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    Chapter 3

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    IN WHICH A VARIETY OF CHARACTERS APPEAR.

    In the forward part of the boat, not the least attractive object, for a time, was a grotesque negro cripple, in tow-cloth attire and an old coal-sifter of a tamborine in his hand, who, owing to something wrong about his legs, was, in effect, cut down to the stature of a Newfoundland dog; his knotted black fleece and good-natured, honest black face rubbing against the upper part of people's thighs as he made shift to shuffle about, making music, such as it was, and raising a smile even from the gravest. It was curious to see him, out of his very deformity, indigence, and houselessness, so cheerily endured, raising mirth in some of that crowd, whose own purses, hearths, hearts, all their possessions, sound limbs included, could not make gay.

    "What is your name, old boy?" said a purple-faced drover, putting his large purple hand on the cripple's bushy wool, as if it were the curled forehead of a black steer.

    "Der Black Guinea dey calls me, sar."

    "And who is your master, Guinea?"

    "Oh sar, I am der dog widout massa."

    "A free dog, eh? Well, on your account, I'm sorry for that, Guinea. Dogs without masters fare hard."

    "So dey do, sar; so dey do. But you see, sar, dese here legs? What ge'mman want to own dese here legs?"

    "But where do you live?"

    "All 'long shore, sar; dough now. I'se going to see brodder at der landing; but chiefly I libs in dey city."

    "St. Louis, ah? Where do you sleep there of nights?"

    "On der floor of der good baker's oven, sar."

    "In an oven? whose, pray? What baker, I should like to know, bakes such black bread in his oven, alongside of his nice white rolls, too. Who is that too charitable baker, pray?"

    "Dar he be," with a broad grin lifting his tambourine high over his head.

    "The sun is the baker, eh?"

    "Yes sar, in der city dat good baker warms der stones for dis ole darkie when he sleeps out on der pabements o' nights."

    "But that must be in the summer only, old boy. How about winter, when the cold Cossacks come clattering and jingling? How about winter, old boy?"

    "Den dis poor old darkie shakes werry bad, I tell you, sar. Oh sar, oh! don't speak ob der winter," he added, with a reminiscent shiver, shuffling off into the thickest of the crowd, like a half-frozen black sheep nudging itself a cozy berth in the heart of the white flock.

    Thus far not very many pennies had been given him, and, used at last to his strange looks, the less polite passengers of those in that part of the boat began to get their fill of him as a curious object; when suddenly the negro more than revived their first interest by an expedient which, whether by chance or
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