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In Pastures New

Chapter 6 WHAT ONE MAN PICKED UP IN LONDON

Word Count: 1655    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

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as a child enjoys a new Christmas toy. It seems impossible for him to keep his hands off of it. He wants to carry i

d by the same rule of human weakness the man will toss his proud bit of information into

joy in getting the British names of everything he saw. After forty-eight hours in London he was gifted with a new vocabulary, and he could not with

ferent places in his letter. It was just as if he had said, "Of course, I'll have to tell you what these things mean, because

r which he read t

ht a ticket) for London. My luggage (baggage) was put into the van (baggage car) and registered (checked) for London. I paid the porter a bob (a shilling, equal to 24 cents in your money), and then showed my ticket to the guard (conductor), who showed me into a comfortable first-class carriage (one of the small compartments in the passenger coach), where I settled back to read a London paper, for which I had paid tuppence (4

a half-crown (about 60 cents in your money), and went in to engage an apartment. I paid seven shillings (about $1.75) a day, this to include service (lights and attendance), which was put in at about 18 pence a day. The lift (elevator) on which I rode to my apartment was very slow. I found that I had a comfortable room, with a grate, in which I could have a fire of coals (coal). As I was somewhat seedy (untidy) from travel, I

hats (silk hats). There are many striking residential mansions (apartment houses) facing the park, and the district is one of the most exclusive up west (in the west end of London). Sunday evening is very dull, and I looked around the smoking-room of the hotel. Nearly every man in the room had a 'B and S' (brandy and soda) in front of him, although some of them preferred 'polly' (apollinaris) to the soda. A few of them drank fizz (champagne);

emarked to the author that "jolly good splash" was

er," h

g par

erstand, of course, that I'm

t of

y without learning what 'spoof' means? It means to chaff, to joke.

d you l

nd he told me to 'give over on the spoof.' But go ahead with the

e re

very good morning coat (cutaway) and waistcoat for three and ten (three pounds and ten shillings). I am going to order several suits before I take passage (sail) for home. Thus far I have bought nothing except a pot hat (a derby), for which I paid a half-guinea (ten shillings and sixpence). This noon I ate a snack (light luncheon) in the establishment of a licensed victualer (caterer), who is also a spirit merchant (liquor dealer). I saw a great many business men and clarks (clerks) eating their meat

much," said Mr. Peasley. Where di

other one to 'chivy' the crowd out of the custom house and get it on the train? I suppose that 'chivy' means to rush

ter con

west of the City (the original London confined within the boundaries of the ancient wall, but now comprising only a small part of the geographical ar

ntil I have got a new stock of

follows in

tra stalls (parquet chairs) at the Lyceum. You may gather from this letter that I am having a ripping (ve

XAND

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In Pastures New
In Pastures New
“Dodo Collections brings you another classic from George Ade 'In Pastures New.''In Pastures New' is a humorous account of travels, chiefly in London and Egypt. Many of the letters appearing in this volume were printed in a syndicate of newspapers in the early months of 1906. With these letters have been incorporated extracts from letters written to the Chicago Record in 1895 and 1898.George Ade (February 9, 1866 – May 16, 1944) was an American writer, newspaper columnist, and playwright. Ade's literary reputation rests upon his achievements as a great humorist of American character during an important era in American history: the first large wave of migration from the countryside to burgeoning cities like Chicago, where, in fact, Ade produced his best fiction. He was a practicing realist during the Age of (William Dean) Howells and a local colorist of Chicago and the Midwest. His work constitutes a vast comedy of Midwestern manners and, indeed, a comedy of late 19th-century American manners. In 1915, Sir Walter Raleigh, Oxford professor and man of letters, while on a lecture tour in America, called George Ade "the greatest living American writer.Ade's fiction dealt consistently with the "little man," the common, undistinguished, average American, usually a farmer or lower middle class citizen. (He sometimes skewered women, too, especially women with laughable social pretensions.) Ade followed in the footsteps of his idol Mark Twain by making expert use of the American language. A striking and unique feature of Ade's essays was the creative and liberal use of capitalization. George Ade is one of the American writers whose publications made him rich.”
1 Chapter 1 GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH THE2 Chapter 2 A LIFE ON THE OCEAN WAVE, WITH MODERN VARIATIONS3 Chapter 3 WITH MR. PEASLEY IN DARKEST LONDON4 Chapter 4 HOW IT FEELS TO GET INTO LONDON5 Chapter 5 AS TO THE IMPORTANCE OF THE PASSPORT6 Chapter 6 WHAT ONE MAN PICKED UP IN LONDON7 Chapter 7 HOW AN AMERICAN ENJOYS LIFE FOR8 Chapter 8 A CHAPTER OF FRENCH JUSTICE AS DEALT9 Chapter 9 THE STORY OF WHAT HAPPENED TO AN AMERICAN CONSUL10 Chapter 10 MR. PEASLEY AND HIS VIVID IMPRESSIONS OF FOREIGN PARTS11 Chapter 11 CAIRO AS THE ANNUAL STAMPING GROUND FOR AMERICANS12 Chapter 12 ROUND ABOUT CAIRO, WITH AND WITHOUT13 Chapter 13 ALL ABOUT OUR VISIT TO THE PYRAMID OF CHEOPS14 Chapter 14 DASHING UP THE NILE IN COMPANY WITH MR. PEASLEY AND OTHERS15 Chapter 15 DAY BY DAY ON THE DROWSY NILE. WITH16 Chapter 16 THE MOHAMMEDAN FLY AND OTHER CREATURES LIVING ALONG THE NILE17 Chapter 17 IN AND AROUND LUXOR, WITH A SIDE18 Chapter 18 THE ORDINARY HUMAN FAILINGS OF THE ANCIENT MOGULS19 Chapter 19 ROYAL TOMBS AND OTHER PLACES OF AMUSEMENT20 Chapter 20 MR. PEASLEY AND HIS FINAL SIZE-UP OF EGYPT