Now, With All Their Natural Acuteness And Habitual Dexterity In Such
Matters, The Canadians Have One Weak Point; They Are Too Ready To
Believe That Englishmen Are Made Of Money.
All that an emigrant has
to do to acquire the reputation of having money, is to seem quite
easy, and free from care or anxiety for the future, and to maintain
a certain degree of reserve in talking of his private affairs.
Mr.
B - - perfectly understood how to play his cards with the
land-jobber; and his fat, jolly physiognomy, and rustic, provincial
manners and accent, greatly assisted him in the deception.
Every day Q - - drove him out to look at different farms. B - - talked
carelessly of buying some large "block" of land, that would have
cost him some 3000 or 4000 pounds, providing he could only find
the kind of soil he particularly liked for farming purposes. As he
seemed to be in no hurry in making his selection, Q - - determined
to make him useful, in the meantime, in promoting his views with
respect to others. He therefore puffed Mr. B - - up to everybody as
a Norfolk farmer of large capital, and always appealed to him to
confirm the character he gave of any farm he wished to sell to a new
comer. B - -, on his side, was not slow in playing into Q - -'s hand
on these occasions, and without being at all suspected of collusion.
In the evening, Mr. B - - would walk into the public room of the
tavern, apparently fatigued with his exertions through the day;
fling himself carelessly on a sofa, and unbutton his gaiters and the
knees of his small-clothes. He took little notice of anybody unless
he was spoken to, and his whole demeanour seemed to say, as plainly
as words, "I care for nobody, nobody cares for me." This was just
the kind of man for Q - -. He instantly saw that he would be an
invaluable ally and coadjutor, without seeming to be so. When B - -
made his appearance in the evening, Q - - was seldom at the tavern,
for his time had not yet come. In the meanwhile, B - - was sure to
be drawn gradually into conversation by some emigrants, who, seeing
that he was a practical farmer, would be desirous of getting his
opinion respecting certain farms which they thought of purchasing.
There was such an appearance of blunt simplicity of character about
him, that most of these inquirers thought he was forgetting his own
interest in telling them so much as he did. In the course of
conversation, he would mention several farms he had been looking at
with the intention of purchasing, and he would particularly mention
some one of them as possessing extraordinary advantages, but which
had some one disadvantage which rendered it ineligible for him; such
as being too small, a circumstance which, in all probability, would
recommend it to another description of settler.
It is hard to say whether Q - - was or was not deceived by B - -; but
though he used him for the present as a decoy, he no doubt expected
ultimately to sell him some of his farms, with a very handsome
profit.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 149 of 349
Words from 77138 to 77667
of 181664