Page:The Wanderer (1814 Volume 2).pdf/187

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words, "Why, Mr. Stubbs, if here is not Miss Ellis!" and finding that she had placed herself between young Gooch, the farmer's son, and Mr. Stubbs, the old steward.

"Good now, Ma'am," the young man cried, "why I have never seen you since that night of our all acting together in that play, when you out-topped us all so to nothing! I never saw the like, not even at the real play. And some of the judges said, you were not much short of what they be at the grand London theatre itself. I suppose, Ma'am, you were pretty well used to acting in France? for they say all the French are actors or dancers, except just them that go to the wars. I should like to know, Ma'am, whether they pop off them players and fidlers at the same rate they do the rest? for, if they do, it's a wonder how they can get 'em to go on acting and piping, and jiggetting about, and such like, if they know they are so soon to have their heads off, all the