Chapter 2
SELECT
THE RIGHT LOCATION
After securing the right vocation, you
must be careful to select the proper location. You may
have been cut out for a hotel keeper, and they say it
requires a genius to "know how to keep a hotel." You
might conduct a hotel like clock-work, and provide
satisfactorily for five hundred guests every day; yet,
if you should locate your house in a small village where
there is no railroad communication or public travel, the
location would be your ruin. It is equally important
that you do not commence business where there are
already enough to meet all demands in the same
occupation. I remember a case which illustrates this
subject. When I was in London in 1858, I was passing
down Holborn with an English friend and came to the
"penny shows." They had immense cartoons outside,
portraying the wonderful curiosities to be seen "all for
a penny." Being a little in the "show line" myself, I
said "let us go in here." We soon found ourselves in the
presence of the illustrious showman, and he proved to be
the sharpest man in that line I had ever met. He told us
some extraordinary stories in reference to his bearded
ladies, his Albinos, and his Armadillos, which we could
hardly believe, but thought it "better to believe it
than look after the proof." He finally begged to call
our attention to some wax statuary, and showed us a lot
of the dirtiest and filthiest wax figures imaginable.
They looked as if they had not seen water since the
Deluge.
"What is there so wonderful about your
statuary?" I asked.
"I beg you not to speak so satirically,"
he replied, "Sir, these are not Madam Tussaud's wax
figures, all covered with gilt and tinsel and imitation
diamonds, and copied from engravings and photographs.
Mine, sir, were taken from life. Whenever you look upon
one of those figures, you may consider that you are
looking upon the living individual."
Glancing casually at them, I saw one
labelled "Henry VIII," and feeling a little curious upon
seeing that it looked like Calvin Edson, the living
skeleton, I said:
"Do you call that `Henry the Eighth?'"
He replied, "Certainly, sir; it was taken
from life at Hampton Court, by special order of his
majesty, on such a day."
He
would have given the hour of the day if I had insisted;
I said, "Everybody knows that `Henry VIII.' was a great
stout old king, and that figure is lean and lank; what
do you say to that?"
"Why,"
he replied, "you would be lean and lank yourself, if you
sat there as long as he has."
There
was no resisting such arguments. I said to my English
friend, "Let us go out; do not tell him who I am; I show
the white feather; he beats me."
He
followed us to the door, and seeing the rabble in the
street, he called out, "ladies and gentlemen, I beg to
draw your attention to the respectable character of my
visitors," pointing to us as we walked away. I called
upon him a couple of days afterwards; told him who I
was, and said:
"My
friend, you are an excellent showman, but you have
selected a bad location."
He
replied, "This is true, sir; I feel that all my talents
are thrown away; but what can I do?"
"You
can go to America," I replied. "You can give full play
to your faculties over there; you will find plenty of
elbow-room in America; I will engage you for two years;
after that you will be able to go on your own account."
He
accepted my offer and remained two years in my New York
Museum. He then went to New Orleans and carried on a
traveling show business during the summer. To-day he is
worth sixty thousand dollars, simply because he selected
the right vocation and also secured the proper location.
The old proverb says, "Three removes are as bad as a
fire," but when a man is in the fire, it matters but
little how soon or how often he removes.