[The Golden Scarecrow by Hugh Walpole]@TWC D-Link book
The Golden Scarecrow

PROLOGUE
16/47

She did not from the first like him at all.

Mr.
Pidgen and Mr.Lasher had been friends at Cambridge and had not met one another since, and every one knows that that is a dangerous basis for the renewal of friendship.

They had a little dispute on the very afternoon of Mr.Pidgen's arrival, when Mr.Lasher asked his guest whether he played golf.
"God preserve my soul! No!" said Mr.Pidgen.

Mr.Lasher then explained that playing golf made one thin, hungry and self-restrained.

Mr.Pidgen said that he did not wish to be the first or last of these, and that he was always the second, and that golf was turning the fair places of England into troughs for the moneyed pigs of the Stock Exchange to swill in.
"My dear Pidgen!" cried Mr.Lasher, "I'm afraid no one could call me a moneyed pig with any justice--more's the pity--and a game of golf to me is----" "Ah! you're a parson, Lasher," said his guest.
In fact, by the evening of the second day of the visit it was obvious that Clinton St.Mary Vicarage might, very possibly, witness a disturbed Christmas.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books