The Food of the Gods and How It Came to Earth


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He was from the first, the Vicar always declared, a terrible nuisance  
about the village. He seems to have had a proportionate impulse to play,  
much curiosity and sociability, and in addition there was a certain  
craving within him--I grieve to say--for more to eat. In spite of what  
Mrs. Greenfield called an "excessively generous" allowance of food  
from Lady Wondershoot, he displayed what the doctor perceived at once  
was the "Criminal Appetite." It carries out only too completely Lady  
Wondershoot's worst experiences of the lower classes--that in spite of  
an allowance of nourishment inordinately beyond what is known to be the  
maximum necessity even of an adult human being, the creature was found  
to steal. And what he stole he ate with an inelegant voracity. His great  
hand would come over garden walls; he would covet the very bread in the  
bakers' carts. Cheeses went from Marlow's store loft, and never a pig  
trough was safe from him. Some farmer walking over his field of swedes  
would find the great spoor of his feet and the evidence of his nibbling  
hunger--a root picked here, a root picked there, and the holes, with  
childish cunning, heavily erased. He ate a swede as one devours a  
radish. He would stand and eat apples from a tree, if no one was about,  
as normal children eat blackberries from a bush. In one way at any rate  
this shortness of provisions was good for the peace of Cheasing  
Eyebright--for many years he ate up every grain very nearly of the Food  
of the Gods that was given him....  
Indisputably the child was troublesome and out of place, "He was always  
about," the Vicar used to say. He could not go to school; he could not  
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205 206 207 208 209

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