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Extract from Captain Stormfield's Visit
to Heaven
by Mark Twain
CHAPTER I
Well, when I had been dead about thirty
years I begun to get a
little anxious. Mind you, had been whizzing through space all
that
time, like a comet. LIKE a comet! Why, Peters, I laid over
the
lot of them! Of course there warn't any of them going my way,
as a
steady thing, you know, because they travel in a long circle
like
the loop of a lasso, whereas I was pointed as straight as a dart
for the Hereafter; but I happened on one every now and then that
was going my way for an hour or so, and then we had a bit of
a
brush together. But it was generally pretty one-sided, because
I
sailed by them the same as if they were standing still. An
ordinary comet don't make more than about 200,000 miles a minute.
Of course when I came across one of that sort--like Encke's and
Halley's comets, for instance--it warn't anything but just a
flash
and a vanish, you see. You couldn't rightly call it a race.
It
was as if the comet was a gravel-train and I was a telegraph
despatch. But after I got outside of our astronomical system,
I
used to flush a comet occasionally that was something LIKE.
WE
haven't got any such comets--ours don't begin. One night I was
swinging along at a good round gait, everything taut and trim,
and
the wind in my favor--I judged I was going about a million miles
a
minute--it might have been more, it couldn't have been less--when
I
flushed a most uncommonly big one about three points off my
starboard bow. By his stern lights I judged he was bearing about
northeast-and-by-north-half-east. Well, it was so near my course
that I wouldn't throw away the chance; so I fell off a point,
steadied my helm, and went for him. You should have heard me
whiz,
and seen the electric fur fly! In about a minute and a half
I was
fringed out with an electrical nimbus that flamed around for
miles
and miles and lit up all space like broad day. The comet was
burning blue in the distance, like a sickly torch, when I first
sighted him, but he begun to grow bigger and bigger as I crept
up
on him. I slipped up on him so fast that when I had gone about
150,000,000 miles I was close enough to be swallowed up in the
phosphorescent glory of his wake, and I couldn't see anything
for
the glare. Thinks I, it won't do to run into him, so I shunted
to
one side and tore along. By and by I closed up abreast of his
tail. Do you know what it was like? It was like a gnat closing
up
on the continent of America. I forged along. By and by I had
sailed along his coast for a little upwards of a hundred and
fifty
million miles, and then I could see by the shape of him that
I
hadn't even got up to his waistband yet. Why, Peters, WE don't
know anything about comets, down here. If you want to see comets
that ARE comets, you've got to go outside of our solar system--
where there's room for them, you understand. My friend, I've
seen
comets out there that couldn't even lay down inside the ORBITS
of
our noblest comets without their tails hanging over.
Well, I boomed along another hundred and
fifty million miles, and
got up abreast his shoulder, as you may say. I was feeling pretty
fine, I tell you; but just then I noticed the officer of the
deck
come to the side and hoist his glass in my direction. Straight
off
I heard him sing out--"Below there, ahoy! Shake her up,
shake her
up! Heave on a hundred million billion tons of brimstone!"
"Ay-ay, sir!"
"Pipe the stabboard watch! All hands
on deck!"
"Ay-ay, sir!"
"Send two hundred thousand million
men aloft to shake out royals
and sky-scrapers!"
"Ay-ay, sir!"
"Hand the stuns'ls! Hang out every
rag you've got! Clothe her
from stem to rudder-post!"
"Ay-ay, sir!"
In about a second I begun to see I'd woke
up a pretty ugly
customer, Peters. In less than ten seconds that comet was just
a
blazing cloud of red-hot canvas. It was piled up into the heavens
clean out of sight--the old thing seemed to swell out and occupy
all space; the sulphur smoke from the furnaces--oh, well, nobody
can describe the way it rolled and tumbled up into the skies,
and
nobody can half describe the way it smelt. Neither can anybody
begin to describe the way that monstrous craft begun to crash
along. And such another powwow--thousands of bo's'n's whistles
screaming at once, and a crew like the populations of a hundred
thousand worlds like ours all swearing at once. Well, I never
heard the like of it before.
We roared and thundered along side by side,
both doing our level
best, because I'd never struck a comet before that could lay
over
me, and so I was bound to beat this one or break something.
I
judged I had some reputation in space, and I calculated to keep
it.
I noticed I wasn't gaining as fast, now, as I was before, but
still
I was gaining. There was a power of excitement on board the
comet.
Upwards of a hundred billion passengers swarmed up from below
and
rushed to the side and begun to bet on the race. Of course this
careened her and damaged her speed. My, but wasn't the mate
mad!
He jumped at that crowd, with his trumpet in his hand, and sung
out--
"Amidships! amidships, you! {1} or
I'll brain the last idiot of
you!"
Well, sir, I gained and gained, little
by little, till at last I
went skimming sweetly by the magnificent old conflagration's
nose.
By this time the captain of the comet had been rousted out, and
he
stood there in the red glare for'ard, by the mate, in his shirt-
sleeves and slippers, his hair all rats' nests and one suspender
hanging, and how sick those two men did look! I just simply
couldn't help putting my thumb to my nose as I glided away and
singing out:
"Ta-ta! ta-ta! Any word to send to
your family?"
Peters, it was a mistake. Yes, sir, I've
often regretted that--it
was a mistake. You see, the captain had given up the race, but
that remark was too tedious for him--he couldn't stand it. He
turned to the mate, and says he--
"Have we got brimstone enough of our
own to make the trip?"
"Yes, sir."
"Sure?"
"Yes, sir--more than enough."
"How much have we got in cargo for
Satan?"
"Eighteen hundred thousand billion
quintillions of kazarks."
"Very well, then, let his boarders
freeze till the next comet
comes. Lighten ship! Lively, now, lively, men! Heave the whole
cargo overboard!"
Peters, look me in the eye, and be calm.
I found out, over there,
that a kazark is exactly the bulk of a HUNDRED AND SIXTY-NINE
WORLDS LIKE OURS! They hove all that load overboard. When it
fell
it wiped out a considerable raft of stars just as clean as if
they'd been candles and somebody blowed them out. As for the
race,
that was at an end. The minute she was lightened the comet swung
along by me the same as if I was anchored. The captain stood
on
the stern, by the after-davits, and put his thumb to his nose
and
sung out--
"Ta-ta! ta-ta! Maybe YOU'VE got some
message to send your friends
in the Everlasting Tropics!"
Then he hove up his other suspender and
started for'ard, and inside
of three-quarters of an hour his craft was only a pale torch
again
in the distance. Yes, it was a mistake, Peters--that remark
of
mine. I don't reckon I'll ever get over being sorry about it.
I'd
'a' beat the bully of the firmament if I'd kept my mouth shut.
But I've wandered a little off the track
of my tale; I'll get back
on my course again. Now you see what kind of speed I was making.
So, as I said, when I had been tearing along this way about thirty
years I begun to get uneasy. Oh, it was pleasant enough, with
a
good deal to find out, but then it was kind of lonesome, you
know.
Besides, I wanted to get somewhere. I hadn't shipped with the
idea
of cruising forever. First off, I liked the delay, because I
judged I was going to fetch up in pretty warm quarters when I
got
through; but towards the last I begun to feel that I'd rather
go
to--well, most any place, so as to finish up the uncertainty.
Well, one night--it was always night, except
when I was rushing by
some star that was occupying the whole universe with its fire
and
its glare--light enough then, of course, but I necessarily left
it
behind in a minute or two and plunged into a solid week of darkness
again. The stars ain't so close together as they look to be.
Where was I? Oh yes; one night I was sailing along, when I
discovered a tremendous long row of blinking lights away on the
horizon ahead. As I approached, they begun to tower and swell
and
look like mighty furnaces. Says I to myself--
"By George, I've arrived at last--and
at the wrong place, just as I
expected!"
Then I fainted. I don't know how long
I was insensible, but it
must have been a good while, for, when I came to, the darkness
was
all gone and there was the loveliest sunshine and the balmiest,
fragrantest air in its place. And there was such a marvellous
world spread out before me--such a glowing, beautiful, bewitching
country. The things I took for furnaces were gates, miles high,
made all of flashing jewels, and they pierced a wall of solid
gold
that you couldn't see the top of, nor yet the end of, in either
direction. I was pointed straight for one of these gates, and
a-
coming like a house afire. Now I noticed that the skies were
black
with millions of people, pointed for those gates. What a roar
they
made, rushing through the air! The ground was as thick as ants
with people, too--billions of them, I judge.
I lit. I drifted up to a gate with a swarm
of people, and when it
was my turn the head clerk says, in a business-like way--
"Well, quick! Where are you from?"
"San Francisco," says I.
"San Fran--WHAT?" says he.
"San Francisco."
He scratched his head and looked puzzled,
then he says--
"Is it a planet?"
By George, Peters, think of it! "PLANET?"
says I; "it's a city.
And moreover, it's one of the biggest and finest and--"
"There, there!" says he, "no
time here for conversation. We don't
deal in cities here. Where are you from in a GENERAL way?"
"Oh," I says, "I beg your
pardon. Put me down for California."
I had him AGAIN, Peters! He puzzled a
second, then he says, sharp
and irritable--
"I don't know any such planet--is
it a constellation?"
"Oh, my goodness!" says I. "Constellation,
says you? No--it's a
State."
"Man, we don't deal in States here.
WILL you tell me where you are
from IN GENERAL--AT LARGE, don't you understand?"
"Oh, now I get your idea," I
says. "I'm from America,--the United
States of America."
Peters, do you know I had him AGAIN? If
I hadn't I'm a clam! His
face was as blank as a target after a militia shooting-match.
He
turned to an under clerk and says--
"Where is America? WHAT is America?"
The under clerk answered up prompt and
says--
"There ain't any such orb."
"ORB?" says I. "Why, what
are you talking about, young man? It
ain't an orb; it's a country; it's a continent. Columbus
discovered it; I reckon likely you've heard of HIM, anyway.
America--why, sir, America--"
"Silence!" says the head clerk.
"Once for all, where--are--you--
FROM?"
"Well," says I, "I don't
know anything more to say--unless I lump
things, and just say I'm from the world."
"Ah," says he, brightening up,
"now that's something like! WHAT
world?"
Peters, he had ME, that time. I looked
at him, puzzled, he looked
at me, worried. Then he burst out--
"Come, come, what world?"
Says I, "Why, THE world, of course."
"THE world!" he says. "H'm!
there's billions of them! . . . Next!"
That meant for me to stand aside. I done
so, and a sky-blue man
with seven heads and only one leg hopped into my place. I took
a
walk. It just occurred to me, then, that all the myriads I had
seen swarming to that gate, up to this time, were just like that
creature. I tried to run across somebody I was acquainted with,
but they were out of acquaintances of mine just then. So I thought
the thing all over and finally sidled back there pretty meek
and
feeling rather stumped, as you may say.
"Well?" said the head clerk.
"Well, sir," I says, pretty humble,
"I don't seem to make out which
world it is I'm from. But you may know it from this--it's the
one
the Saviour saved."
He bent his head at the Name. Then he
says, gently--
"The worlds He has saved are like
to the gates of heaven in number-
-none can count them. What astronomical system is your world
in?--
perhaps that may assist."
"It's the one that has the sun in
it--and the moon--and Mars"--he
shook his head at each name--hadn't ever heard of them, you see--
"and Neptune--and Uranus--and Jupiter--"
"Hold on!" says he--"hold
on a minute! Jupiter . . . Jupiter . . .
Seems to me we had a man from there eight or nine hundred years
ago--but people from that system very seldom enter by this gate."
All of a sudden he begun to look me so straight in the eye that
I
thought he was going to bore through me. Then he says, very
deliberate, "Did you come STRAIGHT HERE from your system?"
"Yes, sir," I says--but I blushed
the least little bit in the world
when I said it.
He looked at me very stern, and says--
"That is not true; and this is not
the place for prevarication.
You wandered from your course. How did that happen?"
Says I, blushing again--
"I'm sorry, and I take back what I
said, and confess. I raced a
little with a comet one day--only just the least little bit--only
the tiniest lit--"
"So--so," says he--and without
any sugar in his voice to speak of.
I went on, and says--
"But I only fell off just a bare point,
and I went right back on my
course again the minute the race was over."
"No matter--that divergence has made
all this trouble. It has
brought you to a gate that is billions of leagues from the right
one. If you had gone to your own gate they would have known
all
about your world at once and there would have been no delay.
But
we will try to accommodate you." He turned to an under
clerk and
says--
"What system is Jupiter in?"
"I don't remember, sir, but I think
there is such a planet in one
of the little new systems away out in one of the thinly worlded
corners of the universe. I will see."
He got a balloon and sailed up and up and
up, in front of a map
that was as big as Rhode Island. He went on up till he was out
of
sight, and by and by he came down and got something to eat and
went
up again. To cut a long story short, he kept on doing this for
a
day or two, and finally he came down and said he thought he had
found that solar system, but it might be fly-specks. So he got
a
microscope and went back. It turned out better than he feared.
He
had rousted out our system, sure enough. He got me to describe
our
planet and its distance from the sun, and then he says to his
chief--
"Oh, I know the one he means, now,
sir. It is on the map. It is
called the Wart."
Says I to myself, "Young man, it wouldn't
be wholesome for you to
go down THERE and call it the Wart."
Well, they let me in, then, and told me
I was safe forever and
wouldn't have any more trouble.
Then they turned from me and went on with
their work, the same as
if they considered my case all complete and shipshape. I was
a
good deal surprised at this, but I was diffident about speaking
up
and reminding them. I did so hate to do it, you know; it seemed
a
pity to bother them, they had so much on their hands. Twice
I
thought I would give up and let the thing go; so twice I started
to
leave, but immediately I thought what a figure I should cut
stepping out amongst the redeemed in such a rig, and that made
me
hang back and come to anchor again. People got to eying me--
clerks, you know--wondering why I didn't get under way. I couldn't
stand this long--it was too uncomfortable. So at last I plucked
up
courage and tipped the head clerk a signal. He says--
"What! you here yet? What's wanting?"
Says I, in a low voice and very confidential,
making a trumpet with
my hands at his ear--
"I beg pardon, and you mustn't mind
my reminding you, and seeming
to meddle, but hain't you forgot something?"
He studied a second, and says--
"Forgot something? . . . No, not that
I know of."
"Think," says I.
He thought. Then he says--
"No, I can't seem to have forgot anything.
What is it?"
"Look at me," says I, "look
me all over."
He done it.
"Well?" says he.
"Well," says I, "you don't
notice anything? If I branched out
amongst the elect looking like this, wouldn't I attract
considerable attention?--wouldn't I be a little conspicuous?"
"Well," he says, "I don't
see anything the matter. What do you
lack?"
"Lack! Why, I lack my harp, and my
wreath, and my halo, and my
hymn-book, and my palm branch--I lack everything that a body
naturally requires up here, my friend."
Puzzled? Peters, he was the worst puzzled
man you ever saw.
Finally he says--
"Well, you seem to be a curiosity
every way a body takes you. I
never heard of these things before."
I looked at the man awhile in solid astonishment;
then I says--
"Now, I hope you don't take it as
an offence, for I don't mean any,
but really, for a man that has been in the Kingdom as long as
I
reckon you have, you do seem to know powerful little about its
customs."
"Its customs!" says he. "Heaven
is a large place, good friend.
Large empires have many and diverse customs. Even small dominions
have, as you doubtless know by what you have seen of the matter
on
a small scale in the Wart. How can you imagine I could ever
learn
the varied customs of the countless kingdoms of heaven? It makes
my head ache to think of it. I know the customs that prevail
in
those portions inhabited by peoples that are appointed to enter
by
my own gate--and hark ye, that is quite enough knowledge for
one
individual to try to pack into his head in the thirty-seven
millions of years I have devoted night and day to that study.
But
the idea of learning the customs of the whole appalling expanse
of
heaven--O man, how insanely you talk! Now I don't doubt that
this
odd costume you talk about is the fashion in that district of
heaven you belong to, but you won't be conspicuous in this section
without it."
I felt all right, if that was the case,
so I bade him good-day and
left. All day I walked towards the far end of a prodigious hall
of
the office, hoping to come out into heaven any moment, but it
was a
mistake. That hall was built on the general heavenly plan--it
naturally couldn't be small. At last I got so tired I couldn't
go
any farther; so I sat down to rest, and begun to tackle the
queerest sort of strangers and ask for information, but I didn't
get any; they couldn't understand my language, and I could not
understand theirs. I got dreadfully lonesome. I was so down-
hearted and homesick I wished a hundred times I never had died.
I
turned back, of course. About noon next day, I got back at last
and was on hand at the booking-office once more. Says I to the
head clerk--
"I begin to see that a man's got to
be in his own Heaven to be
happy."
"Perfectly correct," says he.
"Did you imagine the same heaven
would suit all sorts of men?"
"Well, I had that idea--but I see
the foolishness of it. Which way
am I to go to get to my district?"
He called the under clerk that had examined
the map, and he gave me
general directions. I thanked him and started; but he says--
"Wait a minute; it is millions of
leagues from here. Go outside
and stand on that red wishing-carpet; shut your eyes, hold your
breath, and wish yourself there."
"I'm much obliged," says I; "why
didn't you dart me through when I
first arrived?"
"We have a good deal to think of here;
it was your place to think
of it and ask for it. Good-by; we probably sha'n't see you in
this
region for a thousand centuries or so."
"In that case, o revoor," says
I.
I hopped onto the carpet and held my breath
and shut my eyes and
wished I was in the booking-office of my own section. The very
next instant a voice I knew sung out in a business kind of a
way--
"A harp and a hymn-book, pair of wings
and a halo, size 13, for
Cap'n Eli Stormfield, of San Francisco!--make him out a clean
bill
of health, and let him in."
I opened my eyes. Sure enough, it was
a Pi Ute Injun I used to
know in Tulare County; mighty good fellow--I remembered being
at
his funeral, which consisted of him being burnt and the other
Injuns gauming their faces with his ashes and howling like
wildcats. He was powerful glad to see me, and you may make up
your
mind I was just as glad to see him, and feel that I was in the
right kind of a heaven at last.
Just as far as your eye could reach, there
was swarms of clerks,
running and bustling around, tricking out thousands of Yanks
and
Mexicans and English and Arabs, and all sorts of people in their
new outfits; and when they gave me my kit and I put on my halo
and
took a look in the glass, I could have jumped over a house for
joy,
I was so happy. "Now THIS is something like!" says
I. "Now," says
I, "I'm all right--show me a cloud."
Inside of fifteen minutes I was a mile
on my way towards the cloud-
banks and about a million people along with me. Most of us tried
to fly, but some got crippled and nobody made a success of it.
So
we concluded to walk, for the present, till we had had some wing
practice.
We begun to meet swarms of folks who were
coming back. Some had
harps and nothing else; some had hymn-books and nothing else;
some
had nothing at all; all of them looked meek and uncomfortable;
one
young fellow hadn't anything left but his halo, and he was carrying
that in his hand; all of a sudden he offered it to me and says--
"Will you hold it for me a minute?"
Then he disappeared in the crowd. I went
on. A woman asked me to
hold her palm branch, and then SHE disappeared. A girl got me
to
hold her harp for her, and by George, SHE disappeared; and so
on
and so on, till I was about loaded down to the guards. Then
comes
a smiling old gentleman and asked me to hold HIS things. I swabbed
off the perspiration and says, pretty tart--
"I'll have to get you to excuse me,
my friend,--_I_ ain't no hat-
rack."
About this time I begun to run across piles
of those traps, lying
in the road. I just quietly dumped my extra cargo along with
them.
I looked around, and, Peters, that whole nation that was following
me were loaded down the same as I'd been. The return crowd had
got
them to hold their things a minute, you see. They all dumped
their
loads, too, and we went on.
When I found myself perched on a cloud,
with a million other
people, I never felt so good in my life. Says I, "Now this
is
according to the promises; I've been having my doubts, but now
I am
in heaven, sure enough." I gave my palm branch a wave or
two, for
luck, and then I tautened up my harp-strings and struck in.
Well,
Peters, you can't imagine anything like the row we made. It
was
grand to listen to, and made a body thrill all over, but there
was
considerable many tunes going on at once, and that was a drawback
to the harmony, you understand; and then there was a lot of Injun
tribes, and they kept up such another war-whooping that they
kind
of took the tuck out of the music. By and by I quit performing,
and judged I'd take a rest. There was quite a nice mild old
gentleman sitting next me, and I noticed he didn't take a hand;
I
encouraged him, but he said he was naturally bashful, and was
afraid to try before so many people. By and by the old gentleman
said he never could seem to enjoy music somehow. The fact was,
I
was beginning to feel the same way; but I didn't say anything.
Him
and I had a considerable long silence, then, but of course it
warn't noticeable in that place. After about sixteen or seventeen
hours, during which I played and sung a little, now and then--
always the same tune, because I didn't know any other--I laid
down
my harp and begun to fan myself with my palm branch. Then we
both
got to sighing pretty regular. Finally, says he--
"Don't you know any tune but the one
you've been pegging at all
day?"
"Not another blessed one," says
I.
"Don't you reckon you could learn
another one?" says he.
"Never," says I; "I've tried
to, but I couldn't manage it."
"It's a long time to hang to the one--eternity,
you know."
"Don't break my heart," says
I; "I'm getting low-spirited enough
already."
After another long silence, says he--
"Are you glad to be here?"
Says I, "Old man, I'll be frank with
you. This AIN'T just as near
my idea of bliss as I thought it was going to be, when I used
to go
to church."
Says he, "What do you say to knocking
off and calling it half a
day?"
"That's me," says I. "I
never wanted to get off watch so bad in my
life."
So we started. Millions were coming to
the cloud-bank all the
time, happy and hosannahing; millions were leaving it all the
time,
looking mighty quiet, I tell you. We laid for the new-comers,
and
pretty soon I'd got them to hold all my things a minute, and
then I
was a free man again and most outrageously happy. Just then
I ran
across old Sam Bartlett, who had been dead a long time, and stopped
to have a talk with him. Says I--
"Now tell me--is this to go on forever?
Ain't there anything else
for a change?"
Says he--
"I'll set you right on that point
very quick. People take the
figurative language of the Bible and the allegories for literal,
and the first thing they ask for when they get here is a halo
and a
harp, and so on. Nothing that's harmless and reasonable is refused
a body here, if he asks it in the right spirit. So they are
outfitted with these things without a word. They go and sing
and
play just about one day, and that's the last you'll ever see
them
in the choir. They don't need anybody to tell them that that
sort
of thing wouldn't make a heaven--at least not a heaven that a
sane
man could stand a week and remain sane. That cloud-bank is placed
where the noise can't disturb the old inhabitants, and so there
ain't any harm in letting everybody get up there and cure himself
as soon as he comes.
"Now you just remember this--heaven
is as blissful and lovely as it
can be; but it's just the busiest place you ever heard of. There
ain't any idle people here after the first day. Singing hymns
and
waving palm branches through all eternity is pretty when you
hear
about it in the pulpit, but it's as poor a way to put in valuable
time as a body could contrive. It would just make a heaven of
warbling ignoramuses, don't you see? Eternal Rest sounds
comforting in the pulpit, too. Well, you try it once, and see
how
heavy time will hang on your hands. Why, Stormfield, a man like
you, that had been active and stirring all his life, would go
mad
in six months in a heaven where he hadn't anything to do. Heaven
is the very last place to come to REST in,--and don't you be
afraid
to bet on that!"
Says I--
"Sam, I'm as glad to hear it as I
thought I'd be sorry. I'm glad I
come, now."
Says he--
"Cap'n, ain't you pretty physically
tired?"
Says I--
"Sam, it ain't any name for it! I'm
dog-tired."
"Just so--just so. You've earned
a good sleep, and you'll get it.
You've earned a good appetite, and you'll enjoy your dinner.
It's
the same here as it is on earth--you've got to earn a thing,
square
and honest, before you enjoy it. You can't enjoy first and earn
afterwards. But there's this difference, here: you can choose
your own occupation, and all the powers of heaven will be put
forth
to help you make a success of it, if you do your level best.
The
shoe-maker on earth that had the soul of a poet in him won't
have
to make shoes here."
"Now that's all reasonable and right,"
says I. "Plenty of work,
and the kind you hanker after; no more pain, no more suffering--"
"Oh, hold on; there's plenty of pain
here--but it don't kill.
There's plenty of suffering here, but it don't last. You see,
happiness ain't a THING IN ITSELF--it's only a CONTRAST with
something that ain't pleasant. That's all it is. There ain't
a
thing you can mention that is happiness in its own self--it's
only
so by contrast with the other thing. And so, as soon as the
novelty is over and the force of the contrast dulled, it ain't
happiness any longer, and you have to get something fresh. Well,
there's plenty of pain and suffering in heaven--consequently
there's plenty of contrasts, and just no end of happiness."
Says I, "It's the sensiblest heaven
I've heard of yet, Sam, though
it's about as different from the one I was brought up on as a
live
princess is different from her own wax figger."
Along in the first months I knocked around
about the Kingdom,
making friends and looking at the country, and finally settled
down
in a pretty likely region, to have a rest before taking another
start. I went on making acquaintances and gathering up
information. I had a good deal of talk with an old bald-headed
angel by the name of Sandy McWilliams. He was from somewhere
in
New Jersey. I went about with him, considerable. We used to
lay
around, warm afternoons, in the shade of a rock, on some meadow-
ground that was pretty high and out of the marshy slush of his
cranberry-farm, and there we used to talk about all kinds of
things, and smoke pipes. One day, says I--
"About how old might you be, Sandy?"
"Seventy-two."
"I judged so. How long you been in
heaven?"
"Twenty-seven years, come Christmas."
"How old was you when you come up?"
"Why, seventy-two, of course."
"You can't mean it!"
"Why can't I mean it?"
"Because, if you was seventy-two then,
you are naturally ninety-
nine now."
"No, but I ain't. I stay the same
age I was when I come."
"Well," says I, "come to
think, there's something just here that I
want to ask about. Down below, I always had an idea that in
heaven
we would all be young, and bright, and spry."
"Well, you can be young if you want
to. You've only got to wish."
"Well, then, why didn't you wish?"
"I did. They all do. You'll try
it, some day, like enough; but
you'll get tired of the change pretty soon."
"Why?"
"Well, I'll tell you. Now you've
always been a sailor; did you
ever try some other business?"
"Yes, I tried keeping grocery, once,
up in the mines; but I
couldn't stand it; it was too dull--no stir, no storm, no life
about it; it was like being part dead and part alive, both at
the
same time. I wanted to be one thing or t'other. I shut up shop
pretty quick and went to sea."
"That's it. Grocery people like it,
but you couldn't. You see you
wasn't used to it. Well, I wasn't used to being young, and I
couldn't seem to take any interest in it. I was strong, and
handsome, and had curly hair,--yes, and wings, too!--gay wings
like
a butterfly. I went to picnics and dances and parties with the
fellows, and tried to carry on and talk nonsense with the girls,
but it wasn't any use; I couldn't take to it--fact is, it was
an
awful bore. What I wanted was early to bed and early to rise,
and
something to DO; and when my work was done, I wanted to sit quiet,
and smoke and think--not tear around with a parcel of giddy young
kids. You can't think what I suffered whilst I was young."
"How long was you young?"
"Only two weeks. That was plenty
for me. Laws, I was so lonesome!
You see, I was full of the knowledge and experience of seventy-two
years; the deepest subject those young folks could strike was
only
a-b-c to me. And to hear them argue--oh, my! it would have been
funny, if it hadn't been so pitiful. Well, I was so hungry for
the
ways and the sober talk I was used to, that I tried to ring in
with
the old people, but they wouldn't have it. They considered me
a
conceited young upstart, and gave me the cold shoulder. Two
weeks
was a-plenty for me. I was glad to get back my bald head again,
and my pipe, and my old drowsy reflections in the shade of a
rock
or a tree."
"Well," says I, "do you
mean to say you're going to stand still at
seventy-two, forever?"
"I don't know, and I ain't particular.
But I ain't going to drop
back to twenty-five any more--I know that, mighty well. I know
a
sight more than I did twenty-seven years ago, and I enjoy learning,
all the time, but I don't seem to get any older. That is, bodily--
my mind gets older, and stronger, and better seasoned, and more
satisfactory."
Says I, "If a man comes here at ninety,
don't he ever set himself
back?"
"Of course he does. He sets himself
back to fourteen; tries it a
couple of hours, and feels like a fool; sets himself forward
to
twenty; it ain't much improvement; tries thirty, fifty, eighty,
and
finally ninety--finds he is more at home and comfortable at the
same old figure he is used to than any other way. Or, if his
mind
begun to fail him on earth at eighty, that's where he finally
sticks up here. He sticks at the place where his mind was last
at
its best, for there's where his enjoyment is best, and his ways
most set and established."
"Does a chap of twenty-five stay always
twenty-five, and look it?"
"If he is a fool, yes. But if he
is bright, and ambitious and
industrious, the knowledge he gains and the experiences he has,
change his ways and thoughts and likings, and make him find his
best pleasure in the company of people above that age; so he
allows
his body to take on that look of as many added years as he needs
to
make him comfortable and proper in that sort of society; he lets
his body go on taking the look of age, according as he progresses,
and by and by he will be bald and wrinkled outside, and wise
and
deep within."
"Babies the same?"
"Babies the same. Laws, what asses
we used to be, on earth, about
these things! We said we'd be always young in heaven. We didn't
say HOW young--we didn't think of that, perhaps--that is, we
didn't
all think alike, anyway. When I was a boy of seven, I suppose
I
thought we'd all be twelve, in heaven; when I was twelve, I suppose
I thought we'd all be eighteen or twenty in heaven; when I was
forty, I begun to go back; I remember I hoped we'd all be about
THIRTY years old in heaven. Neither a man nor a boy ever thinks
the age he HAS is exactly the best one--he puts the right age
a few
years older or a few years younger than he is. Then he makes
that
ideal age the general age of the heavenly people. And he expects
everybody TO STICK at that age--stand stock-still--and expects
them
to enjoy it!--Now just think of the idea of standing still in
heaven! Think of a heaven made up entirely of hoop-rolling,
marble-playing cubs of seven years!--or of awkward, diffident,
sentimental immaturities of nineteen!--or of vigorous people
of
thirty, healthy-minded, brimming with ambition, but chained hand
and foot to that one age and its limitations like so many helpless
galley-slaves! Think of the dull sameness of a society made
up of
people all of one age and one set of looks, habits, tastes and
feelings. Think how superior to it earth would be, with its
variety of types and faces and ages, and the enlivening attrition
of the myriad interests that come into pleasant collision in
such a
variegated society."
"Look here," says I, "do
you know what you're doing?"
"Well, what am I doing?"
"You are making heaven pretty comfortable
in one way, but you are
playing the mischief with it in another."
"How d'you mean?"
"Well," I says, "take a
young mother that's lost her child, and--"
"Sh!" he says. "Look!"
It was a woman. Middle-aged, and had grizzled
hair. She was
walking slow, and her head was bent down, and her wings hanging
limp and droopy; and she looked ever so tired, and was crying,
poor
thing! She passed along by, with her head down, that way, and
the
tears running down her face, and didn't see us. Then Sandy said,
low and gentle, and full of pity:
"SHE'S hunting for her child! No,
FOUND it, I reckon. Lord, how
she's changed! But I recognized her in a minute, though it's
twenty-seven years since I saw her. A young mother she was,
about
twenty two or four, or along there; and blooming and lovely and
sweet? oh, just a flower! And all her heart and all her soul
was
wrapped up in her child, her little girl, two years old. And
it
died, and she went wild with grief, just wild! Well, the only
comfort she had was that she'd see her child again, in heaven--
'never more to part,' she said, and kept on saying it over and
over, 'never more to part.' And the words made her happy; yes,
they did; they made her joyful, and when I was dying, twenty-seven
years ago, she told me to find her child the first thing, and
say
she was coming--'soon, soon, VERY soon, she hoped and believed!'"
"Why, it's pitiful, Sandy."
He didn't say anything for a while, but
sat looking at the ground,
thinking. Then he says, kind of mournful:
"And now she's come!"
"Well? Go on."
"Stormfield, maybe she hasn't found
the child, but _I_ think she
has. Looks so to me. I've seen cases before. You see, she's
kept
that child in her head just the same as it was when she jounced
it
in her arms a little chubby thing. But here it didn't elect
to
STAY a child. No, it elected to grow up, which it did. And
in
these twenty-seven years it has learned all the deep scientific
learning there is to learn, and is studying and studying and
learning and learning more and more, all the time, and don't
give a
damn for anything BUT learning; just learning, and discussing
gigantic problems with people like herself."
"Well?"
"Stormfield, don't you see? Her mother
knows CRANBERRIES, and how
to tend them, and pick them, and put them up, and market them;
and
not another blamed thing! Her and her daughter can't be any
more
company for each other NOW than mud turtle and bird o' paradise.
Poor thing, she was looking for a baby to jounce; _I_ think she's
struck a disapp'intment."
"Sandy, what will they do--stay unhappy
forever in heaven?"
"No, they'll come together and get
adjusted by and by. But not
this year, and not next. By and by."
CHAPTER II
I had been having considerable trouble
with my wings. The day
after I helped the choir I made a dash or two with them, but
was
not lucky. First off, I flew thirty yards, and then fouled an
Irishman and brought him down--brought us both down, in fact.
Next, I had a collision with a Bishop--and bowled him down, of
course. We had some sharp words, and I felt pretty cheap, to
come
banging into a grave old person like that, with a million strangers
looking on and smiling to themselves.
I saw I hadn't got the hang of the steering,
and so couldn't
rightly tell where I was going to bring up when I started. I
went
afoot the rest of the day, and let my wings hang. Early next
morning I went to a private place to have some practice. I got
up
on a pretty high rock, and got a good start, and went swooping
down, aiming for a bush a little over three hundred yards off;
but
I couldn't seem to calculate for the wind, which was about two
points abaft my beam. I could see I was going considerable to
looard of the bush, so I worked my starboard wing slow and went
ahead strong on the port one, but it wouldn't answer; I could
see I
was going to broach to, so I slowed down on both, and lit. I
went
back to the rock and took another chance at it. I aimed two
or
three points to starboard of the bush--yes, more than that--enough
so as to make it nearly a head-wind. I done well enough, but
made
pretty poor time. I could see, plain enough, that on a head-wind,
wings was a mistake. I could see that a body could sail pretty
close to the wind, but he couldn't go in the wind's eye. I could
see that if I wanted to go a-visiting any distance from home,
and
the wind was ahead, I might have to wait days, maybe, for a change;
and I could see, too, that these things could not be any use
at all
in a gale; if you tried to run before the wind, you would make
a
mess of it, for there isn't anyway to shorten sail--like reefing,
you know--you have to take it ALL in--shut your feathers down
flat
to your sides. That would LAND you, of course. You could lay
to,
with your head to the wind--that is the best you could do, and
right hard work you'd find it, too. If you tried any other game,
you would founder, sure.
I judge it was about a couple of weeks
or so after this that I
dropped old Sandy McWilliams a note one day--it was a Tuesday--and
asked him to come over and take his manna and quails with me
next
day; and the first thing he did when he stepped in was to twinkle
his eye in a sly way, and say,--
"Well, Cap, what you done with your
wings?"
I saw in a minute that there was some sarcasm
done up in that rag
somewheres, but I never let on. I only says,--
"Gone to the wash."
"Yes," he says, in a dry sort
of way, "they mostly go to the wash--
about this time--I've often noticed it. Fresh angels are powerful
neat. When do you look for 'em back?"
"Day after to-morrow," says I.
He winked at me, and smiled.
Says I,--
"Sandy, out with it. Come--no secrets
among friends. I notice you
don't ever wear wings--and plenty others don't. I've been making
an ass of myself--is that it?"
"That is about the size of it. But
it is no harm. We all do it at
first. It's perfectly natural. You see, on earth we jump to
such
foolish conclusions as to things up here. In the pictures we
always saw the angels with wings on--and that was all right;
but we
jumped to the conclusion that that was their way of getting around-
-and that was all wrong. The wings ain't anything but a uniform,
that's all. When they are in the field--so to speak,--they always
wear them; you never see an angel going with a message anywhere
without his wings, any more than you would see a military officer
presiding at a court-martial without his uniform, or a postman
delivering letters, or a policeman walking his beat, in plain
clothes. But they ain't to FLY with! The wings are for show,
not
for use. Old experienced angels are like officers of the regular
army--they dress plain, when they are off duty. New angels are
like the militia--never shed the uniform--always fluttering and
floundering around in their wings, butting people down, flapping
here, and there, and everywhere, always imagining they are
attracting the admiring eye--well, they just think they are the
very most important people in heaven. And when you see one of
them
come sailing around with one wing tipped up and t'other down,
you
make up your mind he is saying to himself: 'I wish Mary Ann
in
Arkansaw could see me now. I reckon she'd wish she hadn't shook
me.' No, they're just for show, that's all--only just for show."
"I judge you've got it about right,
Sandy," says I.
"Why, look at it yourself," says
he. "YOU ain't built for wings--
no man is. You know what a grist of years it took you to come
here
from the earth--and yet you were booming along faster than any
cannon-ball could go. Suppose you had to fly that distance with
your wings--wouldn't eternity have been over before you got here?
Certainly. Well, angels have to go to the earth every day--
millions of them--to appear in visions to dying children and
good
people, you know--it's the heft of their business. They appear
with their wings, of course, because they are on official service,
and because the dying persons wouldn't know they were angels
if
they hadn't wings--but do you reckon they fly with them? It
stands
to reason they don't. The wings would wear out before they got
half-way; even the pin-feathers would be gone; the wing frames
would be as bare as kite sticks before the paper is pasted on.
The
distances in heaven are billions of times greater; angels have
to
go all over heaven every day; could they do it with their wings
alone? No, indeed; they wear the wings for style, but they travel
any distance in an instant by WISHING. The wishing-carpet of
the
Arabian Nights was a sensible idea--but our earthly idea of angels
flying these awful distances with their clumsy wings was foolish.
"Our young saints, of both sexes,
wear wings all the time--blazing
red ones, and blue and green, and gold, and variegated, and
rainbowed, and ring-streaked-and-striped ones--and nobody finds
fault. It is suitable to their time of life. The things are
beautiful, and they set the young people off. They are the most
striking and lovely part of their outfit--a halo don't BEGIN."
"Well," says I, "I've tucked
mine away in the cupboard, and I allow
to let them lay there till there's mud."
"Yes--or a reception."
"What's that?"
"Well, you can see one to-night if
you want to. There's a
barkeeper from Jersey City going to be received."
"Go on--tell me about it."
"This barkeeper got converted at a
Moody and Sankey meeting, in New
York, and started home on the ferry-boat, and there was a collision
and he got drowned. He is of a class that think all heaven goes
wild with joy when a particularly hard lot like him is saved;
they
think all heaven turns out hosannahing to welcome them; they
think
there isn't anything talked about in the realms of the blest
but
their case, for that day. This barkeeper thinks there hasn't
been
such another stir here in years, as his coming is going to raise.--
And I've always noticed this peculiarity about a dead barkeeper--he
not only expects all hands to turn out when he arrives, but he
expects to be received with a torchlight procession."
"I reckon he is disappointed, then."
"No, he isn't. No man is allowed
to be disappointed here.
Whatever he wants, when he comes--that is, any reasonable and
unsacrilegious thing--he can have. There's always a few millions
or billions of young folks around who don't want any better
entertainment than to fill up their lungs and swarm out with
their
torches and have a high time over a barkeeper. It tickles the
barkeeper till he can't rest, it makes a charming lark for the
young folks, it don't do anybody any harm, it don't cost a rap,
and
it keeps up the place's reputation for making all comers happy
and
content."
"Very good. I'll be on hand and see
them land the barkeeper."
"It is manners to go in full dress.
You want to wear your wings,
you know, and your other things."
"Which ones?"
"Halo, and harp, and palm branch,
and all that."
"Well," says I, "I reckon
I ought to be ashamed of myself, but the
fact is I left them laying around that day I resigned from the
choir. I haven't got a rag to wear but this robe and the wings."
"That's all right. You'll find they've
been raked up and saved for
you. Send for them."
"I'll do it, Sandy. But what was
it you was saying about
unsacrilegious things, which people expect to get, and will be
disappointed about?"
"Oh, there are a lot of such things
that people expect and don't
get. For instance, there's a Brooklyn preacher by the name of
Talmage, who is laying up a considerable disappointment for
himself. He says, every now and then in his sermons, that the
first thing he does when he gets to heaven, will be to fling
his
arms around Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and kiss them and weep
on
them. There's millions of people down there on earth that are
promising themselves the same thing. As many as sixty thousand
people arrive here every single day, that want to run straight
to
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and hug them and weep on them. Now
mind
you, sixty thousand a day is a pretty heavy contract for those
old
people. If they were a mind to allow it, they wouldn't ever
have
anything to do, year in and year out, but stand up and be hugged
and wept on thirty-two hours in the twenty-four. They would
be
tired out and as wet as muskrats all the time. What would heaven
be, to THEM? It would be a mighty good place to get out of--you
know that, yourself. Those are kind and gentle old Jews, but
they
ain't any fonder of kissing the emotional highlights of Brooklyn
than you be. You mark my words, Mr. T.'s endearments are going
to
be declined, with thanks. There are limits to the privileges
of
the elect, even in heaven. Why, if Adam was to show himself
to
every new comer that wants to call and gaze at him and strike
him
for his autograph, he would never have time to do anything else
but
just that. Talmage has said he is going to give Adam some of
his
attentions, as well as A., I. and J. But he will have to change
his mind about that."
"Do you think Talmage will really
come here?"
"Why, certainly, he will; but don't
you be alarmed; he will run
with his own kind, and there's plenty of them. That is the main
charm of heaven--there's all kinds here--which wouldn't be the
case
if you let the preachers tell it. Anybody can find the sort
he
prefers, here, and he just lets the others alone, and they let
him
alone. When the Deity builds a heaven, it is built right, and
on a
liberal plan."
Sandy sent home for his things, and I sent
for mine, and about nine
in the evening we begun to dress. Sandy says,--
"This is going to be a grand time
for you, Stormy. Like as not
some of the patriarchs will turn out."
"No, but will they?"
"Like as not. Of course they are
pretty exclusive. They hardly
ever show themselves to the common public. I believe they never
turn out except for an eleventh-hour convert. They wouldn't
do it
then, only earthly tradition makes a grand show pretty necessary
on
that kind of an occasion."
"Do they an turn out, Sandy?"
"Who?--all the patriarchs? Oh, no--hardly
ever more than a couple.
You will be here fifty thousand years--maybe more--before you
get a
glimpse of all the patriarchs and prophets. Since I have been
here, Job has been to the front once, and once Ham and Jeremiah
both at the same time. But the finest thing that has happened
in
my day was a year or so ago; that was Charles Peace's reception--
him they called 'the Bannercross Murderer'--an Englishman. There
were four patriarchs and two prophets on the Grand Stand that
time-
-there hasn't been anything like it since Captain Kidd came;
Abel
was there--the first time in twelve hundred years. A report
got
around that Adam was coming; well, of course, Abel was enough
to
bring a crowd, all by himself, but there is nobody that can draw
like Adam. It was a false report, but it got around, anyway,
as I
say, and it will be a long day before I see the like of it again.
The reception was in the English department, of course, which
is
eight hundred and eleven million miles from the New Jersey line.
I
went, along with a good many of my neighbors, and it was a sight
to
see, I can tell you. Flocks came from all the departments.
I saw
Esquimaux there, and Tartars, Negroes, Chinamen--people from
everywhere. You see a mixture like that in the Grand Choir,
the
first day you land here, but you hardly ever see it again. There
were billions of people; when they were singing or hosannahing,
the
noise was wonderful; and even when their tongues were still the
drumming of the wings was nearly enough to burst your head, for
all
the sky was as thick as if it was snowing angels. Although Adam
was not there, it was a great time anyway, because we had three
archangels on the Grand Stand--it is a seldom thing that even
one
comes out."
"What did they look like, Sandy?"
"Well, they had shining faces, and
shining robes, and wonderful
rainbow wings, and they stood eighteen feet high, and wore swords,
and held their heads up in a noble way, and looked like soldiers."
"Did they have halos?"
"No--anyway, not the hoop kind. The
archangels and the upper-class
patriarchs wear a finer thing than that. It is a round, solid,
splendid glory of gold, that is blinding to look at. You have
often seen a patriarch in a picture, on earth, with that thing
on--
you remember it?--he looks as if he had his head in a brass
platter. That don't give you the right idea of it at all--it
is
much more shining and beautiful."
"Did you talk with those archangels
and patriarchs, Sandy?"
"Who--_I_? Why, what can you be thinking
about, Stormy? I ain't
worthy to speak to such as they."
"Is Talmage?"
"Of course not. You have got the
same mixed-up idea about these
things that everybody has down there. I had it once, but I got
over it. Down there they talk of the heavenly King--and that
is
right--but then they go right on speaking as if this was a republic
and everybody was on a dead level with everybody else, and
privileged to fling his arms around anybody he comes across,
and be
hail-fellow-well-met with all the elect, from the highest down.
How tangled up and absurd that is! How are you going to have
a
republic under a king? How are you going to have a republic
at
all, where the head of the government is absolute, holds his
place
forever, and has no parliament, no council to meddle or make
in his
affairs, nobody voted for, nobody elected, nobody in the whole
universe with a voice in the government, nobody asked to take
a
hand in its matters, and nobody ALLOWED to do it? Fine republic,
ain't it?"
"Well, yes--it IS a little different
from the idea I had--but I
thought I might go around and get acquainted with the grandees,
anyway--not exactly splice the main-brace with them, you know,
but
shake hands and pass the time of day."
"Could Tom, Dick and Harry call on
the Cabinet of Russia and do
that?--on Prince Gortschakoff, for instance?"
"I reckon not, Sandy."
"Well, this is Russia--only more so.
There's not the shadow of a
republic about it anywhere. There are ranks, here. There are
viceroys, princes, governors, sub-governors, sub-sub-governors,
and
a hundred orders of nobility, grading along down from grand-ducal
archangels, stage by stage, till the general level is struck,
where
there ain't any titles. Do you know what a prince of the blood
is,
on earth?"
"No."
"Well, a prince of the blood don't
belong to the royal family
exactly, and he don't belong to the mere nobility of the kingdom;
he is lower than the one, and higher than t'other. That's about
the position of the patriarchs and prophets here. There's some
mighty high nobility here--people that you and I ain't worthy
to
polish sandals for--and THEY ain't worthy to polish sandals for
the
patriarchs and prophets. That gives you a kind of an idea of
their
rank, don't it? You begin to see how high up they are, don't
you?
just to get a two-minute glimpse of one of them is a thing for
a
body to remember and tell about for a thousand years. Why,
Captain, just think of this: if Abraham was to set his foot
down
here by this door, there would be a railing set up around that
foot-track right away, and a shelter put over it, and people
would
flock here from all over heaven, for hundreds and hundreds of
years, to look at it. Abraham is one of the parties that Mr.
Talmage, of Brooklyn, is going to embrace, and kiss, and weep
on,
when he comes. He wants to lay in a good stock of tears, you
know,
or five to one he will go dry before he gets a chance to do it."
"Sandy," says I, "I had
an idea that _I_ was going to be equals
with everybody here, too, but I will let that drop. It don't
matter, and I am plenty happy enough anyway."
"Captain, you are happier than you
would be, the other way. These
old patriarchs and prophets have got ages the start of you; they
know more in two minutes than you know in a year. Did you ever
try
to have a sociable improving-time discussing winds, and currents
and variations of compass with an undertaker?"
"I get your idea, Sandy. He couldn't
interest me. He would be an
ignoramus in such things--he would bore me, and I would bore
him."
"You have got it. You would bore
the patriarchs when you talked,
and when they talked they would shoot over your head. By and
by
you would say, 'Good morning, your Eminence, I will call again'--
but you wouldn't. Did you ever ask the slush-boy to come up
in the
cabin and take dinner with you?"
"I get your drift again, Sandy. I
wouldn't be used to such grand
people as the patriarchs and prophets, and I would be sheepish
and
tongue-tied in their company, and mighty glad to get out of it.
Sandy, which is the highest rank, patriarch or prophet?"
"Oh, the prophets hold over the patriarchs.
The newest prophet,
even, is of a sight more consequence than the oldest patriarch.
Yes, sir, Adam himself has to walk behind Shakespeare."
"Was Shakespeare a prophet?"
"Of course he was; and so was Homer,
and heaps more. But
Shakespeare and the rest have to walk behind a common tailor
from
Tennessee, by the name of Billings; and behind a horse-doctor
named
Sakka, from Afghanistan. Jeremiah, and Billings and Buddha walk
together, side by side, right behind a crowd from planets not
in
our astronomy; next come a dozen or two from Jupiter and other
worlds; next come Daniel, and Sakka and Confucius; next a lot
from
systems outside of ours; next come Ezekiel, and Mahomet, Zoroaster,
and a knife-grinder from ancient Egypt; then there is a long
string, and after them, away down toward the bottom, come
Shakespeare and Homer, and a shoemaker named Marais, from the
back
settlements of France."
"Have they really rung in Mahomet
and all those other heathens?"
"Yes--they all had their message,
and they all get their reward.
The man who don't get his reward on earth, needn't bother--he
will
get it here, sure."
"But why did they throw off on Shakespeare,
that way, and put him
away down there below those shoe-makers and horse-doctors and
knife-grinders--a lot of people nobody ever heard of?"
"That is the heavenly justice of it--they
warn't rewarded according
to their deserts, on earth, but here they get their rightful
rank.
That tailor Billings, from Tennessee, wrote poetry that Homer
and
Shakespeare couldn't begin to come up to; but nobody would print
it, nobody read it but his neighbors, an ignorant lot, and they
laughed at it. Whenever the village had a drunken frolic and
a
dance, they would drag him in and crown him with cabbage leaves,
and pretend to bow down to him; and one night when he was sick
and
nearly starved to death, they had him out and crowned him, and
then
they rode him on a rail about the village, and everybody followed
along, beating tin pans and yelling. Well, he died before morning.
He wasn't ever expecting to go to heaven, much less that there
was
going to be any fuss made over him, so I reckon he was a good
deal
surprised when the reception broke on him."
"Was you there, Sandy?"
"Bless you, no!"
"Why? Didn't you know it was going
to come off?"
"Well, I judge I did. It was the
talk of these realms--not for a
day, like this barkeeper business, but for twenty years before
the
man died."
"Why the mischief didn't you go, then?"
"Now how you talk! The like of me
go meddling around at the
reception of a prophet? A mudsill like me trying to push in
and
help receive an awful grandee like Edward J. Billings? Why,
I
should have been laughed at for a billion miles around. I
shouldn't ever heard the last of it."
"Well, who did go, then?"
"Mighty few people that you and I
will ever get a chance to see,
Captain. Not a solitary commoner ever has the luck to see a
reception of a prophet, I can tell you. All the nobility, and
all
the patriarchs and prophets--every last one of them--and all
the
archangels, and all the princes and governors and viceroys, were
there,--and NO small fry--not a single one. And mind you, I'm
not
talking about only the grandees from OUR world, but the princes
and
patriarchs and so on from ALL the worlds that shine in our sky,
and
from billions more that belong in systems upon systems away outside
of the one our sun is in. There were some prophets and patriarchs
there that ours ain't a circumstance to, for rank and
illustriousness and all that. Some were from Jupiter and other
worlds in our own system, but the most celebrated were three
poets,
Saa, Bo and Soof, from great planets in three different and very
remote systems. These three names are common and familiar in
every
nook and corner of heaven, clear from one end of it to the other--
fully as well known as the eighty Supreme Archangels, in fact--
where as our Moses, and Adam, and the rest, have not been heard
of
outside of our world's little corner of heaven, except by a few
very learned men scattered here and there--and they always spell
their names wrong, and get the performances of one mixed up with
the doings of another, and they almost always locate them simply
IN
OUR SOLAR SYSTEM, and think that is enough without going into
little details such as naming the particular world they are from.
It is like a learned Hindoo showing off how much he knows by
saying
Longfellow lives in the United States--as if he lived all over
the
United States, and as if the country was so small you couldn't
throw a brick there without hitting him. Between you and me,
it
does gravel me, the cool way people from those monster worlds
outside our system snub our little world, and even our system.
Of
course we think a good deal of Jupiter, because our world is
only a
potato to it, for size; but then there are worlds in other systems
that Jupiter isn't even a mustard-seed to--like the planet Goobra,
for instance, which you couldn't squeeze inside the orbit of
Halley's comet without straining the rivets. Tourists from Goobra
(I mean parties that lived and died there--natives) come here,
now
and then, and inquire about our world, and when they find out
it is
so little that a streak of lightning can flash clear around it
in
the eighth of a second, they have to lean up against something
to
laugh. Then they screw a glass into their eye and go to examining
us, as if we were a curious kind of foreign bug, or something
of
that sort. One of them asked me how long our day was; and when
I
told him it was twelve hours long, as a general thing, he asked
me
if people where I was from considered it worth while to get up
and
wash for such a day as that. That is the way with those Goobra
people--they can't seem to let a chance go by to throw it in
your
face that their day is three hundred and twenty-two of our years
long. This young snob was just of age--he was six or seven
thousand of his days old--say two million of our years--and he
had
all the puppy airs that belong to that time of life--that turning-
point when a person has got over being a boy and yet ain't quite
a
man exactly. If it had been anywhere else but in heaven, I would
have given him a piece of my mind. Well, anyway, Billings had
the
grandest reception that has been seen in thousands of centuries,
and I think it will have a good effect. His name will be carried
pretty far, and it will make our system talked about, and maybe
our
world, too, and raise us in the respect of the general public
of
heaven. Why, look here--Shakespeare walked backwards before
that
tailor from Tennessee, and scattered flowers for him to walk
on,
and Homer stood behind his chair and waited on him at the banquet.
Of course that didn't go for much THERE, amongst all those big
foreigners from other systems, as they hadn't heard of Shakespeare
or Homer either, but it would amount to considerable down there
on
our little earth if they could know about it. I wish there was
something in that miserable spiritualism, so we could send them
word. That Tennessee village would set up a monument to Billings,
then, and his autograph would outsell Satan's. Well, they had
grand times at that reception--a small-fry noble from Hoboken
told
me all about it--Sir Richard Duffer, Baronet."
"What, Sandy, a nobleman from Hoboken?
How is that?"
"Easy enough. Duffer kept a sausage-shop
and never saved a cent in
his life because he used to give all his spare meat to the poor,
in
a quiet way. Not tramps,--no, the other sort--the sort that
will
starve before they will beg--honest square people out of work.
Dick used to watch hungry-looking men and women and children,
and
track them home, and find out all about them from the neighbors,
and then feed them and find them work. As nobody ever saw him
give
anything to anybody, he had the reputation of being mean; he
died
with it, too, and everybody said it was a good riddance; but
the
minute he landed here, they made him a baronet, and the very
first
words Dick the sausage-maker of Hoboken heard when he stepped
upon
the heavenly shore were, 'Welcome, Sir Richard Duffer!' It
surprised him some, because he thought he had reasons to believe
he
was pointed for a warmer climate than this one."
All of a sudden the whole region fairly
rocked under the crash of
eleven hundred and one thunder blasts, all let off at once, and
Sandy says,--
"There, that's for the barkeep."
I jumped up and says,--
"Then let's be moving along, Sandy;
we don't want to miss any of
this thing, you know."
"Keep your seat," he says; "he
is only just telegraphed, that is
all."
"How?"
"That blast only means that he has
been sighted from the signal-
station. He is off Sandy Hook. The committees will go down
to
meet him, now, and escort him in. There will be ceremonies and
delays; they won't he coming up the Bay for a considerable time,
yet. It is several billion miles away, anyway."
"_I_ could have been a barkeeper and
a hard lot just as well as
not," says I, remembering the lonesome way I arrived, and
how there
wasn't any committee nor anything.
"I notice some regret in your voice,"
says Sandy, "and it is
natural enough; but let bygones be bygones; you went according
to
your lights, and it is too late now to mend the thing."
"No, let it slide, Sandy, I don't
mind. But you've got a Sandy
Hook HERE, too, have you?"
"We've got everything here, just as
it is below. All the States
and Territories of the Union, and all the kingdoms of the earth
and
the islands of the sea are laid out here just as they are on
the
globe--all the same shape they are down there, and all graded
to
the relative size, only each State and realm and island is a
good
many billion times bigger here than it is below. There goes
another blast."
"What is that one for?"
"That is only another fort answering
the first one. They each fire
eleven hundred and one thunder blasts at a single dash--it is
the
usual salute for an eleventh-hour guest; a hundred for each hour
and an extra one for the guest's sex; if it was a woman we would
know it by their leaving off the extra gun."
"How do we know there's eleven hundred
and one, Sandy, when they
all go off at once?--and yet we certainly do know."
"Our intellects are a good deal sharpened
up, here, in some ways,
and that is one of them. Numbers and sizes and distances are
so
great, here, that we have to be made so we can FEEL them--our
old
ways of counting and measuring and ciphering wouldn't ever give
us
an idea of them, but would only confuse us and oppress us and
make
our heads ache."
After some more talk about this, I says:
"Sandy, I notice that I
hardly ever see a white angel; where I run across one white angel,
I strike as many as a hundred million copper-colored ones--people
that can't speak English. How is that?"
"Well, you will find it the same in
any State or Territory of the
American corner of heaven you choose to go to. I have shot along,
a whole week on a stretch, and gone millions and millions of
miles,
through perfect swarms of angels, without ever seeing a single
white one, or hearing a word I could understand. You see, America
was occupied a billion years and more, by Injuns and Aztecs,
and
that sort of folks, before a white man ever set his foot in it.
During the first three hundred years after Columbus's discovery,
there wasn't ever more than one good lecture audience of white
people, all put together, in America--I mean the whole thing,
British Possessions and all; in the beginning of our century
there
were only 6,000,000 or 7,000,000--say seven; 12,000,000 or
14,000,000 in 1825; say 23,000,000 in 1850; 40,000,000 in 1875.
Our death-rate has always been 20 in 1000 per annum. Well, 140,000
died the first year of the century; 280,000 the twenty-fifth
year;
500,000 the fiftieth year; about a million the seventy-fifth
year.
Now I am going to be liberal about this thing, and consider that
fifty million whites have died in America from the beginning
up to
to-day--make it sixty, if you want to; make it a hundred million--
it's no difference about a few millions one way or t'other.
Well,
now, you can see, yourself, that when you come to spread a little
dab of people like that over these hundreds of billions of miles
of
American territory here in heaven, it is like scattering a ten-cent
box of homoeopathic pills over the Great Sahara and expecting
to
find them again. You can't expect us to amount to anything in
heaven, and we DON'T--now that is the simple fact, and we have
got
to do the best we can with it. The learned men from other planets
and other systems come here and hang around a while, when they
are
touring around the Kingdom, and then go back to their own section
of heaven and write a book of travels, and they give America
about
five lines in it. And what do they say about us? They say this
wilderness is populated with a scattering few hundred thousand
billions of red angels, with now and then a curiously complected
DISEASED one. You see, they think we whites and the occasional
nigger are Injuns that have been bleached out or blackened by
some
leprous disease or other--for some peculiarly rascally SIN, mind
you. It is a mighty sour pill for us all, my friend--even the
modestest of us, let alone the other kind, that think they are
going to be received like a long-lost government bond, and hug
Abraham into the bargain. I haven't asked you any of the
particulars, Captain, but I judge it goes without saying--if
my
experience is worth anything--that there wasn't much of a hooraw
made over you when you arrived--now was there?"
"Don't mention it, Sandy," says
I, coloring up a little; "I
wouldn't have had the family see it for any amount you are a
mind
to name. Change the subject, Sandy, change the subject."
"Well, do you think of settling in
the California department of
bliss?"
"I don't know. I wasn't calculating
on doing anything really
definite in that direction till the family come. I thought I
would
just look around, meantime, in a quiet way, and make up my mind.
Besides, I know a good many dead people, and I was calculating
to
hunt them up and swap a little gossip with them about friends,
and
old times, and one thing or another, and ask them how they like
it
here, as far as they have got. I reckon my wife will want to
camp
in the California range, though, because most all her departed
will
be there, and she likes to be with folks she knows."
"Don't you let her. You see what
the Jersey district of heaven is,
for whites; well, the Californian district is a thousand times
worse. It swarms with a mean kind of leather-headed mud-colored
angels--and your nearest white neighbor is likely to be a million
miles away. WHAT A MAN MOSTLY MISSES, IN HEAVEN, IS COMPANY--
company of his own sort and color and language. I have come
near
settling in the European part of heaven once or twice on that
account."
"Well, why didn't you, Sandy?"
"Oh, various reasons. For one thing,
although you SEE plenty of
whites there, you can't understand any of them, hardly, and so
you
go about as hungry for talk as you do here. I like to look at
a
Russian or a German or an Italian--I even like to look at a
Frenchman if I ever have the luck to catch him engaged in anything
that ain't indelicate--but LOOKING don't cure the hunger--what
you
want is talk."
"Well, there's England, Sandy--the
English district of heaven."
"Yes, but it is not so very much better
than this end of the
heavenly domain. As long as you run across Englishmen born this
side of three hundred years ago, you are all right; but the minute
you get back of Elizabeth's time the language begins to fog up,
and
the further back you go the foggier it gets. I had some talk
with
one Langland and a man by the name of Chaucer--old-time poets--but
it was no use, I couldn't quite understand them, and they couldn't
quite understand me. I have had letters from them since, but
it is
such broken English I can't make it out. Back of those men's
time
the English are just simply foreigners, nothing more, nothing
less;
they talk Danish, German, Norman French, and sometimes a mixture
of
all three; back of THEM, they talk Latin, and ancient British,
Irish, and Gaelic; and then back of these come billions and
billions of pure savages that talk a gibberish that Satan himself
couldn't understand. The fact is, where you strike one man in
the
English settlements that you can understand, you wade through
awful
swarms that talk something you can't make head nor tail of.
You
see, every country on earth has been overlaid so often, in the
course of a billion years, with different kinds of people and
different sorts of languages, that this sort of mongrel business
was bound to be the result in heaven."
"Sandy," says I, "did you
see a good many of the great people
history tells about?"
"Yes--plenty. I saw kings and all
sorts of distinguished people."
"Do the kings rank just as they did
below?"
"No; a body can't bring his rank up
here with him. Divine right is
a good-enough earthly romance, but it don't go, here. Kings
drop
down to the general level as soon as they reach the realms of
grace. I knew Charles the Second very well--one of the most
popular comedians in the English section--draws first rate.
There
are better, of course--people that were never heard of on earth--
but Charles is making a very good reputation indeed, and is
considered a rising man. Richard the Lion-hearted is in the
prize-
ring, and coming into considerable favor. Henry the Eighth is
a
tragedian, and the scenes where he kills people are done to the
very life. Henry the Sixth keeps a religious-book stand."
"Did you ever see Napoleon, Sandy?"
"Often--sometimes in the Corsican
range, sometimes in the French.
He always hunts up a conspicuous place, and goes frowning around
with his arms folded and his field-glass under his arm, looking
as
grand, gloomy and peculiar as his reputation calls for, and very
much bothered because he don't stand as high, here, for a soldier,
as he expected to."
"Why, who stands higher?"
"Oh, a LOT of people WE never heard
of before--the shoemaker and
horse-doctor and knife-grinder kind, you know--clodhoppers from
goodness knows where that never handled a sword or fired a shot
in
their lives--but the soldiership was in them, though they never
had
a chance to show it. But here they take their right place, and
Caesar and Napoleon and Alexander have to take a back seat.
The
greatest military genius our world ever produced was a brick-layer
from somewhere back of Boston--died during the Revolution--by
the
name of Absalom Jones. Wherever he goes, crowds flock to see
him.
You see, everybody knows that if he had had a chance he would
have
shown the world some generalship that would have made all
generalship before look like child's play and 'prentice work.
But
he never got a chance; he tried heaps of times to enlist as a
private, but he had lost both thumbs and a couple of front teeth,
and the recruiting sergeant wouldn't pass him. However, as I
say,
everybody knows, now, what he WOULD have been,--and so they flock
by the million to get a glimpse of him whenever they hear he
is
going to be anywhere. Caesar, and Hannibal, and Alexander, and
Napoleon are all on his staff, and ever so many more great
generals; but the public hardly care to look at THEM when HE
is
around. Boom! There goes another salute. The barkeeper's off
quarantine now."
Sandy and I put on our things. Then we
made a wish, and in a
second we were at the reception-place. We stood on the edge
of the
ocean of space, and looked out over the dimness, but couldn't
make
out anything. Close by us was the Grand Stand--tier on tier
of dim
thrones rising up toward the zenith. From each side of it spread
away the tiers of seats for the general public. They spread
away
for leagues and leagues--you couldn't see the ends. They were
empty and still, and hadn't a cheerful look, but looked dreary,
like a theatre before anybody comes--gas turned down. Sandy
says,-
-
"We'll sit down here and wait. We'll
see the head of the
procession come in sight away off yonder pretty soon, now."
Says I,--
"It's pretty lonesome, Sandy; I reckon
there's a hitch somewheres.
Nobody but just you and me--it ain't much of a display for the
barkeeper."
"Don't you fret, it's all right.
There'll be one more gun-fire--
then you'll see.
In a little while we noticed a sort of
a lightish flush, away off
on the horizon.
"Head of the torchlight procession,"
says Sandy.
It spread, and got lighter and brighter:
soon it had a strong
glare like a locomotive headlight; it kept on getting brighter
and
brighter till it was like the sun peeping above the horizon-line
at
sea--the big red rays shot high up into the sky.
"Keep your eyes on the Grand Stand
and the miles of seats--sharp!"
says Sandy, "and listen for the gun-fire."
Just then it burst out, "Boom-boom-boom!"
like a million
thunderstorms in one, and made the whole heavens rock. Then
there
was a sudden and awful glare of light all about us, and in that
very instant every one of the millions of seats was occupied,
and
as far as you could see, in both directions, was just a solid
pack
of people, and the place was all splendidly lit up! It was enough
to take a body's breath away. Sandy says,--
"That is the way we do it here. No
time fooled away; nobody
straggling in after the curtain's up. Wishing is quicker work
than
travelling. A quarter of a second ago these folks were millions
of
miles from here. When they heard the last signal, all they had
to
do was to wish, and here they are."
The prodigious choir struck up,--
We long to hear thy voice,
To see thee face to face.
It was noble music, but the uneducated
chipped in and spoilt it,
just as the congregations used to do on earth.
The head of the procession began to pass,
now, and it was a
wonderful sight. It swept along, thick and solid, five hundred
thousand angels abreast, and every angel carrying a torch and
singing--the whirring thunder of the wings made a body's head
ache.
You could follow the line of the procession back, and slanting
upward into the sky, far away in a glittering snaky rope, till
it
was only a faint streak in the distance. The rush went on and
on,
for a long time, and at last, sure enough, along comes the
barkeeper, and then everybody rose, and a cheer went up that
made
the heavens shake, I tell you! He was all smiles, and had his
halo
tilted over one ear in a cocky way, and was the most satisfied-
looking saint I ever saw. While he marched up the steps of the
Grand Stand, the choir struck up,--
The whole wide heaven groans,
And waits to hear that voice."
There were four gorgeous tents standing
side by side in the place
of honor, on a broad railed platform in the centre of the Grand
Stand, with a shining guard of honor round about them. The tents
had been shut up all this time. As the barkeeper climbed along
up,
bowing and smiling to everybody, and at last got to the platform,
these tents were jerked up aloft all of a sudden, and we saw
four
noble thrones of gold, all caked with jewels, and in the two
middle
ones sat old white-whiskered men, and in the two others a couple
of
the most glorious and gaudy giants, with platter halos and
beautiful armor. All the millions went down on their knees,
and
stared, and looked glad, and burst out into a joyful kind of
murmurs. They said,--
"Two archangels!--that is splendid.
Who can the others be?"
The archangels gave the barkeeper a stiff
little military bow; the
two old men rose; one of them said, "Moses and Esau welcome
thee!"
and then all the four vanished, and the thrones were empty.
The barkeeper looked a little disappointed,
for he was calculating
to hug those old people, I judge; but it was the gladdest and
proudest multitude you ever saw--because they had seen Moses
and
Esau. Everybody was saying, "Did you see them?--I did--Esau's
side
face was to me, but I saw Moses full in the face, just as plain
as
I see you this minute!"
The procession took up the barkeeper and
moved on with him again,
and the crowd broke up and scattered. As we went along home,
Sandy
said it was a great success, and the barkeeper would have a right
to be proud of it forever. And he said we were in luck, too;
said
we might attend receptions for forty thousand years to come,
and
not have a chance to see a brace of such grand moguls as Moses
and
Esau. We found afterwards that we had come near seeing another
patriarch, and likewise a genuine prophet besides, but at the
last
moment they sent regrets. Sandy said there would be a monument
put
up there, where Moses and Esau had stood, with the date and
circumstances, and all about the whole business, and travellers
would come for thousands of years and gawk at it, and climb over
it, and scribble their names on it.
Footnotes:
{1} The captain could not remember what
this word was. He said it
was in a foreign tongue.
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