Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
- CHAPTER II BOYHOOD AND YOUTH
- CHAPTER III A ROAMING COMMISSION
- CHAPTER IV YOUTH
- CHAPTER V WANDERINGS: AND BOYHOOD AGAIN
- CHAPTER VI HARVEST TALK
- CHAPTER VII SUNDRY APPRECIATIONS
- CHAPTER VIII A FAVOURITE HORSE
- CHAPTER IX OTHER HORSES
- CHAPTER X “MUCH HAVE I SEEN AND” — DONE
- CHAPTER XI FURTHER OBSERVATIONS ON WELL-SINKING
- CHAPTER XII HOW THE HARVESTERS TRAVEL
- CHAPTER XIII PRACTICAL JOKES
- CHAPTER XIV NICKNAMES
- CHAPTER XV PIGS AND THE WEATHER
- CHAPTER XVI CHRISTMAS—AND AFTER
- CHAPTER XVII GYPSIES
- CHAPTER XVIII OLD BIGGS
- CHAPTER XIX LAYING TURF
- CHAPTER XX FROM BEES TO APRIL FOOLS
- CHAPTER XXI CONTAINS A STORY OF WEYHILL FAIR
- CHAPTER XXII CONCERNING MANY MATTERS
- CHAPTER XXIII EXASPERATION
- CHAPTER XXIV WEATHER AND TOOTHACHE
- CHAPTER XXV PETS
- CHAPTER XXVI OF PIGS AND CATS
- CHAPTER XXVII CRICKET
- CHAPTER XXVIII A SHIFTY EMPLOYER
- CHAPTER XXIX GYPSIES AGAIN
- CHAPTER XXX OUR DOMINANT TOPIC
- CHAPTER XXXI THE BOOK-LEARNED
- CHAPTER XXXII ONE OF THE OLD SCHOOL
- CHAPTER XXXIII PHILOSOPHY
- CHAPTER XXXIV HOPS
- CHAPTER XXXV A WET HOP-PICKING—CONCLUSION
CHAPTER XXII - CONCERNING MANY MATTERS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
- CHAPTER II BOYHOOD AND YOUTH
- CHAPTER III A ROAMING COMMISSION
- CHAPTER IV YOUTH
- CHAPTER V WANDERINGS: AND BOYHOOD AGAIN
- CHAPTER VI HARVEST TALK
- CHAPTER VII SUNDRY APPRECIATIONS
- CHAPTER VIII A FAVOURITE HORSE
- CHAPTER IX OTHER HORSES
- CHAPTER X “MUCH HAVE I SEEN AND” — DONE
- CHAPTER XI FURTHER OBSERVATIONS ON WELL-SINKING
- CHAPTER XII HOW THE HARVESTERS TRAVEL
- CHAPTER XIII PRACTICAL JOKES
- CHAPTER XIV NICKNAMES
- CHAPTER XV PIGS AND THE WEATHER
- CHAPTER XVI CHRISTMAS—AND AFTER
- CHAPTER XVII GYPSIES
- CHAPTER XVIII OLD BIGGS
- CHAPTER XIX LAYING TURF
- CHAPTER XX FROM BEES TO APRIL FOOLS
- CHAPTER XXI CONTAINS A STORY OF WEYHILL FAIR
- CHAPTER XXII CONCERNING MANY MATTERS
- CHAPTER XXIII EXASPERATION
- CHAPTER XXIV WEATHER AND TOOTHACHE
- CHAPTER XXV PETS
- CHAPTER XXVI OF PIGS AND CATS
- CHAPTER XXVII CRICKET
- CHAPTER XXVIII A SHIFTY EMPLOYER
- CHAPTER XXIX GYPSIES AGAIN
- CHAPTER XXX OUR DOMINANT TOPIC
- CHAPTER XXXI THE BOOK-LEARNED
- CHAPTER XXXII ONE OF THE OLD SCHOOL
- CHAPTER XXXIII PHILOSOPHY
- CHAPTER XXXIV HOPS
- CHAPTER XXXV A WET HOP-PICKING—CONCLUSION
Summary
One afternoon in spring Bettesworth was sent on an errand to the town, about a mile away. I also had business there, and we walked off together.
“I give my old finger a tidy smack 's mornin',” he began, showing a finger clumsily bound up with a very dirty rag.
“Ah, they told me you'd cut it rather badly.”
“He never left off bleedin' all dinner-time. So when I come out, I got a stingin'-nettle an' clapped on 'n.”
“That's a very good thing, I suppose?”
“It do give ye snuff for a time. But 'tis a rare thing—in any bad cut, now—to stop the flow o' the blood.”
“I daresay you do feel it, at the moment.”
“Yes, it makes ye soop at first. But you takes all the sting out, ye know, before you puts it on. Rubs it up between your 'ands, so 's to git rid o' the sting, and then it's one o' the finest things out. Old Steve Blackman up at Linfield, he was the first as ever I knowed use it. He chopped his knee once—he was a pointin' hop-poles and 'twas a cold day and his 'and got numb an' the axe slipped … He says to a boy what was with 'n, ‘Run and git me a needle an' thread.’”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Bettesworth BookTalks with a Surrey Peasant, pp. 201 - 210Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1901