Written Sketches 245 Manzi the Model They had promised him sittings at the Royal Academy and then refused him on the ground that his legs were too hairy. He complained to Gogin : " Why/1 said he, " I sat at the Slade School for the figure only last week, and there were five ladies, but not one of them told me my legs were too hairy/' A Sailor Boy and Some Chickens A pretty girl in the train had some chirping chickens about ten days' old in a box labelled " German egg powders. One packet equal to six eggs." A sailor boy got in at Basing- stoke, a quiet, reserved youth, well behaved and unusually good-looking. By and by the chickens were taken out of the box and fed with biscuit on the carriage seat. This thawed the boy who, though he fought against it for some lime, yielded to irresistible fascination and said: "What are they?" " Chickens/' said the girl. " Will they grow bigger ? " " Yes/' Then the boy said with an expression of infinite wonder: " And did you hatch them from they powders ? " We all laughed till the boy blushed and I was very sorry for him. If we had said they had been hatched from the powders he would have certainly believed us. Gogin, the Japanese Gentleman and the Dead Dog Gogin was one day going down Cleveland Street and saw an old, lean, careworn man crying over the body of his dog which had been just run over and killed by the old man's own cart. I have no doubt it was the dog's fault, for the man was in great distress ; as for the dog there it lay all swelled and livid where the wheel had gone over it, its eyes protruded from their sockets and its tongue lolled out, but it was dead. The old man gazed on it, helplessly weeping, for some time and then