Life and sayings of Mrs. Partington and others
of the family | ||
80
SIR, YOU OWE ME A CENT.
OTHER things may be great,”
said old Roger with a nod,
“besides what 's called so;
some very little thing, if 't is
done well, can be a great one;
in impudence, say, for instance.
Yesterday a boy
asked me pitifully for a four-pence;
I gave him what I
thought to be one, and passed
on. Presently I felt a twitch
at my coat-tail, and looked
round, and there stood the boy.
`Sir,' says he, `you owe me a cent — this 'ere won't
pass for but five cents — it 's crossed!' I gave the
little rascal a shilling at once; I could n't help it. The
thing was sublime, — admirable; hang me if it was n't.”
And the little man struck his cane violently on the
ground, and laughed happily at the supreme impudence
displayed in the affair.
Life and sayings of Mrs. Partington and others
of the family | ||