Life and sayings of Mrs. Partington and others
of the family | ||
THE ARCHITECTURAL BLACK EYE.
We met old Guzzle one day, with a terrible black eye.
“Ah!” said we to the interesting individual, “bad eye
that.”
“Yes, that 'ere 's a architectural eye.”
We asked an explanation.
“I say this 'ere 's a architectural eye, because I got it
from the Elizabethan architecture of our house.”
We were in the dark as much as ever.
“T' other night,” continued he, “I went home partially
tight. I say partially, for, 'pon my honor, I had drank
but seven times during the evening. I felt my way up
by the wainscoting, because I did n't want to make a
noise, and when I got to the top, I forgot what a deuced
wide staircase it was, and when I turned to go towards
my door, what does I do but walks right down stairs
again, a good deal faster than I went up, and struck my
head agin the corner-post, and be hanged to it! Bad
eye, is n't it? And all from that infernal Elizabethan
stairway.”
We thought that the fault lay with the rum.
Life and sayings of Mrs. Partington and others
of the family | ||