The Sunny Side eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 252 pages of information about The Sunny Side.

The Sunny Side eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 252 pages of information about The Sunny Side.

I pushed the-thing-you-move-up-and-down back to the zero position, and exchanged the half-stone weight for a stone one.  Excited but a trifle cold, for it was a fresh morning, and the upper part of the window was wide open, I went up from nine stone ounce by ounce....

At nine-stone-twelve I jumped off for a moment and shut the window....

At eleven-stone-eight I had to get off again in order to attend to the bath, which was in danger of overflowing....

At fifteen-stone-eleven the breakfast gong went....

At nineteen-stone-nine I realized that I had overdone it.  However I decided to know the worst.  The worst that the machine could tell me was twenty-stone-seven.  At twenty-stone-seven I left it.

Celia, who had nearly finished breakfast, looked up eagerly as I came in.

“Well?” she said.

“I am sorry I am late,” I apologized, “but I have been putting on flesh.”

“Have you really gone up?” she asked excitedly.

“Yes.”  I began mechanically to help myself to porridge, and then stopped.  “No, perhaps not,” I said thoughtfully.

“Have you gone up much?”

“Much,” I said.  “Quite much.”

“How much?  Quick!”

“Celia,” I said sadly, “I am twenty-stone-seven.  I may be more; the weighing-machine gave out then.”

“Oh, but, darling, that’s much too much.”

“Still, it’s what we came here for,” I pointed out.  “No, no bacon, thanks; a small piece of dry toast.”

“I suppose the machine couldn’t have made a mistake?”

“It seemed very decided about it.  It didn’t hesitate at all.”

“Just try again after breakfast to make sure.”

“Perhaps I’d better try now,” I said, getting up, “because if I turned out to be only twenty-stone-six I might venture on a little porridge after all.  I shan’t be long.”

I went upstairs.  I didn’t dare face that weighing-machine in my clothes after the way in which I had already strained it without them.  I took them off hurriedly and stepped on.  To my joy the bar stayed in its downward position.  I took off an ounce ... then another ounce.  The bar remained down....

At eighteen-stone-two I jumped off for a moment in order to shut the window, which some careless housemaid had opened again....

At twelve-stone-seven I shouted through the door to Celia that I shouldn’t be long, and that I should want the porridge after all....

At four-stone-six I said that I had better have an egg or two as well.

At three ounces I stepped off, feeling rather shaken.

* * * * *

I have not used the weighing-machine since; partly because I do not believe it is trustworthy, partly because I spent the rest of my leave in bed with a severe cold.  We are now in London again, where I am putting on flesh.  At least the doctor who slapped me about yesterday said that I must, and I promised him that I would.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Sunny Side from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.