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She
returned
this
fealty
by
causing
it
to
be
understood
that
she
was
even
more
incensed
against
the
felonious
shade
of
the
deceased
than
anybody
else
was
;
thus
,
on
the
whole
,
she
came
out
of
her
furnace
like
a
wise
woman
,
and
did
exceedingly
well
.
Mr
Sparkler
s
lordship
was
fortunately
one
of
those
shelves
on
which
a
gentleman
is
considered
to
be
put
away
for
life
,
unless
there
should
be
reasons
for
hoisting
him
up
with
the
Barnacle
crane
to
a
more
lucrative
height
.
That
patriotic
servant
accordingly
stuck
to
his
colours
(
the
Standard
of
four
Quarterings
)
,
and
was
a
perfect
Nelson
in
respect
of
nailing
them
to
the
mast
.
On
the
profits
of
his
intrepidity
,
Mrs
Sparkler
and
Mrs
Merdle
,
inhabiting
different
floors
of
the
genteel
little
temple
of
inconvenience
to
which
the
smell
of
the
day
before
yesterday
s
soup
and
coach
-
horses
was
as
constant
as
Death
to
man
,
arrayed
themselves
to
fight
it
out
in
the
lists
of
Society
,
sworn
rivals
.
And
Little
Dorrit
,
seeing
all
these
things
as
they
developed
themselves
,
could
not
but
wonder
,
anxiously
,
into
what
back
corner
of
the
genteel
establishment
Fanny
s
children
would
be
poked
by
-
and
-
by
,
and
who
would
take
care
of
those
unborn
little
victims
.
Arthur
being
far
too
ill
to
be
spoken
with
on
subjects
of
emotion
or
anxiety
,
and
his
recovery
greatly
depending
on
the
repose
into
which
his
weakness
could
be
hushed
,
Little
Dorrit
s
sole
reliance
during
this
heavy
period
was
on
Mr
Meagles
.
Отключить рекламу
He
was
still
abroad
;
but
she
had
written
to
him
through
his
daughter
,
immediately
after
first
seeing
Arthur
in
the
Marshalsea
and
since
,
confiding
her
uneasiness
to
him
on
the
points
on
which
she
was
most
anxious
,
but
especially
on
one
.
To
that
one
,
the
continued
absence
of
Mr
Meagles
abroad
,
instead
of
his
comforting
presence
in
the
Marshalsea
,
was
referable
.
Without
disclosing
the
precise
nature
of
the
documents
that
had
fallen
into
Rigaud
s
hands
,
Little
Dorrit
had
confided
the
general
outline
of
that
story
to
Mr
Meagles
,
to
whom
she
had
also
recounted
his
fate
.
The
old
cautious
habits
of
the
scales
and
scoop
at
once
showed
Mr
Meagles
the
importance
of
recovering
the
original
papers
;
wherefore
he
wrote
back
to
Little
Dorrit
,
strongly
confirming
her
in
the
solicitude
she
expressed
on
that
head
,
and
adding
that
he
would
not
come
over
to
England
without
making
some
attempt
to
trace
them
out
.
By
this
time
Mr
Henry
Gowan
had
made
up
his
mind
that
it
would
be
agreeable
to
him
not
to
know
the
Meagleses
.
He
was
so
considerate
as
to
lay
no
injunctions
on
his
wife
in
that
particular
;
but
he
mentioned
to
Mr
Meagles
that
personally
they
did
not
appear
to
him
to
get
on
together
,
and
that
he
thought
it
would
be
a
good
thing
if
politely
,
and
without
any
scene
,
or
anything
of
that
sort
they
agreed
that
they
were
the
best
fellows
in
the
world
,
but
were
best
apart
.
Poor
Mr
Meagles
,
who
was
already
sensible
that
he
did
not
advance
his
daughter
s
happiness
by
being
constantly
slighted
in
her
presence
,
said
Good
,
Henry
!
You
are
my
Pet
s
husband
;
you
have
displaced
me
,
in
the
course
of
nature
;
if
you
wish
it
,
good
!
This
arrangement
involved
the
contingent
advantage
,
which
perhaps
Henry
Gowan
had
not
foreseen
,
that
both
Mr
and
Mrs
Meagles
were
more
liberal
than
before
to
their
daughter
,
when
their
communication
was
only
with
her
and
her
young
child
:
and
that
his
high
spirit
found
itself
better
provided
with
money
,
without
being
under
the
degrading
necessity
of
knowing
whence
it
came
.
Отключить рекламу
Mr
Meagles
,
at
such
a
period
,
naturally
seized
an
occupation
with
great
ardour
.
He
knew
from
his
daughter
the
various
towns
which
Rigaud
had
been
haunting
,
and
the
various
hotels
at
which
he
had
been
living
for
some
time
back
.
The
occupation
he
set
himself
was
to
visit
these
with
all
discretion
and
speed
,
and
,
in
the
event
of
finding
anywhere
that
he
had
left
a
bill
unpaid
,
and
a
box
or
parcel
behind
,
to
pay
such
bill
,
and
bring
away
such
box
or
parcel
.
With
no
other
attendant
than
Mother
,
Mr
Meagles
went
upon
his
pilgrimage
,
and
encountered
a
number
of
adventures
.
Not
the
least
of
his
difficulties
was
,
that
he
never
knew
what
was
said
to
him
,
and
that
he
pursued
his
inquiries
among
people
who
never
knew
what
he
said
to
them
.
Still
,
with
an
unshaken
confidence
that
the
English
tongue
was
somehow
the
mother
tongue
of
the
whole
world
,
only
the
people
were
too
stupid
to
know
it
,
Mr
Meagles
harangued
innkeepers
in
the
most
voluble
manner
,
entered
into
loud
explanations
of
the
most
complicated
sort
,
and
utterly
renounced
replies
in
the
native
language
of
the
respondents
,
on
the
ground
that
they
were
all
bosh
.
Sometimes
interpreters
were
called
in
;
whom
Mr
Meagles
addressed
in
such
idiomatic
terms
of
speech
,
as
instantly
to
extinguish
and
shut
up
which
made
the
matter
worse
.
On
a
balance
of
the
account
,
however
,
it
may
be
doubted
whether
he
lost
much
;
for
,
although
he
found
no
property
,
he
found
so
many
debts
and
various
associations
of
discredit
with
the
proper
name
,
which
was
the
only
word
he
made
intelligible
,
that
he
was
almost
everywhere
overwhelmed
with
injurious
accusations
.
On
no
fewer
than
four
occasions
the
police
were
called
in
to
receive
denunciations
of
Mr
Meagles
as
a
Knight
of
Industry
,
a
good
-
for
-
nothing
,
and
a
thief
,
all
of
which
opprobrious
language
he
bore
with
the
best
temper
(
having
no
idea
what
it
meant
)
,
and
was
in
the
most
ignominious
manner
escorted
to
steam
-
boats
and
public
carriages
,
to
be
got
rid
of
,
talking
all
the
while
,
like
a
cheerful
and
fluent
Briton
as
he
was
,
with
Mother
under
his
arm
.