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PinkMonkey.com-Nicholas Nickelby by Charles Dickens




845

Linkinwater himself, sir!’

Pursuing this encomium upon the poor follower with such
energy and relish as no words can describe, brother Charles leant
back in his chair, and delivered the remainder of his relation with
greater composure.

It was in substance this: That proudly resisting all offers of
permanent aid and support from her late mother’s friends,
because they were made conditional upon her quitting the
wretched man, her father, who had no friends left, and shrinking
with instinctive delicacy from appealing in their behalf to that true
and noble heart which he hated, and had, through its greatest and
purest goodness, deeply wronged by misconstruction and ill
report, this young girl had struggled alone and unassisted to
maintain him by the labour of her hands. That through the utmost
depths of poverty and affliction she had toiled, never turning aside
for an instant from her task, never wearied by the petulant gloom
of a sick man sustained by no consoling recollections of the past or
hopes of the future; never repining for the comforts she had
rejected, or bewailing the hard lot she had voluntarily incurred.
That every little accomplishment she had acquired in happier days
had been put into requisition for this purpose, and directed to this
one end. That for two long years, toiling by day and often too by
night, working at the needle, the pencil, and the pen, and
submitting, as a daily governess, to such caprices and indignities
as women (with daughters too) too often love to inflict upon their
own sex when they serve in such capacities, as though in jealousy
of the superior intelligence which they are necessitated to
employ,--indignities, in ninety-nine cases out of every hundred,
heaped upon persons immeasurably and incalculably their betters,


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