Thereby Hangs a Tale. Volume One. Fenn George Manville
rubbing his brown curls, “I don’t kinder know what he is. He’s been in the navy, I think, for he’s a capital sailor; but he’s quite the gentleman, and wonderful kind to the poor people, and he lives in that little white house the other side of the cliff.”
“I can’t see any white house,” said Pratt.
“No, sir, you can’t see it, ’cause it’s the other side of the cliff; but that’s his flagstaff rigged up, as you can see, with the weathercock on it, and – Here, hi! you, sir, come out of that! Here, Juno, lass, come along.”
“Has he gone mad?” cried Pratt.
For Humphrey had suddenly set off down a steep slope towards a meadow, and went on shouting with all his might.
“No,” said Trevor, shading his eyes, “there’s a man – two men with billhooks there – labourers, I should think. Come along, or perhaps there’ll be a quarrel; and I can’t have that.”
The Lion at Home
Sir Hampton Rea was out that morning, and very busy.
He had been round to the stables and seen the four horses that had arrived the night before, and bullied the coachman because he had said that one of them had a splinter in its leg, and that the mare meant for Miss Rea had rather a nasty look about the eye.
“You’re an ass, Thomas,” he said.
The man touched his hat, and Sir Hampton walked half across the stable-yard.
“Er-rum!” he ejaculated, half turning; and the coachman came up, obsequiously touching his hat again.
“Those horses, Thomas, were examined by a veterinary surgeon.”
“Yes, sir,” said the man.
“Er-rum! And I chose them and examined them myself.”
“Yes, sir.”
“You’ve made a mistake, Thomas.”
“Very like, sir,” said the man. “Very sorry, sir.”
Sir Hampton did not respond, but gave a sharp glance round the very new-looking stable-yard and buildings, saw nothing to find fault about; and then, clearing his throat, went into the garden as the coachman winked at the groom, and the groom raised a wen upon his cheek by the internal application of his tongue.
“Er-rum! – Sanders!” cried the knight.
And something that had worn the aspect of a huge boa constrictor in cord trousers, crawling into a melon-frame, slowly drew itself back, stood upright, and revealed a yellow-faced man with a scarlet head and whiskers.
Perhaps it is giving too decided a colour to the freckles which covered Mr Sanders’s face to say they were yellow, and to his hair to say it was scarlet; but they certainly approached those hues, “Er-rum! Sanders, come here,” said Sir Hampton.
Sanders leisurely closed the melon-frame and raised the light a few inches with a piece of wood, and then slowly approached his master, to stop in front of him and scrape his feet upon a spade.
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