Heart and Hands critical appreciation.
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Appreaciation of ''Hearts and Hands''
In ''Hearts and Hands,'' a woman, Miss Fairchild, spots an old friend named Mr. Easton on a train handcuffed to another man. That man calls her friend Mr. Marshal when she sees the cuffs. Turns out, the man is actually the marshal, and Mr. Easton is the prisoner. The marshal just wants to save them both from embarrassment.
It takes very little information for Miss Fairchild to believe that the one person on the coach who she knows is a respectable man. Perhaps she associates her own class and respectability with her old friend, or perhaps she is very gullible. She doesn't think twice to question the word of the rough-looking man to whom her friend, Mr. Easton, is handcuffed.
When Miss Fairchild continues to talk about how she would like to move back to the West, possibly flirting and insinuating that she would be interested in courtship, the rough man, the real marshal, interrupts her. He calls Mr. Easton ''Mr. Marshal'' and claims to want to go to the smokers' room. With that, they leave the room. The real marshal is sparing the woman from further embarrassment and heartbreak by doing this. The more he allows Mr. Easton and Miss Fairchild to speak, the more he will have to lie.
Mr. Easton is as quick-thinking as the real marshal. He's also quite the opportunist. He doesn't flinch to lie and continues to lie to Miss Fairchild once the marshal gets the ball rolling. He lays out an explanation as to why he has moved to the West and why he won't be able to see her in the future. He even picks up on the hint from the marshal when he asks to go to the smoke room quickly. He immediately accepts the request claiming that he cannot deny a man asking for a smoke because, ''It's the one friend of the unfortunate.''
The real marshal is a selfless man. He sees the horror on Miss Fairchild's face when she first sees the handcuffs on Mr. Easton and speaks up. He calls Easton ''Marshal'' to detour her thoughts. Later, after he sees that she seems interested in Mr. Easton, he cuts the conversation short without revealing the truth to save her from embarrassment. The ''heart'' part of the title is dedicated to him. The ''hand'' part is about Mr. Easton. O. Henry's known for writing about good people, irony, and symbolism. This story has all three.