[Jonah by Louis Stone]@TWC D-Link book
Jonah

CHAPTER 3
8/22

Every head turned.
"'Ello," said Mrs Jones, "Froggy's on the job to-day." The singer was a Frenchman with a wooden leg, dressed as a sailor.

As he hopped slowly down the street with the aid of a crutch, his grizzled beard and scowling face turned mechanically to right and left, sweeping the street with threatening eyes that gave him the look of a retired pirate, begging the tribute that he had taken by force in better days.
The song ended abruptly, and he wiped the sweat from his face with an enormous handkerchief.

Then he began another.
The women were silent, greedily drinking in the strange, foreign sounds, touched for a moment with the sense of things forlorn and far away.

The singer still roared, though the tune was caressing, languishing, a love song.

But his eyes rolled fiercely, and his moustache seemed to bristle with anger.
Le pinson et la fauvette Chantaient nos chastes amours, Que les oiseaux chantent toujours, Pauvre Colinette, pauvre Colinette.
When he reached the women he hopped to the pavement holding out his hat like a collection plate, with a beseeching air.


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