It is often the case that the man who can't tell a lie
thinks he is the best judge of one.
-- Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar
OCTOBER 12, THE DISCOVERY. It was wonderful to find America,
but it would have been more wonderful to miss it.
-- Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar
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member of it was quite sure to raise his
voice and say:
"And this is the man the likes of us have called a pudd'nhead for more than twenty years. He has resigned from that position, friends."
"Yes, but it isn't vacant -- we're elected."
The twins were heroes of romance, now, and with rehabilitated reputations. But they were weary of Western adventure, and straightway retired to Europe.
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his speech was the basest dialect of the Negro quarter.
His gait, his attitudes, his gestures, his bearing, his laugh --
all were vulgar and uncouth; his manners were the manners of a slave.
Money and fine clothes could not mend these defects or cover them up;
they only made them more glaring and the more pathetic.
The poor fellow could not endure the terrors of the white man's parlor,
and felt at home and at peace nowhere but in the kitchen.
The family pew was a misery to him, yet he could nevermore enter
into the solacing refuge of the "nigger gallery" -- that was closed
to him for good and all. But we cannot follow his curious fate further --
that would be a long story.
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in no way to blame the false heir was
not inventoried at the time with the rest of the property, great
wrong and loss had thereby been inflicted upon them.
They rightly claimed that "Tom" was lawfully their property and had
been so for eight years; that they had already lost sufficiently
in being deprived of his services during that long period, and
ought not to be required to add anything to that loss; that if he
had been delivered up to them in the first place, they would have
sold him and he could not have murdered Judge Driscoll; therefore
it was not that he had really committed the murder, the guilt lay
with the erroneous inventory. Everybody saw that there was
reason in this. Everybody granted that if "Tom" were white
and
free it would be unquestionably right to punish him -- it would be
no loss to anybody; but to shut up a valuable slave for life --
that was quite another matter.
As soon as the Governor understood the case, he pardoned Tom at once, and the creditors sold him down the river. FINIS