Sketches — Volume 02 by Robert Seymour
page 29 of 33 (87%)
page 29 of 33 (87%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
The Itinerant Musician.
A wandering son of Apollo, with a shocking bad hat, encircled by a melancholy piece of rusty crape, and arrayed in garments that had once shone with renovated splendour in that mart of second-hand habiliments 'ycleped Monmouth-street, was affrighting the echoes of a fashionable street by blowing upon an old clarionet, and doing the 'Follow, hark!' of Weber the most palpable injustice. The red hand of the greasy cook tapped at the kitchen-window below, and she scolded inaudibly--but he still continued to amuse--himself, as regardless of the cook's scolding as of the area-railing against which he leaned, tuning his discordant lay. His strain indeed appeared endless, and he still persevered in torturing the ambient air with, apparently, as little prospect of blowing himself out as an asthmatic man would possibly have of extinguishing a smoky link with a wheeze--or a hungry cadger without a penny! The master of the mansion was suffering under a touch of the gout, accompanied by a gnawing tooth-ache!--The horrid noise without made his trembling nerves jangle like the loose strings of an untuned guitar. A furious tug at the bell brought down the silken rope and brought up an orbicular footman. "William" "Yes, sir." |
|