Rolling Stones eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 276 pages of information about Rolling Stones.

Rolling Stones eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 276 pages of information about Rolling Stones.
to their friends.  The common people walked around in barefooted bunches, puffing stogies that a Pittsburg millionaire wouldn’t have chewed for a dry smoke on Ladies’ Day at his club.  And the grandest figure in the whole turnout was Barney O’Connor.  Six foot two he stood in his Fifth Avenue clothes, with his eagle eye and his black moustache that tickled his ears.  He was a born dictator and czar and hero and harrier of the human race.  It looked to me that all eyes were turned upon O’Connor, and that every woman there loved him, and every man feared him.  Once or twice I looked at him and thought of funnier things that had happened than his winning out in his game; and I began to feel like a Hidalgo de Officio de Grafto de South America myself.  And then I would come down again to solid bottom and let my imagination gloat, as usual, upon the twenty-one American dollars due me on Saturday night.

“‘Take note,’ says O’Connor to me as thus we walked, ’of the mass of the people.  Observe their oppressed and melancholy air.  Can ye not see that they are ripe for revolt?  Do ye not perceive that they are disaffected?’

“‘I do not,’ says I.  ’Nor disinfected either.  I’m beginning to understand these people.  When they look unhappy they’re enjoying themselves.  When they feel unhappy they go to sleep.  They’re not the kind of people to take an interest in revolutions.’

“‘They’ll flock to our standard,’ says O’Connor.  ’Three thousand men in this town alone will spring to arms when the signal is given.  I am assured of that.  But everything is in secret.  There is no chance for us to fail.’

“On Hooligan Alley, as I prefer to call the street our headquarters was on, there was a row of flat ’dobe houses with red tile roofs, some straw shacks full of Indians and dogs, and one two-story wooden house with balconies a little farther down.  That was where General Tumbalo, the comandante and commander of the military forces, lived.  Right across the street was a private residence built like a combination bake-oven and folding-bed.  One day, O’Connor and me were passing it, single file, on the flange they called a sidewalk, when out of the window flies a big red rose.  O’Connor, who is ahead, picks it up, presses it to his fifth rib, and bows to the ground.  By Carrambos! that man certainly had the Irish drama chaunceyized.  I looked around expecting to see the little boy and girl in white sateen ready to jump on his shoulder while he jolted their spinal columns and ribs together through a breakdown, and sang:  ‘Sleep, Little One, Sleep.’

“As I passed the window I glanced inside and caught a glimpse of a white dress and a pair of big, flashing black eyes and gleaming teeth under a dark lace mantilla.

“When we got back to our house O’Connor began to walk up and down the floor and twist his moustaches.

“‘Did ye see her eyes, Bowers?’ he asks me.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Rolling Stones from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.