Mr. Dooley Says eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 187 pages of information about Mr. Dooley Says.

Mr. Dooley Says eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 187 pages of information about Mr. Dooley Says.
She aven wint so far as to dhraw on him th’ last cow’rdly weapon iv brutal wives—­their tears.  One time she thravelled to New York an’ wan iv his frinds seen her.  Oh, it was crool, crool.  Hinnissy, tell me, wud ye condim this gr-reat man to such a slavery just because he’d made a rash promise whin he didn’t have a cent in th’ wurruld?  Th’ law said no.  Whin th’ Gr-reat Fi-nanceer cud stand it no longer he called upon th’ Judge to sthrike off th’ chains an’ make him a free man.  He got a divoorce.

“I dare ye to come down to my house an’ say thim things,” said Mr. Hennessy.

“Oh, I know ye don’t agree with me,” said Mr. Dooley.  “Nayether does th’ parish priest.  He’s got it into his head that whin a man’s marrid he’s marrid, an’ that’s all there is to it.  He puts his hand in th’ grab-bag an’ pulls out a blank an’ he don’t get his money back.

“‘Ill-mated couples?’ says he.  ‘Ill-mated couples?  What ar-re ye talkin’ about?  Ar-re there anny other kinds?  Ar-re there anny two people in th’ wurruld that ar-re perfectly mated?’ he says.  ’Was there iver a frindship that was annything more thin a kind iv suspension bridge between quarrels?’ he says.  ‘In ivry branch iv life,’ says he, ’we leap fr’m scrap to scrap,’ he says.  ‘I’m wan iv th’ best-timpered men in th’ wurruld, am I not? (’Ye are not,’ says I.) I’m wan iv th’ kindest iv mortals,’ he says, ‘but put me in th’ same house with Saint Jerome,’ he says, ‘an’ there’d be at laste wan day in th’ month whin I’d answer his last wurrd be slammin’ th’ dure behind me,’ he says.  ’Man is nachrally a fightin’ an quarrelin’ animal with his wife.  Th’ soft answer don’t always turn away wrath.  Sometimes it makes it worse,’ he says.  ‘Th’ throuble about divoorce is it always lets out iv th’ bad bargain th’ wan that made it bad.  If I owned a half in a payin’ business with ye, I’d niver let th’ sun go down on a quarrel,’ he says.  ’But if ye had a bad mouth I’d go into coort an’ wriggle out iv th’ partnership because ye’ar a cantankerous old villain that no wan cud get on with,’ he says.  ’If people knew they cudden’t get away fr’m each other they’d settle down to life, just as I detarmined to like coal smoke whin I found th’ collection wasn’t big enough to put a new chimbley in th’ parish house.  I’ve acchally got to like it,’ he says.  ’There ain’t anny condition iv human life that’s not endurable if ye make up ye’er mind that ye’ve got to endure it,’ he says.  ‘Th’ throuble with the rich,’ he says, ’is this, that whin a rich man has a perfectly nachral scrap with his beloved over breakfast, she stays at home an’ does nawthin’ but think about it, an’ he goes out an’ does nawthin but think about it, an’ that afthernoon they’re in their lawyers’ office,’ he says.  ’But whin a poor gintleman an’ a poor lady fall out, the poor lady puts all her anger into rubbin’ th’ zinc off th’ wash-boord an’ th’ poor gintleman aises his be murdhrin’ a slag pile with a shovel, an’ be th’ time night comes ar-round he says to himself:  Well, I’ve got to go home annyhow, an’ it’s no use I shud be onhappy because I’m misjudged, an’ he puts a pound iv candy into his coat pocket an’ goes home an’ finds her standin’ at th’ dure with a white apron on an’ some new ruching ar-round her neck,’ he says.

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Mr. Dooley Says from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.