[Life And Adventures Of Martin Chuzzlewit by Charles Dickens]@TWC D-Link book
Life And Adventures Of Martin Chuzzlewit

CHAPTER NINE
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This came of putting themselves in the humiliating position of seeming to know such bold, audacious, cunning, dreadful girls as that.

They had expected this.

They had predicted it to Mrs Todgers, as she (Todgers) could depone, that very morning.

To this, they added, that the owner of the house, supposing them to be Miss Pinch's friends, had acted, in their opinion, quite correctly, and had done no more than, under such circumstances, might reasonably have been expected.

To that they added (with a trifling inconsistency), that he was a brute and a bear; and then they merged into a flood of tears, which swept away all wandering epithets before it.
Perhaps Miss Pinch was scarcely so much to blame in the matter as the Seraph, who, immediately on the withdrawal of the visitors, had hastened to report them at head-quarters, with a full account of their having presumptuously charged her with the delivery of a message afterwards consigned to the footman; which outrage, taken in conjunction with Mr Pecksniff's unobtrusive remarks on the establishment, might possibly have had some share in their dismissal.


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