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A Rhinoceros, Some Ladies and A Horse
The horse was now prancing at him, and mincing at turn, and making love at him. He pushed the half apple into the horse's mouth, and the horse mumbled it and watched him, and chewed it and watched him, and gurgled it and watched him.
'The one he used when he said you were the wife of his what-you-may-call-it.'
'I'm not the wife of any man's what-you-may-call-it,' said she indignantly. 'Oh, I see what you mean! So he pronounced it well, did he?'
'Listen,' said Mary to me very earnestly, 'am I nicer than Maudie Darling?'
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A Rhinoceros, Some Ladies and A Horse
by
James Stephens
One day, in my first job, a lady
fell in love with me. It was quite unreasonable, of course, for I wasn't
wonderful: I was small and thin, and I weighed much the same as a largish
duck-egg. I didn't fall in love with her, or anything like that. I got under
the table, and stayed there until she had to go wherever she had to go to.
I had seen an advertisement--'Smart
boy wanted', it said. My legs were the smartest things about me, so I went
there on the run. I got the job.
At that time there was nothing on
God's earth that I could do, except run. I had no brains, and I had no memory.
When I was told to do anything I got into such an enthusiasm about it that I
couldn't remember anything else about it. I just ran as hard as I could, and then
I ran back, proud and panting. And when they asked me for the whatever-it-was that I had run for, I started, right on the instant, and ran
some more.
The place I was working at was, amongst other things, a theatrical agency. I used to be sitting in a corner of the office floor, waiting to be told to run somewhere and hack. A lady would come in—a music-hall lady that is--and, in about five minutes, howls of joy would start coming from the inner office. Then, peacefully enough, the lady and my two bosses would come out, and the lady always said, 'Splits! I can do splits like no one.' And one of my bosses would say, 'I'm keeping your splits in mind.' And the other would add, gallantly--'No one who ever saw your splits could ever forget 'em.'
The place I was working at was, amongst other things, a theatrical agency. I used to be sitting in a corner of the office floor, waiting to be told to run somewhere and hack. A lady would come in—a music-hall lady that is--and, in about five minutes, howls of joy would start coming from the inner office. Then, peacefully enough, the lady and my two bosses would come out, and the lady always said, 'Splits! I can do splits like no one.' And one of my bosses would say, 'I'm keeping your splits in mind.' And the other would add, gallantly--'No one who ever saw your splits could ever forget 'em.'
One of my bosses was thin, and the
other one was fat. My fat boss was composed entirely of stomachs. He had three
baby-stomachs under his chin: then he had three mute descending in even larger
englobings nearly to the ground: but, just before reaching the ground, the
final stomach bifurcated into a pair of boots, lie was very light on these and
could bounce about in the neatest way.
He was the fattest thing I had ever seen, except a rhinoceros that I had met in
the Zoo the Sunday before I got the job. That rhino was very fat, and it had a
smell like twenty-five pigs. I was standing outside its palisade, wondering
what it could possibly feel like to be a rhinoceros, when two larger boys
passed by. Suddenly they caught hold of me and pushed me through the bars of the palisade. I was very skinny,
and in about two seconds I was right inside, and the rhinoceros was looking at
me.
It was very fat, but it wasn't fat like stomachs, it was fat like barrels of cement, and when it moved it creaked a lot, like a woman I used to know who creaked like an old bedstead. The rhinoceros swaggled over to me with a bunch of cabbage sticking out of its mouth. It wasn't angry, or anything lake that. It just wanted to see who I was. Rhinos are blindish: they mainly see by smelling, and they smell in snorts. This one started at my left shoe, and snorted right up that side of me to my ear. He smelt that very carefully: then he switched over to my right ear, and snorted right down that side of me to my right shoe: then he fell in love with my shoes and began to lick them. I naturally wriggled my feet at that, and the big chap was so astonished that he did the strangest step-dance backwards to his pile of cabbages, and began to eat them.
I squeezed myself out of his cage and walked away. In a couple of minutes I saw the two boys. They were very frightened, and they asked me what I had done to the rhinoceros. I answered, a bit grandly, perhaps, that I had seized it in both hands, tipped it limb from limb, and tossed its carcase to the crows. But when they began shouting to people that I had just murdered a rhinoceros I took to my heels, for I didn't want to be arrested and hanged for a murder that I hadn't committed.
It was very fat, but it wasn't fat like stomachs, it was fat like barrels of cement, and when it moved it creaked a lot, like a woman I used to know who creaked like an old bedstead. The rhinoceros swaggled over to me with a bunch of cabbage sticking out of its mouth. It wasn't angry, or anything lake that. It just wanted to see who I was. Rhinos are blindish: they mainly see by smelling, and they smell in snorts. This one started at my left shoe, and snorted right up that side of me to my ear. He smelt that very carefully: then he switched over to my right ear, and snorted right down that side of me to my right shoe: then he fell in love with my shoes and began to lick them. I naturally wriggled my feet at that, and the big chap was so astonished that he did the strangest step-dance backwards to his pile of cabbages, and began to eat them.
I squeezed myself out of his cage and walked away. In a couple of minutes I saw the two boys. They were very frightened, and they asked me what I had done to the rhinoceros. I answered, a bit grandly, perhaps, that I had seized it in both hands, tipped it limb from limb, and tossed its carcase to the crows. But when they began shouting to people that I had just murdered a rhinoceros I took to my heels, for I didn't want to be arrested and hanged for a murder that I hadn't committed.
Still, a man can't be as fat as a
rhinoceros, but my boss was as fat as a man can be. One day a great lady of the
halls came in, and was received on the knee. She was very great. Her name was
Maudie Darling, or thereabouts. My bosses called her nothing but 'Darling,' and
she called them the same. When the time came for her to arrive the whole building got palpitations of the heart. After waiting a while my thin boss got
angry, and said -- 'Who does the woman think she is? If she isn't here in two
twos I'll go down to the entry, and when she does come I'll boot her out.' The
fat boss said 'She's only two hours late, she'll be here before the week's
out.'
Within a few minutes there came
great clamours from the courtyard. Patriotic cheers, such as Parnell himself
never got, were thundering. My bosses ran instantly to the inner office. Then
the door opened, and the lady appeared.
She was very wide, and deep, and
magnificent. She was dressed in camels and zebras and goats: she had two
peacocks in her hat and a rabbit muff in her hand, and she strode among these
with prancings.
But when she got right into the room
and saw herself being looked at by three men and a boy she became adorably shy:
one could see that she had never been looked at before.
'O,' said she, with a smile that made three and a half hearts beat like one, 'O,' said she, very modestly, 'is Mr Which-of-em-is-it really in? Please tell him that Little-Miss-Me would be so glad to see and to be--'
'O,' said she, with a smile that made three and a half hearts beat like one, 'O,' said she, very modestly, 'is Mr Which-of-em-is-it really in? Please tell him that Little-Miss-Me would be so glad to see and to be--'
Then the inner door opened, and the
large lady was surrounded by my fat boss and my thin boss. She crooned to them
'0, you dear boys, you'll never know how much I've thought of you and longed to
see you.'
That remark left me stupefied. The
first day I got to the office I heard that it was the fat boss's birthday, and
that he was thirty years of age: and the thin boss didn't look a day younger
than the fat one. How the lady could mistake these old men for boys seemed to
me the strangest fact that had ever come my way. My own bet was that they'd
both die of old age in about a month. After a while, they all came out again.
The lady was helpless with laughter she had to he supported by my two
bosses--'O,' she cried, 'you boys will kill me.' And the bosses laughed and laughed, and the fat one
said--'Darling, you're a scream,' and the thin one said--'Darling, you're a
riot.'
And then ... she saw me! I saw her
seeing me the very way I had seen the rhinoceros seeing me: I wondered for an
instant would she smell me down one leg and up the other. She swept my two
bosses right away from her, and she became a kind of queen, very glorious to
behold: but sad, startled. She stretched a long, slow arm out and out and then
she unfolded a long, slow finger, and pointed it at me--'Who is THAT??" she whispered in a strange whisper that could be heard two miles off.
My fat boss was an awful liar--'The
cat brought that in' said he.
But the thin boss rebuked him: 'No,'
he said, 'it was not the cat. Let me introduce you; darling, this is James.
James, this is the darling of the gods.'
'And of the pit,' said she, sternly.
She looked at me again. Then she
sank to her knees and spread out both arms to me--
'Come to my boozalum, angel,' said she in a tender kind of way.
I knew what she meant, and I knew
that she didn't know how to pronounce that word. I took a rapid glance at the
area indicated. The lady had a boozalum you could graze a cow on. I didn't wait
one second, but slid, in one swift, silent slide, under the table. Then she came forward and said a whole lot of poems to me under the table, imploring
me, among a lot of odd things, to 'come forth, and gild the morning with my
eyes,' but at last she was reduced to whistling at me with two fingers in her
mouth, the way you whistle for a cab.
I learned after she had gone that
most of the things she said to me were written by a poet fellow named
Spokeshave. They were very complimentary, but I couldn't love a woman who
mistook my old bosses for boys, and had a boozalum that it would rake an Arab
chieftains week to trot across on a camel.
The thin boss pulled me from under
the table by my leg, and said that my way was the proper way to treat a rip,
but my fat boss said, very gravely--'James, when a lady invites a gentleman to
her boozalum a real gentleman hope there as pronto as possible, and I'll have
none but real gentlemen in this office.'
'Tell me,' he went on, 'what made
that wad of Turkish Delight fall in love with you?'
'She didn't love me at all, sir,' I
answered.
'No?' he inquired.
'She was making fun of me,' I
explained.
'There's something in that,' said he
seriously, and went back to his office.
I had been expecting to be sacked
that day. I was sacked the next day, but that was about a horse. I had been
given three letters to post, and told to run or they'd be
too late. So I ran to the post office and round it and back, with, naturally, the three letters in my pocket. As I came to our door a nice, solid, red-faced man rode up on a horse. He thrust the reins into my hand.
too late. So I ran to the post office and round it and back, with, naturally, the three letters in my pocket. As I came to our door a nice, solid, red-faced man rode up on a horse. He thrust the reins into my hand.
'Hold the horse for a minute.' said
he.
'I can't,' I replied, 'my boss is
waiting for me.'
'I'll only be a minute,' said he
angrily, and he walked off.
Well, there was I, saddled, as it
were, with a horse. I looked at it, and it looked at me. Then it blew a pint of
soap-suds out of its nose and took another look at me, and then the horse fell
in love with me as if he had just found his long-lost foal. He started to lean
against me and to woo me with small whinneys, and I responded and replied as best I could.
'Don't move a toe,' said I to the
horse. 'I'll be back in a minute.'
He understood exactly what I said,
and the only move he made was to swing his head and watch me as I darted up the
street. I was less than half a minute away, anyhow, and never out of his sight.
Up the street there was a man, and
sometimes a woman, with a barrow, thick-piled with cabbages and oranges and
apples. As I raced round the barrow I pinched an apple off it at full speed,
and in ten seconds I was back at the horse. The good nag had watched every move
I made, and when I got back his eyes were wide open, his mouth was wide open,
and he had his legs all splayed out so that he couldn't possibly slip. I broke the apple in halves and popped one half into his mouth. He ate it in slow
crunches, and then he looked diligently at the other half:
I gave him the other half, and, as
he ate it, he gurgled with cidery gargles of pure joy. He then swung his head
round from me and pointed his nose up the street right at the apple-barrow.
I raced up the street again, and was back within the half-minute with another apple. The horse had nigh finished the first half of it when a man who had come up said, thoughtfully--
'He seems to like apples, bedad!'
I raced up the street again, and was back within the half-minute with another apple. The horse had nigh finished the first half of it when a man who had come up said, thoughtfully--
'He seems to like apples, bedad!'
'He loves them,' said I.
And then, exactly at the speed of
lightning, the man became angry, and invented bristles all over himself like a
porcupine.
'What the hell do you mean,' he
hissed, and then he bawled, 'by stealing my apples?'
I retreated a bit into the horse.
I retreated a bit into the horse.
'I didn't steal your apples,' I
said.
'You didn't!' he roared and then he
hissed. 'I saw you' he hissed.
'I didn't steal them,' I explained,
'I pinched them.'
'Tell me that one again,' said he.
'If,' said I patiently, 'if I took
the apples for myself that would be stealing.'
'So it would' he agreed.
'But as I took them for the horse
that's pinching.'
'Be dam, but!' said he. "'Tis a
real argument,' he went on, staring at the sky. 'Answer me that one,' he
demanded of himself, and he is a very stupor of intellection. 'I give it up,'
he roared, 'you give me back my apples.'
I placed the half apple that was
left into his hand, and he looked at it as if it was a dead frog.
'What'll I do with that?' he asked
earnestly.
'Give it to the horse.' said I.
The horse was now prancing at him, and mincing at turn, and making love at him. He pushed the half apple into the horse's mouth, and the horse mumbled it and watched him, and chewed it and watched him, and gurgled it and watched him.
'He does like his bit of apple,'
said the man.
'He likes you too,' said I. 'I think
he loves you.'
'It looks like it,' he agreed, for
the horse was yearning at him, and its eyes were soulful.
'Let's get him another apple,' said I, and, without another word, we both pounded back to his barrow and each of us pinched an apple off it. We got one apple into the horse, and were breaking the second one when a woman said gently --'Nice, kind, Christian gentlemen, feeding dumb animals with my apples,' she yelled suddenly.
'Let's get him another apple,' said I, and, without another word, we both pounded back to his barrow and each of us pinched an apple off it. We got one apple into the horse, and were breaking the second one when a woman said gently --'Nice, kind, Christian gentlemen, feeding dumb animals with my apples,' she yelled suddenly.
The man with me jumped as if he had
been hit by a tram.
'Mary,' said he humbly.
'Joseph,' said she in a completely
unloving voice.
But the woman transformed herself
into nothing else but woman—
'What about my apples?' said she.
'How many have we lost?'
'Three,' said Joseph.
'Four,' said I. 'I pinched three and
you pinched one.'
'That's true,' said he. 'That's
exact, Mary. I only pinched one of our apples.'
'You only,' she squealed.
And I, hoping to be useful, broke in
--'Joseph,' said I, is the nice lady your boss?' He halted for a dreadful
second, and made up his mind.
'You bet she's my boss,' said he,
'and she's better than that, for she's the very wife of my bosum.'
She turned to me.
'Child of Grace--' said she—
Now, when I was a child, and did
something that a woman didn't like she always expostulated in the same way. If
I tramped on her foot, or jabbed her in the stomach--the way women have
multitudes of feet and stomachs is always astonishing to a child--the remark
such a woman made was always the same. She would grab her toe or her stomach,
and say--'Childagrace, what the hell are you doing?' After a while I worked it out that Childagrace was one word, and was my name. When any woman in
agony yelled Childagrace I ran right up prepared to be punished, and the woman
always said tenderly, 'What are you yawling about, Childagrace.'
'Childagrace,' said Mary earnestly,
'how's my family to live it you steal our apples? You take my livelihood away
from me! Very good, but will you feed and clothe and educate my children in,'
she continued proudly, 'the condition to which they are accustomed?'
I answered that question cautiously.
I answered that question cautiously.
'How many kids have you, ma'am?'
said I.
'We'll leave that alone for a
while,' she went on. 'You owe me two and six for the apples.'
'Mary,' said Joseph, in a pained
voice.
'And you,' she snarled at him, 'owe
me three shillings. I'll take it out of you in pints.' She turned to me.
'What do you do with all the money
you get from the office here?'
'I give it to my landlady.'
'Does she stick to the lot of it?'
'Oh, no,' I answered, 'she always
gives me back threepence.'
'Well, you come and live with me and
I'll give you back fourpence.'
'All right.' said I.
'By gum', said Joseph,
enthusiastically, 'that'll be fine. We'll go out every night and we won't steal
a thing. We'll just pinch legs of beef, and pig's feet, and barrels of beer--
'Wait now,' said Mary. 'You stick to your own landlady. I've trouble enough of my own. You needn't pay me the two and six.
'Wait now,' said Mary. 'You stick to your own landlady. I've trouble enough of my own. You needn't pay me the two and six.
'Good for you,' said Joseph
heartily, and then, to me 'You just get a wife of your bosum half as kind as my
wife of my bosum and you'll be set up for life.' 'Mary.' he cried joyfully,
'let's go and have a pint on the strength of it.'
'You shut up,' said she.
'Joseph,' I interrupted, 'knows how
to pronounce the word properly.'
'What word?'
'The one he used when he said you were the wife of his what-you-may-call-it.'
'I'm not the wife of any man's what-you-may-call-it,' said she indignantly. 'Oh, I see what you mean! So he pronounced it well, did he?'
'Yes. ma'am.'
She looked at me very sternly.
'How does it come you know about all
these kinds of words?'
'Yes,' said Joseph, and he was even
sterner than she was, 'when I was your age I didn't know any bad words.'
'You shut up,' said she, and
continued, 'what made you say that to me?'
A woman came into our office
yesterday, and she mispronounced it.'
'What did she say, now?'
'Oh, she said it all wrong.'
'Do you tell me so? We're all
friends here: what way did she say it, son?'
'Well, ma'am, she called it
boozalum.'
'She said it wrong all right,' said Joseph,
'but 'tis a good, round fat kind of a
word all the same.'
'You shut up,' said Mary. 'Who did she say the word to?'
'You shut up,' said Mary. 'Who did she say the word to?'
'She said it to me, ma'am.'
'She must have been a rip,' said
Joseph.
'Was she a rip, now?'
'I don't know, ma'am. I never met a
rip.'
'You're too young yet,' said Joseph,
'but you'll meet them later on. I never met a rip myself until I got married--I
mean,' he added hastily, 'that they were all rips except the wife of my what-do-you-call-ems,
and that's why I married her.'
'I expect you've got a barrel-full
of rips in your past,' said she bleakly, 'you must tell me about some of them
tonight.' And then, to me, 'tell us about the woman,' said she.
So I told them all about her, and how she held out her arms to me, and said, 'Come to my boozalum, angel.'
So I told them all about her, and how she held out her arms to me, and said, 'Come to my boozalum, angel.'
'What did you do when she shoved out
the old arms at you?' said Joseph.
'I got under the table,' I answered.
'That's not a bad place at all,
but,' he continued earnestly, 'never get under the bed when there's an old girl
chasing you, for that's the worst spot you could pick on. What was the strap's
name?'
'Maudie Darling, she called
herself.'
'You're a blooming lunatic,' said
Joseph, 'she's the loveliest thing in the world, barring,' he added hastily,
'the wife of my blast-the-bloody-word.'
'We saw her last night,' said Mary,
at Dan Lowrey's Theatre, and she's just lovely.'
'She isn't as nice as you, ma'am,' I asserted.
'She isn't as nice as you, ma'am,' I asserted.
'Do you tell me that now?' said she.
'You are twice as nice as she is,
and twenty times nicer.'
'There you are,' said Joseph, 'the
very words I said to you last night.'
'You shut up,' said Mary scornfully,
'you were trying to knock a pint out of me! Listen, son,' she went on, 'we'll
take all that back about your landlady. You come and live with me, and I'll
give you back sixpence a week out of your wages.
'All right, ma'am,' I crowed in a
perfectly monstrous joy.
'Mary,' said Joseph. in a reluctant
voice—
'You shut up.' said she.
'He can't come to live with us,'
said Joseph. 'He's a bloody Prodestan,' he added sadly.
'Why--,' she began—
'He'd keep me and the childer up all
night pinching apples for horses and asses, and reading the Bible, and up to
every kind of devilment.
Mary made up her mind quickly.
'You stick to your own landlady,'
said she, 'tell her that I said she was to give you sixpence.' She whirled
about. 'There won't be a thing left on that barrow,' said she to Joseph.
'Damn the scrap,' said Joseph
violently.
'Listen,' said Mary to me very earnestly, 'am I nicer than Maudie Darling?'
'You are ma'am,' said I.
Mary went down on the road on her
knees: she stretched out both arms to me, and said-- 'Come to my boozalum,
angel.'
I looked at her, and I looked at
Joseph, and I looked at the horse. Then I turned from them all and ran into the
building and into the office. My fat boss met me--
'Here's your five bob.' said he. 'Get the hell out of here,' said he.
'Here's your five bob.' said he. 'Get the hell out of here,' said he.
And I ran out.
I went to the horse, and leaned my
head against the thick end of his neck, and the horse leaned as much of himself
against me as he could manage. Then the man who owned the horse came up and
climbed into his saddle. He fumbled in his pocket--
'You were too long,' said I. 'I've been sacked for minding your horse.'
'You were too long,' said I. 'I've been sacked for minding your horse.'
'That's too bad,' said he: 'that's
too damn bad,' and he tossed me a penny.
I caught it, and lobbed it back into
his lap, and I strode down the street the most outraged human being then living
in the world.
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