Aftermath
AFTERMATH Part Second of _A Kentucky Cardinal_ by JAMES LAKE ALLEN Author of _The Blue-Grass Region of Kentucky_, _Flute and Violin_, etc. 1899 Dedication This to her from one who in childhood used to stand at the windows
carefully before he commits himself, and even though a certain point may
strike him as funny, he isn't going to laugh until he has fully made up
his mind that it is funny. I remember once riding down Piccadilly with
Froude in a hansom cab. Froude had a copy of _Punch_ in his hand, and he
began to laugh immoderately over something. I leaned over his shoulder
to see what he was laughing at. 'That isn't so funny,' said I, as I read
the paragraph on which his eye was resting. 'No,' said Froude. 'I
wasn't laughing at that. I was enjoying the joke that appeared in the
same relative position in last week's issue.' Now that's the point--the
whole point. The Englishman always laughs over last week's _Punch_, not
this week's, and that is why you will find a file of that interesting
journal in the home of all well-to-do Britons. It is the back number
that amuses him--which merely proves that he is a deliberative person who
weighs even his humor carefully before giving way to his emotions."
"What is the average weight of a copy of _Punch_?" drawled Artemas Ward,
who had strolled in during the latter part of the conversation.
Shakespeare snickered quietly, but Carlyle and Johnson looked upon the
intruder severely.
"We will take that question into consideration," said Carlyle. "Perhaps
to-morrow we shall have a definite answer ready for you."
"Never mind," returned the humorist. "You've proved your point. Tennyson
tells me you find life here dull, Shakespeare."
AFTERMATH Part Second of _A Kentucky Cardinal_ by JAMES LAKE ALLEN Author of _The Blue-Grass Region of Kentucky_, _Flute and Violin_, etc. 1899 Dedication This to her from one who in childhood used to stand at the windows