Little Lord Fauntleroy Frances Hodgson Burnett (best english novels to read txt) š
- Author: Frances Hodgson Burnett
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āBring it up when you come,ā said Mr. Hobbs, āanā Iāll pay for it. Bring all you can find that have any earls in āem. If there arenāt earls, markisesāll do, or dooksā āthough he never made mention of any dooks or markises. We did go over coronets a little, but I never happened to see any. I guess they donāt keep āem āround here.ā
āTiffany ād have āem if anybody did,ā said Dick, ābut I donāt know as Iād know one if I saw it.ā
Mr. Hobbs did not explain that he would not have known one if he saw it. He merely shook his head ponderously.
āI sāpose there is very little call for āem,ā he said, and that ended the matter.
This was the beginning of quite a substantial friendship. When Dick went up to the store, Mr. Hobbs received him with great hospitality. He gave him a chair tilted against the door, near a barrel of apples, and after his young visitor was seated, he made a jerk at them with the hand in which he held his pipe, saying:
āHelp yerself.ā
Then he looked at the story papers, and after that they read and discussed the British aristocracy; and Mr. Hobbs smoked his pipe very hard and shook his head a great deal. He shook it most when he pointed out the high stool with the marks on its legs.
āThereās his very kicks,ā he said impressively; āhis very kicks. I sit and look at āem by the hour. This is a world of ups anā itās a world of downs. Why, heād set there, anā eat crackers out of a box, anā apples out of a barrel, anā pitch his cores into the street; anā now heās a lord a-livinā in a castle. Themās a lordās kicks; theyāll be a earlās kicks some day. Sometimes I says to myself, says I, āWell, Iāll be jiggered!āāā
He seemed to derive a great deal of comfort from his reflections and Dickās visit. Before Dick went home, they had a supper in the small backroom; they had crackers and cheese and sardines, and other canned things out of the store, and Mr. Hobbs solemnly opened two bottles of ginger ale, and pouring out two glasses, proposed a toast.
āHereās to him!ā he said, lifting his glass, āanā may he teach āem a lessonā āearls anā markises anā dooks anā all!ā
After that night, the two saw each other often, and Mr. Hobbs was much more comfortable and less desolate. They read the Penny Story Gazette, and many other interesting things, and gained a knowledge of the habits of the nobility and gentry which would have surprised those despised classes if they had realized it. One day Mr. Hobbs made a pilgrimage to a book store down town, for the express purpose of adding to their library. He went to the clerk and leaned over the counter to speak to him.
āI want,ā he said, āa book about earls.ā
āWhat!ā exclaimed the clerk.
āA book,ā repeated the grocery-man, āabout earls.ā
āIām afraid,ā said the clerk, looking rather queer, āthat we havenāt what you want.ā
āHavenāt?ā said Mr. Hobbs, anxiously. āWell, say markises thenā āor dooks.ā
āI know of no such book,ā answered the clerk.
Mr. Hobbs was much disturbed. He looked down on the floorā āthen he looked up.
āNone about female earls?ā he inquired.
āIām afraid not,ā said the clerk with a smile.
āWell,ā exclaimed Mr. Hobbs, āIāll be jiggered!ā
He was just going out of the store, when the clerk called him back and asked him if a story in which the nobility were chief characters would do. Mr. Hobbs said it wouldā āif he could not get an entire volume devoted to earls. So the clerk sold him a book called āThe Tower of London,ā written by Mr. Harrison Ainsworth, and he carried it home.
When Dick came they began to read it. It was a very wonderful and exciting book, and the scene was laid in the reign of the famous English queen who is called by some people Bloody Mary. And as Mr. Hobbs heard of Queen Maryās deeds and the habit she had of chopping peopleās heads off, putting them to the torture, and burning them alive, he became very much excited. He took his pipe out of his mouth and stared at Dick, and at last he was obliged to mop the perspiration from his brow with his red pocket handkerchief.
āWhy, he aināt safe!ā he said. āHe aināt safe! If the women folks can sit up on their thrones anā give the word for things like that to be done, whoās to know whatās happening to him this very minute? Heās no more safe than nothing! Just let a woman like that get mad, anā no oneās safe!ā
āWell,ā said Dick, though he looked rather anxious himself; āye see this āere un isnāt the one thatās bossinā things now. I know her nameās Victory, anā this un here in the book, her nameās Mary.ā
āSo it is,ā said Mr. Hobbs, still mopping his forehead; āso it is. Anā the newspapers are not sayinā anything about any racks, thumbscrews, or stake-burnināsā ābut still it doesnāt seem as if āt was safe for him over there with those queer folks. Why, they tell me they donāt keep the Fourth oā July!ā
He was privately uneasy for several days; and it was not until he received Fauntleroyās letter and had read it several times, both to himself and to Dick, and had also read the letter Dick got about the same time, that he became composed again.
But they both found great pleasure in their letters. They read and reread them, and talked them over and enjoyed every word of them. And they spent days over the answers they sent and read them over almost as often as the letters they had received.
It was rather a labor for Dick to write his. All his knowledge of reading and writing he had gained during a few months, when he had lived with his elder brother,
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