Alonzo Fitz and Other Stories by Mark Twain

also on imports. And they wanted to issue bonds; also paper money,

redeemable in yams and cabbages in fifty years. They said the pay of the

army and of the navy and of the whole governmental machine was far in

arrears, and unless something was done, and done immediately, national

bankruptcy must ensue, and possibly insurrection and revolution. The

emperor at once resolved upon a high-handed measure, and one of a nature

never before heard of in Pitcairn’s Island. He went in state to the

church on Sunday morning, with the army at his back, and commanded the

minister of the treasury to take up a collection.

That was the feather that broke the camel’s back. First one citizen, and

then another, rose and refused to submit to this unheard-of outrage

–and each refusal was followed by the immediate confiscation of the

malcontent’s property. This vigor soon stopped the refusals, and the

collection proceeded amid a sullen and ominous silence. As the emperor

withdrew with the troops, he said, “I will teach you who is master here.”

Several persons shouted, “Down with unification!” They were at once

arrested and torn from the arms of their weeping friends by the soldiery.

But in the mean time, as any prophet might have foreseen, a Social

Democrat had been developed. As the emperor stepped into the gilded

imperial wheelbarrow at the church door, the social democrat stabbed at

him fifteen or sixteen times with a harpoon, but fortunately with such a

peculiarly social democratic unprecision of aim as to do no damage.

That very night the convulsion came. The nation rose as one man–though

forty-nine of the revolutionists were of the other sex. The infantry

threw down their pitchforks; the artillery cast aside their cocoanuts;

the navy revolted; the emperor was seized, and bound hand and foot in his

palace. He was very much depressed. He said:

“I freed you from a grinding tyranny; I lifted yon up out of your

degradation, and made you a nation among nations; I gave you a strong,

compact, centralized government; and, more than all, I gave you the

blessing of blessings–unification. I have done all this, and my reward

is hatred, insult, and these bonds. Take me; do with me as you will.

I here resign my crown and all my dignities, and gladly do I release

myself from their too heavy burden. For your sake I took them up; for

your sake I lay them down. The imperial jewel is no more; now bruise and

defile as ye will the useless setting.”

By a unanimous voice the people condemned the ex-emperor and the social

democrat to perpetual banishment from church services, or to perpetual

labor as galley-slaves in the whale-boat–whichever they might prefer.

The next day the nation assembled again, and rehoisted the British flag,

reinstated the British tyranny, reduced the nobility to the condition of

commoners again, and then straightway turned their diligent attention to

the weeding of the ruined and neglected yam patches, and the

rehabilitaLion of the old useful industries and the old healing and

solacing pieties. The ex-emperor restored the lost trespass law, and

explained that he had stolen it not to injure any one, but to further his

political projects. Therefore the nation gave the late chief magistrate

his office again, and also his alienated Property.

Upon reflection, the ex-emperor and the social democrat chose perpetual

banishment from religious services in preference to perpetual labor as

galley slaves “with perpetual religious services,” as they phrased it;

wherefore the people believed that the poor fellows’ troubles had

unseated their reason, and so they judged it best to confine them for the

present. Which they did.

Such is the history of Pitcairn’s “doubtful acquisition.”

THE CANVASSER’S TALE

Poor, sad-eyed stranger! There was that about his humble mien, his tired

look, his decayed-gentility clothes, that almost reached the mustard,

seed of charity that still remained, remote and lonely, in the empty

vastness of my heart, notwithstanding I observed a portfolio under his

arm, and said to myself, Behold, Providence hath delivered his servant

into the hands of another canvasser.

Well, these people always get one interested. Before I well knew how it

came about, this one was telling me his history, and I was all attention

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