FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   >>  
e advantage of a military body of which he had information. Ere long a sound of horses was heard; they were immediately on the alert, and succeeded in arresting a French escort of seven soldiers on foot, and the same number on horseback, conducting the baggage-wagon of a French colonel of the line. It contained all his effects, and money to a large amount. Upon the first fire of Spatolino's band, five of the soldiers were killed, and three desperately wounded; he then threw himself amongst the others, who were placed on the defence, and who had expended their fire without hurting a single individual of the band. Spatolino, with his pistols, killed two, and a few moments saw him and his band masters of the field. Spatolino ordered his men to strip the dead, and placing every thing in the wagon, after digging a pit for the bodies, they retired to a cave in a wood near the road, where the booty was equally divided. He took himself two of the best horses, and armed and equipped his band in a superior manner. He also presented to his wife a part of the spoil, she having been armed in the action, performing the duty of a sentinel on the highway in advance about half a mile off, to give notice, in case of an overwhelming force appearing. Spatolino, having made a fair division of the spoil to raise the courage of his companions, sent all his own money to his parents, informing them at the same time, that for the future they should be released from misery, as he would ever bear in mind the beings who gave him birth.--_New Monthly Magazine_. * * * * * AN UNINSURABLE RISK. A bookseller opened a shop on the coast, (I'd rather not mention the spot,) Where gentlemen lounged o'er the Herald and Post, And ladies read Byron and Scott. Much personal memoir, too, shone on the shelves, Which boasted a whimsical olio; Decorum sang small, in octavoes and twelves, And scandal in quarto and folio. The bookseller, prudently aiming to set Th' ignipotent god at defiance, To open a policy vainly essay'd At the Albion, the Hope, and Alliance. "My friend, your abortive attempt prithee stop," Quoth Jekyll, intent on a joke, "How can you expect to insure, while your shop Is rolling out volumes of smoke?" Ibid. * * * * * LONDON NEWSPAPERS. On few subjects are the public under more misapprehension than on the
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   >>  



Top keywords:
Spatolino
 

bookseller

 

killed

 

horses

 

French

 
soldiers
 
boasted
 

gentlemen

 

shelves

 

Herald


ladies

 
memoir
 

lounged

 

personal

 

future

 

beings

 

released

 

misery

 

whimsical

 

opened


Monthly
 

Magazine

 

UNINSURABLE

 
mention
 
expect
 
insure
 
prithee
 

Jekyll

 

intent

 

rolling


public

 
misapprehension
 

subjects

 

volumes

 

LONDON

 
NEWSPAPERS
 

attempt

 

abortive

 

prudently

 
aiming

quarto

 

scandal

 

Decorum

 
octavoes
 

twelves

 

ignipotent

 

Albion

 

Alliance

 

friend

 
defiance