Two days after there came by a travelling
fiddler, who began to play under the window and beg alms; and when the king heard him, he said,
But Pip loved life, and all life's peaceable securities; so that the panic-striking business in which he had somehow unaccountably become entrapped, had most sadly blurred his brightness; though, as ere long will be seen, what was thus temporarily subdued in him, in the end was destined to be luridly illumined by strange wild fires, that fictitiously showed him off to ten times the natural lustre with which in his native Tolland County in Connecticut, he had once enlivened many a
fiddler's frolic on the green; and at melodious even-tide, with his gay ha-ha!
And when the
fiddler, peering into the front room, remarked to the pianist, "It's Burning Daylight," the waltz-time perceptibly quickened, and the dancers, catching the contagion, began to whirl about as if they really enjoyed it.
In came a
fiddler with a music-book, and went up to the lofty desk, and made an orchestra of it, and tuned like fifty stomach-aches.
Not a
fiddler throughout the length and breadth of Scandinavia played as he did.
Then they tucked the old man into a beauti- ful room, which was the spare room, and in the night some time he got powerful thirsty and clumb out on to the porch-roof and slid down a stanchion and traded his new coat for a jug of forty-rod, and clumb back again and had a good old time; and towards daylight he crawled out again, drunk as a
fiddler, and rolled off the porch and broke his left arm in two places, and was most froze to death when somebody found him after sun-up.
A
fiddler who was present, and who appeared to act as the appointed minstrel of the company, forthwith struck up a Scotch reel; and that in tones so invigorating, that Hugh and his friend (who had both been drinking before) rose from their seats as by previous concert, and, to the great admiration of the assembled guests, performed an extemporaneous No-Popery Dance.
The corpulent black
fiddler, and his friend who plays the tambourine, stamp upon the boarding of the small raised orchestra in which they sit, and play a lively measure.
Many a church member saw I, walking behind the music, that has danced in the same measure with me, when Somebody was
fiddler, and, it might be, an Indian powwow or a Lapland wizard changing hands with us!
Lords, indeed!-- why, at one of her swarreys I saw one of 'em speak to a dam
fiddler --a fellar I despise.
For, instead of a long train with royal diadems, I saw in one family two
fiddlers, three spruce courtiers, and an Italian prelate.
In a room above one of the stores, where a dance was to be held, the
fiddlers tuned their instruments.