第29章 TWO THANKSGIVING DAY GENTLEMEN(2 / 3)

For the old Gentleman was coming across Fourth avenue toward his bench.

Every Thanksgiving day for nine years the old Gentleman had come there and found Stuffy Pete on his bench.That was a thing that the old Gentleman was trying to make a tradition of.Every Thanksgiving day for nine years he had found Stuffy there,and had led him to a restaurant and watched him eat a big dinner.They do those things in England unconsciously.But this is a young country,and nine years is not so bad.The old Gentleman was a staunch american patriot,and considered himself a pioneer in american tradition.In order to become picturesque we must keep on doing one thing for a long time without ever letting it get away from us.Something like collecting the weekly dimes in industrial insurance.or cleaning the streets.

The old Gentleman moved,straight and stately,toward the Institution that he was rearing.Truly,the annual feeding of Stuffy Pete was nothing national in its character,such as the Magna Charta or jam for breakfast was in England.Butit was a step.It was almost feudal.It showed,at least,that a Custom was not impossible to New Y—ahem!—america.

The old Gentleman was thin and tall and sixty.He was dressed all in black,and wore the old-fashioned kind of glasses that won't stay on your nose.His hair was whiter and thinner than it had been last year,and he seemed to make more use of his big,knobby cane with the crooked handle.

as his established benefactor came up Stuffy wheezed and shuddered like some woman's over-fat pug when a street dog bristles up at him.He would have fown,but all the skill of Santos-dumont could not have separated him from his bench.Well had the myrmidons of the two old ladies done their work.

“Good morning,”said the old Gentleman.“I am glad to perceive that the vicissitudes of another year have spared you to move in health about the beautiful world.For that blessing alone this day of thanksgiving is well proclaimed to each of us.If you will come with me,my man,I will provide you with a dinner that should make your physical being accord with the mental.”

That is what the old Gentleman said every time.Every Thanksgiving day for nine years.The words themselves almost formed an Institution.Nothing could be compared with them except the declaration of Independence.always before they had been music in Stuffy's ears.But now he looked up at the old Gentleman's face with tearful agony in his own.The fne snow almost sizzled when it fell upon his perspiring brow.But the old Gentleman shivered a little and turned his back to the wind.

Stuffy had always wondered why the old Gentlemanspoke his speech rather sadly.He did not know that it was because he was wishing every time that he had a son to succeed him.a son who would come there after he was gone—a son who would stand proud and strong before some subsequent Stuffy,and say:“In memory of my father.”Then it would be an Institution.

But the old Gentleman had no relatives.He lived in rented rooms in one of the decayed old family brownstone mansions in one of the quiet streets east of the park.In the winter he raised fuchsias in a little conservatory the size of a steamer trunk.In the spring he walked in the Easter parade.In the summer he lived at a farmhouse in the New Jersey hills,and sat in a wicker armchair,speaking of a butterfly,the ornithoptera amphrisius,that he hoped to fnd some day.In the autumn he fed Stuffy a dinner.These were the old Gentleman's occupations.

Stuffy Pete looked up at him for a half minute,stewing and helpless in his own self-pity.The old Gentleman's eyes were bright with the giving-pleasure.His face was getting more lined each year,but his little black necktie was in as jaunty a bow as ever,and the linen was beautiful and white,and his gray mustache was curled carefully at the ends.and then Stuffy made a noise that sounded like peas bubbling in a pot.Speech was intended;and as the old Gentleman had heard the sounds nine times before,he rightly construed them into Stuffy's old formula of acceptance.