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Then
the
ringmaster
he
see
how
he
had
been
fooled
,
and
he
WAS
the
sickest
ringmaster
you
ever
see
,
I
reckon
.
Why
,
it
was
one
of
his
own
men
!
He
had
got
up
that
joke
all
out
of
his
own
head
,
and
never
let
on
to
nobody
.
Well
,
I
felt
sheepish
enough
to
be
took
in
so
,
but
I
would
n't
a
been
in
that
ringmaster
's
place
,
not
for
a
thousand
dollars
.
I
do
n't
know
;
there
may
be
bullier
circuses
than
what
that
one
was
,
but
I
never
struck
them
yet
.
Anyways
,
it
was
plenty
good
enough
for
ME
;
and
wherever
I
run
across
it
,
it
can
have
all
of
MY
custom
every
time
.
Well
,
that
night
we
had
OUR
show
;
but
there
war
n't
only
about
twelve
people
there
--
just
enough
to
pay
expenses
.
And
they
laughed
all
the
time
,
and
that
made
the
duke
mad
;
and
everybody
left
,
anyway
,
before
the
show
was
over
,
but
one
boy
which
was
asleep
So
the
duke
said
these
Arkansaw
lunkheads
could
n't
come
up
to
Shakespeare
;
what
they
wanted
was
low
comedy
--
and
maybe
something
ruther
worse
than
low
comedy
,
he
reckoned
.
He
said
he
could
size
their
style
.
So
next
morning
he
got
some
big
sheets
of
wrapping
paper
and
some
black
paint
,
and
drawed
off
some
handbills
,
and
stuck
them
up
all
over
the
village
.
The
bills
said
:
AT
THE
COURT
HOUSE
!
FOR
3
NIGHTS
ONLY
!
The
World-Renowned
Tragedians
DAVID
GARRICK
THE
YOUNGER
!
AND
EDMUND
KEAN
THE
ELDER
!
Of
the
London
and
Continental
Theatres
,
In
their
Thrilling
Tragedy
of
THE
KING
'S
CAMELEOPARD
,
OR
THE
ROYAL
NONESUCH
!!!
Admission
50
cents
.
Then
at
the
bottom
was
the
biggest
line
of
all
,
which
said
:
LADIES
AND
CHILDREN
NOT
ADMITTED
.
"
There
,
"
says
he
,
"
if
that
line
do
n't
fetch
them
,
I
do
n't
know
Arkansaw
!
"
WELL
,
all
day
him
and
the
king
was
hard
at
it
,
rigging
up
a
stage
and
a
curtain
and
a
row
of
candles
for
footlights
;
and
that
night
the
house
was
jam
full
of
men
in
no
time
.
When
the
place
could
n't
hold
no
more
,
the
duke
he
quit
tending
door
and
went
around
the
back
way
and
come
on
to
the
stage
and
stood
up
before
the
curtain
and
made
a
little
speech
,
and
praised
up
this
tragedy
,
and
said
it
was
the
most
thrillingest
one
that
ever
was
;
and
so
he
went
on
a-bragging
about
the
tragedy
,
and
about
Edmund
Kean
the
Elder
,
which
was
to
play
the
main
principal
part
in
it
;
and
at
last
when
he
'd
got
everybody
's
expectations
up
high
enough
,
he
rolled
up
the
curtain
,
and
the
next
minute
the
king
come
a-prancing
out
on
all
fours
,
naked
;
and
he
was
painted
all
over
,
ring-streaked-and-striped
,
all
sorts
of
colors
,
as
splendid
as
a
rainbow
.
And
--
but
never
mind
the
rest
of
his
outfit
;
it
was
just
wild
,
but
it
was
awful
funny
.
The
people
most
killed
themselves
laughing
;
and
when
the
king
got
done
capering
and
capered
off
behind
the
scenes
,
they
roared
and
clapped
and
stormed
and
haw-hawed
till
he
come
back
and
done
it
over
again
,
and
after
that
they
made
him
do
it
another
time
.
Well
,
it
would
make
a
cow
laugh
to
see
the
shines
that
old
idiot
cut
.
Then
the
duke
he
lets
the
curtain
down
,
and
bows
to
the
people
,
and
says
the
great
tragedy
will
be
performed
only
two
nights
more
,
on
accounts
of
pressing
London
engagements
,
where
the
seats
is
all
sold
already
for
it
in
Drury
Lane
;
and
then
he
makes
them
another
bow
,
and
says
if
he
has
succeeded
in
pleasing
them
and
instructing
them
,
he
will
be
deeply
obleeged
if
they
will
mention
it
to
their
friends
and
get
them
to
come
and
see
it
.
Twenty
people
sings
out
: