A Toast to Repeal Day!

Today, Dec. 5, 2025, is a day of celebration for members of the Don Marquis Double Scotch and Prohibition Society! Today is Repeal Day, marking the 93rd anniversary of the repeal of the 18th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and the end of Prohibition.

Don jokingly referred to the 18th Amendment as the 18th Commandment, a nod to the moral and religious fervor that brought Prohibition to our country like a scourge of locusts. The amendment was ratified in 1919 and effectively prohibited the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages, but in doing so it created a nation of bootleggers and speakeasies. The 21st Amendment, ratified on Dec. 5, 1933, finally brought an end to the failed “Great Experiment.”

Don Old SoakDon wasn’t the only writer to poke fun at Prohibition, but no one did it with a sharper wit than Don and his fictional friend Clem Hawley, a genial drunk who gained international fame as the Old Soak. In the opening chapter of his 1921 book “The Old Soak and Hail and Farewell,” Don introduces Clem as a forlorn champion of all that is decent, true and 80 proof:

“I see that some persons think there is still hope for a liberal interpretation of the law so that beer and light wines may be sold,” said we.

“Hope,” said he, moodily, “is a fine thing, but it don’t gurgle none when you pour it out of a bottle. Hope is all right, and so is Faith . . . but what I would like to see is a little Charity.

“As far as Hope is concerned, I’d rather have Despair combined with a case of Bourbon liquor than all the Hope in the world by itself.”

Marquis introduced the Old Soak in his Sun Dial column in 1914, when the Prohibition movement was picking up steam. His 1921 collection of Old Soak stories was followed in August 1922 with a hit Broadway comedy, “The Old Soak,” based on Clem’s boozy adventures.

The play had a corny and predictable plot — lazy, good-for-nothing husband agrees to leave home in disgrace after the family nest egg vanishes, then confronts the real villain and saves the day — but critics applauded Marquis’ deft writing. Alexander Woollcott, in The New York Times, called the play “gorgeously entertaining,” and drama critic Burns Mantle named “The Old Soak” one of the top 10 productions of the 1922-23 season.

Mantle said Clem Hawley was “representative of all the genial alcoholics, all the winning failures, all the domestic derelicts with weak characters but good hearts, who have both blessed and infested the world from the days of Bacchus to those of Volstead.”

“The Old Soak” ran for 421 performances at New York’s Plymouth Theatre before embarking on three simultaneous national tours. In 1926, Universal Pictures released “The Old Soak” as a silent movie, and in 1937 Clem reappeared in an MGM talkie, “Good Old Soak,” starring the aptly named Wallace Beery.

Today, we fondly recall the Old Soak, and Repeal Day, with a glass or three of our favorite beverage. Cheers, friends! Slainte! Prost! Salud! Na zdravie! L’chaim! Cin cin!

(The accompanying photo, by the way, is a first-ever colorized version of a photo of Don himself in the role of the Old Soak, in a 1926 summer-stock performance in Showhegan, Maine.)

The Don Marquis Double Scotch and Prohibition Society

pattersonStories of Don Marquis sharing drinks and tall stories with his friends are legion. He was a regular at The Players club in New York and other clubs and taverns throughout the 1920s and ’30s, where invariably he was at the center of spirited talk. That camaraderie seems in short supply in our busy modern world, but there’s something we can do about it. And so we propose a new club for today’s legion of Don Marquis fans.

Introducing the Don Marquis Double Scotch and Prohibition Society!

The name borrows from a story recounted by Don’s biographer, Edward Anthony, in his 1962 book, “O Rare Don Marquis,” in which Don, after an extended period of abstinence, boldly walked up to the bar at The Players and declared, “I’ve conquered that goddamn willpower of mine. Give me a double scotch!”

There are other literary clubs and groups focused on the 1920s era, of course. The Dorothy Parker Society calls itself a drinking club with a literary problem, and there’s also the Robert Benchley Society, the scholarly Fitzgerald and Hemingway societies, and the marvelously magnanimous Repeal Society, to name a few. But the Don Marquis Double Scotch and Prohibition Society is our own excuse to gather and talk and drink and talk and tell stories and talk some more.

The bylaws of the Society are straightforward. Basically, if you want to join the Society, you just did. And anywhere that you and a friend raise a toast to Don constitutes a meeting of the local chapter.

Please forward your name, contact information and anything else you’d like to say to John Batteiger, founder of the Society, at john(at)donmarquis.com. We will add you to the roster and keep you informed of Society news and cocktail hours. Also, please visit our website at www.donmarquis.com and the Facebook page at www.facebook.com/DonMarquisAuthor.

Chapter secretaries (that means you) will take note of the following administrative files:
Bylaws of the Society 
Society logo
Letterhead for official Society correspondence
A photo of Don
‘Who the Hell Is Don Marquis?’ *

But enough formalities. Let’s end with a toast: Cheerio my deario!

* This line, by the way, comes from the title of a slim tribute volume privately published in 1998 by the late Steve Gatensbury of British Columbia. We regret the Society had not been founded in time for Mr. Gatensbury to have been a member.