Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 720 pages of information about Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour.

Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 720 pages of information about Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour.

‘To Puddingpote Bower,’ replied Mr. Sponge.

‘S-o-o,’ observed Mr. Peastraw thoughtfully; ’Mr. Crowdey’s—­Mr. Jogglebury that was?’

‘Yes,’ replied Mr. Sponge.

‘He is a deuce of a man, that, for breaking people’s hedges,’ observed Mr. Peastraw; after a pause, ’he can’t see a straight stick of no sort, but he’s sure to be at it.’

‘He’s a great man for walking-sticks,’ replied Mr. Sponge, staggering in the direction of the stable in which he put his horse.

The house clock then struck ten.

‘She’s fast,’ observed Mr. Peastraw, fearing his guest might be wanting to stay all night.

‘How far will Puddingpote Bower be from here?’ asked Mr. Sponge.

‘Oh, no distance, sir, no distance,’ replied Mr. Peastraw, now leading out the horse.  ’Can’t miss your way, sir—­can’t miss your way.  First turn on the right takes you to Collins’ Green; then keep by the side of the church, next the pond; then go straight forward for about a mile and a half, or two miles, till you come to a small village called Lea Green; turn short at the finger-post as you enter, and keep right along by the side of the hills till you come to the Winslow Woods; leave them to the left, and pass by Mr. Roby’s farm, at Runton—­you’ll know Mr. Roby?’

‘Not I,’ replied Mr. Sponge, hoisting himself into the saddle, and holding out a hand to take leave of his host.

‘Good night, sir; good night!’ exclaimed Mr. Peastraw, shaking it; ’and have the goodness to tell Mr. Crowdey from me that the next time he comes here a bush-rangin’, I’ll thank him to shut the gates after him.  He set all my young stock wrong the last time he was here.’

‘I will,’ replied Mr. Sponge, riding off.

Mr. Peastraw’s directions were well calculated to confuse a clearer head than Mr. Sponge then carried; and the reader will not be surprised to learn that, long before he reached the Winslow Woods, he was regularly bewildered.  Indeed, there is no surer way of losing oneself than trying to follow a long train of directions in a strange country.  It is far better to establish one’s own landmarks, and make for them as the natural course of the country seems to direct.  Our forefathers had a wonderful knack of getting to points with as little circumlocution as possible.  Mr. Sponge, however, knew no points, and was quite at sea; indeed, even if he had, they would have been of little use, for a fitful and frequently obscured moon threw such bewildering lights and shades around, that a native would have had some difficulty in recognizing the country.  The frost grew more intense, the stars shone clear and bright, and the cold took our friend by the nape of the neck, shooting across his shoulder-blades and right down his back.  Mr. Sponge wished and wished he was anywhere but where he was—­flattening his nose against the coffee-room window of the Bantam, tooling in a hansom as hard as he could go, squaring along Oxford Street

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Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.