[Arcadian Adventures with the Idle Rich by Stephen Leacock]@TWC D-Link bookArcadian Adventures with the Idle Rich CHAPTER ONE: A Little Dinner with Mr 37/37
In fact, it would seem that, dissimilar as they were in many ways, they found a common bond of interest in sport.
And it is quite likely that Mr.Boulder may have mentioned that he had a hunting-lodge--what the Duke would call a shooting-box--in Wisconsin woods, and that it was made of logs, rough cedar logs not squared, and that the timber wolves and others which surrounded it were of a ferocity without parallel. Those who know the Duke best could measure the effect of that upon his temperament. At any rate, it is certain that Mr.Lucullus Fyshe at his breakfast-table next morning chuckled with suppressed joy to read in the _Plutopian Citizen_ the item: "We learn that the Duke of Dulham, who has been paying a brief visit to the City, leaves this morning with Mr.Asmodeus Boulder for the Wisconsin woods.
We understand that Mr.Boulder intends to show his guest, who is an ardent sportsman, something of the American wolf." * * * * * And so the Duke went whirling westwards and northwards with Mr.Boulder in the drawing-room end of a Pullman car, that was all littered up with double-barrelled express rifles and leather game bags and lynx catchers and wolf traps and Heaven knows what.
And the Duke had on his very roughest sporting-suit, made, apparently, of alligator hide; and as he sat there with a rifle across his knees, while the train swept onwards through open fields and broken woods, the real country at last, towards the Wisconsin forest, there was such a light of genial happiness in his face that had not been seen there since he had been marooned in the mud jungles of Upper Burmah. And opposite, Mr.Boulder looked at him with fixed silent eyes, and murmured from time to time some renewed information of the ferocity of the timber-wolf. But of wolves other than the timber-wolf, and fiercer still into whose hands the Duke might fall in America, he spoke never a word. Nor is it known in the record what happened in Wisconsin, and to the Mausoleum Club the Duke and his visit remained only as a passing and a pleasant memory..
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