Audiobook
SUMMARY
Rudolph Kerner was the son of a very rich man. He
wanted to be an artist, and he was in love with a beautiful working girl, so a
poor girl. His father didn’t like his son’s ideas about vocation and marriage,
but Kerner was stubborn as artists and lovers have to be.
However, the story begins by telling us about a bogeyman,
a spirit or a ghost that people allude in order to frighten or threaten
children; or parents make use of his name to make their children obey. Our
bogeyman is Jesse Holmes, otherwise called the Fool-Killer, because his aim are fools; it is a terrific and bloody character.
But the core of our story is a dinner at Farroni’s.
Kerner and the narrator had dinner there, and after dinner, they drank an absinthe
drip. This is a kind of cocktail, and absinthe is a strong liquor: it has 65% of
alcohol. The narrator got drunk and started to see strange things. He saw Jesse
Holmes coming to their table and sitting with them, although he wasn’t sure if the
character was real or only a product of his intoxicated imagination.
There, the Fool-Killer threatened to kill Kerner for being a fool, that is, for disdaining his father’s fortune by wanting to live the poor life of an artist and by marrying a poor girl. But Kerner doesn’t seem to see or to hear the Fool-Killer. Once this bogeyman had said his ultimatum, he went out of the restaurant. Our narrator, understanding the danger his friend was in, ran after Jesse Holmes and tried to persuade him to forgive or forget Kerner. The bogeyman yielded at last and asked him to fetch Kerner on the street. He was afraid for his friend, but Kerner thought he was only drunk; he was to take him home, when, on the street, the Fool-Killer stopped them and addressed Kerner.
What did he tell him? Did he kill him?
QUESTIONS
-Do you think it is necessary (or useful) to have a
bogeyman to make children obey?
-In every culture, they have their own bogeyman. What
can be the reason for this creation?
-According to the cliché, a real artist has to be poor.
On your point of view, how true is this cliché?
VOCABULARY
Southrons, parlor rifle, slosh, crinkly, dipper, limned,
kalsomining, street-sprinkler, jag, clay-eaters, give in