您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Essay(s) by Stephen Leacock
Stories Shorter Still
Stephen Leacock
下载:Essay(s) by Stephen Leacock.txt
本书全文检索:
       Among the latest follies in fiction is the perpetual demand for stories shorter and shorter still. The only thing to do is to meet this demand at the source and check it. Any of the stories below, if left to soak overnight in a barrel of rainwater, will swell to the dimensions of a dollar-fifty novel.
       (I) AN IRREDUCIBLE DETECTIVE STORY
       HANGED BY A HAIR
       OR A MURDER MYSTERY MINIMISED
       The mystery had now reached its climax. First, the man had been undoubtedly murdered. Secondly, it was absolutely certain that no conceivable person had done it.
       It was therefore time to call in the great detective.
       He gave one searching glance at the corpse. In a moment he whipped out a microscope.
       "Ha! ha!" he said, as he picked a hair off the lapel of the dead man's coat. "The mystery is now solved."
       He held up the hair.
       "Listen," he said, "we have only to find the man who lost this hair and the criminal is in our hands."
       The inexorable chain of logic was complete.
       The detective set himself to the search.
       For four days and nights he moved, unobserved, through the streets of New York scanning closely every face he passed, looking for a man who had lost a hair.
       On the fifth day he discovered a man, disguised as a tourist, his head enveloped in a steamer cap that reached below his ears. The man was about to go on board the Gloritania.
       The detective followed him on board.
       "Arrest him!" he said, and then drawing himself to his full height, he brandished aloft the hair.
       "This is his," said the great detective. "It proves his guilt."
       "Remove his hat," said the ship's captain sternly.
       They did so.
       The man was entirely bald.
       "Ha!" said the great detective without a moment of hesitation. "He has committed not one murder but about a million."
       (II) A COMPRESSED OLD ENGLISH NOVEL
       SWEARWORD THE UNPRONOUNCEABLE
       CHAPTER ONE AND ONLY
       "Ods bodikins!" exclaimed Swearword the Saxon, wiping his mailed brow with his iron hand, "a fair morn withal! Methinks twert lithlier to rest me in yon glade than to foray me forth in yon fray! Twert it not?"
       But there happened to be a real Anglo-Saxon standing by.
       "Where in heaven's name," he said in sudden passion, "did you get that line of English?"
       "Churl!" said Swearword, "it is Anglo-Saxon."
       "You're a liar!" shouted the Saxon, "it is not. It is Harvard College, Sophomore Year, Option No. 6."
       Swearword, now in like fury, threw aside his hauberk, his baldrick, and his needlework on the grass.
       "Lay on!" said Swearword.
       "Have at you!" cried the Saxon.
       They laid on and had at one another.
       Swearword was killed.
       Thus luckily the whole story was cut off on the first page and ended.
       (III) A CONDENSED INTERMINABLE NOVEL
       FROM THE CRADLE TO THE GRAVE
       OR A THOUSAND PAGES FOR A DOLLAR
       NOTE.-This story originally contained two hundred and fifty thousand words. But by a marvellous feat of condensation it is reduced, without the slightest loss, to a hundred and six words.
       

       (I)
       Edward Endless lived during his youth
       in Maine,
       in New Hampshire,
       in Vermont,
       in Massachusetts,
       in Rhode Island,
       in Connecticut.
       

       (II)
       Then the lure of the city lured him. His fate took him to
       New York, to Chicago, and to Philadelphia.
       In Chicago he lived,
       in a boarding-house on Lasalle Avenue,
       then he boarded--
       in a living-house on Michigan Avenue.
       In New York he
       had a room in an eating-house on Forty-first Street,
       and then--
       ate in a rooming-house on Forty-second Street.
       In Philadelphia he
       used to sleep on Chestnut Street,
       and then--
       slept on Maple Street.
       

       During all this time women were calling to him. He knew
       and came to be friends with--
       Margaret Jones,
       Elizabeth Smith,
       Arabella Thompson,
       Jane Williams,
       Maud Taylor.
       And he also got to know pretty well,
       Louise Quelquechose,
       Antoinette Alphabetic,
       Estelle Etcetera.
       And during this same time Art began to call him--
       Pictures began to appeal to him.
       Statues beckoned to him.
       Music maddened him,
       and any form of Recitation or Elocution drove
       him beside himself.
       (III)
       Then, one day, he married Margaret Jones.
       As soon as he had married her
       He was disillusioned.
       He now hated her.
       Then he lived with Elizabeth Smith--
       He had no sooner sat down with her than--
       He hated her.
       

       Half mad, he took his things over to Arabella Thompson's flat to live with her.
       The moment she opened the door of the apartment, he loathed her. He saw her as she was.
       Driven sane with despair, he then--
       (Our staff here cut the story off. There are hundreds and hundreds of pages alter this. They show Edward Endless grappling in the fight for clean politics. The last hundred pages deal with religion. Edward finds it after a big fight. But no one reads these pages. There are no women in them. Our staff cut them out and merely show at the end--
       

       Edward Purified--
       Uplifted--
       Transluted.
       

       The whole story is perhaps the biggest thing ever done on this continent. Perhaps!)
       [The end]
       Stephen Leacock's essay: Stories Shorter Still
用户中心

本站图书检索

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