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76 pages - You are on Page 59 BDELYCLEON. Now the other. PHILOCLEON. Ah! no, not that one; one of its toes holds the Laconians in horror. BDELYCLEON. Positively you must. PHILOCLEON. Alas! alas! Then I shall have no chilblains in my old age.[135] BDELYCLEON. Now, hurry up and get them on; and now imitate the easy effeminate gait of the rich. See, like this. PHILOCLEON. There!... Look at my get-up and tell me which rich man I most resemble in my walk. BDELYCLEON. Why, you look like a garlic plaster on a boil. PHILOCLEON. Ah! I am longing to swagger and sway my rump about. BDELYCLEON. Now, will you know how to talk gravely with well-informed men of good class? PHILOCLEON. Undoubtedly. BDELYCLEON. What will you say to them? [135] He grumbles over his own good fortune, as old men will. Previous Page / First / Next Page of Aristophanes WASPS
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