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d-hearted?" A constitutional habit of servility to his creditor when present before him signalized Algernon. He detested the man, but his feebleness was seized by the latter question, and he fancied he might, on the road to London, convey to Sedgett's mind that it would be well to split that thousand, as he had previously devised. "Jump in," he said. When Sedgett was seated, Algernon would have been glad to walk the distance to London to escape from the unwholesome proximity. He took the vacant place, in horror of it. The man had hitherto appeared respectful; and in Dahlia's presence he had seemed a gentle big fellow with a reverent, affectionate heart. Sedgett rallied him. "You've had bad luck--that's wrote on your hatband. Now, if you was a woman, I'd say, tak' and go and have a peroose o' your Bible. That's what my young woman does; and by George! it's just like medicine to her--that 'tis! I've read out to her till I could ha' swallowed two quart o' beer at a gulp--I was that mortal thirsty. It don't somehow seem to improve men. It didn't do me no good. There was I, cursin' at the bother, down in my boots, like, and she with her hands in a knot, staring the fire out o' count'nance. They're weak, poor sort o' things." The intolerable talk of the ruffian prompted Algernon to cry out, for relief,-- "A scoundrel like you must be past any good to be got from reading his Bible." Sedgett turned his dull brown eyes on him, the thick and hateful flush of evil blood informing them with detestable malignity. "Come; you be civil, if you're going to be my companion," he said. "I don't like bad words; they don't go down my windpipe. 'Scoundrel 's a name I've got a retort for, and if it hadn't been you, and you a gentleman, you'd have had it spanking hot from the end o' my fist. Perhaps you don't know what sort of a arm I've got? Just you feel that ther' muscle." He doubled his arm, the knuckles of the fist toward Algernon's face. "Down with it, you dog!" cried Algernon, crushing his hat as he started up. "It'll come on your nose, if I downs with it, my lord," said Sedgett. "You've what they Londoners calls 'bonneted yourself.'" He pulled Algernon by the coat-tail into his seat. "Stop!" Algernon shouted to the cabman. "Drive ahead!" roared Sedgett. This signal of a dissension was heard along the main street of Epsom, and re-awakened the flagging hilarity of the road. Algernon shrieked his comman
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