Transcriber’s Note:

The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.

FRONTIER HUMOR
IN
VERSE, PROSE AND PICTURE.

BY

PALMER COX,

AUTHOR OF “QUEER PEOPLE,” “THE BROWNIES,” ETC., ETC.

ILLUSTRATED.

EDGEWOOD PUBLISHING COMPANY.

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1889, by

HUBBARD BROS.,

In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington, D. C.

PUBLISHERS’ PREFACE.

Not only is truth stranger than fiction, but it is funnier also. Just as some men have no eye for colors, but are color blind; so some men have no eye for fun, but are fun blind. Happy is the man who can see the humor which bubbles up in daily life; doubly happy he who, having seen, can tell the fun to others and so spread the glad contagion of a laugh; but thrice happy is the man who, having seen, can tell the fun; and having told, can picture it for others’ eyes and so roll on the rollicking humor, for the brightening of a world already far too sad.

Palmer Cox is one who sees, and tells, and pictures all the fun within his reach, as this volume of Frontier Humor will certainly attest.

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

PAGE
Ah Tie—That Deadly Pie,[17]
New Year’s Callers,[21]
Scenes on the Sidewalk,[26]
Sam Patterson’s Balloon,[31]
My Canine,[53]
Jim Dudley’s Flight,[56]
Trials of the Farmer,[67]
A Cunning Dodge[69]
A Terrible Take in,[73]
A Family Jar,[78]
The Rod of Correction,[85]
Gone from his Gaze,[89]
St. Patrick’s Day,[91]
The Contented Frog,[97]
All Fools’ Day,[103]
Finding a Horse-shoe,[107]
An Evening with Scientists,[117]
Our Table Girl,[120]
An Old Woman in Peril,[122]
For Better or for Worse,[128]
Ode on a Bumble-bee,[131]
Dudley and the Greased Pig,[135]
Cora Lee,[156]
A Brilliant Forensic Effort,[162]
Visiting a School,[169]
The Rejected Suitor,[171]
A Night of Terror,[175]
My Drive to the Cliff,[178]
Second Sight,[184]
The Thief,[187]
A Startling Cat-astrophe,[194]
A Trip to the Mountains,[196]
An Impatient Undertaker,[209]
Sermon on a Pin,[218]
Dudley’s Fight with the Texan,[221]
Roller Skating,[242]
A Terrible Nose,[243]
A Masked Battery,[249]
The Prize I Didn’t Win,[257]
The Countryman’s Tooth,[260]
Mining Stocks,[262]
Ode on a Flea,[265]
Fighting it Out on that Line,[268]
Dudley’s Fight with Dr. Tweezer,[271]
My Neighbor Worsted,[285]
The Breathing Spell,[289]
A Visit to Benicia,[290]
Too Much of Indian,[297]
Going Up the Spout,[299]
The Glorious Fourth,[309]
Jim Dudley’s Sermon,[313]
The Poisoned Pet,[337]
Seeking for a Wife,[340]
David Goyle, the Miller Man,[349]
Heels Up and Heads Down,[360]
The Bitter End,[362]
A Trip to the Interior,[367]
Hunting with a Vengeance,[385]
The Art Gallery,[391]
A Rolling Stone,[396]
Riding in the Street Cars,[399]
Simon Rand,[408]
The Value of a Collar,[420]
Quaint Epitaphs,[425]
Mistaken Identity,[430]
Flirting, and What Came of It,[435]
The Champion Mean Man,[436]
In a Thousand Years,[452]
The Cobbler’s End,[454]
The Last of his Race,[460]
Jim Dudley’s Race,[462]
Oleomargarine,[481]
Dining Under Difficulties,[483]
Answers to Correspondents,[486]
Court-room Scenes,[489]
The Mason’s Ride,[493]
June,[497]
The Anniversary,[500]
A Country Town,[503]
A Trip Across the Bay,[507]
Christmas Eve,[513]

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

PAGE
Pictorial Title,[iii]
A Tight Place,[19]
Starting Out,[23]
A Little Mixed,[24]
The Ex-veteran of Waterloo,[27]
A Miner who will soon be Minus,[28]
May and December,[30]
Sam Patterson,[32]
Premature Ascent,[37]
Attempted Abduction of Sam’s Wife,[39]
“Let Me Git Out,”[41]
“Go in, Cripple,”[49]
A Right Angled Try-ankle,[51]
A Prey to Disease,[54]
Bob Browser,[57]
Old Hurley Welcomes Jim,[61]
Old Hurley on the War Path,[65]
A Happy Thought,[68]
Advance of the Cripple Brigade,[71]
“Pay in Advance, Sir,”[75]
Emperor Nelson, of San Francisco,[77]
Stranger Who Went Not In,[79]
The Stranger Who Went In,[83]
A Rear Attack,[87]
Little Dog’s Leather Collar,[90]
In the Morning,[93]
In the Evening,[94]
In Meditation,[98]
Bob’s Attack,[101]
Alas! Poor Frog,[102]
April,[103]
Sold,[104]
The Horse-shoe Charm,[109]
Repairs Needed,[113]
The President of the Academy,[119]
The Old Lady’s Ascent,[124]
The Trying Moment,[129]
Judge Perkins,[140]
Bad for the Fruit Business,[143]
Bow-legged Spinny,[146]
Nip and Tuck,[151]
More Light on the Subject,[154]
The Chief,[158]
Behind the Bars,[161]
The Advocate,[163]
Bill of Divorce,[167]
Head of his Class,[169]
Foot of her Class,[170]
A Suitor Nonsuited,[172]
A Rousing Event,[176]
Slightly Embarrassing,[181]
Badly Mixed,[182]
The Economist Seeing Double,[186]
Richard Roe, the Sardine Thief,[189]
The Judge,[191]
Neck to Neck,[199]
Steam let On,[203]
Blow me Up![207]
Business is Business,[213]
Bill After his Glass Eye,[223]
The Ministerial Looking Man,[227]
Startling Disclosures,[234]
Busting his Bugle,[244]
The One-eyed Swede,[250]
Needed Air,[254]
The Best Shot,[258]
The Ascent,[263]
The Descent,[264]
Going for the Doctor,[274]
Hands Up and Heads Down,[279]
Alas! Poor Doctor,[281]
One of Heenan’s Mementoes,[292]
A Scientific Opening,[294]
An Object of Suspicion,[300]
On a Raid,[304]
The Glorious Fourth,[309]
Arousing the Dog,[311]
The Final Explosion,[312]
Something New,[314]
The Doctor’s Scourge,[318]
Joe Grimsby,[322]
Truth is Powerful,[328]
Mr. Spudd,[331]
The Old Interrogator,[332]
Having a Quiet Time,[339]
The Crone,[341]
Attending to Business,[345]
Partner Wanted,[347]
The New Acquaintance,[353]
A One-sided Operation,[357]
Lively Work,[364]
A Mosquito on the Scent,[368]
To the Hilt in Blood,[371]
The Orchestra,[374]
Macbeth,[378]
Othello,[379]
A Startling Apparition,[383]
Advance of the Expedition,[386]
Boggs Retrieving his Game,[390]
From a Painting by an Old Master,[392]
Love’s Young Dream,[394]
A Through Passenger,[397]
The Signal Station,[400]
Rather “Sloroppy,”[403]
Sniffing the Battle from Afar,[404]
Alighting Gracefully,[407]
Revenge is Sweet,[411]
The Exploring Party,[413]
“Up he Comes,”[416]
Unpromising Outlook,[418]
No Collar, No Crumbs,[422]
The Sexton,[429]
The Clergyman in Limbo,[432]
Sleepy Doby,[440]
Opening his Heart,[444]
Swearing to Get Even,[449]
A Moving Scene,[457]
Slipping Off the Mortal Coil,[458]
The Last of his Race,[460]
Abe Drake,[464]
Kate Rykert,[466]
Mrs. O’Laughlan,[472]
Just as it Was,[473]
Curing People’s Corns,[478]
Bummers on the Raid,[484]
A Drowsy Jury,[490]
The Rocky Road to Masonry,[495]
June,[497]
The Fire Department,[506]
Peering into the Depths,[508]
Good-Bye,[509]
Sketching from Nature,[510]
So Sick![511]
At the Rail,[512]

AH TIE.
THAT DEADLY PIE.

I Sing the woe and overthrow

Of one debased and sly,

Who entered soft a baker’s shop,

And stole a currant pie.

And not a soul about the place,

And no one passing by,

Chanced to detect him in the act,

Or dreamed that he was nigh.

The moon alone with lustre shone,

And viewed him from the sky,

And broadly smiled, as musing on

The sequel by and by.

Ah Tie began, while fast he ran,

To gobble down the pie,

Determined that, if caught at last,

No proof should meet the eye.

For not the fox, for cunning famed,

The crow, or weasel, sly,

Could with that erring man compare—

The heathen thief, Ah Tie.

But, blessings on the pastry man!

Oh! blessings, rich and high,

Upon the cook who cooked a rag

Within that currant pie!

Dim was the light, and large the bite

The thief to bolt did try,

And in his haste, along with paste,

He gulped the wiper dry.

So thus it proves that slight affairs

Do oft, as none deny,

For good or evil, unawares,

Be waiting with reply.

The influence of every plot,

Or action bold or sly,

Or good or bad, mistake or not,

Will speak, we may rely.

He strove in vain, with cough and strain.

And finger swallowed nigh,

Or in, or out, to force the clout,

Or turn the thing awry.

But tight as wadding in a gun,

Or cork in jug of rye,

The choking gag, but half-way down,

Fast in his throat did lie.

A TIGHT PLACE.

Not finger point, or second joint,

Or heaving cough, or pry,

Did seem to change its posture strange,

Or work a passage by.

The Lord was there, as everywhere—

His ways who can descry?

He turned to use the rag that missed

The cook’s incautious eye.

The race was short, as it must be

When lungs get no supply

Of ever needful oxygen,

The blood to purify.

It matters not how large or small

The man, or beast, or fly,

A little air must be their share,

Or else to life “good bye.”

Slow grew his pace, and black his face,

And blood-shot rolled his eye;

And from his nerveless fingers fell

The fragments of the pie.

The broken crust rolled in the dust,

While scattered currants fly;

But ah, the fatal part had gone

Upon its mission high.

Then down he dropped, a strangled man,

Without a witness nigh—

And Death, the grim old boatman, ran

His noiseless shallop by.

NEW YEAR’S CALLERS.

Heigh ho, the New Year is again upon us with its open houses, its “hope you’re wells,” and its “bye bye’s.”

Let what will grow dull or rusty, the sweeping scythe of old Time is ever sharp and busy. How tempered must be that blade which nothing can dull or turn aside.

Now as I sit by my window and look pensively out upon the streets I see them crowded with callers, all anxious to increase the number of their acquaintances. They ring, scrape, and wait. The door opens and they disappear from my view, but fancy pictures them out as they doubtless appear inside, embarrassed because of a painful dearth of words. The weather, fortunately, is a standing theme of conversation. It will always bear comment, and but for this how many callers—who perhaps can hardly come under the head of acquaintances—would wish themselves well out upon the street again, even before sampling the customary wine and cake.

But Fashion is King, and when he nods, his satellites and minions must obey or perish. But I, who come not under the awe of his scepter, have few calls to make. With a leaking roof and no bolt to my door I can keep “open house” without going to the expense of procuring cake or wine, and for this left-handed blessing may the Lord make me truly thankful.

STARTING OUT.

I have been sitting by my window most of the day, watching gentlemen—who were not so fortunate as myself. And I notice with considerable pain—for as reader and writer cannot understand each other too soon, I may as well inform you at once that I am a philanthropist—that some of these callers present an aspect in the evening quite different from their festive morning appearance. Here, for instance, is a sketch of an exquisite as he appears when starting to make his numerous calls. Mark what grace is in every movement as he struts the pavement with military precision, adjusting his lavender-colored kids as he goes. There is something in the airy set of his stylish new stove-pipe, in the very easy elegance of manner with which he holds the crystal orb over his left optic, that bespeaks the born gentleman. Not to a rise in stocks, he would tell you, or a lucky lottery ticket, does he owe his carriage, but to a line of ancestors which he can trace back, perhaps, to the very loins of William the Conqueror.

A LITTLE MIXED.

Look now upon this picture. The unpracticed eye could hardly recognize the gentleman, and yet this is the same sociable but absent-minded individual, as he appeared in the evening frogging up the steps of the dwelling opposite, to make his third call upon the same family. He is evidently “turned around,” poor fellow. Ah, this mixing of coffee, tea, and wine, not to mention stronger potations, will play the mischief with a man, and no mistake about it. The young ladies, with mouths ajar and dilated eyes, look out upon him through partially closed blinds. But he recks not of it as he leans backward, pulling and jerking at the bell knob as though he was drawing on a tight boot. The bell-hanger will doubtless have a job in that house to-morrow. The question naturally arises, will they chalk the gentleman down as a caller each time he favors them with his presence? Now that I think of it, they might do so with an easy conscience, for he is certainly not the man he was when he first offered the compliments of the day.

SCENES ON THE SIDEWALK.

I sit at my window to view the odd sights,

And whatever to study or action invites

Upon the white paper before me I spread,

By aid of my constant companion, the Lead.

A lady of Fashion sails by like a queen,

With ruffles and lace, and her satin de chine;

Her shimmering train as it now sweeps the street,

Is sadly ensnaring a gentleman’s feet.

It is painfully plain an apology’s due;

But which should apologize first of the two?

THE EX-VETERAN OF WATERLOO.

And next, an old man full of years shuffles by,

His nose to the dust, and his back to the sky;

The few snowy hairs that still cling to his head

Far down o’er his collar untidily spread.

And who now would think that the feeble, dry hand

That hardly can free the rude cane from the sand,

Once swung a long saber, that cut its way through

The cuirassiers’ helmets at famed Waterloo?

Old Time warps the figure firm-knitted and square,

He sharpens the feature, he blanches the hair,

And bows the proud head, be it ever so high;

This much hath he done for the man passing by.

A MINER WHO WILL SOON BE MINUS.

Away, to the fields of the diamond and ruby,

The miner sets out, like a consummate booby;

What loads the poor fellow proposes to pack:

His rifle, his shovel, his grub, and his sack;

His rifle to guard against numerous ills,

His shovel to shovel his way to the hills,

The long leather sack he bears in his hand,

To hold the bright gems he may pick from the sand;

In fancy I see him ascend the steep hill,

Or traverse the plain with his sack empty still;

While down on his head ever scorching-hot rays

Descend from th’ unclouded sun like a blaze,—

Too far from his friends, and too nigh to his foes,

Who welcome the stranger with arrows and bows,

And rifles, and war-clubs, and hatchets of stone,

And weapons for scalping, and lances of bone.

Trudge on to your treasure (?), poor dupe of the knave

And prey of the savage—pass on to your grave.

Now stepping as one, see the new-married pair

Emerge from the church. What a contrast is there!

Come haste to the window and gaze out with me—

Ere they enter their carriage the pair you may see.

Oh, May and December! extremes of the year,

When linked thus together, how odd they appear;

The bride in her teens, with a mind as unstable

As ladders of fame, or a medium’s table;

With a riotous pulse, and her blood all aglow

With the fervor of passion, of pleasure, and show.

The bridegroom is pussy, rheumatic and old,

His teeth are in rubber, his blood thin and cold;

His nose tells a tale of inordinate drams,

The gout has laid hold of his corn-laden yams;

The hairs on his cranium scattering stand,

Like ill-nourished blades on a desert of sand.

I muse as I gaze on their arms softly twined;

How soon some young maidens can alter their mind!

’Tis scarcely three weeks since I heard her declare,

When speaking of him who now walks by her there,

In marriage she never would give him her hand

Though rolling in gems, like a horse in the sand.

But she clings to him now, as a green, sappy vine

MAY AND DECEMBER.

Embraces the trunk of a time-honored pine;

While her looks and her manner would seem to imply

That she never before on a man cast an eye;

But I, delving back through the layers of Time,

Exhume the pale ghost of a youth in his prime,

Whose feelings were tortured, whose reason was muddied,

Whose pistol was emptied, whose temple was ruddied;

Because of coquetry so heartless and strange,

Her passion for diamonds, her longing for change.

Pass on, happy bride, with your beaming young face;

May happiness still with your moments keep pace,

And never mistrust pierce the groom at your side

That wealth, and not virtues, have won him his bride.

SAM PATTERSON’S BALLOON.

Last night while a party of us were sitting around the table in the cabin of the New World, talking about the “Avitor” and aerial sailing generally, our conversation was interrupted by a dark, raw-boned Hoosier who had entered the cabin shortly after the steamer left her wharf. He kept squirming on his chair for some time, and was evidently anxious to take part in the conversation. “I say, boys, I’m Sam Patterson,” he commenced at last, “and if this yer dish is free and no one han’t no objections, I’d like mi’ty well to dip my spoon in.”

SAM PATTERSON.

All turned to look at the speaker. Even the fat old gentleman who during our conversation had not taken his eyes from the Christian Guardian he was reading, stretched up and peered over the top of the paper at Sam. Before any one could reply the Hoosier gave his chair a hitch nigher the table and went on:

“I say, boss,” he continued, addressing his conversation to me, perhaps because I had just been expressing my opinion, “I don’t go a picayune on navigatin’ the air. They ain’t no need of talkin’ and gassin’ about crossin’ the ’tlantic or any of them foolish ventur’s. I happen to know somethin’ about balloonin’, and understand pooty near what you can do and what you can’t do with one of them fellers. I’d a plag’y sight ruther undertake to cross the ocean in a dug-out, than ventur’ in one of them tricky cobwebs; you can’t depend on ’em. Thar like a flea—when a man thinks he’s got ’em he hain’t.”

“Perhaps you are misled by prejudice?” I ventured to remark.

“No, I ain’t nuther,” answered the Hoosier, “I speak from experience. I’ve bin thar.”

“Oh! you have given the aeronautic science some attention then?” I said. “An inventor, I presume?”

“Wal, no. I don’t exactly claim to be an inventor,” he replied; “I reckon I foller’d on the old plan, exceptin’ in the material used in constructin’.”

“Did you ever make an ascension?” I asked.

“Wal, yes, I’ve bin up some,” he answered dryly.

“Have you ever been very high?” inquired the fat old gentleman, who seemed to grow interested.

“Perhaps not so high as eagles or turkey-buzzards fly, but a mi’ty sight higher than barn-yard fowls ventur’,” answered the Hoosier. “You see,” he continued, “I was stayin’ down to Orleans once for about a week, and thar was a professor had a balloon in the park hitched to a stake, and he was histin’ people up the length of the rope for two bits a head. I stepped into the cradle that was a hangin’ to it, and went up the length of the rope, and liked it pooty well. I went up three or four times and made considerable inquiries about the manner of constructin’ and inflatin’, as I was cal’latin to rig up one when I got hum to Tuckersville.

“When I got back I telled Sal what I was bent on doin’. She tried pooty hard to git the notion out of my head, but t’was stuck thar, like a bur to a cow’s tail. I telled her it mout be the makin’ of us, so arter a while she gin in, and as silk was too alfired expensive Sal gin me a lot of bed sheets and helped me sew ’em together down in the cellar. We put it together down thar ’cause I didn’t want any of the neighbors to know what was up, until I could astonish ’em some fine mornin’ by risin’ above the hull caboodle, and for wunst lookin’ down on some on ’em that was snuffin’ around and tryin’ to look down on me mi’ty bad.

“I used a rousin’ great corn basket for the cradle, and arter she was all ready for inflatin’ I had my life insured, ’cause I didn’t want Sal to suffer by any of my ventur’s. Then I went to Sol Spence, the lawyer, and had him draw up the writin’s of a will, and while he was doin’ it he worked the balloon secret out of me, and wanted me to take him along. I telled him ’twas pooty risky business, and that he’d hev to run some chances, as I was cal’latin’ on seein’ what clouds war made of before I came down. He said them war his sentiments exactly; that he allers had a great hankerin’ to git up thar and see what sort of a spongy thing they war, anyhow.

“I didn’t object much; I reckoned the sheets war good for it, though he went over two hundred, but I cal’lated he’d do instead of ballast, and be company besides. So I took some bed cord and slung another corn basket below the one I was gwine in, and after dark we hauled the great floppy thing out into the back yard, and arter we got it histed up on stakes we commenced buildin’ fires under her to git the gas up and gittin’ things ready ginnerally. About sun-up we had her all ready to step into. Spence had his sketch book along, cal’latin’ on taking some bird’s-eye views, and I had a bottle of tea, cal’latin’ to empty it gwine up, and fill it with rain water while up thar. The thing was a-wallopin’ and rollin’ around the yard mi’ty impatient to git off. I hitched her first to the grindstone frame, but she was snakin’ that around the yard, and the dogs commenced sech an all-fired yelpin’ and scuddin’ round and watchin’ of it through the fence, that we were obliged to put ’em in the cellar, ’cause we didn’t want the hull neighborhood attractid by ther barkin’. Then we fastened the balloon to the shed post, and left Sal to watch her while we war eatin’ a snack of breakfast. Pooty soon arter we heard Sal a-shoutin’ that she was a-gwine off with the wood-shed. So we ran out mi’ty lively, and had no time to spare, nuther. I jumped up and caught one rope, and Spence got hold of another. We couldn’t fetch it down till Sal caught hold of my leg, and between us three we pulled it back agin.

“She gin a sort of puff and come down pooty sudden when near the ground, and one of the posts of the shed came fair onto the back of a leetle pet hog that was rootin’ round the yard, and knuckled his back down into the chips, leavin’ his head and hinder parts stickin’ up. He commenced sich an uproarious squealin’ you could hear him more’n two miles. While Spence and I were fussin’ at the ropes to unloose her from the shed, she took another sudden start up agin and shot away from us quicker than scat. Sal happened to have hold of a rope at the time, and up she went into the air, scootin’ like a rocket. Sal was a plucky critter. Shoot me, if she wasn’t as full of grit as a sandstone. She could have let go that rope, but she wouldn’t; she wanted to fetch the consarn down agin, and was bound to cling to her until she did. Blow me, if I didn’t think for a while I was goin’ to lose the old woman. Thar she was a-hangin’ on to the end of the rope, hollerin’ like a hull regiment chargin’ a battery, and trailin’ and swingin’ about without any notion of lettin’ go.

ATTEMPTED ABDUCTION OF SAM’S WIFE.

“We had a lively time of it gettin’ her down agin too, now I can tell you. I jumped over a fence into the garden, and snatchin’ up a rake commenced to scrape at her, and finally the teeth caught in her dress, and then I had a pooty good hold so long as Sal was good for it. Spence got hold of another rope that was danglin’ around, so between us we got her down the second time. Then I sung out to Spence, ‘Spence,’ ses I, ‘climb into yer basket and let’s be off, or the hull town will be here and stop us gwine.’ So we clim’ into our baskets and flung out Sal’s flatirons, that we had for ballast, and up we shot like a spark up a chimney. I hollered back to Sal to put the hog out of pain and stop the squeakin’, and the last I seed of her as we went round the gable, she was a whackin’ him over the head with the back of an ax, and he was a hollerin’ wuss and wuss.

“The wind took the balloon over a swamp back of the village, where no person seemed to see us, and then the world began to drop away pooty nicely. ’Twant long till I heered Spence callin’ out, mi’ty skeered like:—

“LET ME GIT OUT!”

“‘I guess, Sam, you mout as well land her and let me git out.’

“‘Are you afeered, Spence?’ ses I, jest that way.

“‘No,’ he answered. ‘I arn’t afeered, but I reckon my fam’ly would be mi’ty uneasy about this time if they knowed whar I was, and I begin to feel pooty sowlicitous about ’em.’

“‘This yer thing is somethin’ like law,’ I ses, ‘when yer’ into her you’ve got to keep goin’ till somethin’ gins out. She hasn’t got a rope a holdin’ of her down now, Spence, and as for yer’ fam’ly, I reckon the’re a mi’ty sight safer than you be, so if you have any spare sowlicitude, you had better be a tuckin’ it onto yourself. ‘Sides,’ I contin’ed, ‘I hain’t studied into the lettin’ down part of it half so much as into the rizin’.’

“‘Jerusalem!’ he shouted. ‘I thought you war famil’ar with the hull thing or I’d have as soon thought of gwine up in a whirlwind.’

“‘I fancy I do know considerable about it,’ I ses.

“‘Then why can’t you stop her right here?’ he hollered, lookin’ up, pooty pale.

“‘I cal’late we’ve got to keep ascendin’ while the gas holds out,’ I answered.

“‘Thunder and lightnin’!’ he hollered, jest that way, ‘and what are you agwine to do arter the gas gins out?’

“‘I reckon,’ ses I, ‘we’ll come down agin.’

“‘A flukin’?’ he asked.

“‘Perhaps so,’ ses I. ‘I cal’late we’ll come down faster than we’re gwine up, but I’m hopin’ to catch an undercurrent of a’r that will sweep us along, and let us down sort of gently.’

“Just as we war talkin’ somethin’ gin a whoppin’ crack overhead, and she began to drop down by the run pooty lively.

“‘What’s that?’ shouted Spence. ‘I think I hear a sort of tearin’ noise up thar; ain’t somethin’ ginnin’ out?’

“‘I reckon the old woman’s sheets have commenced to gin out,’ I said, kind of careless like, though beginnin’ to feel mi’ty narvous all to wunst. On lookin’ down, I seed Spence was a cranin’ out of the basket and lookin’ down, jest as pale as could be.

“‘Sufferin’ pilgrims!’ he shouted. ‘Can’t you throw out somethin’, Sam, and lighten her a leetle? She’s droppin’ straight down, like an aerolite.’

“‘I hain’t got anythin’ to throw out exceptin’ the tea bottle, and that ar’ is e’enmost empty,’ I ses. ‘I cal’late we’ve got to take our chances; if you hain’t forgot yer childhood prayers, you mout as well be a runnin’ of ’em over, for things are beginnin’ to look mi’ty skeery jest now, I can tell ye.’

“Pooty soon I heer’d him a mumblin’ to himself, and I allers allowed he was prayin.’

“We war now about steeple high, and as I had expected, the wind caught us and began to sweep us around pooty loose. As we went wallopin’ over St. Patrick’s church, Spence’s basket struck the spire and was a spillin’ of him out like a lobster out of a market basket. I peered over and seed he was e’enmost gone, so I hollered, ‘Go for the spire, Spence, it’s your only chance.’ He seemed to be of the same mind, for as I spoke he was a grabbin’ for it and managed to git hold of one end of the weather-vane. I reckon if he had got hold on both ends he’d ha’ bin all right; but things war gettin’ desperate and he had to take what come. The balloon riz some when he fell out, and as it was a movin’ off I looked back to see how he was a makin’ it. He was a hangin’ thar like a gymnast, a kickin’ and a wormin’ and the steeple a rockin’. But he was too awful heavy; he couldn’t draw himself up nohow. Pooty soon the tail of the fish gin out, and down he slid along the steeple like a shot coon down a ’simmon tree.

“Fortunately he struck the roof and over it he rolled, clawin’ and a scratchin’ the shingles as he went. But it was ‘all go and no whoa,’ as the boy said when he was a slidin’ the greased banister. Old Father McGillop was just comin’ out of the vestry door after matins as Spence come a scootin’ over the eaves and down kerflumix right on top of him. This, ye see, sort of broke the fall for Spence, but it spread the distress. He was so heavy and come with such force he disjinted the neck of his Riverence, and shoved it so far down into the body that his ears were restin’ on the shoulders. They had to git a shovel to dig him out of the ground, and Doc Willoughby was a fussin’ over him more than five hours, a yankin’ his neck out of his body, and pressin’ his ears into shape, and”——

“Stop now,” said the fat old chap, who was worked up to the top notch of attention, “do you mean to say he lived after his neck was dislocated?”

“Wal, I reckon, boss,” said the narrator, as he took a fresh quid of tobacco, “I hain’t made no sech unreasonable assertion. I was sayin’ they hauled his neck back, and put his ears in place agin (or ruther one of ’em, for the butcher’s dog eat t’other one before the old sexton could git to it), so that he mout make somethin’ like a decent appearance in the coffin.

“Soon as Spence went over the eave I lost sight of him, for I was drivin’ pooty briskly over Kent’s corn patch, and as I came sweepin’ down by the widder O’Donnell’s she was in the yard gittin’ an apron full of chips. I reckon she heer’d a burrin’ sound overhead, ’cause she looked up, and when she seed the balloon she gin a squall and cried out somethin’ about protection. I reckoned she was callin’ on the saints, but had no time just then to listen. Before she had gone many steps she dropped, and I allowed she had gone down in a faintin’ fit.

“I was a drivin’ and a driftin’ over the village like a thistle-down, for more than two hours, and the dogs war a barkin’ and the men and wimmin a hollerin’ and a runnin’ arter it wherever it drifted. The barn-yard fowls war a cacklin’ and a screamin’. Jewillikens! didn’t I make a rumption among them though! You’d think thar war forty thousand hawks and turkey-buzzards a hoverin’ over the village, by the way they scattered, aginst the winders, ahind stun walls, into the wells, under lumber piles and currint bushes; such a scrougin’ and squattin’ and scootin’ I never did see. Parson Jones had thirteen lights of glass smashed by fowls batterin’ aginst the winders tryin’ to git in, and Dud Davis, the blacksmith, fished seven dead hens, two turkeys, a guinea fowl, and two small pigs out of his well next day, whar they sought refuge and war drown’d. Dad Kent gin me six traces of good seed corn next fall. He said barrin’ the killin’ of Priest McGillop, it was the best thing that ever happened in Tuckersville. He said I did more for his crop than if he had a scarecrow standin’ astride every hill. Thar wasn’t a crow flew within two miles of the village for mor’n a fortnight, and by that time the corn was grown so they couldn’t pull it up.

“Pooty soon the balloon come down about house high and druv over toward the dee-pot. I was a hopin’ she’d catch on the telegraph wire, but she skimm’d over, like a swallow over a fence, and immediately riz up tree high agin, where scrape, slap, slash, she went into an ole pine that stood out alone in the field. I was scratched pooty bad, but hung on to the limbs, and arter a while slid down the tree leavin’ the balloon hangin’ in the tree-top. Great turnips! if all Tuckersville wasn’t down thar in five minutes. Thar war young ‘uns runnin’ around half-dressed, with corn-dodgers in their hands, and wimmin with babies in their arms. It was like a dog fight, only, as the feller said when describin’ the nigger by the mulatter, it was more so.

“GO IN, CRIPPLE.”

“The train was delayed half an hour that mornin’, ’cause the engineer, conductor and all hands jumped off the cars and ran down to the balloon. Peg-leg Dibbly, the Mexican war veteran, was thar, hobblin’ around among the rest. He was in such a hurry to git down to the tree he wouldn’t go around by the road, but started in to take a short cut across the marsh with the crowd. And he had a sweet, sweatin’ time of it too, now I can assure you. First his cane would stick, and just about the time he would git that out, down would slide his iron-shod leg fully a foot into the mud, and stake him thar like a scarecrow. Then he would look down to where the people were standin’, and jerk and swear until the want of breath only would make him let up. He got down thar after a while though, but he had to crawl considerable before he could do it; and arter he got thar he was bobbin’ here and bobbin’ thar, tryin’ to git a better look up into the tree, until at last he stumbled and fell across one of Dud Davis’ young ‘uns, and gin her left leg a compound fractur’. She set up a screamin’, and he was so weak and frightened he couldn’t git up agin no how, but lay thar gruntin’, and sprawlin’, and kickin’ his one leg around. The blacksmith was thar himself, and when he seed his young ’un down in the mud with her leg broke, you never seed a man so mad in all your born days. He jest ran and grabbed the old pensioner by the coat collar, and slung him mor’n fifteen feet, landin’ him slidin’ on his back in the mud, like a crawfish.

A RIGHT ANGLED TRY-ANKLE.

“About the same time Tubbs, the cooper, was a lookin’ up, and he seed a bough springin’ up, and he allowed the balloon was comin’ down; so he started to run, and stepped on the foot of Kent’s snappin’ bull-dog, that was a settin’ thar lookin’ up the tree, thinkin’ thar must be a coon up it. The cur whirled round mad, and set his teeth into the nighest thing to him, which happened to be old Polly Alien’s ankle. But he got more than he bargained for, though, for she was so tuff that his teeth stuck thar, and she was a screamin’ and a runnin’ hum, draggin’ him arter her mor’n half the way. I never did see sich an excitin’ time. School was dismissed, and there wasn’t a lick of work done in Tuckersville the hul day. The hul talk was ‘Sam Patterson’s balloon, Sam Patterson’s balloon.’ I didn’t have to pay a picayune for anything for mor’n three weeks. Parson Jones preached a tellin’ sermon about the balloon, and thar wasn’t standin’ room in the church; they had to keep the windows open and let people standin’ on the outside stick their heads in and listen. He likened it first to youth, when it was a rollin’ around in the back yard, whar nobody seed it, impatient and ambitious to rise. Then like unto manhood, when it was up, a bustin’ and droppin’ down agin. Next he said it resembled old age, when it was in rags a floppin’ around in the tree, more for observation than use. Thar wasn’t hardly a dry eye in the hul meetin’ house. Hard-hearted old sinners cried like teethin’ babies.

“The balloon hung in the tree all summer, and every day thar’d be a crowd of people starin’ at it, like cats at a bird cage. A photographer came the hul way from town, and took lots of views of the remains; and one of Frank Leslie’s special artists come rattlin’ down thar, and sot on a stun wall for two days drawin’ sketches of it. He said it was the most spirited subject he had sot eyes on since he sketched the hoop-skirt Jeff Davis was captured in. But I’m gettin’ ruther dry. Ain’t some of you fellers agwine to call on the stimilints?”

MY CANINE.

“If you have tears, prepare to shed them now.”

Shakespeare.

Some fond poets sing of their lady-love’s eyes,

Or lovers who sail the seas over;

But poet-like I shall gaze up at the skies,

And muse of my little dog Rover.

The canine I sing, to disease is a prey;

The mange, the distemper, and flea,

Have all had their turn, and have worn him away;

His shadow you scarcely can see.

From earliest light, until late in the night,

He’s dodging hot water and sticks;

I’m shamed to confess it, but truth I must write,

He’s a foot-ball that every one kicks.

I hear his thin cry, and his frightened “ki-yi,”

Almost any hour of the day;

And Bridget’s “Bad ’cess to the likes of your Skye,

Sure he’s here, and he’s there like a flay.”

Upon his poor body the hair has all died,

’Tis smooth and as bare as your hand;

I vow I believe there’s no life in his hide,

It looks just as if it were tanned.

His blood is so thin that he never is warm,

And keenly he feels the cold weather;

He shivering stands with tail end to the storm,

And his four feet all huddled together.

He suffers sad woe, as his body doth show,

His face bears a hopeless expression;

He seems to be wondering why he’s a foe,

Who never commits a transgression.

He’s only a dog in the dark to be sure,

But I who am mourning his plight,

Know accident often exalts the low boor,

And crowds merit down out of sight.

How oft do we see the chief dunce of the town,

With head like a turnip or melon,

Advanced to the Bench, or clergyman’s gown,

Though thought to be born for a felon.

Dost laugh at my song? Well I care not a pin,

My notion I never shall lose;

I know that my dog hath a spirit within,

That cannot be crushed by abuse.

JIM DUDLEY’S FLIGHT.

That blabbing Hoosier, Bob Browser, has found me out, and paid me a call, boring me with his confounded stories. Even as a hungry parrot when crackers are in view, or as a miller’s hopper when water is high and the farmer’s meal bags low, he rattles right along with copious discourse.

“What’s that you say! Did you know Jim Dudley? What! him as the boys in Gosport used to call Carrot Top Jim? Wal, I’ll be rattled if that ain’t queer. Wasn’t he the allfiredest shirk you ever did see? Perhaps you remember how sudden he left Gosport jest before the war? Oh, that’s so, sure enough, you went north sometime afore that.

BOB BROWSER.

“Wal, that chap was etarnally gettin’ in some scrape or another; I do jest think I’ve helped that Jim out of more close corners than there are buildin’s in this yer town. Yer see him and me was great chums, and roomed at the same house on York Street. Jim was a courtin’ a butcher’s darter that lived out near the cem’t’ry for ‘bout a year afore he left, leastwise he was a totin’ of her around considerable, takin’ her to picnics, circuses, hoss races, and the like. I kind of had my doubts about him gettin’ married, ’cause he was a pooty sot ole batch’, and sometimes I’d ask him when the nuptils were a comin’ off; but he’d allers shuffle out of it by sayin’ when they did come I’d git an invite, and kind of larf it off jest that way.

“One night pooty soon arter I had got into bed I heered some one thumpin’ at my door, and afore I had time to say anythin’ Jim Dudley was plum across the room and standin’ by the bedside.