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A RARE FRIGHT.

When Mr Thomas Youdan kept the Surrey Music Hall, Westbar, he had in his employment an eccentric named Tom Smithers, popularly known as " Legs, " the reason beine that his understandings were bowed like a capital O. " Legs" was engaged as attendant on the menagerie attached to the music hall, and was a faithful hardworking fellow, with but one drawback —he was a little too fond of whiskey. With a view to keeping him sober, he had strict orders not to leave the premises after closing time on any account; but one evening his master heard his gentle footstep sneak up the stair case from the vaults where the animals' dens were kept, saw him noiselossly unfasten a side door and let himself out. " I will teach you a lesson, my lad, " thought Youdan. Consequently he stole downstairs into the first large room, where the boars were kept, locked the door behind him, and waited for the return of " Legs " with the liquor he had slipped out to fetch. Youdan's idea was to scare him to death by way of of caution, but somehow the scheme went wrong. He had no sooner locked the door than he became conscious, in the dim light of the turned down gas burner, that a large black something was shifting uneasily about in a corner of the apartment. Presently the something got up and shook itself, and commenced sniffing around in his direction. Closer inspecrevealed that it was two large bears male and female, which had somehow got out of their cage. As Youdan remembered they were the most savage of his stock he felt his hair rise up on his head like a birch broom, and the cold perspiration went trickling down his back. The bears slowly approached him, the little piggish eyes glittering like yellow fire as they came nearer, and he entered upon a stage of deadly fright that can't be described, even when you have felt it. Suddenly he bethought himself that their cage was just at hia elbow. He leaped for the cage, got inside, and slammed the door, and succeeded in partly bolting it, the hears sniffing at his hands aa he did it. Then Mr and Mrs Brain lost their temper and wentfor the bars with might and main. They growled and snorted, and shook the iron rods aa if they would rend them to pieces, while Youdan curled himself up small in the remotest corner of the den and yelled fifteen different kinds of " Murder!" This went on abont half an hour before '" Legs " arrived to find the door locked and a terrible racket going on inside, in the midst of which he could hear his governor screaming for .ill the powers of Heaven and the other place to come and help him. Though he was afraid the bears wiuld get the cage open, " Legs " soon had his plan arranged. He forced the door, and, dashing in with a flaming torch in one hand and a bucket of bears' food in the other, by a judicious mixture of persuasion and fright, he got the animals into an empty cage and secured them. Then he turned his attention to his master and let him out more dead than alive. Youdan's hair was grey from that moment, and it was not long after that the menagerie was sold off.—Sheffield.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WT18880728.2.31.11

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Waikato Times, Volume XXXI, Issue 2504, 28 July 1888, Page 6 (Supplement)

Word count
Tapeke kupu
563

A RARE FRIGHT. Waikato Times, Volume XXXI, Issue 2504, 28 July 1888, Page 6 (Supplement)

A RARE FRIGHT. Waikato Times, Volume XXXI, Issue 2504, 28 July 1888, Page 6 (Supplement)

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