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81
"
"
Jarndyce
!
"
said
the
old
man
with
a
start
.
"
Jarndyce
and
Jarndyce
.
The
great
suit
,
Krook
,
"
returned
his
lodger
.
"
Hi
!
"
exclaimed
the
old
man
in
a
tone
of
thoughtful
amazement
and
with
a
wider
stare
than
before
.
"
Think
of
it
!
"
He
seemed
so
rapt
all
in
a
moment
and
looked
so
curiously
at
us
that
Richard
said
,
"
Why
,
you
appear
to
trouble
yourself
a
good
deal
about
the
causes
before
your
noble
and
learned
brother
,
the
other
Chancellor
!
"
"
Yes
,
"
said
the
old
man
abstractedly
.
"
Sure
!
YOUR
name
now
will
be
"
"
Richard
Carstone
.
"
"
Carstone
,
"
he
repeated
,
slowly
checking
off
that
name
upon
his
forefinger
;
and
each
of
the
others
he
went
on
to
mention
upon
a
separate
finger
.
"
Yes
.
There
was
the
name
of
Barbary
,
and
the
name
of
Clare
,
and
the
name
of
Dedlock
,
too
,
I
think
.
"
"
He
knows
as
much
of
the
cause
as
the
real
salaried
Chancellor
!
"
said
Richard
,
quite
astonished
,
to
Ada
and
me
.
"
Aye
!
"
said
the
old
man
,
coming
slowly
out
of
his
abstraction
.
"
Yes
!
Tom
Jarndyce
you
ll
excuse
me
,
being
related
;
but
he
was
never
known
about
court
by
any
other
name
,
and
was
as
well
known
there
as
she
is
now
,
"
nodding
slightly
at
his
lodger
.
"
Tom
Jarndyce
was
often
in
here
.
He
got
into
a
restless
habit
of
strolling
about
when
the
cause
was
on
,
or
expected
,
talking
to
the
little
shopkeepers
and
telling
em
to
keep
out
of
Chancery
,
whatever
they
did
.
For
,
says
he
,
it
s
being
ground
to
bits
in
a
slow
mill
;
it
s
being
roasted
at
a
slow
fire
;
it
s
being
stung
to
death
by
single
bees
;
it
s
being
drowned
by
drops
;
it
s
going
mad
by
grains
.
82
He
was
as
near
making
away
with
himself
,
just
where
the
young
lady
stands
,
as
near
could
be
.
"
We
listened
with
horror
.
"
He
come
in
at
the
door
,
"
said
the
old
man
,
slowly
pointing
an
imaginary
track
along
the
shop
,
"
on
the
day
he
did
it
the
whole
neighbourhood
had
said
for
months
before
that
he
would
do
it
,
of
a
certainty
sooner
or
later
he
come
in
at
the
door
that
day
,
and
walked
along
there
,
and
sat
himself
on
a
bench
that
stood
there
,
and
asked
me
(
you
ll
judge
I
was
a
mortal
sight
younger
then
)
to
fetch
him
a
pint
of
wine
.
For
,
says
he
,
Krook
,
I
am
much
depressed
;
my
cause
is
on
again
,
and
I
think
I
m
nearer
judgment
than
I
ever
was
.
I
hadn
t
a
mind
to
leave
him
alone
;
and
I
persuaded
him
to
go
to
the
tavern
over
the
way
there
,
t
other
side
my
lane
(
I
mean
Chancery
Lane
)
;
and
I
followed
and
looked
in
at
the
window
,
and
saw
him
,
comfortable
as
I
thought
,
in
the
arm
-
chair
by
the
fire
,
and
company
with
him
.
I
hadn
t
hardly
got
back
here
when
I
heard
a
shot
go
echoing
and
rattling
right
away
into
the
inn
.
I
ran
out
neighbours
ran
out
twenty
of
us
cried
at
once
,
Tom
Jarndyce
!
"
The
old
man
stopped
,
looked
hard
at
us
,
looked
down
into
the
lantern
,
blew
the
light
out
,
and
shut
the
lantern
up
.
"
We
were
right
,
I
needn
t
tell
the
present
hearers
.
83
Hi
!
To
be
sure
,
how
the
neighbourhood
poured
into
court
that
afternoon
while
the
cause
was
on
!
How
my
noble
and
learned
brother
,
and
all
the
rest
of
em
,
grubbed
and
muddled
away
as
usual
and
tried
to
look
as
if
they
hadn
t
heard
a
word
of
the
last
fact
in
the
case
or
as
if
they
had
Oh
,
dear
me
!
nothing
at
all
to
do
with
it
if
they
had
heard
of
it
by
any
chance
!
"
Ada
s
colour
had
entirely
left
her
,
and
Richard
was
scarcely
less
pale
.
Nor
could
I
wonder
,
judging
even
from
my
emotions
,
and
I
was
no
party
in
the
suit
,
that
to
hearts
so
untried
and
fresh
it
was
a
shock
to
come
into
the
inheritance
of
a
protracted
misery
,
attended
in
the
minds
of
many
people
with
such
dreadful
recollections
.
I
had
another
uneasiness
,
in
the
application
of
the
painful
story
to
the
poor
half
-
witted
creature
who
had
brought
us
there
;
but
,
to
my
surprise
,
she
seemed
perfectly
unconscious
of
that
and
only
led
the
way
upstairs
again
,
informing
us
with
the
toleration
of
a
superior
creature
for
the
infirmities
of
a
common
mortal
that
her
landlord
was
"
a
little
M
,
you
know
!
"
She
lived
at
the
top
of
the
house
,
in
a
pretty
large
room
,
from
which
she
had
a
glimpse
of
Lincoln
s
Inn
Hall
.
This
seemed
to
have
been
her
principal
inducement
,
originally
,
for
taking
up
her
residence
there
.
She
could
look
at
it
,
she
said
,
in
the
night
,
especially
in
the
moonshine
.
Her
room
was
clean
,
but
very
,
very
bare
.
I
noticed
the
scantiest
necessaries
in
the
way
of
furniture
;
a
few
old
prints
from
books
,
of
Chancellors
and
barristers
,
wafered
against
the
wall
;
and
some
half
-
dozen
reticles
and
work
-
bags
,
"
containing
documents
,
"
as
she
informed
us
.
Отключить рекламу
84
There
were
neither
coals
nor
ashes
in
the
grate
,
and
I
saw
no
articles
of
clothing
anywhere
,
nor
any
kind
of
food
.
Upon
a
shelf
in
an
open
cupboard
were
a
plate
or
two
,
a
cup
or
two
,
and
so
forth
,
but
all
dry
and
empty
.
There
was
a
more
affecting
meaning
in
her
pinched
appearance
,
I
thought
as
I
looked
round
,
than
I
had
understood
before
.
"
Extremely
honoured
,
I
am
sure
,
"
said
our
poor
hostess
with
the
greatest
suavity
,
"
by
this
visit
from
the
wards
in
Jarndyce
.
And
very
much
indebted
for
the
omen
.
It
is
a
retired
situation
.
Considering
.
I
am
limited
as
to
situation
.
In
consequence
of
the
necessity
of
attending
on
the
Chancellor
.
I
have
lived
here
many
years
.
I
pass
my
days
in
court
,
my
evenings
and
my
nights
here
.
I
find
the
nights
long
,
for
I
sleep
but
little
and
think
much
.
That
is
,
of
course
,
unavoidable
,
being
in
Chancery
.
I
am
sorry
I
cannot
offer
chocolate
.
I
expect
a
judgment
shortly
and
shall
then
place
my
establishment
on
a
superior
footing
.
At
present
,
I
don
t
mind
confessing
to
the
wards
in
Jarndyce
(
in
strict
confidence
)
that
I
sometimes
find
it
difficult
to
keep
up
a
genteel
appearance
.
I
have
felt
the
cold
here
.
I
have
felt
something
sharper
than
cold
.
It
matters
very
little
.
Pray
excuse
the
introduction
of
such
mean
topics
.
"
She
partly
drew
aside
the
curtain
of
the
long
,
low
garret
window
and
called
our
attention
to
a
number
of
bird
-
cages
hanging
there
,
some
containing
several
birds
.
There
were
larks
,
linnets
,
and
goldfinches
I
should
think
at
least
twenty
.
"
I
began
to
keep
the
little
creatures
,
"
she
said
,
"
with
an
object
that
the
wards
will
readily
comprehend
.
85
With
the
intention
of
restoring
them
to
liberty
.
When
my
judgment
should
be
given
.
Ye
-
es
!
They
die
in
prison
,
though
.
Their
lives
,
poor
silly
things
,
are
so
short
in
comparison
with
Chancery
proceedings
that
,
one
by
one
,
the
whole
collection
has
died
over
and
over
again
.
I
doubt
,
do
you
know
,
whether
one
of
these
,
though
they
are
all
young
,
will
live
to
be
free
!
Ve
-
ry
mortifying
,
is
it
not
?
"
Although
she
sometimes
asked
a
question
,
she
never
seemed
to
expect
a
reply
,
but
rambled
on
as
if
she
were
in
the
habit
of
doing
so
when
no
one
but
herself
was
present
.
"
Indeed
,
"
she
pursued
,
"
I
positively
doubt
sometimes
,
I
do
assure
you
,
whether
while
matters
are
still
unsettled
,
and
the
sixth
or
Great
Seal
still
prevails
,
I
may
not
one
day
be
found
lying
stark
and
senseless
here
,
as
I
have
found
so
many
birds
!
"
Richard
,
answering
what
he
saw
in
Ada
s
compassionate
eyes
,
took
the
opportunity
of
laying
some
money
,
softly
and
unobserved
,
on
the
chimney
-
piece
.
We
all
drew
nearer
to
the
cages
,
feigning
to
examine
the
birds
.
"
I
can
t
allow
them
to
sing
much
,
"
said
the
little
old
lady
,
"
for
(
you
ll
think
this
curious
)
I
find
my
mind
confused
by
the
idea
that
they
are
singing
while
I
am
following
the
arguments
in
court
.
And
my
mind
requires
to
be
so
very
clear
,
you
know
!
Another
time
,
I
ll
tell
you
their
names
.
Not
at
present
.
On
a
day
of
such
good
omen
,
they
shall
sing
as
much
as
they
like
.
In
honour
of
youth
,
"
a
smile
and
curtsy
,
"
hope
,
"
a
smile
and
curtsy
,
"
and
beauty
,
"
a
smile
and
curtsy
.
"
There
!
We
ll
let
in
the
full
light
.
"
The
birds
began
to
stir
and
chirp
.
86
"
I
cannot
admit
the
air
freely
,
"
said
the
little
old
lady
the
room
was
close
,
and
would
have
been
the
better
for
it
"
because
the
cat
you
saw
downstairs
,
called
Lady
Jane
,
is
greedy
for
their
lives
.
She
crouches
on
the
parapet
outside
for
hours
and
hours
.
I
have
discovered
,
"
whispering
mysteriously
,
"
that
her
natural
cruelty
is
sharpened
by
a
jealous
fear
of
their
regaining
their
liberty
.
In
consequence
of
the
judgment
I
expect
being
shortly
given
.
She
is
sly
and
full
of
malice
.
I
half
believe
,
sometimes
,
that
she
is
no
cat
,
but
the
wolf
of
the
old
saying
.
It
is
so
very
difficult
to
keep
her
from
the
door
.
"
Some
neighbouring
bells
,
reminding
the
poor
soul
that
it
was
half
-
past
nine
,
did
more
for
us
in
the
way
of
bringing
our
visit
to
an
end
than
we
could
easily
have
done
for
ourselves
.
She
hurriedly
took
up
her
little
bag
of
documents
,
which
she
had
laid
upon
the
table
on
coming
in
,
and
asked
if
we
were
also
going
into
court
.
On
our
answering
no
,
and
that
we
would
on
no
account
detain
her
,
she
opened
the
door
to
attend
us
downstairs
.
"
With
such
an
omen
,
it
is
even
more
necessary
than
usual
that
I
should
be
there
before
the
Chancellor
comes
in
,
"
said
she
,
"
for
he
might
mention
my
case
the
first
thing
.
I
have
a
presentiment
that
he
WILL
mention
it
the
first
thing
this
morning
.
"
She
stopped
to
tell
us
in
a
whisper
as
we
were
going
down
that
the
whole
house
was
filled
with
strange
lumber
which
her
landlord
had
bought
piecemeal
and
had
no
wish
to
sell
,
in
consequence
of
being
a
little
M
.
This
was
on
the
first
floor
.
But
she
had
made
a
previous
stoppage
on
the
second
floor
and
had
silently
pointed
at
a
dark
door
there
.
87
"
The
only
other
lodger
,
"
she
now
whispered
in
explanation
,
"
a
law
-
writer
.
The
children
in
the
lanes
here
say
he
has
sold
himself
to
the
devil
.
I
don
t
know
what
he
can
have
done
with
the
money
.
Hush
!
"
She
appeared
to
mistrust
that
the
lodger
might
hear
her
even
there
,
and
repeating
"
Hush
!
"
went
before
us
on
tiptoe
as
though
even
the
sound
of
her
footsteps
might
reveal
to
him
what
she
had
said
.
Passing
through
the
shop
on
our
way
out
,
as
we
had
passed
through
it
on
our
way
in
,
we
found
the
old
man
storing
a
quantity
of
packets
of
waste
-
paper
in
a
kind
of
well
in
the
floor
.
He
seemed
to
be
working
hard
,
with
the
perspiration
standing
on
his
forehead
,
and
had
a
piece
of
chalk
by
him
,
with
which
,
as
he
put
each
separate
package
or
bundle
down
,
he
made
a
crooked
mark
on
the
panelling
of
the
wall
.
Richard
and
Ada
,
and
Miss
Jellyby
,
and
the
little
old
lady
had
gone
by
him
,
and
I
was
going
when
he
touched
me
on
the
arm
to
stay
me
,
and
chalked
the
letter
J
upon
the
wall
in
a
very
curious
manner
,
beginning
with
the
end
of
the
letter
and
shaping
it
backward
.
It
was
a
capital
letter
,
not
a
printed
one
,
but
just
such
a
letter
as
any
clerk
in
Messrs
.
Kenge
and
Carboy
s
office
would
have
made
.
"
Can
you
read
it
?
"
he
asked
me
with
a
keen
glance
.
"
Surely
,
"
said
I
.
"
It
s
very
plain
.
"
"
What
is
it
?
"
"
J
.
"
With
another
glance
at
me
,
and
a
glance
at
the
door
,
he
rubbed
it
out
and
turned
an
"
a
"
in
its
place
(
not
a
capital
letter
this
time
)
,
and
said
,
"
What
s
that
?
"
I
told
him
.
He
then
rubbed
that
out
and
turned
the
letter
"
r
,
"
and
asked
me
the
same
question
.
Отключить рекламу
88
He
went
on
quickly
until
he
had
formed
in
the
same
curious
manner
,
beginning
at
the
ends
and
bottoms
of
the
letters
,
the
word
Jarndyce
,
without
once
leaving
two
letters
on
the
wall
together
.
"
What
does
that
spell
?
"
he
asked
me
.
When
I
told
him
,
he
laughed
.
In
the
same
odd
way
,
yet
with
the
same
rapidity
,
he
then
produced
singly
,
and
rubbed
out
singly
,
the
letters
forming
the
words
Bleak
House
.
These
,
in
some
astonishment
,
I
also
read
;
and
he
laughed
again
.
"
Hi
!
"
said
the
old
man
,
laying
aside
the
chalk
.
"
I
have
a
turn
for
copying
from
memory
,
you
see
,
miss
,
though
I
can
neither
read
nor
write
.
"
He
looked
so
disagreeable
and
his
cat
looked
so
wickedly
at
me
,
as
if
I
were
a
blood
-
relation
of
the
birds
upstairs
,
that
I
was
quite
relieved
by
Richard
s
appearing
at
the
door
and
saying
,
"
Miss
Summerson
,
I
hope
you
are
not
bargaining
for
the
sale
of
your
hair
.
Don
t
be
tempted
.
Three
sacks
below
are
quite
enough
for
Mr
.
Krook
!
"
I
lost
no
time
in
wishing
Mr
.
Krook
good
morning
and
joining
my
friends
outside
,
where
we
parted
with
the
little
old
lady
,
who
gave
us
her
blessing
with
great
ceremony
and
renewed
her
assurance
of
yesterday
in
reference
to
her
intention
of
settling
estates
on
Ada
and
me
.
Before
we
finally
turned
out
of
those
lanes
,
we
looked
back
and
saw
Mr
.
Krook
standing
at
his
shop
-
door
,
in
his
spectacles
,
looking
after
us
,
with
his
cat
upon
his
shoulder
,
and
her
tail
sticking
up
on
one
side
of
his
hairy
cap
like
a
tall
feather
.
"
Quite
an
adventure
for
a
morning
in
London
!
"
said
Richard
with
a
sigh
.
89
"
Ah
,
cousin
,
cousin
,
it
s
a
weary
word
this
Chancery
!
"
"
It
is
to
me
,
and
has
been
ever
since
I
can
remember
,
"
returned
Ada
.
"
I
am
grieved
that
I
should
be
the
enemy
as
I
suppose
I
am
of
a
great
number
of
relations
and
others
,
and
that
they
should
be
my
enemies
as
I
suppose
they
are
and
that
we
should
all
be
ruining
one
another
without
knowing
how
or
why
and
be
in
constant
doubt
and
discord
all
our
lives
.
It
seems
very
strange
,
as
there
must
be
right
somewhere
,
that
an
honest
judge
in
real
earnest
has
not
been
able
to
find
out
through
all
these
years
where
it
is
.
"
"
Ah
,
cousin
!
"
said
Richard
.
"
Strange
,
indeed
!
All
this
wasteful
,
wanton
chess
-
playing
IS
very
strange
.
To
see
that
composed
court
yesterday
jogging
on
so
serenely
and
to
think
of
the
wretchedness
of
the
pieces
on
the
board
gave
me
the
headache
and
the
heartache
both
together
.
My
head
ached
with
wondering
how
it
happened
,
if
men
were
neither
fools
nor
rascals
;
and
my
heart
ached
to
think
they
could
possibly
be
either
.
But
at
all
events
,
Ada
I
may
call
you
Ada
?
"
"
Of
course
you
may
,
cousin
Richard
.
"
"
At
all
events
,
Chancery
will
work
none
of
its
bad
influences
on
US
.
We
have
happily
been
brought
together
,
thanks
to
our
good
kinsman
,
and
it
can
t
divide
us
now
!
"
"
Never
,
I
hope
,
cousin
Richard
!
"
said
Ada
gently
.
Miss
Jellyby
gave
my
arm
a
squeeze
and
me
a
very
significant
look
.
I
smiled
in
return
,
and
we
made
the
rest
of
the
way
back
very
pleasantly
.
In
half
an
hour
after
our
arrival
,
Mrs
.
Jellyby
appeared
;
and
in
the
course
of
an
hour
the
various
things
necessary
for
breakfast
straggled
one
by
one
into
the
dining
-
room
.
I
do
not
doubt
that
Mrs
90
Jellyby
had
gone
to
bed
and
got
up
in
the
usual
manner
,
but
she
presented
no
appearance
of
having
changed
her
dress
.
She
was
greatly
occupied
during
breakfast
,
for
the
morning
s
post
brought
a
heavy
correspondence
relative
to
Borrioboola
-
Gha
,
which
would
occasion
her
(
she
said
)
to
pass
a
busy
day
.
The
children
tumbled
about
,
and
notched
memoranda
of
their
accidents
in
their
legs
,
which
were
perfect
little
calendars
of
distress
;
and
Peepy
was
lost
for
an
hour
and
a
half
,
and
brought
home
from
Newgate
market
by
a
policeman
.
The
equable
manner
in
which
Mrs
.
Jellyby
sustained
both
his
absence
and
his
restoration
to
the
family
circle
surprised
us
all
.
She
was
by
that
time
perseveringly
dictating
to
Caddy
,
and
Caddy
was
fast
relapsing
into
the
inky
condition
in
which
we
had
found
her
.
At
one
o
clock
an
open
carriage
arrived
for
us
,
and
a
cart
for
our
luggage
.
Mrs
.
Jellyby
charged
us
with
many
remembrances
to
her
good
friend
Mr
.
Jarndyce
;
Caddy
left
her
desk
to
see
us
depart
,
kissed
me
in
the
passage
,
and
stood
biting
her
pen
and
sobbing
on
the
steps
;
Peepy
,
I
am
happy
to
say
,
was
asleep
and
spared
the
pain
of
separation
(
I
was
not
without
misgivings
that
he
had
gone
to
Newgate
market
in
search
of
me
)
;
and
all
the
other
children
got
up
behind
the
barouche
and
fell
off
,
and
we
saw
them
,
with
great
concern
,
scattered
over
the
surface
of
Thavies
Inn
as
we
rolled
out
of
its
precincts
.