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 XX - FROM BEES TO APRIL FOOLS
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 April morning I found a dead sparrow. “Ah,” I said, “our cats have been at work here.”
“What, en't they eat 'n?” says Bettesworth. “Their bellies be too full a'ready. They be too well-fed.”
“I expect they'll be getting at these up by the house here, by and by.”
“What, got a nest in the house, sir?”
“No, no. Here, look; just by the door.”
I showed where mortar had been pulled away, disclosing a hollow in the brickwork. “I fancy there's a nest there. We often hear a great twittering.”
Bettesworth looked at it for half a minute; then, “I remembers one time when I was helpin' Beagley at a job over there at ol' Miss Lawrence's at Cashford. There was air-bricks, you know, right along by the ground for ventilatin' the floors. The bees had found this out, an' made a nest right in under her parlour floor, an' they used to come up through somewhere. At last she sent out to Beagley—' the place was reg'lar swarmin' wi' bees,' she said,' ‘so's she cou'n't bide there.' Well, I laughed an' I gits a long stick an' I pokes it into one o' these here holes. Out they all come—oh, ther' must ha' bin thousands and thousands of 'em—an' then I did laugh. We all got out o' the way 's fast as we could.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Bettesworth BookTalks with a Surrey Peasant, pp. 185 - 194Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1901