Galusha the Magnificent
night in October-in order to emphasize the truth of that statement it may be well, without waiting further, to explain just who Galusha Cabot Bangs was, and who and what his family
whatever portion of it he saved for a rainy day. In the Revolution a certain Galusha Cabot, progenitor of the line of Galusha Cabots, assisted the struggling patriots of Beacon Hill to pay their troops in the Continental army. During the Civil War his grandson, the Honorable Galusha Hancock Cabot, one of Boston's most famous bankers and financiers, was of great assistance to his state and nation in the sale of bonds and the floating
d admired, but he was not the husband for Galusha Hancock Cabot's daughter. She should have married a Kidder or a Higginson or some one high in the world
whatever she did was sure to be exactly the right thing. So, in order to keep up the family tradition and honors-"He has a perfe
a cough which made physicians who heard it look grave. It was before the days of Adirondack Mountain sanitariums. They told John Bangs to go South, to Florida. He went there, leaving his son at school in
s quite probable that he would have been accepted. He did not happen along; in fact, no one happened along until Clarissa was in her thirties and somewhat anxious. Then came Joshua Bute of Chicago, and when wooed she accepted and married him. More than that, she went with hi
al waistcoat and a tremendous deal of money. Later on the kind heart stopped beating and Aunt Clarissa
ung man, was already known as a financier, and looked out for her various investments, saying that she found young Galusha "a nice boy, though rather odd, like his father," and that she thought of taking his rearing
relative more than once. On one occasion a visitor, admiring the Bute library, asked how many volumes it contained. Aunt Clarissa replied that she did not know. "I have added from time to time such books as I desired and have discarded others. I really have no
hat her eyeglasses fell from her aqu
didn't know you were t
six hundred and seventeen books
o you
unted
hem? Mercy
cles gleamed. "F
ll poring over Ancient Nineveh and Its Rem
to read tha
lready and, counting this one,
it was a very remarkable set, quite rare and complete. "We seldom pick one up nowadays, Mrs.
broad page with its diagram of an ancient temple a
d it so interes
her. His eyes were al
they send an expedition and the people in it figure out where the city or the temple or whatever it is ought to be, and t
the digging
g. And when you DO find 'em there are sculptures like this-oh, yards and yards of 'em-and all sort o
shouldn't be permitted to develop. I have set my heart on his becoming a financier like the other Galushas in our line. Of course he will always be a Bangs-more's the pity-but his middle name is Cabot and his first IS Galusha. I think he had best
college, as at school, he plugged away at his studies, and he managed to win sufficiently high marks in mathematics. But his mathematical genius was of a queer twist. In the practical dollars and cents sort of fig
t each year, which is fair enough because they almost always change, that means that at least so many fellows," giving the number, "have occupied this room si
the classmate, "cut it out. What do you waste
he door frames and the-ah-mop boards it would be great stuff to pu
le look like blazes and it is bad enough as
n were busy with baseball or track or tennis, or the hundred and one activities which help to keep young America employed in a great university, Galusha might have been, and was, seen hopping about some grass-grown graveyard, like a bespectacled
spring, a year ago. But there are dozens of 'em all about, in all the old graveyards. Nobody ever saw a skull with wings; it's a-a-ah-convention, of course. But who made the first o
ow. Forget it. You make a
actly. But isn't it great fun to study 'em up, and see the different kinds
sense. You've got pigeons in your loft, Loos
igeons in his loft." However, it was agreed that they were harmless fow
hand of Aunt Clarissa grasped him, so to speak, by the collar and guided him to the portals of the banking house of
smart tweed trousers, tilted from heels to toes of his stylish and very shiny shoes and whistled beneath his tr
a banker, do you,
him sadly throu
s me to be o
ime the junior partner of Cabot, Bancroft and Cabot had another inte
on. "You've cost us a thousand dollars more than your salary already by mistakes and forgetfulness and all
ha no
he said
do! Well, tha
t when I
ld be no good
is job
n's sake why di
Aunt Clarissa
stay here, that's
and yours. I realize I have
l, I feel like a beast to chuck you out this way, b
n't k
er go back to Aunt Clarissa," he said. "Possibly she
es
mighty sure of it. Ho
ight and almost pathetic gleam, of hu
aid. And thus ended his connect
urse. She expressed her feelings without reservatio
she declared. "Why did Dorothy marry him? Sh
downcast even t
id. "I realize I am a dreadful disappoint
hn Capen Bangs cough like that. That very afternoon the Bute family physician saw, questioned and examined Galusha. The fo
ly to do them, for his aunt's sake. As a matter of fact, he took little interest in the matter for his own. His was a sensitive spirit, although a quiet, shy and "queer" one, and to find that he was "no good" at any particular employment, even though he had fe
t "cliff dwellers," to find and, if need be, excavate the villages of this strange people and to do research work among them. The expedition was in charge of an eminent scientist. Galusha met and talked with the scientist and liked him at once, a liking which was to grow into adoration as the acqu
the precipice as barn swallows' nests are plastered beneath eaves. Then the climb and the glorious burrowing into the homes of these long dead folk, the hallelujahs when a bit of broken pottery was found, and the delightfully arduous labor of painstakingly uncovering and cleaning a bit of rude carving. The average man would have tired of it in two days, a week of it would have bored him to distraction. B
ould not help but make an impression. The distinguished savant at the head of
is quite as much for mine. You're worth at least three of the average young fellows who have trained for this sort of thing. There will be
he G
I can't afford to have a sick man along. You stay here fo
ut I A
ll, then, g
und that he was going anyhow. He returned from the expedition higher than ever in favor with his chief. He was
he buried tombs and temples-all those Galusha saw and took, figuratively speaking, for his own. On his return he settled down to the study of Egyptology, its writings, its history, its every detail. He made another trip to the
ie. There was a letter to the latter in the envelope with the will. "He is to have only the income, the income, understand-until he is forty-
wrong, but there was income enough to furnish any mortal of ordinary tastes with the means of gratifying them and still have a substantial residue left. Galusha understood this, in a vague sort of way, but he did not care. Outside of his beloved profession he ha
y you mustn't," he declared, anxiousl
o with the mon
s, that
you need it
ear me
O you l
my s
salary, if you don
figure he named seemed a small one to
mendous. They don't overpay you mummy-dusters, do the
ou're sure yo
want me to keep it and reinv
es, reinvest it
occasionally. If you do you
ou very much. It's quite a wei
p laughing. Then a
k I sent you?" he asked. Gal
d been hoping to fit out an expedition to the Wyoming fossil fields, but it was lamentably short of funds, appropriations-ah-and so on. Hambridge and I were talking of th
been introduced," he observed, with a chuc
fellow, was very much upset at the prospect of abandoning his expedition and I, knowing from experience what such a disappointment me
ker int
emanded, "that you handed that ch
her at a loss
ha no
ridge's expediti
of
-ah-
by Ge
n't. The only thing that troubles me is the fact that, after all, it was money Aunt Clarissa left to
He had known Aunt Cl
wouldn't,"
any more, will you? Ah-
d not then unless I know WHY you
a great favor. As they walked through the outer of
is relative glanced about at the desks where rows of overjoyed clerks
at the door, "but don't you ever dare call me 'Co
dition of his own, but, generally speaking, he was quite content with his modest salary. He unwrapped his mummies and deciphered his moldering papyri, living far more in ancient Egypt than in modern Washington. The Great War and its demands upon the youth of the world left the Institute short-handed and he
had broken, like the enemy's resistance, and the
the doctor; "forget it. You must get
ha was downcast. T
to start for Syria," he said. "I am quite sure I woul
thing. You can't go wandering off to dig in the desert; you might as well sta
le in Syria, a great many of them, a
in trouble with you just now is nerve weariness and lack of strength. Eat, sleep, rest, build up. Eat regular meals at regular times
myself at such places. I am
ow, they have a tendency to become all wrong with very little provocation. I tell you to go away at once,
lusha took off his spectacl
r me!-ah-Oh, dea
ed his stenographer to name a resort where one would be likely to meet-ah-a good many people and find-ah-air
fficient. A crumpled, perspiring wreck, he boarded the train bound for the mountains. The Wh
metery to be visited. But as the fall season drew on the crowds grew greater. People persisted in talking to Galusha when he did not care to be talked to. They ask
not quite sure. The "rest" and "sea air" and "pleasant people" were exactly what the doctor had prescribed for him, but that was not the whole reason for the advertisement's retention. An association of ideas
ade up his mind. His decision was brought to a focus by the help of Mrs. Worth Buckley. Mrs. Buckley's help had not been solicited, but was volunteered, and, as a matter of
ecided manner. She asked him if-he would pardon her for asking, wouldn't he?-but had she, by any chance, the honor of addressing Doctor Bangs, the Egyptologist. Oh, really? How very wonderful! She was quite certain that it was he. She had heard him deliver a series of
road to his favor. He tried to tell this woman so, but it was of no use. In a little while he found it quite as useless to attemp
ave been merely a succession of "I" and "I" and "I" and "Oh, do you really think so, Doctor Bangs?"
pt into the dining room at meal times. Worst of all, she told others, many others, who he was, and he was aware of being stared at, a knowledge which made him acutely self-conscious and correspondi
with the goldfish tank in the hotel lounge. To Galusha Egypt was an enchanted land, a sort of paradise to which fortunate explorers might eventu
essor Bangs"-of the hotel inmates were to picnic somewhere or other the following day. "And you are to come with us, Doctor, and tell us about thos
as in his pocketbook. Then the idea came to him. He would go to the Hall cottage and make a visit of a day or two. If he liked the Cape and Wellmouth he would take lodgings at the Restabit Inn and stay as long as he wished. The suspic
r he took with him. He tiptoed downstairs, ate a hasty breakfast, and took the earliest train for Boston, The following afternoon he s