[The Mystery of Edwin Drood by Charles Dickens]@TWC D-Link book
The Mystery of Edwin Drood

CHAPTER V--MR
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It ain't a sort of a--scheme of a--National Education ?' 'I should say not,' replies Jasper.
'I should say not,' assents Durdles; 'then we won't try to give it a name.' 'He still keeps behind us,' repeats Jasper, looking over his shoulder; 'is he to follow us ?' 'We can't help going round by the Travellers' Twopenny, if we go the short way, which is the back way,' Durdles answers, 'and we'll drop him there.' So they go on; Deputy, as a rear rank one, taking open order, and invading the silence of the hour and place by stoning every wall, post, pillar, and other inanimate object, by the deserted way.
'Is there anything new down in the crypt, Durdles ?' asks John Jasper.
'Anything old, I think you mean,' growls Durdles.

'It ain't a spot for novelty.' 'Any new discovery on your part, I meant.' 'There's a old 'un under the seventh pillar on the left as you go down the broken steps of the little underground chapel as formerly was; I make him out (so fur as I've made him out yet) to be one of them old 'uns with a crook.

To judge from the size of the passages in the walls, and of the steps and doors, by which they come and went, them crooks must have been a good deal in the way of the old 'uns! Two on 'em meeting promiscuous must have hitched one another by the mitre pretty often, I should say.' Without any endeavour to correct the literality of this opinion, Jasper surveys his companion--covered from head to foot with old mortar, lime, and stone grit--as though he, Jasper, were getting imbued with a romantic interest in his weird life.
'Yours is a curious existence.' Without furnishing the least clue to the question, whether he receives this as a compliment or as quite the reverse, Durdles gruffly answers: 'Yours is another.' 'Well! inasmuch as my lot is cast in the same old earthy, chilly, never-changing place, Yes.

But there is much more mystery and interest in your connection with the Cathedral than in mine.

Indeed, I am beginning to have some idea of asking you to take me on as a sort of student, or free 'prentice, under you, and to let me go about with you sometimes, and see some of these odd nooks in which you pass your days.' The Stony One replies, in a general way, 'All right.


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