“No, his fortune, he is a man of ‘importance,’ at any moment he knows almost to a farthing what he is worth; he is rich, a fourth part of New York is built on his land; a quarter of an hour ago he possessed 1,625,367 dollars and a half, but now he has only 1,625,367 dollars and a quarter.”
“How came this difference in his fortune?”
“Well! he has just smoked a quarter-dollar cigar.”
Doctor Dean Pitferge amused me with his clever repartees, so I pointed out to him another group stowed away in a corner of the saloon.
“THEY,” SAID HE, “ARE PEOPLE FROM THE FAR WEST.”
“They,” said he, “are people from the Far West, the tallest, who looks like a head clerk, is a man of ‘importance,’ the head of a Chicago bank, he always carries an album under his arm, with the principal views of his beloved city. He is, and has reason to be, proud of a city founded in a desert in 1836, which at the present day has a population of more than 400,000 souls. Near him you see a Californian couple, the young wife is delicate and charming, her well-polished husband was once a plough-boy, who one fine day turned up some nuggets. That gentleman—”
“Is a man of ‘importance,’” said I.
“Undoubtedly,” replied the Doctor, “for his assets count by the million.”
“And pray who may this tall individual be, who moves his head backwards and forwards like the pendulum of a clock?”