[Two Years Ago, Volume II. by Charles Kingsley]@TWC D-Link bookTwo Years Ago, Volume II. CHAPTER XXIV 11/42
Can he have gone home to his native town ?" "Never! Anywhere but there." "Is there any old friend of the lower class with whom he may have taken lodgings ?" Tom pondered. "There was a fellow, a noisy blackguard, whom Briggs was asking after this very summer--a fellow who went off from Whitbury with some players. I know Briggs used to go to the theatre with him as a boy--what was his name? He tried acting, but did not succeed; and then became a scene-shifter, or something of the kind, at the Adelphi.
He has some complaint, I forget what, which made him an out-patient at St. Mumpsimus's, some months every year.
I know that he was there this summer, for I wrote to ask, at Briggs's request, and Briggs sent him a sovereign through me." "But what makes you fancy that he can have taken shelter with such a man, and one who knows his secret ?" "It is but a chance: but he may have done it from the mere feeling of loneliness--just to hold by some one whom he knows in this great wilderness; especially a man in whose eyes he will be a great man, and to whom he has done a kindness; still, it is the merest chance." "We will take it, nevertheless, forlorn hope though it be." They took a cab to the hospital, and, with some trouble, got the man's name and address, and drove in search of him.
They had some difficulty in finding his abode, for it was up an alley at the back of Drury Lane, in the top of one of those foul old houses which hold a family in every room; but, by dint of knocking at one door and the other, and bearing meekly much reviling consequent thereon, they arrived, "_per modum tollendi_" at a door which must be the right one, as all the rest were wrong. "Does John Barker live here ?" asks Thurnall, putting his head in cautiously for fear of drunken Irishmen, who might be seized with the national impulse to "slate" him. "What's that to you ?" answers a shrill voice from among soapsuds and steaming rags. "Here is a gentleman wants to speak to him." "So do a many as won't have that pleasure, and would be little the better for it if they had.
Get along with you, I knows your lay." "We really want to speak to him, and to pay him, if he will--" "Go along! I'm up to the something to your advantage dodge, and to the mustachio dodge too.
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