The Astonishing History of Troy
Town, by Sir
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by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
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Title: The Astonishing History of Troy Town
Author: Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
Release Date: December 9, 2005 [eBook #17263]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
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ASTONISHING HISTORY OF TROY TOWN***
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THE ASTONISHING HISTORY OF TROY TOWN.
by
Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch.
1914
This etext prepared from a reprint of a version published in 1914.
[Illustration: "This regiment of visitors." (Chapter VII)]
TO CHARLES CANNAN.
My Dear Cannan, It is told of a distinguished pedagogue that one day a
heated stranger burst into his study, and, wringing him by the hand,
cried, "Heaven bless and reward you, sir! Heaven preserve you long to
educate old England's boyhood! I have walked many a weary, weary
mile to see your face again," he continued, flourishing a scrap of paper,
"and assure you that but for your discipline, obeyed by me as a boy and
remembered as a man, I should never--no, never--have won the
Ticket-of-Leave which you behold!"
In something of the same spirit I bring you this small volume. The child
of encouragement is given to staggering its parent; and I make no doubt
that as you turn the following pages, you will more than once exclaim,
with the old lady in the ballad--
"O, deary me! this is none of I!"
Nevertheless, it would be strange indeed if this story bore no marks of
you; for a hundred kindly instances have taught me to come with sure
reliance for your reproof and praise. Few, I imagine, have the good
fortune of a critic so friendly and inexorable; and if the critic has been
unsparing, he has been used unsparingly. Wargrave,
Henley-on-Thames, June 7, 1888
CONTENTS.
Chapter.
I. IN WHICH THE READER IS MADE ACQUAINTED WITH A
STATE OF INNOCENCE; AND THE MEANING OF THE WORD
"CUMEELFO"
II. HOW AN ADMIRAL TOOK ONE GENTLEMAN FOR
ANOTHER, AND WAS TOLD THE DAY OF THE MONTH.
III. OF A BLUE-JERSEYED MAN THAT WOULD HOIST NO
MORE BRICKS; AND A NIGHTCAP THAT HAD NO BUSINESS
TO BE WHERE IT WAS.
IV. OF CERTAIN LEPERS; AND TWO BROTHERS WHO, BEING
MUCH ALIKE, LOVED THEIR SISTER AND RECOMMENDED
THE USE OF GLOBES.
V. HOW AN ABSENT-MINDED MAN, THAT HATED WOMEN,
TOOK A HOUSE BY THE WATERSIDE AND LIVED THEREIN
WITH ONE SERVANT.
VI. HOW CERTAIN TROJANS CLIMBED A WALL OUT OF
CURIOSITY; AND OF A CHARWOMAN THAT COULD GIVE NO
INFORMATION.
VII. OF A LADY THAT HAD A MUSICAL VOICE, BUT USED IT
TO DECEIVE.
VIII. HOW A CREW, THAT WOULD SAIL ON A WASHING-DAY,
WAS SHIPWRECKED: WITH AN ADVERTISEMENT AGAINST
WOMEN.
IX. OF A TOWN THAT WOULD LAUGH AT THE GREAT: AND
HOW A DULL COMPANY WAS CURED BY AN IRISH SONG.
X. OF ONE EXCURSION AND MANY ALARUMS.
XI. OF A WESLEYAN MINISTER THAT WOULD IMPROVE
UPON NATURE, AND THEREBY TRAINED A ROOK TO GOOD
PRINCIPLES.
XII. OF DETERIORATION; AND A WHEELBARROW THAT
CONTAINED UNEXPECTED THINGS.
XIII. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF POMEROY'S CAT; AND HOW THE
MEN AND WOMEN OF TROY ENSUED AFTER PLEASURE IN
BOATS.
XIV. OF A LADY OF SENSIBILITY THAT, BEING
AWKWARDLY PLACED, MIGHT EASILY HAVE SET MATTERS
RIGHT, BUT DID NOT; WITH MUCH BESIDE.
XV. HOW A LADY AND A YOUTH, BEING SEPARATED FROM
THEIR COMPANY, VISITED A SHIP THAT HELD NOTHING
BUT WATER.
XVI. OF STRATAGEMS AND SPOILS; AND THAT THE
NOMINALISTS ERR WHO HOLD A THING TO BE WHAT IT IS
CALLED.
XVII. HOW ONE THAT WAS DISSATISFIED WITH HIS PAST
SAW A VISION, BUT DOUBTED.
XVIII. OF A YOUNG MAN THAT WOULD START UPON A
DARK ADVENTURE, BUT HAD TWO MINDS UPON IT.
XIX. THAT A SILVER BULLET HAS VIRTUE; WITH A
WARNING TO COMMODORES.
XX. HOW CERTAIN CHARACTERS FOUND THEMSELVES, AT
DEAD OF NIGHT, UPON THE FIVE LANES ROAD.
XXI. THAT A VERY LITTLE TEA MAY SUFFICE TO ELEVATE
A MAN.
XXII. IN WHICH SEVERAL ATTEMPTS ARE MADE TO PUT A
PERIOD TO THIS HISTORY.
XXIII. HOW ONE LOVER TOOK LEAVE OF HIS WITS, AND
TWO CAME TO THEIR SENSES.
XXIV. OF THE BEST HELLEBORE; AND AN EXPERIMENT IN
THE ENTERTAINMENT OF TWINS.
XXV. WHICH ENDS THIS STORY OF TROY.
[Illustration: The Astonishing History of Troy Town]
CHAPTER I.
IN WHICH THE
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