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    Chapter XLII

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    What to do next?

    It was a momentous question. I had gone out into the world to shift for
    myself, at the age of thirteen (for my father had endorsed for friends;
    and although he left us a sumptuous legacy of pride in his fine Virginian
    stock and its national distinction, I presently found that I could not
    live on that alone without occasional bread to wash it down with). I had
    gained a livelihood in various vocations, but had not dazzled anybody
    with my successes; still the list was before me, and the amplest liberty
    in the matter of choosing, provided I wanted to work--which I did not,
    after being so wealthy. I had once been a grocery clerk, for one day,
    but had consumed so much sugar in that time that I was relieved from
    further duty by the proprietor; said he wanted me outside, so that he
    could have my custom. I had studied law an entire week, and then given
    it up because it was so prosy and tiresome. I had engaged briefly in the
    study of blacksmithing, but wasted so much time trying to fix the bellows
    so that it would blow itself, that the master turned me adrift in
    disgrace, and told me I would come to no good. I had been a bookseller's
    clerk for awhile, but the customers bothered me so much I could not read
    with any comfort, and so the proprietor gave me a furlough and forgot to
    put a limit to it. I had clerked in a drug store part of a summer, but
    my prescriptions were unlucky, and we appeared to sell more stomach pumps
    than soda water. So I had to go. I had made of myself a tolerable
    printer, under the impression that I would be another Franklin some day,
    but somehow had missed the connection thus far. There was no berth open
    in the Esmeralda Union, and besides I had always been such a slow
    compositor that I looked with envy upon the achievements of apprentices
    of two years' standing; and when I took a "take," foremen were in the
    habit of suggesting that it would be wanted "some time during the year."

    I was a good average St. Louis and New Orleans pilot and by no means
    ashamed of my abilities in that line; wages were two hundred and fifty
    dollars a month and no board to pay, and I did long to stand behind a
    wheel again and never roam any more--but I had been making such an ass of
    myself lately in grandiloquent letters home about my blind lead and my
    European excursion that I did what many and many a poor disappointed
    miner had done before; said "It is all over with me now, and I will never

    go back home to be pitied--and snubbed." I had been a private secretary,
    a silver miner and a silver mill operative, and amounted to less than
    nothing in each, and now--

    What to do next?

    I yielded to Higbie's appeals and consented to try the mining once more.
    We climbed far up on the mountain side and went to work on a little
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