Alton Locke, Tailor and Poet - An Autobiography by Charles Kingsley
page 240 of 615 (39%)
page 240 of 615 (39%)
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silence, and actually, when they got into the street, broke out into
murmurs, perhaps into execrations. "Silence!" said Crossthwaite; "walls have ears. Come down to the nearest house of call, and talk it out like men, instead of grumbling in the street like fish-fags." So down we went. Crossthwaite, taking my arm, strode on in moody silence--once muttering to himself, bitterly-- "Oh, yes; all right and natural! What can the little sharks do but follow the big ones?" We took a room, and Crossthwaite coolly saw us all in; and locking the door, stood with his back against it. "Now then, mind, 'One and all,' as the Cornishmen say, and no peaching. If any man is scoundrel enough to carry tales, I'll--" "Do what?" asked Jemmy Downes, who had settled himself on the table, with a pipe and a pot of porter. "You arn't the king of the Cannibal Islands, as I know of, to cut a cove's head off?" "No; but if a poor man's prayer can bring God's curse down upon a traitor's head--it may stay on his rascally shoulders till it rots." "If ifs and ans were pots and pans. Look at Shechem Isaacs, that sold penknives in the street six months ago, now a-riding in his own carriage, all along of turning sweater. If God's curse is like that--I'll be happy to take any man's share of it." |
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