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Coffee And Repartee
by
“Madame,” said the Doctor, turning angrily to the landlady, “this is insufferable. You may make out my bill this morning. I shall have to seek a home elsewhere.”
“Oh, now, Doctor!” began the landlady, in her most pleading tone.
“Jove!” ejaculated the Idiot. “That’s a good idea, Doctor. I think I’ll go with you; I’m not altogether satisfied here myself, but to desert so charming a company as we have here had never occurred to me. Together, however, we can go forth, and perhaps find happiness. Shall we put on our hunting togs and chase the fiery, untamed hall-room to the death this morning, or shall we put it off until some pleasanter day?”
“Put it off,” observed the School-master, persuasively. “The Idiot was only indulging in persiflage, Doctor. That’s all. When you have known him longer you will understand him better. Views are as necessary to him as sunlight to the flowers; and I truly think that in an asylum he would prove a delightful companion.”
“There, Doctor,” said the Idiot; “that’s handsome of the School-master. He couldn’t make more of an apology if he tried. I’ll forgive him if you will. What say you?”
And strange to say, the Doctor, in spite of the indignation which still left a red tinge on his cheek, laughed aloud and was reconciled.
As for the School-master, he wanted to be angry, but he did not feel that he could afford his wrath, and for the first time in some months the guests went their several ways at peace with each other and the world.
III
There was a conspiracy in hand to embarrass the Idiot. The School-master and the Bibliomaniac had combined forces to give him a taste of his own medicine. The time had not yet arrived which showed the Idiot at a disadvantage; and the two boarders, the one proud of his learning, and the other not wholly unconscious of a bookish life, were distinctly tired of the triumphant manner in which the Idiot always left the breakfast-table to their invariable discomfiture.
It was the School-master’s suggestion to put their tormentor into the pit he had heretofore digged for them. The worthy instructor of youth had of late come to see that while he was still a prime favorite with his landlady, he had, nevertheless, suffered somewhat in her estimation because of the apparent ease with which the Idiot had got the better of him on all points. It was necessary, he thought, to rehabilitate himself, and a deep-laid plot, to which the Bibliomaniac readily lent ear, was the result of his reflections. They twain were to indulge in a discussion of the great story of Robert Elsmere, which both were confident the Idiot had not read, and concerning which they felt assured he could not have an intelligent opinion if he had read it.
So it happened upon this bright Sunday morning that as the boarders sat them down to partake of the usual “restful breakfast,” as the Idiot termed it, the Bibliomaniac observed:
“I have just finished reading Robert Elsmere.”
“Have you, indeed?” returned the School-master, with apparent interest. “I trust you profited by it?”
“On the contrary,” observed the Bibliomaniac. “My views are much unsettled by it.”
“I prefer the breast of the chicken, Mrs. Smithers,” observed the Idiot, sending his plate back to the presiding genius of the table. “The neck of a chicken is graceful, but not too full of sustenance.”
“He fights shy,” whispered the Bibliomaniac, gleefully.
“Never mind,” returned the School-master, confidently; “we’ll land him yet.” Then he added, aloud: “Unsettled by it? I fail to see how any man with beliefs that are at all the result of mature convictions can be unsettled by the story of Elsmere. For my part I believe, and I have always said–“
“I never could understand why the neck of a chicken should be allowed on a respectable table anyhow,” continued the Idiot, ignoring the controversy in which his neighbors were engaged, “unless for the purpose of showing that the deceased fowl met with an accidental rather than a natural death.”