![]() |
What was he thinking? |
| âHey,â said Buster, âHow you doinâ?â âWell,â replied Clyde, â Could be better. How you doin'?â â Why, I âpreciate you askinâ. Things have gotten purty bad at the ranch. Why jesâ yesterday, I put down olâ Bessie.â âShucks, that is just awful,â Clyde choked. âAfter all these years, sheâs a part of the family near as I can reckon.â âYep. Ainât it the truth. Donât get worse than this, I âspect.â âWell, it might,â countered Clyde. âI had to sell the back forty to pay for the TEEUition for Junior to âtend college. Used to be allâs ya hadda do was âtend to your own business.â Times, they change, though. When I applied fer the loan, the banker man told me, âYou damn near bought the farm.â Ooowee! Thatâd be too much, donâcha think?â âShucks, that arenât nothin. What if I tole you I ainât et all day âcause the crops failed, my wife run off with my brother, and I ainât even shure who his mama isâŚnowâs I considers.â Clyde considered. âWell, if that donât beat all! I figured Iâd at least try to cheer you up in your time of deestress. But evidentually, you ainât to be perked up in any fashion, so âŚâ âHold it right there!â cried Buster. âMy wife Bessie told me she runned off with my brother! Now, I know who you be! But I still ainât sure about your MamaâŚâ ***** Sam thought about his latest novel entry. Would people like it? Was it humorous? Would they recognize components of his own life? Well, no matter. Clemens recognized that people thinking about others in worse straits than theirs would help cheer them up. And by this thought he was much heartened. |