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R.
Holmes & Co.
It was a
blistering night in August. All day long the
mercury in the thermometer had been flirting
with the figures at the top of the tube, and the
promised shower at night which a mendacious
Weather Bureau had been prophesying as a slight
mitigation of our sufferings was conspicuous
wholly by its absence. I had but one comfort in
the sweltering hours of the day, afternoon and
evening, and that was that my family were away
in the mountains, and there was no law against
my sitting around all day clad only in my
pajamas, and otherwise concealed from possibly
intruding eyes by the wreaths of smoke that I
extracted from the nineteen or twenty cigars
which, when there is no protesting eye to
suggest otherwise, form my daily allowance. I
had tried every method known to the resourceful
flat-dweller of modern times to get cool and to
stay so, but alas, it was impossible. Even the
radiators, which all winter long had never once
given forth a spark of heat, now hissed to the
touch of my moistened finger. Enough cooling
drinks to float an ocean greyhound had passed
into my inner man, with no other result than to
make me perspire more profusely than ever, and
in so far as sensations went, to make me feel
hotter than before. Finally, as a last resource,
along about midnight, its gridiron floor having
had a chance to lose some of its stored-up
warmth, I climbed out upon the fire-escape at
the rear of the Richmere, hitched my hammock
from one of the railings thereof to the leader
running from the roof to the area, and swung
myself therein some eighty feet above the
concealed pavement of our backyard—so called,
perhaps, because of its dimensions which were
just about that square...
 A
House-Boat on the Styx
Charon, the Ferryman of renown, was
cruising slowly along the Styx one pleasant
Friday morning not long ago, and as he paddled
idly on he chuckled mildly to himself as he
thought of the monopoly in ferriage which in the
course of years he had managed to build up.
“It’s a great thing,” he said, with a smirk of
satisfaction—“it’s a great thing to be the go-between
between two states of being; to have the
exclusive franchise to export and import shades
from one state to the other, and withal to have
had as clean a record as mine has been. Valuable
as is my franchise, I never corrupted a public
official in my life, and—”
Here Charon stopped his soliloquy and his boat
simultaneously. As he rounded one of the many
turns in the river a singular object met his
gaze, and one, too, that filled him with
misgiving. It was another craft, and that was a
thing not to be tolerated. Had he, Charon, owned
the exclusive right of way on the Styx all these
years to have it disputed here in the closing
decade of the Nineteenth Century? Had not he
dealt satisfactorily with all, whether it was in
the line of ferriage or in the providing of
boats for pleasure-trips up the river? Had he
not received expressions of satisfaction, indeed,
from the most exclusive families of Hades with
the very select series of picnics he had given
at Charon’s Glen Island? No wonder, then, that
the queer-looking boat that met his gaze, moored
in a shady nook on the dark side of the river,
filled him with dismay...

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