The Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Volume 5


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The people of Rattleborough had, indeed, so high an opinion of the  
wisdom and discretion of "Old Charley," that the greater part of them  
felt disposed to agree with him, and not make a stir in the business  
"until something should turn up," as the honest old gentleman worded  
it; and I believe that, after all this would have been the general  
determination, but for the very suspicious interference of Mr.  
Shuttleworthy's nephew, a young man of very dissipated habits,  
and otherwise of rather bad character. This nephew, whose name was  
Pennifeather, would listen to nothing like reason in the matter of  
"lying quiet," but insisted upon making immediate search for the "corpse  
of the murdered man."--This was the expression he employed; and Mr.  
Goodfellow acutely remarked at the time, that it was "a singular  
expression, to say no more." This remark of 'Old Charley's,' too, had  
great effect upon the crowd; and one of the party was heard to ask,  
very impressively, "how it happened that young Mr. Pennifeather was so  
intimately cognizant of all the circumstances connected with his wealthy  
uncle's disappearance, as to feel authorized to assert, distinctly  
and unequivocally, that his uncle was 'a murdered man.'" Hereupon some  
little squibbing and bickering occurred among various members of  
the crowd, and especially between "Old Charley" and Mr.  
Pennifeather--although this latter occurrence was, indeed, by no means a  
novelty, for no good will had subsisted between the parties for the  
last three or four months; and matters had even gone so far that Mr.  
Pennifeather had actually knocked down his uncles friend for some  
alleged excess of liberty that the latter had taken in the uncle's  
house, of which the nephew was an inmate. Upon this occasion "Old  
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73 74 75 76 77

Quick Jump
1 101 202 302 403