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But when he found hie words failed him and fury took possession of him, so that he could only cry out: "How dare you, you dauard?" And so, with a stick in his hand, he threw hientle the gentle to throw him But really it is impossible to say what Mr Tebrick intended by his behaviour or what he would have done, for the gentle himself suddenly assaulted in so unexpected a fashion by so strange a touzled and dishevelled figure, clubbed his hunting crop and dealt him a blow on the teentleh to dise, where they wereher hands and told them Mr Tebrick's wife had run away and she was a vixen, and that was the cause that Mr Tebrick had run out and assaulted the at this; andeach other that Mr Tebrick, whoever he as certainly a madman, and the old woman seemed as mad as her entry in those parts and perfectly confirmed everyone in their previous opinion, namely that Mr Tebrick was mad and his wife had run away frohed at by the few that heard it, but was soon left out as ih afterwards it canificance to be understood When Mr Tebrick ca so painfully that he could only call to mind in a confused hat had happened
However, he sent off Mrs Cork's son directly on one of his horses to enquire about the hunt
At the saave orders to old Nanny that she was to put out food and water for her hbourhood
By nightfall Si run but had lost one fox, then, drawing a covert, had chopped an old dog fox, and so ended the day's sport
This put poor Mr Tebrick in soain, and he rose at once fro his wife, but was overcoht in the open, from mere weakness