FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   >>  
he felt certain that I wouldn't neglect my dooty while there was breath in my body; but 'e was sorry to find 'e was mistook. He stood there talking like a little clergyman, until one of the carmen knocked his 'at over 'is eyes, and then he forgot 'imself for a bit. "Arter that I used to wait until he 'ad gorn afore I 'ad my arf-pint. I didn't want my good name taken away, and I had to be careful, and many's the good arf-pint I 'ad to refuse because that little imitation monkey was sitting in the office drawing faces on 'is blotting-paper. But sometimes it don't matter 'ow careful you are, you make a mistake. "There was a little steamer, called the Eastern Monarch, used to come up here in them days, once a week. Fat little tub she was, with a crew o' fattish old men, and a skipper that I didn't like. He'd been in the coasting trade all 'is life, while I've knocked about all over the world, but to hear 'im talk you'd think he knew more about things than I did. "Eddication, Bill,' he ses one evening, 'that's the thing! You can't argufy without it; you only talk foolish, like you are doing now.' "'There's eddication and there's common sense,' I ses. 'Some people 'as one and some people 'as the other. Give me common sense.' "'That's wot you want,' he ses, nodding. "'And, o' course,' I ses, looking at 'im, 'there's some people 'asn't got either one or the other.' "The office-boy came out of the office afore he could think of an answer, and the pair of 'em stood there talking to show off their cleverness, till their tongues ached. I took up my broom and went on sweeping, and they was so busy talking long words they didn't know the meaning of to each other that they was arf choked with dust afore they noticed it. When they did notice it they left off using long words, and the skipper tried to hurt my feelings with a few short ones 'e knew. "'It's no good wasting your breath on 'im,' ses the boy. 'You might as well talk to a beer-barrel.' "He went off, dusting 'imself down with his little pocket-'ankercher, and arter the skipper 'ad told me wot he'd like to do, only he was too sorry for me to do it, 'e went back to the ship to put on a clean collar, and went off for the evening. "He always used to go off by hisself of a evening, and I used to wonder 'ow he passed the time. Then one night I found out. "I had just come out of the Bear's Head, and stopped to look round afore going back to the whar
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   >>  



Top keywords:

office

 
people
 

evening

 

skipper

 

talking

 

common

 
imself
 

breath

 

knocked

 
careful

noticed

 
answer
 

choked

 

meaning

 
notice
 
feelings
 
forgot
 

wouldn

 

tongues

 
cleverness

sweeping

 

passed

 

hisself

 

collar

 

stopped

 

barrel

 

wasting

 
dusting
 

pocket

 

ankercher


neglect
 
monkey
 
fattish
 

sitting

 

coasting

 
imitation
 
mistook
 

clergyman

 

carmen

 

blotting


matter

 
mistake
 

drawing

 

Monarch

 

Eastern

 

steamer

 

called

 
refuse
 

eddication

 
nodding