[David Balfour, Second Part by Robert Louis Stevenson]@TWC D-Link bookDavid Balfour, Second Part CHAPTER XVIII 17/19
If I stand aside when this young maid is in her trial, it's a thing I will be noways advantaged by; I will lose by it, I will never gain.
I would rather make a shipwreck wholly than to build on that foundation." He was a minute serious, then smiled.
"You mind me of the man with the long nose," said he: "was you to look at the moon by a telescope, you would see David Balfour there! But you shall have your way of it.
I will ask at you one service, and then set you free.
My clerks are overdriven; be so good as copy me these few pages," says he, visibly swithering among some huge rolls of manuscripts, "and when that is done, I shall bid you God speed! I would never charge myself with Mr.David's conscience; and if you could cast some part of it (as you went by) in a moss hag, you would find yourself to ride much easier without it." "Perhaps not just entirely in the same direction though, my lord!" says I. "And you shall have the last word, too!" cries he gaily. Indeed he had some cause for gaiety, having now found the means to gain his purpose.
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