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<title type="main">Gratitude</title>
<author sameAs="#cwc">Charles W. Chesnutt</author>
<principal sameAs="#spb">Stephanie P. Browner</principal>
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<resp>Scanning, Optical Character Recognition, Proofreading, and Encoding</resp>
<name xml:id="jmf">Freiermuth, John M.</name>
<name xml:id="spb">Browner, Stephanie P.</name>
<name xml:id="lkw">Weakly, Laura K.</name>
<name xml:id="amm">Morrison, Ashley M.</name>
 <name xml:id="as">Stewart, Ashlyn</name>
 <name xml:id="km">McMullen, Kevin</name> 
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<edition><date>2018</date></edition>
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<authority>The Charles Chesnutt Digital Archive</authority>
<publisher>University of Nebraska-Lincoln</publisher>
<distributor>
<name>Center for Digital Research in the Humanities</name> 
<address>
<addrLine>319 Love Library</addrLine>
<addrLine>University of Nebraska&#8211;Lincoln</addrLine>
<addrLine>Lincoln, NE 68588-4100</addrLine>
<addrLine>cdrh@unlnotes.unl.edu</addrLine>
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<pubPlace>Lincoln, Nebraska</pubPlace>
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<addrLine>University of Nebraska-Lincoln</addrLine>
<addrLine>Lincoln, NE 68588-4100</addrLine>
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<idno>ccda.works00016</idno>

<availability> 
        <licence>https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/</licence>
        <p>The base text of the original item is in the public domain. The text encoding and editorial notes were created and/or prepared by the <hi rend="italic">Charles W. Chesnutt Archive</hi> and are licensed under a <ref target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License</ref> (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). Any reuse of the material should credit the <hi rend="italic">Charles W. Chesnutt Archive</hi>.</p> 
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<note>One of nine one-page stories that appeared in Puck between 1887 and 1891, "Gratitude" is a blunt, enigmatic tale of a tiresome door-to-door salesman. In "An Eloquent Appeal," published in Puck six months earlier, Chesnutt envisions a salesman with political justifications for his request for money.</note> 
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<author xml:id="cwc" nymRef="http://viaf.org/viaf/22198527">Chesnutt, Charles W. (Waddell)</author>
<title level="a" type="main">Gratitude</title> 
<date when="1888-12-26">December 26, 1888</date>
<title level="j">Puck</title>
<pubPlace>New Haven, Connecticut</pubPlace>
<biblScope unit="page">300</biblScope>
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<bibl>
<author sameAs="#cwc" nymRef="http://viaf.org/viaf/22198527"/>
<title level="a" type="main">Gratitude</title> 
<date when="1974">1974</date>
<title level="j">Short Fiction</title>
<biblScope unit="page">62-63</biblScope> 
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<revisionDesc>
 <change when="2021-06-14"><name sameAs="#km">Kevin McMullen</name> fixed bibl</change>
 <change when="2021-04-12"><name sameAs="#km">Kevin McMullen</name> deleted forme work</change>
 <change when="2021-04-02"><name sameAs="#as">Ashlyn Stewart</name> added images</change>
 <change when="2018-04-20"><name sameAs="#lkw">Laura Weakly</name> review</change>
<change when="2018-01-10"><name sameAs="#amm">Ashley M. Morrison</name> tei encoding</change>
 <change>The scanning was done in the Jackson Library computer laboratory by <name sameAs="#jmf">John M. Freiermuth</name>. The OCR scanning was done through the Caere Omnipage Professional 9.0. Initial proof reading was performed by <name>John M. Freiermuth</name>. Additional proofreading was performed by <name sameAs="#spb">Stephanie P. Browner</name> in 2006.</change>
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 <pb facs="ccda.works00016.001"/>

<head>GRATITUDE</head>

<p>"Good morning, Sir."</p>

<p>"I glanced from my desk at a tall, cadaverous-looking individual, clad in a faded brown ulster.</p>

<p>"I hope I don't disturb you?"</p>

<p>"You have n't yet," I observed.</p>

<p>"Thank you, very much. If it is n't troubling you, would you be kind enough to permit me to show you the advance sheets of our new work on "Art in the Middle Ages?"</p>

<p>"I don't want it."</p>

<p>"Thank you; but I don't ask you to buy it, but merely to look at it."</p>

<p>I am of a very obliging disposition. I turned over a few pages hastily, without giving him an opportunity to recite his usual lecture.</p>

<p>"Yes," I said, as I handed the book back to him, "it seems to be a pretty good book; but I'm not able to buy it."</p>

<p>"I'm very much obliged to you for the opportunity of showing it to you."</p>

<p>"Not at all," I replied, turning to my balance-sheet.</p>

<p>"Could n't I offer you some inducement in the way of easy terms?"</p>

<p>"I can't afford it on any terms at present."</p>

<p>"I am sorry," he said, as he started reluctantly toward the door; "but, as it is, I owe you a debt of gratitude for permitting me to talk to you about it. The life of a book agent, sir, is hard; and it is like an oasis in a desert to meet a man who will permit an agent to describe his book. <hi rend="italic">Good</hi> morning, sir."</p>

<p>I was half-way down a column of figures, when he came back and remarked, over my shoulder, insinuatingly:</p>

<p>"Would fifty cents a month bring it within your means?"</p>

<p>"No," I said, with a touch of impatience; "I can't buy it at any price. I'm too busy to talk about it now, any how."</p>

<p>"Well, good morning, sir. I'm sorry to have disturbed you; but I'm more than obliged to you for the opportunity of showing you the work and letting you know what it is."</p>

<p>I started down the column of figures again, and had reached a total of two hundred and fifty-seven, when a voice remarked, apologetically, close to my ear:</p>

<p>"Excuse me, sir; but would you object to my inquiring when you think it is possible that you will be likely to have leisure to examine the work a little more thoroughly?"</p>

<p>I could bear no more. I arose from my desk, and calmly but firmly took my visitor by the collar, and led him out into the hall and to the head of the stairs. Then, with a skill derived from long practice, I kicked him downstairs.</p>

<p>I stood and watched his abrupt and somewhat undignified descent. The scund of breaking bones came up the hallway. A moment later the book-agent picked himself up, slowly and painfully, and called back to me in a broken but grateful voice, as he limped away:</p>

<p>"Thank you, sir; I am ever so much obliged to you for letting me off alive."</p>

<byline><hi rend="italic">Chas. W. Chesntt.</hi></byline>
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