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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The Post Man tried to wave one of his hands to disclaim any sense of pain, but the barberβs quick eye caught the motion and he leaned his weight against the hand, crushing it against the chair.
βI kept noticing,β went on the barber, βthat Bill was getting about four customers to my one, even if he did drink so much. People would come in three or four at a time and sit down and wait their turns with Bill when my chair was vacant. I didnβt know what to make of it. Bill had all he could do, and he was so crowded that he didnβt have time to go out to a saloon, but he kept a big jug in the back room, and every few minutes he would slip in there and take a drink.
βOne day I noticed a man that got out of Billβs chair acting queer and he staggered as he went out. A day or two afterwards the shop was full of customers from morning till night, and one man came back and had a shave three different times in the forenoon. In a couple of days more there was a crowd of men in the shop, and they had a line formed outside two or three doors down the sidewalk. Bill made $9.00 that day. That evening a policeman came in and jerked me up for running a saloon without a license. It seems that Billβs breath was so full of whiskey that every man he shaved went out feeling pretty hilarious and sent his friends there to be shaved. It cost me $300 to get out of it, and I shipped Bill to Florida pretty soon afterward.β
βI was sent for once,β went on the barber, as he seized his victim by the ear and slammed his head over on the other side, βto go out on Piney Street and shave a dead man. Barbers donβt much like a job of that kind, although they get from $5 to $10 for the work. It was 1908 Piney Street. I started about 11 oβclock at night. I found the street all right and I counted from the corner until I found 1908. I had my razors, soap and mug in a little case I use for such purposes. I went in and knocked at the door. An old man opened it and his eye fell on my case.
βββYouβve come, have you?β he asked. βWell, go upstairs; heβs in the front room to your right. Thereβs nobody with him. He hasnβt any friends or relatives in town; heβs only been boarding here about a week.β
βββHow long since heβ βsince it occurred?β I asked.
βββAbout an hour, I guess,β says the old man. I was glad of that because corpses always shave better before they get good and cold. I went in the room and turned up the lamp. The man was laid out on the bed. He was warm yet and he had about a weekβs growth of beard on. I got to work and in half an hour I had given him a nice clean shave that would have done his heart good if he had been alive. Then I went downstairs and saw the old man.
βββWhat success?β he asked.
βββGood,β says I. βHeβs fixed up all right. Whoβs to pay?β
βββHe gave me $30 to send his folks in Alabama yesterday,β says the old man. βI guess your fee will have to come out of it.β
βββItβll be five,β I said.
βThe old man handed me a five dollar bill and I went home very well satisfied.β
Here the barber seized the chair, hurled it upright, snatched off the cloth, buried his hands in the Post Manβs hair and tore out a handful, bumped and thumped his head, shook it violently and hissed sarcastically: βBay rum?β
The Post Man nodded stupidly, closed his eyes and tried unsuccessfully to recall a prayer.
βNext day,β said the barber, βI heard some news. It seems that a man had died at 1908 Piney Street and just a little while before a man in the next house had taken poison. The folks in one house sent for a doctor and the ones in the other sent for a barber. The funny part is the doctor and I both made a mistake and got into the wrong house. He went in to see the dead man and found the family doctor just getting ready to leave. The doctor didnβt waste any time asking questions, but got out his stomach pump, stuck it into the dead man and went to work pumping the poison out. All this time I was busy shaving the man who had taken poison. And the funniest part of it all is that after the doctor had pumped all the other doctorβs medicine out of the dead man, he opened his eyes, raised up in bed and asked for a steak and potatoes.
βThis made the family doctor mad, and he and the doctor with a stomach pump got into a fight and fell down the stairs and broke the hat rack all to pieces.β
βAnd how about your man who had taken poison?β asked the Post Man timidly.
βHim?β said the barber, βwhy he died, of course, but he died with one of the beautifulest shaves that ever a man had.β βBrush!β
An African of terrible aspect bore down upon the Post Man, struck him violently with the stub of a whisk broom, seized his coat at the back and ripped it loose from its collar.
βCall again,β growled the barber in a voice of the deepest menace, as the scribe made a rush for the door and escaped.
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