[Phil the Fiddler by Horatio Alger Jr.]@TWC D-Link bookPhil the Fiddler CHAPTER VI 4/13
They can stop work at six if they like, or earlier; but the little Italian musician must remain in the street till near midnight, and then, after a long and fatiguing day, he is liable to be beaten and sent to bed without his supper, unless he brings home a satisfactory sum of money. Phil walked about here and there in the lower part of the city.
As he was passing a barroom he was called in by the barkeeper. "Give us a tune, boy," he said. It was a low barroom, frequented by sailors and a rough set of customers of similar character.
The red face of the barkeeper showed that he drank very liberally, and the atmosphere was filled with the fumes of bad cigars and bad liquor.
The men were ready for a good time, as they called it, and it was at the suggestion of one of them that Phil had been invited in. "Play a tune on your fiddle, you little ragamuffin," said one. Phil cared little how he was addressed.
He was at the service of the public, and what he chiefly cared for was that he be paid for his services. "What shall I play ?" he asked. "Anything," hiccoughed one.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|