Detained to Supper
When Freeman returns, the opportunity is destroyed, though this enables the narrator to quell the rising tumult of his passion. Shortly afterward, the squire returns from his nap, rubbing his eyes, and calls for tea, which he drinks from a small bowl qualified with brandy. When Freeman and the narrator propose to take their leave, the foxhunter insists upon their spending the evening at his house with such obstinacy of affection that they are obliged to comply. The narrator would have welcomed the invitation for more of Narcissa’s company but fears risking her esteem by entering into a debauch he knows will occur. The squire begins drinking early, ordering the table furnished with liquor immediately after tea, but they absolutely refuse to drink so soon and prevail upon him to play whist for an hour or two. The narrator and the savage become partners at first, and because his thoughts are wholly employed in a more interesting game, he plays so poorly that the squire loses patience, swears bitterly, and threatens to call for wine if they will not grant him another associate. Their wish is gratified, and the narrator is paired with Narcissa. The squire loses again for the same reason that made him lose before. Time passes agreeably until they are told that supper is served in another room.
The Stratagem
The squire is enraged to find the evening so unprofitably spent and wreaks his vengeance upon the cards, tearing them and committing them to the flames with many execrations. He threatens to make them redeem their loss with a large glass and quick circulation, and after supper, when Narcissa withdraws, he puts this threat in execution. Three bottles of port are placed before them with as many water glasses, which are filled to the brim and emptied immediately to the best in Christendom. Though the narrator swallows his portion without hesitation or reluctance, he perceives his brain will not bear many more bumpers of this sort. Dreading the perseverance of a champion who began with such vigor, he determines to make up for the deficiency of his strength by a stratagem. When the second course of bottles is called for, he assumes a gay air, entertains the squire with a French catch on the subject of drinking, and asks if he has a bowl or cup that will contain a whole quart of wine. The squire produces a silver candle cup holding exactly that quantity. The narrator bids the squire decant his bottle into it, then nods deliberately and says, “Pledge you.” The squire stares in disbelief, but the narrator assures him they will do him justice. The squire applies the cup to his lips and empties it in a breath. The narrator then begins pouring his own bottle into the cup while speaking of drinking with the Cham of Tartary. The squire takes umbrage at these words, and after several attempts to spit, stammers out an indignant reply, declaring himself a freeborn Englishman worth three thousand a-year. He then drops his jaw, fixes his eyes, hiccups aloud, and falls upon the floor as mute as a flounder.
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