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IT was a chilly November afternoon.  I had just consummated an unusually hearty dinner, of which the dyspeptic truffe formed not the least important item, and was sitting alone in  the dining-room, with my feet upon the fender, and at my elbow a small  table which I had rolled up to the fire, and upon which were some  apologies for dessert, with some miscellaneous bottles of wine, spirit  and liqueur.  In the morning I had been reading Glover's "Leonidas,"  Wilkie's "Epigoniad," Lamartine's "Pilgrimage," Barlow's "Columbiad,"  Tuckermann's "Sicily," and Griswold's "Curiosities" ;  I am willing to  confess, therefore, that I now felt a little stupid.  I made effort to  arouse myself by aid of frequent Lafitte,  and, all failing, I betook myself to a stray newspaper in  despair.  Having carefully perused the column of "houses to let," and  the column of "dogs lost," and then the two columns of "wives and  apprentices runaway," I attacked with great resolution the editorial  matter, and, reading it from beginning to end without understanding a  syllable, conceived the possibility of its being Chinese, and so re-read  it from the end to the beginning, but with no more satisfactory result.