{"id":"01KG6G873KM5GBV9TBNZFWB8T4","cid":"bafkreigwdejv2yz4gbdi2rj3s64gorjxc3skejr46ydlfus4nm2n4ei2na","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":8588,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T03:48:16.153Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 3","source_file":"01KG6FXSCNX5F3D880P3YP3PKR","start_line":8518,"text":"in about once a year or so. And annually upon seeing at that house the\r\nblooming Miss Frances or Miss Arabella, he would profoundly bow in his\r\nforlorn old coat, and with his soft, white hand take hers in gallant\r\nwise, saying, ‘Ah, Miss Arabella, these jewels here are bright upon\r\nthese fingers; but brighter would they look were it not for those still\r\nbrighter diamonds of your eyes!’\r\n\r\nThough in thy own need thou hadst no pence to give the poor, thou,\r\nJimmy, still hadst alms to give the rich. For not the beggar chattering\r\nat the corner pines more after bread than the vain heart after\r\ncompliment. The rich in their craving glut, as the poor in their craving\r\nwant, we have with us always. So, I suppose, thought Jimmy Rose.\r\n\r\nBut all women are not vain, or if a little grain that way inclined, more\r\nthan redeem it all with goodness. Such was the sweet girl that closed\r\npoor Jimmy’s eyes. The only daughter of an opulent alderman, she knew\r\nJimmy well, and saw to him in his declining days. During his last\r\nsickness, with her own hands she carried him jellies and blanc-mange;\r\nmade tea for him in his attic, and turned the poor old gentleman in his\r\nbed. And well hadst thou deserved it, Jimmy, at that fair creature’s\r\nhands; well merited to have thy old eyes closed by woman’s fairy\r\nfingers, who through life, in riches and in poverty, was still woman’s\r\nsworn champion and devotee.\r\n\r\nI hardly know that I should mention here one little incident connected\r\nwith this young lady’s ministrations, and poor Jimmy’s reception of\r\nthem. But it is harm to neither; I will tell it.\r\n\r\nChancing to be in town, and hearing of Jimmy’s illness, I went to see\r\nhim. And there in his lone attic I found the lovely ministrant.\r\nWithdrawing upon seeing another visitor, she left me alone with him. She\r\nhad brought some little delicacies, and also several books, of such a\r\nsort as are sent by serious-minded well-wishers to invalids in a serious\r\ncrisis. Now whether it was repugnance at being considered next door to\r\ndeath, or whether it was but the natural peevishness brought on by the\r\ngeneral misery of his state; however it was, as the gentle girl\r\nwithdrew, Jimmy, with what small remains of strength were his, pitched\r\nthe books into the furthest corner, murmuring, ‘Why will she bring me\r\nthis sad old stuff? Does she take me for a pauper? Thinks she to salve a\r\ngentleman’s heart with Poor Man’s Plaster?’\r\n\r\nPoor, poor Jimmy--God guard us all--poor Jimmy Rose!\r\n\r\nWell, well, I am an old man, and I suppose these tears I drop are\r\ndriblets from my dotage. But Heaven be praised, Jimmy needs no man’s\r\npity now.\r\n\r\nJimmy Rose is dead!\r\n\r\nMeantime, as I sit within the parlour of the peacocks--that chamber from\r\nwhich his husky voice had come ere threatening me with the pistol--I\r\nstill must meditate upon his strange example, whereof the marvel is, how\r\nafter that gay, dashing, nobleman’s career, he could be content to crawl\r\nthrough life, and peep about among the marbles and mahoganies for\r\ncontumelious tea and toast, where once like a very Warwick he had\r\nfeasted the huzzaing world with Burgundy and venison.\r\n\r\nAnd every time I look at the wilted resplendence of those proud peacocks\r\non the wall, I bethink me of the withering change in Jimmy’s once\r\nresplendent pride of state. But still again, every time I gaze upon\r\nthose festoons of perpetual roses, ’mid which the faded peacocks hang, I\r\nbethink me of those undying roses which bloomed in ruined Jimmy’s cheek.\r\n\r\nTransplanted to another soil, all the unkind past forgot, God grant that\r\nJimmy’s roses may immortally survive!\r\n\r\n------------------------------------------------------------------------\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n\r","title":"Chunk 3"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG6G6QRHX32VHR7HG2M77N52","peer_type":"article","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG6FXSCNX5F3D880P3YP3PKR","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG2T49K0H5GDRB0G4YDTPG8H","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG6G873SN27GMS3N8F4YPEZ1","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"prev"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T03:48:19.187Z","ts":"2026-01-30T03:48:29.892Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}