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Gargantua and Pantagruel, Complete.

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Blood <strong>and</strong> oons, answered Breton, I was there, <strong>and</strong> can prove it easily; nay,<br />

even where you, my lord, dared not have been. The duke began to resent<br />

this as too rash <strong>and</strong> saucy; but Breton easily appeased him, <strong>and</strong> set them<br />

all a-laughing. Egad, my lord, quoth he, I kept out of harm's way; I was<br />

all the while with your page Jack, skulking in a certain place where you<br />

had not dared hide your head as I did. Thus discoursing, they got to their<br />

ships, <strong>and</strong> left the isl<strong>and</strong> of Chely.<br />

Chapter 4.XII.<br />

How <strong>Pantagruel</strong> passed by the l<strong>and</strong> of Pettifogging, <strong>and</strong> of the strange way<br />

of living among the Catchpoles.<br />

Steering our course forwards the next day, we passed through Pettifogging,<br />

a country all blurred <strong>and</strong> blotted, so that I could hardly tell what to make<br />

on't. There we saw some pettifoggers <strong>and</strong> catchpoles, rogues that will hang<br />

their father for a groat. They neither invited us to eat or drink; but,<br />

with a multiplied train of scrapes <strong>and</strong> cringes, said they were all at our<br />

service for the Legem pone.<br />

One of our droggermen related to <strong>Pantagruel</strong> their strange way of living,<br />

diametrically opposed to that of our modern Romans; for at Rome a world of<br />

folks get an honest livelihood by poisoning, drubbing, lambasting,<br />

stabbing, <strong>and</strong> murthering; but the catchpoles earn theirs by being thrashed;<br />

so that if they were long without a tight lambasting, the poor dogs with<br />

their wives <strong>and</strong> children would be starved. This is just, quoth Panurge,<br />

like those who, as Galen tells us, cannot erect the cavernous nerve towards<br />

the equinoctial circle unless they are soundly flogged. By St. Patrick's<br />

slipper, whoever should jerk me so, would soon, instead of setting me<br />

right, throw me off the saddle, in the devil's name.<br />

The way is this, said the interpreter. When a monk, levite, close-fisted<br />

usurer, or lawyer owes a grudge to some neighbouring gentleman, he sends to<br />

him one of those catchpoles or apparitors, who nabs, or at least cites him,<br />

serves a writ or warrant upon him, thumps, abuses, <strong>and</strong> affronts him<br />

impudently by natural instinct, <strong>and</strong> according to his pious instructions;<br />

insomuch, that if the gentleman hath but any guts in his brains, <strong>and</strong> is not<br />

more stupid than a gyrin frog, he will find himself obliged either to apply<br />

a faggot-stick or his sword to the rascal's jobbernowl, give him the gentle<br />

lash, or make him cut a caper out at the window, by way of correction.<br />

This done, Catchpole is rich for four months at least, as if bastinadoes<br />

were his real harvest; for the monk, levite, usurer, or lawyer will reward<br />

him roundly; <strong>and</strong> my gentleman must pay him such swingeing damages that his<br />

acres must bleed for it, <strong>and</strong> he be in danger of miserably rotting within a<br />

stone doublet, as if he had struck the king.<br />

Quoth Panurge, I know an excellent remedy against this used by the Lord of<br />

Basche. What is it? said <strong>Pantagruel</strong>. The Lord of Basche, said Panurge,<br />

was a brave, honest, noble-spirited gentleman, who, at his return from the<br />

long war in which the Duke of Ferrara, with the help of the French, bravely<br />

defended himself against the fury of Pope Julius the Second, was every day<br />

cited, warned, <strong>and</strong> prosecuted at the suit <strong>and</strong> for the sport <strong>and</strong> fancy of<br />

the fat prior of St. Louant.<br />

One morning, as he was at breakfast with some of his domestics (for he

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