[The Wrong Box by Robert Louis Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne]@TWC D-Link book
The Wrong Box

CHAPTER V
6/18

The artisans of this victory smiled upon each other as the dust subsided.

It was true they had smashed a bust of Apollo and ploughed the wall into deep ruts; but, at least, they were no longer one of the public spectacles of London.
'Well, sir,' said the vanman, 'I never see such a job.' Gideon eloquently expressed his concurrence in this sentiment by pressing a couple of sovereigns in the man's hand.
'Make it three, sir, and I'll stand Sam to everybody here!' cried the latter, and, this having been done, the whole body of volunteer porters swarmed into the van, which drove off in the direction of the nearest reliable public-house.

Gideon closed the door on their departure, and turned to Julia; their eyes met; the most uncontrollable mirth seized upon them both, and they made the house ring with their laughter.

Then curiosity awoke in Julia's mind, and she went and examined the box, and more especially the label.
'This is the strangest thing that ever happened,' she said, with another burst of laughter.

'It is certainly Morris's handwriting, and I had a letter from him only this morning, telling me to expect a barrel.


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