[The Recollections of Geoffrey Hamlyn by Henry Kingsley]@TWC D-Link bookThe Recollections of Geoffrey Hamlyn CHAPTER XXII 3/33
That hut where we spent the pleasant Christmas-day you know of is degraded into the kitchen, and seems moved backward, although it stands in the same place, for a new house is built nearer the river, quite overwhelming the old slab hut in its grandeur--a long low wooden house, with deep cool verandahs all round, already festooned with passion-flowers, and young grapevines, and fronted by a flower garden, all a-blaze with petunias and geraniums. It was a summer evening, and all the French windows reaching to the ground were open to admit the cool south wind, which had just come up, deliciously icily cold after a scorching day.
In the verandah sat the Major and the Doctor over their claret (for the Major had taken to dining late again now, to his great comfort), and in the garden were Mrs.Buckley and Sam watering the flowers, attended by a man who drew water from a new-made reservoir near the house. "I think, Doctor," said the Major, "that the habit of dining in the middle of the day is a gross abuse of the gifts of Providence, and I'll prove it to you.
What does a man dine for ?--answer me that." "To satisfy his hunger, I should say," answered the Doctor. "Pooh! pooh! stuff and nonsense, my good friend," said the Major; "you are speaking at random.
I suppose you will say, then, that a black fellow is capable of dining ?" "Highly capable, as far as I can judge from what I have seen," replied the Doctor.
"A full-grown fighting black would be ashamed if he couldn't eat a leg of mutton at a sitting." "And you call that DINING ?" said the Major.
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