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PinkMonkey.com-Nicholas Nickelby by Charles Dickens




904

time. Having settled the question in this way, and being most
complacently satisfied that in this, and in all other instances, her
conjecture could not fail to be the right one, Mrs Nickleby
dismissed it from her thoughts, and inwardly congratulated
herself on being so shrewd and knowing.

Nicholas did not come home nor did Smike reappear; but
neither circumstance, to say the truth, had any great effect upon
the little party, who were all in the best humour possible. Indeed,
there sprung up quite a flirtation between Miss La Creevy and
Tim Linkinwater, who said a thousand jocose and facetious things,
and became, by degrees, quite gallant, not to say tender. Little
Miss La Creevy, on her part, was in high spirits, and rallied Tim
on having remained a bachelor all his life with so much success,
that Tim was actually induced to declare, that if he could get
anybody to have him, he didn’t know but what he might change
his condition even yet. Miss La Creevy earnestly recommended a
lady she knew, who would exactly suit Mr Linkinwater, and had a
very comfortable property of her own; but this latter qualification
had very little effect upon Tim, who manfully protested that
fortune would be no object with him, but that true worth and
cheerfulness of disposition were what a man should look for in a
wife, and that if he had these, he could find money enough for the
moderate wants of both. This avowal was considered so
honourable to Tim, that neither Mrs Nickleby nor Miss La Creevy
could sufficiently extol it; and stimulated by their praises, Tim
launched out into several other declarations also manifesting the
disinterestedness of his heart, and a great devotion to the fair sex:
which were received with no less approbation. This was done and
said with a comical mixture of jest and earnest, and, leading to a


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