799 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
799 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
1850
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LITERARY LIFE OF THINGUM BOB, ESQ.
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by Edgar Allan Poe
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LATE EDITOR OF THE "GOOSETHERUMFOODLE"
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BY HIMSELF
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I AM now growing in years, and- since I understand that
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Shakespeare and Mr. Emmons are deceased- it is not impossible that I
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may even die. It has occurred to me, therefore, that I may as well
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retire from the field of Letters and repose upon my laurels. But I
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am ambitious of signalizing my abdication of the literary sceptre by
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some important bequest to posterity; and, perhaps, I cannot do a
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better thing than just pen for it an account of my earlier career.
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My name, indeed, has been so long and so constantly before the
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public eye, that I am not only willing to admit the naturalness of the
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interest which it has everywhere excited, but ready to satisfy the
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extreme curiosity which it has inspired. In fact, it is no more than
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the duty of him who achieves greatness to leave behind him, in his
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ascent, such landmarks as may guide others to be great. I propose,
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therefore, in the present paper (which I had some idea of calling
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"Memoranda to Serve for the Literary History of America") to give a
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detail of those important, yet feeble and tottering, first steps, by
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which, at length, I attained the high road to the pinnacle of human
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renown.
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Of one's very remote ancestors it is superfluous to say much. My
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father, Thomas Bob, Esq., stood for many years at the summit of his
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profession, which was that of a merchant-barber, in the city of
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Smug. His warehouse was the resort of all the principal people of
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the place, and especially of the editorial corps- a body which
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inspires all about it with profound veneration and awe. For my own
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part, I regarded them as gods, and drank in with avidity the rich
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wit and wisdom which continuously flowed from their august mouths
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during the process of what is styled "lather." My first moment of
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positive inspiration must be dated from that ever-memorable epoch,
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when the brilliant conductor of the "Gad-Fly," in the intervals of the
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important process just mentioned, recited aloud, before a conclave
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of our apprentices, an inimitable poem in honor of the "Only Genuine
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Oil-of-Bob" (so called from its talented inventor, my father), and for
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which effusion the editor of the "Fly" was remunerated with a regal
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liberality by the firm of Thomas Bob & Company, merchant-barbers.
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The genius of the stanzas to the "Oil-of-Bob" first breathed into
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me, I say, the divine afflatus. I resolved at once to become a great
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man, and to commence by becoming a great poet. That very evening I
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fell upon my knees at the feet of my father.
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"Father," I said, "pardon me!- but I have a soul above lather. It is
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my firm intention to cut the shop. I would be an editor- I would be
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a poet- I would pen stanzas to the 'Oil-of-Bob.' Pardon me and aid
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me to be great!"
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"My dear Thingum," replied father, (I had been christened Thingum
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after a wealthy relative so surnamed,) "My dear Thingum," he said,
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raising me from my knees by the ears- "Thingum, my boy, you're a
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trump, and take after your father in having a soul. You have an
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immense head, too, and it must hold a great many brains. This I have
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long seen, and therefore had thoughts of making you a lawyer. The
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business, however, has grown ungenteel and that of a politician
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don't pay. Upon the whole you judge wisely;- the trade of editor is
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best:- and if you can be a poet at the same time,- as most of the
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editors are, by the by, why, you will kill two birds with the one
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stone. To encourage you in the beginning of things, I will allow you a
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garret, pen, ink, and paper, a rhyming dictionary; and a copy of the
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'Gad-Fly.' I suppose you would scarcely demand any more."
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"I would be an ungrateful villain if I did" I replied with
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enthusiasm. "Your generosity is boundless. I will repay it by making
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you the father of a genius."
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Thus ended my conference with the best of men, and immediately
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upon its termination, I betook myself with zeal to my poetical labors;
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as upon these, chiefly, I founded my hopes of ultimate elevation to
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the editorial chair.
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In my first attempts at composition I found the stanzas to "The
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Oil-of-Bob" rather a drawback than otherwise. Their splendor more
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dazzled than enlightened me. The contemplation of their excellence
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tended, naturally, to discourage me by comparison with my own
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abortions; so that for a long time I labored in vain. At length
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there came into my head one of those exquisitely original ideas
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which now and then will permeate the brain of a man of genius. It
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was this:- or, rather, thus was it carried into execution. From the
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rubbish of an old book-stall, in a very remote corner of the town, I
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got together several antique and altogether unknown or forgotten
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volumes. The bookseller sold them to me for a song. From one of these,
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which purported to be a translation of one Dantes "Inferno," I
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copied with remarkable neatness a long passage about a man named
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Ugolino, who had a parcel of brats. From another, which contained a
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good many old plays by some person whose name I forget, I enacted in
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the same manner, and with the same care, a great number of lines about
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"angels" and "ministers saying grace," and "goblins damned," and
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more besides of that sort. From a third, which was the composition
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of some blind man or other, either a Greek or a Choctaw- I cannot be
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at the pains of remembering every trifle exactly,- I took about
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fifty verses beginning with "Achilles' wrath," and "grease," and
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something else. From a fourth, which I recollect was also the work
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of a blind man, I selected a page or two all about "hail" and "holy
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light"; and, although a blind man has no business to write about
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light, still the verses were sufficiently good in their way.
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Having made fair copies of these poems, I signed every one of them
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"Oppodeldoc" (a fine sonorous name), and, doing each up nicely in a
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separate envelope, I dispatched one to each of the four principal
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Magazines, with a request for speedy insertion and prompt pay. The
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result of this well-conceived plan, however, (the success of which
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would have saved me much trouble in after-life,) served to convince me
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that some editors are not to be bamboozled, and gave the coup-de-grace
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(as they say in France) to my nascent hopes (as they say in the city
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of the transcendentals).
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The fact is, that each and every one of the Magazines in question
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gave Mr. "Oppodeldoc" a complete using-up, in the "Monthly Notices
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to Correspondents." The "Hum-Drum" gave him a dressing after this
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fashion:
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"'Oppodeldoc' (whoever he is) has sent us a long tirade concerning a
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bedlamite whom he styles 'Ugolino,' had a great many children that
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should have been all whipped and sent to bed without their suppers.
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The whole affair is exceedingly tame- not to say flat. 'Oppodeldoc'
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(whoever he is) is entirely devoid of imagination- and imagination, in
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our humble opinion, is not only the soul of Poesy, but also its very
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heart. 'Oppodeldoc' (whoever he is) has the audacity to demand of
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us, for his twattle, a 'speedy insertion and prompt pay.' We neither
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insert nor purchase any stuff of the sort. There can be no doubt,
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however, that he would meet with a ready sale for all the balderdash
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he can scribble, at the office of either the 'Rowdy-Dow,' the
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'Lollipop,' or the 'Goosetherumfoodle.'
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All this, it must be acknowledged, was very severe upon
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"Oppodeldoc,"- but the unkindest cut was putting the word Poesy in
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small caps. In those five pre-eminent letters what a world of
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bitterness is there not involved!
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But "Oppodeldoc" was punished with equal severity in the "Rowdy
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Dow," which spoke thus:
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"We have received a most singular and insolent communication from
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a person (whoever he is) signing himself 'Oppodeldoc,'- thus
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desecrating the greatness of the illustrious Roman emperor so named.
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Accompanying the letter of 'Oppodeldoc' (whoever he is) we find sundry
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lines of most disgusting and unmeaning rant about 'angels and
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ministers of grace,'- rant such as no madman short of a Nat Lee, or an
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'Oppodeldoc,' could possibly perpetrate. And for this trash of
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trash, we are modestly requested to 'pay promptly.' No, sir- no! We
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pay for nothing of that sort. Apply to the 'Hum-Drum,' the 'Lollipop,'
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or the 'Goosetherumfoodle.' These periodicals will undoubtedly
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accept any literary offal you may send them- and as undoubtedly
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promise to pay for it."
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This was bitter indeed upon poor "Oppodeldoc"; but, in this
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instance, the weight of the satire falls upon the "Hum-Drum," the
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"Lollipop," and the "Goosetherumfoodle," who are pungently styled
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"periodicals"- in Italics, too- a thing that must have cut them to the
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heart.
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Scarcely less savage was the "Lollipop," which thus discoursed:
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"Some individual, who rejoices in the appellation 'Oppodeldoc,'
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(to what low uses are the names of the illustrious dead too often
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applied!) has enclosed us some fifty or sixty verses commencing
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after this fashion:
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'Achilles' wrath, to Greece the direful spring
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Of woes unnumbered, &c., &c., &c, &c.'
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"'Oppodeldoc?' (whoever he is) is respectfully informed that there
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is not a printer's devil in our office who is not in the daily habit
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of composing better lines. Those of 'Oppodeldoc' will not scan.
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'Oppodeldoc' should learn to count. But why he should have conceived
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the idea that we (of all others, we!) would disgrace our pages with
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his ineffable nonsense is utterly beyond comprehension. Why, the
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absurd twattle is scarcely good enough for the 'Hum-Drum,' the
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'Rowdy-Dow,' the 'Goosetherumfoodle,'- things that are in the practice
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of publishing 'Mother Gooses Melodies' as original lyrics. And
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'Oppodeldoc' (whoever he is) has even the assurance to demand pay
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for this drivel. Does 'Oppodeldoc' (whoever he is) know- is he aware
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that we could not be paid to insert it?"
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As I perused this I felt myself growing gradually smaller and
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smaller, and when I came to the point at which the editor sneered at
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the poem as "verses," there was little more than an ounce of me
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left. As for "Oppodeldoc," I began to experience compassion for the
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poor fellow. But the "Goosetherumfoodle" showed, if possible, less
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mercy than the "Lollipop." It was the "Goosetherumfoodle" that said-
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"A wretched poetaster, who signs himself 'Oppodeldoc,' is silly
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enough to fancy that we will print and pay for a medley of
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incoherent and ungrammatical bombast which he has transmitted to us,
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and which commences with the following most intelligible line:-
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'Hail Holy Light! Offspring of Heaven, first born.'
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"We say, 'most intelligible.' 'Oppodeldoc' (whoever he is) will be
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kind enough to tell us, perhaps, how 'hail' can be 'holy light.' We
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always regarded it as frozen rain. Will he inform us, also, how frozen
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rain can be, at one and the same time, both 'holy light' (whatever
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that is) and an 'off-spring'?- which latter term (if we understand
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anything about English) is only employed, with propriety, in reference
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to small babies of about six weeks old. But it is preposterous to
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descant upon such absurdity- although 'Oppodeldoc' (whoever he is) has
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the unparalled effrontery to suppose that we will not only 'insert'
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his ignorant ravings, but (absolutely) pay for them?
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"Now this is fine- it is rich!- and we have half a mind to punish
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this young scribbler for his egotism by really publishing his effusion
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verbatim et literatim, as he has written it. We could inflict no
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punishment so severe, and we would inflict it, but for the boredom
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which we should cause our readers in so doing.
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"Let 'Oppodeldoc' (whoever he is) send any future composition of
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like character to the 'Hum-Drum,' the 'Lollipop,' or the 'Rowdy-Dow:
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They will 'insert' it. They 'insert' every month just such stuff. Send
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it to them. WE are not to be insulted with impunity."
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This made an end of me, and as for the "Hum-Drum," the
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"Rowdy-Dow," and the "Lollipop," I never could comprehend how they
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survived it. The putting them in the smallest possible minion (that
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was the rub- thereby insinuating their lowness- their baseness,) while
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WE stood looking upon them in gigantic capitals!- oh it was too
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bitter!- it was wormwood- it was gall. Had I been either of these
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periodicals I would have spared no pains to have the
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"Goosetherumfoodle" prosecuted. It might have been done under the
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Act for the "Prevention of Cruelty to Animals." for Oppodeldoc
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(whoever he was), I had by this time lost all patience with the
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fellow, and sympathized with him no longer. He was a fool, beyond
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doubt, (whoever he was,) and got not a kick more than he deserved.
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The result of my experiment with the old books convinced me, in
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the first place, that "honesty is the best policy," and, in the
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second, that if I could not write better than Mr. Dante, and the two
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blind men, and the rest of the old set, it would, at least, be a
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difficult matter to write worse. I took heart, therefore, and
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determined to prosecute the "entirely original" (as they say on the
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covers of the magazines), at whatever cost of study and pains. I again
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placed before my eyes, as a model, the brilliant stanzas on "The
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Oil-of-Bob" by the editor of the "Gad-Fly" and resolved to construct
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an ode on the same sublime theme, in rivalry of what had already
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been done.
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With my first line I had no material difficulty. It ran thus:
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"To pen an Ode upon the 'Oil-of-Bob.'"
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Having carefully looked out, however, all the legitimate rhymes to
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"Bob," I found it impossible to proceed. In this dilemma I had
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recourse to paternal aid; and, after some hours of mature thought,
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my father and myself thus constructed the poem:
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"To pen an Ode upon the 'Oil-of-Bob'
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Is all sorts of a job.
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(Signed) Snob."
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To be sure, this composition was of no very great length,- but I
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"have yet to learn," as they say in the "Edinburgh Review," that the
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mere extent of a literary work has anything to do with its merit. As
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for the Quarterly cant about "sustained effort," it is impossible to
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see the sense of it. Upon the whole, therefore, I was satisfied with
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the success of my maiden attempt, and now the only question regarded
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the disposal I should make of it. My father suggested that I should
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send it to the "Gad-Fly,"- but there were two reasons which operated
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to prevent me from so doing. I dreaded the jealousy of the editor- and
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I had ascertained that he did not pay for original contributions. I
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therefore, after due deliberation, consigned the article to the more
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dignified pages of the "Lollipop" and awaited the event in anxiety,
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but with resignation.
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In the very next published number I had the proud satisfaction of
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seeing my poem printed at length, as the leading article, with the
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following significant words, prefixed in italics and between brackets:
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[We call the attention of our readers to the subjoined admirable
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on "The Oil-of-Bob." We need say nothing of their sublimity, or of
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their pathos.- it is impossible to peruse them without tears. Those
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who have been nauseated with a sad dose on the same august topic
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from the goose-quill of the editor of the "Gad-Fly," will do well to
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compare the two compositions.
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P. S.- We are consumed with anxiety to probe the mystery which
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envelops the evident pseudonym "Snob" May we hope for a personal
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interview?]
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All this was scarcely more than justice, but it was, I confess,
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rather more than I had expected:- I acknowledge this, be it
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observed, to the everlasting disgrace of my country and of mankind.
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I lost no time, however, in calling upon the editor of the
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"Lollipop" and had the good fortune to find this gentleman at home. He
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saluted me with an air of profound respect, slightly blended with a
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fatherly and patronizing admiration, wrought in him, no doubt, by my
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appearance of extreme youth and inexperience. Begging me to be seated,
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he entered at once upon the subject of my poem;- but modesty will ever
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forbid me to repeat the thousand compliments which he lavished upon
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me. The eulogies of Mr. Crab (such was the editor's name) were,
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however, by no means fulsomely indiscriminate. He analyzed my
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composition with much freedom and great ability- not hesitating to
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point out a few trivial defects- a circumstance which elevated him
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highly in my esteem. The "Gad-Fly" was, of course, brought upon the
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tapis, and I hope never to be subjected to a criticism so searching,
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or to rebukes so withering, as were bestowed by Mr. Crab upon that
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unhappy effusion. I had been accustomed to regard the editor of the
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"Gad-Fly" as something superhuman; but Mr. Crab soon disabused me of
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that idea. He set the literary as well as the personal character of
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the Fly (so Mr. C. satirically designated the rival editor), in its
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true light. He, the Fly, was very little better than he should be.
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He had written infamous things. He was a penny-a-liner, and a buffoon.
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He was a villain. He had composed a tragedy which set the whole
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country in a guffaw, and a farce which deluged the universe in
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tears. Besides all this, he had the impudence to pen what he meant for
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a lampoon upon himself (Mr. Crab), and the temerity to style him "an
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ass." Should I at any time wish to express my opinion of Mr. Fly,
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the pages of the "Lollipop," Mr. Crab assured me, were at my unlimited
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disposal. In the meantime, as it was very certain that I would be
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attacked in the "Fly" for my attempt at composing a rival poem on
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the "Oil-of-Bob," he (Mr. Crab) would take it upon himself to
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attend, pointedly, to my private and personal interests. If I were not
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made a man of at once, it should not be the fault of himself (Mr.
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Crab).
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Mr. Crab having now paused in his discourse (the latter portion of
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which I found it impossible to comprehend), I ventured to suggest
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something about the remuneration which I had been taught to expect for
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my poem, by an announcement on the cover of the "Lollipop,"
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declaring that it (the "Lollipop") "insisted upon being permitted to
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pay exorbitant prices for all accepted contributions,- frequently
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expending more money for a single brief poem than the whole annual
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cost of the 'Hum-Drum,' the 'Rowdy-Dow,' and the 'Goosetherumfoodle'
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combined."
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As I mentioned the word "remuneration," Mr. Crab first opened his
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eyes, and then his mouth, to quite a remarkable extent, causing his
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personal appearance to resemble that of a highly agitated elderly duck
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in the act of quacking; and in this condition he remained (ever and
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anon pressing his hinds tightly to his forehead, as if in a state of
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desperate bewilderment) until I had nearly made an end of what I had
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to say.
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Upon my conclusion, he sank back into his seat, as if much overcome,
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letting his arms fall lifelessly by his side, but keeping his mouth
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still rigorously open, after the fashion of the duck. While I remained
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in speechless astonishment at behavior so alarming he suddenly
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leaped to his feet and made a rush at the bell-rope; but just as he
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reached this, he appeared to have altered his intention, whatever it
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was, for he dived under a table and immediately re-appeared with a
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cudgel. This he was in the act of uplifting (for what purpose I am
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at a loss to imagine), when all at once, there came a benign smile
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over his features, and he sank placidly back in his chair.
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"Mr. Bob," he said, (for I had sent up my card before ascending
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myself,) "Mr. Bob, you are a young man, I presume- very?"
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I assented; adding that I had not yet concluded my third lustrum.
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"Ah!" he replied, "very good! I see how it is- say no more! Touching
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this matter of compensation, what you observe is very just,- in fact
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it is excessively so. But ah- ah- the first contribution- the first, I
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say- it is never the Magazine custom to pay for,- you comprehend,
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eh? The truth is, we are usually the recipients in such case." [Mr.
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Crab smiled blandly as he emphasized the word "recipients."] "for
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the most part, we are paid for the insertion of a maiden attempt-
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especially in verse. In the second place, Mr. Bob, the Magazine rule
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is never to disburse what we term in France the argent comptant:- I
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have no doubt you understand. In a quarter or two after publication of
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the article- or in a year or two- we make no objection to giving our
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note at nine months; provided, always, that we can so arrange our
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affairs as to be quite certain of a 'burst up' in six. I really do
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hope, Mr. Bob, that you will look upon this explanation as
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satisfactory." Here Mr. Crab concluded, and the tears stood in his
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eyes.
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Grieved to the soul at having been, however innocently, the cause of
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pain to so eminent and so sensitive a man, I hastened to apologize,
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and to reassure him, by expressing my perfect coincidence with his
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views, as well as my entire appreciation of the delicacy of his
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position. Having done all this in a neat speech, I took leave.
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One fine morning, very shortly afterwards, "I awoke and found myself
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famous." The extent of my renown will be best estimated by reference
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to the editorial opinions of the day. These opinions, it will be seen,
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were embodied in critical notices of the number of the "Lollipop"
|
|
containing my poem, and are perfectly satisfactory, conclusive, and
|
|
clear with the exception, perhaps, of the hieroglyphical marks,
|
|
"Sep. 15- 1 t," appended to each of the critiques.
|
|
|
|
The "Owl" a journal of profound sagacity, and well known for the
|
|
deliberate gravity of its literary decisions- the "Owl," I say,
|
|
spoke as follows:
|
|
|
|
"The LOLLIPOP! The October number of this delicious Magazine
|
|
surpasses its predecessors, and sets competition at defiance. In the
|
|
beauty of its typography and paper- in the number and excellence of
|
|
its steel plates- as well as in the literary merit of its
|
|
contributions- the 'Lollipop' compares with its slow-paced rivals as
|
|
Hyperion with Satyr. The 'Hum-Drum,' the 'Rowdy-Dow,' and the
|
|
'Goosetherumfoodle,' excel, it is true, in braggadocio, but in all
|
|
other points, give us the 'Lollipop'! How this celebrated journal
|
|
can sustain its evidently tremendous expenses, is more than we can
|
|
understand. To be sure, it has a circulation of 100,000 and its
|
|
subscription list has increased one fourth during the last month; but,
|
|
on the other hand, the sums it disburses constantly for
|
|
contributions are inconceivable. It is reported that Mr. Slyass
|
|
received no less than thirty-seven and a half cents for his inimitable
|
|
paper on 'Pigs.' With Mr. Crab, as editor, and with such names upon
|
|
the list of contributors as SNOB and Slyass, there can be no such word
|
|
as 'fail' for the 'Lollipop.' Go and subscribe. Sep. 15- 1 t."
|
|
|
|
I must say that I was gratified with this high-toned notice from a
|
|
paper so respectable as the "Owl." The placing my name- that is to
|
|
say, my nom de guerre- in priority of station to that of the great
|
|
Slyass, was a compliment as happy as I felt it to be deserved.
|
|
|
|
My attention was next arrested by these paragraphs in the "Toad"-
|
|
print highly distinguished for its uprightness and independence- for
|
|
its entire freedom from sycophancy and subservience to the givers of
|
|
dinners:
|
|
|
|
"The 'Lollipop' for October is out in advance of all its
|
|
contemporaries, and infinitely surpasses them, of course, in the
|
|
splendor of its embellishments, as well as in the richness of its
|
|
contents. The 'Hum-Drum,' the 'Rowdy-Dow,' and the 'Goosetherumfoodle'
|
|
excel, we admit, in braggadocio, but, in all other points, give us the
|
|
'Lollipop.' How this celebrated Magazine can sustain its evidently
|
|
tremendous expenses is more than we can understand. To be sure, it has
|
|
a circulation of 200,000 and its subscription list has increased one
|
|
third during the last fortnight, but, on the other hand, the sums it
|
|
disburses, monthly, for contributions, are fearfully great. We learn
|
|
that Mr. Mumblethumb received no less than fifty cents for his late
|
|
'Monody in a Mud-Puddle.'
|
|
|
|
"Among the original contributors to the present number we notice
|
|
(besides the eminent editor, Mr. Crab), such men as SNOB, Slyass,
|
|
and Mumblethumb. Apart from the editorial matter, the most valuable
|
|
paper, nevertheless, is, we think, a poetical gem by Snob, on the
|
|
'Oil-of-Bob.'-but our readers must not suppose, from the title of this
|
|
incomparable bijou, that it bears any similitude to some balderdash on
|
|
the same subject by a certain contemptible individual whose name is
|
|
unmentionable to ears polite. The present poem 'On the Oil-of-Bob,'
|
|
has excited universal anxiety and curiosity in respect to the owner of
|
|
the evident pseudonym, 'Snob,'- a curiosity which, happily, we have it
|
|
in our power to satisfy. 'Snob' is the nom de plume of Mr. Thingum
|
|
Bob, of this city, a relative of the great Mr. Thingum, (after whom he
|
|
is named), and otherwise connected with the most illustrious
|
|
families of the State. His father, Thomas Bob, Esq., is an opulent
|
|
merchant in Smug. Sep. 15- 1 t."
|
|
|
|
This generous approbation touched me to the heart- the more
|
|
especially as it emanated from a source so avowedly- so proverbially
|
|
pure as the "Toad." The word "balderdash," as applied to the
|
|
"Oil-of-Bob" of the Fly, I considered singularly pungent and
|
|
appropriate. The words "gem" and "bijou," however, used in reference
|
|
to my composition, struck me as being, in some degree, feeble. They
|
|
seemed to me to be deficient in force. They were not sufficiently
|
|
prononces (as we have it in France).
|
|
|
|
I had hardly finished reading the "Toad," when a friend placed in my
|
|
hands a copy of the "Mole," a daily, enjoying high reputation for
|
|
the keenness of its perception about matters in general, and for the
|
|
open, honest, above-ground style of its editorials. The "Mole" spoke
|
|
of the "Lollypop" as follows:
|
|
|
|
"We have just received the 'Lollipop' for October, and must say that
|
|
never before have we perused any single number of any periodical which
|
|
afforded us a felicity so supreme. We speak advisedly. The 'Hum-Drum.'
|
|
the 'Rowdy-Dow,' and the 'Goosetherumfoodle' must look well to their
|
|
laurels. These prints, no doubt, surpass everything in loudness of
|
|
pretension, but, in all other points, give us the 'Lollipop'! How this
|
|
celebrated Magazine can sustain its evidently tremendous expenses,
|
|
is more than we can comprehend. To be sure, it has a circulation of
|
|
300,000; and its subscription list has increased one half within the
|
|
last week, but then the sum it disburses, monthly, for
|
|
contributions, is astoundingly enormous. We have it upon good
|
|
authority that Mr. Fatquack received no less than sixty-two cents
|
|
and a half for his late Domestic Nouvellette, the 'Dish-Clout.'
|
|
|
|
"The contributors to the number before us are Mr. CRAB (the
|
|
eminent editor), SNOB, Mumblethumb, Fatquack, and others; but, after
|
|
the inimitable compositions of the editor himself, we prefer a
|
|
diamond- like effusion from the pen of a rising poet who writes over
|
|
the signature 'Snob'- a nom de guerre which we predict will one day
|
|
extinguish the radiance of 'BOZ.' 'SNOB,' we learn, is a Mr. THINGUM
|
|
BOB, Esq., sole heir of a wealthy merchant of this city, Thomas Bob,
|
|
Esq., and a near relative of the distinguished Mr. Thingum. The
|
|
title of Mr. B.'s admirable poem is the 'Oil-of-Bob'- a somewhat
|
|
unfortunate name, by-the-bye, as some contemptible vagabond
|
|
connected with the penny press has already disgusted the town with a
|
|
great deal of drivel upon the same topic. There will be no danger,
|
|
however, of confounding the compositions. Sep. 15- 1 t.
|
|
|
|
The generous approbation of so clear-sighted a journal as the "Mole"
|
|
penetrated my soul with delight. The only objection which occurred
|
|
to me was, that the terms "contemptible vagabond" might have been
|
|
better written "odious and contemptible wretch, villain, and
|
|
vagabond." This would have sounded more graceful, I think.
|
|
"Diamond-like," also, was scarcely, it will be admitted, of sufficient
|
|
intensity to express what the "Mole" evidently thought of the
|
|
brilliancy of the "Oil-of-Bob."
|
|
|
|
On the same afternoon in which I saw these notices in the "Owl," the
|
|
"Toad" and the "Mole," I happened to meet with a copy of the
|
|
"Daddy-Long-Legs," a periodical proverbial for the extreme extent of
|
|
its understanding. And it was the "Daddy-Long-Legs" which spoke thus:
|
|
|
|
"The 'Lollipop'! This gorgeous Magazine is already before the public
|
|
for October. The question of pre-eminence is forever put to rest,
|
|
and hereafter it will be preposterous in the 'Hum-Drum,' the
|
|
'Rowdy-Dow,' or the 'Goosetherumfoodle' to make any further
|
|
spasmodic attempts at competition. These journals may excel the
|
|
'Lollipop' in outcry, but, in all other points, give us the
|
|
'Lollipop'! How this celebrated Magazine can sustain its evidently
|
|
tremendous expenses, is past comprehension. To be sure it has a
|
|
circulation of precisely half a million, and its subscription list has
|
|
increased seventy-five per cent. within the last couple of days, but
|
|
then the sums it disburses, monthly, for contributions, are scarcely
|
|
credible; we are cognizant of the fact, that Mademoiselle
|
|
Cribalittle received no less than eighty-seven cents and a half for
|
|
her late valuable Revolutionary Tale, entitled 'The York-Town
|
|
Katy-Did, and the Bunker-Hill Katy-Didn't.'
|
|
|
|
"The most able papers in the present number are, of course, those
|
|
furnished by the editor (the eminent Mr. CRAB), but there are numerous
|
|
magnificent contributions from such names as SNOB, Mademoiselle
|
|
Cribalittle, Slyass, Mrs. Fibalittle, Mumblethumb, Mrs.
|
|
Squibalittle, and last, though not least, Fatquack. The world may well
|
|
be challenged to produce so rich a galaxy of genius.
|
|
|
|
"The poem over the signature, "SNOB" is, we find, attracting
|
|
universal commendation, and, we are constrained to say, deserves, if
|
|
possible, even more applause than it has received. The 'Oil-of-Bob' is
|
|
the title of this masterpiece of eloquence and art. One or two of
|
|
our readers may have a very faint, although sufficiently disgusting
|
|
recollection of a poem (?) similarly entitled, the perpetration of a
|
|
miserable penny-a-liner, mendicant, and cut-throat, connected in the
|
|
capacity of scullion, we believe, with one of the indecent prints
|
|
about the purlieus of the city, we beg them, for God's sake, not to
|
|
confound the compositions. The author of the 'Oil-of-Bob' is, we hear,
|
|
Thingum Bob, Esq, a gentleman of high genius, and a scholar. 'Snob' is
|
|
merely a nom de guerre. Sep. 15- 1 t."
|
|
|
|
I could scarcely restrain my indignation while I perused the
|
|
concluding portions of this diatribe. It was clear to me that the
|
|
yea-nay manner- not to say the gentleness,- the positive
|
|
forbearance- with which the "Daddy-Long-Legs" spoke of that pig, the
|
|
editor of the "Gad-Fly,"- it was evident to me, I say, that this
|
|
gentleness of speech could proceed from nothing else than a partiality
|
|
for the "Fly"- whom it was clearly the intention of the
|
|
"Daddy-Long-Legs" to elevate into reputation at my expense. Any one,
|
|
indeed, might perceive, with half an eye, that, had the real design of
|
|
the "Daddy" been what it wished to appear, it (the "Daddy") might have
|
|
expressed itself in terms more direct, more pungent, and altogether
|
|
more to the purpose. The words "penny-a-liner," "mendicant,"
|
|
"scullion," and "cut-throat," were epithets so intentionally
|
|
inexpressive and equivocal, as to be worse than nothing when applied
|
|
to the author of the very worst stanzas ever penned by one of the
|
|
human race. We all know what is meant by "damning with faint
|
|
praise," and, on the other hand, who could fail seeing through the
|
|
covert purpose of the "Daddy,"- that of glorifying with feeble abuse?
|
|
|
|
What the "Daddy" chose to say to the "Fly," however, was no business
|
|
of mine. What it said of myself was. After the noble manner in which
|
|
the "Owl," the "Toad," the "Mole," had expressed themselves in respect
|
|
to my ability, it was rather too much to be coolly spoken of by a
|
|
thing like the "Daddy-Long-Legs," as merely "a gentleman of high
|
|
genius and scholar." Gentleman indeed! I made up my mind at once
|
|
either to get written apology from the "Daddy-Long-Legs," or to call
|
|
it out.
|
|
|
|
Full of this purpose, I looked about me to find a friend whom I
|
|
could entrust with a message to his "Daddy"ship, and as the editor
|
|
of the "Lollipop" had given me marked tokens of regard, I at length
|
|
concluded to seek assistance upon the present occasion.
|
|
|
|
I have never yet been able to account, in a manner satisfactory to
|
|
my own understanding, for the very peculiar countenance and demeanor
|
|
with which Mr. Crab listened to me, as I unfolded to him my design. He
|
|
again went through the scene of the bell-rope and cudgel, and did
|
|
not omit the duck. At one period I thought he really intended to
|
|
quack. His fit, nevertheless, finally subsided as before, and he began
|
|
to act and speak in a rational way. He declined bearing the cartel,
|
|
however, and in fact, dissuaded me from sending it at all; but was
|
|
candid enough to admit that the "Daddy-Long-Legs" had been
|
|
disgracefully in the wrong- more especially in what related to the
|
|
epithets "gentleman and scholar."
|
|
|
|
Toward the end of this interview with Mr. Crab, who really
|
|
appeared to take a paternal interest in my welfare, he suggested to me
|
|
that I might turn an honest penny, and at the same time, advance my
|
|
reputation, by occasionally playing Thomas Hawk for the "Lollypop."
|
|
|
|
I begged Mr. Crab to inform me who was Mr. Thomas Hawk, and how it
|
|
was expected that I should play him.
|
|
|
|
Here Mr. Crab again "made great eyes" (as we say in Germany), but at
|
|
length, recovering himself from a profound attack of astonishment,
|
|
he assured me that he employed the words "Thomas Hawk" to avoid the
|
|
colloquialism, Tommy, which was low- but that the true idea was
|
|
Tommy Hawk- or tomahawk- and that by "playing tomahawk" he referred to
|
|
scalping, brow-beating, and otherwise using- up the herd of poor-devil
|
|
authors.
|
|
|
|
I assured my patron that, if this was all, I was perfectly
|
|
resigned to the task of playing Thomas Hawk. Hereupon Mr. Crab desired
|
|
me to use up the editor of the "Gad-Fly" forthwith, in the fiercest
|
|
style within the scope of my ability, and as a specimen of my
|
|
powers. This I did, upon the spot, in a review of the original
|
|
"Oil-of-Bob," occupying thirty-six pages of the "Lollipop." I found
|
|
playing Thomas Hawk, indeed, a far less onerous occupation than
|
|
poetizing; for I went upon system altogether, and thus it was easy
|
|
to do the thing thoroughly well. My practice was this. I bought
|
|
auction copies (cheap) of "Lord Brougham's speeches," "Cobbett's
|
|
Complete Works," the "New Slang-Syllabus," the "Whole Art of
|
|
Snubbing," "Prentice's Billingsgate" (folio edition), and "Lewis G.
|
|
Clarke on Tongue." These works I cut up thoroughly with a
|
|
curry-comb, and then, throwing the shreds into a sieve, sifted out
|
|
carefully all that might be thought decent (a mere trifle);
|
|
reserving the hard phrases, which I threw into a large tin
|
|
pepper-castor with longitudinal holes, so that an entire sentence
|
|
could get through without material injury. The mixture was then
|
|
ready for use. When called upon to play Thomas Hawk, I anointed a
|
|
sheet of foolscap with the white of a gander's egg; then, shredding
|
|
the thing to be reviewed as I had previously shredded the books-
|
|
only with more care, so as to get every word separate- I threw the
|
|
latter shreds in with the former, screwed on the lid of the castor,
|
|
gave it a shake, and so dusted out the mixture upon the egged
|
|
foolscap; where it stuck. The effect was beautiful to behold. It was
|
|
captivating. Indeed, the reviews I brought to pass by this simple
|
|
expedient have never been approached, and were the wonder of the
|
|
world. At first, through bashfulness- the result of inexperience- I
|
|
was a little put out by a certain inconsistency- a certain air of
|
|
the bizarre (as we say in France), worn by the composition as a whole.
|
|
All the phrases did not fit (as we say in the Anglo-Saxon). Many
|
|
were quite awry. Some, even, were upside-down; and there were none
|
|
of them which were not in some measure, injured in regard to effect,
|
|
by this latter species of accident, when it occurred- with the
|
|
exception of Mr. Lewis Clarkes paragraphs, which were so vigorous
|
|
and altogether stout, that they seemed not particularly disconcerted
|
|
by any extreme of position, but looked equally happy and satisfactory,
|
|
whether on their heads, or on their heels.
|
|
|
|
What became of the editor of the "Gad-Fly" after the publication
|
|
of my criticism on his "Oil-of-Bob," it is somewhat difficult to
|
|
determine. The most reasonable conclusion is, that he wept himself
|
|
to death. At all events he disappeared instantaneously from the face
|
|
of the earth, and no man has seen even the ghost of him since.
|
|
|
|
This matter having been properly accomplished, and the Furies
|
|
appeased, I grew at once into high favor with Mr. Crab. He took me
|
|
into his confidence, gave me a permanent situation as Thomas Hawk of
|
|
the "Lollipop," and, as for the present, he could afford me no salary,
|
|
allowed me to profit, at discretion, by his advice.
|
|
|
|
"My dear Thingum," said he to me one day after dinner, "I respect
|
|
your abilities and love you as a son. You shall be my heir. When I die
|
|
I will bequeath you the "Lollipop." In the meantime I will make a
|
|
man of you- I will- provided always that you follow my counsel. The
|
|
first thing to do is to get rid of the old bore."
|
|
|
|
"Boar?" said I inquiringly- "pig, eh?- aper? (as we say in Latin)-
|
|
who?- where?"
|
|
|
|
"Your father," said he.
|
|
|
|
"Precisely," I replied- "pig."
|
|
|
|
"You have your fortune to make, Thingum," resumed Mr. Crab, "and
|
|
that governor of yours is a millstone about your neck. We must cut him
|
|
at once." [Here I took out my knife.] "We must cut him," continued Mr.
|
|
Crab, "decidedly and forever. He won't do- he won't. Upon second
|
|
thoughts, you had better kick him, or cane him, or something of that
|
|
kind."
|
|
|
|
"What do you say," I suggested modestly, "to my kicking him in the
|
|
first instance, caning him afterward, and winding up by tweaking his
|
|
nose?"
|
|
|
|
Mr. Crab looked at me musingly for some moments, and then answered:
|
|
|
|
"I think, Mr. Bob, that what you propose would answer sufficiently
|
|
well- indeed remarkably well- that is to say, as far as it went- but
|
|
barbers are exceedingly hard to cut, and I think, upon the whole,
|
|
that, having performed upon Thomas Bob the operations you suggest,
|
|
it would be advisable to blacken, with your fists, both his eyes, very
|
|
carefully and thoroughly, to prevent his ever seeing you again in
|
|
fashionable promenades. After doing this, I really do not perceive
|
|
that you can do any more. However- it might be just as well to roll
|
|
him once or twice in the gutter, and then put him in charge of the
|
|
police. Any time the next morning you can call at the watch-house
|
|
and swear an assault."
|
|
|
|
I was much affected by the kindness of feeling toward me personally,
|
|
which was evinced in this excellent advice of Mr. Crab, and I did
|
|
not fail to profit by it forthwith. The result was, that I got rid
|
|
of the old bore, and began to feel a little independent and
|
|
gentleman-like. The want of money, however, was, for a few weeks, a
|
|
source of some discomfort; but at length, by carefully putting to
|
|
use my two eyes, and observing how matters went just in front of my
|
|
nose, I perceived how the thing was to be brought about. I say
|
|
"thing"- be it observed- for they tell me in the Latin for it is
|
|
rem. By the way, talking of Latin, can any one tell me the meaning
|
|
of quocunque- or what is the meaning of modo?
|
|
|
|
My plan was exceedingly simple. I bought, for a song, a sixteenth of
|
|
the "Snapping-Turtle":- that was all. The thing was done, and I put
|
|
money in my purse. There were some trivial arrangements afterward,
|
|
to be sure, but these formed no portion of the plan. They were a
|
|
consequence- a result. For example, I bought pen, ink, and paper,
|
|
and put them into furious activity. Having thus completed a Magazine
|
|
article, I gave it, for appellation, "Fol Lol, by the Author of 'THE
|
|
OIL-OF-BOB,'" and enveloped it to the "Goosetherumfoodle." That
|
|
journal, however, having pronounced it "twattle" in the "Monthly
|
|
Notices to Correspondents," I reheaded the paper
|
|
"Hey-Diddle-Diddle," by Thigum BOB, Esq., Author of the Ode on 'The
|
|
Oil-of-Bob,' and Editor of the 'Snapping Turtle.'" With this
|
|
amendment, I re-enclosed it to the "Goosetherumfoodle," and, while I
|
|
awaited a reply, published daily, in the "Turtle," six columns of what
|
|
may be termed philosophical and analytical investigation of the
|
|
literary merits of the "Goosetherumfoodle," as well as of the personal
|
|
character of the editor of the "Goosetherumfoodle." At the end of a
|
|
week the "Goosetherumfoodle," discovered that it had, by some odd
|
|
mistake, "confounded a stupid article, headed 'Hey-Diddle-Diddle,' and
|
|
composed by some unknown ignoramus, with a gem of resplendent lustre
|
|
similarly entitled, the work of Thingum Bob, Esq, the celebrated
|
|
author of 'The Oil-of-Bob.'" The "Goosetherumfoodle" deeply "regretted
|
|
this very natural accident," and promised, moreover, an insertion of
|
|
the genuine "Hey-Diddle-Diddle" in the very next number of the
|
|
Magazine.
|
|
|
|
The fact is, I thought- I really thought- I thought at the time- I
|
|
thought then- and have no reason for thinking otherwise now- that
|
|
the "Goosetherumfoodle" did make a mistake. With the best intentions
|
|
in the world, I never knew any thing that made as many singular
|
|
mistakes as the "Goosetherumfoodle." From that day I took a liking
|
|
to the "Goosetherumfoodle" and the result was I soon saw into the very
|
|
depths of its literary merits, and did not fail to expatiate upon
|
|
them, in the "Turtle," whenever a fitting opportunity occurred. And it
|
|
is to be regarded as a very peculiar coincidence- as one of those
|
|
positively remarkable coincidences which set a man to serious
|
|
thinking- that just such a total revolution of opinion- just such
|
|
entire bouleversement (as we say in French)- just such thorough
|
|
topsiturviness (if I may be permitted to employ a rather forcible term
|
|
of the Choctaws), as happened, pro and con, between myself on the
|
|
one part, and the "Goosetherumfoodle" on the other, did actually again
|
|
happen, in a brief period afterwards, and with precisely similar
|
|
circumstances, in the case of myself and the "Rowdy-Dow," and in the
|
|
case of myself and the "Hum-Drum."
|
|
|
|
Thus it was that, by a master-stroke of genius, I at length
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consummated my triumphs by "putting money in my purse," and thus may
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be said really and fairly to have commenced that brilliant and
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eventful career which rendered me illustrious, and which now enables
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me to say with Chateaubriand: "I have made history"- J'ai fait
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l'histoire."
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I have indeed "made history." From the bright epoch which I now
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|
record, my actions- my works- are the property of mankind. They are
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familiar to the world. It is, then, needless for me to detail how,
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soaring rapidly, I fell heir to the "Lollipop"- how I merged this
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journal in the "Hum-Drum"- how again I made purchase of the
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"Rowdy-Dow," thus combining the three periodicals- how lastly, I
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|
effected a bargain for the sole remaining rival, and united all the
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literature of the country in one magnificent Magazine known everywhere
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|
as the-
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Rowdy-Dow, Lollipop, Hum-Drum,
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and
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GOOSETHERUMFOODLE.
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Yes, I have made history. My fame is universal. It extends to the
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|
uttermost ends of the earth. You cannot take up a common newspaper
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|
in which you shall not see some allusion to the immortal Thigum Bob.
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|
It is Mr. Thingum Bob said so, and Mr. Thingum Bob wrote this, and Mr.
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|
Thingum Bob did that. But I am meek and expire with an humble heart.
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|
After all, what is it?- this indescribable something which men will
|
|
persist in terming "genius"? I agree with Buffon- with Hogarth- it
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|
is but diligence after all.
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Look at me!- how I labored- how I toiled- how I wrote! Ye Gods,
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|
did I not write? I knew not the word "ease." By day I adhered to my
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|
desk, and at night, a pale student, I consumed the midnight oil. You
|
|
should have seen me- you should. I leaned to the right. I leaned to
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|
the left. I sat forward. I sat backward. I sat tete baissee (as they
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|
have it in the Kickapoo), bowing my head close to the alabaster
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|
page. And, through all, I- wrote. Through joy and through sorrow,
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|
I-wrote. Through hunger and through thirst, I-wrote. Through good
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|
report and through ill report- I wrote. Through sunshine and through
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|
moonshine, I-wrote. What I wrote it is unnecessary to say. The style!-
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|
that was the thing. I caught it from Fatquack- whizz!- fizz!- and I am
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|
giving you a specimen of it now.
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THE END
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.
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