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So
far
as
Mistress
Affery
was
concerned
,
to
regard
her
liege
-
lord
and
her
disabled
mistress
with
a
face
of
blank
wonder
,
to
go
about
the
house
after
dark
with
her
apron
over
her
head
,
always
to
listen
for
the
strange
noises
and
sometimes
to
hear
them
,
and
never
to
emerge
from
her
ghostly
,
dreamy
,
sleep
-
waking
state
,
was
occupation
enough
for
her
.
There
was
a
fair
stroke
of
business
doing
,
as
Mistress
Affery
made
out
,
for
her
husband
had
abundant
occupation
in
his
little
office
,
and
saw
more
people
than
had
been
used
to
come
there
for
some
years
.
This
might
easily
be
,
the
house
having
been
long
deserted
;
but
he
did
receive
letters
,
and
comers
,
and
keep
books
,
and
correspond
.
Moreover
,
he
went
about
to
other
counting
-
houses
,
and
to
wharves
,
and
docks
,
and
to
the
Custom
House
,
and
to
Garraway
s
Coffee
House
,
and
the
Jerusalem
Coffee
House
,
and
on
Change
;
so
that
he
was
much
in
and
out
.
He
began
,
too
,
sometimes
of
an
evening
,
when
Mrs
Clennam
expressed
no
particular
wish
for
his
society
,
to
resort
to
a
tavern
in
the
neighbourhood
to
look
at
the
shipping
news
and
closing
prices
in
the
evening
paper
,
and
even
to
exchange
small
socialities
with
mercantile
Sea
Captains
who
frequented
that
establishment
.
At
some
period
of
every
day
,
he
and
Mrs
Clennam
held
a
council
on
matters
of
business
;
and
it
appeared
to
Affery
,
who
was
always
groping
about
,
listening
and
watching
,
that
the
two
clever
ones
were
making
money
.
The
state
of
mind
into
which
Mr
Flintwinch
s
dazed
lady
had
fallen
,
had
now
begun
to
be
so
expressed
in
all
her
looks
and
actions
that
she
was
held
in
very
low
account
by
the
two
clever
ones
,
as
a
person
,
never
of
strong
intellect
,
who
was
becoming
foolish
.
Perhaps
because
her
appearance
was
not
of
a
commercial
cast
,
or
perhaps
because
it
occurred
to
him
that
his
having
taken
her
to
wife
might
expose
his
judgment
to
doubt
in
the
minds
of
customers
,
Mr
Flintwinch
laid
his
commands
upon
her
that
she
should
hold
her
peace
on
the
subject
of
her
conjugal
relations
,
and
should
no
longer
call
him
Jeremiah
out
of
the
domestic
trio
.
Her
frequent
forgetfulness
of
this
admonition
intensified
her
startled
manner
,
since
Mr
Flintwinch
s
habit
of
avenging
himself
on
her
remissness
by
making
springs
after
her
on
the
staircase
,
and
shaking
her
,
occasioned
her
to
be
always
nervously
uncertain
when
she
might
be
thus
waylaid
next
.
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Little
Dorrit
had
finished
a
long
day
s
work
in
Mrs
Clennam
s
room
,
and
was
neatly
gathering
up
her
shreds
and
odds
and
ends
before
going
home
.
Mr
Pancks
,
whom
Affery
had
just
shown
in
,
was
addressing
an
inquiry
to
Mrs
Clennam
on
the
subject
of
her
health
,
coupled
with
the
remark
that
,
happening
to
find
himself
in
that
direction
,
he
had
looked
in
to
inquire
,
on
behalf
of
his
proprietor
,
how
she
found
herself
.
Mrs
Clennam
,
with
a
deep
contraction
of
her
brows
,
was
looking
at
him
.
Mr
Casby
knows
,
said
she
,
that
I
am
not
subject
to
changes
.
The
change
that
I
await
here
is
the
great
change
.
Indeed
,
ma
am
?
returned
Mr
Pancks
,
with
a
wandering
eye
towards
the
figure
of
the
little
seamstress
on
her
knee
picking
threads
and
fraying
of
her
work
from
the
carpet
.
You
look
nicely
,
ma
am
.
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I
bear
what
I
have
to
bear
,
she
answered
.
Do
you
what
you
have
to
do
.
Thank
you
,
ma
am
,
said
Mr
Pancks
,
such
is
my
endeavour
.
You
are
often
in
this
direction
,
are
you
not
?
asked
Mrs
Clennam
.