Japhet, in Search of a Father by Frederick Marryat
page 67 of 532 (12%)
page 67 of 532 (12%)
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that wisdom may cry in the streets without being noticed, yet folly will
always command a crowd." During this address I turned my eyes upon the speaker. He was an elderly-looking person, with white hair, dressed in a suit of black, ruffles and frill. His eyes were brilliant, but the remainder of his face it was difficult to decipher, as it was evidently painted, and the night's jumbling in the wagon had so smeared it, that it appeared of almost every colour in the rainbow. On one side of him lay a large three-cornered cocked hat, on the other, a little lump of a boy, rolled up in the straw like a marmot, and still sound asleep. Timothy looked at me, and when he caught my eye, burst out into a laugh. "You laugh at my appearance, I presume," said the old man, mildly. "I do in truth," replied Timothy. "I never saw one like you before, and I dare say never shall again." "That is possible; yet probably if you meet me again, you would not know me." "Among a hundred thousand," replied Timothy, with increased mirth. "We shall see, perhaps," replied the quack doctor, for such the reader must have already ascertained to be his profession; "but the wagon has stopped, and the driver will bait his horses. If inclined to eat, now is your time. Come, Jumbo, get up; Philotas, waken him, and follow me." Philotas, for so was the fool styled by his master, twisted up some straw, and stuffed the end of it into Jumbo's mouth. "Now, Jumbo will |
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