Sketches New and Old


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his raiment, rusty, dilapidated, and awkwardly put on); his blue cotton,  
tight-legged pants, tied close around the ankles; and his clumsy  
blunt-toed shoes with thick cork soles; and having so scanned him from  
head to foot, cracked some unseemly joke about his outlandish attire or  
his melancholy face, and passed on. In my heart I pitied the friendless  
Mongol. I wondered what was passing behind his sad face, and what  
distant scene his vacant eye was dreaming of. Were his thoughts with his  
heart, ten thousand miles away, beyond the billowy wastes of the Pacific?  
among the ricefields and the plumy palms of China? under the shadows of  
remembered mountain peaks, or in groves of bloomy shrubs and strange  
forest trees unknown to climes like ours? And now and then, rippling  
among his visions and his dreams, did he hear familiar laughter and  
half-forgotten voices, and did he catch fitful glimpses of the friendly  
faces of a bygone time? A cruel fate it is, I said, that is befallen  
this bronzed wanderer. In order that the group of idlers might be  
touched at least by the words of the poor fellow, since the appeal of his  
pauper dress and his dreary exile was lost upon them, I touched him on  
the shoulder and said:  
"Cheer up--don't be downhearted. It is not America that treats you in  
this way, it is merely one citizen, whose greed of gain has eaten the  
humanity out of his heart. America has a broader hospitality for the  
exiled and oppressed. America and Americans are always ready to help the  
unfortunate. Money shall be raised--you shall go back to China--you shall  
see your friends again. What wages do they pay you here?"  
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289 290 291 292 293

Quick Jump
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