[The Gilded Age Part 7. by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner]@TWC D-Link bookThe Gilded Age Part 7. CHAPTER LVII 1/16
The momentous day was at hand--a day that promised to make or mar the fortunes of Hawkins family for all time.
Washington Hawkins and Col. Sellers were both up early, for neither of them could sleep.
Congress was expiring, and was passing bill after bill as if they were gasps and each likely to be its last.
The University was on file for its third reading this day, and to-morrow Washington would be a millionaire and Sellers no longer, impecunious but this day, also, or at farthest the next, the jury in Laura's Case would come to a decision of some kind or other--they would find her guilty, Washington secretly feared, and then the care and the trouble would all come back again, and these would be wearing months of besieging judges for new trials; on this day, also, the re-election of Mr.Dilworthy to the Senate would take place.
So Washington's mind was in a state of turmoil; there were more interests at stake than it could handle with serenity.
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