maybe twelve hundred (it don’t really matter) before you drift, and then
you start your drifts, some of them across the ledge, and others along
the length of it, where the sulphurets–I believe they call them
sulphurets, though why they should, considering that, so far as I can
see, the main dependence of a miner does not so lie, as some suppose, but
in which it cannot be successfully maintained, wherein the same should
not continue, while part and parcel of the same ore not committed to
either in the sense referred to, whereas, under different circumstances,
the most inexperienced among us could not detect it if it were, or might
overlook it if it did, or scorn the very idea of such a thing, even
though it were palpably demonstrated as such. Am I not right?”
I said, sorrowfully: “I feel ashamed of myself, Mr. Ward. I know I
ought to understand you perfectly well, but you see that treacherous
whisky cocktail has got into my head, and now I cannot understand even
the simplest proposition. I told you how it would be.”
“Oh, don’t mind it, don’t mind it; the fault was my own, no doubt–though
I did think it clear enough for–”
“Don’t say a word. Clear! Why, you stated it as clear as the sun to
anybody but an abject idiot; but it’s that confounded cocktail that has
played the mischief.”
“No; now don’t say that. I’ll begin it all over again, and–”
“Don’t now–for goodness’ sake, don’t do anything of the kind, because I
tell you my head is in such a condition that I don’t believe I could
understand the most trifling question a man could ask me.
“Now don’t you be afraid. I’ll put it so plain this time that you can’t
help but get the hang of it. We will begin at the very beginning.”
[Leaning far across the table, with determined impressiveness wrought
upon his every feature, and fingers prepared to keep tally of each point
enumerated; and I, leaning forward with painful interest, resolved to
comprehend or perish.] “You know the vein, the ledge, the thing that
contains the metal, whereby it constitutes the medium between all other
forces, whether of present or remote agencies, so brought to bear in
favor of the former against the latter, or the latter against the former
or all, or both, or compromising the relative differences existing within
the radius whence culminate the several degrees of similarity to which–”
I said: “Oh, hang my wooden head, it ain’t any use!–it ain’t any use to
try–I can’t understand anything. The plainer you get it the more I
can’t get the hang of it.”
I heard a suspicious noise behind me, and turned in time to see Hingston
dodging behind a newspaper, and quaking with a gentle ecstasy of
laughter. I looked at Ward again, and he had thrown off his dread
solemnity and was laughing also. Then I saw that I had been sold–that I
had been made a victim of a swindle in the way of a string of plausibly
worded sentences that didn’t mean anything under the sun. Artemus Ward
was one of the best fellows in the world, and one of the most
companionable. It has been said that he was not fluent in conversation,
but, with the above experience in my mind, I differ.
CANNIBALISM IN THE CARS –[Written abort 1867.]
I visited St. Louis lately, and on my way West, after changing cars at
Terre Haute, Indiana, a mild, benevolent-looking gentleman of about
forty-five, or maybe fifty, came in at one of the way-stations and sat
down beside me. We talked together pleasantly on various subjects for an
hour, perhaps, and I found him exceedingly intelligent and entertaining.
When he learned that I was from Washington, he immediately began to ask
questions about various public men, and about Congressional affairs; and
I saw very shortly that I was conversing with a man who was perfectly
familiar with the ins and outs of political life at the Capital, even to
the ways and manners, and customs of procedure of Senators and
Representatives in the Chambers of the national Legislature. Presently
two men halted near us for a single moment, and one said to the other: