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The
Road
There is a
woman in the state of Nevada to whom I once lied
continuously, consistently, and shamelessly, for
the matter of a couple of hours. I don't want to
apologize to her. Far be it from me. But I do
want to explain. Unfortunately, I do not know
her name, much less her present address. If her
eyes should chance upon these lines, I hope she
will write to me.
It was in Reno, Nevada, in the summer of 1892.
Also, it was fair-time, and the town was filled
with petty crooks and tin-horns, to say nothing
of a vast and hungry horde of hoboes. It was the
hungry hoboes that made the town a "hungry" town.
They "battered" the back doors of the homes of
the citizens until the back doors became
unresponsive.
A hard town for "scoffings," was what the hoboes
called it at that time. I know that I missed
many a meal, in spite of the fact that I could "throw
my feet" with the next one when it came to "slamming
a gate" for a "poke-out" or a "set-down," or
hitting for a "light piece" on the street. Why,
I was so hard put in that town, one day, that I
gave the porter the slip and invaded the private
car of some itinerant millionnaire. The train
started as I made the platform, and I headed for
the aforesaid millionnaire with the porter one
jump behind and reaching for me. It was a dead
heat, for I reached the millionnaire at the same
instant that the porter reached me. I had no
time for formalities. "Gimme a quarter to eat on,"
I blurted out. And as I live, that millionnaire
dipped into his pocket and gave me ... just ...
precisely ... a quarter. It is my conviction
that he was so flabbergasted that he obeyed
automatically, and it has been a matter of keen
regret ever since, on my part, that I didn't ask
him for a dollar. I know that I'd have got it. I
swung off the platform of that private car with
the porter manoeuvring to kick me in the face.
He missed me. One is at a terrible disadvantage
when trying to swing off the lowest step of a
car and not break his neck on the right of way,
with, at the same time, an irate Ethiopian on
the platform above trying to land him in the
face with a number eleven. But I got the quarter!
I got it!...
 Moon
Face and Other Stories
John Claverhouse was a moon-faced man.
You know the kind, cheek-bones wide apart, chin
and forehead melting into the cheeks to complete
the perfect round, and the nose, broad and pudgy,
equidistant from the circumference, flattened
against the very centre of the face like a dough-ball
upon the ceiling. Perhaps that is why I hated
him, for truly he had become an offense to my
eyes, and I believed the earth to be cumbered
with his presence. Perhaps my mother may have
been superstitious of the moon and looked upon
it over the wrong shoulder at the wrong time.
Be that as it may, I hated John Claverhouse. Not
that he had done me what society would consider
a wrong or an ill turn. Far from it. The evil
was of a deeper, subtler sort; so elusive, so
intangible, as to defy clear, definite analysis
in words. We all experience such things at some
period in our lives. For the first time we see a
certain individual, one who the very instant
before we did not dream existed; and yet, at the
first moment of meeting, we say: “I do not like
that man.” Why do we not like him? Ah, we do not
know why; we know only that we do not. We have
taken a dislike, that is all. And so I with John
Claverhouse...

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