< Page:Soldiers Three - Kipling (1890).djvu
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46

SOLDIERS THREE.


part'nince, the Corp'ril man was comin' out av Bragin's quarters!

"<«He's done that these five evenin's past,' sez Annie Bragin. 'O, fwhat will I do!'

"He'll not do ut again," sez I, for I was fightin' mad.

" ape away from a man that has been a thrifle crossed in love till the fever's died down. He rages like a brute beast.

"T wint up to the man in the verandah, manin', as sure as I sit, to knock the life out av him. He slipped into the open. 'Fwhat are you doin' philanderin' about here, ye scum av the gutter?' sez I polite, to give him his warnin', for I wanted him ready.

"He niver lifted his head, but sez, all mournful an' melancolius, as if he thought I wud be sorry for him: 'I can't find her,' sez he.

"«My troth,' sez I, 'you've lived too long—you an' your seekin's an' findin's in a dacint married woman's quarters! Hould up your head, ye frozen thief av Genesis, sez I, 'an' you'll find all you want an' more!'

"But he niver hild up, an' J let go from the shoulder to where the hair is short over the eyebrows.

"That'll do your business,' sez I, but it nearly did mine instid. I put my body-weight behind the blow, but I Int nothin' at all, an' near put my shoulther out. The Corp'ril man was not there, an' Annie Bragin, who had been watchin' from the verandah, throws up her heels an' carries on like a cock whin his neck's wrung by the dhrummer-bhoy, I wint back to her, for a livin' woman, an' a woman hke Annie sragin, is more than a p'rade-groun' full av g)sosts. I'd never seen a woman faint before, an' I stud like a shtuck calf, askin' her whether she was dead, an' prayin' her for the love av me, an' the love av her husband, an' the love av the Virgin, to opin her blessed eyes again, an' callin' mesilf all the names undher the canopy av Hivin for placuin' her wid miv miserable a-moo7s whin I ought to ha' stud betune her an' this Corp'ril man that had lost the number av his mess.

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