
- 290 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Cabbages and Kings
About this book
Cabbages and Kings is a 1904 novel made up of interlinked short stories, written by O. Henry and set in a fictitious Central American country called the Republic of Anchuria. It takes its title from the poem "The Walrus and the Carpenter", featured in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass.
In this book, O. Henry coined the term "banana republic".
Table of Contents:
I. "FOX-IN-THE-MORNING"
II. THE LOTUS AND THE BOTTLE
III. SMITH
IV. CAUGHT
V. CUPID'S EXILE NUMBER TWO
VI. THE PHONOGRAPH AND THE GRAFT
VII. MONEY MAZE
VIII. THE ADMIRAL
IX. THE FLAG PARAMOUNT
X. THE SHAMROCK AND THE PALM
XI. THE REMNANTS OF THE CODE
XII. SHOES
XIII. SHIPS
XIV. MASTERS OF ARTS
XV. DICKY
XVI. ROUGE ET NOIR
XVII. TWO RECALLS
XVIII. THE VITAGRAPHOSCOPE
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weâve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere â even offline. Perfect for commutes or when youâre on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Cabbages and Kings by O. Henry in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
eBook ISBN
9781473374492Subtopic
Literary CollectionsX.
THE SHAMROCK AND THE PALM
THE SHAMROCK AND THE PALM
One night when there was no breeze, and Coralio seemed closer than ever to the gratings of Avernus, five men were grouped about the door of the photograph establishment of Keogh and Clancy. Thus, in all the scorched and exotic places of the earth, Caucasians meet when the dayâs work is done to preserve the fulness of their heritage by the aspersion of alien things.
Johnny Atwood lay stretched upon the grass in the undress uniform of a Carib, and prated feebly of cool water to be had in the cucumber-wood pumps of Dalesburg. Dr. Gregg, through the prestige of his whiskers and as a bribe against the relation of his imminent professional tales, was conceded the hammock that was swung between the door jamb and a calabash-tree. Keogh had moved out upon the grass a little table that held the instrument for burnishing completed photographs. He was the only busy one of the group. Industriously from between the cylinders of the burnisher rolled the finished depictments of Coralioâs citizens. Blanchard, the French mining engineer, in his cool linen viewed the smoke of his cigarette through his calm glasses, impervious to the heat. Clancy sat on the steps, smoking his short pipe. His mood was the gossipâs; the others were reduced, by the humidity, to the state of disability desirable in an audience.
Clancy was an American with an Irish diathesis and cosmopolitan proclivities. Many businesses had claimed him, but not for long. The roadsterâs blood was in his veins. The voice of the tintype was but one of the many callings that had wooed him upon so many roads. Sometimes he could be persuaded to oral construction of his voyages into the informal and egregious. To-night there were symptoms of divulgement in him.
ââTis elegant weather for filibusterinâ,â he volunteered. âIt reminds me of the time I struggled to liberate a nation from the poisonous breath of a tyrantâs clutch. âTwas hard work. âTis straininâ to the back and makes corns on the hands.â
âI didnât know you had ever lent your sword to an oppressed people,â murmured Atwood, from the grass.
âI did,â said Clancy; âand they turned it into a ploughshare.â
âWhat country was so fortunate as to secure your aid?â airily inquired Blanchard.
âWhereâs Kamchatka?â asked Clancy, with seeming irrelevance.
âWhy, off Siberia somewhere in the Arctic regions,â somebody answered, doubtfully.
âI thought that was the cold one,â said Clancy, with a satisfied nod. âIâm always gettinâ the two names mixed. âTwas Guatemala, thenâthe hot oneâIâve been filibusterinâ with. Yeâll find that country on the map. âTis in the district known as the tropics. By the foresight of Providence, it lies on the coast so the geography man could run the names of the towns off into the water. Theyâre an inch long, small type, composed of Spanish dialects, and, âtis my opinion, of the same system of syntax that blew up the Maine. Yes, âtwas that country I sailed against, single-handed, and endeavoured to liberate it from a tyrannical government with a single-barreled pickaxe, unloaded at that. Ye donât understand, of course. âTis a statement demandinâ elucidation and apologies.
ââTwas in New Orleans one morning about the first of June; I was standinâ down on the wharf, lookinâ about at the ships in the river. There was a little steamer moored right opposite me that seemed about ready to sail. The funnels of it were throwinâ out smoke, and a gang of roustabouts were carryinâ aboard a pile of boxes that was stacked up on the wharf. The boxes were about two feet square, and somethinâ like four feet long, and they seemed to be pretty heavy.
âI walked over, careless, to the stack of boxes. I saw one of them had been broken in handlinâ. âTwas curiosity made me pull up the loose top and look inside. The box was packed full of Winchester rifles. âSo, so,â says I to myself; âsomebodyâs gettinâ a twist on the neutrality laws. Somebodyâs aidinâ with munitions of war. I wonder where the popguns are goinâ?â
âI heard somebody cough, and I turned around. There stood a little, round, fat man with a brown face and white clothes, a first-class-looking little man, with a four-karat diamond on his finger and his eye full of interrogations and respects. I judged he was a kind of foreignerâmay be from Russia or Japan or the archipelagoes.
ââHist!â says the round man, full of concealments and confidences. âWill the señor respect the discoveryments he has made, that the mans on the ship shall not be acquaint? The señor will be a gentleman that shall not expose one thing that by accident occur.â
ââMonseer,â says Iâfor I judged him to be a kind of Frenchmanââreceive my most exasperated assurances that your secret is safe with James Clancy. Furthermore, I will go so far as to remark, Veev la Libertyâveev it good and strong. Whenever you hear of a Clancy obstructinâ the abolishment of existinâ governments you may notify me by return mail.â
ââThe señor is good,â says the dark, fat man, smilinâ under his black mustache. âWish you to come aboard my ship and drink of wine a glass.â
âBeinâ a Clancy, in two minutes me and the foreigner man were seated at a table in the cabin of the steamer, with a bottle between us. I could hear the heavy boxes beinâ dumped into the hold. I judged that cargo must consist of at least 2,000 Winchesters. Me and the brown man drank the bottle of stuff, and he called the steward to bring another. When you amalgamate a Clancy with the contents of a bottle you practically instigate secession. I had heard a good deal about these revolutions in them tropical localities, and I begun to want a hand in it.
ââYou goinâ to stir things up in your country, ainât you, monseer?â says I, with a wink to let him know I was on.
ââYes, yes,â said the little man, pounding his fist on the table. âA change of the greatest will occur. Too long have the people been oppressed with the promises and the never-to-happen things to become. The great work it shall be carry on. Yes. Our forces shall in the capital city strike of the soonest. Carrambos!â
ââCarrambos is the word,â says I, beginning to invest myself with enthusiasm and more wine, âlikewise veeva, as I said before. May the shamrock of oldâI mean the banana-vine or the pie-plant, or whatever the imperial emblem may be of your down-trodden country, wave forever.â
ââA thousand thank-yous,â says the round man, âfor your emission of amicable utterances. What our cause needs of the very most is mans who will the work do, to lift it along. Oh, for one thousands strong, good mans to aid the General De Vega that he shall to his country bring those success and glory! It is hardâoh, so hard to find good mans to help in the work.â
ââMonseer,â says I, leaninâ over the table and graspinâ his hand, âI donât know where your country is, but me heart bleeds for it. The heart of a Clancy was never deaf to the sight of an oppressed people. The family is filibusterers by birth, and foreigners by trade. If you can use James Clancyâs arms and his blood in denudinâ your shores of the tyrantâs yoke theyâre yours to command.â
âGeneral De Vega was overcome with joy to confiscate my condolence of his conspiracies and predicaments. He tried to embrace me across the table, but his fatness, and the wine that had been in the bottles, prevented. Thus was I welcomed into the ranks of filibustery. Then the general man told me his country had the name of Guatemala, and was the greatest nation laved by any ocean whatever anywhere. He looked at me with tears in his eyes, and from time to time he would emit the remark, âAh! big, strong, brave mans! That is what my country need.â
âGeneral De Vega, as was the name by which he denounced himself, brought out a document for me to sign, which I did, makinâ a fine flourish and curlycue with the tail of the ây.â
ââYour passage-money,â says the general, business-like, âshall from your pay be deduct.â
ââTwill not,â says I, haughty. âIâll pay my own passage.â A hundred and eighty dollars I had in my inside pocket, and âtwas no common filibuster I was goinâ to be, filibusterinâ for me board and clothes.
âThe steamer was to sail in two hours, and I went ashore to get some things together Iâd need. When I came aboard I showed the general with pride the outfit. âTwas a fine Chinchilla overcoat, Arctic overshoes, fur cap and earmuffs, with elegant fleece-lined gloves and woolen muffler.
ââCarrambos!â says the little general. âWhat clothes are these that shall go to the tropic?â And then the little spalpeen laughs, and he calls the captain, and the captain calls the purser, and they pipe up the chief engineer, and the whole gang leans against the cabin and laughs at Clancyâs wardrobe for Guatemala.
âI reflects a bit, serious, and asks the general again to denominate the terms by which his country is called. He tells me, and I see then that âtwas the tâother one, Kamchatka, I had in mind. Since then Iâve had difficulty in separatinâ the two nations in name, climate and geographic disposition.
âI paid my passageâtwenty-four dollars, first cabinâand ate at table with the officer crowd. Down on the lower deck was a gang of second-class passengers, about forty of them, seeminâ to be Dagoes and the like. I wondered what so many of them were goinâ along for.
âWell, then, in three days we sailed alongside that Guatemala. âTwas a blue country, and not yellow as âtis miscolored on the map. We landed at a town on the coast, where a train of cars was waitinâ for us on a dinky little railroad. The boxes on the steamer were brought ashore and loaded on the cars. The gang of Dagoes got aboard, too, the general and me in the front car. Yes, me and General De Vega headed the revolution, as it pulled out of the seaport town. That train travelled about as fast as a policeman goinâ to a riot. It penetrated the most conspicuous lot of fuzzy scenery ever seen outside a geography. We run some forty miles in seven hours, and the train stopped. There was no more railroad. âTwas a sort of camp in a damp gorge full of wildness and melancholies. They was gradinâ and choppinâ out the forests ahead to continue the road. âHere,â says I to myself, âis the romantic haunt of the revolutionists. Here will C...
Table of contents
- CABBAGES AND KINGS
- O. Henry
- THE PROEM. BY THE CARPENTER
- âFOX-IN-THE-MORNINGâ
- II. THE LOTUS AND THE BOTTLE
- III. SMITH
- IV. CAUGHT
- V. CUPIDâS EXILE NUMBER TWO
- VI. THE PHONOGRAPH AND THE GRAFT
- VII. MONEY MAZE
- VIII. THE ADMIRAL
- IX. THE FLAG PARAMOUNT
- X. THE SHAMROCK AND THE PALM
- XI. THE REMNANTS OF THE CODE
- XII. SHOES
- XIII. SHIPS
- XIV. MASTERS OF ARTS
- XV. DICKY
- XVI. ROUGE ET NOIR
- XVII. TWO RECALLS
- XVIII. THE VITAGRAPHOSCOPE
- The Vitagraphoscope. (Moving Pictures)