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PAGE 3

The Office Seeker
by [?]

As my business was with the manager of this Great National Fancy Shop, I managed to push by the sad-eyed, eager-faced crowd of men and women in the anteroom, and entered the secretary’s room, conscious of having left behind me a great deal of envy and uncharitableness of spirit. As I opened the door I heard a monotonous flow of Western speech which I thought I recognized. There was no mistaking it. It was the voice of the Gashwiler.

“The appointment of this man, Mr. Secretary, would be most acceptable to the people in my deestrict. His family are wealthy and influential, and it’s just as well in the fall elections to have the supervisors and county judge pledged to support the administration. Our delegates to the State Central Committee are to a man”–but here, perceiving from the wandering eye of Mr. Secretary that there was another man in the room, he whispered the rest with a familiarity that must have required all the politician in the official’s breast to keep from resenting.

“You have some papers, I suppose?” asked the secretary, wearily.

Gashwiler was provided with a pocketful, and produced them. The secretary threw them on the table among the other papers, where they seemed instantly to lose their identity, and looked as if they were ready to recommend anybody but the person they belonged to. Indeed, in one corner the entire Massachusetts delegation, with the Supreme Bench at their head, appeared to be earnestly advocating the manuring of Iowa waste lands; and to the inexperienced eye, a noted female reformer had apparently appended her signature to a request for a pension for wounds received in battle.

“By the way,” said the secretary, “I think I have a letter here from somebody in your district asking an appointment, and referring to you? Do you withdraw it?”

“If anybody has been presuming to speculate upon my patronage,” said the Hon. Mr. Gashwiler, with rising rage.

“I’ve got the letter somewhere here,” said the secretary, looking dazedly at his table. He made a feeble movement among the papers, and then sank back hopelessly in his chair, and gazed out of the window as if he thought and rather hoped it might have flown away. “It was from a Mr. Globbs, or Gobbs, or Dobbs, of Remus,” he said finally, after a superhuman effort of memory.

“Oh, that’s nothing–a foolish fellow who has been boring me for the last month.”

“Then I am to understand that this application is withdrawn?”

“As far as my patronage is concerned, certainly. In fact, such an appointment would not express the sentiments–indeed, I may say, would be calculated to raise active opposition in the deestrict.”

The secretary uttered a sigh of relief, and the gifted Gashwiler passed out. I tried to get a good look at the honorable scamp’s eye, but he evidently did not recognize me.

It was a question in my mind whether I ought not to expose the treachery of Dobbs’s friend, but the next time I met Dobbs he was in such good spirits that I forebore. It appeared that his wife had written to him that she had discovered a second cousin in the person of the Assistant Superintendent of the Envelope Flap Moistening Bureau of the Department of Tape, and had asked his assistance; and Dobbs had seen him, and he had promised it. “You see,” said Dobbs, “in the performance of his duties he is often very near the person of the secretary, frequently in the next room, and he is a powerful man, sir–a powerful man to know, sir–a VERY powerful man.”

How long this continued I do not remember. Long enough, however, for Dobbs to become quite seedy, for the giving up of wrist cuffs, for the neglect of shoes and beard, and for great hollows to form round his eyes, and a slight flush on his cheek-bones. I remember meeting him in all the departments, writing letters or waiting patiently in anterooms from morning till night. He had lost all his old dogmatism, but not his pride. “I might as well be here as anywhere, while I’m waiting,” he said, “and then I’m getting some knowledge of the details of official life.”