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Essay(s) by Stephen Leacock
Helping The Armenians
Stephen Leacock
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       The financial affairs of the parish church up at Doogalville have been getting rather into a tangle in the last six months. The people of the church were specially anxious to do something toward the general public subscription of the town on behalf of the unhappy Armenians, and to that purpose they determined to devote the collections taken up at a series of special evening services. To give the right sort of swing to the services and to stimulate generous giving, they put a new pipe organ into the church. In order to make a preliminary payment on the organ, it was decided to raise a mortgage on the parsonage.
       To pay the interest on the mortgage, the choir of the church got up a sacred concert in the town hall.
       To pay for the town hall, the Willing Workers' Guild held a social in the Sunday school. To pay the expenses of the social, the rector delivered a public lecture on "Italy and Her Past," illustrated by a magic lantern. To pay for the magic lantern, the curate and the ladies of the church got up some amateur theatricals.
       Finally, to pay for the costumes for the theatricals, the rector felt it his duty to dispense with the curate.
       So that is where the church stands just at present. What they chiefly want to do, is to raise enough money to buy a suitable gold watch as a testimonial to the curate. After that they hope to be able to do something for the Armenians. Meantime, of course, the Armenians, the ones right there in the town, are getting very troublesome. To begin with, there is the Armenian who rented the costumes for the theatricals: he has to be squared. Then there is the Armenian organ dealer, and the Armenian who owned the magic lantern. They want relief badly.
       The most urgent case is that of the Armenian who holds the mortgage on the parsonage; indeed it is generally felt in the congregation, when the rector makes his impassioned appeals at the special services on behalf of the suffering cause, that it is to this man that he has special reference.
       In the meanwhile the general public subscription is not getting along very fast; but the proprietor of the big saloon further down the street and the man with the short cigar that runs the Doogalville Midway Plaisance have been most liberal in their contributions.
       [The end]
       Stephen Leacock's essay: Helping The Armenians
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本书目录

"We Have With Us To-Night"
A, B, And C - The Human Element In Mathematics
Abdul Aziz Has His: An Adventure In The Yildiz Kiosk
Are The Rich Happy?
Aristocratic Education
The Awful Fate Of Melpomenus Jones
Back To The Bush
The Balance Of Trade In Impressions
Boarding-House Geometry
Borrowing A Match
The British And The American Press
Business In England. Wanted--More Profiteers
The Call Of The Carburettor, or, Mr. Blinks And His Friends
A Christmas Letter
A Clear View Of The Government And Politics Of England
The Conjurer's Revenge
Every Man And His Friends. Mr. Crunch's
An Experiment With Policeman Hogan
The Force Of Statistics
Foreign Fiction In Imported Instalments
Germany From Within Out
Getting The Thread Of It
The Grass Bachelor's Guide
Half-Hours With The Poets
Have The English Any Sense Of Humour?
Helping The Armenians
Hints To Travellers
Hoodoo McFiggin's Christmas
How To Avoid Getting Married
How To Be A Doctor
How To Live To Be 200
How To Make A Million Dollars
Humour As I See It
I Am Interviewed By The Press
Impressions Of London
In Merry Mexico
Insurance Up To Date
Is Prohibition Coming To England?
A Lesson In Fiction
The Life Of John Smith
Lord Oxhead's Secret
Madeline Of The Movies: A Photoplay Done Back Into Words
A Manual Of Education
Men Who Have Shaved Me
A Model Dialogue
More Than Twice-Told Tales; or, Every Man his Own Hero
My Financial Career
The New Food
A New Pathology
Number Fifty-Six
On Collecting Things
Over The Grape Juice; or, The Peacemakers
Oxford As I See It
The Passing Of The Poet
The Poet Answered
Reflections On Riding
Saloonio
Self-Made Men
Snoopopaths; or, Fifty Stories In One
Society Chat-Chat
Stories Shorter Still
A Study In Still Life--My Tailor
A Study In Still Life.--The Country Hotel
Telling His Faults
The Two Sexes In Fives Or Sixes
The White House From Without In
Winter Pastimes