The Gilded Age by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner

or in a tent, Philip soon found, he was just the same. In camp he would

get himself, up in the most elaborate toilet at his command, polish his

long boots to the top, lay out his work before him, and spend an hour or

longer, if anybody was looking at him, humming airs, knitting his brows,

and “working” at engineering; and if a crowd of gaping rustics were

looking on all the while it was perfectly satisfactory to him.

“You see,” he says to Philip one morning at the hotel when he was thus

engaged, “I want to get the theory of this thing, so that I can have a

check on the engineers.”

“I thought you were going to be an engineer yourself,” queried Philip.

“Not many times, if the court knows herself. There’s better game. Brown

and Schaick have, or will have, the control for the whole line of the

Salt Lick Pacific Extension, forty thousand dollars a mile over the

prairie, with extra for hard-pan–and it’ll be pretty much all hardpan

I can tell you; besides every alternate section of land on this line.

There’s millions in the job. I’m to have the sub-contract for the first

fifty miles, and you can bet it’s a soft thing.”

“I’ll tell you what you do, Philip,” continued Larry, in a burst of

generosity, “if I don’t get you into my contract, you’ll be with the

engineers, and you jest stick a stake at the first ground marked for a

depot, buy the land of the farmer before he knows where the depot will

be, and we’ll turn a hundred or so on that. I’ll advance the money for

the payments, and you can sell the lots. Schaick is going to let me have

ten thousand just for a flyer in such operations.”

“But that’s a good deal of money.”

“Wait till you are used to handling money. I didn’t come out here for a

bagatelle. My uncle wanted me to stay East and go in on the Mobile

custom house, work up the Washington end of it; he said there was a

fortune in it for a smart young fellow, but I preferred to take the

chances out here. Did I tell you I had an offer from Bobbett and Fanshaw

to go into their office as confidential clerk on a salary of ten

thousand?”

“Why didn’t you take it ?” asked Philip, to whom a salary of two thousand

would have seemed wealth, before he started on this journey.

“Take it? I’d rather operate on my own hook;” said Harry, in his most

airy manner.

A few evenings after their arrival at the Southern, Philip and Harry made

the acquaintance of a very agreeable gentleman, whom they had frequently

seen before about the hotel corridors, and passed a casual word with. He

had the air of a man of business, and was evidently a person of

importance.

The precipitating of this casual intercourse into the more substantial

form of an acquaintanceship was the work of the gentleman himself, and

occurred in this wise. Meeting the two friends in the lobby one evening,

he asked them to give him the time, and added:

“Excuse me, gentlemen–strangers in St. Louis? Ali, yes-yes. From the

East, perhaps? Ah; just so, just so. Eastern born myself–Virginia.

Sellers is my name–Beriah Sellers.

Ah! by the way–New York, did you say? That reminds me; just met some

gentlemen from your State, a week or two ago–very prominent gentlemen–

in public life they are; you must know them, without doubt. Let me see–

let me see. Curious those names have escaped me. I know they were from

your State, because I remember afterward my old friend Governor Shackleby

said to me–fine man, is the Governor–one of the finest men our country

has produced–said he, Colonel, how did you like those New York

gentlemen?–not many such men in the world,–Colonel Sellers,’ said the

Governor–yes, it was New York he said–I remember it distinctly.

I can’t recall those names, somehow. But no matter. Stopping here,

gentlemen–stopping at the Southern?”

In shaping their reply in their minds, the title “Mr.” had a place in it;

but when their turn had arrived to speak, the title “Colonel” came from

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