| THE TALE OF THE LOST LAND
CHAPTER 35: A PITIFUL INCIDENT
 It's a world of surprises.  The king brooded; this was natural.
 What would he brood about, should you say?  Why, about the prodigious
 nature of his fall, of course--from the loftiest place in the world
 to the lowest; from the most illustrious station in the world to
 the obscurest; from the grandest vocation among men to the basest.
 No, I take my oath that the thing that graveled him most, to start
 with, was not this, but the price he had fetched!  He couldn't
 seem to get over that seven dollars.  Well, it stunned me so, when
 I first found it out, that I couldn't believe it; it didn't seem
 natural.  But as soon as my mental sight cleared and I got a right
 focus on it, I saw I was mistaken; it was natural.  For this
 reason:  a king is a mere artificiality, and so a king's feelings,
 like the impulses of an automatic doll, are mere artificialities;
 but as a man, he is a reality, and his feelings, as a man, are
 real, not phantoms.  It shames the average man to be valued below
 his own estimate of his worth, and the king certainly wasn't
 anything more than an average man, if he was up that high. Confound him, he wearied me with arguments to show that in anything
 like a fair market he would have fetched twenty-five dollars,
 sure--a thing which was plainly nonsense, and full or the baldest
 conceit; I wasn't worth it myself.  But it was tender ground for
 me to argue on.  In fact, I had to simply shirk argument and do
 the diplomatic instead.  I had to throw conscience aside, and
 brazenly concede that he ought to have brought twenty-five dollars;
 whereas I was quite well aware that in all the ages, the world had
 never seen a king that was worth half the money, and during the
 next thirteen centuries wouldn't see one that was worth the fourth
 of it.  Yes, he tired me.  If he began to talk about the crops;
 or about the recent weather; or about the condition of politics;
 or about dogs, or cats, or morals, or theology--no matter what--
 I sighed, for I knew what was coming; he was going to get out of it
 a palliation of that tiresome seven-dollar sale.  Wherever we
 halted where there was a crowd, he would give me a look which
 said plainly:  "if that thing could be tried over again now, with
 this kind of folk, you would see a different result."  Well, when
 he was first sold, it secretly tickled me to see him go for seven
 dollars; but before he was done with his sweating and worrying
 I wished he had fetched a hundred.  The thing never got a chance
 to die, for every day, at one place or another, possible purchasers
 looked us over, and, as often as any other way, their comment on
 the king was something like this: |