News from the Duchy. Arthur Quiller-Couch

News from the Duchy - Arthur Quiller-Couch


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       Arthur Quiller-Couch

      News from the Duchy

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066241766

       Part I.

      Part II.

       PART I.

       PIPES IN ARCADY.

       OUR LADY OF GWITHIAN.

       PILOT MATTHEY'S CHRISTMAS.

       THE MONT-BAZILLAC.

       THE THREE NECKLACES.

       THE WREN.

       NOT HERE, O APOLLO.

       FIAT JUSTITIA RUAT SOLUM.

       THE HONOUR OF THE SHIP.

       I.

       II.

       III.

       IV.

       V.

       VI.

       VII.

       VIII.

       LIEUTENANT LAPENOTIERE.

       THE CASK ASHORE. (1807)

       I.

       RUM FOR BOND.

       II.

       THE MULTIPLYING CELLAR.

       PART II.

       YE SEXES, GIVE EAR!.

       FRENCHMAN'S CREEK.

       Table of Contents

PIPES IN ARCADY.OUR LADY OF GWITHIAN.PILOT MATTHEY'S CHRISTMAS.THE MONT-BAZILLAC.THE THREE NECKLACES.THE WREN.NOT HERE, O APOLLO.FIAT JUSTITIA RUAT SOLUM.THE HONOUR OF THE SHIP.LIEUTENANT LAPENOTIERETHE CASK ASHORE. Part II.Table of Contents YE SEXES, GIVE EAR.FRENCHMAN'S CREEK.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      I hardly can bring myself to part with this story, it has been such a private joy to me. Moreover, that I have lain awake in the night to laugh over it is no guarantee of your being passably amused. Yourselves, I dare say, have known what it is to awake in irrepressible mirth from a dream which next morning proved to be flat and unconvincing. Well, this my pet story has some of the qualities of a dream; being absurd, for instance, and almost incredible, and even a trifle inhuman. After all, I had better change my mind, and tell you another—

      But no; I will risk it, and you shall have it, just as it befel.

      I had taken an afternoon's holiday to make a pilgrimage: my goal being a small parish church that lies remote from the railway, five good miles from the tiniest of country stations; my purpose to inspect—or say, rather, to contemplate—a Norman porch, for which it ought to be widely famous. (Here let me say that I have an unlearned passion for Norman architecture—to enjoy it merely, not to write about it.)

      To carry me on my first stage I had taken a crawling local train that dodged its way somehow between the regular expresses and the "excursions" that invade our Delectable Duchy from June to October. The season was high midsummer, the afternoon hot and drowsy with scents of mown hay; and between the rattle of the fast trains it seemed that we, native denizens of the Duchy, careless of observation or applause, were executing a tour de force in that fine indolence which has been charged as a fault against us. That we halted at every station goes without saying. Few sidings—however inconsiderable or, as it might seem, fortuitous—escaped the flattery of our prolonged sojourn. We ambled, we paused, almost we dallied with the butterflies lazily afloat


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