3

When Simon returned to Rose Alley that evening it was late. He had been to the paint shop and bought beautiful new fat glistening tubes of paint, soft smooth brushes, and a glossy palette. Then he had returned to Mr. Cobb's yard where he was given about five jobs to do in quick succession—replacing a cracked panel in a barouche, mending a broken axletree, turning a new spoke and putting it in a chariot wheel, shoeing a pony, and bending an iron wheel tread. By the end of this grueling stint he was nearly dead of fatigue, and ravenous, but it was worth it, for Mr. Cobb, slapping him on the shoulder, pronounced him a prime all-arounder, paid him a guinea then and there, with the promise of as much work as he wanted, and invited him up for a dish of pigs' pettitoes and onions with Mrs. Cobb and young Miss Cobb, who lived in a little neat apartment up a flight of steps over the coach house at the back of the yard.

"Oh, it's dabbling in the dew that
makes the barmaids fair,
With their dewy, dewy eyes and their brassy, brassy hair!"