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761
This
present
shepherd
,
our
pastoral
Richard
,
brightens
the
dull
Inns
of
Court
by
making
Fortune
and
her
train
sport
through
them
to
the
melodious
notes
of
a
judgment
from
the
bench
.
That
s
very
pleasant
,
you
know
!
Some
ill
-
conditioned
growling
fellow
may
say
to
me
,
What
s
the
use
of
these
legal
and
equitable
abuses
?
How
do
you
defend
them
?
I
reply
,
My
growling
friend
,
I
DON
T
defend
them
,
but
they
are
very
agreeable
to
me
.
There
is
a
shepherd
youth
,
a
friend
of
mine
,
who
transmutes
them
into
something
highly
fascinating
to
my
simplicity
.
I
don
t
say
it
is
for
this
that
they
exist
for
I
am
a
child
among
you
worldly
grumblers
,
and
not
called
upon
to
account
to
you
or
myself
for
anything
but
it
may
be
so
.
"
I
began
seriously
to
think
that
Richard
could
scarcely
have
found
a
worse
friend
than
this
.
It
made
me
uneasy
that
at
such
a
time
when
he
most
required
some
right
principle
and
purpose
he
should
have
this
captivating
looseness
and
putting
-
off
of
everything
,
this
airy
dispensing
with
all
principle
and
purpose
,
at
his
elbow
.
I
thought
I
could
understand
how
such
a
nature
as
my
guardian
s
,
experienced
in
the
world
and
forced
to
contemplate
the
miserable
evasions
and
contentions
of
the
family
misfortune
,
found
an
immense
relief
in
Mr
.
Skimpole
s
avowal
of
his
weaknesses
and
display
of
guileless
candour
;
but
I
could
not
satisfy
myself
that
it
was
as
artless
as
it
seemed
or
that
it
did
not
serve
Mr
.
Skimpole
s
idle
turn
quite
as
well
as
any
other
part
,
and
with
less
trouble
.
They
both
walked
back
with
me
,
and
Mr
.
762
Skimpole
leaving
us
at
the
gate
,
I
walked
softly
in
with
Richard
and
said
,
"
Ada
,
my
love
,
I
have
brought
a
gentleman
to
visit
you
.
"
It
was
not
difficult
to
read
the
blushing
,
startled
face
.
She
loved
him
dearly
,
and
he
knew
it
,
and
I
knew
it
.
It
was
a
very
transparent
business
,
that
meeting
as
cousins
only
.
I
almost
mistrusted
myself
as
growing
quite
wicked
in
my
suspicions
,
but
I
was
not
so
sure
that
Richard
loved
her
dearly
.
He
admired
her
very
much
any
one
must
have
done
that
and
I
dare
say
would
have
renewed
their
youthful
engagement
with
great
pride
and
ardour
but
that
he
knew
how
she
would
respect
her
promise
to
my
guardian
.
Still
I
had
a
tormenting
idea
that
the
influence
upon
him
extended
even
here
,
that
he
was
postponing
his
best
truth
and
earnestness
in
this
as
in
all
things
until
Jarndyce
and
Jarndyce
should
be
off
his
mind
.
Ah
me
!
What
Richard
would
have
been
without
that
blight
,
I
never
shall
know
now
!
He
told
Ada
,
in
his
most
ingenuous
way
,
that
he
had
not
come
to
make
any
secret
inroad
on
the
terms
she
had
accepted
(
rather
too
implicitly
and
confidingly
,
he
thought
)
from
Mr
.
Jarndyce
,
that
he
had
come
openly
to
see
her
and
to
see
me
and
to
justify
himself
for
the
present
terms
on
which
he
stood
with
Mr
.
Jarndyce
.
As
the
dear
old
infant
would
be
with
us
directly
,
he
begged
that
I
would
make
an
appointment
for
the
morning
,
when
he
might
set
himself
right
through
the
means
of
an
unreserved
conversation
with
me
.
I
proposed
to
walk
with
him
in
the
park
at
seven
o
clock
,
and
this
was
arranged
.
Mr
.
Skimpole
soon
afterwards
appeared
and
made
us
merry
for
an
hour
.
763
He
particularly
requested
to
see
little
Coavinses
(
meaning
Charley
)
and
told
her
,
with
a
patriarchal
air
,
that
he
had
given
her
late
father
all
the
business
in
his
power
and
that
if
one
of
her
little
brothers
would
make
haste
to
get
set
up
in
the
same
profession
,
he
hoped
he
should
still
be
able
to
put
a
good
deal
of
employment
in
his
way
.
"
For
I
am
constantly
being
taken
in
these
nets
,
"
said
Mr
.
Skimpole
,
looking
beamingly
at
us
over
a
glass
of
wine
-
and
-
water
,
"
and
am
constantly
being
bailed
out
like
a
boat
.
Or
paid
off
like
a
ship
s
company
.
Somebody
always
does
it
for
me
.
I
can
t
do
it
,
you
know
,
for
I
never
have
any
money
.
But
somebody
does
it
.
I
get
out
by
somebody
s
means
;
I
am
not
like
the
starling
;
I
get
out
.
If
you
were
to
ask
me
who
somebody
is
,
upon
my
word
I
couldn
t
tell
you
.
Let
us
drink
to
somebody
.
God
bless
him
!
"
Richard
was
a
little
late
in
the
morning
,
but
I
had
not
to
wait
for
him
long
,
and
we
turned
into
the
park
.
The
air
was
bright
and
dewy
and
the
sky
without
a
cloud
.
The
birds
sang
delightfully
;
the
sparkles
in
the
fern
,
the
grass
,
and
trees
,
were
exquisite
to
see
;
the
richness
of
the
woods
seemed
to
have
increased
twenty
-
fold
since
yesterday
,
as
if
,
in
the
still
night
when
they
had
looked
so
massively
hushed
in
sleep
,
Nature
,
through
all
the
minute
details
of
every
wonderful
leaf
,
had
been
more
wakeful
than
usual
for
the
glory
of
that
day
.
"
This
is
a
lovely
place
,
"
said
Richard
,
looking
round
.
"
None
of
the
jar
and
discord
of
law
-
suits
here
!
"
But
there
was
other
trouble
.
Отключить рекламу
764
"
I
tell
you
what
,
my
dear
girl
,
"
said
Richard
,
"
when
I
get
affairs
in
general
settled
,
I
shall
come
down
here
,
I
think
,
and
rest
.
"
"
Would
it
not
be
better
to
rest
now
?
"
I
asked
.
"
Oh
,
as
to
resting
NOW
,
"
said
Richard
,
"
or
as
to
doing
anything
very
definite
NOW
,
that
s
not
easy
.
In
short
,
it
can
t
be
done
;
I
can
t
do
it
at
least
.
"
"
Why
not
?
"
said
I
.
"
You
know
why
not
,
Esther
.
If
you
were
living
in
an
unfinished
house
,
liable
to
have
the
roof
put
on
or
taken
off
to
be
from
top
to
bottom
pulled
down
or
built
up
to
-
morrow
,
next
day
,
next
week
,
next
month
,
next
year
you
would
find
it
hard
to
rest
or
settle
.
So
do
I
.
Now
?
There
s
no
now
for
us
suitors
.
"
I
could
almost
have
believed
in
the
attraction
on
which
my
poor
little
wandering
friend
had
expatiated
when
I
saw
again
the
darkened
look
of
last
night
.
Terrible
to
think
it
had
in
it
also
a
shade
of
that
unfortunate
man
who
had
died
.
"
My
dear
Richard
,
"
said
I
,
"
this
is
a
bad
beginning
of
our
conversation
.
"
"
I
knew
you
would
tell
me
so
,
Dame
Durden
.
"
"
And
not
I
alone
,
dear
Richard
.
It
was
not
I
who
cautioned
you
once
never
to
found
a
hope
or
expectation
on
the
family
curse
.
"
"
There
you
come
back
to
John
Jarndyce
!
"
said
Richard
impatiently
.
"
Well
!
We
must
approach
him
sooner
or
later
,
for
he
is
the
staple
of
what
I
have
to
say
,
and
it
s
as
well
at
once
.
765
My
dear
Esther
,
how
can
you
be
so
blind
?
Don
t
you
see
that
he
is
an
interested
party
and
that
it
may
be
very
well
for
him
to
wish
me
to
know
nothing
of
the
suit
,
and
care
nothing
about
it
,
but
that
it
may
not
be
quite
so
well
for
me
?
"
"
Oh
,
Richard
,
"
I
remonstrated
,
"
is
it
possible
that
you
can
ever
have
seen
him
and
heard
him
,
that
you
can
ever
have
lived
under
his
roof
and
known
him
,
and
can
yet
breathe
,
even
to
me
in
this
solitary
place
where
there
is
no
one
to
hear
us
,
such
unworthy
suspicions
?
"
He
reddened
deeply
,
as
if
his
natural
generosity
felt
a
pang
of
reproach
.
He
was
silent
for
a
little
while
before
he
replied
in
a
subdued
voice
,
"
Esther
,
I
am
sure
you
know
that
I
am
not
a
mean
fellow
and
that
I
have
some
sense
of
suspicion
and
distrust
being
poor
qualities
in
one
of
my
years
.
"
"
I
know
it
very
well
,
"
said
I
.
"
I
am
not
more
sure
of
anything
.
"
"
That
s
a
dear
girl
,
"
retorted
Richard
,
"
and
like
you
,
because
it
gives
me
comfort
.
I
had
need
to
get
some
scrap
of
comfort
out
of
all
this
business
,
for
it
s
a
bad
one
at
the
best
,
as
I
have
no
occasion
to
tell
you
.
"
"
I
know
perfectly
,
"
said
I
.
"
I
know
as
well
,
Richard
what
shall
I
say
?
as
well
as
you
do
that
such
misconstructions
are
foreign
to
your
nature
.
And
I
know
,
as
well
as
you
know
,
what
so
changes
it
.
"
"
Come
,
sister
,
come
,
"
said
Richard
a
little
more
gaily
,
"
you
will
be
fair
with
me
at
all
events
.
If
I
have
the
misfortune
to
be
under
that
influence
,
so
has
he
.
If
it
has
a
little
twisted
me
,
it
may
have
a
little
twisted
him
too
.
I
don
t
say
that
he
is
not
an
honourable
man
,
out
of
all
this
complication
and
uncertainty
;
I
am
sure
he
is
.
766
But
it
taints
everybody
.
You
know
it
taints
everybody
.
You
have
heard
him
say
so
fifty
times
.
Then
why
should
HE
escape
?
"
"
Because
,
"
said
I
,
"
his
is
an
uncommon
character
,
and
he
has
resolutely
kept
himself
outside
the
circle
,
Richard
.
"
"
Oh
,
because
and
because
!
"
replied
Richard
in
his
vivacious
way
.
"
I
am
not
sure
,
my
dear
girl
,
but
that
it
may
be
wise
and
specious
to
preserve
that
outward
indifference
.
It
may
cause
other
parties
interested
to
become
lax
about
their
interests
;
and
people
may
die
off
,
and
points
may
drag
themselves
out
of
memory
,
and
many
things
may
smoothly
happen
that
are
convenient
enough
.
"
I
was
so
touched
with
pity
for
Richard
that
I
could
not
reproach
him
any
more
,
even
by
a
look
.
I
remembered
my
guardian
s
gentleness
towards
his
errors
and
with
what
perfect
freedom
from
resentment
he
had
spoken
of
them
.
"
Esther
,
"
Richard
resumed
,
"
you
are
not
to
suppose
that
I
have
come
here
to
make
underhanded
charges
against
John
Jarndyce
.
I
have
only
come
to
justify
myself
.
What
I
say
is
,
it
was
all
very
well
and
we
got
on
very
well
while
I
was
a
boy
,
utterly
regardless
of
this
same
suit
;
but
as
soon
as
I
began
to
take
an
interest
in
it
and
to
look
into
it
,
then
it
was
quite
another
thing
.
Then
John
Jarndyce
discovers
that
Ada
and
I
must
break
off
and
that
if
I
don
t
amend
that
very
objectionable
course
,
I
am
not
fit
for
her
.
Now
,
Esther
,
I
don
t
mean
to
amend
that
very
objectionable
course
:
I
will
not
hold
John
Jarndyce
s
favour
on
those
unfair
terms
of
compromise
,
which
he
has
no
right
to
dictate
.
Whether
it
pleases
him
or
displeases
him
,
I
must
maintain
my
rights
and
Ada
s
.
767
I
have
been
thinking
about
it
a
good
deal
,
and
this
is
the
conclusion
I
have
come
to
.
"
Poor
dear
Richard
!
He
had
indeed
been
thinking
about
it
a
good
deal
.
His
face
,
his
voice
,
his
manner
,
all
showed
that
too
plainly
.
"
So
I
tell
him
honourably
(
you
are
to
know
I
have
written
to
him
about
all
this
)
that
we
are
at
issue
and
that
we
had
better
be
at
issue
openly
than
covertly
.
I
thank
him
for
his
goodwill
and
his
protection
,
and
he
goes
his
road
,
and
I
go
mine
.
The
fact
is
,
our
roads
are
not
the
same
.
Under
one
of
the
wills
in
dispute
,
I
should
take
much
more
than
he
.
I
don
t
mean
to
say
that
it
is
the
one
to
be
established
,
but
there
it
is
,
and
it
has
its
chance
.
"
"
I
have
not
to
learn
from
you
,
my
dear
Richard
,
"
said
I
,
"
of
your
letter
.
I
had
heard
of
it
already
without
an
offended
or
angry
word
.
"
"
Indeed
?
"
replied
Richard
,
softening
.
"
I
am
glad
I
said
he
was
an
honourable
man
,
out
of
all
this
wretched
affair
.
But
I
always
say
that
and
have
never
doubted
it
.
Now
,
my
dear
Esther
,
I
know
these
views
of
mine
appear
extremely
harsh
to
you
,
and
will
to
Ada
when
you
tell
her
what
has
passed
between
us
.
But
if
you
had
gone
into
the
case
as
I
have
,
if
you
had
only
applied
yourself
to
the
papers
as
I
did
when
I
was
at
Kenge
s
,
if
you
only
knew
what
an
accumulation
of
charges
and
counter
-
charges
,
and
suspicions
and
cross
-
suspicions
,
they
involve
,
you
would
think
me
moderate
in
comparison
.
"
"
Perhaps
so
,
"
said
I
.
"
But
do
you
think
that
,
among
those
many
papers
,
there
is
much
truth
and
justice
,
Richard
?
"
"
There
is
truth
and
justice
somewhere
in
the
case
,
Esther
"
"
Or
was
once
,
long
ago
,
"
said
I
.
Отключить рекламу
768
"
Is
is
must
be
somewhere
,
"
pursued
Richard
impetuously
,
"
and
must
be
brought
out
.
To
allow
Ada
to
be
made
a
bribe
and
hush
-
money
of
is
not
the
way
to
bring
it
out
.
You
say
the
suit
is
changing
me
;
John
Jarndyce
says
it
changes
,
has
changed
,
and
will
change
everybody
who
has
any
share
in
it
.
Then
the
greater
right
I
have
on
my
side
when
I
resolve
to
do
all
I
can
to
bring
it
to
an
end
.
"
"
All
you
can
,
Richard
!
Do
you
think
that
in
these
many
years
no
others
have
done
all
they
could
?
Has
the
difficulty
grown
easier
because
of
so
many
failures
?
"
"
It
can
t
last
for
ever
,
"
returned
Richard
with
a
fierceness
kindling
in
him
which
again
presented
to
me
that
last
sad
reminder
.
"
I
am
young
and
earnest
,
and
energy
and
determination
have
done
wonders
many
a
time
.
Others
have
only
half
thrown
themselves
into
it
.
I
devote
myself
to
it
.
I
make
it
the
object
of
my
life
.
"
"
Oh
,
Richard
,
my
dear
,
so
much
the
worse
,
so
much
the
worse
!
"
"
No
,
no
,
no
,
don
t
you
be
afraid
for
me
,
"
he
returned
affectionately
.
"
You
re
a
dear
,
good
,
wise
,
quiet
,
blessed
girl
;
but
you
have
your
prepossessions
.
So
I
come
round
to
John
Jarndyce
.
I
tell
you
,
my
good
Esther
,
when
he
and
I
were
on
those
terms
which
he
found
so
convenient
,
we
were
not
on
natural
terms
.
"
"
Are
division
and
animosity
your
natural
terms
,
Richard
?
"
"
No
,
I
don
t
say
that
.
I
mean
that
all
this
business
puts
us
on
unnatural
terms
,
with
which
natural
relations
are
incompatible
.
See
another
reason
for
urging
it
on
!
I
may
find
out
when
it
s
over
that
I
have
been
mistaken
in
John
Jarndyce
.
My
head
may
be
clearer
when
I
am
free
of
it
,
and
I
may
then
agree
with
what
you
say
to
-
day
.
769
Very
well
.
Then
I
shall
acknowledge
it
and
make
him
reparation
.
"
Everything
postponed
to
that
imaginary
time
!
Everything
held
in
confusion
and
indecision
until
then
!
"
Now
,
my
best
of
confidantes
,
"
said
Richard
,
"
I
want
my
cousin
Ada
to
understand
that
I
am
not
captious
,
fickle
,
and
wilful
about
John
Jarndyce
,
but
that
I
have
this
purpose
and
reason
at
my
back
.
I
wish
to
represent
myself
to
her
through
you
,
because
she
has
a
great
esteem
and
respect
for
her
cousin
John
;
and
I
know
you
will
soften
the
course
I
take
,
even
though
you
disapprove
of
it
;
and
and
in
short
,
"
said
Richard
,
who
had
been
hesitating
through
these
words
,
"
I
I
don
t
like
to
represent
myself
in
this
litigious
,
contentious
,
doubting
character
to
a
confiding
girl
like
Ada
.
"
I
told
him
that
he
was
more
like
himself
in
those
latter
words
than
in
anything
he
had
said
yet
.
"
Why
,
"
acknowledged
Richard
,
"
that
may
be
true
enough
,
my
love
.
I
rather
feel
it
to
be
so
.
But
I
shall
be
able
to
give
myself
fair
-
play
by
and
by
.
I
shall
come
all
right
again
,
then
,
don
t
you
be
afraid
.
"
I
asked
him
if
this
were
all
he
wished
me
to
tell
Ada
.
"
Not
quite
,
"
said
Richard
.
"
I
am
bound
not
to
withhold
from
her
that
John
Jarndyce
answered
my
letter
in
his
usual
manner
,
addressing
me
as
My
dear
Rick
,
trying
to
argue
me
out
of
my
opinions
,
and
telling
me
that
they
should
make
no
difference
in
him
.
(
All
very
well
of
course
,
but
not
altering
the
case
.
770
)
I
also
want
Ada
to
know
that
if
I
see
her
seldom
just
now
,
I
am
looking
after
her
interests
as
well
as
my
own
we
two
being
in
the
same
boat
exactly
and
that
I
hope
she
will
not
suppose
from
any
flying
rumours
she
may
hear
that
I
am
at
all
light
-
headed
or
imprudent
;
on
the
contrary
,
I
am
always
looking
forward
to
the
termination
of
the
suit
,
and
always
planning
in
that
direction
.
Being
of
age
now
and
having
taken
the
step
I
have
taken
,
I
consider
myself
free
from
any
accountability
to
John
Jarndyce
;
but
Ada
being
still
a
ward
of
the
court
,
I
don
t
yet
ask
her
to
renew
our
engagement
.
When
she
is
free
to
act
for
herself
,
I
shall
be
myself
once
more
and
we
shall
both
be
in
very
different
worldly
circumstances
,
I
believe
.
If
you
tell
her
all
this
with
the
advantage
of
your
considerate
way
,
you
will
do
me
a
very
great
and
a
very
kind
service
,
my
dear
Esther
;
and
I
shall
knock
Jarndyce
and
Jarndyce
on
the
head
with
greater
vigour
.
Of
course
I
ask
for
no
secrecy
at
Bleak
House
.
"
"
Richard
,
"
said
I
,
"
you
place
great
confidence
in
me
,
but
I
fear
you
will
not
take
advice
from
me
?
"
"
It
s
impossible
that
I
can
on
this
subject
,
my
dear
girl
.
On
any
other
,
readily
.
"
As
if
there
were
any
other
in
his
life
!
As
if
his
whole
career
and
character
were
not
being
dyed
one
colour
!
"
But
I
may
ask
you
a
question
,
Richard
?
"
"
I
think
so
,
"
said
he
,
laughing
.
"
I
don
t
know
who
may
not
,
if
you
may
not
.
"
"
You
say
,
yourself
,
you
are
not
leading
a
very
settled
life
.
"
"
How
can
I
,
my
dear
Esther
,
with
nothing
settled
!
"
"
Are
you
in
debt
again
?
"
"
Why
,
of
course
I
am
,
"
said
Richard
,
astonished
at
my
simplicity
.