[Heart’s Desire by Emerson Hough]@TWC D-Link book
Heart’s Desire

CHAPTER IX
12/18

Who, if not the Learned Counsel on my right and myself, organized the social and legal system of this community?
Who paved these broad boulevards of our beauteous city?
Who put up the electric lightin' and heatin' plant, and installed the forty-eight miles of continuous trolley track all under one transfer system?
Who built the courthouse and the red brick schoolhouse, with nine school-teachers fresh from Connecticut?
Who planned the new depot?
Who got a new leather lounge for the managin' editor of our daily newspaper?
Who built the three new smelters?
Who filled our busy streets each evenin' with throngs of happy-faced laborers pacin' home at night after four hours' pleasant work each day in our elegantly upholstered quartz mines?
Was it you, Curly, who made these different and several _pasears_ in progress?
Was it you, Doc, you benighted stray from the short-grass Kansas plains, where they can't raise Kafir corn?
Was it you, McKinney, you sour-dispositioned consumer of canned peas?
Nay, nay.

It was myself and my learned brother.

You ought to send us both to Congress." We gazed up the long, silent street of Heart's Desire, asleep in the all-satisfying sun, and it almost seemed to us that we could indeed see all these things that he had named.

The spell was broken by a renewal of the thin, high voice of this mysterious Thing in Tom Osby's house.
"And now," resumed Dan Anderson, "as I remarked, havin' turned our hands to the stable things of life, and havin' builded well the structure of an endurin', permanent society, there remained for us no need save for the softenin' and refinin' touch of a higher culture.

We lacked nothing but Art.


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