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When Egypt Went Broke by Holman (Holman Francis) Day
page 10 of 316 (03%)
cigar. He knew perfectly well that he merely had been making a pretense
of enjoying that sybaritism, putting on his new clubman airs along with
his dye and his toupee.

Among other curios in the office was a dusty, stuffed alligator, hanging
from the ceiling over the desk. The jaws were widely agape and Mr.
Britt always felt an inclination to yawn when he looked alligatorward.
Therefore, the alligator offended Mr. Britt by suggesting drowsiness
in the morning; Mr. Britt, up early, and strictly after any worm that
showed itself along the financial path, resented the feeling of daytime
sleepiness as heresy. Furthermore, that morning the gaping alligator
also suggested the countenance of the open-mouthed Files whom Britt
had just left in the dining room, and Files had been irritating. Britt
scowled at the alligator, lighted a cigar, and hustled outdoors; he had
the feeling that the day was to be an important one in his affairs.

Egypt's Pharaoh was able to view considerable of the town from the
tavern porch. The tavern was an old stage-coach house and was boosted
high on a hill, according to the pioneer plan of location. The houses of
the little village straggled down the hill.

The aspect was not uninviting, seen under the charitable cloak of
February's snow, sun-touched by the freshly risen luminary, the white
expanses glinting; all the rocks and ledges and the barren shapes were
covered. But under summer's frank sunlight Egypt was as disheartening a
spectacle as a racked old horse, ribs and hip bones outthrust, waiting
for the knacker's offices.

There were men in Egypt--men whose reverses had put them in a
particularly ugly mood--who said out loud in places where Britt could
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