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Read book online ยซShort Fiction by O. Henry (librera reader txt) ๐Ÿ“•ยป.   Author   -   O. Henry



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New York is far ahead of any otherโ โ€”โ€

โ€œBack to the everglades!โ€ said the man from Topaz City. โ€œIn 1900, when Sousaโ€™s band and the repeating candidate were in our town you couldnโ€™tโ โ€”โ€

The rattle of an express wagon drowned the rest of the words.

The Greater Coney

โ€œNext Sunday,โ€ said Dennis Carnahan, โ€œIโ€™ll be after going down to see the new Coney Island thatโ€™s risen like a phoenix bird from the ashes of the old resort. Iโ€™m going with Norah Flynn, and weโ€™ll fall victims to all the dry goods deceptions, from the red-flannel eruption of Mount Vesuvius to the pink silk ribbons on the race-suicide problems in the incubator kiosk.

โ€œWas I there before? I was. I was there last Tuesday. Did I see the sights? I did not.

โ€œLast Monday I amalgamated myself with the Bricklayersโ€™ Union, and in accordance with the rules I was ordered to quit work the same day on account of a sympathy strike with the Lady Salmon Cannersโ€™ Lodge No.2, of Tacoma, Washington.

โ€œโ€Šโ€™Twas disturbed I was in mind and proclivities by losing me job, beinโ€™ already harassed in me soul on account of havinโ€™ quarrelled with Norah Flynn a week before by reason of hard words spoken at the Dairymen and Street-Sprinkler Driversโ€™ semiannual ball, caused by jealousy and prickly heat and that divil, Andy Coghlin.

โ€œSo, I says, it will be Coney for Tuesday; and if the chutes and the short change and the green-corn silk between the teeth donโ€™t create diversions and get me feeling better, then I donโ€™t know at all.

โ€œYe will have heard that Coney has received moral reconstruction. The old Bowery, where they used to take your tintype by force and give ye knockout drops before having your palm read, is now called the Wall Street of the island. The wienerwurst stands are required by law to keep a news ticker in โ€™em; and the doughnuts are examined every four years by a retired steamboat inspector. The nigger manโ€™s head that was used by the old patrons to throw baseballs at is now illegal; and, by order of the Police Commissioner the image of a man drivinโ€™ an automobile has been substituted. I hear that the old immoral amusements have been suppressed. People who used to go down from New York to sit in the sand and dabble in the surf now give up their quarters to squeeze through turnstiles and see imitations of city fires and floods painted on canvas. The reprehensible and degradinโ€™ resorts that disgraced old Coney are said to be wiped out. The wipinโ€™-out process consists of raisinโ€™ the price from 10 cents to 25 cents, and hirinโ€™ a blonde named Maudie to sell tickets instead of Micky, the Bowery Bite. Thatโ€™s what they sayโ โ€”I donโ€™t know.

โ€œBut to Coney I goes a-Tuesday. I gets off the โ€˜Lโ€™ and starts for the glitterinโ€™ show. โ€™Twas a fine sight. The Babylonian towers and the Hindu roof gardens was blazinโ€™ with thousands of electric lights, and the streets was thick with people. โ€™Tis a true thing they say that Coney levels all rank. I see millionaires eatinโ€™ popcorn and trampinโ€™ along with the crowd; and I see eight-dollar-a-week clothinโ€™-store clerks in red automobiles fightinโ€™ one another for whoโ€™d squeeze the horn when they come to a corner.

โ€œโ€Šโ€˜I made a mistake,โ€™ I says to myself. โ€™Twas not Coney I needed. When a manโ€™s sad โ€™tis not scenes of hilarity he wants. โ€™Twould be far better for him to meditate in a graveyard or to attend services at the Paradise Roof Gardens. โ€™Tis no consolation when a manโ€™s lost his sweetheart to order hot corn and have the waiter bring him the powdered sugar cruet instead of salt and then conceal himself, or to have Zozookum, the gipsy palmist, tell him that he has three children and to look out for another serious calamity; price twenty-five cents.

โ€œI walked far away down on the beach, to the ruins of an old pavilion near one corner of this new private park, Dreamland. A year ago that old pavilion was standinโ€™ up straight and the old-style waiters was slamminโ€™ a weekโ€™s supply of clam chowder down in front of you for a nickel and callinโ€™ you โ€˜cullyโ€™ friendly, and vice was rampant, and you got back to New York with enough change to take a car at the bridge. Now they tell me that they serve Welsh rabbits on Surf Avenue, and you get the right change back in the movinโ€™-picture joints.

โ€œI sat down at one side of the old pavilion and looked at the surf spreadinโ€™ itself on the beach, and thought about the time me and Norah Flynn sat on that spot last summer. โ€™Twas before reform struck the island; and we was happy. We had tintypes and chowder in the ribald dives, and the Egyptian Sorceress of the Nile told Norah out of her hand, while I was waitinโ€™ in the door, that โ€™twould be the luck of her to marry a redheaded gossoon with two crooked legs, and I was overrunninโ€™ with joy on account of the allusion. And โ€™twas there that Norah Flynn put her two hands in mine a year before and we talked of flats and the things she could cook and the love business that goes with such episodes. And that was Coney as we loved it, and as the hand of Satan was upon it, friendly and noisy and your moneyโ€™s worth, with no fence around the ocean and not too many electric lights to show the sleeve of a black serge coat against a white shirtwaist.

โ€œI sat with my back to the parks where they had the moon and the dreams and the steeples corralled, and longed for the old Coney. There wasnโ€™t many people on the beach. Lots of them was feedinโ€™ pennies into the slot machines to see the โ€˜Interrupted Courtshipโ€™ in the movinโ€™ pictures; and a good many was takinโ€™ the sea air in the Canals of Venice and some

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