The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson.

The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 210 pages of information about The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson.

“I thought I wouldn’t say anything, but if variety is what you are after, you have wasted a piece of glass.  The hand print of one twin is the same as the hand print of the fellow twin.”

“Well, it’s done now, and I like to have them both, anyway,” said Wilson, returned to his place.

“But look here, Dave,” said Tom, “you used to tell people’s fortunes, too, when you took their finger marks.  Dave’s just an all-round genius—­a genius of the first water, gentlemen; a great scientist running to seed here in this village, a prophet with the kind of honor that prophets generally get at home—­for here they don’t give shucks for his scientifics, and they call his skull a notion factory—­hey, Dave, ain’t it so?  But never mind, he’ll make his mark someday—­finger mark, you know, he-he!  But really, you want to let him take a shy at your palms once; it’s worth twice the price of admission or your money’s returned at the door.  Why, he’ll read your wrinkles as easy as a book, and not only tell you fifty or sixty things that’s going to happen to you, but fifty or sixty thousand that ain’t.  Come, Dave, show the gentlemen what an inspired jack-at-all-science we’ve got in this town, and don’t know it.”

Wilson winced under this nagging and not very courteous chaff, and the twins suffered with him and for him.  They rightly judged, now, that the best way to relieve him would be to take the thing in earnest and treat it with respect, ignoring Tom’s rather overdone raillery; so Luigi said: 

“We have seen something of palmistry in our wanderings, and know very well what astonishing things it can do.  If it isn’t a science, and one of the greatest of them too, I don’t know what its other name ought to be.  In the Orient—­”

Tom looked surprised and incredulous.  He said: 

“That juggling a science?  But really, you ain’t serious, are you?”

“Yes, entirely so.  Four years ago we had our hands read out to us as if our plans had been covered with print.”

“Well, do you mean to say there was actually anything in it?” asked Tom, his incredulity beginning to weaken a little.

“There was this much in it,” said Angelo:  “what was told us of our characters was minutely exact—­we could have not have bettered it ourselves.  Next, two or three memorable things that have happened to us were laid bare—­things which no one present but ourselves could have known about.”

“Why, it’s rank sorcery!” exclaimed Tom, who was now becoming very much interested.  “And how did they make out with what was going to happen to you in the future?”

“On the whole, quite fairly,” said Luigi.  “Two or three of the most striking things foretold have happened since; much the most striking one of all happened within that same year.  Some of the minor prophesies have come true; some of the minor and some of the major ones have not been fulfilled yet, and of course may never be:  still, I should be more surprised if they failed to arrive than if they didn’t.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.