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"
He
was
puzzled
what
to
do
;
not
the
less
,
because
I
gave
him
my
opinion
that
it
was
not
safe
to
try
to
get
Tom
,
Jack
,
or
Richard
too
far
out
of
the
way
at
present
.
Mr
.
Pip
,
I
’
ll
tell
you
something
.
Under
existing
circumstances
,
there
is
no
place
like
a
great
city
when
you
are
once
in
it
.
Don
’
t
break
cover
too
soon
.
Lie
close
.
Wait
till
things
slacken
,
before
you
try
the
open
,
even
for
foreign
air
.
"
I
thanked
him
for
his
valuable
advice
,
and
asked
him
what
Herbert
had
done
?
"
Mr
.
Herbert
,
"
said
Wemmick
,
"
after
being
all
of
a
heap
for
half
an
hour
,
struck
out
a
plan
.
He
mentioned
to
me
as
a
secret
,
that
he
is
courting
a
young
lady
who
has
,
as
no
doubt
you
are
aware
,
a
bedridden
Pa
.
Which
Pa
,
having
been
in
the
Purser
line
of
life
,
lies
a
-
bed
in
a
bow
-
window
where
he
can
see
the
ships
sail
up
and
down
the
river
.
You
are
acquainted
with
the
young
lady
,
most
probably
?
"
"
Not
personally
,
"
said
I
.
The
truth
was
,
that
she
had
objected
to
me
as
an
expensive
companion
who
did
Herbert
no
good
,
and
that
,
when
Herbert
had
first
proposed
to
present
me
to
her
,
she
had
received
the
proposal
with
such
very
moderate
warmth
,
that
Herbert
had
felt
himself
obliged
to
confide
the
state
of
the
case
to
me
,
with
a
view
to
the
lapse
of
a
little
time
before
I
made
her
acquaintance
.
When
I
had
begun
to
advance
Herbert
’
s
prospects
by
stealth
,
I
had
been
able
to
bear
this
with
cheerful
philosophy
:
he
and
his
affianced
,
for
their
part
,
had
naturally
not
been
very
anxious
to
introduce
a
third
person
into
their
interviews
;
and
thus
,
although
I
was
assured
that
I
had
risen
in
Clara
’
s
esteem
,
and
although
the
young
lady
and
I
had
long
regularly
interchanged
messages
and
remembrances
by
Herbert
,
I
had
never
seen
her
.
However
,
I
did
not
trouble
Wemmick
with
these
particulars
.
"
The
house
with
the
bow
-
window
,
"
said
Wemmick
,
"
being
by
the
river
-
side
,
down
the
Pool
there
between
Limehouse
and
Greenwich
,
and
being
kept
,
it
seems
,
by
a
very
respectable
widow
who
has
a
furnished
upper
floor
to
let
,
Mr
.
Herbert
put
it
to
me
,
what
did
I
think
of
that
as
a
temporary
tenement
for
Tom
,
Jack
,
or
Richard
?
Now
,
I
thought
very
well
of
it
,
for
three
reasons
I
’
ll
give
you
.
That
is
to
say
:
Firstly
.
It
’
s
altogether
out
of
all
your
beats
,
and
is
well
away
from
the
usual
heap
of
streets
great
and
small
.
Secondly
.
Without
going
near
it
yourself
,
you
could
always
hear
of
the
safety
of
Tom
,
Jack
,
or
Richard
,
through
Mr
.
Herbert
.
Thirdly
.
After
a
while
and
when
it
might
be
prudent
,
if
you
should
want
to
slip
Tom
,
Jack
,
or
Richard
on
board
a
foreign
packet
-
boat
,
there
he
is
—
ready
.
"
Much
comforted
by
these
considerations
,
I
thanked
Wemmick
again
and
again
,
and
begged
him
to
proceed
.
"
Well
,
sir
!
Mr
.
Herbert
threw
himself
into
the
business
with
a
will
,
and
by
nine
o
’
clock
last
night
he
housed
Tom
,
Jack
,
or
Richard
—
whichever
it
may
be
—
you
and
I
don
’
t
want
to
know
—
quite
successfully
.
At
the
old
lodgings
it
was
understood
that
he
was
summoned
to
Dover
,
and
,
in
fact
,
he
was
taken
down
the
Dover
road
and
cornered
out
of
it
.
Now
,
another
great
advantage
of
all
this
is
,
that
it
was
done
without
you
,
and
when
,
if
any
one
was
concerning
himself
about
your
movements
,
you
must
be
known
to
be
ever
so
many
miles
off
and
quite
otherwise
engaged
.
This
diverts
suspicion
and
confuses
it
;
and
for
the
same
reason
I
recommended
that
,
even
if
you
came
back
last
night
,
you
should
not
go
home
.
It
brings
in
more
confusion
,
and
you
want
confusion
.