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 XXIX - GYPSIES AGAIN
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
“I hear,” said I, “that little Jimmy Ayres up at Middlesham is dead.”
Bettesworth looked up seriously from his hoeing. “My wife was a sayin' so, when I went down 'ome to dinner.”
“Dropped down dead in the street, they say.”
“Oh, was it in the street, sir? I didn't hear. Now he got a lot o' money I 'xpect, if the rights was known. He bin a schemin' little feller ever since I knowd 'n. He come about 'ere first in one o' they travellin' vans.”
This seemed to explain the little knotted-up, dark-skinned, false-looking man, with his impenetrable eyes. “I always thought,” I said, “that he must be something of a gypsy.”
“Yes, that was his sort. Always a sort of a horse-coper. … Little devil he was to fight, too. He didn't care how big a man was. I've see 'n fight a man twice he's size. Now my brother-in-law — I see 'n fight him once. He was a big, strong feller, an' he overcome Jimmy at last; but Jimmy stuck to 'n. If 'twas a man o' fifteen stone it didn't matter to he. D'you remember that 'ere Tom Hawkins what used to live up here? He had the sandpits afore Legg took 'em. I see Jimmy one day jump up—he had to jump so's to reach his face. He jumped up in the chop-house, an' cut 'n over two or three chairs an' broke some cups an' things.
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- The Bettesworth BookTalks with a Surrey Peasant, pp. 247 - 254Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1901