Last Updated:2022/12/23
The butcher’s boy—a fierce and beefy youth, who openly defied the dog, and waved him off with hurlings of his basket and threatenings of his feet, accompanied by growls of “Git out, yer beast!”—now entered silently; Edmund Yates (1884), “A Dickens Chapter”, in Edmund Yates: His Recollections and Experiences, volume II, London: Richard Bentley and Son, page 111: “In Mr. J. C. Hotten’s Life, and in Mr. A. W. Ward’s admirable monograph in the “English Men of Letters” Series, a paper of mine called “Pincher Astray” is attributed to Dickens.”
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The
butcher’s
boy—a
fierce
and
beefy
youth,
who
openly
defied
the
dog,
and
waved
him
off
with
hurlings
of
his
basket
and
threatenings
of
his
feet,
accompanied
by
growls
of
“Git
out,
yer
beast!”—now
entered
silently;
Edmund
Yates
(1884),
“A
Dickens
Chapter”,
in
Edmund
Yates:
His
Recollections
and
Experiences,
volume
II,
London:
Richard
Bentley
and
Son,
page
111:
“In
Mr.
J.
C.
Hotten’s
Life,
and
in
Mr.
A.
W.
Ward’s
admirable
monograph
in
the
“English
Men
of
Letters”
Series,
a
paper
of
mine
called
“Pincher
Astray”
is
attributed
to
Dickens.”