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Essay(s) by Heywood Broun
Judge Krink
Heywood Broun
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       H. 3d, our three-year-old son, has created for himself out of thin air somebody whom he can respect. The name of this character is Judge Krink, but generally he is more casually referred to as "the Judge." He lives, so we are informed, at some remote place called Fourace Hill. H. 3d says Judge Krink is his best friend. He told us yesterday that he had written a letter to Judge Krink and had received one in reply.
       "What did you say?" we asked.
       "I said I was writing him a letter."
       "What did he say?"
       "Nothing."
       This interchange of courtesies did not seem epoch-making even in the life of a child, but we learned later just how extraordinarily important and useful Judge Krink had become to H. 3d. Cross-examination revealed the fact that Judge Krink has dirty hands which he never allows to be washed. Under no compulsion does he go to bed. Apparently he sits all day long in a garden, more democratically administered than any city park, digging dirt and putting it in a pail.
       Candy Judge Krink eats very freely and without let or hindrance. In fact there is nothing forbidden to H. 3d which Judge Krink does not do with great gusto. Rules and prohibitions melt before the iron will and determination of the Judge. We suppose that when the artificial restrictions of a grown-up world bear too heavily upon H. 3d he finds consolation in the thought that somewhere in the world Judge Krink is doing all these things. We cannot get at Judge Krink and put him to bed or take away his trumpet. The Judge makes monkeys of all of us who seek to administer harsh laws in an unduly restricted world. The sound of his shovel beating against his tin pail echoes revolution all over the world.
       And vicariously the will of H. 3d triumphs with him, no matter how complete may be any mere corporeal defeat which he himself suffers. The more we hear about the Judge the more strongly do we feel drawn to him. We would like to have one of our own. Some day we hope to win sufficient favor with H. 3d to prevail upon him to introduce us to Judge Krink.
       * * * * *
       We are never to meet Judge Krink after all. He has passed back into the nowhere from whence he came. It was only to-day that we learned the news, although we had suspected that the Judge's popularity was waning. Some visitor undertook to cross-question H. 3d about his relations with Krink and it was plain to see that the child resented it, but we were not prepared for the direction which his revenge took. When we asked about the Judge to-day there was no response at first and it was only after a long pause that H. 3d answered, "I don't have Judge Krink any more. He's got table manners."
       [The end]
       Heywood Broun's essay: Judge Krink
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"Ataboy!"
An Adjective A Day
Adventure Made Painless
Alcoholic Liquors
Altruistic Poker
Are Editors People?
Art For Argument's Sake
Bacillus And Circumstance
The Bigger The Year
A Bolt From The Blue
Buying A Farm
Censoring The Censor
Chivalry Is Born
The Cosmic "Kid"
Danger Signals For Readers
Death Says It Isn't So
Deburau
The Dog Star
The Excelsior Movement
The Fifty-First Dragon
For Old Nassau
Frankincense And Myrrh
G. K. C.
Glass Slippers By The Gross
Gray Gods And Green Goddesses
H. 3rd--The Review Of A Continuous Performance
H. G. Wells Of England
Holding A Baby
How To Be A Lion Tamer
How To Win Money At The Races----
I'd Die For Dear Old Rutgers
Inasmuch
Jack The Giant Killer
John Roach Straton
Judge Krink
A Jung Man's Fancy
Just Around The Corner
The Last Trump
The Library Of A Lover
Life, The Copy Cat
Margaret Fuller
Merrick's Women
Michael
A Modern Beanstalk
Mr. Dempsey's Five-Foot Shelf
No 'rahs For Ray
Nonsenseorship
The Not Impossible Sheik
On Being A God
One Touch Of Slapstick
The Orthodox Champion
Park Row And Fleet Street
Private Ownership Of Offspring
Professor George Pierce Baker
Promises And Contracts And Clocks
Red Magic
Reform Through Reading
A Reviewer's Notebook
A Robe For The King
Romance And Reticence
Ruth vs. Roth
Shush!
Some Of My Best Friends Are Yale Men
Southpaws
Spanking Manners
Sport For Art's Sake
The Tall Villa
A Test For Critics
A Tortoise Shell Home
Turning Thirty
The Unknown Soldier
Volstead And Conversation
We Have With Us This Evening----
The Well Made Review
What Shakespeare Missed
With A Stein On The Table
The Young Pessimists