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Page 36
When he could find nothing else to damage, he would go out of his way to
upset himself. He could not be sure of stepping from his own punt on to
the boat with safety. As often as not, he would catch his foot in the
chain or the punt-pole, and arrive on his chest.
Amenda used to condole with him. "Your mother ought to be ashamed of
herself," I heard her telling him one morning; "she could never have
taught you to walk. What you want is a go-cart."
He was a willing lad, but his stupidity was super-natural. A comet
appeared in the sky that year, and everybody was talking about it. One
day he said to me:--
"There's a comet coming, ain't there, sir?" He talked about it as though
it were a circus.
"Coming!" I answered, "it's come. Haven't you seen it?"
"No, sir."
"Oh, well, you have a look for it to-night. It's worth seeing."
"Yees, sir, I should like to see it. It's got a tail, ain't it, sir?"
"Yes, a very fine tail."
"Yees, sir, they said it 'ad a tail. Where do you go to see it, sir?"
"Go! You don't want to go anywhere. You'll see it in your own garden at
ten o'clock."
He thanked me, and, tumbling over a sack of potatoes, plunged head
foremost into his punt and departed.
Next morning, I asked him if he had seen the comet.
"No, sir, I couldn't see it anywhere."
"Did you look?"
"Yees, sir. I looked a long time."
"How on earth did you manage to miss it then?" I exclaimed. "It was a
clear enough night. Where did you look?"
"In our garden, sir. Where you told me."
"Whereabouts in the garden?" chimed in Amenda, who happened to be
standing by; "under the gooseberry bushes?"
"Yees--everywhere."
That is what he had done: he had taken the stable lantern and searched
the garden for it.
But the day when he broke even his own record for foolishness happened
about three weeks later. MacShaughnassy was staying with us at the time,
and on the Friday evening he mixed us a salad, according to a recipe
given him by his aunt. On the Saturday morning, everybody was, of
course, very ill. Everybody always is very ill after partaking of any
dish prepared by MacShaughnassy. Some people attempt to explain this
fact by talking glibly of "cause and effect." MacShaughnassy maintains
that it is simply coincidence.
"How do you know," he says, "that you wouldn't have been ill if you
hadn't eaten any? You're queer enough now, any one can see, and I'm very
sorry for you; but, for all that you can tell, if you hadn't eaten any of
that stuff you might have been very much worse--perhaps dead. In all
probability, it has saved your life." And for the rest of the day, he
assumes towards you the attitude of a man who has dragged you from the
grave.
The moment Jimmy arrived I seized hold of him.
"Jimmy," I said, "you must rush off to the chemist's immediately. Don't
stop for anything. Tell him to give you something for colic--the result
of vegetable poisoning. It must be something very strong, and enough for
four. Don't forget, something to counteract the effects of vegetable
poisoning. Hurry up, or it may be too late."
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