—So there was one Judas among them,—I remarked.
—Well,—said the Master,—they ’ve been whitewashing Judas of late. But never mind him. I did not say there was not one rogue on the average among a dozen men. I don’t see how that would interfere with my proposition. If I say that among a dozen men you ought to find one that weighs over a hundred and fifty pounds, and you tell me that there were twelve men in your club, and one of ’em had red hair, I don’t see that you have materially damaged my statement.
—I thought it best to let the old Master have his easy victory, which was more apparent than real, very evidently, and he went on.
—When the Lord sends out a batch of human beings, say a hundred—Did you ever read my book, the new edition of it, I mean?
It is rather awkward to answer such a question in the negative, but I said, with the best grace I could, “No, not the last edition.”
—Well, I must give you a copy of it. My book and I are pretty much the same thing. Sometimes I steal from my book in my talk without mentioning it, and then I say to myself, “Oh, that won’t do; everybody has read my book and knows it by heart.” And then the other I says,—you know there are two of us, right and left, like a pair of shoes,—the other I says, “You’re a—something or other—fool. They have n’t read your confounded old book; besides, if they have, they have forgotten all about it.” Another time, I say, thinking I will be very honest, “I have said something about that in my book”; and then the other I says, “What a Balaam’s quadruped you are to tell ’em it’s in your book; they don’t care whether it is or not, if it’s anything worth saying; and if it isn’t worth saying, what are you braying for?” That is a rather sensible fellow, that other chap we talk with, but an impudent whelp. I never got such abuse from any blackguard in my life as I have from that No. 2 of me, the one that answers the other’s questions and makes the comments, and does what in demotic phrase is called the “sarsing.”
—I laughed at that. I have just such a fellow always with me, as wise as Solomon, if I would only heed him; but as insolent as Shimei, cursing, and throwing stones and dirt, and behaving as if he had the traditions of the “ape-like human being” born with him rather than civilized instincts. One does not have to be a king to know what it is to keep a king’s jester.
—I mentioned my book,—the Master said, because I have something in it on the subject we were talking about. I should like to read you a passage here and there out of it, where I have expressed myself a little more freely on some of those matters we handle in conversation. If you don’t quarrel with it, I must give you a copy of the book. It’s a rather serious thing to get a copy of a book from the writer of it. It has made my adjectives sweat pretty hard, I know, to put together an answer returning thanks and not lying beyond the twilight of veracity, if one may use a figure. Let me try a little of my book on you, in divided doses, as my friends the doctors say.