-""JS" H HfP7l twKW 41X1 vw ' in- nT-wp, . DECEMBEIf 18, 1908 The Commoner. 3 racter in the Speaker iair How Jenny Lind and an Illinois Farmer Boy "Went Through the Rye Togothot'.. Quaint Cha Oa jh With the advent of every new political party, quaint characters have commanded public attention. In a popular uprising an untried party had captured the legislature of one of the western states. The members of the lower house in that legislature chose a3 their presiding ofllcer an odd character whom we shall designate as Mull largely for the reason that that was not his name. Speaker Mull was an unlettered man, but he possessed a native shrewdness and he had such a unique way of expressing himself that during that session of the legislature he made generous contribution to newspaper literature. For instance, it was the wont of Speaker Mull to suggest at the- moment he felt the pangs of noon day hunger "Let's unhitch and go to dinner." Some of the quaint sayings of the speaker we're grouped under the title of "Mul berries" and given publicity in the newspapers of that day. Here are some sample "Mulberries:" "I found out several years ago that I couldn't know much, so I concluded I'd make it a point to know things well. Gentleman, what I do know I know awful hard." "I heard a -fellow say yesterday, 'There's only one Mull.' I tell- you what, boys, if we were all made alike there wouldn't be any excuse for mutual admiration societies in this here land." "I may not catch on quite as quick as some others, but I hang on hard enough to make up for it." "I'll tell you, gentlemen, the trouble with this crowd is, every fellow is trying to make another legislator better and forgetting about himself." "This is the most intelligent legislature I ever saw. It's the only one I ever saw." "It's pretty tough when a man wants to know something and can't know it; but half the battle is won by wanting to know some thing." "Gentlemen, there are a" good many ways to do wrong; there is only one way to do right." "Most of us would rather be right than president; but some of us would rather have the president's salary than even the satisfaction of knowing that we were holier than they." "Boys, -I never enjoyed life before; this legislative business is the best fun I ever had, and when we all go home, the man who leaves here as my enemy, will have to be a smaller man than I am." "If a man wants to know if I came here for my health, I tell him no nor for boodle neither. It's the only safe plan." "I never so highly prized my good old mother's teachings as I have in the last two months when I needed them most." "I pity the man who daresn't go outside of his own political party to win a friend. When we get up to the pearly gates,-1 don't doubt but what we will all be independents, democrats or republicans; and I expect the man who is first to be rejected will be the political leader who has no need for friendship himself and who tries to imprison human friendships in the nar row cells of political association." "Since I have been speaker, there are a good many chaps down on the floor who think they have seen things to smile at. I dften find consolation in the belief that if any one of those chaps were in my place the laugh might be on the other side, and I want it understood that there are a great many things happening on 'the floor which make me smile in my sleeve, of course." On one occasion, the entire legislature at tended a play, where everyone was captivated by a beautiful song. On the following morning Speaker Mull waB asked, "How did you like that song last night?" The speaker was resting in his private office, 'Preparing for his day's battle as presiding officer. He replied: "That was pretty good, but let me tell you, she ain't no JTenny Lind." "Did you ever hear Jenny Lind?" I'Did 1 e.ver hear Jenny Lind?" exclaimed the speaker in a' somewhat injured tone. "Did I ever hear Jenny Lind?, I should say I did. Me and her went through the rye together. It was in spirit rather than in the flesh that Jenny and I went through the rye togother." "Whore did you hear her sing?" "It was in St. Louis. Oh, I was only a kid, but big enough to just float away with ovary word Jenny Lind sang." "AVhat did she sing?" "What didn't she sing? Dut there is one song I will never forget. It's the only song I ever learned or tried to learn. It's the sweetest music to my ears today. Jenny was not a very big woman, but great Jupiter! What a voire she had. It wns at B.en Do Bar's old theater in St. Louis. With my father I lived in Montgom ery county, Illinois, and the old gentleman had taken me to hear the woman who had stopped churns in their duty. She sang Great Caesar, how she sang! She came out and sang some nice songs, and I remember that soon I was moving all over my seat without regard to my old homo instruction that boys must be seen instead of heard. But then everybody else was going wild over the singing. Finally Jonnv was called out and then was the time that she broke me all up. She stood there with three thousand pairs of eyes upon her and three thousand pairs of ears listening for overy note. One moment she gazed like a little frightened bird might at the great crowd before her. Then she. raised her hand and everybody shut up yelling and you might have heard a pin drop. Then when everything was as quiet as a session of tho house when the house ain't in session Jenny began to sing. Great Jupiter, what a song it was! " "Yes, sir," he continued, "she began to sing, and I'll never forget that song. It was some thing like this: "If a body meet a body Coming through tho rye, . Should a body kiss a body, ' .," ' Need that body cry? 0 -v'n:; - "If a lassie has her laddie, Never one have I, If that lassie kiss that laddie, Is it anybody's business?" "Of course," continued the speaker, "I don't remember the exact words and may not have the Words exactly right, but tho tune I'll never forget that tune" and the speaker whistled the old familiar -air, "Coming Through the Rye." "That was a glorious time," ho added, "I remember I stood up and held onto the seat in front of me. I was only a farmer boy, but I was an American, with all the love for such songs as Jenny Lind sang. I forgot all about my father sitting beside me; I forgot all my surroundings; forgot that I was in a crowd of three thousand fashionably dressed people; all I thought of was Jenny Lind and that 'tune. Soon I seemed to go away from there, I seemed to seize the hand of the singer; I clutched it tightly and the crowd before us seemed to melt away and in the place of the stylish theater there seemed to spring up a great field of rye. 'If a lassie has her laddie,' sang Jenny, and I seemed to clutch her hand tighter and when she repeated that verse, 'If a body meet a body,' I seemed to make a desperate effort and to gether Jenny and I started off through the field tramping down tho rye straw. On and on we pranced; it didn't seem like we were walking; we were just floating but I clung tight to Jenny and Jenny sho clung tight to mo and when we reached the other side of the field we turned and cut a new swath to the tother side. On and on we .floated going through the rye. It was the happiest moment of my life, but just as I seemed to become unconscious I heard shouts and' clapping of hands, and saw the waving of handkerchiefs. Three thousand -people were on their feet yelling like mad men. My old father had jumped up beside me and he was waving his old felt hat. The people all seemed mad and I opened my eyes and then I realized that I had been standing there all the time and that Jenny had simply hypnotized me. I hadn't been tramping through the rye field at all, and I remember, poor little country boy that I was, I sat down on the cushioned seat, and taking out my little red bandana, wiped , N several big drops of water from my oyos. Jenny came before the curtain and ild 'good-bye.' I hen the great crowd filed out. I took hold of my good old father's hand and wo loft tho theater. Not a word wax Mpokon by either of us until wo reached tho sidewalk and then my father said: 'Samuel, that was tho greatest song I ever heard.' "Fc.r weeks arter that tho cornfields and tho barnyards on our old Illinois farm re-echoed with bits of that old song. And now I never hear that song but what it brings back to mo the drtys of my boyhood. I never hoar it but what I see the faces of my father and mother. M never hear It but what I scorn to be feeding the cows in the barnyard or driving tho hogs from the cornfield .and tho noxt time I go to hear a woman who can sing and will sing I'm going to ask her to open the pearly gates for a moment with the keynotes of 'Coming Thro' It was 10 o'clock and tho speaker hurried down tho aislo of tho house of representatives and mounted the speaker's stand, calling tho house to order. When tho chaplain offered prayer tho speaker bowed his head lower than usual; when tho clerk read tho long and tro somo record tho speaker fixed lifs oyoH oti the too of his boot and whistled notLly and tho tuno which floated to'tlio press stand wns an old familiar air. RICHARD L. METCALFE. AXOTIIKH JOYFUJj SONG When the Washington Herald pitched the tuno and chortled in joyous song tho praises ' of the pumpkin plo, The Commoner took a long breath and with nil the cheerfulness and tune fulness at Its command joined In the gladsomo chorus. The subject was an Inspiring one, call- ' Ing out the best efforts of tho vocalists, and there are ample evidences In tho scrap hook to prove that the song and the singers made a hit with those who are yet able to enjoy tho rich though simple gustatory Joys of other days. Now the esteemed Herald leads us on to respond to the encore and has chosen another themo calculatod to arouse us to even better vocal effort. The Herald now sings of "hog- killln' time," with all its Joys, edible and social. ' Sorry, Indeed, are we for those benighted Indi viduals to whom tho joys of "hog killln' time" are as a sealed book. The pleasant interchange of labor between noighbors, the joys of accept ing a jowl or a chunk of backbone from.a friend down tho road, the olfactory delights arising from the trying out of tho lard, the musical scrunch of the sausage grinder and the nutty aroma arising from tho smokehouse where the fresh hams are being cured all these arc Joyo no longer participated In by men and women, save In somewhat remote localities where tho devastating hand of the packing trust has not been laid. And then, too, our esteemed con temporary asks us to joij. in s'tnging one verso dedicated especially to a concommltant of "hog killln' time," and although the "very mention of it starts the salivary glands to working over time and the Juice to trickling down our chin, we joyfully lift our voice to sing the praises of "cracklln' bread." Let the French chef hide his head in shame, and the Italian master of tho kitchen weep for very humiliation. Not In all thp long list of theii culinary achievements can they find one single thing to match the glory of "cracklln' bread." Nor, for that matter, can " the French and Italian chefs do cuisine if that's the foreign lingo compaTO with tho cooks of the "hog killln' " districts in the prep aration of real, soul-satisfying and stomach pleasing meals. Spare-ribs and kraut, with dumplings, ham hock and cabbage, pickled pigs feet and dill pickles, cracklln' bread and rich, old-fashioned dasher church buttermilk, pump kin bread and 'simraon sauce, fried sausage and gravy with a stack o' wheats oa the side O, me! O, my! Now all together, with the gustatory mentor of the Washington Herald beating the time and leading the song, let us join in singing tho joys of "hog killln' time," and strive with all our might to bring about the revival of an Institu tion almost throttled by the prosaic, money grubbing and dyspeptic-breeding meat trust. - i