David Lockwin -- The Peoples Idol | Page 4

John McGovern
me up
here, privately."
"Well, you ought to know whether or not you want to go. Nobody
wants you there if it isn't yourself. Harpwood will go if you don't."
"Yes, I suppose so."
"Well, if you want our support, we must have a pledge from you. I
guess you want to go, and we are willing to put you there for the
unexpired term and the next one. Then are you ready to climb down?
Say the word. The mayor and the senator are out there waiting for me."

"All right. It is a bargain."
"And you won't feel bad when we knock you out, in three years?"
"No. I will probably be glad to come home."
"Very well; we will carry the primaries. But that district needs
watching. Spend lots of money."

CHAPTER III
OF SNEEZES
There is no chapter on sneezes in "Tristam Shandy." The faithful
Boswell has recorded no sneeze of Dr. Johnson. Spinoza does not
reckon it among the things the citizen may do without offense to a free
state. Montesquieu does not give the Spirit of Sneezing, nor tell how
the ancients sneezed. Pascal, in all his vanities of man, has no thought
on sneezing. Bacon has missed it. Of all the glorious company of
Shakespeare's brain, a few snored, but not one sneezed or spoke of
sneezing. Darwin avoids it. Hegel and Schlegel haven't a word of it.
The encyclopedias leave it for the dictionaries.
We might suppose the gentle latitudes and halcyon seas of Asia and the
Mediterranean had failed to develop the sneeze, save that the immortal
Montaigue, a friend in need to every reader, will point you that
Aristotle told why the people bless a man who sneezes. "The gods bless
you!" said the Athenian. "God bless you!" says the Irishman or
Scotchman of to-day.
A sneeze is to enter the politics of the First District. Could any political
boss, however prudent or scholarly, foresee it? A sneeze is to influence
the life of David Lockwin. Does not providence move in a mysterious
way?
A great newspaper has employed as its marine reporter a singular
character. He once was rich--that is, he had $10,000 in currency. How

had he made it? Running a faro bank. How did he lose it? By taking a
partner, who "played it in"--that is, the partner conspired with an
outside player, or "patron" of the house. Why did not our man begin
over again? He was disheartened--tired of the business. Besides, it
gives a gambler a bad name to be robbed--it is like a dishonored
husband.
The marine reporter's ancestors were knights. The ancestral name was
Coeur de Cheval. The attrition of centuries, and the hurry of the
industrial period, have diminished this name in sound and dignity to
Carkey, and finally to Corkey.
Naturally of a knightly fiber, this queer man has no sooner established
himself in command of the port of Chicago than he has found his
dearest dreams realized. To become the ornament of the sailor's
fraternity is but to go up and down the docks, drinking the whisky
which comes in free from Canada and sneezing.
"We steer toward Corkey's sneeze," the sailors declare.
To produce the greatest sneeze that was ever heard in the valley of the
Mississippi, give us, then, a man who is called a "sawed-off" by those
who love him--a very thick, very short, very tobaccofied, strong man in
cavalry pants, with a jacket of the heaviest chinchilla--a restless,
oathful, laconic, thirsty, never-drunk "editor." It is a man after the
sailor's own heart. It is a man, too, well known to the gamblers, and
they all vote in Lockwin's district.
Parlor entertainers make a famous sneeze by delegating to each of a
group some vowel in the word "h--sh!" It shall be "hash" for this one,
"hish" for that one, "hush" for still another, and so on. Then the
professor counts three, at which all yell together, and the consolidated
sound is a sneeze.
In a chorus the leader may tell you one singer is worth all the rest. So,
if Corkey were in this parlor, and should render one unforeseen,
unpremeditated sneeze, you would not know the parlorful had sneezed
along with him. Corkey's sneeze is unapproachable, unrivaled, hated,

feared, admired, reverenced. The devout say "God bless you!" with
deep unction. The adventurous declare that such a sneeze would buckle
the cabin-floor of a steamer like a wave in the trough of the sea.
When Corkey sneezes, sailors are moved to treat to the drinks. They
mark it as an event. A sailor will treat you because it is Christmas, or
because Corkey has sneezed.
Greatness consists in doing one thing better or worse than any one else
can do it. Thus it is rare a man is
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