55 pages • 1 hour read
Laurence SterneA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
In his room, Yorick sits at his table and thinks about imprisonment. He imagines the life of a person locked in a cell. After despairing over his situation, he eventually calls for La Fleur and asks for a coach to be made ready first thing in the morning.
After a night’s sleep, Yorick takes the coach to Versailles. During the course of the journey, he discusses a short history of the starling he encountered in the cage. It arrived from England, brought by “an English lad” (44) who travelled with a gentleman. He’d brought the bird all the way to Paris and, when he was set to leave the hotel, he left it behind. La Fleur purchases the bird and its cage “for a bottle of Burgundy” (44) and gives it to Yorick. Eventually, the bird will be bought and sold by a string of aristocrats and “many commoners” (44), so Yorick admits that the reader might well have heard the starling’s song.
In Versailles, Yorick intends to meet Monsieur le Duc de C---, whom he hopes will be able to help him with his legal issue. When he arrives, he is told that the Duc de C--- is busy.
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By Laurence Sterne