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Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 1804-1864

"Passages from the American Notebooks, Volume 1"

" I suppose his state is that of a drowsy man but
partly conscious of life,--walking as through a dim dream, but brighter
at some seasons than at others. By and by he will fall quite asleep,
without any trouble. Mr. S------, unbidden, gave him a glass of gin,
which the old man imbibed by the warm fireside, and grew the younger
for it.

September 4th.--This day an exhibition of animals in the vicinity of the
village, under a pavilion of sail-cloth,--the floor being the natural
grass, with here and there a rock partially protruding. A pleasant, mild
shade; a strip of sunshine or a spot of glimmering brightness in some
parts. Crowded,--row above row of women, on an amphitheatre of seats, on
one side. In an inner pavilion an exhibition of anacondas,--four,--which
the showman took, one by one, from a large box, under some blankets, and
hung round his shoulders. They seemed almost torpid when first taken
out, but gradually began to assume life, to stretch, to contract, twine
and writhe about his neck and person, thrusting out their tongues and
erecting their heads.


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