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Chapter X. Golf in Hades

The Enchanted Typewriter





"Jim," said I to Boswell one morning as the type-writer began to
work, "perhaps you can enlighten me on a point concerning which a
great many people have questioned me recently. Has golf taken hold of
Hades yet? You referred to it some time ago, and I've been wondering
ever since if it had become a fad with you."

"Has it?" laughed my visitor; "well, I should rather say it had.
The fact is, it has been a great boon to the country. You remember my
telling you of the projected revolution led by Cromwell, and Caesar,
and the others?"

"I do, very well," said I, "and I have been intending to ask you
how it came out."

"Oh, everything's as fine and sweet as can be now," rejoined
Boswell, somewhat gleefully, "and all because of golf. We are all
quiet along the Styx now. All animosities are buried in the general
love of golf, and every one of us, high or low, autocrat and
revolutionist, is hobnobbing away in peace and happiness on the
links. Why, only six weeks ago, Apollyon was for cooking Bonaparte on
a waffle iron, and yesterday the two went out to the Cimmerian links
together and played a mixed foursome, Bonaparte and Medusa playing
against Apollyon and Delilah."

"Dear me! Really?" I cried. "That must have been an interesting
match."

"It was, and up to the very last it was nip-and-tuck between
'em," said Boswell. "Apollyon and Delilah won it with one hole up,
and they got that on the put. They'd have halved the hole if Medusa's
back hair hadn't wiggled loose and bitten her caddie just as she was
holeing out."

"It is a remarkable game," said I. "There is no sensation in the
world quite equal to that which comes to a man's soul when he has hit
the ball a solid clip and sees it sail off through the air towards
the green, whizzing musically along like a very bird."

"True," said Boswell; "but I'm rather of the opinion that it's a
safer game for shades than for you purely material persons."

"I don't see why," I answered.

"It is easy to understand," returned Boswell. "For instance,
with us there is no resistance when by a mischance we come into
unexpected contact with the ball. Take the experience of Diogenes and
Solomon at the St. Jonah's Links week before last. The Wiseman's
Handicap was on. Diogenes and Simple Simon were playing just ahead of
Solomon and Montaigne. Solomon was driving in great form. For the
first time in his life he seemed able to keep his eye on the ball,
and the way he sent it flying through the air was a caution. Diogenes
and Simple Simon had both had their second stroke and Solomon drove
off. His ball sailed straight ahead like a missile from a catapult,
flew in a bee-line for Diogenes, struck him at the base of his brain,
continued on through, and landed on the edge of the green."

"Mercy!" I cried. "Didn't it kill him?"

"Of course not," retorted Boswell. "You can't kill a shade.
Diogenes didn't know he'd been hit, but if that had happened to one
of you material golfers there'd have been a sickening end to that
tournament."

"There would, indeed," said I. "There isn't much fun in being
hit by a golf-ball. I can testify to that because I have had the
experience," and I called to mind the day at St. Peterkin's when I
unconsciously stymied with my material self the celebrated Willie
McGuffin, the Demon Driver from the Hootmon Links, Scotland. McGuffin
made his mark that day if he never did before, and I bear the
evidence thereof even now, although the incident took place two years
ago, when I did not know enough to keep out of the way of the player
who plays so well that he thinks he has a perpetual right of way
everywhere.

"What kind of clubs do you Stygians use?" I asked.

"Oh, very much the same kind that you chaps do," returned
Boswell. "Everybody experiments with new fads, too, just as you do.
Old Peter Stuyvesant, for instance, always drives with his wooden
leg, and never uses anything else unless he gets a lie where he's got
to."

"His wooden leg?" I roared, with a laugh. "How on earth does he
do that?"

"He screws the small end of it into a square block shod like a
brassey," explained Boswell, "tees up his ball, goes back ten yards,
makes a run at it and kicks the ball pretty nearly out of sight. He
can put with it too, like a dream, swinging it sideways."

"But he doesn't call that golf, does he?" I cried.

"What is it?" demanded Boswell.

"I should call it football," I said.

"Not at all," said Boswell. "Not a bit of it. He hasn't any foot
on that leg, and he has a golf-club head with a shaft to it. There
isn't any rule which says that the shaft shall not look like an
inverted nine-pin, nor do any of the accepted authorities require
that the club shall be manipulated by the arms. I admit it's bad form
the way he plays, but, as Stuyvesant himself says, he never did
travel on his shape."

"Suppose he gets a cuppy lie?" I asked, very much interested at
the first news from Hades of the famous old Dutchman.

"Oh, he does one of two things," said Boswell. "He stubs it out
with his toe, or goes back and plays two more. Munchausen plays a
good game too. He beat the colonel forty-seven straight holes last
Wednesday, and all Hades has been talking about it ever since."

"Who is the colonel?" I asked, innocently.

"Bogey," returned Boswell. "Didn't you ever hear of Colonel
Bogey?"

"Of course," I replied, "but I always supposed Bogey was an
imaginary opponent, not a real one."

"So he is," said Boswell.

"Then you mean--"

"I mean that Munchausen beat him forty-seven up," said
Boswell.

"Were there any witnesses?" I demanded, for I had little faith
in Munchausen's regard for the eternal verities, among which a
golf-card must be numbered if the game is to survive.

"Yes, a hundred," said Boswell. "There was only one trouble with
'em." Here the great biographer laughed. "They were all imaginary,
like the colonel."

"And Munchausen's score?" I queried.

"The same, naturally. But it makes him king-pin in golf circles
just the same, because nobody can go back on his logic," said
Boswell. "Munchausen reasoned it out very logically indeed, and
largely, he said, to protect his own reputation. Here is an imaginary
warrior, said he, who makes a bully, but wholly imaginary, score at
golf. He sends me an imaginary challenge to play him forty-seven
holes. I accept, not so much because I consider myself a golfer as
because I am an imaginer--if there is such a word."

"Ask Dr. Johnson," said I, a little sarcastically. I always grow
sarcastic when golf is mentioned.

"Dr. Johnson be--" began Boswell.

"Boswell!" I remonstrated.

"Dr. Johnson be it, I was about to say," clicked the
type-writer, suavely; but the ink was thick and inclined to spread.
"Munchausen felt that Bogey was encroaching on his preserve as a man
with an imagination."

"I have always considered Colonel Bogey a liar," said I. "He
joins all the clubs and puts up an ideal score before he has played
over the links."

"That isn't the point at all," said Boswell. "Golfers don't lie.
Realists don't lie. Nobody in polite--or say, rather, accepted--
society lies. They all imagine. Munchausen realizes that he has only
one claim to recognition, and that is based entirely upon his
imagination. So when the imaginary Colonel Bogey sent him an
imaginary challenge to play him forty-seven holes at golf--"

"Why forty-seven?" I asked.

"An imaginary number," explained Boswell. "Don't interrupt. As I
say, when the imaginary colonel--"

"I must interrupt," said I. "What was he colonel of?"

"A regiment of perfect caddies," said Boswell.

"Ah, I see," I replied. "Imaginary in his command. There isn't
one perfect caddy, much less a regiment of the little reprobates."

"You are wrong there," said Boswell. "You don't know how to
produce a good caddy--but good caddies can be made."

"How?" I cried, for I have suffered. "I'll have the plan
patented."

"Take a flexible brassey, and at the ninth hole, if they deserve
it, give them eighteen strokes across the legs with all your
strength," said Boswell. "But, as I said before, don't interrupt. I
haven't much time left to talk with you."

"But I must ask one more question," I put in, for I was growing
excited over a new idea. "You say give them eighteen strokes across
the legs. Across whose legs?"

"Yours," replied Boswell. "Just take your caddy up, place him
across your knees, and spank him with your brassey. Spank isn't a
good golf term, but it is good enough for the average caddy; in fact,
it will do him good."

"Go on," said I, with a mental resolve to adopt his
prescription.

"Well," said Boswell, "Munchausen, having received an imaginary
challenge from an imaginary opponent, accepted. He went out to the
links with an imaginary ball, an imaginary bagful of fanciful clubs,
and licked the imaginary life out of the colonel."

"Still, I don't see," said I, somewhat jealously, perhaps, "how
that makes him king-pin in golf circles. Where did he play?"

"On imaginary links," said Boswell.

"Poh!" I ejaculated.

"Don't sneer," said Boswell. "You know yourself that the links
you imagine are far better than any others."

"What is Munchausen's strongest point?" I asked, seeing that
there was no arguing with the man--"driving, approaching, or
putting?"

"None of the three. He cannot put, he foozles every drive, and
at approaching he's a consummate ass," said Boswell.

"Then what can he do?" I cried.

"Count," said Boswell. "Haven't you learned that yet? You can
spend hours learning how to drive, weeks to approach, and months to
put. But if you want to win you must know how to count."

I was silent, and for the first time in my life I realized that
Munchausen was not so very different from certain golfers I have met
in my short day as a golfiac, and then Boswell put in:

"You see, it isn't lofting or driving that wins," he continued.
"Cups aren't won on putting or approaching. It's the man who puts in
the best card who becomes the champion."

"I am afraid you are right," I said, sadly, "but I am sorry to
find that Hades is as badly off as we mortals in that matter."

"Golf, sir," retorted Boswell, sententiously, "is the same
everywhere, and that which is dome in our world is directly in line
with what is developed in yours."

"I'm sorry for Hades," said I; "but to continue about golf-- do
the ladies play much on your links?"

"Well, rather," returned Boswell, "and it's rather amusing to
watch them at it, too. Xanthippe with her Greek clothes finds it
rather difficult; but for rare sport you ought to see Queen Elizabeth
trying to keep her eye on the ball over her ruff! It really is one of
the finest spectacles you ever saw."

"But why don't they dress properly?"

"Ah," sighed Boswell, "that is one of the things about Hades
that destroys all the charm of life there. We are but shades."

"Granted," said I, "but your garments can--"

"Our garments can't," said Boswell. "Through all eternity we
shades of our former selves are doomed to wear the shadows of our
former clothes."

"Then what the devil does a poor dress-maker do who goes to
Hades?" I cried.

"She makes over the things she made before," said Boswell.
"That's why, my dear fellow," the biographer added, becoming
confidential-- "that's why some people confound Hades with--ah--the
other place, don't you know."

"Still, there's golf!" I said; "and that's a panacea for all
ills. You enjoy it, don't you?"

"Me?" cried Boswell. "Me enjoy it? Not on all the lives in
Christendom. It is the direst drudgery for me."

"Drudgery?" I said. "Bah! Nonsense, Boswell!"

"You forget--" he began.

"Forget? It must be you who forget, if you call golf
drudgery."

"No," sighed the genial spirit. "No, *I* don't forget. I
remember."

"Remember what?" I demanded.

"That I am Dr. Johnson's caddy!" was the answer. And then came a
heart-rending sigh, and from that time on all was silence. I
repeatedly put questions to the machine, made observations to it,
derided it, insulted it, but there was no response.

It has so continued to this day, and I can only conclude the
story of my Enchanted Type-writer by saying that I presume golf has
taken the same hold upon Hades that it has upon this world, and that
I need not hope to hear more from that attractive region until the
game has relaxed its grip, which I know can never be.

Hence let me say to those who have been good enough to follow me
through the realms of the Styx that I bid them an affectionate
farewell and thank them for their kind attention to my chronicles.
They are all truthful; but now that the source of supply is cut off I
cannot prove it. I can only hope that for one and all the future may
hold as much of pleasure as the place of departed spirits has held
for me.







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Bangs page for related resources.

The Enchanted Typewriter

Chapter I. The Discovery
Chapter II. Mr. Boswell Imparts Some Late News of Hades
Chapter III. From Advance Sheets of Baron Munchausen's Further Recollections
Chapter IV. A Chat with Xanthippe
Chapter V. The Editing of Xanthippe
Chapter VI. The Boswell Tours: Personally Conducted
Chapter VII. An Important Decision
Chapter VIII. A Hand-Book to Hades
Chapter IX. Sherlock Holmes Again
Chapter X. Golf in Hades

 


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