[The Antiquary by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link book
The Antiquary

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIRST
10/19

Let's see what they can be doing." This interruption, and the low tone in which Sir Arthur spoke, made Lovel lose all Sir Arthur's answer to the adept, excepting the last three emphatic words, "Very great expense;" to which Dousterswivel at once replied--"Expenses!--to be sure--dere must be de great expenses.
You do not expect to reap before you do sow de seed: de expense is de seed--de riches and de mine of goot metal, and now de great big chests of plate, they are de crop--vary goot crop too, on mine wort.

Now, Sir Arthur, you have sowed this night one little seed of ten guineas like one pinch of snuff, or so big; and if you do not reap de great harvest--dat is, de great harvest for de little pinch of seed, for it must be proportions, you must know--then never call one honest man, Herman Dousterswivel.

Now you see, mine patron--for I will not conceal mine secret from you at all--you see this little plate of silver; you know de moon measureth de whole zodiack in de space of twenty-eight day--every shild knows dat.

Well, I take a silver plate when she is in her fifteenth mansion, which mansion is in de head of Libra, and I engrave upon one side de worts, [Shedbarschemoth Schartachan]--dat is, de Emblems of de Intelligence of de moon--and I make this picture like a flying serpent with a turkey-cock's head--vary well.

Then upon this side I make de table of de moon, which is a square of nine, multiplied into itself, with eighty-one numbers on every side, and diameter nine--dere it is done very proper.


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