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Confidence-Man, The
Chapter 33. Which May Pass For Whatever It May Prove To Be Worth
Herman Melville
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       _ CHAPTER XXXIII. WHICH MAY PASS FOR WHATEVER IT MAY PROVE TO BE WORTH
       But ere be given the rather grave story of Charlemont, a reply must in civility be made to a certain voice which methinks I hear, that, in view of past chapters, and more particularly the last, where certain antics appear, exclaims: How unreal all this is! Who did ever dress or act like your cosmopolitan? And who, it might be returned, did ever dress or act like harlequin?
       Strange, that in a work of amusement, this severe fidelity to real life should be exacted by any one, who, by taking up such a work, sufficiently shows that he is not unwilling to drop real life, and turn, for a time, to something different. Yes, it is, indeed, strange that any one should clamor for the thing he is weary of; that any one, who, for any cause, finds real life dull, should yet demand of him who is to divert his attention from it, that he should be true to that dullness.
       There is another class, and with this class we side, who sit down to a work of amusement tolerantly as they sit at a play, and with much the same expectations and feelings. They look that fancy shall evoke scenes different from those of the same old crowd round the custom-house counter, and same old dishes on the boardinghouse table, with characters unlike those of the same old acquaintances they meet in the same old way every day in the same old street. And as, in real life, the proprieties will not allow people to act out themselves with that unreserve permitted to the stage; so, in books of fiction, they look not only for more entertainment, but, at bottom, even for more reality, than real life itself can show. Thus, though they want novelty, they want nature, too; but nature unfettered, exhilarated, in effect transformed. In this way of thinking, the people in a fiction, like the people in a play, must dress as nobody exactly dresses, talk as nobody exactly talks, act as nobody exactly acts. It is with fiction as with religion: it should present another world, and yet one to which we feel the tie.
       If, then, something is to be pardoned to well-meant endeavor, surely a little is to be allowed to that writer who, in all his scenes, does but seek to minister to what, as he understands it, is the implied wish of the more indulgent lovers of entertainment, before whom harlequin can never appear in a coat too parti-colored, or cut capers too fantastic.
       One word more. Though every one knows how bootless it is to be in all cases vindicating one's self, never mind how convinced one may be that he is never in the wrong; yet, so precious to man is the approbation of his kind, that to rest, though but under an imaginary censure applied to but a work of imagination, is no easy thing. The mention of this weakness will explain why such readers as may think they perceive something harmonious between the boisterous hilarity of the cosmopolitan with the bristling cynic, and his restrained good-nature with the boon-companion, are now referred to that chapter where some similar apparent inconsistency in another character is, on general principles, modestly endeavored to-be apologized for. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. A Mute Goes Aboard A Boat On The Mississippi
Chapter 2. Showing That Many Men Have Many Minds
Chapter 3. In Which A Variety Of Characters Appear
Chapter 4. Renewal Of Old Acquaintance
Chapter 5. The Man With The Weed Makes It An Even Question..
Chapter 6. At The Outset Of Which Certain Passengers Prove Deaf...
Chapter 7. A Gentleman With Gold Sleeve-Buttons
Chapter 8. A Charitable Lady
Chapter 9. Two Business Men Transact A Little Business
Chapter 10. In The Cabin
Chapter 11. Only A Page Or So
Chapter 12. Story Of The Unfortunate Man
Chapter 13. The Man With The Traveling-Cap Evinces Much Humanity...
Chapter 14. Worth The Consideration Of Those..
Chapter 15. An Old Miser, Upon Suitable Representations..
Chapter 16. A Sick Man, After Some Impatience, Is Induced To Become A Patient
Chapter 17. Towards The End Of Which The Herb-Doctor Proves Himself...
Chapter 18. Inquest Into The True Character Of The Herb-Doctor
Chapter 19. A Soldier Of Fortune
Chapter 20. Reappearance Of One Who May Be Remembered
Chapter 21. A Hard Case
Chapter 22. In The Polite Spirit Of The Tusculan Disputations
Chapter 23. In Which The Powerful Effect Of Natural Scenery Is Evinced...
Chapter 24. A Philanthropist Undertakes To Convert A Misanthrope..
Chapter 25. The Cosmopolitan Makes An Acquaintance
Chapter 26. Containing The Metaphysics Of Indian-Hating...
Chapter 27. Some Account Of A Man Of Questionable Morality...
Chapter 28. Moot Points Touching The Late Colonel John Moredock
Chapter 29. The Boon Companions
Chapter 30. Opening With A Poetical Eulogy Of The Press...
Chapter 31. A Metamorphosis More Surprising Than Any In Ovid
Chapter 32. Showing That The Age Of Magic And Magicians Is Not Yet Over
Chapter 33. Which May Pass For Whatever It May Prove To Be Worth
Chapter 34. In Which The Cosmopolitan Tells The Story Of The Gentleman Madman
Chapter 35. In Which The Cosmopolitan Strikingly Evinces...
Chapter 36. In Which The Cosmopolitan Is Accosted By A Mystic...
Chapter 37. Mystical Master Introduces The Practical Disciple
Chapter 38. Disciple Unbends, And Consents To Act A Social Part
Chapter 39. The Hypothetical Friends
Chapter 40. In Which The Story Of China Aster Is At Second-Hand...
Chapter 41. Ending With A Rupture Of The Hypothesis
Chapter 42. Upon The Heel Of The Last Scene...
Chapter 43. Very Charming
Chapter 44. In Which The Last Three Words Of The Last Chapter...
Chapter 45. The Cosmopolitan Increases In Seriousness