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Without saying any more, we went out after supper and set on the railroad track. We had been pardners too long not to know what was going on in each others mind. I reckon you understand, says Paisley, that Ive made up my mind to accrue that widow woman as part and parcel in and to my hereditaments for ever, both domestic, sociable, legal, and otherwise, until death us do part. Why, yes, says I. I read it between the lines, though you only spoke one. And I suppose you are aware, says I, that I have a movement on foot that leads up to the widows changing her name to Hicks, and leaves you writing to the society column to inquire whether the best man wears a japonica or seamless socks at the wedding! Therell be some hiatuses in your programme, says Paisley, chewing up a piece of a railroad tie. Id give in to you, says he, in most any respect if it was secular affairs, but this is not so. The smiles of woman, goes on Paisley, is the whirlpool of Squills and Chalybeates, into which vortex the good ship Friendship is often drawn and dismembered. Id assault a bear that was annoying you, says Paisley, or Id endorse your note, or rub the place between your shoulder-blades with opodeldoc the same as ever; but there my sense of etiquette ceases. In this fracas with Mrs. Jessup we play it alone. Ive notified you fair. And then I collaborates with myself, and offers the following resolutions and bye-laws Friendship between man and man, says I, is an ancient historical virtue enacted in the days when men had to protect each other against lizards with eighty-foot tails and flying turtles. And theyve kept up the habit to this day, and stand by each other till the bellboy comes up and tells them the animals are not really there. Ive often heard, I says, about ladies stepping in and breaking up a friendship between men. Why should that be? Ill tell you, Paisley, the first sight and hot biscuit of Mrs. Jessup appears to have inserted a oscillation into each of our bosoms. Let the best man of us have her. Ill play you a square game, and wont do any underhanded work. Ill do all of my courting of her in your presence, so you will have an equal opportunity. With that arrangement I dont see why our steamboat of friendship should fall overboard in the medicinal whirlpools you speak of, whichever of us wins out. Good old hoss! says Paisley, shaking my hand. And Ill do the same, says he. Well court the lady synonymously, and without any of the prudery and bloodshed usual to such occasions. And well be friends still, win or lose. At one side of Mrs. Jessups eating-house was a bench under some trees where she used to sit in the breeze after the south-bound had been fed and gone. And there me and Paisley used to congregate after supper and make partial payments on our respects to the lady of our choice. And we was so honourable and circuitous in our calls that if one of us got there first we waited for the other before beginning any gallivantery. The first evening that Mrs. Jessup knew about our arrangement I got to the bench before Paisley did. Supper was just over, and Mrs. Jessup was out there with a fresh pink dress on, and almost cool enough to handle. I sat down by her and made a few specifications about the moral surface of nature as set forth by the landscape and the contiguous perspective. That evening was surely a case in point. The moon was attending to business in the section of sky where it belonged, and the trees was making shadows on the ground according to science and nature, and there was a kind of conspicuous hullabaloo going on in the bushes between the bullbats and the orioles and the jack-rabbits and other feathered insects of the forest. And the wind out of the mountains was singing like a jews harp in the pile of old tomato cans by the railroad track. |
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