Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy - Stephen Leacock

Moonbeams from the Larger Lunacy

CONTENTS

The prudent husbandman, after having taken from his field all the straw that is there, rakes it over with a wooden rake and gets as much again. The wise child, after the lemonade jug is empty, takes the lemons from the bottom of it and squeezes them into a still larger brew. So does the sagacious author, after having sold his material to the magazines and been paid for it, clap it into book-covers and give it another squeeze. But in the present case the author is of a nice conscience and anxious to place responsibility where it is due. He therefore wishes to make all proper acknowledgments to the editors of Vanity Fair, The American Magazine, The Popular Magazine, Life, Puck, The Century, Methuen’s Annual, and all others who are in any way implicated in the making of this book.
McGill University, Montreal. Oct. 1, 1915.



Readers are requested to note that this novel has taken our special prize of a cheque for a thousand guineas. This alone guarantees for all intelligent readers a palpitating interest in every line of it. Among the thousands of MSS. which reached us—many of them coming in carts early in the morning, and moving in a dense phalanx, indistinguishable from the Covent Garden Market waggons; others pouring down our coal-chute during the working hours of the day; and others again being slipped surreptitiously into our letter-box by pale, timid girls, scarcely more than children, after nightfall (in fact many of them came in their night-gowns),—this manuscript alone was the sole one—in fact the only one—to receive the prize of a cheque of a thousand guineas. To other competitors we may have given, inadvertently perhaps, a bag of sovereigns or a string of pearls, but to this story alone is awarded the first prize by the unanimous decision of our judges.
When we say that the latter body included two members of the Cabinet, two Lords of the Admiralty, and two bishops, with power in case of dispute to send all the MSS. to the Czar of Russia, our readers will breathe a sigh of relief to learn that the decision was instant and unanimous. Each one of them, in reply to our telegram, answered immediately SPOOF.

Stephen Leacock
Содержание

MOONBEAMS FROM THE LARGER LUNACY


PREFACE


STEPHEN LEACOCK.


I.—SPOOF. A Thousand-Guinea Novel. New! Fascinating! Perplexing!


CHAPTER I


CHAPTER II


CHAPTER III


. . . . . . .


. . . . . . .


. . . . . . .


CHAPTER IV


II.—THE READING PUBLIC. A BOOK STORE STUDY


III.—AFTERNOON ADVENTURES AT MY CLUB


1.—The Anecdotes of Dr. So and So


2.—The Shattered Health of Mr. Podge


3.—The Amazing Travels of Mr. Yarner


4.—The Spiritual Outlook of Mr. Doomer


5.—The Reminiscences of Mr. Apricot


6.—The Last Man out of Europe


7.—The War Mania of Mr. Jinks and Mr. Blinks


8.—The Ground Floor


9.—The Hallucination of Mr. Butt


IV-RAM SPUDD THE NEW WORLD SINGER.


Is He Divinely Inspired? Or Is He Not? At Any Rate We Discovered Him.


V.—ARISTOCRATIC ANECDOTES OR LITTLE STORIES OF GREAT


PEOPLE


ANECDOTE OF THE DUKE OF STRATHYTHAN


ANECDOTE OF LORD KITCHENER


NEW LIGHT ON THE LIFE OF CAVOUR


TENDERNESS OF A QUEEN


VI.—EDUCATION MADE AGREEABLE OR THE DIVERSIONS OF A


PROFESSOR


VII.—AN EVERY-DAY EXPERIENCE


VIII—TRUTHFUL ORATORY


II


III


IX.—OUR LITERARY BUREAU


JANUARY INSTALMENT


FEBRUARY INSTALMENT


MARCH INSTALMENT


APRIL INSTALMENT


MAY INSTALMENT


JUNE INSTALMENT


JULY INSTALMENT


AUGUST INSTALMENT


SEPTEMBER INSTALMENT


OCTOBER INSTALMENT


NOVEMBER INSTALMENT


DECEMBER INSTALMENT


CONCLUDING NOTE


X.—SPEEDING UP BUSINESS


XI.—WHO IS ALSO WHO


A Companion Volume to Who’s Who


XII.—PASSIONATE PARAGRAPHS


XIII.—WEEJEE THE PET DOG


An Idyll of the Summer


XIV.—SIDELIGHTS ON THE SUPERMEN


An Interview with General Bernhardi


XV.—THE SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST


XVI—THE FIRST NEWSPAPER


A Sort of Allegory


XVII—IN THE GOOD TIME AFTER THE WAR


HOUSE OF COMMONS REPORT

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2003-05-01

Темы

Canadian wit and humor

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