<h2>MAN ABOUT TOWN</h2>
<p>There were two or three things that I wanted to know. I do not care about a
mystery. So I began to inquire.</p>
<p>It took me two weeks to find out what women carry in dress suit cases. And then
I began to ask why a mattress is made in two pieces. This serious query was at
first received with suspicion because it sounded like a conundrum. I was at
last assured that its double form of construction was designed to make lighter
the burden of woman, who makes up beds. I was so foolish as to persist, begging
to know why, then, they were not made in two equal pieces; whereupon I was
shunned.</p>
<p>The third draught that I craved from the fount of knowledge was enlightenment
concerning the character known as A Man About Town. He was more vague in my
mind than a type should be. We must have a concrete idea of anything, even if
it be an imaginary idea, before we can comprehend it. Now, I have a mental
picture of John Doe that is as clear as a steel engraving. His eyes are weak
blue; he wears a brown vest and a shiny black serge coat. He stands always in
the sunshine chewing something; and he keeps half-shutting his pocket knife and
opening it again with his thumb. And, if the Man Higher Up is ever found, take
my assurance for it, he will be a large, pale man with blue wristlets showing
under his cuffs, and he will be sitting to have his shoes polished within sound
of a bowling alley, and there will be somewhere about him turquoises.</p>
<p>But the canvas of my imagination, when it came to limning the Man About Town,
was blank. I fancied that he had a detachable sneer (like the smile of the
Cheshire cat) and attached cuffs; and that was all. Whereupon I asked a
newspaper reporter about him.</p>
<p>“Why,” said he, “a ‘Man About Town’ is something
between a ‘rounder’ and a ‘clubman.’ He isn’t
exactly—well, he fits in between Mrs. Fish’s receptions and private
boxing bouts. He doesn’t—well, he doesn’t belong either to
the Lotos Club or to the Jerry McGeogheghan Galvanised Iron Workers’
Apprentices’ Left Hook Chowder Association. I don’t exactly know
how to describe him to you. You’ll see him everywhere there’s
anything doing. Yes, I suppose he’s a type. Dress clothes every evening;
knows the ropes; calls every policeman and waiter in town by their first names.
No; he never travels with the hydrogen derivatives. You generally see him alone
or with another man.”</p>
<p>My friend the reporter left me, and I wandered further afield. By this time the
3126 electric lights on the Rialto were alight. People passed, but they held me
not. Paphian eyes rayed upon me, and left me unscathed. Diners, heimgangers,
shop-girls, confidence men, panhandlers, actors, highwaymen, millionaires and
outlanders hurried, skipped, strolled, sneaked, swaggered and scurried by me;
but I took no note of them. I knew them all; I had read their hearts; they had
served. I wanted my Man About Town. He was a type, and to drop him would be an
error—a typograph—but no! let us continue.</p>
<p>Let us continue with a moral digression. To see a family reading the Sunday
paper gratifies. The sections have been separated. Papa is earnestly scanning
the page that pictures the young lady exercising before an open window, and
bending—but there, there! Mamma is interested in trying to guess the
missing letters in the word N_w Yo_k. The oldest girls are eagerly perusing the
financial reports, for a certain young man remarked last Sunday night that he
had taken a flyer in Q., X. & Z. Willie, the eighteen-year-old son, who
attends the New York public school, is absorbed in the weekly article
describing how to make over an old skirt, for he hopes to take a prize in
sewing on graduation day.</p>
<p>Grandma is holding to the comic supplement with a two-hours’ grip; and
little Tottie, the baby, is rocking along the best she can with the real estate
transfers. This view is intended to be reassuring, for it is desirable that a
few lines of this story be skipped. For it introduces strong drink.</p>
<p>I went into a café to—and while it was being mixed I asked the man who
grabs up your hot Scotch spoon as soon as you lay it down what he understood by
the term, epithet, description, designation, characterisation or appellation,
viz.: a “Man About Town.”</p>
<p>“Why,” said he, carefully, “it means a fly guy that’s
wise to the all-night push—see? It’s a hot sport that you
can’t bump to the rail anywhere between the Flatirons—see? I guess
that’s about what it means.”</p>
<p>I thanked him and departed.</p>
<p>On the sidewalk a Salvation lassie shook her contribution receptacle gently
against my waistcoat pocket.</p>
<p>“Would you mind telling me,” I asked her, “if you ever meet
with the character commonly denominated as ‘A Man About Town’
during your daily wanderings?”</p>
<p>“I think I know whom you mean,” she answered, with a gentle smile.
“We see them in the same places night after night. They are the
devil’s body guard, and if the soldiers of any army are as faithful as
they are, their commanders are well served. We go among them, diverting a few
pennies from their wickedness to the Lord’s service.”</p>
<p>She shook the box again and I dropped a dime into it.</p>
<p>In front of a glittering hotel a friend of mine, a critic, was climbing from a
cab. He seemed at leisure; and I put my question to him. He answered me
conscientiously, as I was sure he would.</p>
<p>“There is a type of ‘Man About Town’ in New York,” he
answered. “The term is quite familiar to me, but I don’t think I
was ever called upon to define the character before. It would be difficult to
point you out an exact specimen. I would say, offhand, that it is a man who had
a hopeless case of the peculiar New York disease of wanting to see and know. At
6 o’clock each day life begins with him. He follows rigidly the
conventions of dress and manners; but in the business of poking his nose into
places where he does not belong he could give pointers to a civet cat or a
jackdaw. He is the man who has chased Bohemia about the town from rathskeller
to roof garden and from Hester street to Harlem until you can’t find a
place in the city where they don’t cut their spaghetti with a knife. Your
‘Man About Town’ has done that. He is always on the scent of
something new. He is curiosity, impudence and omnipresence. Hansoms were made
for him, and gold-banded cigars; and the curse of music at dinner. There are
not so many of him; but his minority report is adopted everywhere.</p>
<p>“I’m glad you brought up the subject; I’ve felt the influence
of this nocturnal blight upon our city, but I never thought to analyse it
before. I can see now that your ‘Man About Town’ should have been
classified long ago. In his wake spring up wine agents and cloak models; and
the orchestra plays ‘Let’s All Go Up to Maud’s’ for
him, by request, instead of Händel. He makes his rounds every evening;
while you and I see the elephant once a week. When the cigar store is raided,
he winks at the officer, familiar with his ground, and walks away immune, while
you and I search among the Presidents for names, and among the stars for
addresses to give the desk sergeant.”</p>
<p>My friend, the critic, paused to acquire breath for fresh eloquence. I seized
my advantage.</p>
<p>“You have classified him,” I cried with joy. “You have
painted his portrait in the gallery of city types. But I must meet one face to
face. I must study the Man About Town at first hand. Where shall I find him?
How shall I know him?”</p>
<p>Without seeming to hear me, the critic went on. And his cab-driver was waiting
for his fare, too.</p>
<p>“He is the sublimated essence of Butt-in; the refined, intrinsic extract
of Rubber; the concentrated, purified, irrefutable, unavoidable spirit of
Curiosity and Inquisitiveness. A new sensation is the breath in his nostrils;
when his experience is exhausted he explores new fields with the
indefatigability of a—”</p>
<p>“Excuse me,” I interrupted, “but can you produce one of this
type? It is a new thing to me. I must study it. I will search the town over
until I find one. Its habitat must be here on Broadway.”</p>
<p>“I am about to dine here,” said my friend. “Come inside, and
if there is a Man About Town present I will point him out to you. I know most
of the regular patrons here.”</p>
<p>“I am not dining yet,” I said to him. “You will excuse me. I
am going to find my Man About Town this night if I have to rake New York from
the Battery to Little Coney Island.”</p>
<p>I left the hotel and walked down Broadway. The pursuit of my type gave a
pleasant savour of life and interest to the air I breathed. I was glad to be in
a city so great, so complex and diversified. Leisurely and with something of an
air I strolled along with my heart expanding at the thought that I was a
citizen of great Gotham, a sharer in its magnificence and pleasures, a partaker
in its glory and prestige.</p>
<p>I turned to cross the street. I heard something buzz like a bee, and then I
took a long, pleasant ride with Santos-Dumont.</p>
<p>When I opened my eyes I remembered a smell of gasoline, and I said aloud:
“Hasn’t it passed yet?”</p>
<p>A hospital nurse laid a hand that was not particularly soft upon my brow that
was not at all fevered. A young doctor came along, grinned, and handed me a
morning newspaper.</p>
<p>“Want to see how it happened?” he asked cheerily. I read the
article. Its headlines began where I heard the buzzing leave off the night
before. It closed with these lines:</p>
<p>“—Bellevue Hospital, where it was said that his injuries were not
serious. He appeared to be a typical Man About Town.”</p>
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