{"id":"01KG6GMNQWNY6WJKVGSAM9RFGM","cid":"bafkreiaeiqydses5jsat2arxydmmonfovlrsiwgafldlnnqu4pdy376o5u","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":8199,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T03:55:03.883Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 1","source_file":"01KG6FXSCNX5F3D880P3YP3PKR","start_line":8153,"text":"                               JIMMY ROSE\r\n\r\n\r\nA time ago, no matter how long precisely, I, an old man, removed from\r\nthe country to the city, having become unexpected heir to a great old\r\nhouse in a narrow street of one of the lower wards once the haunt of\r\nstyle and fashion, full of gay parlours and bridal chambers; but now,\r\nfor the most part, transformed into counting-rooms and ware-houses.\r\nThere bales and boxes usurp the place of sofas; day-books and ledgers\r\nare spread where once the delicious breakfast toast was buttered. In\r\nthose old wards the glorious old soft-waffle days are over.\r\n\r\nNevertheless, in this old house of mine, so strangely spared, some\r\nmonument of departed days survived. Nor was this the only one. Amidst\r\nthe warehouse ranges some few other dwellings likewise stood. The\r\nstreet’s transmutation was not yet complete. Like those old English\r\nfriars and nuns, long haunting the ruins of their retreats after they\r\nhad been despoiled, so some few strange old gentlemen and ladies still\r\nlingered in the neighbourhood, and would not, could not, might not quit\r\nit. And I thought that when, one spring, emerging from my\r\nwhite-blossoming orchard, my own white hairs and white ivory-headed cane\r\nwere added to their loitering census, that those poor old souls insanely\r\nfancied the ward was looking up--the tide of fashion setting back again.\r\n\r\nFor many years the old house had been unoccupied by an owner; those into\r\nwhose hands it from time to time had passed having let it out to various\r\nshifting tenants; decayed old townspeople, mysterious recluses, or\r\ntransient, ambiguous-looking foreigners.\r\n\r\nWhile from certain cheap furbishings to which the exterior had been\r\nsubjected, such as removing a fine old pulpit-like porch crowning the\r\nsummit of six lofty steps, and set off with a broad-brimmed\r\nsounding-board over-shadowing the whole, as well as replacing the\r\noriginal heavy window shutters (each pierced with a crescent in the\r\nupper panel to admit an Oriental and moony light into the otherwise\r\nshut-up rooms of a sultry morning in July) with frippery Venetian\r\nblinds; while, I repeat, the front of the house hereby presented an\r\nincongruous aspect, as if the graft of modernness had not taken in its\r\nancient stock; still, however it might fare without, within little or\r\nnothing had been altered. The cellars were full of great grim, arched\r\nbins of blackened brick, looking like the ancient tombs of Templars,\r\nwhile overhead were shown the first floor timbers, huge, square, and\r\nmassive, all red oak, and through long eld, of a rich and Indian colour.\r\nSo large were those timbers, and so thickly ranked, that to walk in\r\nthose capacious cellars was much like walking along a line-of-battle\r\nship’s gun-deck.\r\n\r","title":"Chunk 1"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG6GKYHXXDTPR7QVPBW00QM7","peer_type":"section","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG6FXSCNX5F3D880P3YP3PKR","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG2T49K0H5GDRB0G4YDTPG8H","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG6GMNQZ0N8XYESGF3M0EQST","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"next"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T03:55:07.388Z","ts":"2026-01-30T03:55:19.153Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}