The hospitable Mistress Dorothy was trying to turn him and everybody else out of her inn.
The cowardly Peter was squaring-up at everybody, and particularly at the Sergeant, in an utterly reckless manner.
The valiant Sergeant was ducking and dodging from Peter and everybody else who came near him, as if he had been the most timid soul on the face of the earth.
And Jenny—the shy, modest, prudish, bashful, blushing Jenny—was kissing everybody right and left, as if her life depended on it. In short, there never was a more extraordinary scene in a bar-parlour since bar-parlours first became an institution in Great Britain and Ireland.
In the midst of this scene the Old Lady entered, for she was curious to see how the spell that she had thrown over the inmates of the "Three Pigeons" was working.
Directly she entered, the attention of everyone was directed to her.
The Miser gave her gold.
The Landlady tried to push her out.
The Sergeant ducked and dodged at her.
The bashful Jenny kissed her.
And the cowardly Peter squared-up to her in such a determined manner, if she had not been surrounded by the others, he would have done her a serious injury.
In short, the Old Lady, who was much more than a match for each of them taken singly, was overpowered by numbers. She never thought of this when she entered the room, which was stupid in the Old Lady.