News from the Duchy by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
page 92 of 243 (37%)
page 92 of 243 (37%)
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some bricks from the wall of his cell, and he came wriggling through
the aperture, using the most dreadful oaths. "Stir yourselves--Oh,--,--, stir yourselves! Standin' there like a--lot of stuck pigs! Get out the Admiral! The Admiral, I tell you! . . . . Hark to the poor old devil, damnin' away down ther, wi' two hundredweight o' table pressin' against his belly!" Mr. Edwards, in fact, used an even more vulgar word. But he was not stopping to weigh words. Magistrates, Inspector, Clerk--he took charge of them all on the spot--a master of men. The Admiral, in the unfathomed dark of the cellar, was indeed uttering language to make your hair creep. "Oh, cuss away, y' old varmint!" sang down Mr. Edwards cheerfully. "The louder you cuss, the better the hearin'; 'means ye have air to breathe an' nothin' broke internal. . . . Eh? Oh, _I_ knows th' old warrior! Opened a gate for en once when he was out hare-huntin', up St. Germans way--I likes a bit o' sport, I do, when I happens on it. Lord love ye, the way he damned my eyes for bein' slow about it! . . . Aye, aye, Admiral! Cuss away, cuss away--proper quarter-deck you're givin' us! But we're gettin' to you fast as we can. . . . England can't spare the likes o' you--an' she won't, not if we can help it!" The man worked like a demon. What is more, he was making the others work, flailing them all--peer and baronet and parson--with slave-driver's oaths, while they tugged to loosen the timbers under which the magistrates' table lay wedged. |
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