Little Dorrit Charles Dickens (e reader for manga TXT) š
- Author: Charles Dickens
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āMr. Plornish,ā said Arthur, āI trust to you, if you please, to keep my secret. If you will undertake to let the young man know that he is free, and to tell him that you were employed to compound for the debt by someone whom you are not at liberty to name, you will not only do me a service, but may do him one, and his sister also.ā
āThe last reason, sir,ā said Plornish, āwould be quite sufficient. Your wishes shall be attended to.ā
āA Friend has obtained his discharge, you can say if you please. A Friend who hopes that for his sisterās sake, if for no one elseās, he will make good use of his liberty.ā
āYour wishes, sir, shall be attended to.ā
āAnd if you will be so good, in your better knowledge of the family, as to communicate freely with me, and to point out to me any means by which you think I may be delicately and really useful to Little Dorrit, I shall feel under an obligation to you.ā
āDonāt name it, sir,ā returned Plornish, āitāll be ekally a pleasure an aā āitāl be ekally a pleasure and aā āā Finding himself unable to balance his sentence after two efforts, Mr. Plornish wisely dropped it. He took Clennamās card and appropriate pecuniary compliment.
He was earnest to finish his commission at once, and his Principal was in the same mind. So his Principal offered to set him down at the Marshalsea Gate, and they drove in that direction over Blackfriars Bridge. On the way, Arthur elicited from his new friend a confused summary of the interior life of Bleeding Heart Yard. They was all hard up there, Mr. Plornish said, uncommon hard up, to be sure. Well, he couldnāt say how it was; he didnāt know as anybody could say how it was; all he knowād was, that so it was. When a man felt, on his own back and in his own belly, that poor he was, that man (Mr. Plornish gave it as his decided belief) knowād well that he was poor somehow or another, and you couldnāt talk it out of him, no more than you could talk Beef into him. Then you see, some people as was better off said, and a good many such people lived pretty close up to the mark themselves if not beyond it so heād heerd, that they was āimprovidentā (that was the favourite word) down the Yard. For instance, if they see a man with his wife and children going to Hampton Court in a Wan, perhaps once in a year, they says, āHallo! I thought you was poor, my improvident friend!ā Why, Lord, how hard it was upon a man! What was a man to do? He couldnāt go mollancholy mad, and even if he did, you wouldnāt be the better for it. In Mr. Plornishās judgment you would be the worse for it. Yet you seemed to want to make a man mollancholy mad. You was always at itā āif not with your right hand, with your left. What was they a doing in the Yard? Why, take a look at āem and see. There was the girls and their mothers a working at their sewing, or their shoe-binding, or their trimming, or their waistcoat making, day and night and night and day, and not more than able to keep body and soul together after allā āoften not so much. There was people of pretty well all sorts of trades you could name, all wanting to work, and yet not able to get it. There was old people, after working all their lives, going and being shut up in the workhouse, much worse fed and lodged and treated altogether, thanā āMr. Plornish said manufacturers, but appeared to mean malefactors. Why, a man didnāt know where to turn himself for a crumb of comfort. As to who was to blame for it, Mr. Plornish didnāt know who was to blame for it. He could tell you who suffered, but he couldnāt tell you whose fault it was. It wasnāt his place to find out, and whoād mind what he said, if he did find out? He only knowād that it wasnāt put right by them what undertook that line of business, and that it didnāt come right of itself. And, in brief, his illogical opinion was, that if you couldnāt do nothing for him, you had better take nothing from him for doing of it; so far as he could make out, that was about what it come to. Thus, in a prolix, gently-growling, foolish way, did Plornish turn the tangled skein of his estate about and about, like a blind man who was trying to find some beginning or end to it; until they reached the prison gate. There, he left his Principal alone; to wonder, as he rode away, how many thousand Plornishes there might be within a day or twoās journey of the Circumlocution Office, playing sundry curious variations on the same tune, which were not known by ear in that glorious institution.
XIII PatriarchalThe mention of Mr. Casby again revived in Clennamās memory the smouldering embers of curiosity and interest which Mrs. Flintwinch had fanned on the night of his arrival. Flora Casby had been the beloved of his boyhood; and Flora was the daughter and only child of wooden-headed old Christopher (so he was still occasionally spoken of by some irreverent spirits who had had dealings with him, and in whom familiarity had
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