[Mr. Sponge’s Sporting Tour by R. S. Surtees]@TWC D-Link bookMr. Sponge’s Sporting Tour CHAPTER XLVI 2/10
Amidst praises and stories of the prodigy, they reached the house. If a 'hall' means a house with an entrance-'hall,' Puddingpote Bower did not aspire to be one.
A visitor dived, _in medias res_, into the passage at once.
In it stood an oak-cased family clock, and a large glass-case, with an alarming-looking, stuffed tiger-like cat, on an imitation marble slab. Underneath the slab, indeed all about the passage, were scattered children's hats and caps, hoops, tops, spades, and mutilated toys--spotted horses without heads, soldiers without arms, windmills without sails, and wheelbarrows without wheels.
In a corner were a bunch of 'gibbeys' in the rough, and alongside the weather-glass hung Jog's formidable flail of a hunting-whip. Mr.Sponge found his portmanteau standing bolt upright in the passage, with the bag alongside of it, just as they had been chucked out of the phaeton by Bartholomew Badger, who, having got orders to put the horse right, and then to put himself right to wait at dinner, Mr.Jogglebury proceeded to vociferate: 'Murry Ann!--Murry Ann!' in such a way that Mary Ann thought either that the cat had got young Crowdey, or the house was on fire.
'Oh! Murry Ann!' exclaimed Mr.Jogglebury, as she came darting into the passage from the back settlements, up to the elbows in soap-suds; 'I want you to (puff) upstairs with me, and help to get my (wheeze) gibbey-sticks out of the best room; there's a (puff) gentleman coming to (wheeze) here.' 'Oh, indeed, sir,' replied Mary Ann, smiling, and dropping down her sleeves--glad to find it was no worse. They then proceeded upstairs together. All the gibbey-sticks were bundled out, both the finished ones, that were varnished and laid away carefully in the wardrobe, and those that were undergoing surgical treatment, in the way of twistings, and bendings, and tyings in the closets.
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