It would be a matter of utter impossibility," replied Legs,
|
|
whom the assumptions and dignity of King Pest the First had
|
|
evidently inspired some feelings of respect, and who arose and
|
|
steadied himself by the table as he spoke --"It would, please your
|
|
majesty, be a matter of utter impossibility to stow away in my hold
|
|
even one-fourth part of the same liquor which your majesty has just
|
|
mentioned. To say nothing of the stuffs placed on board in the
|
|
forenoon by way of ballast, and not to mention the various ales and
|
|
liqueurs shipped this evening at different sea-ports, I have, at
|
|
present, a full cargo of 'humming stuff' taken in and duly paid for at
|
|
the sign of the 'Jolly Tar.' You will, therefore, please your majesty,
|
|
be so good as to take the will for the deed --for by no manner of
|
|
means either can I or will I swallow another drop --least of all a
|
|
drop of that villainous bilge-water that answers to the hall of 'Black
|
|
Strap.'"
|
|
|
|
"Belay that!" interrupted Tarpaulin, astonished not more at the
|
|
length of his companion's speech than at the nature of his refusal
|
|
--"Belay that you tubber! --and I say, Legs, none of your palaver!
|
|
My hull is still light, although I confess you yourself seem to be a
|
|
little top-heavy; and as for the matter of your share of the cargo,
|
|
why rather than raise a squall I would find stowageroom for it myself,
|
|
but" --
|
|
|
|
"This proceeding," interposed the president, "is by no means in
|
|
accordance with the terms of the mulct or sentence, which is in its
|
|
nature Median, and not to be altered or recalled. The conditions we
|
|
have imposed must be fulfilled to the letter, and that without a
|
|
moment's hesitation --in failure of which fulfilment we decree that
|
|
you do here be tied neck and heels together, and duly drowned as
|
|
rebels in yon hogshead of October beer!"
|
|
|
|
"A sentence! --a sentence! --a righteous and just sentence! --a
|
|
glorious decree! --a most worthy and upright, and holy
|
|
condemnation!" shouted the Pest family altogether. The king elevated
|
|
his forehead into innumerable wrinkles; the gouty little old man
|
|
puffed like a pair of bellows; the lady of the winding sheet waved her
|
|
nose to and fro; the gentleman in the cotton drawers pricked up his
|
|
ears; she of the shroud gasped like a dying fish; and he of the coffin
|
|
looked stiff and rolled up his eyes.
|
|
|
|
"Ugh! ugh! ugh!" chuckled Tarpaulin without heeding the general
|
|
excitation, "ugh! ugh! ugh! --ugh! ugh! ugh! --ugh! ugh! ugh! --I
|
|
was saying," said he, "I was saying when Mr. King Pest poked in his
|
|
marlin-spike, that as for the matter of two or three gallons more or
|
|
less of Black Strap, it was a trifle to a tight sea-boat like myself
|
|
not overstowed --but when it comes to drinking the health of the Devil
|
|
(whom God assoilzie) and going down upon my marrow bones to his
|
|
ill-favored majesty there, whom I know, as well as I know myself to be
|
|
a sinner, to be nobody in the whole world, but Tim Hurlygurly the
|
|
stage-player --why! it's quite another guess sort of a thing, and
|
|
utterly and altogether past my comprehension."
|
|
|
|
He was not allowed to finish this speech in tranquillity. At the
|
|
name Tim Hurlygurly the whole assembly leaped from their name seats.
|
|
|
|
"Treason!" shouted his Majesty King Pest the First.
|
|
|
|
"Treason!" said the little man with the gout.
|
|
|
|
"Treason!" screamed the Arch Duchess Ana-Pest.
|
|
|
|
"Treason!" muttered the gentleman with his jaws tied up.
|
|
|
|
"Treason!" growled he of the coffin.
|
|
|
|
"Treason! treason!" shrieked her majesty of the mouth; and,
|
|
seizing by the hinder part of his breeches the unfortunate
|
|
Tarpaulin, who had just commenced pouring out for himself a skull of
|
|
liqueur, she lifted him high into the air, and let him fall without
|
|
ceremony into the huge open puncheon of his beloved ale. Bobbing up
|
|
and down, for a few seconds, like an apple in a bowl of toddy, he,
|
|
at length, finally disappeared amid the whirlpool of foam which, in
|
|
the already effervescent liquor, his struggles easily succeeded in
|
|
creating.
|
|
|
|
Not tamely, however, did the tall seaman behold the discomfiture
|
|
of his companion. Jostling King Pest through the open trap, the
|
|
valiant Legs slammed the door down upon him with an oath, and strode
|
|
towards the centre of the room. Here tearing down the skeleton which
|
|
swung over the table, he laid it about him with so much energy and
|
|
good will, that, as the last glimpses of light died away within the
|
|
apartment, he succeeded in knocking out the brains of the little
|
|
gentleman with the gout. Rushing then with all his force against the
|
|
fatal hogshead full of October ale and Hugh Tarpaulin, he rolled it
|
|
over and over in an instant. Out burst a deluge of liquor so fierce
|
|
--so impetuous --so overwhelming --that the room was flooded from wall
|
|
to wall --the loaded table was overturned --the tressels were thrown
|
|
upon their backs --the tub of punch into the fire-place --and the
|
|
ladies into hysterics. Piles of death-furniture floundered about.
|
|
Jugs, pitchers, and carboys mingled promiscuously in the melee, and
|
|
wicker flagons encountered desperately with bottles of junk. The man
|
|
with the horrors was drowned upon the spot-the little stiff
|
|
gentleman floated off in his coffin --and the victorious Legs, seizing
|
|
by the waist the fat lady in the shroud, rushed out with her into
|
|
the street, and made a bee-line for the "Free and Easy," followed
|
|
under easy sail by the redoubtable Hugh Tarpaulin, who, having sneezed
|
|
three or four times, panted and puffed after him with the Arch Duchess
|
|
Ana-Pest.
|
|
|
|
-THE END-
|
|
.
|