The passer- by
A
young man, giving a farewell bachelor dinner, receives a note at the last
moment saying that one of his guests is obliged to leave town and cannot
attend. Rather than allow his place to remain empty he sends two of his friends
to the street to bring in the first man who passes. They enter into the spirit
of the idea descend to the street and pounce upon a poorly dressed old man and,
in spite of his protests, drag him in to the dinner. At the finish of the dinner he is called upon for a story and in
answer to their insistent demands proceeds to tell them the story of his life.
Years
ago, he too was giving a farewell bachelor dinner, surrounded by his friends,
happy in the love of a woman who was to be his wife the next day. He was the
life and gaiety of the party. In the midst of merriment, he was handed a note
from the woman saying that she had married another man an hour before.
Completely crushed, his first thoughts were of suicide but his manhood
revolting at this, he decided to fight down his love and forget her if
possible. He plunged into speculation and with several friends formed a pool to
corner a certain stock. While the fight for control was raging furiously and
when the victory was within his grasp, he suddenly caught sight of the woman in
the balcony of the Stock Exchange. Her husband was his opponent.
Her
mute appeal so unnerved him that the tide set in against him and he went down
to utter ruin. Time passed and he was now only the confidential clerk of one of
his former associates. In this position a momentary abstraction was brought
about by a newspaper item in reference to the woman which caused him to commit
a serious blunder, resulting in his discharge. Years later we see him a
prematurely aged man, employed as bookkeeper. His employer, receiving an urgent
call from a friend for funds, entrusts him with a number of securities to be
delivered at once.
Hurrying along Wall Street he meets the woman alighting from her car. Forgetting his errand he stares vacantly after her and finally returns to the office without delivering the securities. His seeming carelessness is rewarded by immediate discharge. Thereafter his decline on the social ladder is very rapid until he has become merely a hanger-on in the great world of frenzied finance, an object of jest to strangers and of pity and charity to his former friends. And that is the story of the passer-by invited to the feast. History has a chastening effect upon the merry crowd. The host hands him his card, saying that if he will call he will help him. The passer-by bids them goodnight, but as he turns to go he comes face to face with the portrait of a beautiful woman which is hanging over the mantel. Clutching a chair he hoarsely asks his host who she is and is told that she is his mother. Glancing at the card his young host has given him he reads the name for the first time. It is that of the woman's son. He cannot accept any favors from such a source.
As a bridegroom-to-be is preparing for a bachelor dinner with some
friends, one of his friends sends word that he will be unable to attend. For
fun, the group decides to invite as a substitute the first man who passes by
outside. The first passer-by turns out to be an older man, who reluctantly
joins them. He tells them how, at his own bachelor dinner, he suddenly
discovered that his fiancée had left to marry another man. He goes on to
describe how this incident has affected him for the rest of his life.
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