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 the mobile mouth and quick imagination of the orator, and he was always eloquent when he was talking about himself.

"You see, when I got the nomination to Congress it was that or bankruptcy. For two months before the convention was held I'd walk the floor half the night, and the other half I'd pretend to be asleep, to keep my wife from breaking her heart with anxiety. Annette is a good woman—too good for me. I had neglected my law practice for politics until I had no practice left, and then I was transported to Congress and Heaven and five thousand dollars a year. I determined to do two things—cut a wide swath in Washington and save one-third of my salary."

"Great fool—you," murmured Thorndyke, sympathetically.

"But—I didn't know what a wide swath was. I didn't know anything about it. I came to Washington and brought my wife and three children. We went to a boarding-house on Eleventh Street—you called to see us there."

"Yes. I remember thinking Mrs. Crane the prettiest, sweetest woman I had seen that season."