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- 4606
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- 2026-01-30T20:48:26.981Z
- extracted_by
- structure-extraction-lambda
- start_line
- 4538
- text
- I felt in rare spirits the whole morning. The dun called about eleven. I
had the boy Jake send the dun up. I was reading _Tristram Shandy_, and
could not go down under the circumstances. The lean rascal (a lean
farmer, too--think of that!) entered, and found me seated in an
armchair, with my feet on the table, and the second bottle of brown
stout handy, and the book under eye.
‘Sit down,’ said I; ‘I’ll finish this chapter, and then attend to you.
Fine morning. Ha! ha!--this is a fine joke about my Uncle Toby and the
Widow Wadman! Ha! ha! ha! let me read this to you.’
‘I have no time; I’ve got my noon _chores_ to do.’
‘To the deuce with your _chores_!’ said I. ‘Don’t drop your old tobacco
about here, or I’ll turn you out.’
‘Sir!’
‘Let me read you this about the Widow Wadman. Said the Widow Wadman----’
‘There’s my bill, sir.’
‘Very good. Just twist it up, will you; it’s about my smoking-time; and
hand a coal, will you, from the hearth yonder!’
‘My bill, sir!’ said the rascal, turning pale with rage and amazement at
my unwonted air (formerly I had always dodged him with a pale face), but
too prudent as yet to betray the extremity of his astonishment. ‘My
bill, sir!’--and he stiffly poked it at me.
‘My friend,’ said I, ‘what a charming morning! How sweet the country
looks! Pray, did you hear that extraordinary cock-crow this morning?
Take a glass of my stout!’
‘_Yours?_ First pay your debts before you offer folks your stout!’
‘You think, then, that, properly speaking, I have no _stout_,’ said I,
deliberately rising. ‘I’ll undeceive you. I’ll show you stout of a
superior brand to Barclay and Perkins.’
Without more ado, I seized that insolent dun by the slack of his
coat--(and, being a lean, shad-bellied wretch, there was plenty of slack
to it)--I seized him that way, tied him with a sailor-knot, and
thrusting his bill between his teeth, introduced him to the open country
lying round about my place of abode.
‘Jake,’ said I, ‘you’ll find a sack of blue-nosed potatoes lying under
the shed. Drag it here, and pelt this pauper away; he’s been begging
pence of me, and I know he can work, but he’s lazy. Pelt him away,
Jake!’
Bless my stars, what a crow! Shanghai sent up such a perfect pæan and
_laudamus_--such a trumpet-blast of triumph, that my soul fairly snorted
in me. Duns!--I could have fought an army of them! Plainly, Shanghai was
of the opinion that duns only came into the world to be kicked, hanged,
bruised, battered, choked, walloped, hammered, drowned, clubbed!
Returning indoors, when the exultation of my victory over the dun had a
little subsided, I fell to musing over the mysterious Shanghai. I had no
idea I would hear him so nigh my house. I wondered from what rich
gentleman’s yard he crowed. Nor had he cut short his crows so easily as
I had supposed he would. This Shanghai crowed till midday, at least.
Would he keep a-crowing all day? I resolved to learn. Again I ascended
the hill. The whole country was now bathed in a rejoicing sunlight. The
warm verdure was bursting all round me. Teams were afield. Birds, newly
arrived from the south, were blithely singing in the air. Even the crows
cawed with a certain unction, and seemed a shade or two less black than
usual.
- title
- Chunk 22