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Описание:
http://stamina.ru/
Автор:
novkostya
Создан:
до 15 июня 2009 (текущая версия от 8 апреля 2010 в 12:54)
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Да
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Фразы
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1 A sceptic is a person who, when he sees the handwriting on the wall and claims it's a forgery.
2 A successful marriage isn't finding the right person, it's being the right person.
3 Feed your faith and your doubts will starve to death.
4 God gave the angels Wings, and He gave humans Chocolate!
5 God wants spiritual fruit, NOT religious nuts.
6 If God had meant us to look back instead of forward, he would have put eyes in the back of our head.
7 If the grass is greener on the other side of the fence, you can bet the water bill is much higher.
8 It isn't difficult to make a mountain out of a molehill - just add a little more dirt.
9 It's all right to sit on your pity pot every now and again.
10 Just be sure to flush when you are done.
11 Kind and loving words are windows to the heart.
12 Many marriages are made in heaven, but they ALL have to be maintained on earth.
13 People who feel they need control lack self-control.
14 Some folks wear their halos much too tight which cuts off circulation to the brain.
15 Sorrow looks back, worry looks around, and faith looks UP.
16 Standing in the middle of the road is dangerous, you will get knocked down by the traffic from both directions.
17 The best way to get even is to forgive and then forget!
18 The mighty oak tree was once a little nut that held its ground.
19 The tongue must be heavy indeed, so few people can hold it.
20 To forgive is to set the prisoner free, and then discover all along the prisoner was you!
21 Too many people offer God prayers, with claw marks all over them.
22 Unless you can create the whole universe in 5 days, then perhaps giving advice to God, isn't such a good idea!
23 You have to wonder about humans, they think God is dead and Elvis is still alive!
24 You'll notice that a turtle only makes progress when it sticks out its neck.
25 It doesn't matter if you're on the right track, if you don't move, you'll get run over.
26 Men do not like to admit to even momentary imperfection.
27 My husband forgot the code to turn off the alarm.
28 When the police came, he wouldn't admit he'd forgotten the code.
29 Some people say that I must be a horrible person, but that's not true.
30 I have the heart of a young boy - in a jar on my desk.
31 If you water it and it dies, it's a plant.
32 If you pull it out and it grows back, it's a weed.
33 Clothes make the man.
34 Naked people have little or no influence on society.
35 The only winner in the War of 1812 was Tchaikovsky.
36 Blessed are we who can laugh at ourselves for we shall never cease to be amused.
37 Learn from the past.
38 Look to the future.
39 Live in the present.
40 Life is ours to be spent, not saved.
41 What makes old age so sad is not that our joys but our hopes cease.
42 If you wish you be like someone else, you waste the person you are.
43 Nothing can bring you peace but yourself.
44 If I could drop dead right now, I'd be the happiest man alive.
45 The surest way of severely upsetting yourself for hours is by continuing to consider what concerns you most for a single moment too long.
46 Anxiety is interest paid on trouble before it is due.
47 Even the the most tempting rose has thorns.
48 I look forward to an America which will not be afraid of grace and beauty.
49 A home is not a mere transient shelter: its essence lies in the personalities of the people who live in it.
50 A lifetime of happiness!
51 No man alive could bear it; it would be hell on earth.
52 Poverty doesn't bring unhappiness; it brings degradation.
53 Be good and you will be lonesome.
54 I advise you to go on living solely to enrage those who are paying your annuities.
55 It is the only pleasure I have left.
56 In life, we are all in the gutter.
57 Some of us just tend to look up at the stars.
58 All who would win joy, must share it; happiness was born a twin.
59 Don't underestimate the value of doing nothing, of just going along, listening to all the things you can't hear, and not bothering.
60 When the world has once begun to use us ill, it afterwards continues the same treatment with less scruple or ceremony, as men do to a whore.
61 For those who fight for it, life has a flavour the sheltered will never know.
62 Live each day as if it were the last day of your life, because so far, it is.
63 To live a perfect life, you must ask nothing, give nothing, and expect nothing.
64 Expect everything, and anything seems nothing.
65 Expect nothing, and anything seems everything.
66 A man can do what he wants, but not want what he wants.
67 If we couldn't laugh, we'd all go insane.
68 If life doesn't offer a game worth playing, then invent a new one.
69 There is more to life than increasing its speed.
70 Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two equals four.
71 If that is granted, all else follows.
72 Anxiety is a thin stream of fear trickling through the mind.
73 If encouraged, it cuts a channel into which all other thoughts are drained.
74 There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion.
75 Comedy is tragedy plus time.
76 Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us or we find it not.
77 He is happiest who hath power to gather wisdom from a flower.
78 Do not scorn the person who is perpetually happy.
79 He does know something you don't.
80 Joy is not in things, it is in us.
81 So go for the jump, and chase all your dreams.
82 It is not in the stars to hold our destiny, but in ourselves.
83 Sloppy, raggedyassed old life.
84 I love it.
85 I never want to die.
86 Everyone smiles in the same language.
87 So of cheerfulness, or a good temper, the more it is spent, the more it remains.
88 Life is short.
89 Live it up.
90 Every heart that has beat strong and cheerfully has left a hopeful impulse behind it in the world, and bettered the tradition of mankind.
91 Laughter is a tranquilizer with no side effects.
92 Living well is the best revenge.
93 Happiness is good health and a bad memory.
94 Happiness isn't something you experience; it's something you remember.
95 Here's to your love, health, and wealth - and time to enjoy each.
96 Waste not fresh tears over old griefs.
97 Learn not only to find what you like, learn to like what you find.
98 Realize that if you have time to whine and complain about something then you have the time to do something about it.
99 Ask yourself whether you are happy, and you will cease to be so.
100 I'm an idealist.
101 I don't know where I'm going, but I'm on my way.
102 The human race has one really effective weapon, and that is laughter.
103 I can't complain, but sometimes I still do.
104 Nostalgia is the realization that things weren't as unbearable as they seemed at the time.
105 The gods too are fond of a joke.
106 Harmony seldom makes a headline.
107 And when it rains on your parade, look up rather than down.
108 Without the rain, there would be no rainbow.
109 Everything human is pathetic.
110 The secret source of humor itself is not joy but sorrow.
111 While farmers generally allow one rooster for ten hens, ten men are scarcely sufficient to service one woman.
112 A woman is only a woman, but a good cigar is a smoke.
113 When a man's wife learns to understand him, she usually stops listening to him.
114 It is the ordinary women that know something about love.
115 The gorgeous ones are too busy being gorgeous.
116 Girls are like pianos.
117 When they're not upright, they're grand.
118 If you have been involved with or enjoyed the company of a female for 6 months to a year, then you can say that you know a woman.
119 If you have been involved with or enjoyed the company of a female for 1 to 4 years, then you can say that you understand a woman.
120 If you have been involved with or enjoyed the company of a female for 4 or more years, then you can say that you have learned from a woman.
121 Woman inspires us to great things, and prevents us from achieving them.
122 A bachelor is a selfish, undeserving guy who has cheated some woman out of a divorce.
123 Give a man free hands and you'll know where to find them.
124 When a female has tears in her eyes the one who cannot see is the male.
125 Anatomy is destiny.
126 My notion of a wife at forty is that a man should be able to change her, like a bank note, for two twenties.
127 A woman has to be twice as good as a man, to be regarded as half that clever.
128 I love Mickey Mouse more than any woman I have ever known.
129 A beautiful woman is the hell of the soul, the purgatory of the purse, and the paradise of the eyes.
130 Men mistake friendship, but not sex, for love; women mistake sex, but not friendship, for love.
131 Women like silent men.
132 They think they're listening.
133 A woman, especially if she has the misfortune of knowing anything, should conceal it as well as she can.
134 If there is anything disagreeable going on, men are always sure to get out of it.
135 Men like to pursue an elusive woman like a cake of wet soap - even men who hate baths.
136 A diplomat is a man who always remembers a woman's birthday but never her age.
137 Large increases in cost with questionable increases in performance can be tolerated only in race horses and women.
138 Being kissed by a man who didn't wax his moustache was like eating an egg without salt.
139 Women who seek to be equal with men lack ambition.
140 There are really not many jobs that actually require a penis or a vagina, and all other occupations should be open to everyone.
141 Men who cherish for women the highest respect are seldom popular with them.
142 Nature has given women so much power that the law has very wisely given them little.
143 A diplomat is a man who can convince his wife she'd look stout in a fur coat.
144 Women make love for love, men make love for lust.
145 There's a difference between beauty and charm.
146 A beautiful woman is one I notice.
147 A charming woman is one who notices me.
148 Flirting is the gentle art of making a man feel pleased with himself.
149 Men don't need women - they just need certain parts of their anatomy.
150 A man is as good as he has to be, and a woman is as bad as she dares.
151 When God created two sexes, he may have been overdoing it.
152 A man needs a mistress, just to break the monogamy.
153 The more I know men, the more I love my dog.
154 I want to know the thoughts of God.
155 Everything else is just details.
156 The only thing we learn from history is that we learn nothing from history.
157 Prophecy is many times the principal cause of the events foretold.
158 This sentence contradicts itself - no actually it doesn't.
159 In science as in love, too much concentration on technique can often lead to impotence.
160 If you love God, burn the church.
161 Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel.
162 It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity.
163 My religion consists of a humble admiration of the illimitable superior spirit who reveals himself in the slight details we are able to perceive with our frail and feeble mind.
164 Beware of the man who won't be bothered with details.
165 That which is static and repetitive is boring.
166 That which is dynamic and random is confusing.
167 In between lies art.
168 Arithmetic is being able to count up to twenty without taking off your shoes.
169 Life is a whim of several billion cells to be you for a while.
170 A budget is just a method of worrying before you spend money, as well as afterward.
171 Not all chemicals are bad.
172 For example, without chemicals such as hydrogen and oxygen, there would be no way to make water, a vital ingredient in beer.
173 There is nothing remarkable about love at first sight.
174 It's when people have been looking at each other for years that it becomes remarkable.
175 Teenaged girls use make-up to feel older sooner.
176 Their mothers use make-up to feel younger longer.
177 A mother may hope that her daughter will get a better husband than she did but she knows her son will never get as good a wife as his father did.
178 It is the mark of an educated mind to rest satisfied with the degree of precision which the nature of the subject admits and not to seek exactness where only an approximation is possible.
179 I do not fear computers.
180 I fear the lack of them.
181 Every sentence that I utter must be understood not as an affirmation, but as a question.
182 To use a method is to compare the realm of mind to a stool.
183 The true thinker walks freely.
184 My sources are unreliable, but their information is fascinating.
185 The economy depends about as much on economists as the weather does on weather forecasters.
186 The socalled lessons of history are for the most part the rationalizations of the victors.
187 History is written by the survivors.
188 We should take care not to make the intellect our god; it has, of course, powerful muscles, but no personality.
189 Interestingly, according to modern astronomers, space is finite.
190 This is a very comforting thought - particularly for people who can never remember where they have left things.
191 It is not necessary to understand things in order to argue about them.
192 To generalize is to be an idiot.
193 The opposite of a profound truth may well be another profound truth.
194 The most likely way for the world to be destroyed, most experts agree, is by accident.
195 That's where we come in; we're computer professionals.
196 We cause accidents.
197 Your theory is crazy, but it's not crazy enough to be true.
198 Math is like love - a simple idea but it can get complicated.
199 Anyone who goes to a psychiatrist ought to have his head examined.
200 Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards.
201 The truth is out there.
202 Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.
203 The danger today is not so much that machines will learn to think and feel but that men will cease to do so.
204 Strong words are required for weak principles.
205 If we take science as our sole guide, if we accept and hold fast that alone which is verifiable, the old theology must go.
206 If Jesus Christ were to come today, people would not crucify him.
207 They would ask him to dinner, hear what he had to say, and make fun of it.
208 Logic is a system whereby one may go wrong with confidence.
209 My theology, briefly, is that the universe was dictated but not signed.
210 Organic chemistry is the chemistry of carbon compounds.
211 Biochemistry is the study of carbon compounds that crawl.
212 Give me a lever long enough, and a prop strong enough, and I can singlehandedly move the world.
213 The heresies we should fear are those which can be confused with orthodoxy.
214 According to the latest official figures, 43% of all statistics are totally worthless.
215 For my part, the longer I live the less I feel the need of any sort of theological belief, and the more I am content to let unseen powers go on their way with me and mine without question or distrust.
216 As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality.
217 Imagination is more important than knowledge.
218 Never worry about theory as long as the machinery does what it's supposed to do.
219 There's always an easy solution to every human problem - neat, plausible, and wrong.
220 There is no conversation more boring than the one where everybody agrees.
221 Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted.
222 Wonder, rather than doubt, is the root of knowledge.
223 Genealogy is based on the obviously silly idea that there is no such thing as a bastard.
224 It is impossible to travel faster than the speed of light, and certainly not desirable, as one's hat keeps blowing off.
225 Logic is like the sword - those who appeal to it shall perish by it.
226 Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.
227 The most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible.
228 In prayer, it is better to have a heart without words than words without heart.
229 It is bad luck to be superstitious.
230 History is the version of past events that people have decided to agree upon.
231 No great advance has ever been made in science, politics, or religion, without controversy.
232 It is always easier to believe than to deny.
233 Our minds are naturally affirmative.
234 Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
235 Absence of proof is not proof of absence.
236 I think, therefore I am.
237 Put your hand on a hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour.
238 Sit with a pretty girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute.
239 The biggest difference between time and space is that you can't reuse time.
240 If there is no God, who pops up the next Kleenex?
241 The hands that help are better far than the lips that pray.
242 It is now proved beyond doubt that smoking is one of leading causes of statistics.
243 Whenever anyone says anything he is indulging in theories.
244 Ignorance is the mother of devotion.
245 Christianity has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and not tried.
246 The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious.
247 It is the source of all true art and science.
248 No idea is so antiquated that it was not once modern; no idea is so modern that it will not someday be antiquated.
249 To "be" means to be related.
250 Religion is the opium of the masses.
251 Beware the man of one book.
252 Pray: To ask that the laws of the universe be nullified on behalf of a single petitioner, admittedly unworthy.
253 It may be that our role on this planet is not to worship God but to create him.
254 There are three kinds of lies: Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics.
255 For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled.
256 The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.
257 The church saves sinners, but science seeks to stop their manufacture.
258 Truth decays into beauty, while beauty soon becomes merely charm.
259 Charm ends up as strangeness, and even that doesn't last, but up and down are forever.
260 I don't have the lungs to cope with sustained plot loss.
261 Spel chekers, hoo neeeds em?
262 It took me fifteen years to discover that I had no talent for writing, but I couldn't give up because by that time I was too famous.
263 All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organism to live beyond its income.
264 The only way to discover the limits of the possible is to go beyond them into the impossible.
265 If at first you don't succeed, failure may be your style.
266 Become addicted to constant and neverending self-improvement.
267 There's nothing so useless as doing efficiently that which should not be done at all.
268 If you're strong enough, there are no precedents.
269 Seventy percent of success in life is showing up.
270 If at first you don't succeed, redefine success.
271 Having now got the hang of this intercom thing, I am now going to use it to bugger people mercilessly.
272 I am lost so I am cruel but I'd be love and sweetness if I had you.
273 New York City: No matter how many times I visit this great city I'm always struck by the same thing: a yellow taxi cab.
274 There are no depths to which I will not sink.
275 It looks like blind screaming hedonism won out.
276 You can run with the big dogs or sit on the porch and bark.
277 Hatred: A sentiment appropriate to the occasion of another's superiority.
278 Brooks' Law: Adding manpower to a late software project makes it later.
279 If you pray for rain, don't be surprised if you're struck by lightning.
280 Focus 90% of your time on solutions and only 10% of your time on problems.
281 Attempt the impossible in order to improve your work.
282 It's kind a fun to do the impossible.
283 As you ramble on through life, brother, whatever be your goal: keep your eyes upon the donut, and not upon the hole!
284 It is better to be defeated on principle than to win on lies.
285 We must believe in luck.
286 For how else can we explain the success of those we don't like?
287 Anything is possible if you wish hard enough.
288 Freedom is nothing else but a chance to be better.
289 Don't fear change - embrace it.
290 To gain that which is worth having, it may be necessary to lose everything else.
291 You've got to be very careful if you don't know where you're going, because you might not get there.
292 Happiness: An agreeable sensation arising from contemplating the misery of another.
293 This is as true in everyday life as it is in battle: we are given one life and the decision is ours whether to wait for circumstances to make up our mind, or whether to act and, in acting, to live.
294 Everyone has his day and some days last longer than others.
295 No one really knows enough to be a pessimist.
296 Hard reality has a way of cramping your style.
297 The world is all gates, all opportunities, strings of tension waiting to be struck.
298 A new idea is delicate.
299 It can be killed by a sneer or a yawn; it can be stabbed to death by a joke or worried to death by a frown on the right person's brow.
300 Kites rise highest against the wind - not with it.
301 There's no success like failure, And failure's no success at all.
302 I avoid looking forward or backward, and try to keep going forward.
303 You don't drown by falling in the water; you drown by staying there.
304 Success is the sum of small efforts, repeated day in and day out.
305 Sloppy thinking only gets worse with decapitation.
306 I have learned to use the word "impossible" with the greatest caution.
307 No pressure, no diamonds.
308 Intelligence is nothing without delight.
309 Man usually avoids attributing cleverness to somebody else - unless it is an enemy.
310 Whether you think that you can or that you can't, you are usually right.
311 If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
312 A celebrity is a person who is known for his well-knownness.
313 The secret of success is constancy to purpose.
314 The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.
315 It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle if it is lightly greased.
316 The man who follows the crowd will usually get no further than the crowd.
317 The man who walks alone is likely to find himself in places no one has ever been.
318 Luck can't last a lifetime unless you die young.
319 It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle if it's been though a blender first.
320 A conclusion is simply the place where someone got tired of thinking.
321 He who thinks he is raising a mound may only in reality be digging a pit.
322 Why be a man when you can be a success?
323 A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.
324 Selfrespect permeates every aspect of your life.
325 An empowered organization is one in which individuals have the knowledge, skill, desire, and opportunity to personally succeed in a way that leads to collective organizational success.
326 Hitch your wagon to a star.
327 No man can get through me but through my act.
328 To accomplish great things, you must not only act but also dream, not only dream but also believe.
329 Advertising is 85% confusion and 15% commission.
330 Misfortune: The kind of fortune that never misses.
331 When you reach for the stars, you may not quite get one, but you won't come up with a handful of mud either.
332 Every man is the architect of his own fortune.
333 A man who has committed a mistake and doesn't correct it, is committing another mistake.
334 When I discover who I am, I'll be free.
335 Inform all the troops that communications have completely broken down.
336 I kept on digging the hole deeper and deeper looking for the treasure chest until I finally lifted my head, looked up and realized that I had dug my own grave.
337 If at first you don't succeed, try, and try again.
338 Then give up.
339 There's no sense in being a damned fool about it.
340 Genius is one per cent inspiration and ninetynine per cent perspiration.
341 You can't build a reputation on what you are going to do.
342 In laboring to be brief, I become obscure.
343 It is neither wealth nor splendor, but tranquility and occupation, that gives happiness.
344 A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.
345 A scholar who cherishes the love of comfort is not fit to be deemed a scholar.
346 We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have done.
347 People forget how fast you did a job - but they remember how well you did it.
348 A pint of sweat saves a gallon of blood.
349 Until you value yourself, you will not value your time.
350 Until you value your time, you will not do anything with it.
351 Peter's Principle: In an organization, each person rises to the level of his own incompetence.
352 A committee is a thing which takes a week to do what one good man can do in an hour.
353 I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have.
354 People who work sitting down are paid more than people who work standing up.
355 Work is only work if you'd rather be doing something else.
356 Nobody realizes that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal.
357 There's no real need to do housework - after four years it doesn't get any worse.
358 Hell, there are no rules here - we're trying to accomplish something.
359 Committee: A group of the unwilling, picked from the unfit to do the unnecessary.
360 If food were free, why work?
361 Leemans' Law: Junk expands to fill the space allotted.
362 I can write better than anybody who can write faster, and I can write faster than anybody who can write better.
363 Ambition is a poor excuse for not having sense enough to be lazy.
364 He who rocks the boat seldom has time to row it.
365 Don't tell people how to do things.
366 Tell them what to do and let them surprise you with their results.
367 Originality is the fine art of remembering what you hear but forgetting where you heard it.
368 Whatever you do will be insignificant, but it is very important that you do it.
369 We will burn that bridge when we come to it.
370 Anyone can do any amount of work provided it isn't the work he is supposed to be doing at the moment.
371 He who desires, but acts not, breeds pestilence.
372 If there is no struggle, there is no progress.
373 Well done is better than well said.
374 The only way round is through.
375 For a man to achieve all that is demanded of him, he must regard himself as greater than he is.
376 Bullshit makes the flowers grow and that's Beautiful.
377 Trouble is only an opportunity in work clothes.
378 Parkinson's First Law: Work expands to fill the time available.
379 There is nothing so easy but that it becomes difficult when you do it reluctantly.
380 All paid jobs absorb and degrade the mind.
381 Try to relax and enjoy the crisis.
382 Iron rusts from disuse, stagnant water loses its purity, and in cold weather becomes frozen, even so does inaction sap the vigors of the mind.
383 Efficiency is intelligent laziness.
384 It is time I stepped aside for a less experienced and less able man.
385 My work is a game - a very serious game.
386 Most problems are either unimportant or impossible to solve.
387 If one has not given everything, one has given nothing.
388 It is by will alone that I set my mind in motion.
389 Genius is an infinite capacity for taking pains.
390 He has half the deed done who has made a beginning.
391 People who never do any more than they get paid for never get paid for any more than they do.
392 The best way to predict the future is to invent it.
393 It gets late early out there.
394 The Lord gave us farmers two strong hands so we could grab as much as we could with both of them.
395 Never mistake motion for action.
396 Every day I get up and look through the Forbes list of the richest people in America.
397 If I'm not there, I go to work.
398 A conference is just an admission that you want somebody to join you in your troubles.
399 Too much credit is given to the end result.
400 The true lesson is in the struggle that takes place between the dream and reality.
401 That struggle is a thing called life!
402 One of the major functions of skin is to keep people who look at you from throwing up.
403 Talk is cheap because supply exceeds demand.
404 A youth becomes a man when the marks he wants to leave on the world have nothing to do with tires.
405 A woman may very well form a friendship with a man, but for this to endure, it must be assisted by a little physical antipathy.
406 Analyzing humor is like dissecting a frog: nobody enjoys it, and the frog usually dies as a result.
407 Don't think of it as being outnumbered, think of it as a wide target selection.
408 I will endure all this subhuman driveling shit with a smile.
409 A continuing flow of paper is sufficient to continue the flow of paper.
410 Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.
411 No vacation goes unpunished.
412 Utility is when you have one telephone, luxury is when you have two, and paradise is when you have none.
413 Even if you're on the right track, you'll get run over if you just sit there.
414 Farming looks easy when your plow is a pencil and you're a thousand miles from a cornfield.
415 Everybody wants to save the earth; nobody wants to help Mom do the dishes.
416 Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
417 What is written without effort is in general read without pleasure.
418 If all the cars in the United States were placed end to end, it would probably be Labor Day weekend.
419 I'm a slow walker, but I never walk back.
420 There is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct or more uncertain in its success than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things.
421 Not to be able to bear poverty is a shameful thing, but not to know how to chase it away by work is a more shameful thing yet.
422 I love deadlines.
423 I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by.
424 I want to be what I was when I wanted to be what I am now.
425 The Promised Land always lies on the other side of a wilderness.
426 Necessity is the mother of invention.
427 Consistency is the final refuge of the unimaginative.
428 A snooze button is a poor substitute for no alarm clock at all.
429 Rome did not create a great empire by having meetings, they did it by killing all those who opposed them.
430 I've found Jesus, he was behind the sofa the whole time.
431 Well, aren't we just a ray of stinking sunshine?
432 Once you get people laughing, they're listening and you can tell them almost anything Trust everyone.
433 It's not like you have any really important secrets.
434 Trust no one.
435 Only those who you trust can betray you.
436 A baby is something you carry inside of you for 9 months, In your arms for three years, And in your heart till the day you die.
437 The only failure without dignity is the failure to try.
438 A woman's charm is her strength, a man's strength is his charm.
439 In spite of the costs of living, it's still popular.
440 Suspicion always haunts the guilty mind.
441 You have all the characteristics of a popular politician: a horrible voice, bad breeding, and a vulgar manner.
442 There's no trick to being a humorist when you have the whole government working for you.
443 Beer is good food.
444 It's easy if you try.
445 Anyone who doesn't believe in the Tooth Fairy is offending all the gay dentists in America.
446 Climate is what we expect, weather is what we get.
447 A committee is a life form with six or more legs and no brain.
448 Lead us not into temptation.
449 Just tell us where it is; we'll find it.
450 We should not permit prayer to be taken out of the schools; that's the only way most of us got through.
451 A Freudian slip is when you say one thing but mean your mother.
452 Medicine reports that it has already happened.
453 A new-born baby laughing like crazy, its hands full of pills.
454 A hospital is a place where men keep asking the nurses for dates and the nurses keep giving them prunes.
455 A man can be happy with any woman as long as he doesn't love her.
456 Love is the triumph of imagination over intelligence.
457 Love is a matter of chemistry, sex is a matter of physics.
458 Jesus died for our sins.
459 Let's not disappoint him.
460 The only thing that separates us from the animals is mindless superstition and pointless rituals.
461 Men never do evil so cheerfully and so completely as when they do so from religious conviction.
462 Last night I dreamed I ate a ten-pound marshmallow, and when I woke up the pillow was gone.
463 I either want less corruption, or more chance to participate in it.
464 Doing a thing well is often a waste of time.
465 He is one of those people who would be enormously improved by death.
466 The secret of success is sincerity.
467 Once you can fake that, you've got it made.
468 Boy, everyone is stupid except me.
469 There may be some things better than sex and some things may be worse, but there is nothing exactly like it.
470 When doctors and undertakers meet, they always wink at each other.
471 There is not a man in America who at one time or another hasn't had a secret desire to boot a child in the ass.
472 The best cure for insomnia is plenty of sleep.
473 It's one thing to have to explain to a man why a billion dollar measure has been vetoed, but it is much more difficult to explain to a woman why the cap of the toothpaste has not been put back on.
474 A happy person is not a person in a certain set of circumstances, but rather a person with a certain set of attitudes.
475 Happiness is a positive cash flow.
476 Sticks and stones may break my bones, but whips and chains excite me.
477 Diarrhea is hereditary, it runs in your jeans.
478 A good day is when you wake up without a chalk outline around your body.
479 It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others.
480 The hardest thing about any political campaign is how to win without proving that you are unworthy of winning.
481 Man does not control his own fate.
482 The women in his life do that for him.
483 What's another word for Thesaurus?
484 I always turn to the sports page first, which record people's accomplishments.
485 The front page has nothing but man's failures.
486 As is well known, an elk that is shot within fifteen feet of your hunting vehicle will still pull himself together enough to gallop to the very bottom of the steepest canyon within five miles.
487 Friends don't let Friends drive Naked.
488 The Schizophrenic: an unauthorized autobiography.
489 To err is human; to admit it is not.
490 When I was growing up, we were so poor that when I asked my father for something to play with, he cut a hole in my pants pocket.
491 I wanted to go the Paranoids Anonymous meeting, but they wouldn't tell me where it was.
492 Quite frankly, teachers are the only profession that teach our children.
493 A low voter turnout is an indication of fewer people going to the polls.
494 We're going to have the best-educated American people in the world.
495 The future will be better tomorrow.
496 A straight line may be the shortest distance between two points, but it is by no means the most interesting.
497 And which parallel universe did you crawl out of?
498 Jesus is coming; look busy!
499 For your convenience our staff is fluent in monosyllabic grunts.
500 There come's a time in the affairs of a man when he must take the bull by the tail and face the situation.
501 Be careful about reading health books.
502 You might die of a misprint.
503 We can lick gravity, but sometimes the paperwork is overwhelming.
504 Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you recognize a mistake when you make it again.
505 No one is perfect.
506 The mere fact that one is human is a flaw in itself.
507 Things are more like they are now than they ever were before.
508 The only thing you can do easily is be wrong, and that's hardly worth the effort.
509 When we are planning for posterity, we ought to remember that virtue is not hereditary.
510 Men get laid, but women get screwed.
511 Shoot for the stars, otherwise gravity gets in your way.
512 We don't want to go back to tomorrow, we want to go forward.
513 Verbosity leads to unclear, inarticulate things.
514 I believe we are on an irreversible trend toward more freedom and democracy - but that could change.
515 I was recently on a tour of Latin America, and the only regret I have was that I didn't study Latin harder in school so I could converse with those people.
516 I loathe people who keep dogs.
517 They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves.
518 I think gods don't smite people anymore because people of many different religions now live in the same town.
519 No god wants to accidentally smite the wrong person and get sued by another god.
520 Since I brought along two cases of well-joggled wine, my main problems will be food and sex.
521 Not oddly, they're the same problems a lot of people have everywhere on Earth.
522 If your mind changes itself fast enough, the result is vertigo.
523 One of the curious effects of a bad hangover is that you think you're wrong whether you are or not.
524 Not wrong in particulars, but wrong in general, wrong about everything.
525 The right to be heard does not automatically include the right to be taken seriously.
526 Try calling up strangers in the phone book and forgiving them.
527 Not only will it loosen you up for the crucial real thing, the strangers will feel better.
528 Everyone likes to know they're forgiven.
529 Never do today what you can do tomorrow.
530 Something may occur to make you regret your premature action.
531 Never ruin an apology with an excuse.
532 Never give up.
533 And never, under any circumstances, face the facts.
534 Never take a job where winter winds can blow up your pants.
535 Never stand between a dog and the hydrant.
536 The reason most people play golf is to wear clothes they would not be caught dead in otherwise.
537 I would love to speak a foreign language but I can't.
538 So I grew hair under my arms instead.
539 I'm not into working out.
540 My philosophy: No pain, no pain.
541 It's like deja vu all over again.
542 If Man were meant to use the metric system, Jesus would have had 10 disciples.
543 This is one race of people for whom psychoanalysis is of no use whatsoever.
544 The German mind has a talent for making no mistakes but the very greatest.
545 Send lawyers, guns, and money - the shit has hit the fan.
546 If love is blind, then why do they make lingerie?
547 Lots of comedians have people they try to mimic.
548 I mimic my shadow.
549 I put tape on the mirrors in my house so I don't accidentally walk through into another dimension.
550 I've been doing a lot of abstract painting lately, extremely abstract.
551 No brush, no paint, no canvas, I just think about it.
552 My watch is three hours fast, and I can't fix it.
553 So I'm going to move to New York.
554 I like to reminisce with people I don't know.
555 I like to skate on the other side of the ice.
556 If you can't hear me, it's because I'm in parentheses.
557 Is it weird in here, or is it just me?
558 Every so often, I like to stick my head out the window, look up, and smile for a satellite picture.
559 I'm moving to Mars next week, so if you have any boxes.
560 Sorry, my mind was wandering.
561 One time my mind went all the way to Venus on mail order and I couldn't pay for it.
562 It's a small world, but I wouldn't want to have to paint it.
563 Cross country skiing is great if you live in a small country.
564 You can't have everything.
565 Where would you put it?
566 It's a good thing we have gravity, or else when birds died they'd just stay right up there.
567 Hunters would be all confused.
568 When I die, I'm leaving my body to science fiction.
569 I saw a bank that said "24 Hour Banking", but I don't have that much time.
570 My wife always keeps a bowl of wax fruit around, even though neither of us knows any mannequins.
571 I'm not saying my wife's a bad cook exactly but we have a complete set of soup knives.
572 I went to the museum where they had all the heads and arms from the statues that are in all the other museums.
573 Lord Birkenhead is very clever, but sometimes his brains go to his head.
574 On the other hand the early worm gets eaten.
575 Right now I'm having amnesia and deja vu at the same time.
576 I think I've forgotten this before.
577 If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
578 I bought some powdered water, but I don't know what to add.
579 I spilled spot remover on my dog.
580 He's gone now.
581 Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend.
582 Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.
583 Mistress - Somewhere between a mister and a mattress.
584 Ecstasy - A feeling you feel when you feel you are going to feel a feeling you never felt before.
585 Adultery - Two wrong people doing the right thing.
586 Quote me as saying I was misquoted.
587 I must confess, I was born at a very early age.
588 Military justice is to justice what military music is to music.
589 Are you any relation to your brother Marv?
590 I've never had major knee surgery on any other part of my body.
591 Smoking kills.
592 I was a pilot flying an airplane and it just so happened that where I was flying made what I was doing spying.
593 A personal injustice is stronger motivation than any instinct for philanthropy.
594 There are two kinds of people, those who finish what they start and so on.
595 Serious people have few ideas.
596 People with ideas are never serious.
597 A slipping gear could let your M203 grenade launcher fire when you least expect it.
598 That would make you quite unpopular in what's left of your unit.
599 Human beings, who are almost unique in having the ability to learn from the experience of others, are also remarkable for their apparent disinclination to do so.
600 The only way to keep your health is to eat what you don't want, drink what you don't like and do what you'd druther not.
601 The world's a stage and most of us are desperately unrehearsed.
602 German in the most extravagantly ugly language - it sounds like someone using a sick bag on a 747.
603 The Englishman who has lost his fortune is said to have died of a broken heart.
604 The English think soap is civilization.
605 I know why the sun never sets on the British Empire: God wouldn't trust an Englishman in the dark.
606 Britain is the only country in the world where the food is more dangerous than the sex.
607 Never criticize Americans.
608 They have the best taste that money can buy.
609 Americans always try to do the right thing - after they've tried everything else.
610 In America, only the successful writer is important, in France all writers are important, in England no writer is important, and in Australia you have to explain what a writer is.
611 But his wife loves him, and so did all his mistresses.
612 If you can't live without me, why aren't you dead already?
613 A dog teaches a boy fidelity, perseverance and to turn round three times before lying down.
614 A women's work is never done by men.
615 When a man brings his wife flowers for no reason - there's a reason.
616 Martyrdom is the only way in which a man can become famous without ability.
617 The surest way to make a monkey out of a man is to quote him.
618 A kleptomaniac is a person who helps himself because he can't help himself.
619 It usually takes more than three weeks to prepare a good impromptu speech.
620 If triangles had a God, He'd have three sides.
621 Hokey religions and ancient weapons are no match for a good blaster at your side, kid.
622 What can you say about a society that says God is dead and Elvis is alive?
623 Maybe Computer Science should be in the College of Theology.
624 Somebody's boring me.
625 I think it's me.
626 Abstention is a vote in favor of the oppressor.
627 How much patience you have, for instance.
628 Men have died and worms have eaten them - but not for love!
629 English is the language up with which I will not put.
630 It is my ambition to say in ten sentences what other say in a whole book.
631 Man is still the most extraordinary computer of all.
632 Give me five lines by the best of men, and I will find something in it to hang him.
633 In the realm of human destiny, the depth of man's questioning is more important than his answers.
634 Rodgers and Hammerstein are America's answer to Mozart!
635 Maturity is a bitter disappointment for which no remedy exists, unless laughter could be said to remedy anything.
636 If you cannot get rid of the family skeleton, you may as well make it dance.
637 I have seen hypocrisy that was so artful that it was good judgment to be deceived by it.
638 Morality is simply the attitude we adopt towards people whom we dislike.
639 Never raise your hands to your kids.
640 It leaves your groin unprotected.
641 The second day of a diet is always easier than the first.
642 By the second day you're off it.
643 I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone, but they've always worked for me.
644 Her kisses left something to be desired - the rest of her.
645 Some mornings, it's just not worth chewing through the leather straps.
646 Lazlo's Chinese Relativity Axiom: No matter how great your triumphs or how tragic your defeats - approximately one billion Chinese couldn't care less.
647 When cryptography is outlawed, bayl bhgynjf jvyy unir cevinpl.
648 If a woman has to choose between catching a fly ball and saving an infant's life, she will choose to save the infant's life without even considering if there are men on base.
649 Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes hurtling down the highway.
650 Karate is a form of martial arts in which people who have had years and years of training can, using only their hands and feet, make some of the worst movies in the history of the world.
651 Applying computer technology is simply finding the right wrench to pound in the correct screw.
652 Technology is a way of organizing the universe so that man doesn't have to experience it.
653 In answer to the question of why it happened, I offer the modest proposal that our Universe is simply one of those things which happen from time to time.
654 Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.
655 When I was a kid, all we had to do was just sit around and hope somebody would invent television so we could play Nintendo.
656 History doesn't repeat itself - historians merely repeat each other.
657 In any collection of data, the figure most obviously correct, beyond all need of checking, is the mistake.
658 The first bug to hit a clean windshield lands directly in front of your eyes.
659 If you hit two keys on the typewriter, the one you don't want hits the paper.
660 If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee - that will do them in.
661 When it comes to music lessons, most kids make it a practice not to practice.
662 When we seek to discover the best in others, we somehow bring out the best in ourselves.
663 When you fool a fool you strike a blow for intelligence.
664 When your dreams turn to dust, vacuum.
665 Where love leads, happiness follows.
666 Who says nothing is impossible, I have been doing nothing for years.
667 Whoever said you can't buy happiness forgot about puppies.
668 Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.
669 Sterilize: What you do to your first baby's pacifier by boiling it and to your last baby's pacifier by blowing on it.
670 Success is the result of perfection, hard work, learning from failure, loyalty, and persistence.
671 Take time to laugh - it is the music of the soul.
672 You can't shake hands with a clenched fist.
673 You cannot acquire experience by making experiments.
674 You cannot create experience.
675 You must undergo it.
676 Sometimes you gotta laugh through the tears, smile through the pain so that you can live through the sorrow.
677 Standard mathematics has recently been rendered obsolete by the discovery that for years we have been writing the numeral five backward.
678 This has led to reevaluation of counting as a method of getting from one to ten.
679 Students are taught advanced concepts of Boolean algebra, and formerly unsolvable equations are dealt with by threats of reprisals.
680 Stress is when you wake up screaming and you realize you haven't fallen asleep yet.
681 Success is the best revenge.
682 Table manners must have been invented by people who were never hungry.
683 Take away love and earth is a tomb.
684 Tear is a powerful weapon that can change the future of oneself or even the world.
685 People living in the war, they cry.
686 People love someone, they cry.
687 Through crying, people can express their feeling and their mind.
688 The answers to life's problems aren't at the bottom of a bottle, they're on TV!
689 The trouble with the rat race is that even if you win, you're still a rat.
690 The nice thing about meditation is that it makes doing nothing quite respectable.
691 Happiness is having a large, loving, caring, close-knit family in another city.
692 Of course there's a lot of knowledge in universities: the freshmen bring a little in; the seniors don't take much away, so knowledge sort of accumulates.
693 My mother's menu consisted of two choices: Take it or leave it.
694 When I give a lecture, I accept that people look at their watches, but what I do not tolerate is when they look at it and raise it to their ear to find out if it stopped.
695 In politics, merit is rewarded by the possessor being raised, like a target, to a position to be fired at.
696 Sex without love is an empty gesture.
697 But as empty gestures go, it is one of the best.
698 Reject hatred without hating.
699 Bigot: One who is obstinately and zealously attached to an opinion that you do not entertain.
700 Be bad while you are young - then you can spend the rest of your life repenting and improving.
701 Alliance: In international politics, the union of two thieves who have their hands so deeply inserted into each others' pockets that they cannot separately plunder a third.
702 Eulogy: Praise of a person who has either the advantages of wealth and power, or the consideration to be dead.
703 I never forget my wife's birthday.
704 It's usually the day after she reminds me about it.
705 When I have a birthday I take the day off.
706 But when my wife has a birthday, she takes a year or two off.
707 My folks were so poor we couldn't give my sister a sweet 16 party until she was 28.
708 On my 60th birthday my wife gave me a superb birthday present.
709 She let me win an argument.
710 A well adjusted woman is one who not only knows what she wants for her birthday, but even knows what she's going to exchange it for.
711 We know when we're getting old when the only thing we want for our birthday is not to be reminded of it.
712 It's so sad to grow old alone.
713 My wife hasn't had a birthday in 4 years.
714 She was born in the year of our Lord-only-knows.
715 By the time the last candle was lit on her birthday cake in February, the first one had gone out.
716 If she ever told her real age her birthday cake would be a fire hazard.
717 When it was fully lit it looked like a prairie fire.
718 Some people are alive only because it's illegal to kill them.
719 God must love stupid people, he made so many.
720 I took an IQ test and the results were negative.
721 Death is life's way of telling you you're fired.
722 My child beat up your honor student!
723 If everything is coming your way, then you're in the wrong lane.
724 I just love nonverbal communication!
725 You can't be late until you show up.
726 The report of my death was an exaggeration.
727 It's funny how most people love the dead, once you're dead your made for life.
728 When I was a boy the Dead Sea was only sick.
729 They say such nice things about people at their funerals that it makes me sad that I'm going to miss mine by just a few days.
730 When you've told someone that you've left them a legacy the only decent thing to do is to die at once.
731 You know you're getting old when you stoop to tie your shoelaces and wonder what else you could do while you're down there.
732 My grandmother was a very tough woman.
733 She buried three husbands and two of them were just napping.
734 On the plus side, death is one of the few things that can be done as easily lying down.
735 People ask me what I'd most appreciate getting for my eighty-seventh birthday.
736 I tell them, a paternity suit.
737 At my age flowers scare me.
738 The reason a dog has so many friends is that he wags his tail instead of his tongue.
739 Don't accept your dog's admiration as conclusive evidence that you are wonderful.
740 The average dog is a nicer person than the average person.
741 No animal should ever jump up on the dining-room furniture unless absolutely certain that he can hold his own in the conversation.
742 If I have any beliefs about immortality, it is that certain dogs I have known will go to heaven, and very, very few persons.
743 I wonder what goes through his mind when he sees us peeing in his water bowl.
744 A dog teaches a boy fidelity, perseverance, and to turn around three times before lying down.
745 I wonder if other dogs think poodles are members of a weird religious cult.
746 Anybody who doesn't know what soap tastes like never washed a dog.
747 If your dog is fat, you aren't getting enough exercise.
748 Outside of a dog, a book is probably man's best friend; inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.
749 Either he's dead or my watch has stopped.
750 To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune; to lose both looks like carelessness.
751 I don't want to achieve immortality through my work, I want to achieve it through not dying.
752 A man's only as old as the woman he feels.
753 For three days after death, hair and fingernails continue to grow but phone calls taper off.
754 I was with this girl the other night and from the way she was responding to my skillful caresses, you would have sworn that she was conscious from the top of her head to the tag on her toes.
755 All good things in life are either immoral, fattening or overpriced.
756 If you go back in time, don't step on anything.
757 Natives who beat drums to drive off evil spirits are objects of scorn to smart Americans who blow horns to break up traffic jams.
758 The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated.
759 If it weren't for the killings, Washington would have one of the lowest crime rates in the country.
760 Before you criticize someone, you should walk a mile in their shoes.
761 That way, when you criticize them, you are a mile away from them, and you have their shoes.
762 A horror movie without the horror is like the turkey sandwich without the Miracle Whip.
763 One ply toilet paper: If you can see through it, you can wee through it.
764 I can't decide if indecision is good or bad.
765 Imagine if there were no hypothetical situations.
766 Drive-in banks were established so most of the cars today could see their real owners.
767 Nobody goes where the crowds are anymore.
768 It's too crowded.
769 When they asked George Washington for his ID, he just took out a quarter.
770 Why do people sing "Take Me Out to the Ballgame" when they're already there?
771 When you come to a fork in the road, take it.
772 Too bad that all the people who know how to run the country are driving taxi cabs and cutting hair.
773 Conscience is the inner voice warning us that someone may be looking.
774 Always carry a flagon of whiskey in case of snakebite and furthermore always carry a small snake.
775 What if nothing exists and we're all in somebody's dream?
776 Or what's worse, what if only that fat guy in the third row exists?
777 Everybody is ignorant, only on different subjects.
778 If the facts don't fit the theory, change the facts.
779 When you are courting a nice girl an hour seems like a second.
780 When you sit on a red-hot cinder a second seems like an hour.
781 My girlfriend always laughs during sex - no matter what she's reading.
782 Not only is there no God, but try finding a plumber on Sunday.
783 Better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt.
784 When I sell liquor, it's called bootlegging; when my patrons serve it on silver trays on Lake Shore Drive, it's called hospitality.
785 The best way to remember your wife's birthday is to forget is once.
786 To be sure of hitting the target, shoot first, and call whatever you hit the target.
787 The best way to give advice to your children is to find out what they want and then advise them to do it.
788 I always wanted to be somebody, but I should have been more specific.
789 Wickedness is a myth invented by good people to account for the curious attractiveness of others.
790 It's the good girls who keep diaries; the bad girls never have the time.
791 I have lost friends, some by death, others through sheer inability to cross the street.
792 It is amazing what you can accomplish if you do not care who gets the credit.
793 The main purpose of the stock market is to make fools of as many men as possible.
794 No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible.
795 Honesty is the key to a relationship.
796 If you can fake that, you're in.
797 How much patience you have for instance.
798 Honest criticism is hard to take, particularly from a relative, a friend, an acquaintance, or a stranger.
799 I don't believe in an afterlife, so I don't have to spend my whole life fearing hell, or fearing heaven even more.
800 For whatever the tortures of hell, I think the boredom of heaven would be even worse.
801 Work like you don't need the money.
802 Love like you've never been hurt.
803 Dance like nobody's watching.
804 Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.
805 Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again.
806 I hate mankind, for I think myself to be one of them, and I know how bad I am.
807 Sex is God's joke on human beings.
808 I have not failed.
809 I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.
810 To find out a girl's faults, praise her to her girl friends.
811 When ideas fail, words come in very handy.
812 When a man steals your wife, there is no better revenge than to let him keep her.
813 First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.
814 A fanatic is a person who can't change his mind and won't change the subject.
815 A woman's mind is cleaner than a man's.
816 She changes it more often.
817 To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk.
818 You can pretend to be serious; you can't pretend to be witty.
819 Instead of giving a politician the keys to the city, it might be better to change the locks.
820 The person who knows how to laugh at himself will never cease to be amused.
821 Sex is one of the nine reasons for reincarnation; the other eight are unimportant.
822 One of the symptoms of an approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one's work is terribly important.
823 God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh.
824 If you're going to do something tonight that you'll be sorry for tomorrow, sleep late.
825 You can't be a Real Country unless you have a BEER and an airline.
826 It helps if you have some kind of a football team, or some nuclear weapons, but at the very least you need a BEER.
827 It isn't necessary to be rich and famous to be happy.
828 It's only necessary to be rich.
829 Moral indignation is jealousy with a halo.
830 Even if it doesn't work, there is something healthy and invigorating about direct action.
831 A gossip is one who talks to you about others, a bore is one who talks to you about himself; and a brilliant conversationalist is one who talks to you about yourself.
832 I figure you have the same chance of winning the lottery whether you play or not.
833 I could dance till the cows come home.
834 On second thought, I'd rather dance with the cows till you come home.
835 Eighty percent of married men cheat in America.
836 The rest cheat in Europe.
837 A black cat crossing your path signifies that the animal is going somewhere.
838 Radio news is bearable.
839 This is due to the fact that while the news is being broadcast the disc jockey is not allowed to talk.
840 From the moment I picked your book up until I laid it down I was convulsed with laughter.
841 Some day I intend reading it.
842 The male is a domestic animal which, if treated with firmness and kindness, can be trained to do most things.
843 You know when you put a stick in water and it looks bent?
844 That's why I never take baths.
845 Men should be like Kleenex, soft, strong and disposable.
846 A genius is a man who can rewrap a new shirt and not have any pins left over.
847 The quickest way to a man's heart is through his chest.
848 When I eventually met Mr Right I had no idea that his first name was Always.
849 No man is an island, but some of us are pretty long peninsulas.
850 If you've got them by the balls their hearts and minds will follow.
851 Women complain about PMS, but I think of it as the only time of the month when I can be myself.
852 Women: Can't live with them, can't bury them in the back yard without the neighbours seeing.
853 If a woman insists on being called Ms, ask her if it stands for miserable.
854 Gain of mis-trust makes a man to miss his miss; gain of miss' trust makes his miss to miss her miss.
855 For sensual light, man's match-stick ignites woman's candle.
856 Humour kills murmur in marriage.
857 Marriage is adjustment of complementaries for mutuality; and sex is enjoyment of complementaries for mutuality.
858 Mix sex with love creates sentiments, lest it creates resentments.
859 From your parent learn the love; from your partner earn the love.
860 Funs and puns invalidate even nuns and guns.
861 In sex, man is hardware and woman is software, and for the consequence, man is a software and the woman is a hardware.
862 In sex, for man, upper part of woman is attraction, and lower part is an invitation.
863 Man is in woman and can be in woman, but woman, neither is in, nor can be, in man.
864 If you're smarter than your boss, his ego will reject you, but if you're fooler than your boss his sense will reject you.
865 Better lose to gain but never win to lose.
866 In a committed sex, satisfying the other is one's duty.
867 For ardent sexual interaction: supplement with motivation; experiment with innovation; and complement with satisfaction.
868 Complementary of each other in marriage should be made use of so as to complimenting each other.
869 In life: torture the evil, puncture the bad, and nurture the good.
870 If your wife is your life, her satisfaction should be your satiation.
871 In sexuality doing naughty with a beauty in reality on mutuality is maturity.
872 Doing nasty against society hurting individuality, even such thinking mentality, is vulgarity.
873 Empathise empathy emphatically in your approach to every interpersonal relationship.
874 Empathising empathy retains relationships; encouraging egoism retaliates relationships.
875 Couple's fusion by man's intromission for their satisfaction gives immense satiation.
876 A loving heart is the truest wisdom.
877 Love is a fruit in season at all times, and in reach of every hand.
878 Love many things, for therein lies the true strength, and whosoever loves much performs much, and can accomplish much, and what is done in love is done well.
879 Every heart sings a song, incomplete, until another heart whispers back.
880 Those who wish to sing always find a song.
881 At the touch of a lover, everyone becomes a poet.
882 Being deeply loved by someone gives you strength, while loving someone deeply gives you courage.
883 Absence diminishes small loves and increases great ones, as the wind blows out the candle and blows up the bonfire.
884 The greatest happiness of life it the conviction that we are loved - loved for ourselves, or rather, loved in spite of ourselves.
885 You yourself, as much as anybody in the entire universe, deserve your love and affection.
886 Give me ambiguity or give me something else.
887 We are born naked, wet and hungry; then things get worse.
888 I'm not a complete idiot, some parts are missing!
889 He who laughs last thinks slowest!
890 Always remember you're unique, just like everyone else.
891 Lottery: A tax on people who are bad at math.
892 Hard work has a future payoff.
893 Friends help you move.
894 Real friends help you move bodies.
895 Puritanism: The haunting fear that someone, somewhere may be happy.
896 I used to have a handle on life, then it broke.
897 Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.
898 Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.
899 Early bird gets the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
900 I'm not cheap, but I am on special this week.
901 I almost had a psychic girlfriend but she left me before we met.
902 I drive way too fast to worry about cholesterol.
903 I intend to live forever - so far, so good.
904 I love defenseless animals, especially in a good gravy.
905 If Barbie is so popular, why do you have to buy her friends?
906 If you ain't makin' waves, you ain't kickin' hard enough!
907 Mental backup in progress - Do Not Disturb!
908 Mind Like A Steel Trap - Rusty And Illegal In 37 States.
909 The only substitute for good manners is fast reflexes.
910 When everything's coming your way, you're in the wrong lane.
911 Ambition is a poor excuse for not having enough sense to be lazy.
912 If I worked as much as others, I would do as little as they.
913 If everything seems to be going well, you have obviously overlooked something.
914 Many people quit looking for work when they find a job.
915 Dancing is a perpendicular expression of a horizontal desire.
916 All those who believe in psychogenesis raise my hand.
917 A clean desk is a sign of a cluttered desk drawer.
918 The Universe is a figment of its own imagination.
919 Why was the Tomato blushing?
920 Because he saw the salad dressing.
921 How do you catch a squirrel?
922 Climb into a tree and act like a nut.
923 Why didn't the skeleton cross the road?
924 Because he had no guts!
925 Why didn't the chicken cross the road?
926 Because he was too chicken.
927 What do you call a person with leprosy in a bath tub?
928 Did you hear about the cannibal who passed his brother in the woods one day?
929 What lies at the bottom of the ocean and twitches?
930 A nervous wreck!
931 Why don't cannibals eat comedians?
932 Because they taste funny.
933 What's brown and sticky?
934 How do you describe the average cannibal?
935 A guy with a wife and ate children.
936 What do you give an elephant with diarrhea?
937 What does Mozart do now that he is dead?
938 Why did the squirrel sleep on his stomach?
939 To keep his nuts warm.
940 Why do they put bells on cows?
941 Because their horns don't work!
942 Why did the bee cross his legs?
943 Because he couldn't find the BP station.
944 What do you get when you put a canary in a blender?
945 Shredded tweet.
946 What's clear and smells like carrots?
947 A Rabbit fart.
948 What do you call a missing parrot?
949 A polygon.
950 Where does a one armed man shop?
951 At a second hand store!
952 What Happened to the fly on the toilet seat?
953 He got pissed off!
954 What did the cannibal do after he dumped his girlfriend?
955 Wiped his butt.
956 What do you call a sleeping cow?
957 A bulldozer.
958 Why did the girl fall off the swing?
959 Because she had no arms!
960 Did you hear about the cat who swallowed a ball of yarn?
961 She had mittens!
962 Why can't skeletons play music in church?
963 They have no organs!
964 What's the ultimate doom for a leper?
965 An epileptic fit.
966 What's brown and sounds like a bell?
967 What bird can lift the most weight?
968 The Crane.
969 Why was the man arrested for waiting in the Big Top?
970 He was loitering within tent.
971 Because he saw his phone bill.
972 Why were all the ink spots crying?
973 Their father was in the pen.
974 There's no future in time travel.
975 Tonight's weather: Dark with continued darkness until dawn.
976 Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface.
977 DCE seeks DTE for mutual exchange of data.
978 Death is hereditary.
979 Multitasking - screwing up several things at once.
980 Dyslexics of the world, untie!
981 If at first you don't succeed, buy her another beer!
982 Beat the 5 o'clock rush - Leave work at noon!
983 Arachibutyrophobia: fear of peanut butter sticking to roof of mouth.
984 Please return Stewardess to original upright position.
985 Polynesia: memory loss in parrots.
986 A good pun is its own reword.
987 Friends may come and go, but enemies tend to accumulate.
988 Man who smoke pot choke on handle.
989 A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking.
990 Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.
991 For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism.
992 He who hesitates is probably right.
993 Never do card tricks for the group you play poker with.
994 No one is listening until you make a mistake.
995 The colder the X-ray table, the more of your body is required on it.
996 The hardness of the butter is proportional to the softness of the bread.
997 The severity of the itch is proportional to the reach.
998 To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research.
999 To succeed in politics, it is often necessary to rise above your principles.
1000 Two wrongs are only the beginning.
1001 You never really learn to swear until you learn to drive.
1002 The problem with the gene pool is that there is no lifeguard.
1003 A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.
1004 If you must choose between two evils, pick the one you've never tried before.
1005 A fool and his money are soon partying.
1006 Money can't buy love.
1007 But it CAN rent a very close imitation.
1008 Attempt to get a new car for your spouse - it'll be a great trade!
1009 Hell hath no fury like the lawyer of a woman scorned.
1010 Bills travel through the mail at twice the speed of checks.
1011 Hard work pays off in the future.
1012 Eagles may soar, but weasels aren't sucked into jet engines.
1013 Borrow money from pessimists - they don't expect it back.
1014 Half the people you know are below average.
1015 A conscience is what hurts when all your other parts feel so good.
1016 If at first you don't succeed, then skydiving definitely isn't for you!
1017 Some just don't have film.
1018 If you choke a smurf, what color does it turn?
1019 OK, so what's the speed of dark?
1020 Wisdom and beauty form a very rare combination.
1021 Education: That which discloses to the wise and disguises from the fool their lack of understanding.
1022 Vote: The instrument and symbol of a free man's power to make a fool of himself and a wreck of his country.
1023 To be sure of hitting the target, shoot first and whatever you hit, call it the target.
1024 I was educated once, and it took me years to get over it.
1025 The surest way to remain a winner is to win once, and then not play any more.
1026 Politics is the gentle art of getting votes from the poor and campaign funds from the rich by promising to protect each from the other.
1027 Riot: A popular entertainment given to the military by innocent bystanders.
1028 It is not the bad times on which we should dwell, it is only poison to the mind and soul.
1029 We shall rise up after we fall, and continue to go on - dwelling on the good, high-spirited times of our lives.
1030 If you suffer, thank God!
1031 It is a sure sign that you are alive.
1032 If what Proust says is true, that happiness is the absence of fever, then I will never know happiness.
1033 For I am possessed by a fever for knowledge, experience, and creation.
1034 The heart has its reasons that reason knows nothing of.
1035 No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.
1036 Trouble is part of your life - if you don't share it, you don't give the person who loves you a chance to love you enough.
1037 He has achieved success who has lived well, laughed often, and loved much.
1038 Heaven is under our feet as well as over our heads.
1039 A man cannot be comfortable without his own approval.
1040 Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious.
1041 Were there no women, men might live like gods.
1042 Women and cats will do as they please, and men and dogs should relax and get used to the idea.
1043 Bachelors know more about women than married men do.
1044 If they didn't, they'd be married too.
1045 You come out of a woman and you spend the rest of your life trying to get back inside.
1046 Sex is what women have and men want.
1047 The only thing that men and women have in common, is that they both prefer the company of men.
1048 A woman never forgets the men she could have had; a man, the women he couldn't.
1049 I've had one child.
1050 My husband wants to have another.
1051 I'd like to watch him have another.
1052 Women first want to find out what is in your wallet, and second what is in your pants.
1053 I'm still an atheist, thank God.
1054 Man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of the time he will pick himself up and continue on.
1055 Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
1056 The only thing that stops God from sending another flood is that the first one was useless.
1057 I predict that exact reproduction through cloning will not become popular.
1058 Too many people already find it difficult to live with themselves.
1059 Every man is a divinity in disguise, a god playing the fool.
1060 A myth is a religion in which no one any longer believes.
1061 Disorder increases with time because we measure time in the direction in which disorder increases.
1062 I don't necessarily agree with everything I say.
1063 Nothing is more intolerable than to have to admit to yourself your own errors.
1064 Man is able to do what he is unable to imagine.
1065 His head trails a wake through the galaxy of the absurd.
1066 I like pigs.
1067 Dogs look up to us.
1068 Cats look down on us.
1069 Pigs treat us as equals.
1070 Most of life is choices, and the rest is pure dumb luck.
1071 Failure is the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.
1072 I have made mistakes, but have never made the mistake of claiming I never made one.
1073 It's not over until it's over.
1074 Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.
1075 Don't worry about people stealing your ideas.
1076 If your ideas are any good, you'll have to ram them down people's throats.
1077 The brain is a wonderful organ.
1078 It starts working the moment you get up in the morning and does not stop until you get to work.
1079 Manuscript: something submitted in haste and returned at leisure.
1080 The quality of an organization can never exceed the quality of the minds that make it up.
1081 Parkinson's Fourth Law: The number of people in any working group tends to increase regardless of the amount of work to be done.
1082 You will break the bow if you keep it always stretched.
1083 Give me a museum and I'll fill it.
1084 The beginning is the most important part of the work.
1085 He that would perfect his work must first sharpen his tools.
1086 Tell a man that there are 400 billion stars in the sky, and he'll believe you.
1087 Tell him a bench has wet paint and he has to touch it.
1088 Thank God for dirty dishes, they have a tale to tell.
1089 While others may go hungry, we've eaten very well.
1090 With home, health and happiness, I shouldn't want to fuss.
1091 By the stack of evidence, God's been very good to us.
1092 The act of putting pen to paper encourages pause for thought, this in turn makes us think more deeply about life, which helps us regain our equilibrium.
1093 The best thing to sleep on is a clear conscience.
1094 The computer only crashes when printing a document you haven't saved.
1095 The hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax.
1096 The last day of school before summer vacation is the shortest day of a mother's year.
1097 The life you have led doesn't need to be the only life you have.
1098 The more we learn, the more we realize how little we know.
1099 The only abnormality is the incapacity to love.
1100 The past is but the beginning of a beginning, and all that is and has been is but the twilight of the dawn.
1101 Of all the things which wisdom provides to make life entirely happy, much the greatest is the possession of friendship.
1102 Every now and again take a good look at something not made with hands - a mountain, a star, the turn of a stream.
1103 There will come to you wisdom and patience and solace and, above all, the assurance that you are not alone in the world.
1104 Friendship is the hardest thing in the world to explain.
1105 It's not something you learn in school.
1106 But if you haven't learned the meaning of friendship, you really haven't learned anything.
1107 I am not in this world to live up to other people's expectations, nor do I feel that the world must live up to mine.
1108 Friendship is precious, not only in the shade, but in the sunshine of life; and thanks to a benevolent arrangement of things, the greater part of life is sunshine.
1109 Life is no brief candle to me.
1110 It is a sort of splendid torch which I have got a hold of for the moment, and I want to make it burn as brightly as possible before handing it on to future generations.
1111 How far you go in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant of the weak and strong.
1112 Because someday in your life you will have been all of these.
1113 Live all you can.
1114 It is a mistake not to.
1115 It doesn't matter so much what you do in particular, so long as you have your life.
1116 If you haven't had that, what have you had?
1117 No one gets out of this world alive, so the time to live, learn, care, share, celebrate, and love is now.
1118 There is no cure for birth and death save to enjoy the interval.
1119 Love is a state in which a man sees things most decidedly as they are not.
1120 Love wasn't put in your heart to stay.
1121 Love isn't love 'til you give it away.
1122 Let love be your greatest aim.
1123 If thou must love me, let it be for naught except for love's sake only.
1124 He whom love touches not walks in darkness.
1125 To live without loving is not really to live.
1126 At the touch of love, everyone becomes a poet.
1127 The world is indeed full of peril, and in it there are many dark places; but still there is much that is fair, and though in all lands love is mingled with grief, love grows perhaps the greater.
1128 True love doesn't consist of holding hands, it consists of holding hearts.
1129 Age does not protect you from love.
1130 But love, to some extent, protects you from age.
1131 Lots of people are willing to die for the person they love, which is a pity, for it is a much grander thing to live for that person.
1132 It is a curious thought, but it is only when you see people looking ridiculous that you realize just how much you love them.
1133 The supreme happiness in life is the conviction that we are loved.
1134 Don't be so humble - you are not that great.
1135 Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever.
1136 The school of hard knocks is an accelerated curriculum.
1137 I am always doing things I can't do, that's how I get to do them.
1138 Nagging is the repetition of unpalatable truths.
1139 Some of us are becoming the men we wanted to marry.
1140 I have yet to hear a man ask for advice on how to combine marriage and a career.
1141 The dreams in my spirit mirror the solitude of my dark solitude.
1142 No computer has ever been designed that is ever aware of what it's doing; but most of the time, we aren't either.
1143 Accept no one's definition of your life, but define yourself.
1144 Smash forehead on keyboard to continue!
1145 Press any key to continue, or any other key to quit.
1146 Close your eyes and press escape three times.
1147 This will end your Windows session.
1148 Do you want to play another game?
1149 Ellen Degeneres Virus - Your IBM suddenly claims it's a MAC.
1150 Monica Lewinski Virus - Sucks all the memory out of your computer.
1151 Titanic Virus - Makes your whole computer go down.
1152 Disney Virus - Everything in the computer goes goofy.
1153 Mike Tyson Virus - Quits after one byte.
1154 Prozac Virus - Screws up your RAM but your processor doesn't care.
1155 Sharon Stone Virus - Makes a huge initial impact, then you forget it's there.
1156 Tim Allen Virus - Appears helpful, only to destroy your hard drive upon contact.
1157 Woody Allen Virus - Bypasses the motherboard and turns on a daughter card.
1158 Saddam Hussein Virus - Won't let you into any of your programs.
1159 George Michael Virus - Runs its course, occasionally releasing excess data buildup.
1160 Joey Buttafuoco Virus - Only attacks minor files.
1161 X-files Virus - All your icons start shape-shifting.
1162 Spice Girl Virus - Has no real function, but makes a pretty desktop.
1163 Ronald Reagan Virus - Saves your data, but forgets where it is stored.
1164 Sonny Bono Virus - Just when you get surfing the web, a firewall appears out of nowhere.
1165 Martha Stewart Virus - Takes all your files, sorts them by category and folds them into cute little doilies to be displayed on your desktop.
1166 Freudian Virus - Your computer becomes obsessed with its own motherboard.
1167 Or becomes very jealous of the size of your friend's hard drive.
1168 Hillary Rodham Clinton Virus - Instantly turns 1K of disk space into 1 Meg.
1169 Ollie North Virus - Plays a patriotic WAV while it shreds your files.
1170 Jane Fonda Virus - Attacks your hard drive's FAT.
1171 Oprah Winfrey Virus - Your 200MB hard drive suddenly shrinks to 80MB, and then slowly expands to 300MB.
1172 AT&T Virus - Every three minutes it tells you what great service you are getting.
1173 MCI Virus - Every three minutes it reminds you that you're paying too much for the AT&T virus.
1174 Politically Correct Virus - Never calls itself a "virus", but instead refers to itself as an "electronic microorganism".
1175 Ross Perot Virus - Activates every component in your system, just before the whole darn thing quits.
1176 Arnold Schwarzenegger Virus - Terminates and stays resident; It'll be back!
1177 Government Economist Virus - Nothing works, but all your diagnostic software says everything is fine.
1178 Federal Bureaucrat Virus - Divides your hard disk into hundreds of little units, each of which does practically nothing, but all of which claim to be the most important part of your computer.
1179 Adam and Eve Virus - Takes a couple of bytes out of your Apple computer.
1180 Congressional Virus #1 - The computer locks up, screen splits erratically with a message appearing on each half blaming the other side for the problem.
1181 Congressional Virus #2 - Runs every program on the hard drive simultaneously but doesn't allow the user to accomplish anything.
1182 Airline Virus - You're in Dallas, but your data is in Singapore.
1183 PBS Virus - Your computer stops every few minutes to ask for money.
1184 Jimmy Hoffa Virus - Your programs can never be found again.
1185 LAPD Virus - It claims it feels threatened by the other files on your PC and erases them in "self-defense".
1186 The E-mail of the species is more deadly than the mail.
1187 A journey of a thousand sites begins with a single click.
1188 You can't teach a new mouse old clicks.
1189 Great groups from little icons grow.
1190 Speak softly and carry a cellular phone.
1191 Don't put all your hypes in one home page.
1192 Pentium wise; pen and paper foolish.
1193 The modem is the message.
1194 Too many clicks spoil the browse.
1195 The geek shall inherit the earth.
1196 A chat has nine lives.
1197 Don't byte off more than you can view.
1198 Fax is stranger than fiction.
1199 What boots up must come down.
1200 Windows will never cease.
1201 In Gates we trust.
1202 Virtual reality is its own reward.
1203 Modulation in all things.
1204 A user and his leisure time are soon parted.
1205 Know what to expect before you connect.
1206 Oh, what a tangled web-site we weave, when first we practice.
1207 Speed thrills.
1208 Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach him to use the Web and he won't bother you for weeks.
1209 My mother was like a sister to me, only we didn't have sex quite so often.
1210 It's so long since I've had sex I've forgotten who ties up who.
1211 If it wasn't for pick-pockets I'd have no sex life at all.
1212 Sex without love is an empty experience, but as empty experiences go it's a pretty good one.
1213 Like most men, I am consumed with desire whenever a lesbian gets within twenty feet.
1214 The big difference between sex for money and sex for free is that sex for money costs less.
1215 There we were in the middle of a sexual revolution wearing clothes that guaranteed we wouldn't get laid.
1216 My classmates would copulate with anything that moved, but I never saw any reason to limit myself.
1217 It's better to be black than gay because when you're black you don't have to tell your mother.
1218 Life is a sexually transmitted disease and the mortality rate is one hundred percent.
1219 Love is the answer - but while you're waiting for the answer sex raises some pretty good questions.
1220 An intellectual is someone who has found something more interesting than sex.
1221 Show me a woman who doesn't feel guilt and I'll show you a man.
1222 I only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a doormat or a prostitute.
1223 As long as a woman can look ten years younger than her own daughter, she is perfectly satisfied.
1224 When women kiss it always reminds me of prize fighter shaking hands.
1225 When women go wrong, men go right after them.
1226 She looked as if she'd been poured into her clothes and had forgotten to say when.
1227 Women are nothing but machines for producing children.
1228 An archaeologist is best husband a woman can have: the older she gets, the more interested he is in her.
1229 All I want is a warm bed and a kind word and unlimited power.
1230 An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less until he knows absolutely everything about nothing.
1231 Beauty: That power by which a woman charms a lover and terrifies a husband.
1232 Black holes are where God divided by zero.
1233 Boycott shampoo!
1234 By working faithfully eight hours a day, you may eventually get to be boss and work twelve.
1235 Copy from one, it's plagiarism; copy from two, it's research.
1236 Corduroy pillows: They're making headlines!
1237 Demand the REAL poo!
1238 Energizer Bunny arrested, charged with battery.
1239 Everyone has a photographic memory.
1240 Everywhere is walking distance if you have the time.
1241 Failure to prepare is preparing to fail.
1242 For Sale: Parachute.
1243 Give a man a free hand and he'll run it all over you.
1244 Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds.
1245 How do you tell when you run out of invisible ink?
1246 I couldn't repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder.
1247 I don't have any solution but I certainly admire the problem.
1248 I tried sniffing Coke once, but the ice cubes got stuck in my nose.
1249 I used to have an open mind but my brains kept falling out.
1250 I'm writing a book.
1251 I've got the page numbers done.
1252 If at first you don't succeed, destroy all evidence that you tried.
1253 If the effort that went in research on the female bosom had gone into our space program, we would now be running hot-dog stands on the moon.
1254 If women didn't exist, all the money in the world would have no meaning.
1255 If you're killed, you've lost a very important part of your life.
1256 It is by fighting and triumphing over the enemies of the Buddha that we ourselves become Buddhas.
1257 It's not that I'm afraid to die, I just don't want to be there when it happens.
1258 Join the Army, meet interesting people, kill them.
1259 Knowledge and belief are two separate tracks that run parallel to each other and never meet, except in the child.
1260 Laughing stock: cattle with a sense of humor.
1261 Laziness pays off now.
1262 Man is only happy as he finds a work worth doing, and does it well.
1263 Most plans are just inaccurate predictions.
1264 My opinions may have changed, but not the fact that I am right.
1265 My schedule is already full.
1266 Only used once, never opened, small stain.
1267 Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.
1268 Reality is a crutch for people who can't handle drugs.
1269 Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing.
1270 Sacred cows make the best hamburger.
1271 Shin: a device for finding furniture in the dark.
1272 Some don't have film.
1273 Success always occurs in private, and failure in full view.
1274 Support your right to bare arms!
1275 That's relativity.
1276 The more I want to get something done, the less I call it work.
1277 The reward of a thing well done is to have done it.
1278 The trouble with our times is that the future is not what it used to be.
1279 There cannot be a crisis next week.
1280 Time's fun when you're having flies.
1281 Truth comes out of error more easily than out of confusion.
1282 We would often be sorry if our wishes were gratified.
1283 Wear short sleeves!
1284 What happens if you get scared half to death twice?
1285 Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk?
1286 Why do psychics have to ask you for your name?
1287 Women should be obscene and not heard.
1288 You can learn many things from children.
1289 There was Gertrude.
1290 And there was his sister Marian.
1291 She had worked in the cannery the preceding summer, and her slim, pretty hands were all scarred with the tomato-knives.
1292 He remembered the hard palms of his mother as she lay in her coffin.
1293 He sat back on the bed with a bitter laugh, and finished taking off his shoes.
1294 And then, suddenly, before his eyes, on the foul plaster-wall appeared a vision.
1295 He stood in front of a gloomy tenement house.
1296 It was night-time, in the East End of London, and before him stood Margey, a little factory girl of fifteen.
1297 He had seen her home after the beanfeast.
1298 She lived in that gloomy tenement, a place not fit for swine.
1299 His hand was going out to hers as he said good night.
1300 Somehow he was afraid of her.
1301 And then her hand closed on his and pressed feverishly.
1302 He felt her callouses grind and grate on his, and a great wave of pity welled over him.
1303 Her glad little cry rang in his ears, and he felt her clinging to him like a cat.
1304 Poor little starveling!
1305 He continued to stare at the vision of what had happened in the long ago.
1306 His flesh was crawling as it had crawled that night when she clung to him, and his heart was warm with pity.
1307 It was a gray scene, greasy gray, and the rain drizzled greasily on the pavement stones.
1308 He took the Browning and the Swinburne from the chair and kissed them.
1309 Just the same, she told me to call again, he thought.
1310 Understand!
1311 Norman and Arthur knew that speech.
1312 He had heard them talking it.
1313 And they were her brothers.
1314 He left the alcove in despair.
1315 From every side the books seemed to press upon him and crush him.
1316 He had never dreamed that the fund of human knowledge bulked so big.
1317 He was frightened.
1318 How could his brain ever master it all?
1319 And so he wandered on, alternating between depression and elation as he stared at the shelves packed with wisdom.
1320 In a way, it spoke a kindred speech.
1321 Both he and it were of the sea.
1322 There it was; he would teach himself navigation.
1323 He would quit drinking, work up, and become a captain.
1324 Ruth seemed very near to him in that moment.
1325 As a captain, he could marry her (if she would have him).
1326 He cast his eyes about the room and closed the lids down on a vision of ten thousand books.
1327 No; no more of the sea for him.
1328 There was power in all that wealth of books, and if he would do great things, he must do them on the land.
1329 Besides, captains were not allowed to take their wives to sea with them.
1330 Noon came, and afternoon.
1331 But when he found the right shelf, he sought vainly for the answer.
1332 He abandoned his search.
1333 The man nodded.
1334 Are you a sailor?
1335 "Yes, sir," he answered.
1336 Now, how did he know that?
1337 A terrible restlessness that was akin to hunger afflicted Martin Eden.
1338 He could not steel himself to call upon her.
1339 He was afraid that he might call too soon, and so be guilty of an awful breach of that awful thing called etiquette.
1340 The many books he read but served to whet his unrest.
1341 Every page of every book was a peep-hole into the realm of knowledge.
1342 His hunger fed upon what he read, and increased.
1343 Also, he did not know where to begin, and continually suffered from lack of preparation.
1344 The commonest references, that he could see plainly every reader was expected to know, he did not know.
1345 And the same was true of the poetry he read which maddened him with delight.
1346 He read more of Swinburne than was contained in the volume Ruth had lent him; and "Dolores" he understood thoroughly.
1347 But surely Ruth did not understand it, he concluded.
1348 These thoughts he had tried to share, but never had he found a woman capable of understanding - nor a man.
1349 He had tried, at times, but had only puzzled his listeners.
1350 And as his thoughts had been beyond them, so, he argued now, he must be beyond them.
1351 He felt power move in him, and clenched his fists.
1352 Those bold black eyes had nothing to offer.
1353 He knew the thoughts behind them - of ice-cream and of something else.
1354 They offered books and painting, beauty and repose, and all the fine elegance of higher existence.
1355 Behind those black eyes he knew every thought process.
1356 It was like clockwork.
1357 He could watch every wheel go around.
1358 Their bid was low pleasure, narrow as the grave, that palled, and the grave was at the end of it.
1359 He had caught glimpses of the soul in them, and glimpses of his own soul, too.
1360 "Lizzie," she replied, softening toward him, her hand pressing his arm, while her body leaned against his.
1361 He talked on a few minutes before saying good night.
1362 I kept it for you.
1363 A week of heavy reading had passed since the evening he first met Ruth Morse, and still he dared not call.
1364 Time and again he nerved himself up to call, but under the doubts that assailed him his determination died away.
1365 But his eyes were strong, and they were backed by a body superbly strong.
1366 Furthermore, his mind was fallow.
1367 It had never been jaded by study, and it bit hold of the knowledge in the books with sharp teeth that would not let go.
1368 It seemed to him, by the end of the week, that he had lived centuries, so far behind were the old life and outlook.
1369 But he was baffled by lack of preparation.
1370 He attempted to read books that required years of preliminary specialization.
1371 It was the same with the economists.
1372 He was bewildered, and yet he wanted to know.
1373 She had never had any experiences of the heart.
1374 She did not know the actual fire of love.
1375 She did not dream of the volcanic convulsions of love, its scorching heat and sterile wastes of parched ashes.
1376 She knew neither her own potencies, nor the potencies of the world; and the deeps of life were to her seas of illusion.
1377 It was only natural.
1378 There was something cosmic in such things, and there was something cosmic in him.
1379 He came to her breathing of large airs and great spaces.
1380 The blaze of tropic suns was in his face, and in his swelling, resilient muscles was the primordial vigor of life.
1381 He was untamed, wild, and in secret ways her vanity was touched by the fact that he came so mildly to her hand.
1382 Likewise she was stirred by the common impulse to tame the wild thing.
1383 His swift development was a source of surprise and interest.
1384 She detected unguessed finenesses in him that seemed to bud, day by day, like flowers in congenial soil.
1385 She read Browning aloud to him, and was often puzzled by the strange interpretations he gave to mooted passages.
1386 Then she played to him - no longer at him - and probed him with music that sank to depths beyond her plumb-line.
1387 In an immediate way it personified his life.
1388 But her singing he did not question.
1389 It was too wholly her, and he sat always amazed at the divine melody of her pure soprano voice.
1390 She enjoyed singing and playing to him.
1391 Besides, it was pleasant to be with him.
1392 He did not repel her.
1393 That first repulsion had been really a fear of her undiscovered self, and the fear had gone to sleep.
1394 Though she did not know it, she had a feeling in him of proprietary right.
1395 Also, he had a tonic effect upon her.
1396 Strength was what she needed, and he gave it to her in generous measure.
1397 To come into the same room with him, or to meet him at the door, was to take heart of life.
1398 And when he had gone, she would return to her books with a keener zest and fresh store of energy.
1399 She knew her Browning, but it had never sunk into her that it was an awkward thing to play with souls.
1400 As her interest in Martin increased, the remodelling of his life became a passion with her.
1401 Butler, Charles Butler he was called, found himself alone in the world.
1402 His father had come from Australia, you know, and so he had no relatives in California.
1403 She paused for breath, and to note how Martin was receiving it.
1404 Butler; but there was a frown upon his face as well.
1405 How could he live on it?
1406 He must have lived like a dog.
1407 His early denials are paid for a thousand fold.
1408 Martin looked at her sharply.
1409 Her eyes dropped before his searching gaze.
1410 By nature he is sober and serious.
1411 He always was that.
1412 "You can bet he was," Martin proclaimed.
1413 Her own limits were the limits of her horizon; but limited minds can recognize limitations only in others.
1414 "But I have not finished my story," she said.
1415 Butler was always eager to work.
1416 He never was late, and he was usually at the office a few minutes before his regular time.
1417 And yet he saved his time.
1418 Every spare moment was devoted to study.
1419 He quickly became a clerk, and he made himself invaluable.
1420 Father appreciated him and saw that he was bound to rise.
1421 He became a lawyer, and hardly was he back in the office when father took him in as junior partner.
1422 He is a great man.
1423 Such a life is an inspiration to all of us.
1424 It shows us that a man with will may rise superior to his environment.
1425 "He is a great man," Martin said sincerely.
1426 And then, in splendor and glory, came the great idea.
1427 He would write.
1428 He would write - everything - poetry and prose, fiction and description, and plays like Shakespeare.
1429 There was career and the way to win to Ruth.
1430 Butlers who earned thirty thousand a year and could be Supreme Court justices if they wanted to.
1431 Once the idea had germinated, it mastered him, and the return voyage to San Francisco was like a dream.
1432 He was drunken with unguessed power and felt that he could do anything.
1433 In the midst of the great and lonely sea he gained perspective.
1434 Clearly, and for the first lime, he saw Ruth and her world.
1435 The thought was fire in him.
1436 He would begin as soon as he got back.
1437 The first thing he would do would be to describe the voyage of the treasure-hunters.
1438 He would sell it to some San Francisco newspaper.
1439 He would not tell Ruth anything about it, and she would be surprised and pleased when she saw his name in print.
1440 While he wrote, he could go on studying.
1441 There were twenty-four hours in each day.
1442 He was invincible.
1443 He knew how to work, and the citadels would go down before him.
1444 She did not think much of his plan.
1445 Not that I know anything about it, of course.
1446 I only bring common judgment to bear.
1447 This education is indispensable for whatever career you select, and it must not be slipshod or sketchy.
1448 You should go to high school.
1449 "I would have to," he said grimly.
1450 I must live and buy books and clothes, you know.
1451 This change in him was her handiwork, and she was proud of it and fired with ambition further to help him.
1452 But the most radical change of all, and the one that pleased her most, was the change in his speech.
1453 Not only did he speak more correctly, but he spoke more easily, and there were many new words in his vocabulary.
1454 Also, there was an awkward hesitancy, at times, as he essayed the new words he had learned.
1455 He was just beginning to orientate himself and to feel that he was not wholly an intruder.
1456 He told her of what he had been doing, and of his plan to write for a livelihood and of going on with his studies.
1457 But he was disappointed at her lack of approval.
1458 Up to then he had accepted existence, as he had lived it with all about him, as a good thing.
1459 Who could tell?
1460 He did not know enough to ask the man at the desk, and began his adventures in the philosophy alcove.
1461 He had heard of book philosophy, but had not imagined there had been so much written about it.
1462 The high, bulging shelves of heavy tomes humbled him and at the same time stimulated him.
1463 Here was work for the vigor of his brain.
1464 He could read English, but he saw there an alien speech.
1465 How could she, living the refined life she did?
1466 Higginbotham, who would have preferred the money taking the form of board.
1467 On another night, his vigil was rewarded by a glimpse of Ruth through a second-story window.
1468 He saw only her head and shoulders, and her arms raised as she fixed her hair before a mirror.
1469 Then she pulled down the shade.
1470 She was of the class that dealt with banks.
1471 In one way, he had undergone a moral revolution.
1472 He had always been easy-going.
1473 It was not in his nature to give rebuff.
1474 In the old days he would have smiled back, and gone further and encouraged smiling.
1475 But now it was different.
1476 He did smile back, then looked away, and looked no more deliberately.
1477 But several times, forgetting the existence of the two girls, his eyes caught their smiles.
1478 It was nothing new to him.
1479 But it was different now.
1480 He had it in his heart to wish that they could possess, in some small measure, her goodness and glory.
1481 And not for the world could he hurt them because of their outreaching.
1482 He was not flattered by it; he even felt a slight shame at his lowliness that permitted it.
1483 He left his seat before the curtain went down on the last act, intent on seeing Her as she passed out.
1484 They were looking for him, he knew; and for the moment he could have cursed that in him which drew women.
1485 Their casual edging across the sidewalk to the curb, as they drew near, apprised him of discovery.
1486 They slowed down, and were in the thick of the crown as they came up with him.
1487 One of them brushed against him and apparently for the first time noticed him.
1488 She was a slender, dark girl, with black, defiant eyes.
1489 But they smiled at him, and he smiled back.
1490 Also, she was struck by his face.
1491 It was almost violent, this health of his, and it seemed to rush out of him and at her in waves of force.
1492 And he, in turn, knew again the swimming sensation of bliss when he felt the contact of her hand in greeting.
1493 The difference between them lay in that she was cool and self-possessed while his face flushed to the roots of the hair.
1494 He stumbled with his old awkwardness after her, and his shoulders swung and lurched perilously.
1495 Once they were seated in the living-room, he began to get on easily - more easily by far than he had expected.
1496 She made it easy for him; and the gracious spirit with which she did it made him love her more madly than ever.
1497 She had thought of this often since their first meeting.
1498 She wanted to help him.
1499 The old fascination of his neck was there, and there was sweetness in the thought of laying her hands upon it.
1500 It seemed still a wanton impulse, but she had grown more used to it.
1501 She did not dream that in such guise new-born love would epitomize itself.
1502 Nor did she dream that the feeling he excited in her was love.
1503 She did not know she desired him; but with him it was different.
1504 As he gazed at her and listened, his thoughts grew daring.
1505 He reviewed all the wild delight of the pressure of her hand in his at the door, and longed for it again.
1506 His gaze wandered often toward her lips, and he yearned for them hungrily.
1507 But there was nothing gross or earthly about this yearning.
1508 Their substance was not mere human clay.
1509 I was never inside a house like this.
1510 I wanted it.
1511 I want it now.
1512 Here it is.
1513 I want to make my way to the kind of life you have in this house.
1514 Mebbe I ought to ask him.
1515 Ruth did not speak immediately.
1516 She had never looked in eyes that expressed greater power.
1517 And for that matter so complex and quick was her own mind that she did not have a just appreciation of simplicity.
1518 And yet she had caught an impression of power in the very groping of this mind.
1519 It had seemed to her like a giant writhing and straining at the bonds that held him down.
1520 Her face was all sympathy when she did speak.
1521 You should go back and finish grammar school, and then go through to high school and university.
1522 "But that takes money," he interrupted.
1523 But then you have relatives, somebody who could assist you?
1524 He shook his head.
1525 The oldest died in India.
1526 What it means is that a trust is like an egg, and it is not like an egg.
1527 If you want to break an egg you have to do it from the outside.
1528 The only way to break up a trust is from the inside.
1529 Keep sitting on it until it hatches.
1530 Somewhat to my surprise he acknowledged the corner.
1531 "Once," said he.
1532 But we lost out.
1533 "Some unforeseen opposition came up, I suppose," I said.
1534 We were self-curbed.
1535 It was a case of auto-suppression.
1536 There was a rift within the loot, as Albert Tennyson says.
1537 That man was the most talented conniver at stratagems I ever saw.
1538 Andy was educated, too, besides having a lot of useful information.
1539 Oh, yes, the mine was all right.
1540 The other half interest must have been worth two or three thousand.
1541 I often wondered who owned that mine.
1542 The town had about 2,000 inhabitants, mostly men.
1543 I figured out that their principal means of existence was in living close to tall chaparral.
1544 Me and Andy put up at a hotel that was built like something between a roof-garden and a sectional bookcase.
1545 It began to rain the day we got there.
1546 As the saying is, Juniper Aquarius was sure turning on the water plugs on Mount Amphibious.
1547 But we could see the townspeople making a triangular procession from one to another all day and half the night.
1548 Everybody seemed to know what to do with as much money as they had.
1549 Bird City was built between the Rio Grande and a deep wide arroyo that used to be the old bed of the river.
1550 Andy looks at it a long time.
1551 And then he unfolds to me a instantaneous idea that has occurred to him.
1552 Right there was organized a trust; and we walked back into town and put it on the market.
1553 The river had busted through its old channel, and the town was surrounded by roaring torrents.
1554 But the worst was yet to come.
1555 So, naturally the body politic emits thirsty ejaculations of surprise and ports hellum for the Blue Snake.
1556 And what does it find there?
1557 The town marshal is there with two deputies to keep order, having been promised free drinks by the trust.
1558 The nearest railroad was thirty miles away; and it would be two weeks at least before the river would be fordable.
1559 So they began to cuss, amiable, and throw down dollars on the bar till it sounded like a selection on the xylophone.
1560 It was beautiful and simple as all truly great swindles are.
1561 We told the bartenders to take advantage of the lull, and do the same.
1562 Then me and Andy counted the receipts.
1563 He got off the safe and lit the biggest cigar in the house.
1564 We have sure handed the small consumer a giant blow in the sole apoplectic region.
1565 This little turn in bug juice is, verily, all to the Skibo.
1566 It was the first drink I had ever known him to take.
1567 I watched him to see what turn the whiskey was going to take in him.
1568 There are two times when you never can tell what is going to happen.
1569 One is when a man takes his first drink; and the other is when a woman takes her latest.
1570 He was outwardly decent and managed to preserve his aquarium, but inside he was impromptu and full of unexpectedness.
1571 I feel like if I once turned loose people would begin to call Senator Beveridge the Grand Young Sphinx of the Wabash.
1572 Me and the boys will take care of the business.
1573 Everybody will be through dinner pretty soon, and salt pork and beans makes a man pretty thirsty.
1574 The streets were deserted except for some ducks and ladies going to the stores.
1575 There was only a light drizzle falling then.
1576 We put him in bed while he still muttered and gesticulated with his hands and feet.
1577 I met a man who told me all about it.
1578 Andy had made the finest two hour speech that had ever been heard in Texas, he said, or anywhere else in the world.
1579 And say, Jeff, make that succotash fancier give you nice, clean, new bills.
1580 I drove out to the Plunkett farm and hitched.
1581 There was a man sitting on the front steps of the house.
1582 He had on a white flannel suit, a diamond ring, golf cap and a pink ascot tie.
1583 I see the left pocket of your coat sags a good deal.
1584 Out with the goldbrick first.
1585 I put it back in my pocket.
1586 Yes; this is Plunkett, of Woodbine Centre.
1587 Reserve four orchestra seats for Friday evening - my usual ones.
1588 Have you got him there?
1589 Let me see him.
1590 Get away from the transmitter.
1591 Now make him trot in a circle.
1592 Yes, I can hear him.
1593 Keep on - faster yet.
1594 Now lead him up to the phone.
1595 Get his nose nearer.
1596 Then he passes the Henry Clays and sets out a bottle of green chartreuse, and goes over and looks at the ticker tape.
1597 The horse turned round and took me back to the hotel.
1598 I hitched him and went in to see Andy.
1599 It looks incredulous to me that he could have inoculated himself against all the preordained systems of bucolic bunco.
1600 Farmers was made for a purpose; and that was to furnish a livelihood to men like me and you.
1601 Else why was we given brains?
1602 His vest is red with blue dots, and he wears a high silk hat.
1603 Wait here till I come back.
1604 My life is never safe.
1605 There was no pause of the realities wherein he moved.
1606 He saw her hand coming out to his, and she looked him straight in the eyes as she shook hands, frankly, like a man.
1607 The women he had known did not shake hands that way.
1608 For that matter, most of them did not shake hands at all.
1609 But he shook them aside and looked at her.
1610 Never had he seen such a woman.
1611 The women he had known!
1612 Immediately, beside her, on either hand, ranged the women he had known.
1613 There were women of the cattle camps, and swarthy cigarette-smoking women of Old Mexico.
1614 She repressed a smile at sight of the red line that marked the chafe of the collar against the bronzed neck.
1615 He was evidently unused to stiff collars.
1616 This was a new experience for him.
1617 All his life, up to then, he had been unaware of being either graceful or awkward.
1618 Such thoughts of self had never entered his mind.
1619 He sat down gingerly on the edge of the chair, greatly worried by his hands.
1620 They were in the way wherever he put them.
1621 Arthur was leaving the room, and Martin Eden followed his exit with longing eyes.
1622 He felt lost, alone there in the room with that pale spirit of a woman.
1623 I am sure it must have been some adventure.
1624 "A Mexican with a knife, miss," he answered, moistening his parched lips and clearing hip throat.
1625 After I got the knife away, he tried to bite off my nose.
1626 But of all this no hint had crept into his speech.
1627 "He tried to bite off my nose," he concluded.
1628 "Oh," the girl said, in a faint, far voice, and he noticed the shock in her sensitive face.
1629 Such sordid things as stabbing affrays were evidently not fit subjects for conversation with a lady.
1630 People in the books, in her walk of life, did not talk about such things - perhaps they did not know about them, either.
1631 There was a brief pause in the conversation they were trying to get started.
1632 Then she asked tentatively about the scar on his cheek.
1633 "It was just an accident," he said, putting his hand to his cheek.
1634 "This man Swineburne," he began, attempting to put his plan into execution and pronouncing the I long.
1635 "Swineburne," he repeated, with the same mispronunciation.
1636 "Swinburne," she corrected.
1637 "I never clapped eyes on him," was the reply.
1638 How do you like his poetry?
1639 And thereat she began to talk quickly and easily upon the subject he had suggested.
1640 Here was intellectual life, he thought, and here was beauty, warm and wonderful as he had never dreamed it could be.
1641 He forgot himself and stared at her with hungry eyes.
1642 Here was something to live for, to win to, to fight for - ay, and die for.
1643 The books were true.
1644 There were such women in the world.
1645 She was one of them.
1646 But she, who knew little of the world of men, being a woman, was keenly aware of his burning eyes.
1647 She had never had men look at her in such fashion, and it embarrassed her.
1648 She stumbled and halted in her utterance.
1649 The thread of argument slipped from her.
1650 He frightened her, and at the same time it was strangely pleasant to be so looked upon.
1651 She was clean, and her cleanness revolted; but she was woman, and she was just beginning to learn the paradox of woman.
1652 "Yes, thank you," she said.
1653 There are many of his poems that should never be read.
1654 Not a line of the great poets can be spared without impoverishing the world by that much.
1655 I had no idea he was such a - a scoundrel.
1656 I guess that crops out in his other books.
1657 He broke off lamely.
1658 He was confused, painfully conscious of his inarticulateness.
1659 He had felt the bigness and glow of life in what he had read, but his speech was inadequate.
1660 Well, he decided, it was up to him to get acquainted in this new world.
1661 It sounded like a threat.
1662 His voice was determined, his eyes were flashing, the lines of his face had grown harsh.
1663 And to her it seemed that the angle of his jaw had changed; its pitch had become unpleasantly aggressive.
1664 At the same time a wave of intense virility seemed to surge out from him and impinge upon her.
1665 "I think you could make it in - in your class," she finished with a laugh.
1666 And though he sat there, blushing and humble, again she felt drawn to him.
1667 She was surprised by a wanton thought that rushed into her mind.
1668 She was shocked by this thought.
1669 It seemed to reveal to her an undreamed depravity in her nature.
1670 Besides, strength to her was a gross and brutish thing.
1671 Her ideal of masculine beauty had always been slender gracefulness.
1672 Yet the thought still persisted.
1673 It bewildered her that she should desire to place her hands on that sunburned neck.
1674 In truth, she was far from robust, and the need of her body and mind was for strength.
1675 But she did not know it.
1676 Never trained that way, you see.
1677 Mebbe you can put me right.
1678 "By going to school, I fancy, and by studying," she answered.
1679 "I went to school when I was a kid," he began to object.
1680 He felt that she had become remoter from him by at least a million miles.
1681 He did not know what "English" meant, but he made a mental note of that item of ignorance and passed on.
1682 You have never attended high school?
1683 "I had two years to run, when I left," he answered.
1684 At the same moment he became aware that a woman was entering the room.
1685 He saw the girl leave her chair and trip swiftly across the floor to the newcomer.
1686 That must be her mother, he thought.
1687 She was a tall, blond woman, slender, and stately, and beautiful.
1688 Her gown was what he might expect in such a house.
1689 His eyes delighted in the graceful lines of it.
1690 She and her dress together reminded him of women on the stage.
1691 Next his mind leaped to the Grand Hotel at Yokohama, where, too, from the sidewalk, he had seen grand ladies.
1692 Then the city and the harbor of Yokohama, in a thousand pictures, began flashing before his eyes.
1693 But he swiftly dismissed the kaleidoscope of memory, oppressed by the urgent need of the present.
1694 The process of getting into the dining room was a nightmare to him.
1695 Between halts and stumbles, jerks and lurches, locomotion had at times seemed impossible.
1696 But at last he had made it, and was seated alongside of Her.
1697 The array of knives and forks frightened him.
1698 He watched them eating, and decided that they ate like pigs.
1699 Well, he would be careful here.
1700 He would make no noise.
1701 He would keep his mind upon it all the time.
1702 He glanced around the table.
1703 They were her brothers, he reminded himself, and his heart warmed toward them.
1704 How they loved each other, the members of this family!
1705 Not in his world were such displays of affection between parents and children made.
1706 It was a revelation of the heights of existence that were attained in the world above.
1707 It was the finest thing yet that he had seen in this small glimpse of that world.
1708 He was moved deeply by appreciation of it, and his heart was melting with sympathetic tenderness.
1709 He had starved for love all his life.
1710 His nature craved love.
1711 It was an organic demand of his being.
1712 Yet he had gone without, and hardened himself in the process.
1713 He had not known that he needed love.
1714 Nor did he know it now.
1715 He merely saw it in operation, and thrilled to it, and thought it fine, and high, and splendid.
1716 Morse was not there.
1717 It was difficult enough getting acquainted with her, and her mother, and her brother, Norman.
1718 Arthur he already knew somewhat.
1719 The father would have been too much for him, he felt sure.
1720 It seemed to him that he had never worked so hard in his life.
1721 He was oppressed throughout the meal by the thought of finger-bowls.
1722 Irrelevantly, insistently, scores of times, he wondered when they would come on and what they looked like.
1723 What should his attitude be?
1724 He wrestled continually and anxiously with the problem.
1725 It was during the first part of the dinner, struggling to decide upon his attitude, that he was very quiet.
1726 So he sat at table, perturbed by his own unfitness and at the same time charmed by all that went on about him.
1727 For the first time he realized that eating was something more than a utilitarian function.
1728 He was unaware of what he ate.
1729 It was merely food.
1730 He was feasting his love of beauty at this table where eating was an aesthetic function.
1731 It was an intellectual function, too.
1732 His mind was stirred.
1733 The romance, and beauty, and high vigor of the books were coming true.
1734 He curbed the impulse, arising out of his sea-training, to say "Yes, sir," and "No, sir," to her brothers.
1735 Also, it was a dictate of his pride.
1736 He was a civilized man, that was what he was, shoulder to shoulder, at dinner, with people he had read about in books.
1737 He was in the books himself, adventuring through the printed pages of bound volumes.
1738 He was no gentle lamb, and the part of second fiddle would never do for the high-pitched dominance of his nature.
1739 Besides, he was confident that he could not keep it up.
1740 He was by nature powerful of thought and sensibility, and the creative spirit was restive and urgent.
1741 But he recovered himself quickly.
1742 His cheeks were hot.
1743 He took it as an exposure of another of his deficiencies.
1744 "Yes," he said depreciatingly.
1745 I can hit like a mule with my arms and shoulders.
1746 He was not happy at what he had said.
1747 He was filled with disgust at himself.
1748 He had loosed the guard upon his tongue and talked about things that were not nice.
1749 He certainly had not succeeded so far.
1750 The masquerade would fail, and besides, masquerade was foreign to his nature.
1751 There was no room in him for sham or artifice.
1752 Whatever happened, he must be real.
1753 Upon that he was resolved.
1754 "Mathematics, arithmetic," was the answer.
1755 Martin Eden nodded.
1756 He had caught a glimpse of the apparently illimitable vistas of knowledge.
1757 What he saw took on tangibility.
1758 His abnormal power of vision made abstractions take on concrete form.
1759 It was like wine to him.
1760 Martin Eden remembered his decision.
1761 He had been a member of the crew of the smuggling schooner Halcyon when she was captured by a revenue cutter.
1762 He saw with wide eyes, and he could tell what he saw.
1763 He brought the pulsing sea before them, and the men and the ships upon the sea.
1764 He communicated his power of vision, till they saw with his eyes what he had seen.
1765 And while he talked, the girl looked at him with startled eyes.
1766 His fire warmed her.
1767 She wondered if she had been cold all her days.
1768 She felt that she must lean toward him, and resisted by an effort.
1769 Then, too, there was the counter impulse to shrink away from him.
1770 And ever and again would come the draw of him, till she thought he must be evil to have such power over her.
1771 All that was most firmly established in her mind was rocking.
1772 His romance and adventure were battering at the conventions.
1773 This man from outer darkness was evil.
1774 Her mother saw it, and her mother was right.
1775 The fire of him was no longer warm, and the fear of him was no longer poignant.
1776 He gazed upon her in awe.
1777 In his mind, as in her own, the gulf widened; but faster than it widened, towered his ambition to win across it.
1778 He was remarkably susceptible to music.
1779 It banished sordid fact, flooded his mind with beauty, loosed romance and to its heels added wings.
1780 He did not understand the music she played.
1781 It was different from the dancehall piano-banging and blatant brass bands he had heard.
1782 Once, it entered his mind that there was a deliberate rebuff in all this.
1783 He caught her spirit of antagonism and strove to divine the message that her hands pronounced upon the keys.
1784 Then he dismissed the thought as unworthy and impossible, and yielded himself more freely to the music.
1785 The old delightful condition began to be induced.
1786 The known and the unknown were commingled in the dream-pageant that thronged his vision.
1787 He entered strange ports of sun-washed lands, and trod market-places among barbaric peoples that no man had ever seen.
1788 Swift as thought the pictures came and went.
1789 He lay on a coral beach where the cocoanuts grew down to the mellowsounding surf.
1790 It was a sensuous, tropic night.
1791 In the background a volcano crater was silhouetted against the stars.
1792 Overhead drifted a pale crescent moon, and the Southern Cross burned low in the sky.
1793 He did not merely feel.
1794 And she, glancing at him across her shoulder, saw something of all this in his face.
1795 She was startled.
1796 His mood was essentially religious.
1797 He was humble and meek, filled with selfdisparagement and abasement.
1798 In such frame of mind sinners come to the penitent form.
1799 He was convicted of sin.
1800 But this possession of her was dim and nebulous and totally different from possession as he had known it.
1801 My house is closed.
1802 Cease knocking at my door, and be off.
1803 Inside was heard the clink of chain and bar, and the door was flung open.
1804 David followed the Marquis out of the carriage.
1805 "Assist the lady," he was ordered.
1806 The poet obeyed.
1807 He felt her small hand tremble as he guided her descent.
1808 "Into the house," was the next command.
1809 The room was the long dining-hall of the tavern.
1810 A great oak table ran down its length.
1811 The huge gentleman seated himself in a chair at the nearer end.
1812 The lady sank into another against the wall, with an air of great weariness.
1813 David stood, considering how best he might now take his leave and continue upon his way.
1814 A dozen more lighted candles shone in the hall.
1815 The great bulk of the marquis overflowed his chair.
1816 He was dressed in fine black from head to foot save for the snowy ruffles at his wrist and throat.
1817 Even the hilt and scabbard of his sword were black.
1818 His expression was one of sneering pride.
1819 The ends of an upturned moustache reached nearly to his mocking eyes.
1820 The lady sat motionless, and now David perceived that she was young, and possessed of pathetic and appealing beauty.
1821 He was startled from the contemplation of her forlorn loveliness by the booming voice of the marquis.
1822 I am a poet.
1823 The moustache of the marquis curled nearer to his eyes.
1824 She is of noble descent and is possessed of ten thousand francs a year in her own right.
1825 As to her charms, you have but to observe for yourself.
1826 Do not interrupt me.
1827 You, shepherd, are the first.
1828 Mademoiselle must be wed this night.
1829 If not you, then another.
1830 You have ten minutes in which to make your decision.
1831 Do not vex me with words or questions.
1832 Ten minutes, shepherd; and they are speeding.
1833 The marquis drummed loudly with his white fingers upon the table.
1834 He sank into a veiled attitude of waiting.
1835 It was as if some great house had shut its doors and windows against approach.
1836 "Mademoiselle," he said, and he marvelled to find his words flowing easily before so much elegance and beauty.
1837 I have also had the fancy, at times, that I am a poet.
1838 If it be the test of a poet to adore and cherish the beautiful, that fancy is now strengthened.
1839 Can I serve you in any way, mademoiselle?
1840 The young woman looked up at him with eyes dry and mournful.
1841 He is my uncle, the brother of my father, and my only relative.
1842 He loved my mother, and he hates me because I am like her.
1843 He has made my life one long terror.
1844 I am afraid of his very looks, and never before dared to disobey him.
1845 But to-night he would have married me to a man three times my age.
1846 You will forgive me for bringing this vexation upon you, monsieur.
1847 You will, of course, decline this mad act he tries to force upon you.
1848 But let me thank you for your generous words, at least.
1849 I have had none spoken to me in so long.
1850 Poet he must have been, for Yvonne was forgotten; this fine, new loveliness held him with its freshness and grace.
1851 The subtle perfume from her filled him with strange emotions.
1852 His tender look fell warmly upon her.
1853 She leaned to it, thirstily.
1854 But here David found housing commensurate to his scant purse.
1855 Daylight and candlelight found him at pen and paper.
1856 One afternoon he was returning from a foraging trip to the lower world, with bread and curds and a bottle of thin wine.
1857 A loose, dark cloak, flung open, showed a rich gown beneath.
1858 Her eyes changed swiftly with every little shade of thought.
1859 One hand raised her gown, undraping a little shoe, high-heeled, with its ribbons dangling, untied.
1860 So heavenly she was, so unfitted to stoop, so qualified to charm and command!
1861 Perhaps she had seen David coming, and had waited for his help there.
1862 Ah, would monsieur pardon that she occupied the stairway, but the shoe!
1863 He leaned against the balustrade, clutching his bottle of sour wine.
1864 "You have been so good," she said, smiling.
1865 I have met him twice or thrice upon the stairs.
1866 I questioned him, fearing that he might dwell too near the room in which we are accustomed to meet.
1867 He is mine, if I will.
1868 He writes poems in his garret, and I think he dreams of me.
1869 He will do what I say.
1870 He shall take the message to the palace.
1871 The marquis rose from his chair and bowed.
1872 "You did not permit me to finish my sentence, countess," he said.
1873 I believe you to be good and true, and I know of no other help.
1874 How I flew through the streets among the swaggering men!
1875 Monsieur, my mother is dying.
1876 My uncle is a captain of guards in the palace of the king.
1877 Some one must fly to bring him.
1878 And then, sitting there, his eye fell upon a bright star, one that he and Yvonne had named for theirs.
1879 That set him thinking of Yvonne, and he wondered if he had not been too hasty.
1880 Why should he leave her and his home because a few hot words had come between them?
1881 Was love so brittle a thing that jealousy, the very proof of it, could break it?
1882 Mornings always brought a cure for the little heartaches of evening.
1883 There was yet time for him to return home without any one in the sweetly sleeping village of Vernoy being the wiser.
1884 David rose, and shook off his unrest and the wild mood that had tempted him.
1885 He set his face steadfastly back along the road he had come.
1886 By the time he had retravelled the road to Vernoy, his desire to rove was gone.
1887 The corner of her eye was engaged in a search for David, albeit her set mouth seemed unrelenting.
1888 He saw the look; braved the mouth, drew from it a recantation and, later, a kiss as they walked homeward together.
1889 Three months afterwards they were married.
1890 He gave them a wedding that was heard of three leagues away.
1891 Both the young people were favourites in the village.
1892 The sheep and the cottage descended to him.
1893 He already had the seemliest wife in the village.
1894 But you must keep your eyes upon her yard, for her flower beds were so neat and gay they restored to you your sight.
1895 But a day came when David drew out paper from a long-shut drawer, and began to bite the end of a pencil.
1896 Spring had come again and touched his heart.
1897 Poet he must have been, for now Yvonne was well-nigh forgotten.
1898 This fine new loveliness of earth held him with its witchery and grace.
1899 The perfume from her woods and meadows stirred him strangely.
1900 Daily had he gone forth with his flock, and brought it safe at night.
1901 But now he stretched himself under the hedge and pieced words together on his bits of paper.
1902 Her pans and kettles grew dull, but her eyes had caught their flash.
1903 She pointed out to the poet that his neglect was reducing the flock and bringing woe upon the household.
1904 David hired a boy to guard the sheep, locked himself in the little room at the top of the cottage, and wrote more poems.
1905 The boy, being a poet by nature, but not furnished with an outlet in the way of writing, spent his time in slumber.
1906 Sometimes she would stand in the yard and rail at David through his high window.
1907 Papineau, the kind, wise, meddling old notary, saw this, as he saw everything at which his nose pointed.
1908 It would distress me to be obliged to attest a paper signifying the bankruptcy of his son.
1909 But that is what you are coming to.
1910 I speak as an old friend.
1911 He took David inside to his study and sat him down upon a little island beat upon by a sea of books.
1912 Monsieur Bril had a conscience.
1913 He flinched not even at a mass of manuscript the thickness of a finger-length and rolled to an incorrigible curve.
1914 He broke the back of the roll against his knee and began to read.
1915 He slighted nothing; he bored into the lump as a worm into a nut, seeking for a kernel.
1916 Meanwhile, David sat, marooned, trembling in the spray of so much literature.
1917 It roared in his ears.
1918 He held no chart or compass for voyaging in that sea.
1919 Half the world, he thought, must be writing books.
1920 Then he took off his spectacles, and wiped them with his handkerchief.
1921 "In the best of health," said David.
1922 The flock has had ill fortune.
1923 To that number it has decreased from eight hundred and fifty.
1924 The sheep brought you plenty.
1925 You went into the fields with them and lived in the keen air and ate the sweet bread of contentment.
1926 Am I right thus far?
1927 "It was so," said David.
1928 "I see a crow," said David, looking.
1929 You know that bird, Monsieur Mignot; he is the philosopher of the air.
1930 He is happy through submission to his lot.
1931 None so merry or full-crawed as he with his whimsical eye and rollicking step.
1932 The fields yield him what he desires.
1933 Is the nightingale any happier, do you think?
1934 David rose to his feet.
1935 The crow cawed harshly from his tree.
1936 "I thank you, Monsieur Bril," he said, slowly.
1937 "I could not have missed it," said Monsieur Bril, with a sigh.
1938 Live your poetry, man; do not try to write it any more.
1939 "I thank you," said David, again.
1940 Back along the road to Vernoy he trudged with his poems under his arm.
1941 I must purchase firearms to protect them.
1942 What have you?
1943 There are some choice firearms in the lot.
1944 This pistol - oh, a weapon fit for a prince!
1945 "I will charge it," said Zeigler.
1946 David laid his pistol under his coat and walked to his cottage.
1947 Yvonne was not there.
1948 Of late she had taken to gadding much among the neighbours.
1949 But a fire was glowing in the kitchen stove.
1950 David opened the door of it and thrust his poems in upon the coals.
1951 As they blazed up they made a singing, harsh sound in the flue.
1952 He went up to his attic room and closed the door.
1953 So quiet was the village that a score of people heard the roar of the great pistol.
1954 They flocked thither, and up the stairs where the smoke, issuing, drew their notice.
1955 The women chattered in a luxury of zealous pity.
1956 Robert, taking his cigar from his mouth.
1957 Robert began to mask, as was his habit, a tendency to softheartedness with a spurious anger.
1958 I told you to go home, Bushrod.
1959 Miss Lucy said that, did she?
1960 Confound it!
1961 Are you going to stand there all night gabbing like a coffee-coloured gander?
1962 The train whistled again.
1963 Now it was at the water tank, a mile away.
1964 "Marse Robert," said Uncle Bushrod, laying his hand on the satchel that the banker held.
1965 I knows where you got it in de bank.
1966 Uncle Bushrod bowed his head to the expected storm, but he did not flinch.
1967 If the house of Weymouth was to fall, he would fall with it.
1968 The banker spoke, and Uncle Bushrod blinked with surprise.
1969 The storm was there, but it was suppressed to the quietness of a summer breeze.
1970 You have presumed upon the leniency with which you have been treated to meddle unpardonably.
1971 So you know what is in this satchel!
1972 Your long and faithful service is some excuse, but - go home, Bushrod - not another word!
1973 But Bushrod grasped the satchel with a firmer hand.
1974 The headlight of the train was now lightening the shadows about the station.
1975 The roar was increasing, and folks were stirring about at the track side.
1976 The train was standing at the station.
1977 Some men were pushing trucks along the side.
1978 Two or three sleepy passengers got off and wandered away into the night.
1979 Robert released his hold on the satchel.
1980 You can understand that, of course.
1981 "Listen," said the millionaire, impressively.
1982 "Then you force me to say good night," said the millionaire.
1983 Twice that day had his money been scorned by simple ones to whom his dollars had appeared as but tin tobacco-tags.
1984 Pilkins walked away rapidly, and then turned abruptly and returned to the bench where the young couple sat.
1985 He took off his hat and began to speak.
1986 His voice just suited me.
1987 Man, three days of that light-housekeeping was plenty for me.
1988 Aunt Maggie was affectionate as ever.
1989 She was a hedger from Hedgersville, Hedger County.
1990 Seventy-five cents a day was the limit she set.
1991 We cooked our own meals in the room.
1992 She offers to move into a swell room with a two-burner stove and running water.
1993 I walked straight to the Acropolis and asked for my job back, and I got it.
1994 How did you say your writings were getting along?
1995 And, by the way, did you ever happen to know a newspaper artist - oh, shut up!
1996 I know I asked you before.
1997 I wonder what paper he works on?
1998 Ida Bates saw who it was with her back-hair comb.
1999 I saw her turn pink, perfect statue that she was - a miracle that I share with Pygmalion only.
2000 After the ceremony I dragged Lathrop aside.
2001 It was me that they hung out paper flowers and palm branches for.
2002 I am not a jealous man; I am stating facts.
2003 The people were Nebuchadnezzars; they bit the grass before me; there was no dust in the town for them to bite.
2004 They bowed down to Judson Tate.
2005 They knew that I was the power behind Sancho Benavides.
2006 Looking handsome.
2007 Oh, what a mistake!
2008 But I was going to tell you.
2009 The Little Big High Low Jack-in-the-game of the town came around and kowtowed.
2010 They had heard about Judson Tate.
2011 But there are compensations.
2012 For instance, I am It in this country as far as the eye can reach, and then a few perches and poles.
2013 Or large, either.
2014 With your reputation and my looks combined in one man, how can she resist him?
2015 And what do you think he wants me to do?
2016 For him to ask me was a compliment - an acknowledgment of his own shortcomings.
2017 Well, Fergus and the duenna, Francesca, attended to the details.
2018 And one night they fetched me a long black cloak with a high collar, and led me to the house at midnight.
2019 And, smothering a laugh as I thought of the tongue-tied Fergus, I began to talk.
2020 Both of us knew English and Spanish; so in two languages I tried to win the heart of the lady for my friend Fergus.
2021 But for the bars to the window I could have done it in one.
2022 At the end of the hour she dismissed me and gave me a big, red rose.
2023 I handed it over to Fergus when I got home.
2024 At last she admitted that her heart was mine, and spoke of having seen me every afternoon when she drove in the plaza.
2025 It was Fergus she had seen, of course.
2026 But it was my talk that won her.
2027 And she put her hand between the bars for me to kiss.
2028 I bestowed the kiss and took the news to Fergus.
2029 But I went; and children and dogs took to the banana groves and mangrove swamps as soon as they had a look at my face.
2030 I saw at a glance that I must be hers and she mine forever.
2031 I thought of my face and nearly fainted; and then I thought of my other talents and stood upright again.
2032 And I had been wooing her for three weeks for another man!
2033 But she never looked at me.
2034 And that handsome man only ruffles his curls and smirks and prances like a lady-killer at my side.
2035 I am no man to play tricks on a friend.
2036 Struck too, are you?
2037 Francesca tells me that Anabela talks of nothing but me, day and night.
2038 Judson Tate.
2039 But up prances the alcalde and almost wipes the dust off my shoes with his forehead.
2040 No mere good looks could have won me that sensational entrance.
2041 Fergus was at the other end of the room trying to break away from two maroons and a claybank girl.
2042 When she took the first look at my face she dropped her fan and nearly turned her chair over from the shock.
2043 When she heard me speak she jumped, and her eyes got as big as alligator pears.
2044 She was coming my way.
2045 She knew of Judson Tate, and what a big man he was, and the big things he had done; and that was in my favour.
2046 I ranged from the second G below the staff up to F-sharp above it.
2047 I set my voice to poetry, art, romance, flowers, and moonlight.
2048 Oh, the vocal is the true art - no doubt about that.
2049 Handsome is as handsome palavers.
2050 In two weeks Anabela was engaged to me, and Fergus was out.
2051 I was calling regular every evening then, and we were to be married in a month.
2052 She looked at my rugged features without any expression of fear or repugnance.
2053 I walked slowly up to the little park near my hotel, leaving Judson Tate alone with his conscience.
2054 My feelings were lacerated.
2055 He had poured gently upon me a story that I might have used.
2056 And, at the last it had proven to be a commercial pill, deftly coated with the sugar of fiction.
2057 The worst of it was that I could not offer it for sale.
2058 Advertising departments and counting-rooms look down upon me.
2059 And it would never do for the literary.
2060 Therefore I sat upon a bench with other disappointed ones until my eyelids drooped.
2061 I went to my room, and, as my custom is, read for an hour stories in my favourite magazines.
2062 This was to get my mind back to art again.
2063 And as I read each story, I threw the magazines sadly and hopelessly, one by one, upon the floor.
2064 And when the last one was hurled from me I took heart.
2065 Genius, whose coronations alone are democratic, had woven a chaplet of chaparral for the brow of Lonny Briscoe.
2066 The outcome, seven feet by twelve of besmeared canvas, stood, gilt-framed, in the lobby of the Capitol.
2067 The boarding-houses were corralling the easy dollars of the gamesome law-makers.
2068 Order reigned within her borders.
2069 Life and property were as safe there, sir, as anywhere among the corrupt cities of the effete East.
2070 With impunity might the tenderfoot ventilate his "stovepipe" or his theories of culture.
2071 The arts and sciences received nurture and subsidy.
2072 Rarely has the San Saba country contributed to the spread of the fine arts.
2073 Why he came to woo art is beyond postulation.
2074 Beyond doubt, some spore of the afflatus must have sprung up within him in spite of the desert soil of San Saba.
2075 The landscape presented fitting and faithful accessories.
2076 Chaparral, mesquit, and pear were distributed in just proportions.
2077 A richly mottled rattlesnake lay coiled beneath a pale green clump of prickly pear in the foreground.
2078 Citizens and lawmakers passed there by twos and groups and sometimes crowds to gaze upon it.
2079 Many - perhaps a majority of them - had lived the prairie life and recalled easily the familiar scene.
2080 Hundreds of connoisseurs had straddled their broncos and ridden miles to view it before its removal to the capital.
2081 Senator Mullens desired reelection, and he knew the importance of the San Saba vote.
2082 He also knew that with the help of Senator Kinney - who was a power in the legislature - the thing could be put through.
2083 Few artists have uncovered their first picture to the world under happier auspices than did Lonny Briscoe.
2084 It looks like the worst kind of a chromo to me.
2085 The man who carved the state out of the wilderness.
2086 The man who settled the Indians.
2087 The man who cleaned out the horse thieves.
2088 The man who refused the crown.
2089 Do you see the point now?
2090 "Wrap up the picture," said Kinney.
2091 By the hour and minute of it you must dwell under the sway and direct authority of Phoebe, the ninth satellite.
2092 And for many years before.
2093 I told him that for the time we would banish both astrology and astronomy from our heads.
2094 The manifest valour and enthusiasm of the man drew me.
2095 We sent for a tug to tow us back and lost three days.
2096 When we struck the blue waters of the Gulf, all the storm clouds of the Atlantic seemed to have concentrated above us.
2097 He weathered every storm on deck, smoking a black pipe, to keep which alight rain and sea-water seemed but as oil.
2098 And he shook his fist at the black clouds behind which his baleful star winked its unseen eye.
2099 When the skies cleared one evening, he reviled his malignant guardian with grim humour.
2100 Twinkle, twinkle, little devil!
2101 Get busy and sink the ship, you one-eyed banshee.
2102 Sounds as mild as a milkmaid.
2103 Five days only should have landed us in Esperando.
2104 Also in the manual of arms - but, alas!
2105 Even a Mexican might have crossed his path in safety while he was in this mood.
2106 The Kid openly boarded the north-bound passenger train that departed five minutes later.
2107 But at Webb, a few miles out, where it was flagged to take on a traveller, he abandoned that manner of escape.
2108 There were telegraph stations ahead; and the Kid looked askance at electricity and steam.
2109 Saddle and spur were his rocks of safety.
2110 The man whom he had shot was a stranger to him.
2111 Most of them waited, half asleep, with sagging limbs and drooping heads.
2112 But one, a long-legged roan with a curved neck, snorted and pawed the turf.
2113 For the Kid there was no turning back now.
2114 With the springing roan under him he felt little care or uneasiness.
2115 A sailor had been dispatched for the missing cargo.
2116 Meanwhile the captain paced the sands, chewing profanely at his pocket store.
2117 His complexion was naturally dark; and the sun and wind of an outdoor life had burned it to a coffee brown.
2118 He looked beyond Captain Boone at the gulf with the impersonal and expressionless dignity of a Chinese emperor.
2119 I never saw it before.
2120 I was just looking at it.
2121 Not thinking of selling it, are you?
2122 "Not this trip," said the captain.
2123 Boone, skipper.
2124 Cargo - lumber, corrugated iron, and machetes.
2125 The bananys and oranges and hurricanes and pineapples that ye eat comes from there.
2126 Second cabin.
2127 "All right, buddy," said the captain.
2128 Thacker, the United States consul at Buenas Tierras, was not yet drunk.
2129 They told me it was customary to light at your camp before starting in to round up the town.
2130 I just came in on a ship from Texas.
2131 The Kid laughed.
2132 "Sprague Dalton," he said.
2133 Try a cigar?
2134 "They speak Spanish here," said the consul.
2135 Everybody speaks it on the range where I come from.
2136 He regarded the kid absorbedly.
2137 "You look like a Spaniard, too," he continued.
2138 And I come down to your parrot-and-monkey range just for to smell the morning-glories and marigolds.
2139 Thacker got up and closed the door.
2140 "Let me see your hand," he said.
2141 "I can do it," he said excitedly.
2142 It will heal in a week.
2143 But no barehanded scrapping, like ladies at a tea-party, for me.
2144 Old Santos Urique lives there.
2145 He owns half the gold-mines in the country.
2146 Twelve years ago they lost a kid.
2147 Everybody knows about it.
2148 Brace up, and make a man of yourself.
2149 Stop cracking safes, and live straight.
2150 "Oh, no," laughed the warden.
2151 How was it you happened to get sent up on that Springfield job?
2152 Or was it simply a case of a mean old jury that had it in for you?
2153 Unlock him at seven in the morning, and let him come to the bull-pen.
2154 Better think over my advice, Valentine.
2155 The warden gave him a cigar, and shook hands.
2156 They came by the hotel where Jimmy still boarded, and he ran up to his room and brought along his suitcase.
2157 Then they went on to the bank.
2158 The clerks were pleased to be greeted by the good-looking, agreeable young man who was going to marry Miss Annabel.
2159 Jimmy set his suit-case down.
2160 Ralph, how heavy it is?
2161 Feels like it was full of gold bricks.
2162 The Elmore Bank had just put in a new safe and vault.
2163 Adams was very proud of it, and insisted on an inspection by every one.
2164 The vault was a small one, but it had a new, patented door.
2165 It fastened with three solid steel bolts thrown simultaneously with a single handle, and had a time-lock.
2166 Spencer, who showed a courteous but not too intelligent interest.
2167 The two children, May and Agatha, were delighted by the shining metal and funny clock and knobs.
2168 Suddenly there was a scream or two from the women, and a commotion.
2169 Robbins, an investigator by nature, sent a curious glance roving about the room.
2170 Oh, madame!
2171 Since when - oh!
2172 At his words, Madame Tibault and Dumars approached.
2173 Where I get them from?
2174 Robbins explained.
2175 Mister Morin was right.
2176 He dragged Dumars by the arm into the outer room.
2177 I advise you to join me.
2178 Now, that green stuff you drink is no good.
2179 It stimulates thought.
2180 What we want to do is to forget to remember.
2181 Her name is Belle of Kentucky, twelveyear-old Bourbon.
2182 In quarts.
2183 How does the idea strike you?
2184 A man with a thick black-leather wallet under his arm left the train and walked rapidly up the main street of the town.
2185 Indecision had no part in the movements of the man with the wallet.
2186 He was well dressed in the prevailing Eastern style.
2187 His air denoted a quiet but conscious reserve force, if not actual authority.
2188 Upon one corner stood the post-office.
2189 The cashier was examining the mail when he noticed the stranger standing at his window.
2190 He had had to make that statement so often to early birds since San Rosario adopted city banking hours.
2191 "I am well aware of that," said the other man, in cool, brittle tones.
2192 Walk right around, please.
2193 Edlinger, the cashier - a middle-aged gentleman of deliberation, discretion, and method.
2194 Not overly much money on hand, but able to stand the storms, sir, stand the storms.
2195 I will take the cash first, please.
2196 He knew it was right to a cent, and he had nothing to fear, but he was nervous and flustered.
2197 So was every man in the bank.
2198 He looked to be a man who would never make nor overlook an error.
2199 Nettlewick first seized the currency, and with a rapid, almost juggling motion, counted it by packages.
2200 Then he spun the sponge cup toward him and verified the count by bills.
2201 The air was full of fractional currency when he came to the halves and quarters.
2202 He counted the last nickle and dime.
2203 He had the scales brought, and he weighed every sack of silver in the vault.
2204 This newly-imported examiner was so different from Sam Turner.
2205 Halves and quarters and dimes?
2206 Not for Sam Turner.
2207 "No chicken feed for me," he would say when they were set before him.
2208 List of over-drafts, please.
2209 Unsigned bills of the bank, next.
2210 Two men of very different types shook hands.
2211 One was a finished product of the world of straight lines, conventional methods, and formal affairs.
2212 The other was something freer, wider, and nearer to nature.
2213 Tom Kingman had not been cut to any pattern.
2214 He had been mule-driver, cowboy, ranger, soldier, sheriff, prospector, and cattleman.
2215 We will take them up now, if you please.
2216 He had gone through the First National at almost record-breaking speed - but thoroughly, as he did everything.
2217 The running order of the bank was smooth and clean, and that had facilitated his work.
2218 There was but one other bank in the town.
2219 He received from the Government a fee of twenty-five dollars for each bank that he examined.
2220 He should be able to go over those loans and discounts in half an hour.
2221 Otherwise, he would have to spend the night and Sunday in this uninteresting Western town.
2222 Nettlewick was rushing matters.
2223 Nobody in the bank knows those notes as I do.
2224 Next, he took up the larger loans, inquiring scrupulously into the condition of their endorsers or securities.
2225 The clerical work seems to be done accurately and punctually.
2226 Your past-due paper is moderate in amount, and promises only a small loss.
2227 And now, there is one thing more, and I will have finished with the bank.
2228 They are secured, according to their faces, by various stocks, bonds, shares, etc.
2229 Those securities are missing from the notes to which they should be attached.
2230 I suppose you have them in the safe or vault.
2231 You will permit me to examine them.
2232 I have taken them.
2233 You may hold me personally responsible for their absence.
2234 Nettlewick felt a slight thrill.
2235 He had not expected this.
2236 He had struck a momentous trail when the hunt was drawing to a close.
2237 "The securities were taken by me," repeated the major.
2238 There was a desk, and a table, and half-a-dozen leather-covered chairs.
2239 On the wall was the mounted head of a Texas steer with horns five feet from tip to tip.
2240 You are aware, also, of what my duty must compel me to do.
2241 Do your duty.
2242 But, I spoke of my friend.
2243 I did want you to hear me tell you about Bob.
2244 Nettlewick settled himself in his chair.
2245 There would be no leaving San Rosario for him that day.
2246 It was not the first crime the examiner had unearthed.
2247 One cashier had shot himself at his desk before him.
2248 The day is that hot, senor.
2249 Maybeso it is of desirableness to leave him out to get the cool.
2250 I know what you want.
2251 You want to tell me that story again about Johnny Ammiger and the widow on the train.
2252 Sitting on ice, and calling his best friends pseudonyms.
2253 Now, what was it Johnny said to the widow first?
2254 Yes, neither me nor Jones breathed with soul so dead.
2255 He was some pumpkin both in politics and colour, and the friend of me and Jones.
2256 While he was in the States he had acquired a synopsis of the English language and the art of admiring our institutions.
2257 The hearts of Americans and Salvadorians should beat together.
2258 Of your history and your great Washington I know.
2259 It made us feel good.
2260 He must have heard the news going round in Philadelphia about that disturbance we had with England.
2261 We were talking about it when you came in.
2262 He might suspend the rules for one day.
2263 He will aid us.
2264 He dug his trench on the plaza, and got half a beef on the coals for an all-night roast.
2265 None of them have ever held Federal positions.
2266 They have been land-holders, slave-owners, and planters on a large scale.
2267 Have you decided to accept this appointment, William?
2268 "I am thinking it over," said Billy, slowly, regarding the ash of his cigar.
2269 "You have been a good son to me," continued the Governor, stirring his pipe with the handle of a penholder.
2270 Especially in this, our native town, is your name linked with mine in the talk of our citizens.
2271 "I never knew anyone to forget the vindculum," murmured Billy, unintelligibly.
2272 I have not hesitated to exert it in your behalf whenever opportunity offered.
2273 And you have deserved it, William.
2274 And now this appointment comes to take you away from me.
2275 I have but a few years left to live.
2276 I am almost dependent upon others now, even in walking and dressing.
2277 What would I do without you, my son?
2278 A tear trickled from his eye.
2279 Elmville is good enough for me.
2280 The General whistled.
2281 When does he leave?
2282 We must have a reception.
2283 Great Gatlings!
2284 Think of it!
2285 Our little, wood-sawing, mealy-mouthed Billy!
2286 Elmville is disgraced forever until she lines up in a hurry for ratification and apology.
2287 The venerable Moloch smiled fatuously.
2288 He refuses to leave me in my old age.
2289 He is a good son.
2290 The commissioner betrayed a slight impatience.
2291 Am I just a knot on a mesquite stump?
2292 Charge it up to Insurance and the other two sideshows.
2293 Come, now, Uncle Frank, let her have the money.
2294 The clerks were beginning to listen.
2295 Neither can you.
2296 The treasurer called him back.
2297 "Never mind, Uncle Frank," said the commissioner, in a softer tone.
2298 Besides, her case is in my hands.
2299 It seems to be about as important as an almanac or a hotel register.
2300 You want to keep your eye on the Department of Insurance, Statistics, and History.
2301 The commissioner returned to his office, looking thoughtful.
2302 He opened and closed an inkstand on his desk many times with extreme and undue attention.
2303 The department will see you through.
2304 He is living there now.
2305 He wanted to give a dinner at his old home to a few friends.
2306 The prairies were somewhat dim, and the moonlight was pale orange, diluted with particles of an impalpable, flying mist.
2307 Santa turned her face to the southeast and threw three kisses thitherward; for there was none to see.
2308 Then she sped silently to the blacksmith-shop, fifty yards away; and what she did there can only be surmised.
2309 But the forge glowed red; and there was a faint hammering such as Cupid might make when he sharpens his arrow-points.
2310 To the corral where the Sussex cattle were penned she sped with these things swiftly in the moonlight.
2311 She opened the gate and slipped inside the corral.
2312 The Sussex cattle were mostly a dark red.
2313 But among this bunch was one that was milky white - notable among the others.
2314 And now Santa shook from her shoulder something that we had not seen before - a rope lasso.
2315 She freed the loop of it, coiling the length in her left hand, and plunged into the thick of the cattle.
2316 The white cow was her object.
2317 She swung the lasso, which caught one horn and slipped off.
2318 The next throw encircled the forefeet and the animal fell heavily.
2319 Santa made for it like a panther; but it scrambled up and dashed against her, knocking her over like a blade of grass.
2320 Again she made her cast, while the aroused cattle milled around the four sides of the corral in a plunging mass.
2321 And then she ran swiftly to her furnace at the gate and brought the branding-iron, queerly shaped and white-hot.
2322 The beasts arrived at Rancho Seco one evening at dusk; and were received and counted by the foreman of the ranch.
2323 He dismounted stiffly, and strode, with whizzing spurs, to the house.
2324 His horse gave a great sigh and swayed foam-streaked, with down-drooping head and closed eyes.
2325 But waste not your pity upon Belshazzar, the flea-bitten sorrel.
2326 The horseman stumbled into the house.
2327 "I was a skunk," said Webb Yeager.
2328 "I saw it," said Webb.
2329 What they meant God knows; and you shall know, if you rightly read the primer of events.
2330 I was a mangy, sheep-stealing coyote.
2331 Do you know who I am?
2332 I am Santa Yeager, First Lady of the Bedchamber.
2333 Come here.
2334 She dragged him from the gallery into the room to the right.
2335 Down on your knees and look at his Highness.
2336 Them beeves is just turned out on the trail.
2337 "You hear your boss, Bud," said Webb Yeager, with a broad grin - just as he had said a year ago.
2338 "I thought so," said Quinn.
2339 What brand is that?
2340 I turned to "What to do in Case of Accidents," on page 117.
2341 I run my finger down the page, and struck it.
2342 Good old Herkimer, he never overlooked anything!
2343 It said: Suffocation from Inhaling Smoke or Gas.
2344 There is nothing better than flaxseed.
2345 Place a few seed in the outer corner of the eye.
2346 I shoved the Handbook back in my pocket, and grabbed a boy that was running by.
2347 Four of the firemen and citizens grabs hold of me.
2348 And then I busted into the house.
2349 I was a heap more cooked than the hurry-up orders of broiled chicken that you get in restaurants.
2350 I carried her out fifty yards from the house and laid her on the grass.
2351 They fetched my coat, and I gets out the Handbook.
2352 Flaxseed in the outer corner of the eye, it says.
2353 That flaxseed done me more good than anything I ever tried.
2354 Sampson, embellishing and adorning it.
2355 Some of the boys been telling you about me and that pancake racket?
2356 Was there a story about pancakes?
2357 They never irritated me like they do most cowmen.
2358 I never thought it was worth while to be hostile with a snoozer.
2359 The sheep person helped her off; and they stood throwing each other sentences all sprightful and sagacious for a while.
2360 His seeing arrangement was grey enough, but his eye-lashes was pink and his hair was sandy, and that gave you the idea.
2361 Sheep man?
2362 I popped over one after the other with my forty-five, just to show him.
2363 That is a bad habit you have got of riding with young ladies over at Pimienta.
2364 What would I do with a wife?
2365 If you ever saw that ranch of mine!
2366 I do my own cooking and mending.
2367 She sang some, and exasperated the piano quite a lot with quotations from the operas.
2368 Thinks I, if Jackson Bird can now be persuaded to migrate, I win.
2369 Pancakes is just whirling in my head like wagon wheels.
2370 Start her off, now - pound of flour, eight dozen eggs, and so on.
2371 He turns around to get a glass on the table, and I see a forty-five in his hip pocket.
2372 We got there in time for dinner; and I put our thumb-prints on the register of the most expensive hotel in the city.
2373 Object is no expense.
2374 It was all served at once.
2375 The dinner comes in threes of a kind.
2376 Louis topics, the water supply and the colour line.
2377 Solly gets up and comes around to me.
2378 I thought you said they had some beans here.
2379 He saw a saddleshop open, and some of the sadness faded from his eyes.
2380 Eleven hundred dollars the two cost him.
2381 In a little side street, where there was no street and no sidewalks and no houses, he finds what he is looking for.
2382 We go into a shanty and sit on high stools among stevedores and boatmen, and eat beans with tin spoons.
2383 Yes, sir, beans - beans boiled with salt pork.
2384 And the building-and-loan associations and the fair have about killed it.
2385 Guess we might as well go to bed.
2386 Wait till you see Chicago, though.
2387 But not for the grass-fed man of the pampas!
2388 Solly grew sadder day by day.
2389 And I got fearful about my salary, and knew I must play my trump card.
2390 I knew his habits by then; so in a couple of hours I found him in a saddle-shop.
2391 He invested about nine hundred dollars in there.
2392 I wanted to know where to look for Solly when he got lost.
2393 I showed him the horse-cars on Broadway and the Staten Island ferry-boats.
2394 And then I piled up the sensations on him, but always keeping a lot of warmer ones up my sleeve.
2395 They were out in numerous quantities, with the fat of the land showing in their clothes.
2396 It was his first in two weeks, and it gave me hope.
2397 She was a chorus-girl in a Broadway musical comedy.
2398 I followed him.
2399 I wondered whether anybody was.
2400 But pretty soon afterward Solly failed to show up at dinner-time for several days.
2401 I cornered him.
2402 He confessed that he had found a restaurant on Third Avenue where they cooked beans in Texas style.
2403 I made him take me there.
2404 The minute I set foot inside the door I threw up my hands.
2405 And then we sat down and had beans.
2406 I saw her working it.
2407 She was healthy-looking and plain dressed.
2408 When she wants a man, she manages it so that every time he looks at her he finds her looking at him.
2409 I went out and found a cab.
2410 I felt sure there was something wrong.
2411 Neither was the smooth-haired lady.
2412 I asked Solly to step around the corner for a few words.
2413 He was grinning clear across his face; but I had not administered the grin.
2414 And they are fit for kings to ride on.
2415 The six he sent me must have cost him three thousand dollars.
2416 Who would buy one except one of these rajahs and princes of Asia and Africa?
2417 I know every tan royal dub and smoked princerino from Mindanao to the Caspian Sea.
2418 Now look here.
2419 From an inside pocket he drew a tightly folded newspaper with muchworn edges, and indicated a paragraph.
2420 "Read that," said the saddler to royalty.
2421 His stables contain more than a thousand horses of the purest Persian breeds.
2422 It is said that this powerful prince contemplates a visit to the United States at an early date.
2423 Polk triumphantly.
2424 Have you three dollars that you could loan me for a short time?
2425 It happened that I had; and I did.
2426 The floor was bare and clean.
2427 White curtains waved in the gulf breeze through the open windows.
2428 Some well-mounted heads of deer and one of an enormous black javeli projected from the walls.
2429 A wide, cool cot-bed stood in a corner.
2430 Nueces County people regarded this guest chamber as fit for a prince.
2431 McGuire showed his eyeteeth at it.
2432 He took out his nickel and spun it up to the ceiling.
2433 Well, you can frisk me if you wanter.
2434 Once was quite a plenty.
2435 I never held you up for a cent.
2436 I never gave you a hard-luck story till you asked me.
2437 Here I am fifty miles from a bellboy or a cocktail.
2438 Raidler went to the door and called.
2439 A slender, bright-complexioned Mexican youth about twenty came quickly.
2440 Raidler spoke to him in Spanish.
2441 He is very sick.
2442 What doesn't belong in this list: Meat, Eggs, Wife, Blowjob?
2443 Blowjob: You can beat your meat, eggs or wife, but you can't beat a blowjob.
2444 Q: What's the speed limit of sex?
2445 A: 68 because at 69 you have to turn around.
2446 What do a Rubix cube and a penis have in common?
2447 The longer you play with them, the harder they get.
2448 What's the difference between your paycheck and your cock?
2449 You don't have to beg your wife to blow your paycheck!
2450 Three words to ruin a man's ego.
2451 How does a guy know if he has a high spermcount?
2452 If the girl has to chew, before she swallows.
2453 What do you get when you cross Raggedy Ann and the Pillsbury Dough Boy?
2454 A red headed bitch with a yeast infection.
2455 Q: What do you do with 365 used rubbers?
2456 A: Melt them down, make a tire, and call it Goodyear.
2457 What does bungee jumping and hookers have in common?
2458 They both cost a hundred bucks and if the rubber breaks, you're screwed.
2459 Curl Up and Die.
2460 I walked into a hair salon with my husband and three kids in tow and asked loudly, How much do you charge for a shampoo and a blow job?
2461 Pad, please!
2462 An insurance man visited me at home to talk about our mortgage insurance.
2463 He was throwing a lot of facts and figures at me, and I wanted to follow as best I could, so I told my 6-year-old son to run and get me a pad.
2464 He came back and handed me a Kotex right in front of our guest.
2465 Ho, Ho, Ho.
2466 I was taking a shower when my two year old son came into the bathroom and wrapped himself in toilet paper.
2467 Although he made a mess, he looked adorable, so I ran for my camera and took a few shots.
2468 They came out so well that I had copies made and included one with each of our Christmas cards.
2469 Days later, a relative called about the picture, laughing hysterically, and suggesting I take a closer look.
2470 Puzzled, I stared at the photo and was shocked to discover that in addition to my son, I had captured my reflection in the mirror - wearing nothing but a camera!
2471 Lady Golfer.
2472 I was at the golf store comparing different kinds of golf balls.
2473 I was unhappy with the women's type I had been using.
2474 After browsing for several minutes, I was approached by one of the good-looking gentlemen who works at the store.
2475 He asked if he could help me.
2476 Without thinking, I looked at him and said, I think I like playing with men's balls.
2477 Nuts about You.
2478 My sister and I were at the mall and passed by a store that sold a variety of nuts.
2479 As we were looking at the display case, the boy behind the counter asked if we needed any help.
2480 I replied, No, I'm just looking at your nuts.
2481 My sister started to laugh hysterically, the boy grinned, and I turned beet-red and walked away.
2482 To this day, my sister has never let me forget.
2483 Na-na na-na na-nah!
2484 While in line at the bank one afternoon, my toddler decided to release some pent-up energy and ran amok.
2485 I was finally able to grab hold of her after receiving looks of disgust and annoyance from other patrons.
2486 I told her that if she did not start behaving right now she would be punished.
2487 To my horror, she looked me in the eye and said in a voice just as threatening, If you don't let me go right now, I will tell Grandma that I saw you kissing Daddy's pee-pee last night!
2488 The silence was deafening after this enlightening exchange.
2489 Even the tellers stopped what they were doing.
2490 I mustered up the last of my dignity and walked out of the bank with my daughter in tow.
2491 The last thing I heard when the door closed behind me were screams of laughter.
2492 It was the day before my eighteenth birthday.
2493 I was living at home, but my parents had gone out for the evening, so I invited my girlfriend over for a romantic night alone.
2494 As we lay in bed after making love, we heard the telephone ring downstairs.
2495 I suggested to my girlfriend that I give her a nude piggyback ride to the phone.
2496 Since we didn't want to miss the call, we didn't have time to get dressed.
2497 My entire family: aunts, uncles, grandparents, cousins and all my friends were standing there.
2498 My girlfriend and I were frozen in a state of shock and embarrassment for what seemed like an eternity.
2499 Since then, no one in my family has planned a surprise party again.
2500 Priceless.
2501 One of the funniest most-embarrassing-moment stories I've come upon in a long time was about a lady who picked up several items at a discount store.
2502 When she finally got up to the checker, she learned that one of her items had no price tag.
2503 In a business-like tone, a voice boomed back over the intercom.
2504 Mom's Advice.
2505 A teacher noticed that a little boy at the back of the class was squirming around, scratching his crotch and not paying attention.
2506 The teacher told him to go down to the principal's office.
2507 He was to phone his mother and ask her what he should do about it.
2508 He did it and returned to his class.
2509 Suddenly, there was a commotion at the back of the room.
2510 She went back to investigate only to find him sitting at his desk with his penis hanging out.
2511 I thought I told you to call your mom, she screamed.
2512 I did, he said, And she told me that if I could stick it out till noon, she'd come and pick me up from school.
2513 An escape convict, imprisoned for 1st degree murder, had spend 25-years of his sentence in prison.
2514 While on the run, he broke into a house and tied up a young couple who had been sleeping in the bedroom.
2515 He tied the man to a chair on one side of the room.
2516 He got on the bed right over the woman, and it appeared he was kissing her neck.
2517 Suddenly he got up and left the room.
2518 I saw him kissing on your neck and then he left in a hurry.
2519 Just cooperate and do anything he wants.
2520 If he wants to have sex with you, just go along with it and pretend you like it.
2521 Our lives depend on it!
2522 You are right, he hasn't seen a woman in years, but he wasn't kissing my neck.
2523 He was whispering in my ear.
2524 He said that he thinks you are really cute and ask if we keep the Vaseline in the bedroom.
2525 I'm making a black man cake cause I'm hungry as hell.
2526 And the sweet tooth I have, only a brother can break the spell.
2527 Let me reach into my spice rack to see what I can get.
2528 To make a mix that will stick to my stomach you can bet.
2529 Cause he's got to be sweet, mental, sound and deep.
2530 Cinnamon is always good to accent the taste.
2531 A few cups of culture So he's down for his race.
2532 You see I won't bite into anything That's not conscious of its own.
2533 That's why I stick to chocolate And leave the angel food alone.
2534 I am adding butter cause he must be smooth.
2535 I must add nuts so he can reproduce.
2536 Can't leave him hanging cause I like kids too!
2537 I think I'll add a little salt to balance him out.
2538 And a dominant profile to show him some clout.
2539 For a responsible man I'll throw in some yeast So he can rise to the occasion when I'm ready to feast.
2540 I'll add 8 cups of strength and into the oven to bake.
2541 Turn it up to 360 degrees to balance out his mental state.
2542 Now that it's done, I'm sorry ladies I won't share the wealth That's why I'm sharing the recipe because I'm eating this black man all by myself.
2543 Alcohol was an acquired taste.
2544 Because of the warmth of the day I had had several drinks before casting my ballot, and divers drinks after casting it.
2545 She uttered an exclamation of surprise.
2546 For, be it known, in my younger days, despite my ardent democracy, I had been opposed to woman suffrage.
2547 In my later and more tolerant years I had been unenthusiastic in my acceptance of it as an inevitable social phenomenon.
2548 I answered.
2549 I answered at length.
2550 I answered indignantly.
2551 The more I answered, the more indignant I became.
2552 I was lighted up, I was feeling "good," I was pleasantly jingled.
2553 "When the women get the ballot, they will vote for prohibition," I said.
2554 I never am.
2555 I am never less his friend than when he is with me and when I seem most his friend.
2556 He is the king of liars.
2557 He is the frankest truthsayer.
2558 He is the august companion with whom one walks with the gods.
2559 He is also in league with the Noseless One.
2560 His way leads to truth naked, and to death.
2561 He gives clear vision, and muddy dreams.
2562 He is a red-handed killer, and he slays youth.
2563 And Charmian looked at me, and I knew she wondered where I had got it.
2564 I continued to talk.
2565 As I say, I was lighted up.
2566 In my brain every thought was at home.
2567 Every thought, in its little cell, crouched ready-dressed at the door, like prisoners at midnight a jail-break.
2568 I liked saloons.
2569 Especially I liked the San Francisco saloons.
2570 And once, I remember, a barkeeper mixed me a sweet temperance drink of syrup and sodawater.
2571 My father did not pay for it.
2572 I dreamed daydreams of him for years.
2573 The saloon was south of Market Street in San Francisco.
2574 It stood on the west side of the street.
2575 As you entered, the bar was on the left.
2576 On the right, against the wall, was the free lunch counter.
2577 It was a long, narrow room, and at the rear, beyond the beer kegs on tap, were small, round tables and chairs.
2578 The barkeeper was blue-eyed, and had fair, silky hair peeping out from under a black silk skullcap.
2579 He and my father talked long, and I sipped my sweet drink and worshipped him.
2580 And for years afterward I worshipped the memory of him.
2581 Here was a child, forming its first judgments of the world, finding the saloon a delightful and desirable place.
2582 Yes, the saloon was a mighty fine place, and it was more than that.
2583 By the time I was ten years old, my family had abandoned ranching and gone to live in the city.
2584 And here, at ten, I began on the streets as a newsboy.
2585 One of the reasons for this was that we needed the money.
2586 Another reason was that I needed the exercise.
2587 I had found my way to the free public library, and was reading myself into nervous prostration.
2588 On the poor ranches on which I had lived there had been no books.
2589 In ways truly miraculous, I had been lent four books, marvellous books, and them I had devoured.
2590 I was not a forward child.
2591 Unlike Oliver Twist, I was incapable of asking for more.
2592 When I returned the "Alhambra" to the teacher I hoped she would lend me another book.
2593 I waited and yearned for her to lend me another book.
2594 Here were thousands of books as good as my four wonder-books, and some were even better.
2595 Libraries were not concerned with children in those days, and I had strange adventures.
2596 I read everything, but principally history and adventure, and all the old travels and voyages.
2597 I read mornings, afternoons, and nights.
2598 You make me nervous.
2599 And so, at ten, I was out on the streets, a newsboy.
2600 I had no time to read.
2601 I was busy getting exercise and learning how to fight, busy learning forwardness, and brass and bluff.
2602 I had an imagination and a curiosity about all things that made me plastic.
2603 Not least among the things I was curious about was the saloon.
2604 And I was in and out of many a one.
2605 In the saloons life was different.
2606 Men talked with great voices, laughed great laughs, and there was an atmosphere of greatness.
2607 Here was something more than common every-day where nothing happened.
2608 There were no big moments when I trudged along the street throwing my papers in at doors.
2609 And more, the saloons were right.
2610 The city fathers sanctioned them and licensed them.
2611 They were not the terrible places I heard boys deem them who lacked my opportunities to know.
2612 Besides, in saloons I saw reporters, editors, lawyers, judges, whose names and faces I knew.
2613 They put the seal of social approval on the saloon.
2614 They verified my own feeling of fascination in the saloon.
2615 They, too, must have found there that something different, that something beyond, which I sensed and groped after.
2616 What it was, I did not know; yet there it must be, for there men focused like buzzing flies about a honey pot.
2617 Not that I drank at that time.
2618 From ten to fifteen I rarely tasted liquor, but I was intimately in contact with drinkers and drinking places.
2619 Big jovial Josie Harper ran a road house at Telegraph Avenue and Thirty-ninth Street.
2620 Here for a year I delivered an evening paper, until my route was changed to the water-front and tenderloin of Oakland.
2621 I was ashamed to refuse, so I drank it.
2622 The others asked for beer.
2623 The boys snickered, and I noticed the barkeeper favoured me with a strange, searching scrutiny.
2624 Nevertheless, he opened a bottle of ginger ale.
2625 Afterward, back in the alleys, in the pauses between games, the boys enlightened me.
2626 I had offended the barkeeper.
2627 Besides, beer was food.
2628 I could work better on it.
2629 There was no food in ginger ale.
2630 I was always aware that I was missing something.
2631 What I really liked in those days was candy.
2632 For five cents I could buy five "cannon-balls" - big lumps of the most delicious lastingness.
2633 I could chew and worry a single one for an hour.
2634 Then there was a Mexican who sold big slabs of brown chewing taffy for five cents each.
2635 It required a quarter of a day properly to absorb one of them.
2636 And many a day I made my entire lunch off one of those slabs.
2637 In truth, I found food there, but not in beer.
2638 I wanted to go to sea.
2639 I wanted to get away from monotony and the commonplace.
2640 Little I guessed how all the warp and woof of that manworld was entangled with alcohol.
2641 So, one day, as I hoisted sail on my skiff, I met Scotty.
2642 He was a husky youngster of seventeen, a runaway apprentice, he told me, from an English ship in Australia.
2643 He had just worked his way on another ship to San Francisco; and now he wanted to see about getting a berth on a whaler.
2644 Across the estuary, near where the whalers lay, was lying the sloop-yacht Idler.
2645 The caretaker was a harpooner who intended sailing next voyage on the whale ship Bonanza.
2646 Would I take him, Scotty, over in my skiff to call upon the harpooner?
2647 And the harpooner who was caretaker!
2648 How often had I seen him and envied him his freedom.
2649 He never had to leave the water.
2650 He slept aboard the Idler each night, while I had to go home upon the land to go to bed.
2651 Would I take Scotty, the runaway sailor, to visit the harpooner, on the opiumsmuggler Idler?
2652 The harpooner came on deck to answer our hail, and invited us aboard.
2653 We went below.
2654 It was the first sea-interior I had ever seen.
2655 The clothing on the wall smelled musty.
2656 But what of that?
2657 Was it not the sea-gear of men?
2658 And everywhere was in evidence the economy of space - the narrow bunks, the swinging tables, the incredible lockers.
2659 At last I was living.
2660 The harpooner suggested the eminent desirableness of a drink, and Scotty searched his pockets for dimes and nickels.
2661 We drank the cheap rotgut out of tumblers.
2662 Was I any the less strong, any the less valiant, than the harpooner and the sailor?
2663 They were men.
2664 They proved it by the way they drank.
2665 Drink was the badge of manhood.
2666 Divers times we filled the flask that afternoon.
2667 I was only fourteen, and had never been on the ocean in my life.
2668 We unbent.
2669 Our inhibitions and taciturnities vanished.
2670 The harpooner told of misadventures and secret shames.
2671 And Scotty proved it.
2672 Nor was I loath.
2673 I could whip any runaway sailor seventeen years old.
2674 By this time the singing stage was reached, and I joined Scotty and the harpooner in snatches of sea songs and chanties.
2675 I was beginning to grasp the meaning of life.
2676 We were not ordinary.
2677 We were three tipsy young gods, incredibly wise, gloriously genial, and without limit to our powers.
2678 But this is not a world of free freights.
2679 Intenseness and duration are as ancient enemies as fire and water.
2680 They are mutually destructive.
2681 They cannot co-exist.
2682 And John Barleycorn, mighty necromancer though he be, is as much a slave to organic chemistry as we mortals are.
2683 We pay for every nerve marathon we run, nor can John Barleycorn intercede and fend off the just payment.
2684 Yet the foregoing is all in after wisdom spoken.
2685 His talk grew incoherent.
2686 He groped for words and could not find them, while the ones he found his lips were unable to form.
2687 His poisoned consciousness was leaving him.
2688 The brightness went out of his eyes, and he looked as stupid as were his efforts to talk.
2689 His face and body sagged as his consciousness sagged.
2690 All his correlations were breaking down.
2691 He strove to take another drink, and feebly dropped the tumbler on the floor.
2692 Then, to my amazement, weeping bitterly, he rolled into a bunk on his back and immediately snored off to sleep.
2693 Then the harpooner faded away into his bunk, and I was left alone, unthrown, on the field of battle.
2694 I was very proud, and John Barleycorn was proud with me.
2695 I could carry my drink.
2696 I had drunk two men, drink for drink, into unconsciousness.
2697 And I was still on my two feet, upright, making my way on deck to get air into my scorching lungs.
2698 The fortunate man is the one who cannot take more than a couple of drinks without becoming intoxicated.
2699 There were plenty of bunks below.
2700 I did not need to go home.
2701 But I wanted to demonstrate to myself how much I was a man.
2702 There lay my skiff astern.
2703 The last of a strong ebb was running out in channel in the teeth of an ocean breeze of forty miles an hour.
2704 I set sail, cast off, took my place at the tiller, the sheet in my hand, and headed across channel.
2705 The skiff heeled over and plunged into it madly.
2706 The spray began to fly.
2707 I was at the pinnacle of exaltation.
2708 I sang "Blow the Man Down" as I sailed.
2709 I was no boy of fourteen, living the mediocre ways of the sleepy town called Oakland.
2710 I was a man, a god, and the very elements rendered me allegiance as I bitted them to my will.
2711 The tide was out.
2712 A full hundred yards of soft mud intervened between the boat-wharf and the water.
2713 It was then that my correlations began to break down.
2714 I lost my balance and pitched head-foremost into the ooze.
2715 But what of it?
2716 Across the channel two strong sailormen lay unconscious in their bunks where I had drunk them.
2717 I was still on my legs, if they were knee-deep in mud.
2718 I disdained to get back into the skiff.
2719 I waded through the mud, shoving the skiff before me and yammering the chant of my manhood to the world.
2720 I paid for it.
2721 I was sick for a couple of days, meanly sick, and my arms were painfully poisoned from the barnacle scratches.
2722 For a week I could not use them, and it was a torture to put on and take off my clothes.
2723 The price was too stiff.
2724 I had no moral qualms.
2725 My revulsion was purely physical.
2726 No exalted moments were worth such hours of misery and wretchedness.
2727 When I got back to my skiff, I shunned the Idler.
2728 I would cross the opposite side of the channel to go around her.
2729 The harpooner was still about, but him I avoided.
2730 Once, when he landed on the boat-wharf, I hid in a shed so as to escape seeing him.
2731 I was afraid he would propose some more drinking, maybe have a flask full of whisky in his pocket.
2732 It was memorable.
2733 My mind dwelt on it continually.
2734 I went over the details, over and over again.
2735 The harpooner had told me terribly wonderful things of himself.
2736 I had got behind my own soul and found unguessed potencies and greatnesses.
2737 Yes, that day stood out above all my other days.
2738 To this day it so stands out.
2739 The memory of it is branded in my brain.
2740 But the price exacted was too high.
2741 I refused to play and pay, and returned to my cannon-balls and taffy-slabs.
2742 The point is that all the chemistry of my healthy, normal body drove me away from alcohol.
2743 It was abominable.
2744 And detest and hate him all the time.
2745 Month in and month out, the shortest day I ever worked was ten hours.
2746 There was no time to wipe the bar, nor wash glasses, nor do anything save fill glasses.
2747 The Oakland water-front can be real thirsty on occasion.
2748 This method of jamming and struggling in front of the bar was too slow for us.
2749 The drink was ours.
2750 It was not a clear vision, however, and there were two phases of it, somewhat jumbled at the time.
2751 Everywhere I saw men doing, drunk, what they would never dream of doing sober.
2752 It was the penalty that must be paid.
2753 Crime was destructive.
2754 And then the police gathered them in and they vanished from our ken.
2755 When they took sick, even with trifling afflictions that any ordinary man could pull through, they just pegged out.
2756 So I considered my situation and knew that I was getting into a bad way of living.
2757 It made toward death too quickly to suit my youth and vitality.
2758 And there was only one way out of this hazardous manner of living, and that was to get out.
2759 I met the seal-hunter, Pete Holt, and agreed to be his boat-puller and to sign on any schooner he signed on.
2760 And I had to have half a dozen drinks with Pete Holt there and then to seal our agreement.
2761 And at once awoke all my old unrest that John Barleycorn had put to sleep.
2762 I lived more circumspectly, drank less deeply, and went home more frequently.
2763 When drinking grew too wild, I got out.
2764 When Nelson was in his maniacal cups, I managed to get separated from him.
2765 Yet never did he refuse me any sum I asked of him.
2766 Unfortunately, before I became prosperous, he moved away to another city.
2767 And to this day I regret that he is gone.
2768 It is the code I have learned.
2769 This is not to exalt saloon-keepers.
2770 But to return to the run of my narrative.
2771 Nobody about me drank.
2772 If any had drunk, and had they offered it to me, I surely would have drunk.
2773 Also, I had found my way into the realm of the mind, and I was intellectually intoxicated.
2774 I grew impatient.
2775 Bud turned on his high boot-heels.
2776 She looked at her husband with surprise in her steady gray eyes.
2777 Barber has handled every head of stock from this ranch in that market for five years.
2778 She faced Bud Turner.
2779 "Deliver those cattle to Barber," she concluded positively.
2780 Bud gazed impartially at the water-jar hanging on the gallery, stood on his other leg, and chewed a mesquite-leaf.
2781 "Nonsense," said Santa impatiently.
2782 Let me tell you.
2783 I was a man before I married a cattle-queen.
2784 What am I now?
2785 The laughing-stock of the camps.
2786 Santa looked at him closely.
2787 Do I ever interfere in your management of the cattle?
2788 I know the business side of the ranch much better than you do.
2789 I learned it from Dad.
2790 Be sensible.
2791 I punch the cattle and you wear the crown.
2792 These he began to tie deliberately upon his saddle.
2793 Santa, a little pale, followed him.
2794 Webb swung up into the saddle.
2795 His serious, smooth face was without expression except for a stubborn light that smouldered in his eyes.
2796 Lobos have killed three of the calves.
2797 I forgot to leave orders.
2798 "I am going to be a man again," he answered.
2799 It is dark in there.
2800 He will wear my red skirt and blue waist and brown mantilla.
2801 I send you a hundred kisses.
2802 Come surely and shoot quickly and straight.
2803 Even the lady passenger was moved to expression.
2804 "I think it is quite charming," she said, in her slow, crystal tones.
2805 At intervals some one of the passengers would rise and humorously explore the room.
2806 There was little evidence to be collected of its habitation by old man Redruth.
2807 He never allowed nobody to come nigh him.
2808 There was spinning-wheels up in his loft, all right.
2809 Just ordinary trouble.
2810 I never heard of no romance.
2811 She never married him.
2812 This man said she was the kind of girl you like to have reach across you in a car to pay the fare.
2813 Although she was a staked claim, Miss Alice and the new entry seemed to strike a mutual kind of a clip.
2814 Then he lifts his hat and walks away, and that was the last anybody in that town seen of him, as far as this man knew.
2815 A little silence followed, except for the wind and the crackling of the fire.
2816 Nameless to us, he travels the road from Paradise to Sunrise City.
2817 He began with a rasping chuckle that gradually formed itself into words.
2818 My money on the lad with the butterfly tie and the certified checks in his trouserings.
2819 All right.
2820 Away with him!
2821 Get platonic, if you please.
2822 No jack-pots for mine.
2823 Go and hate your friend some more.
2824 What turned him into a hermit?
2825 One says laziness; one says remorse; one says booze.
2826 I say women did it.
2827 How old is the old man now?
2828 He conducted his hermit shop here for twenty years.
2829 Say he was twenty-five when he took off his hat at the gate.
2830 That leaves twenty years for him to account for, or else be docked.
2831 Where did he spend that ten and two fives?
2832 Up for bigamy.
2833 Redruth gets his cases mixed, and they send him up the road.
2834 Enclosed find stamps.
2835 If she be worthy of the name, no gold or rank will outweigh with her a genuine devotion.
2836 Yet, who is on trial?
2837 Not Redruth, for he has been punished.
2838 Not those immortal passions that clothe our lives with the joy of the angels.
2839 Each man of us here to-night stands at the bar to answer if chivalry or darkness inhabits his bosom.
2840 To judge us sits womankind in the form of one of its fairest flowers.
2841 I have not found woman to be so unspiritual or venal.
2842 Tormented by jealousy, young Redruth vanished from his native haunts.
2843 But had he just cause to do so?
2844 There is no evidence for or against.
2845 Then his withdrawal from the world of sorrow and the subsequent derangement of his faculties becomes intelligible.
2846 She is old now.
2847 Her hair is white and smoothly banded.
2848 Each day she sits at the door and gazes longingly down the dusty road.
2849 Presently, from the other, as Kinney and I sat without, there burst a volume of sudden and brilliant music.
2850 A piano, and one so well played, seemed to me to be an unusual thing to find in that small and unpromising ranchhouse.
2851 "A wise and generous theory," I assented.
2852 Kinney plays well.
2853 I am not learned in the science of music, but I should call her an uncommonly good performer.
2854 She has technic and more than ordinary power.
2855 "I did," said I.
2856 I could see by the broken corrals that no one lived there.
2857 And she was the most elegant kind of a housekeeper.
2858 He had a pretty bad cold and cough.
2859 I stayed to supper.
2860 I like a man who is kind to animals.
2861 Yes; there was even admiration in her gaze now.
2862 After all, there was a hero rising out of the ruins of the anti-climax.
2863 She held out her hand penitently.
2864 There was a bright, unshed drop in each of her eyes.
2865 Givens took the proffered hand.
2866 Dry Valley had had no youth.
2867 Even his childhood had been one of dignity and seriousness.
2868 His life as a young man had been wasted.
2869 But a sheepman is a hardy animal.
2870 Dry Valley Johnson had weathered too many northers to turn his back on a late summer, spiritual or real.
2871 He would show them.
2872 Dry Valley kept indoors closely for a week except for frequent sallies after youthful strawberry snatchers.
2873 Then, a few days later, he suddenly emerged brilliantly radiant in the hectic glow of his belated midsummer madness.
2874 A jay-bird-blue tennis suit covered him outwardly, almost as far as his wrists and ankles.
2875 A little flat straw hat with a striped band desecrated his weather-beaten head.
2876 Lemon-coloured kid gloves protected his oak-tough hands from the benignant May sunshine.
2877 It lasted two weeks and then came to a sudden end.
2878 "Merry Christmas, little boy," said Cherokee.
2879 What do I want with dolls and tin horses?
2880 I want to go home.
2881 Trinidad stepped into the breach.
2882 But me and the Judge was sure we could round up a wagonful of candidates for your gimcracks.
2883 We can dump the stuff down a shaft or throw it away.
2884 Bobby had retreated to a distant chair, and was coldly regarding the scene with ennui plastered thick upon him.
2885 Cherokee, lingering with his original idea, went over and sat beside him.
2886 "Granite Junction," said Bobby without emphasis.
2887 The room was warm.
2888 Cherokee took off his cap, and then removed his beard and wig.
2889 The boy hesitated.
2890 "On the bureau at home," he answered.
2891 The picture belongs to my mother.
2892 She puts it under her pillow of nights.
2893 And once I saw her kiss it.
2894 But women are that way.
2895 Cherokee rose and beckoned to Trinidad.
2896 "Keep this boy by you till I come back," he said.
2897 I wish I was at home.
2898 Bobby slipped a cigarette from his pocket and was trying to snap a match.
2899 "Throw that cigarette away," said Cherokee, in a quiet but new voice.
2900 Bobby hesitated, and then dropped the cylinder overboard.
2901 "Throw the box, too," commanded the new voice.
2902 More reluctantly the boy obeyed.
2903 I seen her do it.
2904 Will you get me one?
2905 Cherokee took out his watch.
2906 Are you cold?
2907 Sit closer, son.
2908 Down in the hotel office three or four of the labourers were growling and swearing over a belated game of checkers.
2909 Heavy odours of stewed meat, hot grease, and cheap coffee hung like a depressing fog about the house.
2910 Lena lit the stump of a candle and sat limply upon her wooden chair.
2911 She was eleven years old, thin and ill-nourished.
2912 Her back and limbs were sore and aching.
2913 But the ache in her heart made the biggest trouble.
2914 The last straw had been added to the burden upon her small shoulders.
2915 Fritz urged them along, himself dizzy and muddled over his fearful adventure.
2916 According to schedule time, he should have reached Fredericksburg at daylight.
2917 He stopped his team at the gate and called.
2918 Her little Lena drown herself!
2919 Why had they sent her from home?
2920 What could be done?
2921 Perhaps it would be too late by the time they could send for her now.
2922 Peter Hildesmuller dropped his meerschaum on the walk and it shivered into pieces.
2923 It is your fault if she comes home to us no more.
2924 Fritz stared at her with eyes that bulged behind his spectacles.
2925 What an opportunity it would offer to Calliope!
2926 He had only to step out the other door, mount the train, and away.
2927 The members of the posse heard one shot fired inside, and then there was silence.
2928 At length the wounded man opened his eyes.
2929 After a blank space he again could see and hear and feel and think.
2930 Turning his eyes about, he found himself lying on a wooden bench.
2931 A tall man with a perplexed countenance, wearing a big badge with "City Marshal" engraved upon it, stood over him.
2932 He was trying to get these facts fixed in his mind and connected with past events, when the old woman began to talk.
2933 That bullet never tetched ye!
2934 Jest skeeted along the side of your head and sort of paralysed ye for a spell.
2935 You just lay still a while longer and let me bathe your head.
2936 I come in on that train from Alabama to see my son.
2937 This is my son, sir.
2938 Jest think, now, that little boy of mine has got to be a officer - a city marshal of a whole town!
2939 But, laws!
2940 I never was much of a hand to git skeered.
2941 I knowed him at oncet.
2942 He sat, somewhat weakly yet, leaning against the wall.
2943 He was a rugged man, big-boned and straight.
2944 His eyes, steady and keen, seemed to linger upon the face of the man standing so still above him.
2945 Be a good man, and leave liquor alone and live peaceably and goodly.
2946 Keep away from bad company and work honest and sleep sweet.
2947 The black-mitted hand of the old pleader gently touched the breast of the man she addressed.
2948 Very earnest and candid her old, worn face looked.
2949 Still the man to whom she spoke gazed above her head, contemplating the silent son of the old mother.
2950 The tall man moved uneasily.
2951 He fingered the badge on his breast for a moment, and then he put an arm around the old woman and drew her close to him.
2952 The other man rose to his feet, trying his limbs and stretching his muscles.
2953 The unblessed condition of Yellowhammer had been truly described.
2954 Later they would come.
2955 But of children there were none.
2956 Christmas would come on Thursday.
2957 On Tuesday morning Trinidad, instead of going to work, sought the Judge at the Lucky Strike Hotel.
2958 You might say that that man made this town.
2959 I am indebted to Cherokee for past favours.
2960 I learned about that Latin word at school.
2961 "I will accompany you," declared the Judge, waving his cane.
2962 Trinidad made careful notes of all such, and then hastened to secure a vehicle and team.
2963 He sat in the snow, arms tied behind him, waiting the torture.
2964 He stared curiously before him at a huge Cossack, prone in the snow, moaning in his pain.
2965 The men had finished handling the giant and turned him over to the women.
2966 Subienkow looked on, and shuddered.
2967 He was not afraid to die.
2968 He had carried his life too long in his hands, on that weary trail from Warsaw to Nulato, to shudder at mere dying.
2969 But he objected to the torture.
2970 It offended his soul.
2971 This would not be nice.
2972 To pass out bravely and cleanly, with a smile and a jest - ah!
2973 There had been no chance to escape.
2974 He sighed.
2975 "A husband," said Santa cordially.
2976 "Come on and have a beer," I invited.
2977 "I wish you success in a praiseworthy attempt," she said, with a sudden coldness.
2978 "S-s-sh," says I.
2979 "Small beer for me, Johnny," I said, when the others had ordered schooners.
2980 "Sure," Johnny agreed, with a smile.
2981 After a couple more drinks, for which I insisted on paying, Nelson decided to go.
2982 Again we stood at the bar and drank and talked, but this time it was I who paid ten cents!
2983 All you got to do is walk right up and call for it.
2984 Almost it seemed the final badge of manhood.
2985 Amongst strong men I had proved myself strong.
2986 And sitting there on the stringer-piece in my shame, I did a great deal of thinking and transvaluing of values.
2987 And the heat of my shame burned up my neck and into my cheeks and forehead.
2988 And then it had been only one little undershirt.
2989 And up runs the boy with the flaxseed.
2990 And we had another, and I paid for it.
2991 And when I never drew a sober breath, on one stretch, for three solid weeks, I was certain I had reached the top.
2992 And when he reached the horizon he might have ridden on into blue space as far as knowledge of him on the Nopalito went.
2993 At Haywards there were no drinks either.
2994 At once I became possessed with a desire to have a page in that book.
2995 Aye, even the barkeeper was giving me a recommendation as a man.
2996 Be Strong and I Love You.
2997 Be Strong and I Love you.
2998 Besides, I was learning.
2999 Then an idea came to me.
3000 Very well.

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