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    Chapter 42

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    HIS ADVENTURE WITH THE CROSS OLD GENTLEMAN

    My adventure in the News-Room in the Exchange, which I have related in a
    previous chapter, reminds me of another, at the Lyceum, some days after,
    which may as well be put down here, before I forget it.

    I was strolling down Bold-street, I think it was, when I was struck by
    the sight of a brown stone building, very large and handsome. The
    windows were open, and there, nicely seated, with their comfortable legs
    crossed over their comfortable knees, I beheld several sedate,
    happy-looking old gentlemen reading the magazines and papers, and one
    had a fine gilded volume in his hand.

    Yes, this must be the Lyceum, thought I; let me see. So I whipped out my
    guide-book, and opened it at the proper place; and sure enough, the
    building before me corresponded stone for stone. I stood awhile on the
    opposite side of the street, gazing at my picture, and then at its
    original; and often dwelling upon the pleasant gentlemen sitting at the
    open windows; till at last I felt an uncontrollable impulse to step in
    for a moment, and run over the news.

    I'm a poor, friendless sailor-boy, thought I, and they can not object;
    especially as I am from a foreign land, and strangers ought to be
    treated with courtesy. I turned the matter over again, as I walked
    across the way; and with just a small tapping of a misgiving at my
    heart, I at last scraped my feet clean against the curb-stone, and
    taking off my hat while I was yet in the open air, slowly sauntered in.

    But I had not got far into that large and lofty room, filled with many
    agreeable sights, when a crabbed old gentleman lifted up his eye from
    the London Times, which words I saw boldly printed on the back of the
    large sheet in his hand, and looking at me as if I were a strange dog
    with a muddy hide, that had stolen out of the gutter into this fine
    apartment, he shook his silver-headed cane at me fiercely, till the
    spectacles fell off his nose. Almost at the same moment, up stepped a
    terribly cross man, who looked as if he had a mustard plaster on his
    back, that was continually exasperating him; who throwing down some
    papers which he had been filing, took me by my innocent shoulders, and
    then, putting his foot against the broad part of my pantaloons, wheeled
    me right out into the street, and dropped me on the walk, without so
    much as offering an apology for the affront. I sprang after him, but in
    vain; the door was closed upon me.

    These Englishmen have no manners, that's plain, thought I; and I trudged
    on down the street in a reverie.
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