Roundabout Papers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Roundabout Papers.

Roundabout Papers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Roundabout Papers.
prevents this tongue from wagging, or this ink from running, they will bore you very likely; so it would to read through “Howel’s Letters” from beginning to end, or to eat up the whole of a ham; but a slice on occasion may have a relish:  a dip into the volume at random and so on for a page or two:  and now and then a smile; and presently a gape; and the book drops out of your hand; and so, bon soir, and pleasant dreams to you.  I have frequently seen men at clubs asleep over their humble servant’s works, and am always pleased.  Even at a lecture I don’t mind, if they don’t snore.  Only the other day when my friend A. said, “You’ve left off that Roundabout business, I see; very glad you have,” I joined in the general roar of laughter at the table.  I don’t care a fig whether Archilochus likes the papers or no.  You don’t like partridge, Archilochus, or porridge, or what not?  Try some other dish.  I am not going to force mine down your throat, or quarrel with you if you refuse it.  Once in America a clever and candid woman said to me, at the close of a dinner, during which I had been sitting beside her, “Mr. Roundabout, I was told I should not like you; and I don’t.”  “Well, ma’am,” says I, in a tone of the most unfeigned simplicity, “I don’t care.”  And we became good friends immediately, and esteemed each other ever after.

So, my dear Archilochus, if you come upon this paper, and say, “Fudge!” and pass on to another, I for one shall not be in the least mortified.  If you say, “What does he mean by calling this paper On Two Children in Black, when there’s nothing about people in black at all, unless the ladies he met (and evidently bored) at dinner, were black women?  What is all this egotistical pother?  A plague on his I’s!” My dear fellow, if you read “Montaigne’s Essays,” you must own that he might call almost any one by the name of any other, and that an essay on the Moon or an essay on Green Cheese would be as appropriate a title as one of his on Coaches, on the Art of Discoursing, or Experience, or what you will.  Besides, if I have a subject (and I have) I claim to approach it in a roundabout manner.

You remember Balzac’s tale of the Peau de Chagrin, and how every time the possessor used it for the accomplishment of some wish the fairy Peau shrank a little and the owner’s life correspondingly shortened?  I have such a desire to be well with my public that I am actually giving up my favorite story.  I am killing my goose, I know I am.  I can’t tell my story of the children in black after this; after printing it, and sending it through the country.  When they are gone to the printer’s these little things become public property.  I take their hands.  I bless them.  I say, “Good-by, my little dears.”  I am quite sorry to part with them:  but the fact is, I have told all my friends about them already, and don’t dare to take them about with me any more.

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Roundabout Papers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.