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Updated: May 29, 2025
I'll tell you what you must give ME all the chocolate, and then I'll give YOU I'll give you what you ought to have!" "Oh, all right," I said, in a subdued sort of way. It seemed a little hard to be put under a sentimental restriction like this in one's own Chocolate-room. "In the next room you come to," I proceeded, "there's fizzy drinks!
"Never mind the knocking, sir; let's get to 'em 'fore we misses the chance. Now, Neb, lad; ready?" "Ready it is, messmate." "Here you are then; on'y go face downwards." "Would yer? Can't breathe so well if you turns yer fizzy mahogany down." "And yer can't crawl so well if yer goes with it up."
Trenor, a little heated by his unusual flow of words, and perhaps by prolonged propinquity with the decanters, was bending over the latter to decipher their silver labels. "Here, now, Lily, just a drop of cognac in a little fizzy water you do look pinched, you know: I swear the end of your nose is red. I'll take another glass to keep you company Judy?
"It's just like that horrid, beastly fizzy stuff they gave me that made me feel happy." "Oh, it isn't like anything but itself!" answered Diana, breathing deeply. "Why, it's all cold, and yet it feels like fire." "Balmy is the word we use in Fleet Street," said Mr. Moon. "Balmy especially on the crumpet." And he fanned himself quite unnecessarily with his straw hat.
He was watching Dick, who called aloud to the restless Nile for Maisie, and again Maisie! 'Behold a phenomenon, said Torpenhow, rearranging the blanket. 'Here is a man, presumably human, who mentions the name of one woman only. And I've seen a good deal of delirium, too. Dick, here's some fizzy drink. 'Thank you, Maisie, said Dick.
"And what did he say?" "'E said that was only your nonsense, sir, and that I'd better have enough for one to begin with; and then 'e asked me if I'd been eating green apples again." "And you told him?" "Yees, sir, I told 'im I'd 'ad a few, and 'e said it served me right, and that 'e 'oped it would be a warning to me. And then 'e put something fizzy in a glass and told me to drink it."
This was a very successful joke. After supper came Fizzy's conjuring tricks, which were not very bewildering to children who had once had a real conjurer from the Stores, as these had, and then a charade played by Mary, Horace, Fizzy, and Shrimp for the others to guess. You see the whole word, of course Car-'ave-Anne.
We fell into easy chairs, and seized books and magazines. The Somalis brought us trays with iced and fizzy drinks in thin glasses. When the time came we crossed the veranda in the rear to enter a spacious separate dining-room. The table was white with napery, glittering with silver and glass, bright with flowers.
I lost the one Fizzy gave us in class and it'll take me all night to pick them out from the ones in the book." "Certainly, you may," said Sahwah cordially. "Take it along with you and bring it to school in the morning. It'll be all right as long as I get it in by that time. But don't forget it, whatever you do, unless you want to see me put out of the game."
"Any seltzer?" asked Tom, who knew the risk of taking into an over-heated system the artificially flavored and colored concoctions that pass current as summer drinks. "Seltzer?" queried the lad. "Do you mean that there fizzy stuff that squirts all over when you press down on the handle of the bottle?" "That's her!" laughed Jack. "Pass it out if it's cold."
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