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THE COMIC MAN。
He follows the hero all over the world。 This is rough on the hero。
What makes him so gone on the hero is that when they were boys
together the hero used to knock him down and kick him。 The comic man
remembers this with a glow of pride when he is grown up; and it makes
him love the hero and determine to devote his life to him。
He is a man of humble stationthe comic man。 The village blacksmith
or a peddler。 You never see a rich or aristocratic comic man on the
stage。 You can have your choice on the stage; you can be funny and of
lowly origin; or you can be well…to…do and without any sense of humor。
Peers and policemen are the people most utterly devoid of humor on the
stage。
The chief duty of the comic man's life is to make love to
servant…girls; and they slap his face; but it does not discourage him;
he seems to be more smitten by them than ever。
The comic man is happy under any fate; and he says funny things at
funerals and when the bailiffs are in the house or the hero is waiting
to be hanged。
This sort of man is rather trying in real life。 In real life such a
man would probably be slaughtered to death and buried at an early
period of his career; but on the stage they put up with him。
He is very good; is the comic man。 He can't bear villainy。 To thwart
villainy is his life's ambition; and in this noble object fortune
backs him up grandly。 Bad people come and commit their murders and
thefts right under his nose; so that he can denounce them in the last
act。
They never see him there; standing close beside them; while they are
performing these fearful crimes。
It is marvelous how short…sighted people on the stage are。 We always
thought that the young lady in real life was moderately good at not
seeing folks she did not want to when they were standing straight in
front of her; but her affliction in this direction is as nothing
compared with that of her brothers and sisters on the stage。
These unfortunate people come into rooms where there are crowds of
people aboutpeople that it is most important that they should see;
and owing to not seeing whom they get themselves into fearful trouble;
and they never notice any of them。 They talk to somebody opposite;
and they can't see a third person that is standing bang between the
two of them。
You might fancy they wore blinkers。
Then; again; their hearing is so terribly weak。 It really ought to be
seen to。 People talk and chatter at the very top of their voices
close behind them; and they never hear a worddon't know anybody's
there; even。 After it has been going on for half an hour; and the
people 〃up stage〃 have made themselves hoarse with shouting; and
somebody has been boisterously murdered and all the furniture upset;
then the people 〃down stage〃 〃think they hear a noise。〃
The comic man always rows with his wife if he is married or with his
sweetheart if he is not married。 They quarrel all day long。 It must
be a trying life; you would think; but they appear to like it。
How the comic man lives and supports his wife (she looks as if it
wanted something to support her; too) and family is always a mystery
to us。 As we have said; he is not a rich man and he never seems to
earn any money。 Sometimes he keeps a shop; and in the way he manages
business it must be an expensive thing to keep; for he never charges
anybody for anything; he is so generous。 All his customers seem to be
people more or less in trouble; and he can't find it in his heart to
ask them to pay for their goods under such distressing circumstances。
He stuffs their basket full with twice as much as they came to buy;
pushes their money back into their hands; and wipes away a tear。
Why doesn't a comic man come and set up a grocery store in our
neighborhood?
When the shop does not prove sufficiently profitable (as under the
above…explained method sometimes happens to be the case) the comic
man's wife seeks to add to the income by taking in lodgers。 This is a
bad move on her part; for it always ends in the lodgers taking her in。
The hero and heroine; who seem to have been waiting for something of
the sort; immediately come and take possession of the whole house。
Of course the comic man could not think of charging for mere board and
lodging the man who knocked him down when they were boys together!
Besides; was not the heroine (now the hero's wife) the sweetest and
the blithest girl in all the village of Deepdale? (They must have
been a gloomy band; the others!) How can any one with a human heart
beneath his bosom suggest that people like that should pay for their
rest and washing? The comic man is shocked at his wife for even
thinking of such a thing; and the end of it is that Mr。 and Mrs。 Hero
live there for the rest of the play rent free; coals; soap; candles;
and hair…oil for the child being provided for them on the same terms。
The hero raises vague and feeble objections to this arrangement now
and again。 He says he will not hear of such a thing; that he will
stay no longer to be a burden upon these honest folk; but will go
forth unto the roadside and there starve。 The comic man has awful
work with him; but wins at last and persuades the noble fellow to stop
on and give the place another trial。
When; a morning or so after witnessing one of these beautiful scenes;
our own landlady knocks at our door and creates a disturbance over a
paltry matter of three or four weeks' rent; and says she'll have her
money or out we go that very day; and drifts slowly away down toward
the kitchen; abusing us in a rising voice as she descends; then we
think of these things and grow sad。
It is the example of the people round him that makes the comic man so
generous。 Everybody is generous on the stage。 They are giving away
their purses all day long; that is the regulation 〃tip〃 on the
stageone's purse。 The moment you hear a tale of woe; you grab it
out of your pocket; slap it in to the woe…er's palm; grip his hand;
dash away a tear; and exit; you don't even leave yourself a 'bus fare
home。 You walk back quickly and get another purse。
Middle…class people and others on the stage who are short of purses
have to content themselves with throwing about rolls of bank…notes and
tipping servants with five…pound checks。 Very stingy people on the
stage have been known to be so cussed mean as to give away mere
sovereigns。
But they are generally only villains or lords that descend to this
sort of thing。 Respectable stage folk never offer anything less than
a purse。
The recipient is very grateful on receiving the purse (he never looks
inside) and thinks that Heaven ought to reward the donor。 They get a
lot of work out of Heaven on the stage。 Heaven does all the odd jobs
for them that they don't want to go to the trouble and expense of
doing for themselves。 Heaven's chief duty on the stage is to see to
the repayment of all those sums of money that are given or lent to the
good people。 It is generally requested to do this to the tune of a
〃thousand…fold〃an exorbitant rate when you come to think of it。
Heaven is also expected to take care that the villain ge