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PinkMonkey.com-Nicholas Nickelby by Charles Dickens




1054

assenting verbally to the compliment.

‘Twenty pound ten better,’ repeated Mr Squeers, ‘than you did
that day when I first introduced myself. Don’t you know?’

‘Ah!’ said Peg, shaking her head, ‘but you frightened me that
day.’

‘Did I?’ said Squeers; ‘well, it was rather a startling thing for a
stranger to come and recommend himself by saying that he knew
all about you, and what your name was, and why you were living
so quiet here, and what you had boned, and who you boned it
from, wasn’t it?’

Peg nodded her head in strong assent.
‘But I know everything that happens in that way, you see,’
continued Squeers. ‘Nothing takes place, of that kind, that I an’t
up to entirely. I’m a sort of a lawyer, Slider, of first-rate standing,
and understanding too; I’m the intimate friend and confidential
adwiser of pretty nigh every man, woman, and child that gets
themselves into difficulties by being too nimble with their fingers,
I’m--’

Mr Squeers’s catalogue of his own merits and
accomplishments, which was partly the result of a concerted plan
between himself and Ralph Nickleby, and flowed, in part, from the
black bottle, was here interrupted by Mrs Sliderskew.

‘Ha, ha, ha!’ she cried, folding her arms and wagging her head;
‘and so he wasn’t married after all, wasn’t he. Not married after
all?’

‘No,’ replied Squeers, ‘that he wasn’t!’
‘And a young lover come and carried off the bride, eh?’ said
Peg.

‘From under his very nose,’ replied Squeers; ‘and I’m told the


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