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271
If
you
entertain
the
supposition
that
any
real
success
,
in
great
things
or
in
small
,
ever
was
or
could
be
,
ever
will
or
can
be
,
wrested
from
Fortune
by
fits
and
starts
,
leave
that
wrong
idea
here
or
leave
your
cousin
Ada
here
.
"
"
I
will
leave
IT
here
,
sir
,
"
replied
Richard
smiling
,
"
if
I
brought
it
here
just
now
(
but
I
hope
I
did
not
)
,
and
will
work
my
way
on
to
my
cousin
Ada
in
the
hopeful
distance
.
"
"
Right
!
"
said
Mr
.
Jarndyce
.
"
If
you
are
not
to
make
her
happy
,
why
should
you
pursue
her
?
"
"
I
wouldn
t
make
her
unhappy
no
,
not
even
for
her
love
,
"
retorted
Richard
proudly
.
"
Well
said
!
"
cried
Mr
.
Jarndyce
.
"
That
s
well
said
!
She
remains
here
,
in
her
home
with
me
.
Love
her
,
Rick
,
in
your
active
life
,
no
less
than
in
her
home
when
you
revisit
it
,
and
all
will
go
well
.
Otherwise
,
all
will
go
ill
.
That
s
the
end
of
my
preaching
.
I
think
you
and
Ada
had
better
take
a
walk
.
"
Ada
tenderly
embraced
him
,
and
Richard
heartily
shook
hands
with
him
,
and
then
the
cousins
went
out
of
the
room
,
looking
back
again
directly
,
though
,
to
say
that
they
would
wait
for
me
.
The
door
stood
open
,
and
we
both
followed
them
with
our
eyes
as
they
passed
down
the
adjoining
room
,
on
which
the
sun
was
shining
,
and
out
at
its
farther
end
.
Richard
with
his
head
bent
,
and
her
hand
drawn
through
his
arm
,
was
talking
to
her
very
earnestly
;
and
she
looked
up
in
his
face
,
listening
,
and
seemed
to
see
nothing
else
.
So
young
,
so
beautiful
,
so
full
of
hope
and
promise
,
they
went
on
lightly
through
the
sunlight
as
their
own
happy
thoughts
might
then
be
traversing
the
years
to
come
and
making
them
all
years
of
brightness
272
So
they
passed
away
into
the
shadow
and
were
gone
.
It
was
only
a
burst
of
light
that
had
been
so
radiant
.
The
room
darkened
as
they
went
out
,
and
the
sun
was
clouded
over
.
"
Am
I
right
,
Esther
?
"
said
my
guardian
when
they
were
gone
.
He
was
so
good
and
wise
to
ask
ME
whether
he
was
right
!
"
Rick
may
gain
,
out
of
this
,
the
quality
he
wants
.
Wants
,
at
the
core
of
so
much
that
is
good
!
"
said
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
shaking
his
head
.
"
I
have
said
nothing
to
Ada
,
Esther
.
She
has
her
friend
and
counsellor
always
near
.
"
And
he
laid
his
hand
lovingly
upon
my
head
.
I
could
not
help
showing
that
I
was
a
little
moved
,
though
I
did
all
I
could
to
conceal
it
.
"
Tut
tut
!
"
said
he
.
"
But
we
must
take
care
,
too
,
that
our
little
woman
s
life
is
not
all
consumed
in
care
for
others
.
"
"
Care
?
My
dear
guardian
,
I
believe
I
am
the
happiest
creature
in
the
world
!
"
"
I
believe
so
,
too
,
"
said
he
.
"
But
some
one
may
find
out
what
Esther
never
will
that
the
little
woman
is
to
be
held
in
remembrance
above
all
other
people
!
"
I
have
omitted
to
mention
in
its
place
that
there
was
some
one
else
at
the
family
dinner
party
.
It
was
not
a
lady
.
It
was
a
gentleman
.
It
was
a
gentleman
of
a
dark
complexion
a
young
surgeon
.
He
was
rather
reserved
,
but
I
thought
him
very
sensible
and
agreeable
.
At
least
,
Ada
asked
me
if
I
did
not
,
and
I
said
yes
.
273
Richard
left
us
on
the
very
next
evening
to
begin
his
new
career
,
and
committed
Ada
to
my
charge
with
great
love
for
her
and
great
trust
in
me
.
It
touched
me
then
to
reflect
,
and
it
touches
me
now
,
more
nearly
,
to
remember
(
having
what
I
have
to
tell
)
how
they
both
thought
of
me
,
even
at
that
engrossing
time
.
I
was
a
part
of
all
their
plans
,
for
the
present
and
the
future
.
I
was
to
write
Richard
once
a
week
,
making
my
faithful
report
of
Ada
,
who
was
to
write
to
him
every
alternate
day
.
I
was
to
be
informed
,
under
his
own
hand
,
of
all
his
labours
and
successes
;
I
was
to
observe
how
resolute
and
persevering
he
would
be
;
I
was
to
be
Ada
s
bridesmaid
when
they
were
married
;
I
was
to
live
with
them
afterwards
;
I
was
to
keep
all
the
keys
of
their
house
;
I
was
to
be
made
happy
for
ever
and
a
day
.
"
And
if
the
suit
SHOULD
make
us
rich
,
Esther
which
it
may
,
you
know
!
"
said
Richard
to
crown
all
.
A
shade
crossed
Ada
s
face
.
"
My
dearest
Ada
,
"
asked
Richard
,
"
why
not
?
"
"
It
had
better
declare
us
poor
at
once
,
"
said
Ada
.
"
Oh
!
I
don
t
know
about
that
,
"
returned
Richard
,
"
but
at
all
events
,
it
won
t
declare
anything
at
once
.
It
hasn
t
declared
anything
in
heaven
knows
how
many
years
.
"
"
Too
true
,
"
said
Ada
.
"
Yes
,
but
,
"
urged
Richard
,
answering
what
her
look
suggested
rather
than
her
words
,
"
the
longer
it
goes
on
,
dear
cousin
,
the
nearer
it
must
be
to
a
settlement
one
way
or
other
.
Now
,
is
not
that
reasonable
?
"
"
You
know
best
,
Richard
.
But
I
am
afraid
if
we
trust
to
it
,
it
will
make
us
unhappy
.
"
"
But
,
my
Ada
,
we
are
not
going
to
trust
to
it
!
"
cried
Richard
gaily
.
"
We
know
it
better
than
to
trust
to
it
.
Отключить рекламу
274
We
only
say
that
if
it
SHOULD
make
us
rich
,
we
have
no
constitutional
objection
to
being
rich
.
The
court
is
,
by
solemn
settlement
of
law
,
our
grim
old
guardian
,
and
we
are
to
suppose
that
what
it
gives
us
(
when
it
gives
us
anything
)
is
our
right
.
It
is
not
necessary
to
quarrel
with
our
right
.
"
"
No
,
"
said
Ada
,
"
but
it
may
be
better
to
forget
all
about
it
.
"
"
Well
,
well
,
"
cried
Richard
,
"
then
we
will
forget
all
about
it
!
We
consign
the
whole
thing
to
oblivion
.
Dame
Durden
puts
on
her
approving
face
,
and
it
s
done
!
"
"
Dame
Durden
s
approving
face
,
"
said
I
,
looking
out
of
the
box
in
which
I
was
packing
his
books
,
"
was
not
very
visible
when
you
called
it
by
that
name
;
but
it
does
approve
,
and
she
thinks
you
can
t
do
better
.
"
So
,
Richard
said
there
was
an
end
of
it
,
and
immediately
began
,
on
no
other
foundation
,
to
build
as
many
castles
in
the
air
as
would
man
the
Great
Wall
of
China
.
He
went
away
in
high
spirits
.
Ada
and
I
,
prepared
to
miss
him
very
much
,
commenced
our
quieter
career
.
On
our
arrival
in
London
,
we
had
called
with
Mr
.
Jarndyce
at
Mrs
.
Jellyby
s
but
had
not
been
so
fortunate
as
to
find
her
at
home
.
It
appeared
that
she
had
gone
somewhere
to
a
tea
-
drinking
and
had
taken
Miss
Jellyby
with
her
.
Besides
the
tea
-
drinking
,
there
was
to
be
some
considerable
speech
-
making
and
letter
-
writing
on
the
general
merits
of
the
cultivation
of
coffee
,
conjointly
with
natives
,
at
the
Settlement
of
Borrioboola
-
Gha
.
All
this
involved
,
no
doubt
,
sufficient
active
exercise
of
pen
and
ink
to
make
her
daughter
s
part
in
the
proceedings
anything
but
a
holiday
.
It
being
now
beyond
the
time
appointed
for
Mrs
.
275
Jellyby
s
return
,
we
called
again
.
She
was
in
town
,
but
not
at
home
,
having
gone
to
Mile
End
directly
after
breakfast
on
some
Borrioboolan
business
,
arising
out
of
a
society
called
the
East
London
Branch
Aid
Ramification
.
As
I
had
not
seen
Peepy
on
the
occasion
of
our
last
call
(
when
he
was
not
to
be
found
anywhere
,
and
when
the
cook
rather
thought
he
must
have
strolled
away
with
the
dustman
s
cart
)
,
I
now
inquired
for
him
again
.
The
oyster
shells
he
had
been
building
a
house
with
were
still
in
the
passage
,
but
he
was
nowhere
discoverable
,
and
the
cook
supposed
that
he
had
"
gone
after
the
sheep
.
"
When
we
repeated
,
with
some
surprise
,
"
The
sheep
?
"
she
said
,
Oh
,
yes
,
on
market
days
he
sometimes
followed
them
quite
out
of
town
and
came
back
in
such
a
state
as
never
was
!
I
was
sitting
at
the
window
with
my
guardian
on
the
following
morning
,
and
Ada
was
busy
writing
of
course
to
Richard
when
Miss
Jellyby
was
announced
,
and
entered
,
leading
the
identical
Peepy
,
whom
she
had
made
some
endeavours
to
render
presentable
by
wiping
the
dirt
into
corners
of
his
face
and
hands
and
making
his
hair
very
wet
and
then
violently
frizzling
it
with
her
fingers
.
Everything
the
dear
child
wore
was
either
too
large
for
him
or
too
small
.
Among
his
other
contradictory
decorations
he
had
the
hat
of
a
bishop
and
the
little
gloves
of
a
baby
.
His
boots
were
,
on
a
small
scale
,
the
boots
of
a
ploughman
,
while
his
legs
,
so
crossed
and
recrossed
with
scratches
that
they
looked
like
maps
,
were
bare
below
a
very
short
pair
of
plaid
drawers
finished
off
with
two
frills
of
perfectly
different
patterns
.
276
The
deficient
buttons
on
his
plaid
frock
had
evidently
been
supplied
from
one
of
Mr
.
Jellyby
s
coats
,
they
were
so
extremely
brazen
and
so
much
too
large
.
Most
extraordinary
specimens
of
needlework
appeared
on
several
parts
of
his
dress
,
where
it
had
been
hastily
mended
,
and
I
recognized
the
same
hand
on
Miss
Jellyby
s
.
She
was
,
however
,
unaccountably
improved
in
her
appearance
and
looked
very
pretty
.
She
was
conscious
of
poor
little
Peepy
being
but
a
failure
after
all
her
trouble
,
and
she
showed
it
as
she
came
in
by
the
way
in
which
she
glanced
first
at
him
and
then
at
us
.
"
Oh
,
dear
me
!
"
said
my
guardian
.
"
Due
east
!
"
Ada
and
I
gave
her
a
cordial
welcome
and
presented
her
to
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
to
whom
she
said
as
she
sat
down
,
"
Ma
s
compliments
,
and
she
hopes
you
ll
excuse
her
,
because
she
s
correcting
proofs
of
the
plan
.
She
s
going
to
put
out
five
thousand
new
circulars
,
and
she
knows
you
ll
be
interested
to
hear
that
.
I
have
brought
one
of
them
with
me
.
Ma
s
compliments
.
"
With
which
she
presented
it
sulkily
enough
.
"
Thank
you
,
"
said
my
guardian
.
"
I
am
much
obliged
to
Mrs
.
Jellyby
.
Oh
,
dear
me
!
This
is
a
very
trying
wind
!
"
We
were
busy
with
Peepy
,
taking
off
his
clerical
hat
,
asking
him
if
he
remembered
us
,
and
so
on
.
Peepy
retired
behind
his
elbow
at
first
,
but
relented
at
the
sight
of
sponge
-
cake
and
allowed
me
to
take
him
on
my
lap
,
where
he
sat
munching
quietly
.
Mr
.
Jarndyce
then
withdrawing
into
the
temporary
growlery
,
Miss
Jellyby
opened
a
conversation
with
her
usual
abruptness
.
"
We
are
going
on
just
as
bad
as
ever
in
Thavies
Inn
,
"
said
she
.
"
I
have
no
peace
of
my
life
.
277
Talk
of
Africa
!
I
couldn
t
be
worse
off
if
I
was
a
what
s
-
his
-
name
man
and
a
brother
!
"
I
tried
to
say
something
soothing
.
"
Oh
,
it
s
of
no
use
,
Miss
Summerson
,
"
exclaimed
Miss
Jellyby
,
"
though
I
thank
you
for
the
kind
intention
all
the
same
.
I
know
how
I
am
used
,
and
I
am
not
to
be
talked
over
.
YOU
wouldn
t
be
talked
over
if
you
were
used
so
.
Peepy
,
go
and
play
at
Wild
Beasts
under
the
piano
!
"
"
I
shan
t
!
"
said
Peepy
.
"
Very
well
,
you
ungrateful
,
naughty
,
hard
-
hearted
boy
!
"
returned
Miss
Jellyby
with
tears
in
her
eyes
.
"
I
ll
never
take
pains
to
dress
you
any
more
.
"
"
Yes
,
I
will
go
,
Caddy
!
"
cried
Peepy
,
who
was
really
a
good
child
and
who
was
so
moved
by
his
sister
s
vexation
that
he
went
at
once
.
"
It
seems
a
little
thing
to
cry
about
,
"
said
poor
Miss
Jellyby
apologetically
,
"
but
I
am
quite
worn
out
.
I
was
directing
the
new
circulars
till
two
this
morning
.
I
detest
the
whole
thing
so
that
that
alone
makes
my
head
ache
till
I
can
t
see
out
of
my
eyes
.
And
look
at
that
poor
unfortunate
child
!
Was
there
ever
such
a
fright
as
he
is
!
"
Peepy
,
happily
unconscious
of
the
defects
in
his
appearance
,
sat
on
the
carpet
behind
one
of
the
legs
of
the
piano
,
looking
calmly
out
of
his
den
at
us
while
he
ate
his
cake
.
"
I
have
sent
him
to
the
other
end
of
the
room
,
"
observed
Miss
Jellyby
,
drawing
her
chair
nearer
ours
,
"
because
I
don
t
want
him
to
hear
the
conversation
.
Those
little
things
are
so
sharp
!
I
was
going
to
say
,
we
really
are
going
on
worse
than
ever
.
Pa
will
be
a
bankrupt
before
long
,
and
then
I
hope
Ma
will
be
satisfied
.
There
ll
he
nobody
but
Ma
to
thank
for
it
.
"
We
said
we
hoped
Mr
.
Отключить рекламу
278
Jellyby
s
affairs
were
not
in
so
bad
a
state
as
that
.
"
It
s
of
no
use
hoping
,
though
it
s
very
kind
of
you
,
"
returned
Miss
Jellyby
,
shaking
her
head
.
"
Pa
told
me
only
yesterday
morning
(
and
dreadfully
unhappy
he
is
)
that
he
couldn
t
weather
the
storm
.
I
should
be
surprised
if
he
could
.
When
all
our
tradesmen
send
into
our
house
any
stuff
they
like
,
and
the
servants
do
what
they
like
with
it
,
and
I
have
no
time
to
improve
things
if
I
knew
how
,
and
Ma
don
t
care
about
anything
,
I
should
like
to
make
out
how
Pa
is
to
weather
the
storm
.
I
declare
if
I
was
Pa
,
I
d
run
away
.
"
"
My
dear
!
"
said
I
,
smiling
.
"
Your
papa
,
no
doubt
,
considers
his
family
.
"
"
Oh
,
yes
,
his
family
is
all
very
fine
,
Miss
Summerson
,
"
replied
Miss
Jellyby
;
"
but
what
comfort
is
his
family
to
him
?
His
family
is
nothing
but
bills
,
dirt
,
waste
,
noise
,
tumbles
downstairs
,
confusion
,
and
wretchedness
.
His
scrambling
home
,
from
week
s
end
to
week
s
end
,
is
like
one
great
washing
-
day
only
nothing
s
washed
!
"
Miss
Jellyby
tapped
her
foot
upon
the
floor
and
wiped
her
eyes
.
"
I
am
sure
I
pity
Pa
to
that
degree
,
"
she
said
,
"
and
am
so
angry
with
Ma
that
I
can
t
find
words
to
express
myself
!
However
,
I
am
not
going
to
bear
it
,
I
am
determined
.
I
won
t
be
a
slave
all
my
life
,
and
I
won
t
submit
to
be
proposed
to
by
Mr
.
Quale
.
A
pretty
thing
,
indeed
,
to
marry
a
philanthropist
.
As
if
I
hadn
t
had
enough
of
THAT
!
"
said
poor
Miss
Jellyby
.
I
must
confess
that
I
could
not
help
feeling
rather
angry
with
Mrs
.
Jellyby
myself
,
seeing
and
hearing
this
neglected
girl
and
knowing
how
much
of
bitterly
satirical
truth
there
was
in
what
she
said
.
279
"
If
it
wasn
t
that
we
had
been
intimate
when
you
stopped
at
our
house
,
"
pursued
Miss
Jellyby
,
"
I
should
have
been
ashamed
to
come
here
to
-
day
,
for
I
know
what
a
figure
I
must
seem
to
you
two
.
But
as
it
is
,
I
made
up
my
mind
to
call
,
especially
as
I
am
not
likely
to
see
you
again
the
next
time
you
come
to
town
.
"
She
said
this
with
such
great
significance
that
Ada
and
I
glanced
at
one
another
,
foreseeing
something
more
.
"
No
!
"
said
Miss
Jellyby
,
shaking
her
head
.
"
Not
at
all
likely
!
I
know
I
may
trust
you
two
.
I
am
sure
you
won
t
betray
me
.
I
am
engaged
.
"
"
Without
their
knowledge
at
home
?
"
said
I
.
"
Why
,
good
gracious
me
,
Miss
Summerson
,
"
she
returned
,
justifying
herself
in
a
fretful
but
not
angry
manner
,
"
how
can
it
be
otherwise
?
You
know
what
Ma
is
and
I
needn
t
make
poor
Pa
more
miserable
by
telling
HIM
.
"
"
But
would
it
not
be
adding
to
his
unhappiness
to
marry
without
his
knowledge
or
consent
,
my
dear
?
"
said
I
.
"
No
,
"
said
Miss
Jellyby
,
softening
.
"
I
hope
not
.
I
should
try
to
make
him
happy
and
comfortable
when
he
came
to
see
me
,
and
Peepy
and
the
others
should
take
it
in
turns
to
come
and
stay
with
me
,
and
they
should
have
some
care
taken
of
them
then
.
"
There
was
a
good
deal
of
affection
in
poor
Caddy
.
She
softened
more
and
more
while
saying
this
and
cried
so
much
over
the
unwonted
little
home
-
picture
she
had
raised
in
her
mind
that
Peepy
,
in
his
cave
under
the
piano
,
was
touched
,
and
turned
himself
over
on
his
back
with
loud
lamentations
.
280
It
was
not
until
I
had
brought
him
to
kiss
his
sister
,
and
had
restored
him
to
his
place
on
my
lap
,
and
had
shown
him
that
Caddy
was
laughing
(
she
laughed
expressly
for
the
purpose
)
,
that
we
could
recall
his
peace
of
mind
;
even
then
it
was
for
some
time
conditional
on
his
taking
us
in
turns
by
the
chin
and
smoothing
our
faces
all
over
with
his
hand
.
At
last
,
as
his
spirits
were
not
equal
to
the
piano
,
we
put
him
on
a
chair
to
look
out
of
window
;
and
Miss
Jellyby
,
holding
him
by
one
leg
,
resumed
her
confidence
.
"
It
began
in
your
coming
to
our
house
,
"
she
said
.
We
naturally
asked
how
.
"
I
felt
I
was
so
awkward
,
"
she
replied
,
"
that
I
made
up
my
mind
to
be
improved
in
that
respect
at
all
events
and
to
learn
to
dance
.
I
told
Ma
I
was
ashamed
of
myself
,
and
I
must
be
taught
to
dance
.
Ma
looked
at
me
in
that
provoking
way
of
hers
as
if
I
wasn
t
in
sight
,
but
I
was
quite
determined
to
be
taught
to
dance
,
and
so
I
went
to
Mr
.
Turveydrop
s
Academy
in
Newman
Street
.
"
"
And
was
it
there
,
my
dear
"
I
began
.
"
Yes
,
it
was
there
,
"
said
Caddy
,
"
and
I
am
engaged
to
Mr
.
Turveydrop
.
There
are
two
Mr
.
Turveydrops
,
father
and
son
.
My
Mr
.
Turveydrop
is
the
son
,
of
course
.
I
only
wish
I
had
been
better
brought
up
and
was
likely
to
make
him
a
better
wife
,
for
I
am
very
fond
of
him
.
"
"
I
am
sorry
to
hear
this
,
"
said
I
,
"
I
must
confess
.
"
"
I
don
t
know
why
you
should
be
sorry
,
"
she
retorted
a
little
anxiously
,
"
but
I
am
engaged
to
Mr
.
Turveydrop
,
whether
or
no
,
and
he
is
very
fond
of
me
.
It
s
a
secret
as
yet
,
even
on
his
side
,
because
old
Mr
.