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kozt legkissebb,' the least among the Magyars. I do hate that Scott, and all his vile gang of Lowlanders and Highlanders. The black corps, the fekete regiment of Matyjas Hunyadi, was worth all the Scots, high or low, that ever pretended to be soldiers; and would have sent them all headlong into the Black Sea, had they dared to confront it on its shores; but why be angry with an ignorant, who couples together Thor and Tzernebock? Ha! ha!" "You have read his novels?" said I. "Yes, I read them now and then. I do not speak much English, but I can read it well, and I have read some of his romances, and mean to read his Napoleon, in the hope of finding Thor and Tzernebock coupled together in it, as in his high-flying Ivanhoe." "Come," said the jockey, "no more Dutch, whether high or low. I am tired of it; unless we can have some English, I am off to bed." "I should be very glad to hear some English," said I; "especially from your mouth. Several things which you have mentioned have awakened my curiosity. Suppose you give us your history?" "My history?" said the jockey. "A rum idea! however, lest conversation should lag, I'll give it you. First of all, however, a glass of champagne to each." After we had each taken a glass of champagne, the jockey commenced his history. CHAPTER XLI. THE JOCKEY'S TALE--THIEVES' LATIN--LIBERTIES WITH COIN--THE SMASHER IN PRISON--OLD FULCHER--EVERY ONE HAS HIS GIFT--FASHION OF THE ENGLISH. "My grandfather was a shorter, and my father was a smasher; the one was scragg'd, and the other lagg'd." I here interrupted the jockey by observing that his discourse was, for the greater part, unintelligible to me. "I do not understand much English," said the Hungarian, who, having replenished and resumed his mighty pipe, was now smoking away; "but, by Isten, I believe it is the gibberish which that great ignorant Valter Scott puts into the mouth of the folks he calls gypsies." "Something like it, I confess," said I, "though this sounds more genuine than his dialect, which he picked up out of the canting vocabulary at the end of the 'English Rogue,' a book which, however despised, was written by a remarkable genius. What do you call the speech you were using?" said I, addressing myself to the jockey. "Latin," said the jockey, very coolly; "that is, that dialect of it which is used by the light-fingered gentry." "He is right," said the Hungarian; "it is what the G
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