<SPAN name="chapter_2"></SPAN><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page13" title="13"> </SPAN>
<h2><span class="chapter_no" title="two">II</span><br/>THE SPORTING TOUR OF MR. MUNCHAUSEN</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph">“<span class="first_word">Good</span> morning, Mr. Munchausen,” said the
interviewer of the <cite>Gehenna Gazette</cite> entering
the apartment of the famous traveller at the
Hotel Deville, where the late Baron had just arrived
from his sporting tour in the Blue Hills of
Cimmeria and elsewhere.</p>
<p>“The interests of truth, my dear Ananias,”
replied the Baron, grasping me cordially by the
hand, “require that I should state it as my opinion
that it is not a good morning. In fact, my good
friend, it is a very bad morning. Can you not see
that it is raining cats and dogs without?”</p>
<p>“Sir,” said I with a bow, “I accept the spirit of
your correction but not the letter. It is raining
indeed, sir, as you suggest, but having passed
through it myself on my way hither I can personally
testify that it is raining rain, and not a single
cat or canine has, to my knowledge, as yet fallen
from the clouds to the parched earth, although I am
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page14" title="14"> </SPAN>informed that down upon the coast an elephant
and three cows have fallen upon one of the summer
hotels and irreparably damaged the roof.”</p>
<p>Mr. Munchausen laughed.</p>
<p>“It is curious, Ananias,” said he, “what sticklers
for the truth you and I have become.”</p>
<p>“It is indeed, Munchausen,” I returned. “The
effects of this climate are working wonders upon
us. And it is just as well. You and I are outclassed
by these twentieth century prevaricators
concerning whom late arrivals from the upper
world tell such strange things. They tell me that
lying has become a business and is no longer ranked
among the Arts or Professions.”</p>
<p>“Ah me!” sighed the Baron with a retrospective
look in his eye, “lying isn’t what it used to be,
Ananias, in your days and mine. I fear it has become
one of the lost arts.”</p>
<p>“I have noticed it myself, my friend, and only last
night I observed the same thing to my well beloved
Sapphira, who was lamenting the transparency
of the modern lie, and said that lying to-day is no
better than the truth. In our day a prevarication
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page15" title="15"> </SPAN>had all of the opaque beauty of an opalescent bit of
glass, whereas to-day in the majority of cases it is
like a great vulgar plate-glass window, through
which we can plainly see the ugly truths that lie behind.
But, sir, I am here to secure from you not
a treatise upon the lost art of lying, but some idea
of the results of your sporting tour. You fished,
and hunted, and golfed, and doubtless did other
things. You, of course, had luck and made the
greatest catch of the season; shot all the game in
sight, and won every silver, gold and pewter golf
mug in all creation?”</p>
<p>“You speak truly, Ananias,” returned Mr. Munchausen.
“My luck <em>was</em> wonderful—even for one
who has been so singularly fortunate as I. I took
three tons of speckled beauties with one cast of an
ordinary horse whip in the Blue Hills, and with
nothing but a silken line and a minnow hook landed
upon the deck of my steam yacht a whale of most
tremendous proportions; I shot game of every kind
in great abundance and in my golf there was none
to whom I could not give with ease seven holes in
every nine and beat him out.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page16" title="16"> </SPAN>“Seven?” said I, failing to see how the ex-Baron
could be right.</p>
<p>“Seven,” said he complacently. “Seven on the
first, and seven on the second nine; fourteen in all
of the eighteen holes.”</p>
<p>“But,” I cried, “I do not see how that could be.
With fourteen holes out of the eighteen given to
your opponent even if you won all the rest you still
would be ten down.”</p>
<p>“True, by ordinary methods of calculation,” returned
the Baron, “but I got them back on a technicality,
which I claim is a new and valuable discovery
in the game. You see it is impossible to
play more than one hole at a time, and I invariably
proved to the Greens Committee that in taking
fourteen holes at once my opponent violated the
physical possibilities of the situation. In every case
the point was accepted as well taken, for if we
allow golfers to rise above physical possibilities the
game is gone. The integrity of the Card is the
soul of Golf,” he added sententiously.</p>
<p>“Tell me of the whale,” said I, simply. “You
landed a whale of large proportions on the deck
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page17" title="17"> </SPAN>of your yacht with a simple silken line and a
minnow hook.”</p>
<p>“Well it’s a tough story,” the Baron replied,
handing me a cigar. “But it is true, Ananias, true
to the last word. I was fishing for eels. Sitting on
the deck of <em>The Lyre</em> one very warm afternoon in
the early stages of my trip, I baited a minnow hook
and dropped it overboard. It was the roughest
day at sea I had ever encountered. The waves were
mountain high, and it is the sad fact that one of our
crew seated in the main-top was drowned with the
spray of the dashing billows. Fortunately for myself,
directly behind my deck chair, to which I was
securely lashed, was a powerful electric fan which
blew the spray away from me, else I too might have
suffered the same horrid fate. Suddenly there
came a tug on my line. I was half asleep at the
time and let the line pay out involuntarily, but I
was wide-awake enough to know that something
larger than an eel had taken hold of the hook. I
had hooked either a Leviathan or a derelict. Caution
and patience, the chief attributes of a good
angler were required. I hauled the line in until it
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page18" title="18"> </SPAN>was taut. There were a thousand yards of it out,
and when it reached the point of tensity, I gave
orders to the engineers to steam closer to the object
at the other end. We steamed in five hundred
yards, I meanwhile hauling in my line. Then came
another tug and I let out ten yards. ‘Steam
closer,’ said I. ‘Three hundred yards sou-sou-west
by nor’-east.’ The yacht obeyed on the instant.
I called the Captain and let him feel the
line. ‘What do you think it is?’ said I. He pulled
a half dozen times. ‘Feels like a snag,’ he said,
‘but seein’ as there ain’t no snags out here, I think
it must be a fish.’ ‘What kind?’ I asked. I could
not but agree that he was better acquainted with
the sea and its denizens than I. ‘Well,’ he replied,
‘it is either a sea serpent or a whale.’ At the mere
mention of the word whale I was alert. I have always
wanted to kill a whale. ‘Captain,’ said I,
‘can’t you tie an anchor onto a hawser, and bait
the flukes with a boa constrictor and make sure of
him?’ He looked at me contemptuously. ‘Whales
eats fish,’ said he, ‘and they don’t bite at no
anchors. Whales has brains, whales has.’ ‘What
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page19" title="19"> </SPAN>shall we do?’ I asked. ‘Steam closer,’ said the
Captain, and we did so.”</p>
<p>Munchausen took a long breath and for the moment
was silent.</p>
<p>“Well?” said I.</p>
<p>“Well, Ananias,” said he. “We resolved to
wait. As the Captain said to me, ‘Fishin’ is
waitin’.’ So we waited. ‘Coax him along,’ said
the Captain. ‘How can we do it?’ I asked. ‘By
kindness,’ said he. ‘Treat him gently, persuasive-like
and he’ll come.’ We waited four days and
nobody moved and I grew weary of coaxing. ‘We’ve
got to do something,’ said I to the Captain. ‘Yes,’
said he, ‘Let’s <em>make</em> him move. He doesn’t seem to
respond to kindness.’ ‘But how?’ I cried. ‘Give
him an electric shock,’ said the Captain. ‘Telegraph
him his mother’s sick and may be it’ll move him.’
‘Can’t you get closer to him?’ I demanded, resenting
his facetious manner. ‘I can, but it will
scare him off,’ replied the Captain. So we turned
all our batteries on the sea. The dynamo shot
forth its bolts and along about four o’clock in the
afternoon there was the whale drawn by magnetic
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page20" title="20"> </SPAN>influence to the side of <em>The Lyre</em>. He was a beauty,
Ananias,” Munchausen added with enthusiasm.
“You never saw such a whale. His back was
as broad as the deck of an ocean steamer and in his
length he exceeded the dimensions of <em>The Lyre</em> by
sixty feet.”</p>
<div id="illo01" class="illo">
<SPAN href="images/illo01.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illo01-thumb.jpg" width-obs="300" height-obs="414" alt="A ghostly Baron standing at a boat rail tips his hat to a whale" /></SPAN>
<p class="caption">“There was the whale drawn by magnetic
influence to the side of <em>The Lyre</em>.” <span class="illo_ch">Chapter II.</span></p>
</div>
<p>“And still you got him on deck?” I asked,—I,
Ananias, who can stand something in the way of an
exaggeration.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Munchausen, lighting his cigar,
which had gone out. “Another storm came up and
we rolled and rolled and rolled, until I thought <em>The
Lyre</em> was going to capsize.”</p>
<p>“But weren’t you sea-sick?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Didn’t have a chance to be,” said Munchausen.
“I was thinking of the whale all the time. Finally
there came a roll in which we went completely under,
and with a slight pulling on the line the
whale was landed by the force of the wave and laid
squarely upon the deck.”</p>
<p>“Great Sapphira!” said I. “But you just said
he was wider and longer than the yacht!”</p>
<p>“He was,” sighed Munchausen. “He landed on <!-- Original Location of Illo 1-->
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page21" title="21"> </SPAN>the deck and by sheer force of his weight the yacht
went down under him. I swam ashore and the
whole crew with me. The next day Mr. Whale
floated in strangled. He’d swallowed the thousand
yards of line and it got so tangled in his tonsils
that it choked him to death. Come around next
week and I’ll give you a couple of pounds of whalebone
for Mrs. Ananias, and all the oil you can
carry.”</p>
<p>I thanked the old gentleman for his kind offer
and promised to avail myself of it, although as a
newspaper man it is against my principles to accept
gifts from public men.</p>
<p>“It was great luck, Baron,” said I. “Or at least
it would have been if you hadn’t lost your yacht.”</p>
<p>“That was great luck too,” he observed nonchalantly.
“It cost me ten thousand dollars a month
keeping that yacht in commission. Now she’s gone
I save all that. Why it’s like finding money in the
street, Ananias. She wasn’t worth more than fifty
thousand dollars, and in six months I’ll be ten
thousand ahead.”</p>
<p>I could not but admire the cheerful philosophy
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page22" title="22"> </SPAN>of the man, but then I was not surprised. Munchausen
was never the sort of man to let little
things worry him.</p>
<p>“But that whale business wasn’t a circumstance
to my catch of three tons of trout with a single cast
of a horse-whip in the Blue Hills,” said the Baron
after a few moments of meditation, during which I
could see that he was carefully marshalling his
facts.</p>
<p>“I never heard of its equal,” said I. “You must
have used a derrick.”</p>
<p>“No,” he replied suavely. “Nothing of the sort.
It was the simplest thing in the world. It was
along about five o’clock in the afternoon when with
my three guides and my valet I drove up the winding
roadway of Great Sulphur Mountain on my
way to the Blue Mountain House where I purposed
to put up for a few days. I had one of those big
mountain wagons with a covered top to it such as
the pioneers used on the American plains, with six
fine horses to the fore. I held the reins myself,
since we were in the midst of a terrific thunderstorm
and I felt safer when I did my own driving.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page23" title="23"> </SPAN>All the flaps of the leathern cover were let down
at the sides and at the back, and were securely
fastened. The roads were unusually heavy, and
when we came to the last great hill before the lake
all but I were walking, as a measure of relief to the
horses. Suddenly one of the horses balked right in
the middle of the ascent, and in a moment of impatience
I gave him a stinging flick with my whip,
when like a whirlwind the whole six swerved to
one side and started on a dead run upward. The
jolt and the unexpected swerving of the wagon
threw me from my seat and I landed clear of the
wheels in the soft mud of the roadway, fortunately
without injury. When I arose the team was out of
sight and we had to walk the remainder of the distance
to the hotel. Imagine our surprise upon arriving
there to find the six panting steeds and the
wagon standing before the main entrance to the
hotel dripping as though they had been through
the Falls of Niagara, and, would you believe it,
Ananias, inside that leather cover of the wagon,
packed as tightly as sardines, were no less than
three thousand trout, not one of them weighing
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page24" title="24"> </SPAN>less than a pound and some of them getting as high
as four. The whole catch weighed a trifle over six
thousand pounds.”</p>
<p>“Great Heavens, Baron,” I cried. “Where the
dickens did they come from?”</p>
<p>“That’s what I asked myself,” said the Baron
easily. “It seemed astounding at first glance, but
investigation showed it after all to be a very simple
proposition. The runaways after reaching the top
of the hill turned to the left, and clattered on down
toward the bridge over the inlet to the lake. The
bridge broke beneath their weight and the horses
soon found themselves struggling in the water. The
harness was strong and the wagon never left them.
They had to swim for it, and I am told by a small
boy who was fishing on the lake at the time that
they swam directly across it, pulling the wagon
after them. Naturally with its open front and
confined back and sides the wagon acted as a sort
of drag-net and when the opposite shore was
gained, and the wagon was pulled ashore, it was
found to have gathered in all the fish that could
not get out of the way.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page25" title="25"> </SPAN>The Baron resumed his cigar, and I sat still eyeing
the ample pattern of the drawing-room carpet.</p>
<p>“Pretty good catch for an afternoon, eh?” he
said in a minute.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said I. “Almost too good, Baron. Those
horses must have swam like the dickens to get over
so quickly. You would think the trout would have
had time to escape.”</p>
<p>“Oh I presume one or two of them did,” said
Munchausen. “But the majority of them couldn’t.
The horses were all fast, record-breakers anyhow.
I never hire a horse that isn’t.”</p>
<p>And with that I left the old gentleman and
walked blushing back to the office. I don’t doubt
for an instant the truth of the Baron’s story, but
somehow or other I feel that in writing it my reputation
is in some measure at stake.</p>
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page26" title="26"> </SPAN>
<p><span class="nb">Note</span>—Mr. Munchausen, upon request of the Editor of the <cite>Gehenna
Gazette</cite> to write a few stories of adventure for his Imp’s page, conducted
by Sapphira, contributed the tales which form the substance of several of
the following chapters.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />