Short Story Writing A Practical Treatise on the Art of The Short Story
TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE INTRODUCTION I THE SHORT STORY II SHORT STORIES CLASSIFIED III THE PLOT IV TITLES GOOD AND BAD V THE USE OF FACTS
slumbering brute. He suggested the attempt to perform an operation on
the somnolent raccoon by removing, under the influence of the drug, an
internal growth, which was considered the probable cause of his illness.
A surgeon was called in, the growth was found and removed, and the
raccoon, to everybody's surprise, continued to slumber peacefully on his
straw for five hours afterwards. At the end of that time he awoke, and
stretched himself as if nothing had happened; and though he was, of
course, very weak from loss of blood, he immediately displayed a
most royal hunger. He ate up all the maize that was offered him
for breakfast, and proceeded to manifest a desire for more by most
unequivocal symptoms.
Sebastian was overjoyed. He now felt sure he had discovered a drug
which would supersede chloroform--a drug more lasting in its immediate
effects, and yet far less harmful in its ultimate results on the balance
of the system. A name being wanted for it, he christened it "lethodyne."
It was the best pain-luller yet invented.
For the next few weeks, at Nat's, we heard of nothing but lethodyne.
Patients recovered and patients died; but their deaths or recoveries
were as dross to lethodyne, an anaesthetic that might revolutionise
surgery, and even medicine! A royal road through disease, with no
trouble to the doctor and no pain to the patient! Lethodyne held the
field. We were all of us, for the moment, intoxicated with lethodyne.
Sebastian's observations on the new agent occupied several months.
TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE INTRODUCTION I THE SHORT STORY II SHORT STORIES CLASSIFIED III THE PLOT IV TITLES GOOD AND BAD V THE USE OF FACTS