210 



THE RAT. 



or women. I was consulted on the important affair ; 

 and I remarked with great gravity, that there was 

 something very strange and awful in it. " If," said 

 I, " Molly has unfortunately been interfering with 

 any other w^oman's witchcraft ; or if she has been 

 writing words with her own blood ; or, above all, if 

 there was a strong smell of brimstone in the lane 

 at the time of the chase, then, and in that case, 

 there is too much reason to fear that the thing 

 which Wilson took for a snake was an imp from the 

 bottomless pit, sent up here, no doubt, by the king 

 of sulphur, on some wicked and mischievous errand." 

 Poor old Molly is still alive, but Nature is almost 

 done with her ; and she is now rarely seen on the 

 cold side of the threshold. Many a time have I 

 bantered old Molly on this serpentine apparition ; 

 but she would only shake her head and say, she 

 wished she had been at home that evening, instead 

 of going up Blind Lane. 



NOTES ON THE HISTORY AND HABITS OF 

 THE BROWN OR GREY RAT. 



Some few years after the fatal period of 1688, when 

 our aristocracy, in defence of its ill-gotten goods, 

 took upon itself to dispose of hereditary monarchy 

 in a way which, if attempted nowadays, would cause 

 a considerable rise in the price of hemp, there arrived 



