The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 5


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capabilities of the stomach. I am not sure, indeed, that he greatly  
disagreed with the Chinese, who held that the soul lies in the abdomen.  
The Greeks at all events were right, he thought, who employed the same  
words for the mind and the diaphragm. (*1) By this I do not mean to  
insinuate a charge of gluttony, or indeed any other serious charge  
to the prejudice of the metaphysician. If Pierre Bon-Bon had his  
failings--and what great man has not a thousand?--if Pierre Bon-Bon,  
I say, had his failings, they were failings of very little  
importance--faults indeed which, in other tempers, have often been  
looked upon rather in the light of virtues. As regards one of these  
foibles, I should not even have mentioned it in this history but for the  
remarkable prominency--the extreme alto relievo--in which it jutted  
out from the plane of his general disposition. He could never let slip  
an opportunity of making a bargain.  
{
*1} MD  
Not that he was avaricious--no. It was by no means necessary to the  
satisfaction of the philosopher, that the bargain should be to his own  
proper advantage. Provided a trade could be effected--a trade of any  
kind, upon any terms, or under any circumstances--a triumphant smile  
was seen for many days thereafter to enlighten his countenance, and a  
knowing wink of the eye to give evidence of his sagacity.  
At any epoch it would not be very wonderful if a humor so peculiar as  
the one I have just mentioned, should elicit attention and remark.  
103  


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