Page:Iron shroud, or, Italian revenge (1).pdf/21

 back. They had moved nearer to him, and were now motionlcssmotionless [sic]. Vivenzio looked up, and saw thothe [sic] roof almost touching his head, even as he sat cowering beneath it; and he felt that a further contraction of but a few inches only must commence the frightful opcrationoperation [sic]. Roused as he had becnbeen [sic], he now gasped for breath. His body shook violently —he was bent nearly double. His hands rested upon either wall, and his feet were drawn under him to avoid the prcssurcpressure [sic] in front. Thus he remained for more than an hour, when that deafening bell beat again, and again there came the crash of horrid death. But the concussion was now so great that it struck Vivenzio down. As he lay gathered up in lessened bulk, the bell beat loud and frcquentfrequent [sic]—crash succeedcdsucceeded [sic] crash—and on, and on, and on came the mysterious engine of death, till Vivenzio’s smothered groans wercwere [sic] heard no more! He was horribly crushed by the ponderous roof and collapsing sides—and thothe [sic] flattened bier was his Iron Shroud.

An odd whim oncoonce [sic] possessed a country ’squire, that he would not hire any servant whatever, until ten pounds should be deposited between the master and servant; and the first that grumbled at any thing, let it bcbe [sic] what it might, was to forfcitforfeit [sic] thothe [sic] money. Being in want of a coachman, not one round the country would venture to go after the placoplace [sic]. Now it happened that one Thomas Winterbourn, a coachman of London, who had bcenbeen [sic] discharged from a nobleman’s family, was in that