Beach Reveries

O.O. McIntyre

Fort Worth Star Telegram/May 7, 1932

NEW YORK May 7—I’ve just had a dip in the surf, which concludes my surf dipping for this year of grace thanks. I’m a creek person anyway. In a fancy city bathing suit I rate several notches under zero. But on the end of a log, O boy! I’m a good speller and sum fairly well, too.

I wasn’t halfway across the beach until some smartie, jerking his thumb at me, halloed: “Hey Mike, get a load of Gwendolyn!” The scum. Beaches always attract the overflow from the pool rooms. You’d think my bathing suit was flounced with lace. Or run with baby ribbon.

It’s an ordinary suit—perhaps a little red upstairs, but the trunks are a modest green. You can’t let yourself go altogether in bathing costumes. I have a few colors for business wear. And, of course, when I go back home. It is then I give until it hurts for the locals.

When I go out to swim I want to swim. But does anyone else? No they must throw a big medicine ball around, play baseball or cover each other with sand. You can do all that in the back yards. Bathing these days is just a way to show off your figure of which I have none to speak about.

I wasn’t built for beaches. I look dandier neck deep in water. From the way it smells there must be a sick eel around somewhere. I wish I could hide my feet. Nothing you can do for old feet. Young Apollo wants to show me how hard he can throw the medicine ball.

So I must cope with that. My coping days really ended with the market crash. You know something! Want in on a secret. Straining for the medicine ball has done me no good. It might happen any moment. The puckering string holding my pantalettes is not what it was.

But go ahead. Certainly, I’ll play leap frog and I hope it happens while I’m in midair. I’d like to shock Countess Sourpuss over there with her lorgnette under the big sun parasol. And see that? While I’m looking at her somebody socks me in the mush with the medicine ball.

I don’t care to play anymore. Go on with your childish games. I’m off for my dip. Loll there and gape, offsprings of the beaches! Titter as I pass. I know I look like something the cat dragged in. But I haven’t been well lately. My side hurts. (This is what the public wants—the higher type of columning.) You should see me when I’m all filled out and my hair brushed back slick like Harry Silvey’s. What care I for sniggers? They sneered at Columbus when he put to sea.

The water is a bit coldish. Not that it matters. Anyway I like to stand at the sea edge in reverie. It’s the poet in me. Ah, the phosphorous toss of foam. The majesty of the mighty expanse. The skimming gull with a glad cry spirals upward to greet the dawn. That’s all the reverie for this time. Tomorrow: “The Dying Swan”—I’ll flex my muscles awhile and mosey out to get attuned to the coolth. No use rushing into things. Leave that to bankers. Here’s an ideal depth to kinda-inda let-tet myself brr-r. I don’t care to dip. I should have been home an hour ago.

This is cowardly. Remember, you are a McIntyre. A quick plunge and how have you been! But no hurry. The sun won’t be down for an hour or so. Those people out on the raft are trying to attract my attention. Probably making cracks about my bath suit. I’ll act as though I didn’t hear. They might not be my sort. Probably riff-raff. A fig for their guffaws. Make it two and a tangerine.

Here goes! See you around the bowling alley. It-t-t-t’s not bad. Just the first shock. Now for the Old Australian crawl. Is Johnny Weissmuller in the house? Not that I care he might pick up a few ideas. The raft is further than I thought. But since I cut out cigarets my wind is great.

Like bananas it’s great! I’ve run out of it already. Of course, the life guard would be looking the other way. I suppose the usual crowd will collect when they untangle me from sea weeds and roll me across a barrel. Still I won’t know about that. Just 50 more strokes and I would have reached the raft. Goodby world! Give my raccoon coat to Bert Lytell. Here I go! Shucks, it’s not even over my head.

Standard

On Whiskers

H.L. Mencken

Baltimore Evening Sun/May 2, 1910

The ridiculous report, so industriously circulated by the Boston Evening Transcript and other sensational papers, that Governor Hughes will be compelled by the unwritten law of the judiciary to shave off his copious and unearthly whiskers when he becomes a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States has no foundation whatever in fact.

There is, indeed, no such law, written or unwritten. The learned justices have a perfect right to cultivate their hirsute garden as they list. They may go in for shaven lawns, they may decide for shrubbery before the ear, they may even devote their leisure to broad waterfall effects, straight or bifurcated. It is all one. No court-martial or board of inquiry has any authority to question their taste or to offer suggestions. A barrister who sought to enliven a tedious argument before them and mixing sly jokes about the judicial foliage would be clearly in contempt and might reasonably expect a heavy fine or a term in jail.

Whiskers On The Bench

A considerable diversity is noticeable in the vegetable adornment of the justices. The Chief Justice and Justice Holmes go in for pugnacious mustaches of the Bismarck type, without chin or cheek support. Justice Harlan wears siders, Justice Moody wears a mustache of the ragged sort popular among business men, Justice Lurton sports a toothbrush, and Justice McKenna yields to the insidious fascinations of a full beard, though his upper lip is bare.

In the past many other capillary effects have been visible in that austere sanhedrin. It is firmly established, indeed, as an axiom of jurisprudence that a justice may cut his whiskers as he pleases, just as he may divert himself with plantation toilet or the common plunge of commerce, as he pleases.

There is no purpose here, of course, to lay it down as an indubitable fact that Governor Hughes will make no rearrangement of his facial adornments when he mounts the bench. That he need not do so has been established, but that he will not do so is scarcely a matter of safe prophecy. He may, indeed, yield voluntarily to a wakening sense of the fitness of things—to some spontaneous aesthetic impulse—and so mutilate his whiskers with scissors, or even obliterate them entirely with a razor.

Such changes of mind are by no means impossible theoretically and by no means unrecorded in actuality. Many a man, after staggering on to 50 years with whiskers, more or less grandiloquent, has suddenly chopped them off and gone down to his grave with smooth cheeks. And by the same token many a man, after 50 years of clean shaving, has devoted the leisure of his old age to the cultivation of whiskers more or less elaborate.

The psychology of bewhiskerment, in truth, is exceedingly complex and obscure. Why do men raise whiskers? And why do other men raise mustaches? It is common to ascribe all such disfigurements to a childish vanity, to crude and even childish conceptions of the beautiful. The man with mutton-chops, for example, is dismissed with a sneer as a man of defective aesthetic vision, and it is assumed as a matter of course that his infirmity also inclines him to admire upright pianos, solitaire diamond rings, plaid waistcoats, green hats and other abominations.

Some Eminent Shrubbery

But a brief inspection is sufficient to show the absurdity of all such off-hand theories. Many a man of undoubted intelligence and impeccable taste wears whiskers. Nicholas Acusa, the father of modern philosophy, had a beard reaching to his belt; Herbert Spencer and Thomas Henry Huxley sported Galways; Christopher Columbus went in for throaty effects; Emperor William I of Germany cultivated a pair of burnsides with almost ludicrous assiduity; Napoleon III wore an imperial, and Henrik Ibsen trained his hair and beard into a form suggesting an aureole or an Elizabethan ruff. Even Shakespeare gave obvious attention to his whiskers.

In view of all this—and thousands of other examples must occur to everyone—it becomes plain that the cultivation of whiskers is by no means a sign of ignorance or puerility, nor even of senile degeneration. But why, then, do men raise them? Why do civilized and educated human beings, who would shrink instinctively from any suggestion that they pierce their ears, cut furrows across their scalps or bedaub their foreheads with gaudy pigments—why do such superman still waste time and thought upon the rearing of fantastic and unsightly vegetal flora?

In Paris, a couple of years ago, a curious psychologist sought to find out, albeit he confined his inquiries to men with mustaches and had no dealing with actual whiskers-wearers. To each of 100 chosen men he addressed the simple question. Why do men wear mustaches? and from each of them he got a reply. Those replies afford us an interesting, though perhaps, not quite satisfying, insight into the causation of all hirsute manifestations. 

Thirty-six Gave It Up



Ten of the men admitted frankly that they wore mustaches because their wives insisted that they do so, and all 10 seemed to hint that if they were free to choose they would shave. Sixteen others answered that mustache-wearing was the fashion in their professions, and that they feared shaving would make them seem eccentric. Eight others answered that their fathers wore mustaches before them, and that they deemed it their duty to observe the family custom.

Six others said that they were admirers of eminent men who wore mustaches— such as the Emperor of Germany, for example—and did likewise to show their admiration. Twelve confessed freely that they regarded the mustache as a pleasing ornament, and so cultivated it. Four swore that their upper lips were so tender that they could not bear the agonies of shaving; two said that they desired to hide their false teeth, and six others that they desired to hide scars, warts, moles, hare-lips or other disfigurements.

So far we have accounted for 64 of the 100 men. But what of the 36 remaining: What were their reasons for wearing mustaches? The answer is simple: They had no reasons at all. One and all, they confessed that they could offer no intelligible excuse for their habit. One and all, they passed up the problem as insoluble.

And now the infinite complexity and obscurity of the whiskers question begins to grow apparent. If 36 of 100 men with mustaches confess that their adornments are entirely independent of conscious processes of ratiocination, what sort of answers are we to expect from men with whiskers?

An Impenetrable Mystery

The mustache is a simple thing, and in consequence it should be easily grasped by the mind and placed in an ordered chain of cause and effect. It runs to standard forms, it does not stun the intellect by its prodigality: it is familiar, usual, normal.

But whiskers are not. On the contrary, they are infinitely diverse in quantity and quality, texture and form, density and curvature, length and specific gravity. No two stands are exactly alike. Even among Galways, siders, mutton-chops and other more or less familiar species there are gradations without number.

A fine stand of whiskers, in truth, changes from day to day, even from minute to minute. Meteorological variations conditions and qualify it; tonsorial incompetence cripples and musses it; it is affected by every phenomenon of a restless environment. The human mind must needs be helpless in the presence of a thing so inordinately complex, mobile, fluid and elusive.

Even a man who devotes his whole life to the cultivation of his whiskers, meditating upon them ceaselessly, day and night, and giving them the place of honor in his most secret hopes and aspirations—even so assiduous a birsuticulturist must, in the end, stand flabbergasted before their impenetrable mystery. 

Standard

Donie Bush Has 36,000 Assistants

Ring Lardner

Fort Worth Star Telegram/October 7, 1927

PITTSBURGH, Oct 7—In direct violation of all the rules of the Baseball Writers Association of America your boyfriend got up at 7 o’clock Thursday morning and was in the Schenley dining room enjoying a shore dinner at a quarter of eight.

During the steamed clam course in came Jack Fournier and Mrs. Jack Fournier and I asked them to join me. I did this for two reasons. In the first place it helps a man relish his breakfast to have a lady share same with him and especially when the lady in question is a whole lot easier to look at than a World’s Series ball game. In the second place, there was only room for three people at the table and if the other two places was occupied it would remove the danger of being infested with Miss Helma Thoke, the Oklahoma woman I told you about.

Mr. Fournier declined the invitation on the ground that he wished to eat in a hurry and get right over to the ball park. I thought this was a kind of a queer ambition for a fella that had his box seats bought and paid for. But then I figured that maybe Jack wanted to make a study of Forbes Field on the chance that he would play with the Pittsburgh club next season, it being the only club in the big leagues which has escaped him so far. It turned out, however, that the Fournier family had got up by Miss Fournier’s watch, which is one of these here costly little Swiss watches that if you look at it close you can tell what month it is, provided you carry a pocket calendar. The Fourniers thought it was half past 12 and if they didn’t bolt their food they would miss the lady singing “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

Incidentally, this lady is the same one that sang it here two years ago and evidently don’t know that there has been a lot of new song hits written since then. Well, anyway, I was left defenseless and sure enough it wasn’t long before Miss Thoke burst into the room and plunked herself down beside me, to whom she has evidently taken quite a fancy.

“You know,” she said, “I am betting on Pittsburgh to win and I think they are throwing me down. In the first game they let Mr. Kremer play quarterback, or whatever you call it, till Columbia was way ahead and then they put in Mr. Miljus, who could of scored many more touchdowns if he had been there at the beginning.”

I EXPLAINED to her carefully that there are some pitchers, not quarterbacks, whose specialty is relief work. I spoke of men like Marberry and Wiley Moore and old Charlie Hall that used to be with the Boston Red Sox, men that ain’t so good for nine innings maybe but can make a sucker out of their opponents late in the game.

“Well, then,” said Miss Thoke, “if Mr. Bush and Mr. Huggins has got even calfs’ brains why don’t they insist on starting the games in the seventh inning? This would permit them to release all their pitchers except Mr. Miljus and Mr. Moore and the money which they now waste paying these here other pitchers’ salary, why they could spend it in some worthy cause. The only question would be what worthy cause to spend it in?”

“My suggestion,” I replied, “is for them to buy you a one way ticket from Pittsburgh to Manila and a life membership in the home for female fools.”

She laughed heartily and in obedience to George Cohan’s injunction to always leave them laughing when you say goodbye I hurried over to Forbes Field to tell the Fourniers what time it was. Accompanying me was Dan Howley, manager of the St. Louis Browns. He read me a piece in the paper to the effect that policemen had seized hundreds of tickets from the scalpers.

“I can’t see,” said Dan “that this helps the situation. What is the difference whether you have to buy your ticket from a regular scalper or a cop?” “Oh,” I answered, “a policeman would not dare sell the tickets, if he did they would take his star.”

“That is something that could never happen to me,” said Mr. Howley.

There were nearly 42,000 people in the park and 36,000 of them was  helping Donie Bush manage his ball club. What I can’t understand is how the Pirates ever won any games on the road where Donie had to do the managing all by himself.

In the eighth inning, when it was time to put in a pinch hitter, the usual cry for Cuyler went up. But Donie chose Earl Smith and the 36,000 booed him, showing that in spite of the inroads of visiting firemen there is still plenty of booes left in Pittsburgh.

The things that happened to Vic Aldridge in the third inning was not entirely his fault. The rally started with a base hit by Combs that could of been fielded by a first baseman that ain’t quite so much of a recluse as Joe Harris. The next five guys participating in this rally were Koenig, Ruth, Gehrig, Meusel and Lazzeri. And yet they call them Yankees.

The incidents of the eighth inning, however, was Vic’s own business and not even Donie’s 36,000 assistants squawked when he was taken out.

Miss Thokes’ mouth was so full of candy all afternoon that she couldn’t say much. On one occasion, when Pipgras and Bengough stopped the game for a conference, she wanted to know what they was talking about and I told her they were trying to find out how to pronounce each others name as this was the first time either of them had ever been in a World’s Series.

“Can you pronounce them yourself,” she asked me.

“No,” I said, “but you certainly ought to be able to with all that candy in your mouth.”

Well, she tried and the less said about the result the better. Luckily I am going home where I have got a clean suit of clothes.

Standard