Short Fiction by O. Henry (librera reader txt) π
Description
William Sydney Porter, known to readers as O. Henry, was a true raconteur. As a draftsman, a bank teller, a newspaper writer, a fugitive from justice in Central America, and a writer living in New York City, he told stories at each stop and about each stop. His stories are known for their vivid characters who come to life, and sometimes death, in only a few pages. But the most famous characteristic of O. Henryβs stories are the famous βtwistβ endings, where the outcome comes as a surprise both to the characters and the readers. O. Henryβs work was widely recognized and lauded, so much so that a few years after his death an award was founded in his name to recognize the best American short story (now stories) of the year.
This collection gathers all of his available short stories that are in the U.S. public domain. They were published in various popular magazines of the time, as well as in the Houston Post, where they were not attributed to him until many years after his death.
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- Author: O. Henry
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On a March afternoon the lobby dashed, with a whoop, into town. The cowpunchers had adjusted their garb suitably from that prescribed for the range to the more conventional requirements of town. They had conceded their leather chaparreras and transferred their six-shooters and belts from their persons to the horns of their saddles. Among them rode Lonny, a youth of twenty-three, brown, solemn-faced, ingenuous, bowlegged, reticent, bestriding Hot Tamales, the most sagacious cow pony west of the Mississippi. Senator Mullens had informed him of the bright prospects of the situation; had even mentionedβ βso great was his confidence in the capable Kinneyβ βthe price that the state would, in all likelihood, pay. It seemed to Lonny that fame and fortune were in his hands. Certainly, a spark of the divine fire was in the little brown centaurβs breast, for he was counting the two thousand dollars as but a means to future development of his talent. Some day he would paint a picture even greater than thisβ βone, say, twelve feet by twenty, full of scope and atmosphere and action.
During the three days that yet intervened before the coming of the date fixed for the introduction of the bill, the centaur lobby did valiant service. Coatless, spurred, weather-tanned, full of enthusiasm expressed in bizarre terms, they loafed in front of the painting with tireless zeal. Reasoning not unshrewdly, they estimated that their comments upon its fidelity to nature would be received as expert evidence. Loudly they praised the skill of the painter whenever there were ears near to which such evidence might be profitably addressed. Lem Perry, the leader of the claque, had a somewhat set speech, being uninventive in the construction of new phrases.
βLook at that two-year-old, now,β he would say, waving a cinnamon-brown hand toward the salient point of the picture. βWhy, dang my hide, the critterβs alive. I can jest hear him, βlumpety-lump,β a-cuttinβ away from the herd, pretendinβ heβs skeered. Heβs a mean scamp, that there steer. Look at his eyes a-wallinβ and his tail a-wavinβ. Heβs true and natβral to life. Heβs jest hankerinβ fur a cow pony to round him up and send him scootinβ back to the bunch. Dang my hide! jest look at that tail of hisβn a-wavinβ. Never knowed a steer to wave his tail any other way, dang my hide ef I did.β
Jud Shelby, while admitting the excellence of the steer, resolutely confined himself to open admiration of the landscape, to the end that the entire picture receive its meed of praise.
βThat piece of range,β he declared, βis a dead ringer for Dead Hoss Valley. Same grass, same lay of land, same old Whipperwill Creek skallyhootinβ in and out of them motts of timber. Them buzzards on the left is circlinβ βround over Sam Kildrakeβs old paint hoss that killed hisself over-drinkinβ on a hot day. You canβt see the hoss for that mott of ellums on the creek, but heβs thar. Anybody that was goinβ to look for Dead Hoss Valley and come across this picture, why, heβd just light offβn his bronco and hunt a place to camp.β
Skinny Rogers, wedded to comedy, conceived a complimentary little piece of acting that never failed to make an impression. Edging quite near to the picture, he would suddenly, at favourable moments emit a piercing and awful βYi-yi!β leap high and away, coming down with a great stamp of heels and whirring of rowels upon the stone-flagged floor.
βJeeming Cristopher!ββ βso ran his linesβ ββthought that rattler was a gin-u-ine one. Ding baste my skin if I didnβt. Seemed to me I heard him rattle. Look at the blamed, unconverted insect a-layinβ under that pear. Little more, and somebody would a-been snake-bit.β
With these artful dodges, contributed by Lonneyβs faithful coterie, with the sonorous Kinney perpetually sounding the pictureβs merits, and with the solvent prestige of the pioneer Briscoe covering it like a precious varnish, it seemed that the San Saba country could not fail to add a reputation as an art centre to its well-known superiority in steer-roping contests and achievements with the precarious busted flush. Thus was created for the picture an atmosphere, due rather to externals than to the artistβs brush, but through it the people seemed to gaze with more of admiration. There was a magic in the name of Briscoe that counted high against faulty technique and crude colouring. The old Indian fighter and wolf slayer would have smiled grimly in his happy hunting grounds had he known that his dilettante ghost was thus figuring as an art patron two generations after his uninspired existence.
Came the day when the Senate was expected to pass the bill of Senator Mullens appropriating two thousand dollars for the purchase of the picture. The gallery of the Senate chamber was early preempted by Lonny and the San Saba lobby. In the front row of chairs they sat, wild-haired, self-conscious, jingling, creaking, and rattling, subdued by the majesty of the council hall.
The bill was introduced, went to the second reading, and then Senator Mullens spoke for it dryly, tediously, and at length. Senator Kinney then arose, and the welkin seized the bellrope preparatory to ringing. Oratory was at that time a living thing; the world had not quite come to measure its questions by geometry and the multiplication table. It was the day of the silver tongue, the sweeping gesture, the decorative apostrophe, the moving peroration.
The Senator spoke. The San Saba contingent sat, breathing hard, in the gallery, its disordered hair hanging down to its eyes, its sixteen-ounce hats shifted restlessly from knee to knee. Below, the distinguished Senators either lounged at their desks with the abandon of proven statesmanship or maintained correct attitudes indicative
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