“On October 12 a letter was sent from this office
to Messrs. Bernard and Juke, bookbinders. Opened
by Mr. Juke, it was found to contain the following:
`Sir, our Mr. Trip will call at 3, as we wish to
know whether it is really decided 00000073bb!!!!!xy.’
To this Mr. Juke, a person of a playful mind, returned
the answer: `Sir, I am in a position to give
it as my most decided opinion that it is not really
decided that 00000073bb!!!!!xy. Yrs., etc.,
`J.
Juke.’
“On receiving this extraordinary reply, our Mr. Trip asked for the original letter sent from him, and found that the typewriter had indeed substituted these demented hieroglyphics for the sentences really dictated to her. Our Mr. Trip interviewed the girl, fearing that she was in an unbalanced state, and was not much reassured when she merely remarked that she always went like that when she heard the barrel organ. Becoming yet more hysterical and extravagant, she made a series of most improbable statements—as, that she was engaged to the barrel-organ man, that he was in the habit of serenading her on that instrument, that she was in the habit of playing back to him upon the typewriter (in the style of King Richard and Blondel), and that the organ man’s musical ear was so exquisite and his adoration of herself so ardent that he could detect the note of the different letters on the machine, and was enraptured by them as by a melody. To all these statements of course our Mr. Trip and the rest of us only paid that sort of assent that is paid to persons who must as quickly as possible be put in the charge of their relations. But on our conducting the lady downstairs, her story received the most startling and even exasperating confirmation; for the organ-grinder, an enormous man with a small head and manifestly a fellow-lunatic, had pushed his barrel organ in at the office doors like a battering-ram, and was boisterously demanding his alleged fiancee. When I myself came on the scene he was flinging his great, ape-like arms about and reciting a poem to her. But we were used to lunatics coming and reciting poems in our office, and we were not quite prepared for what followed. The actual verse he uttered began, I think,
`O vivid, inviolate head,
Ringed —’
but he never got any further. Mr. Trip made
a sharp movement towards him, and the next moment
the giant picked up the poor lady typewriter like
a doll, sat her on top of the organ, ran it with a
crash out of the office doors, and raced away down
the street like a flying wheelbarrow. I put the
police upon the matter; but no trace of the amazing
pair could be found. I was sorry myself; for
the lady was not only pleasant but unusually cultivated
for her position. As I am leaving the service
of Messrs. Hanbury and Bootle, I put these things
in a record and leave it with them.
(Signed)
Aubrey Clarke,
Publishers’
Reader.