Section 1
The Magic Bon Bons explained simply
The Magic Bon Bons by L. Frank Baum
Original excerpt
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There lived in Boston a wise and ancient chemist by the name of Dr. Daws, who dabbled somewhat in magic. There also lived in Boston a young lady by the name of Claribel Sudds, who was possessed of much money, little wit and an intense desire to go upon the stage. So Claribel w...
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There lived in Boston a wise and ancient chemist by the name of Dr.
Daws, who dabbled somewhat in magic. There also lived in Boston a young
lady by the name of Claribel Sudds, who was possessed of much money,
little wit and an intense desire to go upon the stage.
So Claribel went to Dr. Daws and said:
“I can neither sing nor dance; I cannot recite verse nor play upon the
piano; I am no acrobat nor leaper nor high kicker; yet I wish to go
upon the stage. What shall I do?”
“Are you willing to pay for such accomplishments?” asked the wise
chemist.
“Certainly,” answered Claribel, jingling her purse.
“Then come to me to-morrow at two o’clock,” said he.
All that night he practiced what is known as chemical sorcery; so that
when Claribel Sudds came next day at two o’clock he showed her a small
box filled with compounds that closely resembled French bonbons.
“This is a progressive age,” said the old man, “and I flatter myself
your Uncle Daws keeps right along with the procession. Now, one of your
old-fashioned sorcerers would have made you some nasty, bitter pills to
swallow; but I have consulted your taste and convenience. Here are some
magic bonbons. If you eat this one with the lavender color you can
dance thereafter as lightly and gracefully as if you had been trained a
lifetime. After you consume the pink confection you will sing like a
nightingale. Eating the white one will enable you to become the finest
elocutionist in the land. The chocolate piece will charm you into
playing the piano better than Rubenstein, while after eating the
lemon-yellow bonbon you can easily kick six feet above your head.”
“How delightful!” exclaimed Claribel, who was truly enraptured. “You
are certainly a most clever sorcerer as well as a considerate
compounder,” and she held out her hand for the box.
“Ahem!” said the wise one; “a check, please.”
“Oh, yes; to be sure! How stupid of me to forget it,” she returned.
He considerately retained the box in his own hand while she signed a
check for a large amount of money, after which he allowed her to hold
the box herself.
“Are you sure you have made them strong enough?” she inquired,
anxiously; “it usually takes a great deal to affect me.”
“My only fear,” replied Dr. Daws, “is that I have made them too strong.
For this is the first time I have ever been called upon to prepare
these wonderful confections.”
“Don’t worry,” said Claribel; “the stronger they act the better I shall
act myself.”
She went away, after saying this, but stopping in at a dry goods store
to shop, she forgot the precious box in her new interest and left it
lying on the ribbon counter.
Then little Bessie Bostwick came to the counter to buy a hair ribbon
and laid her parcels beside the box. When she went away she gathered up
the box with her other bundles and trotted off home with it.
Bessie never knew, until after she had hung her coat in the hall closet
and counted up her parcels, that she had one too many. Then she opened
it and exclaimed:
“Why, it’s a box of candy! Someone must have mislaid it. But it is too
small a matter to worry about; there are only a few pieces.” So she
dumped the contents of the box into a bonbon dish that stood upon the
hall table and picking out the chocolate piece—she was fond of
chocolates—ate it daintily while she examined her purchases.
These were not many, for Bessie was only twelve years old and was not
yet trusted by her parents to expend much money at the stores. But
while she tried on the hair ribbon she suddenly felt a great desire to
play upon the piano, and the desire at last became so overpowering that
she went into the parlor and opened the instrument.
The little girl had, with infinite pains, contrived to learn two
“pieces” which she usually executed with a jerky movement of her right
hand and a left hand that forgot to keep up and so made dreadful
discords. But under the influence of the chocolate bonbon she sat down
and ran her fingers lightly over the keys producing such exquisite
harmony that she was filled with amazement at her own performance.
That was the prelude, however. The next moment she dashed into
Beethoven’s seventh sonata and played it magnificently.
Her mother, hearing the unusual burst of melody, came downstairs to see
what musical guest had arrived; but when she discovered it was her own
little daughter who was playing so divinely she had an attack of
palpitation of the heart (to which she was subject) and sat down upon a
sofa until it should pass away.
Meanwhile Bessie played one piece after another with untiring energy.
She loved music, and now found that all she need do was to sit at the
piano and listen and watch her hands twinkle over the keyboard.
Twilight deepened in the room and Bessie’s father came home and hung up
his hat and overcoat and placed his umbrella in the rack. Then he
peeped into the parlor to see who was playing.
“Great Caesar!” he exclaimed. But the mother came to him softly with
her finger on her lips and whispered: “Don’t interrupt her, John. Our
child seems to be in a trance. Did you ever hear such superb music?”
“Why, she’s an infant prodigy!” gasped the astounded father. “Beats
Blind Tom all hollow! It’s—it’s wonderful!”
As they stood listening the senator arrived, having been invited to
dine with them that evening. And before he had taken off his coat the
Yale professor—a man of deep learning and scholarly attainments—joined
the party.
Bessie played on; and the four elders stood in a huddled but silent and
amazed group, listening to the music and waiting for the sound of the
dinner gong.
Mr. Bostwick, who was hungry, picked up the bonbon dish that lay on the
table beside him and ate the pink confection. The professor was
watching him, so Mr. Bostwick courteously held the dish toward him. The
professor ate the lemon-yellow piece and the senator reached out his
hand and took the lavender piece. He did not eat it, however, for,
chancing to remember that it might spoil his dinner, he put it in his
vest pocket. Mrs. Bostwick, still intently listening to her precocious
daughter, without thinking what she did, took the remaining piece,
which was the white one, and slowly devoured it.
The dish was now empty, and Claribel Sudds’ precious bonbons had passed
from her possession forever!
Suddenly Mr. Bostwick, who was a big man, began to sing in a shrill,
tremolo soprano voice. It was not the same song Bessie was playing, and
the discord was shocking that the professor smiled, the senator put his
hands to his ears and Mrs. Bostwick cried in a horrified voice:
“William!”
Her husband continued to sing as if endeavoring to emulate the famous
Christine Nillson, and paid no attention whatever to his wife or his
guests.
Fortunately the dinner gong now sounded, and Mrs. Bostwick dragged
Bessie from the piano and ushered her guests into the dining-room. Mr.
Bostwick followed, singing “The Last Rose of Summer” as if it had been
an encore demanded by a thousand delighted hearers.
The poor woman was in despair at witnessing her husband’s undignified
actions and wondered what she might do to control him. The professor
seemed more grave than usual; the senator’s face wore an offended
expression, and Bessie kept moving her fingers as if she still wanted
to play the piano.
Mrs. Bostwick managed to get them all seated, although her husband had
broken into another aria; and then the maid brought in the soup.
When she carried a plate to the professor, he cried, in an excited
voice:
“Hold it higher! Higher—I say!” And springing up he gave it a sudden
kick that sent it nearly to the ceiling, from whence the dish descended
to scatter soup over Bessie and the maid and to smash in pieces upon
the crown of the professor’s bald head.
At this atrocious act the senator rose from his seat with an
exclamation of horror and glanced at his hostess.
For some time Mrs. Bostwick had been staring straight ahead, with a
dazed expression; but now, catching the senator’s eye, she bowed
gracefully and began reciting “The Charge of the Light Brigade” in
forceful tones.
The senator shuddered. Such disgraceful rioting he had never seen nor
heard before in a decent private family. He felt that his reputation
was at stake, and, being the only sane person, apparently, in the room,
there was no one to whom he might appeal.
The maid had run away to cry hysterically in the kitchen; Mr. Bostwick
was singing “O Promise Me;” the professor was trying to kick the globes
off the chandelier; Mrs. Bostwick had switched her recitation to “The
Boy Stood on the Burning Deck,” and Bessie had stolen into the parlor
and was pounding out the overture from the “Flying Dutchman.”
The senator was not at all sure he would not go crazy himself,
presently; so he slipped away from the turmoil, and, catching up his
had and coat in the hall, hurried from the house.
That night he sat up late writing a political speech he was to deliver
the next afternoon at Faneuil hall, but his experiences at the
Bostwicks’ had so unnerved him that he could scarcely collect his
thoughts, and often he would pause and shake his head pityingly as he
remembered the strange things he had seen in that usually respectable
home.
The next day he met Mr. Bostwick in the street, but passed him by with
a stony glare of oblivion. He felt he really could not afford to know
this gentleman in the future. Mr. Bostwick was naturally indignant at
the direct snub; yet in his mind lingered a faint memory of some quite
unusual occurrences at his dinner party the evening before, and he
hardly knew whether he dared resent the senator’s treatment or not.
The political meeting was the feature of the day, for the senator’s
eloquence was well known in Boston. So the big hall was crowded with
people, and in one of the front rows sat the Bostwick family, with the
learned Yale professor beside them. They all looked tired and pale, as
if they had passed a rather dissipated evening, and the senator was
rendered so nervous by seeing them that he refused to look in their
direction a second time.
While the mayor was introducing him the great man sat fidgeting in his
chair; and, happening to put his thumb and finger into his vest pocket,
he found the lavender-colored bonbon he had placed there the evening
before.
“This may clear my throat,” thought the senator, and slipped the bonbon
into his mouth.
A few minutes afterwards he arose before the vast audience, which
greeted him with enthusiastic plaudits.
“My friends,” began the senator, in a grave voice, “this is a most
impressive and important occasion.”
Then he paused, balanced himself upon his left foot, and kicked his
right leg into the air in the way favored by ballet-dancers!
There was a hum of amazement and horror from the spectators, but the
senator appeared not to notice it. He whirled around upon the tips of
his toes, kicked right and left in a graceful manner, and startled a
bald-headed man in the front row by casting a languishing glance in his
direction.
Suddenly Claribel Sudds, who happened to be present, uttered a scream
and sprang to her feet. Pointing an accusing finger at the dancing
senator, she cried in a loud voice:
“That’s the man who stole my bonbons! Seize him! Arrest him! Don’t let
him escape!”
But the ushers rushed her out of the hall, thinking she had gone
suddenly insane; and the senator’s friends seized him firmly and
carried him out the stage entrance to the street, where they put him
into an open carriage and instructed the driver to take him home.
The effect of the magic bonbon was still powerful enough to control the
poor senator, who stood upon the rear seat of the carriage and danced
energetically all the way home, to the delight of the crowd of small
boys who followed the carriage and the grief of the sober-minded
citizens, who shook their heads sadly and whispered that “another good
man had gone wrong.”
It took the senator several months to recover from the shame and
humiliation of this escapade; and, curiously enough, he never had the
slightest idea what had induced him to act in so extraordinary a
manner. Perhaps it was fortunate the last bonbon had now been eaten,
for they might easily have caused considerably more trouble than they
did.
Of course Claribel went again to the wise chemist and signed a check
for another box of magic bonbons; but she must have taken better care
of these, for she is now a famous vaudeville actress.
This story should teach us the folly of condemning others for actions
that we do not understand, for we never know what may happen to
ourselves. It may also serve as a hint to be careful about leaving
parcels in public places, and, incidentally, to let other people’s
packages severely alone.
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What happens here
The Magic Bon Bons follows American fairy-tale invention, practical humor, magic, and a surprising problem to solve.
Why this scene matters
This story matters because it turns American fairy-tale invention, practical humor, magic, and a surprising problem to solve into a short public-domain reading experience that is easier to understand when the plot is explained plainly first.
Characters in this scene
- The curious child or hero: The person who meets the strange magical problem.
- The magical invention: The impossible object or creature that gives the story its comic shape.