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قراءة كتاب The Other Fellow
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
The Other Fellow
By F. HOPKINSON SMITH

BOSTON AND NEW YORK
HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
The Riverside Press, Cambridge
1900
COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY F. HOPKINSON SMITH
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| Dick Sands, Convict | 1 |
| A Kentucky Cinderella | 35 |
| A Waterlogged Town | 65 |
| The Boy in the Cloth Cap | 71 |
| Between Showers in Dort | 82 |
| One of Bob's Tramps | 113 |
| According to the Law | 124 |
| "Never had no Sleep" | 162 |
| The Man with the Empty Sleeve | 169 |
| "Tincter ov Iron" | 200 |
| "Five Meals for a Dollar" | 206 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
| PAGE | |
| "Miss Nannie gib Marse Tom Boling her han'" (page 63) | Frontispiece |
| Aunt Chloe | 36 |
| "Her head crammed full of hifalutin' notions" | 66 |
| Through streets embowered in trees | 82 |
| The gossips lean in the doorways | 88 |
| Drenched leaves quivering | 94 |
| An ancient Groote Kerk | 108 |
| "Forty-two cents" | 216 |
DICK SANDS, CONVICT.
I
he stage stopped at a disheartened-looking tavern with a sagging porch and sprawling wooden steps. A fat man with a good-natured face, tagged with a gray chin whisker, bareheaded, and without a coat—there was snow on the ground, too—and who said he was the landlord, lifted my yellow bag from one of the long chintz-covered stage cushions, and preceded me through a sanded hall into a low-ceiled room warmed by a red-hot stove, and lighted by windows filled with geraniums in full bloom. The effect of this color was so surprising, and the contrast to the desolate surroundings outside so grateful, that, without stopping to register my name, I drew up a chair and joined the circle of baking loungers. My oversight was promptly noted by the clerk—a sallow-faced young man with an uncomfortably high collar, red necktie, and stooping shoulders—and as promptly corrected by his dipping a pen in a wooden inkstand and holding the book on his knee until I could add my own superscription to those on its bespattered page. He had been considerate enough not to ask me to rise.
The landlord studied the signature, his spectacles on his nose, and remarked in a kindly tone:—
"Oh, you're the man what's going to lecture to the college."
"Yes; how far is it from here?"
"'Bout two miles out, Bingville way. You'll want a team, won't you? If I'd knowed it was you when yer got out I'd told the driver to come back for you. But it's all right—he's got to stop here again in half an hour—soon 's he leaves the mail."
I thanked him and asked him to see that the stage called for me at half-past seven, as I was to speak at eight o'clock. He nodded in assent, dropped into a rocking chair, and guided a spittoon into range with his foot. Then he backed away a little and began to scrutinize my face. Something about me evidently puzzled him. A leaning mirror that hung over a washstand reflected his head and shoulders, and gave me every expression that flitted across his good-natured countenance.
His summing up was evidently favorable, for his scrutinizing look gave place to a benign smile which widened into curves around his mouth and lost itself in faint ripples under his eyes. Hitching his chair closer, he spread his fat knees, and settled his broad shoulders, lazily stroking his chin whisker all the while with his puffy fingers.
"Guess you ain't been at the business long," he said kindly. "Last one we had a year ago looked kinder peaked." The secret of his peculiar interest was now out. "Must be awful tough on yer


