Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,188 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works.

Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 4,188 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. Works.

—­Including cannibals and all?—­said I.

-Oh, as to that, the eating of one’s kind is a matter of taste, but the roasting of them has been rather more a specialty of our own particular belief than of any other I am acquainted with.  If you broil a saint, I don’t see why, if you have a mind, you shouldn’t serve him up at your—­

Pop! went the little piece of artillery.  Don’t tell me it was accident.  I know better.  You can’t suppose for one minute that a boy like that one would time his interruptions so cleverly.  Now it so happened that at that particular moment Dr. B. Franklin was not at the table.  You may draw your own conclusions.  I say nothing, but I think a good deal.

—­I came back to the Bunker Hill Monument.—–­I often think—­I said—­of the dynasty which is to reign in its shadow for some thousands of years, it may be.

The “Man of Letters,” so called, asked me, in a tone I did not exactly like, whether I expected to live long enough to see a monarchy take the place of a republic in this country.

—­No,—­said I,—­I was thinking of something very different.  I was indulging a fancy of mine about the Man who is to sit at the foot of the monument for one, or it may be two or three thousand years.  As long as the monument stands and there is a city near it, there will always be a man to take the names of visitors and extract some small tribute from their pockets, I suppose.  I sometimes get thinking of the long, unbroken succession of these men, until they come to look like one Man; continuous in being, unchanging as the stone he watches, looking upon the successive generations of human beings as they come and go, and outliving all the dynasties of the world in all probability.  It has come to such a pass that I never speak to the Man of the Monument without wanting to take my hat off and feeling as if I were looking down a vista of twenty or thirty centuries.

The “Man of Letters,” so called, said, in a rather contemptuous way, I thought, that he had n’t got so far as that.  He was n’t quite up to moral reflections on toll-men and ticket-takers.  Sentiment was n’t his tap.

He looked round triumphantly for a response:  but the Capitalist was a little hard of hearing just then; the Register of Deeds was browsing on his food in the calm bovine abstraction of a quadruped, and paid no attention; the Salesman had bolted his breakfast, and whisked himself away with that peculiar alacrity which belongs to the retail dealer’s assistant; and the Member of the Haouse, who had sometimes seemed to be impressed with his “tahlented mahn’s” air of superiority to the rest of us, looked as if he thought the speaker was not exactly parliamentary.  So he failed to make his point, and reddened a little, and was not in the best humor, I thought, when he left the table.  I hope he will not let off any of his irritation on our poor little Scheherezade; but the truth is, the first person a man of this sort (if he is what I think him) meets, when he is out of humor, has to be made a victim of, and I only hope our Young Girl will not have to play Jephthah’s daughter.

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