A Cosmopolite in a Café (Henry): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
{{Summary | {{Summary | ||
| Title = A Cosmopolite in a Café | | Title = A Cosmopolite in a Café | ||
| Cycle = [[Four Million (Henry)| Four Million]] | | Cycle = [[The Four Million (Henry)|The Four Million]] | ||
| Author = O. Henry | | Author = O. Henry | ||
| Genre = short story | | Genre = short story |
Revision as of 13:57, 8 May 2023
from the Collection «The Four Million»
At a café late at night, a man named E. Rushmore Coglan sat at a table with two other people. Coglan was a cosmopolite, a person who had traveled the world and was not tied to any one place. He spoke of his travels and his belief that all people should be citizens of the world, not just of their own city or country.
When the band began to play "Dixie," a dark-haired young man jumped up and waved his hat, and then joined the group at the table. The man asked Coglan if he believed in patriotism, and Coglan said it was a relic of the stone age.
The conversation then shifted to the dark-haired young man's desire to be a periwinkle on the top of a valley. Suddenly, a loud noise erupted from another part of the café. It was Coglan and another man fighting. The waiters broke up the fight and took them outside.
When asked what had caused the fight, the waiter said that Coglan had gotten angry at the other man for insulting the place he was from. It turned out that Coglan was originally from Mattawamkeag, Maine, and he had been defending his hometown. Despite his cosmopolitan beliefs, Coglan still had a strong sense of patriotism and loyalty to his hometown.