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Bailey, Temple, -1953

"The Tin Soldier"


There were men who envied him as he swept past them in the rain, men
who felt that he had more than his share of wealth and ease, yet he
would have made a glad exchange for the feet which took them where they
willed.
He came at last to one of his old haunts, a small stone house on the
edge of the Canal. From its wide porch he had often watched the slow
boats go by, with men and women and children living in worlds bounded
by weather-beaten decks. To-day in the rain there was a blur of lilac
bushes along the tow path, but no boats were in sight; the Canal was a
ruffled gray sheet in the April wind.
Lounging in the low-ceiled front room of the stone house were men of
the type with whom he had once foregathered--men not of his class or
kind, but interesting because of their very differences--human
derelicts who had welcomed him.
But now, for the first time he was not one of them. They eyed his
elegances with suspicion--his fur coat, his gloves, his hat--the man
whose limousine stood in front of the door was not one of them; they
might beg of him, but they would never call him "Brother."
So, because his feet no longer carried him, and he must ride, he found
himself cast out, as it were, by outcasts.


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