[Rujub, the Juggler by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link book
Rujub, the Juggler

CHAPTER VI
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You can make a very good shot now and then, but you are too harum scarum and slap dash altogether.
The art of playing pool is the art of placing yourself; while, when you strike, you have not the faintest idea where your ball is going to, and you are just as likely to run in yourself as you are to pot your adversary.

I should abjure it if I were you, Doolan; it is too expensive a luxury for you to indulge in." "You are right there, Doctor; only what is a man to do when fellows say, 'We want you to make up a pool, Doolan' ?" "I should say the reply would be quite simple.

I should answer, 'I am ready enough to play if any of you are ready to pay my losses and take my winnings; I am tired of being as good as an annuity to you all,' for that is what you have been for the last ten years.

Why, it would be cheaper for you to send home to England for skittles, and get a ground up here." "But I don't play so very badly, Doctor." "If you play badly enough always to lose, it doesn't matter as to the precise degree of badness," the Doctor retorted.

"It is not surprising.
When you came out here, fourteen or fifteen years ago, boys did not take to playing billiards, but they do now.


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