FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   >>  
a paper saying as they were willing for 'im to 'ave their money and give it to 'em bit by bit, till they went to sea agin. Anybody but Ginger Dick and Peter Russet or a fool would ha' known better than to do such a thing, but old Isaac 'ad got such a oily tongue and seemed so fair-minded about wot 'e called moderate drinking that they never thought wot they was letting themselves in for, and when they took their pay--close on sixteen pounds each--they put the odd change in their pockets and 'anded the rest over to him. The first day they was as pleased as Punch. Old Isaac got a nice, respectable bedroom for them all, and arter they'd 'ad a few drinks they humoured 'im by 'aving a nice 'ot cup o' tea, and then goin' off with 'im to see a magic-lantern performance. It was called "The Drunkard's Downfall," and it begun with a young man going into a nice-looking pub and being served by a nice-looking barmaid with a glass of ale. Then it got on to 'arf pints and pints in the next picture, and arter Ginger 'ad seen the lost young man put away six pints in about 'arf a minute, 'e got such a raging thirst on 'im that 'e couldn't sit still, and 'e whispered to Peter Russet to go out with 'im. "You'll lose the best of it if you go now," ses old Isaac, in a whisper; "in the next picture there's little frogs and devils sitting on the edge of the pot as 'e goes to drink." "Ginger Dick got up and nodded to Peter." "Arter that 'e kills 'is mother with a razor," ses old Isaac, pleading with 'im and 'olding on to 'is coat. Ginger Dick sat down agin, and when the murder was over 'e said it made 'im feel faint, and 'im and Peter Russet went out for a breath of fresh air. They 'ad three at the first place, and then they moved on to another and forgot all about Isaac and the dissolving views until ten o'clock, when Ginger, who 'ad been very liberal to some friends 'e'd made in a pub, found 'e'd spent 'is last penny. "This comes o' listening to a parcel o' teetotalers," 'e ses, very cross, when 'e found that Peter 'ad spent all 'is money too. "Here we are just beginning the evening and not a farthing in our pockets." They went off 'ome in a very bad temper. Old Isaac was asleep in 'is bed, and when they woke 'im up and said that they was going to take charge of their money themselves 'e kept dropping off to sleep agin and snoring that 'ard they could scarcely hear themselves speak. Then Peter tipped Ginger a wink an
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   >>  



Top keywords:

Ginger

 

Russet

 
pockets
 
picture
 
called
 

breath

 

devils

 

forgot

 

dissolving

 

mother


nodded

 

pleading

 

olding

 

liberal

 

sitting

 
murder
 

friends

 
charge
 

asleep

 
temper

dropping

 

tipped

 
scarcely
 

snoring

 

farthing

 

listening

 

parcel

 

teetotalers

 

beginning

 

evening


humoured

 
minded
 

drinks

 

performance

 

Drunkard

 

lantern

 

tongue

 

bedroom

 

change

 

pounds


letting

 

drinking

 

moderate

 

respectable

 

pleased

 

thought

 
Downfall
 
whispered
 
Anybody
 

raging