Paulding's Works: John Bull and Brother JonthanHarper, 1835 |
Common terms and phrases
abuse alewives Baboons barbecue Beau Nap Beau Napperty began better Bishop Porteus blockheads boatmen boats boys Brother Jonathan Bullock Island called captain CHAPTER cockfighting corporal cried daddy ears father fight Fred friends Frogmoreans frogs gentleman grum grumbling hand head heard hearty honest fellow horse John Bull John Dory John's Jona Jonathan's farms Jonathan's tenants Justice Scout knew lady landlord lands live look madam manor of Frogmore Master Canynge mighty millpond mind Napperty's neighbours never nose old creature old fellow old squire parcel passion perty pockets pretty quarrel quoth rascal reason rents rogues rowers scold scurvy sent silver forks Smelfungus sort Southlands Squire Bull Squire Bull's tenants squire's swore talk tell termagant than's thing thought tickled told took truth turn Uncle Sam varlets wanted whole neighbourhood wife young young rascal
Popular passages
Page 9 - Bull kept on picking his pockets of every penny he could scrape together ; till at last one day when the squire was even more than usually pressing in his demands, which he accompanied with threats, Jonathan started up in a furious passion, and threw the tea-kettle at the old man's head.
Page 5 - John Bull was a choleric old fellow, who held a good manor in the middle of a great mill-pond, and which, by reason of its being quite surrounded by water, was generally called Bullock Island. Bull was an ingenious man, an exceedingly good blacksmith, a dexterous cutler, and a notable weaver and pot-baker besides. He also brewed capital porter, ale, and small beer, and was in fact a sort of jack of all trades, and good at each.
Page 8 - ... that had seen John Bull saw a great likeness between them, and swore he was John's own boy, and a true chip of the old block. Like the old squire, he was apt to be blustering and saucy, but in the main was a peaceable sortof careless fellow, that would quarrel with nobody if you only let him • alone.
Page 6 - Such was Squire Bull, as he was commonly called by the country people his neighbours — one of those odd, testy, grumbling, boasting old codgers, that never get credit for what they are, because they are always pretending to be what they are not. The squire was as tight a hand to deal with...
Page 7 - ... and build a meeting-house without a steeple as soon as he grew rich enough. When he got over, Jonathan found that the land was quite in a state of nature, covered with wood, and inhabited by nobody but wild beasts. But, being a lad of mettle, he took his axe on one shoulder and his gun on the other, marched into the thickest of the wood, and, clearing a place, built a log hut. Pursuing his labors, and handling his axe like a notable woodman, he in a few years cleared the land, which he laid out...
Page 6 - Bull, as he was commonly called by the country people his neighbours— one of those odd, testy, grumbling, boasting old codgers, that never get credit for what they are, because they are always pretending to be what they are not. The squire was as tight a hand to deal with in-doors as out ; sometimes treating his family as if they were not the same flesh and blood, when they happened to differ with him in certain matters. One day he got into a dispute with his youngest son Jonathan, who was familiarly...