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PinkMonkey.com-Nicholas Nickelby by Charles Dickens




385

in Sloane Street, but not of it. The people in Cadogan Place look
down upon Sloane Street, and think Brompton low. They affect
fashion too, and wonder where the New Road is. Not that they
claim to be on precisely the same footing as the high folks of
Belgrave Square and Grosvenor Place, but that they stand, with
reference to them, rather in the light of those illegitimate children
of the great who are content to boast of their connections,
although their connections disavow them. Wearing as much as
they can of the airs and semblances of loftiest rank, the people of
Cadogan Place have the realities of middle station. It is the
conductor which communicates to the inhabitants of regions
beyond its limit, the shock of pride of birth and rank, which it has
not within itself, but derives from a fountain-head beyond; or, like
the ligament which unites the Siamese twins, it contains
something of the life and essence of two distinct bodies, and yet
belongs to neither.

Upon this doubtful ground, lived Mrs Wititterly, and at Mrs
Wititterly’s door Kate Nickleby knocked with trembling hand. The
door was opened by a big footman with his head floured, or
chalked, or painted in some way (it didn’t look genuine powder),
and the big footman, receiving the card of introduction, gave it to a
little page; so little, indeed, that his body would not hold, in
ordinary array, the number of small buttons which are
indispensable to a page’s costume, and they were consequently
obliged to be stuck on four abreast. This young gentleman took the
card upstairs on a salver, and pending his return, Kate and her
mother were shown into a dining-room of rather dirty and shabby
aspect, and so comfortably arranged as to be adapted to almost
any purpose rather than eating and drinking.


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