The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 5


google search for The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 5

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
121 122 123 124 125

Quick Jump
1 101 202 302 403

"
Why, there are several ways of managing. The most of us starve: some  
put up with the pickle: for my part I purchase my spirits vivente  
corpore, in which case I find they keep very well."  
"But the body!--hiccup!--the body!"  
"
The body, the body--well, what of the body?--oh! ah! I perceive. Why,  
sir, the body is not at all affected by the transaction. I have made  
innumerable purchases of the kind in my day, and the parties never  
experienced any inconvenience. There were Cain and Nimrod, and Nero, and  
Caligula, and Dionysius, and Pisistratus, and--and a thousand others,  
who never knew what it was to have a soul during the latter part of  
their lives; yet, sir, these men adorned society. Why possession of  
his faculties, mental and corporeal? Who writes a keener epigram?  
Who reasons more wittily? Who--but stay! I have his agreement in my  
pocket-book."  
Thus saying, he produced a red leather wallet, and took from it a number  
of papers. Upon some of these Bon-Bon caught a glimpse of the letters  
Machi--Maza--Robesp--with the words Caligula, George, Elizabeth. His  
Majesty selected a narrow slip of parchment, and from it read aloud the  
following words:  
"In consideration of certain mental endowments which it is unnecessary  
to specify, and in further consideration of one thousand louis d'or, I  
being aged one year and one month, do hereby make over to the bearer  
123  


Page
121 122 123 124 125

Quick Jump
1 101 202 302 403