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A
most
engaging
little
Beauty
!
said
Steerforth
,
taking
my
arm
.
Well
!
It
s
a
quaint
place
,
and
they
are
quaint
company
,
and
it
s
quite
a
new
sensation
to
mix
with
them
How
fortunate
we
are
,
too
,
I
returned
,
to
have
arrived
to
witness
their
happiness
in
that
intended
marriage
!
I
never
saw
people
so
happy
.
How
delightful
to
see
it
,
and
to
be
made
the
sharers
in
their
honest
joy
,
as
we
have
been
!
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That
s
rather
a
chuckle
-
headed
fellow
for
the
girl
;
isn
t
he
?
said
Steerforth
.
He
had
been
so
hearty
with
him
,
and
with
them
all
,
that
I
felt
a
shock
in
this
unexpected
and
cold
reply
.
But
turning
quickly
upon
him
,
and
seeing
a
laugh
in
his
eyes
,
I
answered
,
much
relieved
:
Ah
,
Steerforth
!
It
s
well
for
you
to
joke
about
the
poor
!
You
may
skirmish
with
Miss
Dartle
,
or
try
to
hide
your
sympathies
in
jest
from
me
,
but
I
know
better
.
When
I
see
how
perfectly
you
understand
them
,
how
exquisitely
you
can
enter
into
happiness
like
this
plain
fisherman
s
,
or
humour
a
love
like
my
old
nurse
s
,
I
know
that
there
is
not
a
joy
or
sorrow
,
not
an
emotion
,
of
such
people
,
that
can
be
indifferent
to
you
.
And
I
admire
and
love
you
for
it
,
Steerforth
,
twenty
times
the
more
!
He
stopped
,
and
,
looking
in
my
face
,
said
,
Daisy
,
I
believe
you
are
in
earnest
,
and
are
good
.
I
wish
we
all
were
!
Next
moment
he
was
gaily
singing
Mr
.
Peggotty
s
song
,
as
we
walked
at
a
round
pace
back
to
Yarmouth
.
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Steerforth
and
I
stayed
for
more
than
a
fortnight
in
that
part
of
the
country
.
We
were
very
much
together
,
I
need
not
say
;
but
occasionally
we
were
asunder
for
some
hours
at
a
time
.
He
was
a
good
sailor
,
and
I
was
but
an
indifferent
one
;
and
when
he
went
out
boating
with
Mr
.
Peggotty
,
which
was
a
favourite
amusement
of
his
,
I
generally
remained
ashore
.
My
occupation
of
Peggotty
s
spare
-
room
put
a
constraint
upon
me
,
from
which
he
was
free
:
for
,
knowing
how
assiduously
she
attended
on
Mr
.
Barkis
all
day
,
I
did
not
like
to
remain
out
late
at
night
;
whereas
Steerforth
,
lying
at
the
Inn
,
had
nothing
to
consult
but
his
own
humour
.
Thus
it
came
about
,
that
I
heard
of
his
making
little
treats
for
the
fishermen
at
Mr
.
Peggotty
s
house
of
call
,
The
Willing
Mind
,
after
I
was
in
bed
,
and
of
his
being
afloat
,
wrapped
in
fishermen
s
clothes
,
whole
moonlight
nights
,
and
coming
back
when
the
morning
tide
was
at
flood
.
By
this
time
,
however
,
I
knew
that
his
restless
nature
and
bold
spirits
delighted
to
find
a
vent
in
rough
toil
and
hard
weather
,
as
in
any
other
means
of
excitement
that
presented
itself
freshly
to
him
;
so
none
of
his
proceedings
surprised
me
.
Another
cause
of
our
being
sometimes
apart
,
was
,
that
I
had
naturally
an
interest
in
going
over
to
Blunderstone
,
and
revisiting
the
old
familiar
scenes
of
my
childhood
;
while
Steerforth
,
after
being
there
once
,
had
naturally
no
great
interest
in
going
there
again
.
Hence
,
on
three
or
four
days
that
I
can
at
once
recall
,
we
went
our
several
ways
after
an
early
breakfast
,
and
met
again
at
a
late
dinner
.
I
had
no
idea
how
he
employed
his
time
in
the
interval
,
beyond
a
general
knowledge
that
he
was
very
popular
in
the
place
,
and
had
twenty
means
of
actively
diverting
himself
where
another
man
might
not
have
found
one
.