We were satisfied that we could walk to Oppenau in one day, now that we were
in practice; so we set out the next morning after breakfast determined to do it.
It was all the way downhill, and we had the loveliest summer weather for it. So
we set the pedometer and then stretched away on an easy, regular stride, down
through the cloven forest, drawing in the fragrant breath of the morning in deep
refreshing draughts, and wishing we might never have anything to do forever but
walk to Oppenau and keep on doing it and then doing it over again.
Now, the true charm of pedestrianism does not lie in the walking, or in the
scenery, but in the talking. The walking is good to time the movement of the
tongue by, and to keep the blood and the brain stirred up and active; the
scenery and the woodsy smells are good to bear in upon a man an unconscious and
unobtrusive charm and solace to eye and soul and sense; but the supreme pleasure
comes from the talk. It is no matter whether one talks wisdom or nonsense, the
case is the same, the bulk of the enjoyment lies in the wagging of the gladsome
jaw and the flapping of the sympathetic ear.
And what motley variety of subjects a couple of people will casually rake
over in the course of a day's tramp! There being no constraint, a change of
subject is always in order, and so a body is not likely to keep pegging at a
single topic until it grows tiresome. We discussed everything we knew, during
the first fifteen or twenty minutes, that morning, and then branched out into
the glad, free, boundless realm of the things we were not certain about.
Harris said that if the best writer in the world once got the slovenly habit
of doubling up his "haves" he could never get rid of it while he lived. That is
to say, if a man gets the habit of saying "I should have liked to have known
more about it" instead of saying simply and sensibly, "I should have liked to
know more about it," that man's disease is incurable. Harris said that his sort
of lapse is to be found in every copy of every newspaper that has ever been
printed in English, and in almost all of our books. He said he had observed it
in Kirkham's grammar and in Macaulay. Harris believed that milk-teeth are
commoner in men's mouths than those "doubled-up haves." [1]
1. I do not know that there have not been moments in the course of the
present session when I should have been very glad to have accepted the proposal
of my noble friend, and to have exchanged parts in some of our evenings of
work.--[From a Speech of the English Chancellor of the Exchequer, August, 1879.]
That changed the subject to dentistry. I said I believed the average man
dreaded tooth-pulling more than amputation, and that he would yell quicker under
the former operation than he would under the latter. The philosopher Harris said
that the average man would not yell in either case if he had an audience. Then
he continued:
"When our brigade first went into camp on the Potomac, we used to be brought
up standing, occasionally, by an ear-splitting howl of anguish. That meant that
a soldier was getting a tooth pulled in a tent. But the surgeons soon changed
that; they instituted open-air dentistry. There never was a howl afterward--that
is, from the man who was having the tooth pulled. At the daily dental hour there
would always be about five hundred soldiers gathered together in the
neighborhood of that dental chair waiting to see the performance--and help; and
the moment the surgeon took a grip on the candidate's tooth and began to lift,
every one of those five hundred rascals would clap his hand to his jaw and begin
to hop around on one leg and howl with all the lungs he had! It was enough to
raise your hair to hear that variegated and enormous unanimous caterwaul burst
out! With so big and so derisive an audience as that, a suffer wouldn't emit a
sound though you pulled his head off. The surgeons said that pretty often a
patient was compelled to laugh, in the midst of his pangs, but that had never
caught one crying out, after the open-air exhibition was instituted."
Dental surgeons suggested doctors, doctors suggested death, death suggested
skeletons--and so, by a logical process the conversation melted out of one of
these subjects and into the next, until the topic of skeletons raised up
Nicodemus Dodge out of the deep grave in my memory where he had lain buried and
forgotten for twenty-five years. When I was a boy in a printing-office in
Missouri, a loose-jointed, long-legged, tow-headed, jeans-clad countrified cub
of about sixteen lounged in one day, and without removing his hands from the
depths of his trousers pockets or taking off his faded ruin of a slouch hat,
whose broken rim hung limp and ragged about his eyes and ears like a bug-eaten
cabbage leaf, stared indifferently around, then leaned his hip against the
editor's table, crossed his mighty brogans, aimed at a distant fly from a
crevice in his upper teeth, laid him low, and said with composure:
"Whar's the boss?"
"I am the boss," said the editor, following this curious bit of architecture
wonderingly along up to its clock-face with his eye.
"Don't want anybody fur to learn the business, 'tain't likely?"
"Well, I don't know. Would you like to learn it?"
"Pap's so po' he cain't run me no mo', so I want to git a show somers if I
kin, 'taint no diffunce what--I'm strong and hearty, and I don't turn my back on
no kind of work, hard nur soft."
"Do you think you would like to learn the printing business?"
"Well, I don't re'ly k'yer a durn what I DO learn, so's I git a chance fur to
make my way. I'd jist as soon learn print'n's anything."
"Can you read?"
"Yes--middlin'."
"Write?"
"Well, I've seed people could lay over me thar."
"Cipher?"
"Not good enough to keep store, I don't reckon, but up as fur as
twelve-times-twelve I ain't no slouch. 'Tother side of that is what gits me."
"Where is your home?"
"I'm f'm old Shelby."
"What's your father's religious denomination?"
"Him? Oh, he's a blacksmith."
"No, no--I don't mean his trade. What's his RELIGIOUS DENOMINATION?"
"OH--I didn't understand you befo'. He's a Freemason."
"No, no, you don't get my meaning yet. What I mean is, does he belong to any
CHURCH?"
"NOW you're talkin'! Couldn't make out what you was a-tryin' to git through
yo' head no way. B'long to a CHURCH! Why, boss, he's ben the pizenest kind of
Free-will Babtis' for forty year. They ain't no pizener ones 'n what HE is.
Mighty good man, pap is. Everybody says that. If they said any diffrunt they
wouldn't say it whar _I_ wuz-- not MUCH they wouldn't."
"What is your own religion?"
"Well, boss, you've kind o' got me, there--and yit you hain't got me so
mighty much, nuther. I think 't if a feller he'ps another feller when he's in
trouble, and don't cuss, and don't do no mean things, nur noth'n' he ain' no
business to do, and don't spell the Saviour's name with a little g, he ain't
runnin' no resks--he's about as saift as he b'longed to a church."
"But suppose he did spell it with a little g--what then?"
"Well, if he done it a-purpose, I reckon he wouldn't stand no chance--he
OUGHTN'T to have no chance, anyway, I'm most rotten certain 'bout that."
"What is your name?"
"Nicodemus Dodge."
"I think maybe you'll do, Nicodemus. We'll give you a trial, anyway."
"All right."
"When would you like to begin?"
"Now."
So, within ten minutes after we had first glimpsed this nondescript he was
one of us, and with his coat off and hard at it.
Beyond that end of our establishment which was furthest from the street, was
a deserted garden, pathless, and thickly grown with the bloomy and villainous
"jimpson" weed and its common friend the stately sunflower. In the midst of this
mournful spot was a decayed and aged little "frame" house with but one room, one
window, and no ceiling--it had been a smoke-house a generation before. Nicodemus
was given this lonely and ghostly den as a bedchamber.
The village smarties recognized a treasure in Nicodemus, right away--a butt
to play jokes on. It was easy to see that he was inconceivably green and
confiding. George Jones had the glory of perpetrating the first joke on him; he
gave him a cigar with a firecracker in it and winked to the crowd to come; the
thing exploded presently and swept away the bulk of Nicodemus's eyebrows and
eyelashes. He simply said:
"I consider them kind of seeg'yars dangersome,"--and seemed to suspect
nothing. The next evening Nicodemus waylaid George and poured a bucket of
ice-water over him.
One day, while Nicodemus was in swimming, Tom McElroy "tied" his clothes.
Nicodemus made a bonfire of Tom's by way of retaliation.
A third joke was played upon Nicodemus a day or two later--he walked up the
middle aisle of the village church, Sunday night, with a staring handbill pinned
between his shoulders. The joker spent the remainder of the night, after church,
in the cellar of a deserted house, and Nicodemus sat on the cellar door till
toward breakfast-time to make sure that the prisoner remembered that if any
noise was made, some rough treatment would be the consequence. The cellar had
two feet of stagnant water in it, and was bottomed with six inches of soft mud.
But I wander from the point. It was the subject of skeletons that brought
this boy back to my recollection. Before a very long time had elapsed, the
village smarties began to feel an uncomfortable consciousness of not having made
a very shining success out of their attempts on the simpleton from "old Shelby."
Experimenters grew scarce and chary. Now the young doctor came to the rescue.
There was delight and applause when he proposed to scare Nicodemus to death, and
explained how he was going to do it. He had a noble new skeleton--the skeleton
of the late and only local celebrity, Jimmy Finn, the village drunkard--a grisly
piece of property which he had bought of Jimmy Finn himself, at auction, for
fifty dollars, under great competition, when Jimmy lay very sick in the tan-yard
a fortnight before his death. The fifty dollars had gone promptly for whiskey
and had considerably hurried up the change of ownership in the skeleton. The
doctor would put Jimmy Finn's skeleton in Nicodemus's bed!
This was done--about half past ten in the evening. About Nicodemus's usual
bedtime--midnight--the village jokers came creeping stealthily through the
jimpson weeds and sunflowers toward the lonely frame den. They reached the
window and peeped in. There sat the long-legged pauper, on his bed, in a very
short shirt, and nothing more; he was dangling his legs contentedly back and
forth, and wheezing the music of "Camptown Races" out of a paper-overlaid comb
which he was pressing against his mouth; by him lay a new jewsharp, a new top,
and solid india-rubber ball, a handful of painted marbles, five pounds of
"store" candy, and a well-gnawed slab of gingerbread as big and as thick as a
volume of sheet-music. He had sold the skeleton to a traveling quack for three
dollars and was enjoying the result!
Just as we had finished talking about skeletons and were drifting into the
subject of fossils, Harris and I heard a shout, and glanced up the steep
hillside. We saw men and women standing away up there looking frightened, and
there was a bulky object tumbling and floundering down the steep slope toward
us. We got out of the way, and when the object landed in the road it proved to
be a boy. He had tripped and fallen, and there was nothing for him to do but
trust to luck and take what might come.
When one starts to roll down a place like that, there is no stopping till the
bottom is reached. Think of people FARMING on a slant which is so steep that the
best you can say of it--if you want to be fastidiously accurate--is, that it is
a little steeper than a ladder and not quite so steep as a mansard roof. But
that is what they do. Some of the little farms on the hillside opposite
Heidelberg were stood up "edgeways." The boy was wonderfully jolted up, and his
head was bleeding, from cuts which it had got from small stones on the way.
Harris and I gathered him up and set him on a stone, and by that time the men
and women had scampered down and brought his cap.
Men, women, and children flocked out from neighboring cottages and joined the
crowd; the pale boy was petted, and stared at, and commiserated, and water was
brought for him to drink and bathe his bruises in. And such another clatter of
tongues! All who had seen the catastrophe were describing it at once, and each
trying to talk louder than his neighbor; and one youth of a superior genius ran
a little way up the hill, called attention, tripped, fell, rolled down among us,
and thus triumphantly showed exactly how the thing had been done.
Harris and I were included in all the descriptions; how we were coming along;
how Hans Gross shouted; how we looked up startled; how we saw Peter coming like
a cannon-shot; how judiciously we got out of the way, and let him come; and with
what presence of mind we picked him up and brushed him off and set him on a rock
when the performance was over. We were as much heroes as anybody else, except
Peter, and were so recognized; we were taken with Peter and the populace to
Peter's mother's cottage, and there we ate bread and cheese, and drank milk and
beer with everybody, and had a most sociable good time; and when we left we had
a handshake all around, and were receiving and shouting back LEB' WOHL's until a
turn in the road separated us from our cordial and kindly new friends forever.
We accomplished our undertaking. At half past eight in the evening we stepped
into Oppenau, just eleven hours and a half out of Allerheiligen--one hundred and
forty-six miles. This is the distance by pedometer; the guide-book and the
Imperial Ordinance maps make it only ten and a quarter--a surprising blunder,
for these two authorities are usually singularly accurate in the matter of
distances.
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