The Broad Highway - Page 158/374

"Come, master," said he, "come, you never mean to give up all

that good money--there's fifty guineas, and more, in that purse!"

"All the more reason to return it," said I.

"No, don't--don't go a-wasting good money like that--it's like

throwing it away!" But shaking off the fellow's importunate

hand, I approached, and saluted the venerable man.

"Sir," said I, "you have had your pocket picked."

He turned and regarded me with a pair of deep-set, very bright

eyes, and blew a whiff of smoke slowly into the air.

"Sir," he replied, "I found that out five minutes ago."

"The fact seems to trouble you very little," said I.

"There, sir, being young, and judging exteriorly, you are wrong.

There is recounted somewhere in the classics an altogether

incredible story of a Spartan youth and a fox: the boy, with the

animal hid beneath his cloak, preserved an unruffled demeanor

despite the animal's tearing teeth, until he fell down and died.

In the same way, young sir, no man can lose fifty-odd guineas

from his pocket and remain unaffected by the loss."

"Then, sir," said I, "I am happy to be able to return your purse

to you." He took it, opened it, glanced over its contents,

looked at me, took out two guineas, looked at me again, put the

money back, closed the purse, and, dropping it into his pocket,

bowed his acknowledgment. Having done which, he made room for me

to sit beside him.

"Sir," said he, chuckling, "hark to that lovely rascal in the

cart, yonder--hark to him; Galen was an ass and Hippocrates a

dunce beside this fellow--hark to him."

"There's nothing like pills!" the Quack-salver was saying at the

top of his voice; "place one upon the tip o' the tongue--in this

fashion--take a drink o' water, beer, or wine, as the case may

be, give a couple o' swallers, and there you are. Oh, there's

nothing in the world like pills, and there's nothing like my

Elixir Anthropos for coughs, colds, and the rheumatics, for sore

throats, sore eyes, sore backs--good for the croup, measles, and

chicken-pox--a certain cure for dropsy, scurvy, and the king's

evil; there's no disease or ailment, discovered or invented, as

my pills won't soothe, heal, ha-meliorate, and charm away, and

all I charge is one shilling a box. Hand 'em round, Jonas."

Whereupon the fellow in the clown's dress, stepping down from the

cart, began handing out the boxes of pills and taking in the

shillings as fast as he conveniently could.