The History of Mr Polly


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It took him two months to place himself in another situation, and  
during that time he had quite a disagreeable amount of loneliness,  
disappointment, anxiety and humiliation.  
He went at first to stay with a married cousin who had a house at  
Easewood. His widowed father had recently given up the music and  
bicycle shop (with the post of organist at the parish church) that had  
sustained his home, and was living upon a small annuity as a guest  
with this cousin, and growing a little tiresome on account of some  
mysterious internal discomfort that the local practitioner diagnosed  
as imagination. He had aged with mysterious rapidity and become  
excessively irritable, but the cousin's wife was a born manager, and  
contrived to get along with him. Our Mr. Polly's status was that of a  
guest pure and simple, but after a fortnight of congested hospitality  
in which he wrote nearly a hundred letters beginning:  
Sir:  
Referring to your advt. in the "Christian World" for an improver in  
Gents' outfitting I beg to submit myself for the situation. Have had  
six years' experience....  
and upset a bottle of ink over a toilet cover and the bedroom carpet,  
his cousin took him for a walk and pointed out the superior advantages  
of apartments in London from which to swoop upon the briefly yawning  
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46 47 48 49 50

Quick Jump
1 85 170 255 340