Sweet Cicely β or Josiah Allen as a Politician by Marietta Holley (the best books of all time .TXT) π
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- Author: Marietta Holley
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Presently a waiter presented himself.
βHave you ordered?β he asked.
βGive me some roast beef,β said Phil. βWhat will you have, Giacomo?β
βThe same as you, Filippo,β said Giacomo, in Italian.
βWhatβs that?β asked the waiter, thinking he had named some dish.
βHe will have some roast beef, too. Will you have some coffee, Giacomo?β
βIf you have it,β answered the smaller boy.
So Phil gave the double order, and very soon the coffee and meat were placed before them. I suspect that few of my readers would have regarded these articles with any relish. One need not be fastidious to find fault with the dark-hued beverage, which was only a poor imitation of coffee, and the dark fragments of meat, which might have been horseflesh so far as appearance went. But to the two Italian boys it was indeed a feast. The coffee, which was hot, warmed their stomachs, and seemed to them like nectar, while the meat was as palatable as the epicure finds his choicest dishes. While eating, even Giacomo forgot that he was engaged in something unlawful, and his face was lighted up with rare satisfaction.
βIt is good,β said Phil, briefly, as he laid down his knife and fork, after disposing of the last morsel upon his plate.
βI wish I could have such a supper every day,β said Giacomo.
βI will when I am a man,β said Phil.
βI donβt think I shall ever be a man,β said Giacomo, shaking his head.
βWhy not?β asked Phil, regarding him with surprise.
βI do not think I shall live.β
βWhat makes you think so, Giacomo?β said Phil, startled.
βI am not strong, Filippo,β said the little boy, βI think I get weaker every day. I long so much to go back to Italy. If I could see my mother once more, I would be willing to die then.β
βYou must not think of such things, Giacomo,β said Phil, who, like most healthy boys, did not like to think of death. βYou will get strong when summer comes. The weather is bad now, of course.β
βI donβt think I shall, Filippo. Do you remember Matteo?β
βYes, I remember him.β
Matteo was a comrade who had died six months before. He was a young boy, about the size and age of Giacomo.
βI dreamed of him last night, Filippo. He held out his hand to me.β
βWell?β
βI think I am going to die, like him.β
βDonβt be foolish, Giacomo,β said Phil. But, though he said this, even he was startled by what Giacomo had told him. He was ignorant, and the ignorant are prone to superstition; so he felt uncomfortable, but did not like to acknowledge it.
βYou must not think of this, Giacomo,β he said. βYou will be an old man some day.β
βThatβs for you, Filippo. It isnβt for me,β said the little boy.
βCome, let us go,β said Phil, desirous of dropping the subject.
He went up to the desk, and paid for both, the sum of thirty cents.
βNow, come,β he said.
Giacomo followed him out, and they turned down the street, feeling refreshed by the supper they had eaten. But unfortunately they had been observed. As they left the restaurant, they attracted the attention of Pietro, whom chance had brought thither at an unfortunate time. His sinister face lighted up with joy as he realized the discovery he had made. But he wished to make sure that it was as he supposed. They might have gone in only to play and sing.
He crossed the street, unobserved by Phil and Giacomo, and entered the restaurant.
βWere my two brothers here?β he asked, assuming relationship.
βTwo boys with fiddles?β
βYes; they just went out.β
βDid they get supper?β
βYes; they had some roast beef and coffee.β
βThank you,β said Pietro, and he left the restaurant with his suspicions confirmed.
βI shall tell the padrone,β he said to himself.
βThey will feel the stick to-night.β
CHAPTER X FRENCHβS HOTEL
Pietro had one of those mean and malignant natures that are best pleased when they are instrumental in bringing others into trouble. He looked forward to becoming a padrone himself some time, and seemed admirably fitted by nature to exercise the inhuman office. He lost no time, on his return, in making known to his uncle what he had learned.
For the boys to appropriate to their own use money which had been received for their services was, in the eyes of the padrone, a crime of the darkest shade. In fact, if the example were generally followed, it would have made a large diminution of his income, though the boys might have been benefited. He listened to Pietro with an ominous scowl, and decided to inflict condign punishment upon the young offenders.
Meanwhile Phil and Giacomo resumed their wanderings. They no longer hoped to make up the large difference between what they had and the sum they were expected by the padrone to bring. As the evening advanced the cold increased, and penetrated through their thin clothing, chilling them through and through. Giacomo felt it the most. By and by he began to sob with the cold and fatigue.
βWhat is the matter, Giacomo?β asked Phil, anxiously.
βI feel so cold, Filippoβso cold and tired. I wish I could rest.β
The boys were in Printing House Square, near the spot where now stands the Franklin statue.
βIf you want to rest, Giacomo,β said Phil, pityingly, βwe will go into Frenchβs Hotel a little while.β
βI should like to.β
They entered the hotel and sat down near the
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