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Double Trouble

Double Trouble

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Chapter 1 A SLEEP AND A FORGETTING

Word Count: 1880    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

where blushing hi

aked

dared to fetch ens

sted

ind Race of Men peer

I fetched it fort

op th

g for Certitude, a

mate

and in spite of R

Inex

that I sing to-day

an

t ye always know the

of the She

"take things entirely into

o Canada; but in case I should prove honest, and

and made a gesture exp

to communicate with me? Whenever I'm off a day you always sign everything; and I shall be gone but a day on any given date this time

n looking over for the last time his cameras, film

neral manager, and the wife of Baggs-his confidential clerk and silent partner-"gives me

the men, and keep Baggs up in the collar, and see that Wilkes and Ranger get their just dues. I must have rest, Jennie; and as for the wife, why, th

gs important, had nothing remarkable followed. But he had exceptional points as a person of consequence, aside from these. His father had been a scholar, and his mother so much of a grande dame as to have old worm-eaten silks and laces with histories. The Daughters of the American Revolution always went to the Amidons for ancient toggery fo

s townsmen knew nothing. To Hazelhurst his celibacy was the banker's caution, waiting for something of value in the matrimonial market: to him it was a bashful a

ss man! If found out it would h

of credit, to whom there came daily the vision of a native Arcadia of art, letters and travel. It was good business to allow Hazelhurst to harbor its illusions; it was excelle

ete. He talked with Simeon Woolaver, one of his tenants, about the delinquent rent, and gave Simeon a note to Baggs

him; an' figgered the shrink on them steers most correct from his standp'int, on a business card with a i

ng peculiar in his behavior, except the pointed manner in which he passed the chair by Minnie's side, and took the one by herself. This seemed abnormal to Mrs. Hunter, whose egotism had its center in her daughter; but those who remembered the respectfu

nd asking him if he didn't think Minnie was getting much plumper. As soon as he saw me he yelled: 'Hello, Blodgett! Come i

d he place before you?

d Browning to me until 9:03, when he got off at Elm Springs Junction, to t

t the lonely station the trees crowded down to the right of way, and rustled in a gentle evening breeze. Somewhere off in the wood, his ear discerned the faint hoot of an owl. Across the track in a pool under the shadow of the semaphore, he heard the full orchestra of the frogs, and saw reflected in the water the last exquisite glories of expiring day lamped by one

cular bar of dim light. A vibratory sound somewhere near made him think that the owls and frogs had begun snoring. He heard horrible hissings and the distant clangor of a bell; an

d a scholarly-looking negro porter looked down in his face, lay

er. "Bettah tuhn in again, suh. I'll wake yo' fo' N'Yohk. Yo' kin sleep late on a

e trembling-trembling, forsooth, because, instead of summer, it seemed winter; for Elm Springs Junction, it appeared to be a moving train on some unknown road, going God knew wher

kable history is the turning-point of this narrative, we append a brief note by his college classmate and

s nothing abnormal, except that his father, a chemist, wrote an essay opposing the atomic theory, and a cousin is an epileptic. I regard these facts as significant. Volitional and inhibitory faculties largely developed; may be said to be a man of strong will-power end self-control. The following facts may be noted as possibly symptomatic of neurasthenia; fondness for the poetry of Whitman and Browning (see Nordau); tendency to dabble in irregular systems of medical practice; pronounced nervous and emotiona

poration of Doctor Urquhart's very illuminating note at this p

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