nken spleen alike on
soldiers or scavengers. Some of the former would have retaliated; but
they knew him to have authority in high places, and therefore kept
silent, sullenly enduring it. Not so the spectators, many of whom,
knowing, hated him. Possibly, more than probably, some of them had been
under his care. But to all he was now affording infinite amusement.
They laughed at his impotent anger, and laughed again, one crying out,
"He's as good as a bull in a ring!" another exclaiming, "_Viva el Senor
Dominguez rey de las bastoneros_!" ("Hurrah for the Senor Dominguez,
king of the turnkeys!")--a sally which elicited roars of applauding
laughter.
If angry before, he was now infuriated. Purple in the face, he was
making a dash at the man whom he suspected of mocking him, when his foot
slipped and down he went into the drain head foremost.
He had altogether disappeared, and was for some seconds out of sight;
the laughter, which had become a yelling chorus, all the while
continuing. Nor did it cease when he re-appeared; instead, was louder
and more uproarious than ever. For his face, late blue with rage, was
now black with a limning of the sewer liquid.
But he was less mad than sad, after the ill-timed tumble. The _douche_
had tamed, if not sobered him; and his only thought now was how to get
away from that place of repeated discomfitures, anywhere to hide and
wash himself.
Luck declared for him at last, in the approach of a squadron of Hussars,
drawing off from him the eyes of the spectators; who had now enough to
do looking out for themselves and their safety. For the Hussars were
coming on at a gallop, with drawn sabres.
A crush and a scampering followed, as they forced their way through the
crowd, shouting, and striking with the back of their blades. After they
had passed, the people were no longer in a humour for laughing at the
"King of the turnkeys," nor any one else; neither was he there to be
laughed at.
CHAPTER THIRTY ONE.
A TRANSFORMATION.
While the ladies set down upon the street were still plaintively
appealing to those around, the carriage from which they had been so
unceremoniously ejected was tearing along the Calle de San Francisco,
going direct for the Acordada! But nothing could be farther from the
thoughts of those in it than a return to that grand gaol, or even
approaching its door. All of them knew there was a regular guard there;
and instead of a single musket miss
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