The Two Johns At The Tremont
by
It is somewhat curious that more embarrassments, and queer contre temps do not take place in the routine of human affairs, when we find so many persons floating about of one and the same name. It must be shocking to be named John Brown, troublesome to be called John Thompson, but who can begin to conceive the horrors of that man’s situation, who has at the baptismal font received the title of John Smith ?
Now it only wants a slight accident, the most trivial occurrence of fate–the meeting of two or three persons of the same name, or of great similarity of name, to create the most singular and even ludicrous circumstances and tableaux. One of these affairs came off at the Tremont House, some time since. One Thomas Johns, a blue-nose Nova-Scotian–a man of “some pumpkins” and “persimmons” at home, doubtless, put up for a few days at the Tremont, and about the same time one John Thomas, a genuine son of John Bull, just over in one of the steamers, took up his quarters at the same respectable and worthy establishment.
Thomas Johns was a linen draper, sold silks, satinets, linen, and dimities, at his establishment in the Provinces, and was also a politician, and “went on” for the part of magistrate, occasionally. John Thomas was a retired wine-merchant, and, having netted a bulky fortune, he took it into his head to travel, and as naturally as he despised, and as contemptuously as he looked upon this poor, wild, unsophisticated country of ours, he nevertheless condescended to come and look at us.
Well, there they were, Thomas Johns, and John Thomas; one was “roomed” in the north wing, the other in the south wing. Thomas Johns went out and began reconnoitering among the Yankee shop-keepers. John Thomas, having a fortnight’s pair of sea legs on, and full of bile and beer, laid up at his lodgings, and passed the first three days in “hazing around” the servants, and blaspheming American manners and customs.
Old John was quietly snoring off his bottle after a sumptuous Tremont dinner, when a repeated rap, rap, rap at his door aroused him.
“What are you–at?” growls John.
“It’s ma, zur?” says one of the Milesian servants.
“Blast yer hies, what want yer?” again growls John.
“If ye plaze, zur, there’s a young man below wishes to see you,” says the servant.
“Ha, tell ‘im to clear out!” John having predestinated the “young man,” he gave an apoplectic snort, relapsed into his lethargy, and the servant whirled down into the rotunda, and informed the “young man” what the gentleman desired.
“He did, eh?” says the young man, who looked as if he might be a clerk in an importing house. The young man left, in something of a high dudgeon.
“What’r yer at now?” roared John Thomas, a second time, roused by the servant’s rat-tat-too.
“It’s a gentleman wants to see yez’s, zur.”
“Tell him to go to the d–!” and John snored again.
“Is John in?” asks the gentleman, as the servant returns.
“Mister Thomas did yez mane, zur?”
“No, yes, it is (looking at his tablets) same thing, I suppose; Thomas Johns,” says the gentleman.
“I belave it’s right, zur,” says the servant.
“Well, what did he say?”
“Faith, I think he’s not in a good humor, betwane us, zur; he says yez may go to the divil!”
“Did he? Well, that’s polite, any how–invite a gentleman to dine with him, and then meet him with such language as that. The infernal ‘blue nose,’ I’ll pull it, I’ll tweak it until he’ll roar like a calf!” and off went “the gentleman,” hot as No. 6.
“I belave he’s not in, zur,” says the same servant, answering another inquiry for John Thomas, or Thomas Johns, the carriage driver was not certain which.
“Oh, ho!” says the servant, “it’s a ride ould John’s going fur to take till himself, and didn’t want any callers.” Reaching John’s door, he began his tattoo.