Part 37 (2/2)

”Hoo's!” said the bearded man.

”I believe I could do it,” went on the King, feverishly. ”By the eight green G.o.ds of the mountain, I believe I could! By the holy fire that burns night and day before the altar of Belus, I'm _sure_ I could!

By Hec, I'm going to do it now! Gimme that hoe!”

”Toots!” said the bearded man.

It seemed to the King that the fellow spoke derisively, and his blood boiled angrily. He seized the hoe and raised it above his shoulder, bracing himself solidly on widely-parted feet. His pose was an exact reproduction of the one in which the Court sculptor had depicted him when working on the life-size statue (”Our Athletic King”) which stood in the princ.i.p.al square of the city; but it did not impress the stranger. He uttered a discordant laugh.

”Ye puir gonuph!” he cried, ”whitkin' o' a staunce is that?”

The King was hurt. Hitherto the att.i.tude had been generally admired.

”It's the way I always stand when killing lions,” he said. ”'In killing lions,'” he added, quoting from the well-known treatise of Nimrod, the recognized text-book on the sport, ”'the weight at the top of the swing should be evenly balanced on both feet.'”

”Ah, weel, ye're no killing lions the noo. Ye're gowfing.”

A sudden humility descended upon the King. He felt, as so many men were to feel in similar circ.u.mstances in ages to come, as though he were a child looking eagerly for guidance to an all-wise master--a child, moreover, handicapped by water on the brain, feet three sizes too large for him, and hands consisting mainly of thumbs.

”O thou of n.o.ble ancestors and agreeable disposition!” he said, humbly.

”Teach me the true way.”

”Use the interlocking grup and keep the staunce a wee bit open and slow back, and dinna press or sway the heid and keep yer e'e on the ba'.”

”My which on the what?” said the King, bewildered.

”I fancy, your Majesty,” hazarded the Vizier, ”that he is respectfully suggesting that your serene graciousness should deign to keep your eye on the ball.”

”Oh, ah!” said the King.

The first golf lesson ever seen in the kingdom of Oom had begun.

Up on the terrace, meanwhile, in the little group of courtiers and officials, a whispered consultation was in progress. Officially, the King's unfortunate love affair was supposed to be a strict secret. But you know how it is. These things get about. The Grand Vizier tells the Lord High Chamberlain; the Lord High Chamberlain whispers it in confidence to the Supreme Hereditary Custodian of the Royal Pet Dog; the Supreme Hereditary Custodian hands it on to the Exalted Overseer of the King's Wardrobe on the understanding that it is to go no farther; and, before you know where you are, the varlets and scurvy knaves are gossiping about it in the kitchens, and the Society journalists have started to carve it out on bricks for the next issue of _Palace Prattlings_.

”The long and short of it is,” said the Exalted Overseer of the King's Wardrobe, ”we must cheer him up.”

There was a murmur of approval. In those days of easy executions it was no light matter that a monarch should be a prey to gloom.

”But how?” queried the Lord High Chamberlain.

”I know,” said the Supreme Hereditary Custodian of the Royal Pet Dog.

”Try him with the minstrels.”

”Here! Why us?” protested the leader of the minstrels.

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