Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town
NINE
The Mariposa Bank Mystery
Suicide is a thing that ought not to be committed without very careful
thought. It often involves serious consequences, and in some cases brings pain
to others than oneself.
I don't say that there is no justification for it. There often is. Anybody
who has listened to certain kinds of music, or read certain kinds of poetry, or
heard certain kinds of performances upon the concertina, will admit that there
are some lives which ought not to be continued, and that even suicide has its
brighter aspects.
But to commit suicide on grounds of love is at the best a very dubious
experiment. I know that in this I am expressing an opinion contrary to that of
most true lovers who embrace suicide on the slightest provocation as the only
honourable termination of an existence that never ought to have begun.
I quite admit that there is a glamour and a sensation about the thing which
has its charm, and that there is nothing like it for causing a girl to realize
the value of the heart that she has broken and which breathed forgiveness upon
her at the very moment when it held in its hand the half-pint of prussic acid
that was to terminate its beating for ever.
But apart from the general merits of the question, I suppose there are few
people, outside of lovers, who know what it is to commit suicide four times in
five weeks.
Yet this was what happened to Mr. Pupkin, of the Exchange Bank of Mariposa.
Ever since he had known Zena Pepperleigh he had realized that his love for
her was hopeless. She was too beautiful for him and too good for him; her father
hated him and her mother despised him; his salary was too small and his own
people were too rich.
If you add to all that that he came up to the judge's house one night and
found a poet reciting verses to Zena, you will understand the suicide at once.
It was one of those regular poets with a solemn jackass face, and lank parted
hair and eyes like puddles of molasses. I don't know how he came there—up from
the city, probably—but there he was on the Pepperleighs' verandah that August
evening. He was reciting poetry—either Tennyson's or Shelley's, or his own, you
couldn't tell—and about him sat Zena with her hands clasped and Nora Gallagher
looking at the sky and Jocelyn Drone gazing into infinity, and a little tubby
woman looking at the poet with her head falling over sideways—in fact, there was
a whole group of them.
I don't know what it is about poets that draws women to them in this way. But
everybody knows that a poet has only to sit and saw the air with his hands and
recite verses in a deep stupid voice, and all the women are crazy over him. Men
despise him and would kick him off the verandah if they dared, but the women
simply rave over him.
So Pupkin sat there in the gloom and listened to this poet reciting Browning
and he realized that everybody understood it but him. He could see Zena with her
eyes fixed on the poet as if she were hanging on to every syllable (she was; she
needed to), and he stood it just about fifteen minutes and then slid off the
side of the verandah and disappeared without even saying good-night.
He walked straight down Oneida Street and along the Main Street just as hard
as he could go. There was only one purpose in his mind,—suicide. He was heading
straight for Jim Eliot's drug store on the main corner and his idea was to buy a
drink of chloroform and drink it and die right there on the spot.
As Pupkin walked down the street, the whole thing was so vivid in his mind
that he could picture it to the remotest detail. He could even see it all in
type, in big headings in the newspapers of the following day:
APPALLING SUICIDE. PETER PUPKIN POISONED.
He perhaps hoped that the thing might lead to some kind of public enquiry and
that the question of Browning's poetry and whether it is altogether fair to
allow of its general circulation would be fully ventilated in the newspapers.
Thinking of that, Pupkin came to the main corner.
On a warm August evening the drug store of Mariposa, as you know, is all a
blaze of lights. You can hear the hissing of the soda-water fountain half a
block away, and inside the store there are ever so many people—boys and girls
and old people too—all drinking sarsaparilla and chocolate sundaes and lemon
sours and foaming drinks that you take out of long straws. There is such a
laughing and a talking as you never heard, and the girls are all in white and
pink and cambridge blue, and the soda fountain is of white marble with silver
taps, and it hisses and sputters, and Jim Eliot and his assistant wear white
coats with red geraniums in them, and it's just as gay as gay.
The foyer of the opera in Paris may be a fine sight, but I doubt if it can
compare with the inside of Eliot's drug store in Mariposa—for real gaiety and
joy of living.
This night the store was especially crowded because it was a Saturday and
that meant early closing for all the hotels, except, of course, Smith's. So as
the hotels were shut, the people were all in the drug store, drinking like
fishes. It just shows the folly of Local Option and the Temperance Movement and
all that. Why, if you shut the hotels you simply drive the people to the soda
fountains and there's more drinking than ever, and not only of the men, too, but
the girls and young boys and children. I've seen little things of eight and nine
that had to be lifted up on the high stools at Eliot's drug store, drinking
great goblets of lemon soda, enough to burst them—brought there by their own
fathers, and why? Simply because the hotel bars were shut.
What's the use of thinking you can stop people drinking merely by cutting off
whiskey and brandy? The only effect is to drive them to taking lemon sour and
sarsaparilla and cherry pectoral and caroka cordial and things they wouldn't
have touched before. So in the long run they drink more than ever. The point is
that you can't prevent people having a good time, no matter how hard you try. If
they can't have it with lager beer and brandy, they'll have it with plain soda
and lemon pop, and so the whole gloomy scheme of the temperance people breaks
down, anyway.
But I was only saying that Eliot's drug store in Mariposa on a Saturday night
is the gayest and brightest spot in the world.
And just imagine what a fool of a place to commit suicide in!
Just imagine going up to the soda-water fountain and asking for five cents'
worth of chloroform and soda! Well, you simply can't, that's all.
That's the way Pupkin found it. You see, as soon as he came in, somebody
called out: "Hello, Pete!" and one or two others called: "Hullo, Pup!" and some
said: "How goes it?" and others: "How are you toughing it?" and so on, because
you see they had all been drinking more or less and naturally they felt jolly
and glad-hearted.
So the upshot of it was that instead of taking chloroform, Pupkin stepped up
to the counter of the fountain and he had a bromo-seltzer with cherry soda, and
after that he had one of those aerated seltzers, and then a couple of lemon
seltzers and a bromo-phizzer.
I don't know if you know the mental effect of a bromo-seltzer.
But it's a hard thing to commit suicide on.
You can't.
You feel so buoyant.
Anyway, what with the phizzing of the seltzer and the lights and the girls,
Pupkin began to feel so fine that he didn't care a cuss for all the Browning in
the world, and as for the poet—oh, to blazes with him! What's poetry,
anyway?—only rhymes.
So, would you believe it, in about ten minutes Peter Pupkin was off again and
heading straight for the Pepperleighs' house, poet or no poet, and, what was
more to the point, he carried with him three great bricks of Eliot's ice
cream—in green, pink and brown layers. He struck the verandah just at the moment
when Browning was getting too stale and dreary for words. His brain was all
sizzling and jolly with the bromo-seltzer, and when he fetched out the ice cream
bricks and Zena ran to get plates and spoons to eat it with, and Pupkin went
with her to help fetch them and they picked out the spoons together, they were
so laughing and happy that it was just a marvel. Girls, you know, need no
bromo-seltzer. They're full of it all the time.
And as for the poet—well, can you imagine how Pupkin felt when Zena told him
that the poet was married, and that the tubby little woman with her head on
sideways was his wife?
So they had the ice cream, and the poet ate it in bucketsful. Poets always
do. They need it. And after it the poet recited some stanzas of his own and
Pupkin saw that he had misjudged the man, because it was dandy poetry, the very
best. That night Pupkin walked home on air and there was no thought of
chloroform, and it turned out that he hadn't committed suicide, but like all
lovers he had commuted it.
I don't need to describe in full the later suicides of Mr. Pupkin, because
they were all conducted on the same plan and rested on something the same
reasons as above.
Sometimes he would go down at night to the offices of the bank below his
bedroom and bring up his bank revolver in order to make an end of himself with
it. This, too, he could see headed up in the newspapers as:
BRILLIANT BOY BANKER BLOWS OUT BRAINS.
But blowing your brains out is a noisy, rackety performance, and Pupkin soon
found that only special kinds of brains are suited for it. So he always sneaked
back again later in the night and put the revolver in its place, deciding to
drown himself instead. Yet every time that he walked down to the Trestle Bridge
over the Ossawippi he found it was quite unsuitable for drowning—too high, and
the water too swift and black, and the rushes too gruesome—in fact, not at all
the kind of place for a drowning.
Far better, he realized, to wait there on the railroad track and throw
himself under the wheels of the express and be done with it. Yet, though Pupkin
often waited in this way for the train, he was never able to pick out a pair of
wheels that suited him. Anyhow, it's awfully hard to tell an express from a fast
freight.
I wouldn't mention these attempts at suicide if one of them hadn't finally
culminated in making Peter Pupkin a hero and solving for him the whole perplexed
entanglement of his love affair with Zena Pepperleigh. Incidentally it threw him
into the very centre of one of the most impenetrable bank mysteries that ever
baffled the ingenuity of some of the finest legal talent that ever adorned one
of the most enterprising communities in the country.
It happened one night, as I say, that Pupkin decided to go down into the
office of the bank and get his revolver and see if it would blow his brains out.
It was the night of the Firemen's Ball and Zena had danced four times with a
visitor from the city, a man who was in the fourth year at the University and
who knew everything. It was more than Peter Pupkin could bear. Mallory Tompkins
was away that night, and when Pupkin came home he was all alone in the building,
except for Gillis, the caretaker, who lived in the extension at the back.
He sat in his room for hours brooding. Two or three times he picked up a
book—he remembered afterwards distinctly that it was Kant's Critique of Pure
Reason—and tried to read it, but it seemed meaningless and trivial. Then with a
sudden access of resolution he started from his chair and made his way down the
stairs and into the office room of the bank, meaning to get a revolver and kill
himself on the spot and let them find his body lying on the floor.
It was then far on in the night and the empty building of the bank was as
still as death. Pupkin could hear the stairs creak under his feet, and as he
went he thought he heard another sound like the opening or closing of a door.
But it sounded not like the sharp ordinary noise of a closing door but with a
dull muffled noise as if someone had shut the iron door of a safe in a room
under the ground. For a moment Pupkin stood and listened with his heart thumping
against his ribs. Then he kicked his slippers from his feet and without a sound
stole into the office on the ground floor and took the revolver from his
teller's desk. As he gripped it, he listened to the sounds on the back-stairway
and in the vaults below.
I should explain that in the Exchange Bank of Mariposa the offices are on the
ground floor level with the street. Below this is another floor with low dark
rooms paved with flagstones, with unused office desks and with piles of papers
stored in boxes. On this floor are the vaults of the bank, and lying in them in
the autumn—the grain season—there is anything from fifty to a hundred thousand
dollars in currency tied in bundles. There is no other light down there than the
dim reflection from the lights out on the street, that lies in patches on the
stone floor.
I think as Peter Pupkin stood, revolver in hand, in the office of the bank,
he had forgotten all about the maudlin purpose of his first coming. He had
forgotten for the moment all about heroes and love affairs, and his whole mind
was focussed, sharp and alert, with the intensity of the night-time, on the
sounds that he heard in the vault and on the back-stairway of the bank.
Straight away, Pupkin knew what it meant as plainly as if it were written in
print. He had forgotten, I say, about being a hero and he only knew that there
was sixty thousand dollars in the vault of the bank below, and that he was paid
eight hundred dollars a year to look after it.
As Peter Pupkin stood there listening to the sounds in his stockinged feet,
his faced showed grey as ashes in the light that fell through the window from
the street. His heart beat like a hammer against his ribs. But behind its
beatings was the blood of four generations of Loyalists, and the robber who
would take that sixty thousand dollars from the Mariposa bank must take it over
the dead body of Peter Pupkin, teller.
Pupkin walked down the stairs to the lower room, the one below the ground
with the bank vault in it, with as fine a step as any of his ancestors showed on
parade. And if he had known it, as he came down the stairway in the front of the
vault room, there was a man crouched in the shadow of the passage way by the
stairs at the back. This man, too, held a revolver in his hand, and, criminal or
not, his face was as resolute as Pupkin's own. As he heard the teller's step on
the stair, he turned and waited in the shadow of the doorway without a sound.
There is no need really to mention all these details. They are only of
interest as showing how sometimes a bank teller in a corded smoking jacket and
stockinged feet may be turned into such a hero as even the Mariposa girls might
dream about.
All of this must have happened at about three o'clock in the night. This much
was established afterwards from the evidence of Gillis, the caretaker. When he
first heard the sounds he had looked at his watch and noticed that it was
half-past two; the watch he knew was three-quarters of an hour slow three days
before and had been gaining since. The exact time at which Gillis heard
footsteps in the bank and started downstairs, pistol in hand, became a nice
point afterwards in the cross-examination.
But one must not anticipate. Pupkin reached the iron door of the bank safe,
and knelt in front of it, feeling in the dark to find the fracture of the lock.
As he knelt, he heard a sound behind him, and swung round on his knees and saw
the bank robber in the half light of the passage way and the glitter of a pistol
in his hand. The rest was over in an instant. Pupkin heard a voice that was his
own, but that sounded strange and hollow, call out: "Drop that, or I'll fire!"
and then just as he raised his revolver, there came a blinding flash of light
before his eyes, and Peter Pupkin, junior teller of the bank, fell forward on
the floor and knew no more.
At that point, of course, I ought to close down a chapter, or volume, or, at
least, strike the reader over the head with a sandbag to force him to stop and
think. In common fairness one ought to stop here and count a hundred or get up
and walk round a block, or, at any rate, picture to oneself Peter Pupkin lying
on the floor of the bank, motionless, his arms distended, the revolver still
grasped in his hand. But I must go on.
By half-past seven on the following morning it was known all over Mariposa
that Peter Pupkin the junior teller of the Exchange had been shot dead by a bank
robber in the vault of the building. It was known also that Gillis, the
caretaker, had been shot and killed at the foot of the stairs, and that the
robber had made off with fifty thousand dollars in currency; that he had left a
trail of blood on the sidewalk and that the men were out tracking him with
bloodhounds in the great swamps to the north of the town.
This, I say, and it is important to note it, was what they knew at half-past
seven. Of course as each hour went past they learned more and more. At eight
o'clock it was known that Pupkin was not dead, but dangerously wounded in the
lungs. At eight-thirty it was known that he was not shot in the lungs, but that
the ball had traversed the pit of his stomach.
At nine o'clock it was learned that the pit of Pupkin's stomach was all
right, but that the bullet had struck his right ear and carried it away. Finally
it was learned that his ear had not exactly been carried away, that is, not
precisely removed by the bullet, but that it had grazed Pupkin's head in such a
way that it had stunned him, and if it had been an inch or two more to the left
it might have reached his brain. This, of course, was just as good as being
killed from the point of view of public interest.
Indeed, by nine o'clock Pupkin could be himself seen on the Main Street with
a great bandage sideways on his head, pointing out the traces of the robber.
Gillis, the caretaker, too, it was known by eight, had not been killed. He had
been shot through the brain, but whether the injury was serious or not was only
a matter of conjecture. In fact, by ten o'clock it was understood that the
bullet from the robber's second shot had grazed the side of the caretaker's
head, but as far as could be known his brain was just as before. I should add
that the first report about the bloodstains and the swamp and the bloodhounds
turned out to be inaccurate. The stains may have been blood, but as they led to
the cellar way of Netley's store they may have also been molasses, though it was
argued, to be sure, that the robber might well have poured molasses over the
bloodstains from sheer cunning.
It was remembered, too, that there were no bloodhounds in Mariposa, although,
mind you, there are any amount of dogs there.
So you see that by ten o'clock in the morning the whole affair was settling
into the impenetrable mystery which it ever since remained.
Not that there wasn't evidence enough. There was Pupkin's own story and
Gillis's story, and the stories of all the people who had heard the shots and
seen the robber (some said, the bunch of robbers) go running past (others said,
walking past), in the night. Apparently the robber ran up and down half the
streets of Mariposa before he vanished.
But the stories of Pupkin and Gillis were plain enough. Pupkin related that
he heard sounds in the bank and came downstairs just in time to see the robber
crouching in the passage way, and that the robber was a large, hulking,
villainous looking man, wearing a heavy coat. Gillis told exactly the same
story, having heard the noises at the same time, except that he first described
the robber as a small thin fellow (peculiarly villainous looking, however, even
in the dark), wearing a short jacket; but on thinking it over, Gillis realized
that he had been wrong about the size of the criminal, and that he was even
bigger, if anything, than what Mr. Pupkin thought. Gillis had fired at the
robber; just at the same moment had Mr. Pupkin.
Beyond that, all was mystery, absolute and impenetrable.
By eleven o'clock the detectives had come up from the city under orders from
the head of the bank.
I wish you could have seen the two detectives as they moved to and fro in
Mariposa—fine looking, stern, impenetrable men that they were. They seemed to
take in the whole town by instinct and so quietly. They found their way to Mr.
Smith's Hotel just as quietly as if it wasn't design at all and stood there at
the bar, picking up scraps of conversation—you know the way detectives do it.
Occasionally they allowed one or two bystanders—confederates, perhaps,—to buy a
drink for them, and you could see from the way they drank it that they were
still listening for a clue. If there had been the faintest clue in Smith's Hotel
or in the Mariposa House or in the Continental, those fellows would have been at
it like a flash.
To see them moving round the town that day—silent, massive,
imperturbable—gave one a great idea of their strange, dangerous calling. They
went about the town all day and yet in such a quiet peculiar way that you
couldn't have realized that they were working at all. They ate their dinner
together at Smith's cafe and took an hour and a half over it to throw people off
the scent. Then when they got them off it, they sat and talked with Josh Smith
in the back bar to keep them off. Mr. Smith seemed to take to them right away.
They were men of his own size, or near it, and anyway hotel men and detectives
have a general affinity and share in the same impenetrable silence and in their
confidential knowledge of the weaknesses of the public.
Mr. Smith, too, was of great use to the detectives. "Boys," he said, "I
wouldn't ask too close as to what folks was out late at night: in this town it
don't do."
When those two great brains finally left for the city on the five-thirty, it
was hard to realize that behind each grand, impassible face a perfect vortex of
clues was seething.
But if the detectives were heroes, what was Pupkin? Imagine him with his
bandage on his head standing in front of the bank and talking of the midnight
robbery with that peculiar false modesty that only heroes are entitled to use.
I don't know whether you have ever been a hero, but for sheer exhilaration
there is nothing like it. And for Mr. Pupkin, who had gone through life thinking
himself no good, to be suddenly exalted into the class of Napoleon Bonaparte and
John Maynard and the Charge of the Light Brigade—oh, it was wonderful. Because
Pupkin was a brave man now and he knew it and acquired with it all the brave
man's modesty. In fact, I believe he was heard to say that he had only done his
duty, and that what he did was what any other man would have done: though when
somebody else said: "That's so, when you come to think of it," Pupkin turned on
him that quiet look of the wounded hero, bitterer than words.
And if Pupkin had known that all of the afternoon papers in the city reported
him dead, he would have felt more luxurious still.
That afternoon the Mariposa court sat in enquiry,—technically it was summoned
in inquest on the dead robber—though they hadn't found the body—and it was
wonderful to see them lining up the witnesses and holding cross-examinations.
There is something in the cross-examination of great criminal lawyers like
Nivens, of Mariposa, and in the counter examinations of presiding judges like
Pepperleigh that thrills you to the core with the astuteness of it.
They had Henry Mullins, the manager, on the stand for an hour and a half, and
the excitement was so breathless that you could have heard a pin drop. Nivens
took him on first.
"What is your name?" he said.
"Henry August Mullins."
"What position do you hold?"
"I am manager of the Exchange Bank."
"When were you born?"
"December 30, 1869."
After that, Nivens stood looking quietly at Mullins. You could feel that he
was thinking pretty deeply before he shot the next question at him.
"Where did you go to school?"
Mullins answered straight off: "The high school down home," and Nivens
thought again for a while and then asked:
"How many boys were at the school?"
"About sixty."
"How many masters?"
"About three."
After that Nivens paused a long while and seemed to be digesting the
evidence, but at last an idea seemed to strike him and he said:
"I understand you were not on the bank premises last night. Where were you?"
"Down the lake duck shooting."
You should have seen the excitement in the court when Mullins said this. The
judge leaned forward in his chair and broke in at once.
"Did you get any, Harry?" he asked.
"Yes," Mullins said, "about six."
"Where did you get them? What? In the wild rice marsh past the river? You
don't say so! Did you get them on the sit or how?"
All of these questions were fired off at the witness from the court in a
single breath. In fact, it was the knowledge that the first ducks of the season
had been seen in the Ossawippi marsh that led to the termination of the
proceedings before the afternoon was a quarter over. Mullins and George Duff and
half the witnesses were off with shotguns as soon as the court was cleared.
I may as well state at once that the full story of the robbery of the bank of
Mariposa never came to the light. A number of arrests—mostly of vagrants and
suspicious characters—were made, but the guilt of the robbery was never brought
home to them. One man was arrested twenty miles away, at the other end of
Missinaba county, who not only corresponded exactly with the description of the
robber, but, in addition to this, had a wooden leg. Vagrants with one leg are
always regarded with suspicion in places like Mariposa, and whenever a robbery
or a murder happens they are arrested in batches.
It was never even known just how much money was stolen from the bank. Some
people said ten thousand dollars, others more. The bank, no doubt for business
motives, claimed that the contents of the safe were intact and that the robber
had been foiled in his design.
But none of this matters to the exaltation of Mr. Pupkin. Good fortune, like
bad, never comes in small instalments. On that wonderful day, every good thing
happened to Peter Pupkin at once. The morning saw him a hero. At the sitting of
the court, the judge publicly told him that his conduct was fit to rank among
the annals of the pioneers of Tecumseh Township, and asked him to his house for
supper. At five o'clock he received the telegram of promotion from the head
office that raised his salary to a thousand dollars, and made him not only a
hero but a marriageable man. At six o'clock he started up to the judge's house
with his resolution nerved to the most momentous step of his life.
His mind was made up.
He would do a thing seldom if ever done in Mariposa. He would propose to Zena
Pepperleigh. In Mariposa this kind of step, I say, is seldom taken. The course
of love runs on and on through all its stages of tennis playing and dancing and
sleigh riding, till by sheer notoriety of circumstance an understanding is
reached. To propose straight out would be thought priggish and affected and is
supposed to belong only to people in books.
But Pupkin felt that what ordinary people dare not do, heroes are allowed to
attempt. He would propose to Zena, and more than that, he would tell her in a
straight, manly way that he was rich and take the consequences.
And he did it.
That night on the piazza, where the hammock hangs in the shadow of the
Virginia creeper, he did it. By sheer good luck the judge had gone indoors to
the library, and by a piece of rare good fortune Mrs. Pepperleigh had gone
indoors to the sewing room, and by a happy trick of coincidence the servant was
out and the dog was tied up—in fact, no such chain of circumstances was ever
offered in favour of mortal man before.
What Zena said—beyond saying yes—I do not know. I am sure that when Pupkin
told her of the money, she bore up as bravely as so fine a girl as Zena would,
and when he spoke of diamonds she said she would wear them for his sake.
They were saying these things and other things—ever so many other things—when
there was such a roar and a clatter up Oneida Street as you never heard, and
there came bounding up to the house one of the most marvellous Limousine touring
cars that ever drew up at the home of a judge on a modest salary of three
thousand dollars. When it stopped there sprang from it an excited man in a long
sealskin coat—worn not for the luxury of it at all but from the sheer chilliness
of the autumn evening. And it was, as of course you know, Pupkin's father. He
had seen the news of his son's death in the evening paper in the city. They
drove the car through, so the chauffeur said, in two hours and a quarter, and
behind them there was to follow a special trainload of detectives and emergency
men, but Pupkin senior had cancelled all that by telegram half way up when he
heard that Peter was still living.
For a moment as his eye rested on young Pupkin you would almost have
imagined, had you not known that he came from the Maritime Provinces, that there
were tears in them and that he was about to hug his son to his heart. But if he
didn't hug Peter to his heart, he certainly did within a few moments clasp Zena
to it, in that fine fatherly way in which they clasp pretty girls in the
Maritime Provinces. The strangest thing is that Pupkin senior seemed to
understand the whole situation without any explanations at all.
Judge Pepperleigh, I think, would have shaken both of Pupkin senior's arms
off when he saw him; and when you heard them call one another "Ned" and
"Phillip" it made you feel that they were boys again attending classes together
at the old law school in the city.
If Pupkin thought that his father wouldn't make a hit in Mariposa, it only
showed his ignorance. Pupkin senior sat there on the judge's verandah smoking a
corn cob pipe as if he had never heard of Havana cigars in his life. In the
three days that he spent in Mariposa that autumn, he went in and out of Jeff
Thorpe's barber shop and Eliot's drug store, shot black ducks in the marsh and
played poker every evening at a hundred matches for a cent as if he had never
lived any other life in all his days. They had to send him telegrams enough to
fill a satchel to make him come away.
So Pupkin and Zena in due course of time were married, and went to live in
one of the enchanted houses on the hillside in the newer part of the town, where
you may find them to this day.
You may see Pupkin there at any time cutting enchanted grass on a little lawn
in as gaudy a blazer as ever.
But if you step up to speak to him or walk with him into the enchanted house,
pray modulate your voice a little musical though it is—for there is said to be
an enchanted baby on the premises whose sleep must not lightly be disturbed.