"The story is presented as a very short play (3 pages) between a Supernumerary Editor and a Probationary Contributor. When the contributor enters, he asks for the editor and the supernumerary editor says he's dead, which the contributor is grateful for and begins to tell the man his "little story." The contributor begins to tell his story about a girl sitting outside in the rain wishing she could be a variety of delicious food from inside the bake-shop as a means of passing the time. The editor remarks that he has heard it before and the contributor explains that he has because the story has never been rejected where he's looked to publish it but that the editor should heed to the end as it is largely improved upon. The clock in the story strikes midnight and it is a new year. The editor interrupts again to note the different details and the contributor explains this is because he has read Byron and looks to improve the tale. In the contributor's story, food begins to plummet from the sky to which she must dodge. The food types and amount begin to increase along with domestic wares. By the morning, people had gone into the street to scoop up these items. The editor asks about the girl and the contributor explains she had to be swept up because she had been pummeled so much and brought to the coroner." -- Lance Eaton
First published in Fun (London), August 29, 1874.
| Date | Publication | Publisher | Type | Page | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1970 |
|
The Complete Short Stories of Ambrose Bierce | Doubleday | Collection | 450 |
| November 1971 |
|
The Complete Short Stories of Ambrose Bierce, Volume II: The World of War and the World of Tall Tales | Ballantine Books | Collection | 241 |
| June 1974 |
|
Racconti neri | Garzanti | Collection | 115 |
| 1984 |
|
The Complete Short Stories of Ambrose Bierce | University of Nebraska Press | Collection | 450 |
| 1984 | The Best of Ambrose Bierce | Castle / Book Sales | Omnibus | 462 | |
| 1988 |
|
The Collected Writings of Ambrose Bierce | Picador / Pan Books | Omnibus | 788 |