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Priscilla learns from the announcer that "this little lady is out of 'Irony' by Theodore Dreiser".
"All ready, Helen--"
The "little lady" appears.
She is somewhat over six feet six in height and built like a boilermaker. She is dressed in pink tights.
"Six Minutes of Beauty" begins when Helen picks up three large iron cannon b.a.l.l.s and juggles them. She tosses them in the air and catches them cleverly on the back of her neck.
The six minutes are brought to a successful conclusion when Helen, hanging head downward by one foot from a trapeze, balances lighted lamp on the other foot and plays Beethoven's Fifth Symphony on the slide trombone.
The announcer then begins his lecture. Priscilla has by this time gotten used to the overpowering roar of his voice and she discovers that once this difficulty is overcome she is tremendously impressed by his words.
She becomes more and more attracted to the man. She listens, fascinated, as his lecture draws to a close and he offers his medicine for sale. She presses forward through the crowd of Indians surrounding the stand. She reaches the tent. She gives her coin and receives in return a bottle.
She hides it in her cape and hurries home.
She slips in the back way; she pours some of the medicine into a gla.s.s; she drinks it.
V
A terrible overwhelming nausea. Vomiting, which lasts for agonizing minutes, leaving her helpless on the floor.
Then cessation.
Then light--blinding light.
VI
At 3:10 Priscilla drank the Mencken medicine; at 3:12 she was lying in agony on the floor; at 3:20 she opened her eyes; at 3:21 she walked out of her front door; and at 3:22 she discovered what was wrong with Plymouth and the pilgrims.
Main Street. Straight and narrow. A Puritan thoroughfare in a Puritan town.
The church. A centre of Puritan worship. The shrine of a narrow theology which persistently repressed beauty and joy and life.
The Miles Standish house. The house of a Puritan. A squat, unlovely symbol of repression. Beauty crushed by Morality.
Plymouth Rock. Hard, unyielding--like the Puritan moral code. A huge tombstone on the grave of Pan.
She fled home. She flung herself, sobbing, on the bed. She cried, "They're all Puritans that's what they are, Puritans!"
After a while she slept, her cheeks flushed, her heart beating unnaturally.
VII
Late that night.
She opened her eyes; she heard men's voices; she felt her heart still pounding within her at an alarming rate.
"And I told them then that it would come to no good end. Truly, the Lord does not countenance such joking."
She recognized the voices of Miles Standish and Elder Brewster.
"Well--what happened then?" This from Kennicott.
"Well, you see, Henry Haydock got some of this Mencken's medicine from one of the Indians. And he thought it would be a good joke to put it in the broth at the church supper this evening."
"Yes?"
"Well--he did it, the fool. And when the broth was served, h.e.l.l on earth broke loose. Everyone started calling his neighbor a Puritan, and cursing him for having banished Beauty from the earth. The Lord knows what they meant by that; I don't. Old friends fought like wildcats, shrieking 'Puritan' at each other. Luckily it only got to one table--but there are ten raving lunatics in the lockup tonight.
"It's an awful thing. But thanks to the Lord, some good has come out of this evil: that medicine man, Mencken, was standing outside looking in at the rumpus, smiling to himself I guess. Well, somebody saw him and yelled, 'There's another of those d.a.m.ned Puritans!' and before he could get away five of them had jumped on him and beaten him to death. He deserved it, and it's a good joke on him that they killed him for being a Puritan."
Priscilla could stand no more. She rose from her bed, rushed into the room, and faced the three Puritans. In the voice of Priscilla Kennicott but with the words of the medicine man she scourged them.
"A good joke?" she began. "And that is what you Puritan gentlemen of G.o.d and volcanoes of Correct Thought snuffle over as a good joke? Well, with the highest respect to Professor Doctor Miles Standish, the Puritan Hea.r.s.e-hound, and Professor Doctor Elder Brewster, the Plymouth Dr.
Frank Crane--BLAA!"
She shrieked this last in their faces and fell lifeless at their feet.
She never recovered consciousness; an hour later she died. An overdose of the medicine had been too much for her weak heart.
"Poor William," comforted Elder Brewster, "you must be brave. You will miss her sorely. But console yourself with the thought that it was for the best. Priscilla has gone where she will always be happy. She has at last found that bliss which she searched for in vain on earth."
"Yes William," added Miles Standish. "Priscilla has now found eternal joy."
VIII
Heaven.
Smug saints with ill-fitting halos and imitation wings, singing meaningless hymns which Priscilla had heard countless times before.
Sleek prosaic angels flying aimlessly around playing stale songs on sickly yellow harps.
Three of the harps badly out of tune; two strings missing on another.
Moses, a Jew.
Methuselah, another Jew. Old and unshaven.
Priscilla threw herself on a cloud, sobbing.
"Well, sister, what seems to be the matter here?"
She looked up; she saw a sympathetic stranger looking down at her.
"Because you know, sister," he went on, "if you don't like it here you can always go back any time you want to."
"Do you mean to say," gasped Priscilla, "that I can return to earth?"