The Miller Of Old Church by Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow
page 87 of 435 (20%)
page 87 of 435 (20%)
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"Well, rather, my friend, and I'll trouble you at the same time to hand
over that string on your shoulder." "Hand them over? Well, I like that! Why, I shot them." "But you shot them on my land didn't you?" "What in the devil do you mean by that? My folks have shot over these fields before yours were ever heard of about here. A bird doesn't happen to be yours, I reckon, just because it takes a notion to fly over your pasture." "Do you mean to tell me that you don't respect a man's right to his game?" "A man's game is the bird in the bag, not in the air, I reckon. This land was open hunting in the time of the Jordans, and we're not going to keep off of it at the first bid of any Tom-fool that thinks he's got a better right to it." The assumption of justice angered Gay far more than the original poaching had done. To be flouted in his own pasture on the subject of his own game by a handsome barbarian, whom he had caught red-handed in the act of stealing, would have appealed irresistibly to his sense of humour, if it had not enraged him. "All the same I give you fair warning," he retorted, "that the next time I find you trespassing on my land, I'll have the law after you." "The law--bosh! Do you think I'm afraid of it?" |
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