The Gilded Age


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The dining room was long, low and narrow, and a narrow table extended its  
whole length. Upon this was spread a cloth which from appearance might  
have been as long in use as the towel in the barroom. Upon the table was  
the usual service, the heavy, much nicked stone ware, the row of plated  
and rusty castors, the sugar bowls with the zinc tea-spoons sticking up  
in them, the piles of yellow biscuits, the discouraged-looking plates of  
butter. The landlord waited, and Philip was pleased to observe the  
change in his manner. In the barroom he was the conciliatory landlord.  
Standing behind his guests at table, he had an air of peremptory  
patronage, and the voice in which he shot out the inquiry, as he seized  
Philip's plate, "Beefsteak or liver?" quite took away Philip's power of  
choice. He begged for a glass of milk, after trying that green hued  
compound called coffee, and made his breakfast out of that and some hard  
crackers which seemed to have been imported into Ilium before the  
introduction of the iron horse, and to have withstood a ten years siege  
of regular boarders, Greeks and others.  
The land that Philip had come to look at was at least five miles distant  
from Ilium station. A corner of it touched the railroad, but the rest  
was pretty much an unbroken wilderness, eight or ten thousand acres of  
rough country, most of it such a mountain range as he saw at Ilium.  
His first step was to hire three woodsmen to accompany him. By their  
help he built a log hut, and established a camp on the land, and then  
began his explorations, mapping down his survey as he went along, noting  
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Page
309 310 311 312 313

Quick Jump
1 170 341 511 681