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    Chapter 10 - Page 2

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    numb in my sensibilities; but this ode, in its way, works on my numbness not unlike a sermon, which, by lamenting over my lying dead in trespasses and sins, thereby stirs me up to be all alive in well-doing."

    "Glad to hear it, and hope you will do well, as the doctors say. But who snowed the odes about here?"

    "I cannot say; I have not been here long."

    "Wasn't an angel, was it? Come, you say you feel genial, let us do as the rest, and have cards."

    "Thank you, I never play cards."

    "A bottle of wine?"

    "Thank you, I never drink wine."

    "Cigars?"

    "Thank you, I never smoke cigars."

    "Tell stories?"

    "To speak truly, I hardly think I know one worth telling."

    "Seems to me, then, this geniality you say you feel waked in you, is as water-power in a land without mills. Come, you had better take a genial hand at the cards. To begin, we will play for as small a sum as you please; just enough to make it interesting."

    "Indeed, you must excuse me. Somehow I distrust cards."

    "What, distrust cards? Genial cards? Then for once I join with our sad Philomel here:--

    'Alas for man, he hath small sense Of genial trust and confidence.'

    Good-bye!"

    Sauntering and chatting here and there, again, he with the book at length seems fatigued, looks round for a seat, and spying a partly-vacant settee drawn up against the side, drops down there; soon, like his chance neighbor, who happens to be the good merchant, becoming not a little interested in the scene more immediately before him; a party at whist; two cream-faced, giddy, unpolished youths, the one in a red cravat, the other in a green, opposed to two bland, grave, handsome, self-possessed men of middle age, decorously dressed in a sort of professional black, and apparently doctors of some eminence in the civil law.

    By-and-by, after a preliminary scanning of the new comer next him the good merchant, sideways leaning over, whispers behind a crumpled copy of the Ode which he holds: "Sir, I don't like the looks of those two, do you?"


    "Hardly," was the whispered reply; "those colored cravats are not in the best taste, at least not to mine; but my taste is no rule for all."

    "You mistake; I mean the other two, and I don't refer to dress, but countenance. I confess I am not familiar with such gentry any further than reading about them in the papers--but those two are--are sharpers, aint they?"

    "Far be from us the captious and fault-finding spirit, my dear sir."

    "Indeed, sir, I would not find fault; I am little given that way: but certainly, to say the least, these two youths can hardly be adepts, while the opposed couple
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