Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 146, January 21, 1914 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 53 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 146, January 21, 1914.

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 146, January 21, 1914 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 53 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 146, January 21, 1914.

Thompson cleared his throat.—­“For some weeks, Sir,” he said, “I have been much worried with financial affairs.  Like a fool I have invested all my savings in speculative shares, and the variations of the market have unduly depressed me.  When I am depressed I take no food, and that depresses me even more.”

You will be as surprised as we were that this was allowed to continue, but when a man of so few words as Thompson chooses to come out of his shell he is always master of the situation.  “And so, Sir,” he continued, “I have taken the liberty of telephoning to the mews for a cab.”

He paused and bowed, as if this made it all clear, and was about to withdraw.  “Kindly finish serving dinner at once, and don’t be impudent,” my father got out at last.

Thompson sighed.  “It is absolutely out of the question, Sir,” said he.  “Quite, quite impossible.”

“Why on earth?” cried my father.

Thompson became, if possible, more solemn and deliberate than before.  “I am drunk, Sir,” said he.

At this point Mrs. Robinson, whose indignation had slowly been swelling within her, rose and left the room.  Robinson, as in duty bound, followed.  Neither of them, to my infinite joy, has ever returned...

“Depressed by want of food, Sir,” continued Thompson, by sheer duress preventing my father from following his guests and attempting to pacify them, “I have taken to spirits.  I do not like the taste of spirits and they go at once to my head.  They depress me further, Sir, but they intoxicate me.  Yes, I am undoubtedly tipsy.”

My father seized the opportunity of his pause for reflection to order him to leave the room and present himself in the morning when he was sober.

“You dismiss us without notice, Sir,” he stated, referring to himself and his wife in the kitchen.  “First thing in the morning we go.  And so I have ordered the cab to take us.”

This was a very proper fate for Thompson but came a little hard on my father.  “But what am I to do?” asked he.

Thompson regarded him with a desultory smile.  “The Mews desires to know, Sir,” said he, “who will pay for the cab?”

I ought to be able to state that there followed with the cold light of day an apology, with passionate tears and remorse, from Thompson, or at least a severe reprimand from my father before he consented to keep him on.  I regret to say that my father, next morning, postponed the interview till the evening, and from the evening till the next morning, and—­that interview is still pending.  If this seems weak, you have only to see Thompson to realize that no man with any sense of the incongruous could even mention the word “Drink” in his presence.

As for the cab which Thompson had ordered, though we never saw it we later heard all about it.  It went to the wrong house because, as the proprietor of the mews informed us with shame and regret, the driver entrusted with the order had been very much under the influence of alcohol.  Altogether it is a sordid tale, made no better by the fact that the house which the drunken driver chose to go to and insult was the Robinsons’...

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 146, January 21, 1914 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.