FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3029   3030   3031   3032   3033   3034   3035   3036   3037   3038   3039   3040   3041   3042   3043   3044   3045   3046   3047   3048   3049   3050   3051   3052   3053  
3054   3055   3056   3057   3058   3059   3060   3061   3062   3063   3064   3065   3066   3067   3068   3069   3070   3071   3072   3073   3074   3075   3076   3077   3078   >>   >|  
along the pavement; 'and if you were in your uniform, you damned Republican dog! I'd strip you with my own hands, for the disloyal scoundrel you are, with your pimping Republicanism and capsizing everything in a country like Old England. It's the cat-o'-nine-tails you want, and the bosen to lay on; and I'd do it myself. And mind me, when next I catch sight of you in blue and gold lace, I'll compel you to show cause why you wear it, and prove your case, or else I'll make a Cupid of you, and no joke about it. I don't pay money for a nincompoop to outrage my feelings of respect and loyalty, when he's in my pay, d' ye hear? You're in my pay: and you do your duty, or I 'll kick ye out of it. It's no empty threat. You look out for your next public speech, if it's anywhere within forty mile of London. Get along.' With a scowl, and a very ugly 'yah!' worthy of cannibal jaws, the man passed off. Beauchamp kept eye on him. 'What class does a fellow like that come of?' 'He's a harmless enthusiast,' said Lydiard. 'He has been reading the article, and has got excited over it.' 'I wish I had the fellow's address.' Beauchamp looked wistfully at Lydiard, but he did not stimulate the generous offer to obtain it for him. Perhaps it was as well to forget the fellow. 'You see the effect of those articles,' he said. 'You see what I mean by unseasonable times,' Lydiard retorted. 'He didn't talk like a tradesman,' Beauchamp mused. 'He may be one, for all that. It's better to class him as an enthusiast.' 'An enthusiast!' Beauchamp stamped: 'for what?' 'For the existing order of things; for his beef and ale; for the titles he is accustomed to read in the papers. You don't study your countrymen.' 'I'd study that fellow, if I had the chance.' 'You would probably find him one of the emptiest, with a rather worse temper than most of them.' Beauchamp shook Lydiard's hand, saying, 'The widow?' 'There's no woman like her!' 'Well, now you're free--why not? I think I put one man out of the field.' 'Too early! Besides--' 'Repeat that, and you may have to say too late.' 'When shall you go down to Bevisham?' 'When? I can't tell: when I've gone through fire. There never was a home for me like the cottage, and the old man, and the dear good girl--the best of girls! if you hadn't a little spoilt her with your philosophy of the two sides of the case.' 'I've not given her the brains.' 'She's always doubtful of doing
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3029   3030   3031   3032   3033   3034   3035   3036   3037   3038   3039   3040   3041   3042   3043   3044   3045   3046   3047   3048   3049   3050   3051   3052   3053  
3054   3055   3056   3057   3058   3059   3060   3061   3062   3063   3064   3065   3066   3067   3068   3069   3070   3071   3072   3073   3074   3075   3076   3077   3078   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
Beauchamp
 

fellow

 
Lydiard
 

enthusiast

 

countrymen

 

chance

 

damned

 
titles
 

accustomed

 
papers

emptiest

 
temper
 

tradesman

 

retorted

 

unseasonable

 

Republican

 

things

 

uniform

 

existing

 

stamped


cottage

 

doubtful

 

brains

 
spoilt
 

philosophy

 

Besides

 

Repeat

 

Bevisham

 

pavement

 
effect

threat

 

public

 

speech

 

worthy

 

London

 

loyalty

 

compel

 

nincompoop

 

outrage

 

feelings


respect

 

cannibal

 
scoundrel
 
wistfully
 

looked

 

address

 

stimulate

 

generous

 

forget

 
obtain