The Gilded Age, Part 3. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 78 pages of information about The Gilded Age, Part 3..

The Gilded Age, Part 3. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 78 pages of information about The Gilded Age, Part 3..

But his friends suffered more on his account than he did.  He was a cork that could not be kept under the water many moments at a time.

He had to bolster up his wife’s spirits every now and then.  On one of these occasions he said: 

“It’s all right, my dear, all right; it will all come right in a little while.  There’s $200,000 coming, and that will set things booming again:  Harry seems to be having some difficulty, but that’s to be expected—­you can’t move these big operations to the tune of Fisher’s Hornpipe, you know.  But Harry will get it started along presently, and then you’ll see!  I expect the news every day now.”

“But Beriah, you’ve been expecting it every day, all along, haven’t you?”

“Well, yes; yes—­I don’t know but I have.  But anyway, the longer it’s delayed, the nearer it grows to the time when it will start—­same as every day you live brings you nearer to—­nearer—­”

“The grave?”

“Well, no—­not that exactly; but you can’t understand these things, Polly dear—­women haven’t much head for business, you know.  You make yourself perfectly comfortable, old lady, and you’ll see how we’ll trot this right along.  Why bless you, let the appropriation lag, if it wants to—­that’s no great matter—­there’s a bigger thing than that.”

“Bigger than $200,000, Beriah?”

“Bigger, child?—­why, what’s $200,000?  Pocket money!  Mere pocket money!  Look at the railroad!  Did you forget the railroad?  It ain’t many months till spring; it will be coming right along, and the railroad swimming right along behind it.  Where’ll it be by the middle of summer?  Just stop and fancy a moment—­just think a little—­don’t anything suggest itself?  Bless your heart, you dear women live right in the present all the time—­but a man, why a man lives——­

“In the future, Beriah?  But don’t we live in the future most too much, Beriah?  We do somehow seem to manage to live on next year’s crop of corn and potatoes as a general thing while this year is still dragging along, but sometimes it’s not a robust diet,—­Beriah.  But don’t look that way, dear—­don’t mind what I say.  I don’t mean to fret, I don’t mean to worry; and I don’t, once a month, do I, dear?  But when I get a little low and feel bad, I get a bit troubled and worrisome, but it don’t mean anything in the world.  It passes right away.  I know you’re doing all you can, and I don’t want to seem repining and ungrateful—­for I’m not, Beriah—­you know I’m not, don’t you?”

“Lord bless you, child, I know you are the very best little woman that ever lived—­that ever lived on the whole face of the Earth!  And I know that I would be a dog not to work for you and think for you and scheme for you with all my might.  And I’ll bring things all right yet, honey —­cheer up and don’t you fear.  The railroad——­”

“Oh, I had forgotten the railroad, dear, but when a body gets blue, a body forgets everything.  Yes, the railroad—­tell me about the railroad.”

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The Gilded Age, Part 3. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.