[Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray]@TWC D-Link book
Vanity Fair

CHAPTER XIX
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Mrs.Stokes was a communicative person, and quickly told all she knew about Mr.
Sharp; how dissolute and poor he was; how good-natured and amusing; how he was always hunted by bailiffs and duns; how, to the landlady's horror, though she never could abide the woman, he did not marry his wife till a short time before her death; and what a queer little wild vixen his daughter was; how she kept them all laughing with her fun and mimicry; how she used to fetch the gin from the public-house, and was known in all the studios in the quarter--in brief, Mrs.Bute got such a full account of her new niece's parentage, education, and behaviour as would scarcely have pleased Rebecca, had the latter known that such inquiries were being made concerning her.
Of all these industrious researches Miss Crawley had the full benefit.
Mrs.Rawdon Crawley was the daughter of an opera-girl.

She had danced herself.

She had been a model to the painters.

She was brought up as became her mother's daughter.

She drank gin with her father, &c.


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