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--- a/43207.txt
+++ b/43207-0.txt
@@ -1,45 +1,4 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Scenes and Characters from the Works of
-Charles Dickens, by Charles Dickens
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Scenes and Characters from the Works of Charles Dickens
- Being Eight Hundred and Sixty-six Pictures Printed From
- the Original Wood Blocks
-
-Author: Charles Dickens
-
-Illustrator: Various Artists
-
-Release Date: July 13, 2013 [EBook #43207]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCENES, CHARACTERS FROM DICKENS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Emmy and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43207 ***
[Illustration]
@@ -2657,7 +2616,7 @@ REMARKABLE GOBLIN SHADOW ON THE WALL--Book 3, chap. x.]
[Illustration: TWICE HE PUT HIS HAND TO THE WOUND IN HIS BREAST, AND
WITH HIS FOREFINGER DREW A CROSS IN THE AIR--Book 3, chap. x.]
-[Illustration: THE TRIAL OF EVREMONDE--Book 3, chap. ix.]
+[Illustration: THE TRIAL OF EVRÉMONDE--Book 3, chap. ix.]
[Illustration: AS HE WAS DRAWN AWAY, HIS WIFE RELEASED HIM, AND STOOD
LOOKING AFTER HIM WITH HER HANDS TOUCHING ONE ANOTHER IN THE ATTITUDE OF
@@ -3365,361 +3324,4 @@ Page 545, "i" changed to "I" (if I gave it you)
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Scenes and Characters from the Works
of Charles Dickens, by Charles Dickens
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCENES, CHARACTERS FROM DICKENS ***
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-***** This file should be named 43207.txt or 43207.zip *****
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43207 ***
diff --git a/43207-8.txt b/43207-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 6897f8b..0000000
--- a/43207-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3725 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Scenes and Characters from the Works of
-Charles Dickens, by Charles Dickens
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Scenes and Characters from the Works of Charles Dickens
- Being Eight Hundred and Sixty-six Pictures Printed From
- the Original Wood Blocks
-
-Author: Charles Dickens
-
-Illustrator: Various Artists
-
-Release Date: July 13, 2013 [EBook #43207]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCENES, CHARACTERS FROM DICKENS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Emmy and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-SCENES AND CHARACTERS
-
-
-FROM THE WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS
-
- BEING EIGHT HUNDRED AND SIXTY-SIX
- PICTURES PRINTED FROM THE ORIGINAL
- WOOD BLOCKS
-
-
-
-
-
-SCENES AND CHARACTERS FROM THE WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS
-
-BEING EIGHT HUNDRED AND SIXTY-SIX DRAWINGS BY
-
- FRED BARNARD
- HABLOT K. BROWNE (PHIZ)
- J. MAHONEY
- CHARLES GREEN
- A. B. FROST
- GORDON THOMSON
- J. McL. RALSTON
- H. FRENCH
- E. G. DALZIEL
- F. A. FRASER
- AND SIR LUKE FILDES
-
-PRINTED FROM THE ORIGINAL WOODBLOCKS
-
-ENGRAVED FOR "THE HOUSEHOLD EDITION"
-
-THE MUSSON BOOK CO. LIMITED
-
- LONDON ENGLAND
- TORONTO CANADA
-
-
-
-
- Printed by BALLANTYNE & CO. LIMITED
- Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, London
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF WORKS AND ARTISTS
-
-
- TITLE DESIGN _By Gordon Thomson_
-
- SKETCHES BY BOZ 34 _Illustrations by Fred Barnard_
-
- THE PICKWICK PAPERS 57 " " _Phiz_
-
- OLIVER TWIST 28 " " _J. Mahoney_
-
- NICHOLAS NICKLEBY 59 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- MASTER HUMPHREY'S CLOCK AND
- OTHER STORIES 9 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP 39 " " _Charles Green_
-
- BARNABY RUDGE 46 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- AMERICAN NOTES 10 " " _A. B. Frost_
-
- MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT 59 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- CHRISTMAS BOOKS 28 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- PICTURES FROM ITALY 8 " " _Gordon Thomson_
-
- DOMBEY AND SON 62 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- DAVID COPPERFIELD 61 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- A CHILD'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND 15 " " _J. McL. Ralston_
-
- BLEAK HOUSE 61 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- HARD TIMES 20 " " _H. French_
-
- LITTLE DORRIT 58 " " _J. Mahoney_
-
- REPRINTED PIECES 9 " " _E. G. Dalziel_
-
- A TALE OF TWO CITIES 25 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
- UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER 26 " " _E. G. Dalziel_
-
- GREAT EXPECTATIONS 30 " " _F. A. Frazer_
-
- OUR MUTUAL FRIEND 58 " " _J. Mahoney_
-
- CHRISTMAS STORIES 23 " " _E. G. Dalziel_
-
- EDWIN DROOD 12 " " _Luke Fildes_
-
- LIFE OF DICKENS 28 " " _Fred Barnard_
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTORY NOTE
-
-
-THERE is one question upon which the critics and lovers of Dickens seem
-never able to get into agreement, and that is the question of the
-original illustrations to his works. To the thorough-going enthusiast
-Phiz and Dickens seem inseparable, and no edition which does not contain
-the old, familiar grotesques of Hablot Browne's imagination, or, in the
-earlier volume, the equally abnormal lineaments portrayed by Cruikshank
-or Seymour, would be deemed worthy of a place upon his bookshelf. But a
-younger generation is growing up, for whom the time-honoured pictures
-have not the charm of long association, and among them it is common to
-hear the complaint that the natural humour and pathos of the author's
-best works are spoiled to modern fancy by the violent caricatures of the
-illustrator. "Let us abolish these pictures altogether," they say: "and
-illustrate the books with pretty conventionalities by more fashionable
-artists." At the opposite pole stands yet another group of critics--the
-"Superior People" who have made up their minds that Dickens himself was
-a caricaturist, and that therefore the early illustrations, even if they
-do a little emphasise his exaggerations, are only conceived in fitting
-harmony with a world of fancy which drowns itself in excesses of the
-grotesque. Among so many doctors, and all so emphatic, who shall decide?
-It is, at any rate, no easy task.
-
-It happens, however, that there does exist a series of Dickens
-illustrations, now in some danger of being unduly neglected, in which
-the artists were wonderfully happy in preserving the original features
-of Phiz and Cruikshank's interpretations, while they toned down the more
-extravagant details and brought imagination into closer harmony with
-reality. These were the illustrations to the square-shaped "Household
-Edition," published in 1870, just after the great novelist's death--and
-now reissued in this Dickens picture-book, in the hope that those who
-love the stories may like to possess in separate form what is, perhaps,
-the best pictorial accompaniment that the novels ever received. At the
-time of its first publication, the "Household Edition" enjoyed an
-enormous success. At the moment the name of Dickens was on every one's
-lips, and the fact that this splendidly illustrated reprint was issued
-in penny numbers and sixpenny parts placed it within reach of even the
-most humbly stocked purse. Its sale was stupendous, and the familiar
-green-covered pamphlets percolated through every town and village where
-the English tongue is spoken. The original copies may still be met with,
-under many a country timbered roof, carefully treasured as one of the
-most cherished household possessions.
-
-Undoubtedly, a great part of the success was due to the art of the
-illustrators. To begin with, there was an unusually liberal display of
-pictures--the edition, as a whole, containing close upon nine hundred.
-But more important than the number were the truth and sincerity of the
-interpretations--qualities which helped to give a new life to characters
-already secure of immortality. First and foremost, of course, the
-edition will always be associated with the memory of Fred Barnard, whose
-pictures are the outstanding feature of the present volume. Barnard
-seemed destined by nature to illustrate Dickens; the spirit of "Boz" ran
-again in his veins. And nothing in his work is more impressively
-ingenious than the skill with which he took the types already created by
-his predecessors, preserved their characteristics, so that each was
-unmistakably himself, and yet by the illuminating touch of genius
-transferred them every one from the realm of caricature to that of
-portraiture. Not far inferior to him was that admirable draughtsman,
-Charles Green, who exactly adopted Barnard's attitude to the originals.
-The reader who will compare Green's illustrations to "The Old Curiosity
-Shop" with Phiz's, will scarcely fail to notice with interest how often
-Green has chosen the same subject as his predecessor, and all but
-treated it in the same manner, save that a twisted grotesque suddenly
-becomes, under the magic of his wand, a natural human being. His picture
-of Sally Brass and the Marchioness is a remarkable instance in point:
-but there are many others equally eloquent of his sympathetic and
-interpretative method. Nor should the work of Mahony, A. B. Frost,
-Gordon Thomson and others be forgotten, for each in his own way has
-helped to make this volume, what its publishers confidently claim it to
-be, a collection of Dickens pictures unrivalled for humour, pathos,
-character, and interpretative skill. In the certainty that such a
-gallery of good work can hardly fail to find appreciators, the volume is
-now offered to all lovers of the most widely popular author of the
-Victorian Era.
-
-
-
-
-
-SKETCHES BY BOZ
-
-ILLUSTRATIVE OF EVERY-DAY LIFE AND EVERY-DAY PEOPLE.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THIRTY-FOUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-BY FRED BARNARD
-
-[Illustration: THE HALF-PAY CAPTAIN COMPLETELY EFFACED THE OLD LADY'S
-NAME FROM THE BRASS DOOR-PLATE IN HIS ATTEMPTS TO POLISH IT WITH
-AQUA-FORTIS--_Our Parish_, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHY THE DEVIL AIN'T YOU LOOKING AFTER THAT PLATE?"--_Our
-Parish_, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN HE FIRST CAME TO LOOK AT THE LODGINGS, HE INQUIRED
-MOST PARTICULARLY WHETHER HE WAS SURE TO BE ABLE TO GET A SEAT IN THE
-PARISH CHURCH--_Our Parish_, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT IS NEARLY ELEVEN O'CLOCK, AND THE COLD THIN RAIN,
-WHICH HAS BEEN DRIZZLING SO LONG, IS BEGINNING TO POUR DOWN IN GOOD
-EARNEST"--_Scenes_, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE GRAVESEND BOAT.--_Scenes_, chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: DIFFERENT WOMEN OF THE HOUSE GOSSIPING ON THE STEPS ...
-THE NATIVE DIALLERS--_Scenes_, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS A WEDDING PARTY AND SKETCHED FROM ONE OF THE
-INTERIOR STREETS NEAR FITZROY SQUARE--_Scenes_, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE GENTLEMAN DESCRIBED LOOKS EXTREMELY FOOLISH, AND
-SQUEEZES HER HAND, AND FEES THE GIPSY LIBERALLY--_Scenes_, chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I MAY AS WELL GET BOARD, LODGIN', AND WASHIN' TILL THEN,
-OUT OF THE COUNTRY, AS PAY FOR IT MYSELF; CONSEQUENTLY HERE
-GOES"--_Scenes_, chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "HIS LINE IS GENTEEL COMEDY--HIS FATHER'S COAL AND
-POTATO. HE DOES ALFRED HIGHFLIER IN THE LAST PIECE, AND VERY WELL HE'LL
-DO IT--AT THE PRICE."--_Scenes_, chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: TUREENS OF SOUP ARE EMPTIED WITH AWFUL
-RAPIDITY--_Scenes_, chap. x. 19]
-
-[Illustration: A GIN-SHOP--_Scenes_, chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE PAWNBROKER'S SHOP--_Scenes_, chap. xxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: CHILDREN WERE PLAYING ON THE GRASS; GROUPS ... CHATTING
-AND LAUGHING; BUT THE MAN WALKED STEADILY UP AND DOWN, UNHEEDING AND
-UNHEEDED--_Characters_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY THAT, SCOUNDREL?" EXCLAIMED MR.
-SAMUEL WILKINS.... "WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH YOU, YOU LITTLE HUMBUG?"
-REPLIED WHISKERS--_Characters_, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE PRISONERS' VAN--_Characters_, chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: HURRYING ALONG A BY-STREET, KEEPING AS CLOSE AS HE CAN TO
-THE AREA RAILINGS, A MAN OF ABOUT FORTY OR FIFTY, CLAD IN AN OLD RUSTY
-SUIT OF THREADBARE BLACK CLOTH--_Characters_, chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: "I RECEIVED A NOTE"--HE SAID TREMULOUSLY, IN A VOICE LIKE
-A PUNCH WITH A COLD--"YES," RETURNED THE OTHER, "YOU DID,"--"EXACTLY,"--
-"YES"--_Tales_, Chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "NO WHAT?" INQUIRED MRS. BLOSS WITH A LOOK OF THE MOST
-INDESCRIBABLE ALARM "NO STOMACH," REPEATED MRS. TIBBS WITH A SHAKE OF
-THE HEAD--_Tales_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: THE DEAR LITTLE FELLOW, HAVING RECOVERED HIS ANIMAL
-SPIRITS, WAS STANDING UPON HER SOFT TENDER FOOT--_Tales_, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "SO EXACTLY THE AIR OF THE MARQUIS," SAID THE MILITARY
-GENTLEMAN--_Tales_, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "HOW DELIGHTFUL, HOW REFRESHING IT IS, TO RETIRE FROM THE
-CLOUDY STORMS, THE VICISSITUDES, AND THE TROUBLES OF LIFE, EVEN IF IT BE
-BUT FOR A FEW FLEETING MOMENTS."--_Tales_, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHO WAS HE?" INQUIRED THE SURGEON. "MY SON!" REJOINED
-THE WOMAN; AND FELL SENSELESS AT HIS FEET--_Tales_, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE FACETIOUS HARDY, IN FULFILMENT OF HIS PROMISE, HAD
-WATCHED THE CHILD TO A REMOTE PART OF THE VESSEL, AND, SUDDENLY
-APPEARING BEFORE HIM WITH THE MOST AWFUL CONTORTIONS OF VISAGE, HAD
-PRODUCED HIS PAROXYSMS OF TERROR--_Tales_, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: ONE GENTLEMAN WAS OBSERVED SUDDENLY TO RUSH FROM TABLE
-WITHOUT THE SLIGHTEST OSTENSIBLE REASON, AND DART UP THE STEPS WITH
-INCREDIBLE SWIFTNESS, THEREBY GREATLY DAMAGING BOTH HIMSELF AND THE
-STEWARD, WHO HAPPENED TO BE COMING DOWN AT THE SAME MOMENT--_Tales_,
-chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "LEAVE THAT 'ERE BELL ALONE, YOU WRETCHED LOO-NATTIC!"
-SAID THE BOOTS, SUDDENLY FORCING THE UNFORTUNATE TROTT BACK INTO HIS
-CHAIR, AND BRANDISHING THE STICK ALOFT--_Tales_, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE BLACK VEIL--_Tales_, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHY," REPLIED MR. WALKINS TOTTLE EVASIVELY; FOR HE
-TREMBLED VIOLENTLY, AND FELT A SUDDEN TINGLING THROUGHOUT HIS WHOLE
-FRAME; "WHY--I SHOULD CERTAINLY--AT LEAST, I _think_ I SHOULD
-LIKE----"--_Tales_, chap. x. 1]
-
-[Illustration: MR. NICODEMUS DUMPS ... CROSS, CADAVEROUS, ODD AND
-ILL-NATURED--_Tales_, chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: "I'VE BROUGHT THIS HERE NOTE," REPLIED THE INDIVIDUAL IN
-THE PAINTED TOPS IN A HOARSE WHISPER; "I'VE BROUGHT THIS HERE NOTE FROM
-A GEN'L'M'N AS COME TO OUR HOUSE THIS MORNIN'."--_Tales_, Chap. x. 2]
-
-[Illustration: HE RAISED HIS MANACLED HANDS IN A THREATENING ATTITUDE,
-FIXED HIS EYES ON HIS SHRINKING PARENT AND SLOWLY LEFT THE
-ROOM--_Tales_, chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: LOOKS THAT HE HAD LONG FORGOTTEN WERE FIXED UPON HIM ONCE
-MORE; VOICES LONG SINCE HUSHED IN DEATH SOUNDED IN HIS EARS LIKE THE
-MUSIC OF VILLAGE BELLS--_Tales_, chap. xii.]
-
-
-[Illustration: THE BODY WAS WASHED ASHORE, SOME MILES DOWN THE RIVER, A
-SWOLLEN DISFIGURED MASS--_Tales_, chap. xii.]
-
-
-
-
-THE POSTHUMOUS PAPERS OF THE PICKWICK CLUB
-
-[Illustration]
-
-FIFTY-SEVEN ILLUSTRATIONS BY PHIZ
-
-
-[Illustration: "COME ON," SAID THE CAB-DRIVER, SPARRING AWAY LIKE
-CLOCKWORK. "COME ON--ALL FOUR ON YOU"--Chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT! INTRODUCING HIS FRIEND!"--Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. SNODGRASS AND MR. WINKLE HAD EACH PERFORMED A
-COMPULSORY SUMMERSET WITH REMARKABLE AGILITY--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE HORSE NO SOONER BEHELD MR. PICKWICK ADVANCING WITH
-THE CHAISE WHIP IN HIS HAND--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: THERE WAS A SCREAM AS OF AN INDIVIDUAL--NOT A ROOK--IN
-CORPOREAL ANGUISH. MR. TUPMAN HAD SAVED THE LIVES OF INNUMERABLE
-UNOFFENDING BIRDS BY RECEIVING A PORTION OF THE CHARGE IN HIS LEFT
-ARM--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. WARDLE LOOKED ON, IN SILENT WONDER--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: OLD MR. WARDLE, WITH A HIGHLY-INFLAMED COUNTENANCE, WAS
-GRASPING THE HAND OF A STRANGE GENTLEMAN--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. TUPMAN LOOKED ROUND. THERE WAS THE FAT BOY--Chap.
-viii.]
-
-[Illustration: SAM STOLE A LOOK AT THE INQUIRER--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: "GOD BLESS ME, WHAT'S THE MATTER"--Chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: "TAKE THIS LITTLE VILLAIN AWAY," SAID THE AGONISED MR.
-PICKWICK--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "HE HAS COME OUT," SAID LITTLE MR. PERKER, GREATLY
-EXCITED; THE MORE SO AS THEIR POSITION DID NOT ENABLE THEM TO SEE WHAT
-WAS GOING FORWARD--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE CHAIR WAS AN UGLY OLD GENTLEMAN; AND WHAT WAS MORE,
-HE WAS WINKING AT TOM SMART--Chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "PERMIT ME TO INTRODUCE MY FRIENDS--MR. TUPMAN--MR.
-WINKLE--MR. SNODGRASS"--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE HEROIC MAN ACTUALLY THREW HIMSELF INTO A PARALYTIC
-ATTITUDE, CONFIDENTLY SUPPOSED BY THE TWO BYSTANDERS TO HAVE BEEN
-INTENDED AS A POSTURE OF SELF-DEFENCE--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. WELLER WAS DISPELLING ALL THE FEVERISH REMAINS OF THE
-PREVIOUS EVENING'S CONVIVIALITY, ... WHEN HE WAS ATTRACTED BY THE
-APPEARANCE OF A YOUNG FELLOW IN MULBERRY-COLOURED LIVERY--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE DOOR WAS JUST GOING TO BE CLOSED IN CONSEQUENCE, WHEN
-AN INQUISITIVE BOARDER, WHO HAD BEEN PEEPING BETWEEN THE HINGES, SET UP
-A FEARFUL SCREAMING--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: OLD LOBBS GAVE IT ONE TUG, AND OPEN IT FLEW, DISCLOSING
-NATHANIEL PIPKIN STANDING BOLT UPRIGHT INSIDE, AND SHAKING WITH
-APPREHENSION FROM HEAD TO FOOT--Chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHO ARE YOU, YOU RASCAL?" SAID THE CAPTAIN,
-ADMINISTERING SEVERAL POKES TO MR. PICKWICK'S BODY WITH THE THICK STICK.
-"WHAT'S YOUR NAME?"--Chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU JUST COME AWAY," SAID MR. WELLER. "BATTLEDORE AND
-SHUTTLECOCK'S A WERY GOOD GAME, WHEN YOU AN'T THE SHUTTLECOCK AND TWO
-LAWYERS THE BATTLEDORES"--Chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: "HEYLING!" SAID THE OLD MAN WILDLY. "MY BOY, HEYLING, MY
-DEAR BOY, LOOK, LOOK!" GASPING FOR BREATH, THE MISERABLE FATHER POINTED
-TO THE SPOT WHERE THE YOUNG MAN WAS STRUGGLING FOR LIFE--Chap. xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: STANDING BEFORE THE DRESSING-GLASS WAS A MIDDLE-AGED LADY
-IN YELLOW CURL-PAPERS, BUSILY ENGAGED IN BRUSHING WHAT LADIES CALL THEIR
-"BACK HAIR"--Chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. PICKWICK NO SOONER PUT ON HIS SPECTACLES, THAN HE AT
-ONCE RECOGNISED IN THE FUTURE MRS. MAGNUS THE LADY INTO WHOSE ROOM HE
-HAD SO UNWARRANTABLY INTRUDED ON THE PREVIOUS NIGHT--Chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: A COMPLIMENT WHICH MR. WELLER RETURNED BY KNOCKING HIM
-DOWN OUT OF HAND: HAVING PREVIOUSLY, WITH THE UTMOST CONSIDERATION,
-KNOCKED DOWN A CHAIRMAN FOR HIM TO LIE UPON--Chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE KITCHEN DOOR OPENED, AND IN WALKED MR. JOE
-TROTTER--Chap. xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: SAM LOOKED AT THE FAT BOY WITH GREAT ASTONISHMENT, BUT
-WITHOUT SAYING A WORD--Chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: BEFORE MR. PICKWICK DISTINCTLY KNEW WHAT WAS THE MATTER,
-HE WAS SURROUNDED BY THE WHOLE BODY, AND KISSED BY EVERY ONE OF
-THEM--Chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: SEATED ON AN UPRIGHT TOMBSTONE, CLOSE TO HIM, WAS A
-STRANGE UNEARTHLY FIGURE--Chap. xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. PICKWICK .... WENT SLOWLY AND GRAVELY DOWN THE SLIDE,
-WITH HIS FEET ABOUT A YARD AND A QUARTER APART, AMIDST THE GRATIFIED
-SHOUTS OF ALL THE SPECTATORS--Chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: A LITTLE FIERCE WOMAN BOUNCED INTO THE ROOM, ALL IN A
-TREMBLE WITH PASSION, AND PALE WITH RAGE--Chap. xxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: WITH A COUNTENANCE GREATLY MOLLIFIED BY THE SOFTENING
-INFLUENCE OF TOBACCO, REQUESTED HIM TO "FIRE AWAY"--Chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: BEFORE SAM COULD INTERFERE TO PREVENT IT, HIS HEROIC
-PARENT HAD PENETRATED INTO A REMOTE CORNER OF THE ROOM, AND ATTACKED THE
-REVEREND MR. STIGGINS WITH MANUAL DEXTERITY--Chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: AN ADMONITORY GESTURE FROM PERKER RESTRAINED HIM, AND HE
-LISTENED TO THE LEARNED GENTLEMAN'S CONTINUATION WITH A LOOK OF
-INDIGNATION--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: POOR MR. PICKWICK! HE HAD NEVER PLAYED WITH THREE
-THOROUGH-PACED FEMALE CARD-PLAYERS BEFORE--Chap. xxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: HE NO SOONER HEARD THE HORRIBLE THREAT OF THE VALOROUS
-DOWLER, THAN HE BOUNCED OUT OF THE SEDAN--Chap. xxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. TUCKLE, DRESSED OUT WITH THE COCKED-HAT AND STICK,
-DANCED THE FROG HORNPIPE AMONG THE SHELLS ON THE TABLE--Chap. xxxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR BOB SAWYER'S BOY ... PEEPED THROUGH THE GLASS DOOR,
-AND THUS LISTENED AND LOOKED ON AT THE SAME TIME--Chap. xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "UNLOCK THAT DOOR, AND LEAVE THIS ROOM IMMEDIATELY, SIR,"
-SAID MR. WINKLE--Chap. xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "MY DEAR," SAID MR. PICKWICK, LOOKING OVER THE WALL, AND
-CATCHING SIGHT OF ARABELLA ON THE OTHER SIDE. "DON'T BE FRIGHTENED, MY
-DEAR, 'TIS ONLY ME"--Chap. xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. PICKWICK SITTING FOR HIS PORTRAIT--Chap. xl.]
-
-[Illustration: LETTING HIS HAT FALL ON THE FLOOR, HE STOOD PERFECTLY
-FIXED AND IMMOVABLE WITH ASTONISHMENT--Chap. xlii.]
-
-[Illustration: WITH THIS, THE SPEAKER SNATCHED THAT ARTICLE OF DRESS
-FROM MR. PICKWICK'S HEAD--Chap. xli.]
-
-[Illustration: SAM, HAVING BEEN FORMALLY INTRODUCED .... AS THE
-OFFSPRING OF MR. WELLER, OF THE BELLE SAVAGE, WAS TREATED WITH MARKED
-DISTINCTION--Chap. xliii.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO YOU ALWAYS SMOKE ARTER YOU GOES TO BED, OLD COCK?"
-INQUIRED MR. WELLER OF HIS LANDLORD, WHEN THEY HAD BOTH RETIRED FOR THE
-NIGHT--Chap. xliv.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. STIGGINS, GETTING ON HIS LEGS AS WELL AS HE COULD,
-PROCEEDED TO DELIVER AN EDIFYING DISCOURSE FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE
-COMPANY--Chap. xlv.]
-
-[Illustration: MRS. BARDELL SCREAMED VIOLENTLY; TOMMY ROARED; MRS.
-CLUFFINK SHRUNK WITHIN HERSELF AND MRS. SANDERS MADE OFF WITHOUT MORE
-ADO--Chap. xlvi.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. PICKWICK COULD SCARCELY BELIEVE THE EVIDENCE OF HIS
-OWN SENSES--Chap. xlvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THESE ATTENTIONS WERE DIRECTED, NOT TOWARDS HIM, BUT TO A
-YOUNG LADY WHO JUST THEN APPEARED AT THE FOOT OF THE STEPS--Chap. xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. BOB SAWYER WAS SEATED: NOT IN THE DICKEY, BUT ON THE
-ROOF OF THE CHAISE--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: SNATCHING UP A MEAL-SACK, EFFECTUALLY STOPPED THE
-CONFLICT BY DRAWING IT OVER THE HEAD AND SHOULDERS OF THE MIGHTY
-POTT--Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: SUDDENLY AWARE THAT HE WAS IN THE PRESENCE OF A STRANGER,
-MR. BEN ALLEN ADVANCED--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS A STILL MORE EXCITING SPECTACLE TO BEHOLD MR.
-WELLER .... IMMERSING MR. STIGGINS'S HEAD IN A HORSE-TROUGH FULL OF
-WATER, AND HOLDING IT THERE UNTIL HE WAS HALF SUFFOCATED--Chap. lii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I SAY INSOLENT FAMILIARITY, SIR," SAID MR. PICKWICK,
-TURNING UPON FOGG WITH A FIERCENESS OF GESTURE WHICH CAUSED THAT PERSON
-TO RETREAT TOWARDS THE DOOR WITH GREAT EXPEDITION--Chap. liii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I SAY, HOW NICE YOU LOOK!"--Chap. liv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE MOTTLED-FACED GENTLEMAN REVIEWED THE COMPANY, AND
-SLOWLY LIFTED HIS HAND--Chap. lv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE WORDS WERE SCARCELY OUT OF THE OLD GENTLEMAN'S LIPS,
-WHEN FOOTSTEPS WERE HEARD ASCENDING THE STAIRS--Chap. lvi.]
-
-
-
-
- THE ADVENTURES OF
- OLIVER TWIST
-
- [Illustration]
-
- TWENTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS
- BY J. MAHONEY
-
-[Illustration: OLIVER ASKS FOR MORE--Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "LIBERAL TERMS, MR. SOWERBERRY, LIBERAL TERMS!"--Chap.
-iv.]
-
-[Illustration: OLIVER RATHER ASTONISHES NOAH--Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: "HULLO, MY COVEY! WHAT'S THE ROW?"--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: "STOP THIEF!"--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT'S BECOME OF THE BOY?"--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU ARE ON THE SCENT, ARE YOU, NANCY?"--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: "A BEADLE! A PARISH BEADLE, OR I'LL EAT MY HEAD"--Chap.
-xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE BOY WAS LYING FAST ASLEEP, ON A RUDE BED UPON THE
-FLOOR--Chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: SIKES, WITH OLIVER'S HANDS STILL IN HIS, SOFTLY
-APPROACHED THE LOW PORCH--Chap. xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "DIRECTLY I LEAVE GO OF YOU, DO YOUR WORK. HARK!"--Chap.
-xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "FAGIN!" WHISPERED A VOICE CLOSE TO HIS EAR--Chap.
-xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "DON'T SIGH, MRS. CORNEY," SAID MR. BUMBLE--Chap. xxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "JUST SEND SOMEBODY OUT TO RELIEVE MY MATE, WILL YOU,
-YOUNG MAN?"--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN IT BECAME QUITE DARK, AND THEY RETURNED HOME, THE
-YOUNG LADY WOULD SIT DOWN TO THE PIANO, AND PLAY SOME PLEASANT
-AIR--Chap. xxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: LOOKING ROUND, HE SAW THAT IT WAS A POST-CHAISE, DRIVEN
-AT GREAT SPEED--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: A "FEW--A VERY FEW--WILL SUFFICE, ROSE," SAID THE YOUNG
-MAN, DRAWING HIS CHAIR TOWARDS HER--Chap. xxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "WERE YOU LOOKING FOR ME," HE SAID, "WHEN YOU PEERED IN
-AT THE WINDOW?"--Chap. xxxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE EVIDENCE DESTROYED--Chap. xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: THEN, STOOPING SOFTLY OVER THE BED, SHE KISSED THE
-ROBBER'S LIPS--Chap. xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: "LOOK THERE! THOSE ARE THE LIGHTS OF LONDON"--Chap.
-xlii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT IS THIS?" INQUIRED ONE OF THE MAGISTRATES. "A
-PICK-POCKETING CASE, YOUR WORSHIP"--Chap. xliii.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN SHE WAS ABOUT THE SAME DISTANCE IN ADVANCE AS SHE
-HAD BEEN BEFORE, HE SLIPPED QUIETLY DOWN, AND FOLLOWED HER AGAIN--Chap.
-xlvi.]
-
-[Illustration: HE MOVED, BACKWARD, TOWARDS THE DOOR: DRAGGED THE DOG
-WITH HIM--Chap. xlviii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND CREEPING OVER THE TILES, LOOKED OVER THE LOW
-PARAPET--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO YOU KNOW THE YOUNG LADY, SIR?"--Chap. li.]
-
-[Illustration: HE SAT DOWN ON THE STONE BENCH OPPOSITE THE DOOR--Chap.
-lvi.]
-
-
-
-
-THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF NICHOLAS NICKLEBY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-FIFTY-NINE ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-
-[Illustration: RALPH NICKLEBY AND NEWMAN NOGGS--Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE UNCLE AND NEPHEW LOOKED AT EACH OTHER FOR SOME
-SECONDS WITHOUT SPEAKING--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SCHOOLMASTER AND HIS COMPANION LOOKED STEADILY AT
-EACH OTHER FOR A FEW SECONDS, AND THEN EXCHANGED A VERY MEANING
-SMILE--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "SNUBS AND ROMANS ARE PLENTIFUL ENOUGH, AND THERE ARE
-FLATS OF ALL SORTS AND SIZES WHEN THERE'S A MEETING AT EXETER
-HALL"--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "VERY GLAD TO MAKE YOUR ACQUAINTANCE, MISS," SAID
-SQUEERS, RAISING HIS HAT AN INCH OR TWO--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: ON THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE FIRE, THERE SAT WITH FOLDED
-ARMS A WRINKLING HIDEOUS FIGURE--Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE FIRST CLASS ENGLISH SPELLING AND PHILOSOPHY--Chap.
-viii.]
-
-[Illustration: "PAIN AND FEAR, PAIN AND FEAR FOR ME, ALIVE OR DEAD. NO
-HOPE, NO HOPE!"--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: KATE WALKED SADLY BACK TO THEIR LODGINGS IN THE
-STRAND--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH! AS SOFT AS POSSIBLE, IF YOU PLEASE"--Chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "WRETCH," REJOINED NICHOLAS FIERCELY, "TOUCH HIM AT YOUR
-PERIL! I WILL NOT STAND BY, AND SEE IT DONE. MY BLOOD IS UP, AND I HAVE
-THE STRENGTH OF TEN SUCH MEN AS YOU"--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I CAN--NOT HELP IT, AND IT DON'T SIGNIFY," SOBBED MRS.
-KENWIGS. "OH! THEY'RE TOO BEAUTIFUL TO LIVE, MUCH TOO BEAUTIFUL!"--Chap.
-xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: THERE CAME INTO THE OFFICE AN APPLICANT IN WHOSE FAVOUR
-HE IMMEDIATELY RETIRED, AND WHOSE APPEARANCE BOTH SURPRISED AND
-INTERESTED HIM--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "I DON'T FORGET YOU, MY SOUL, AND NEVER SHALL, AND NEVER
-CAN," SAID MANTALINI, KISSING HIS WIFE'S HAND AND GRIMACING ASIDE TO
-MISS NICKLEBY, WHO TURNED AWAY--Chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "A MISERABLE WRETCH," EXCLAIMED MR. KNAG, STRIKING HIS
-FOREHEAD. "A MISERABLE WRETCH"--Chap. xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I AM AFRAID YOU HAVE BEEN GIVING HER SOME OF YOUR WICKED
-LOOKS, MY LORD," SAID THE INTENDED--Chap. xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: BUT THE YOUNG LADY MAKING A VIOLENT EFFORT TO DISENGAGE
-HERSELF, HE LOST HIS BALANCE, AND MEASURED HIS LENGTH UPON THE
-GROUND--Chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: THE DRESSING-ROOM DOOR BEING HASTILY FLUNG OPEN, MR.
-MANTALINI WAS DISCLOSED TO VIEW, WITH HIS SHIRT COLLAR SYMMETRICALLY
-THROWN BACK: PUTTING A FINE EDGE TO A BREAKFAST KNIFE BY MEANS OF HIS
-RAZOR STROP--Chap. xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU CAN JUST GIVE HIM THAT ERE CARD, AND TELL HIM IF HE
-WANTS TO SPEAK TO ME, AND SAVE TROUBLE, HERE I AM, THAT'S ALL"--Chap.
-xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. CRUMMLES LOOKED, FROM TIME TO TIME, WITH GREAT
-INTEREST AT SMIKE, WITH WHOM HE HAD APPEARED CONSIDERABLY STRUCK FROM
-THE FIRST. HE HAD NOW FALLEN ASLEEP, AND WAS NODDING IN HIS CHAIR--Chap.
-xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE INDIAN SAVAGE AND THE MAIDEN--Chap. xxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "AS AN EXQUISITE EMBODIMENT OF THE POET'S VISIONS, AND A
-REALISATION OF HUMAN INTELLECTUALITY, GILDING WITH REFULGENT LIGHT OUR
-DREAMY MOMENTS, AND LAYING OPEN A NEW AND MAGIC WORLD BEFORE THE MENTAL
-EYE, THE DRAMA IS GONE, PERFECTLY GONE," SAID MR. CURDLE--Chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "NICKLEBY," SAID HIS CLIENT, THROWING HIMSELF ALONG THE
-SOFA ON WHICH HE HAD BEEN PREVIOUSLY SEATED, SO AS TO BRING HIS LIPS
-NEARER TO THE OLD MAN'S EAR, "WHAT A PRETTY CREATURE YOUR NIECE
-IS!"--Chap. xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: SIR MULBERRY HAWK AND HIS FRIEND EXCHANGED GLANCES OVER
-THE TOP OF THE BONNET--Chap. xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "I SEE HOW IT IS," SAID POOR NOGGS, DRAWING FROM HIS
-POCKET WHAT SEEMED TO BE A VERY OLD DUSTER, AND WIPING KATE'S EYES WITH
-IT AS GENTLY AS IF SHE WERE AN INFANT--Chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "BUT THEY SHALL NOT PROTECT YE!" SAID THE TRAGEDIAN,
-TAKING AN UPWARD LOOK AT NICHOLAS, BEGINNING AT HIS BOOTS AND ENDING AT
-THE CROWN OF HIS HEAD--Chap. xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. SNEVELLICCI REPEATED THE WINK, AND, DRINKING TO MRS.
-LILYVICK IN DUMB-SHOW, ACTUALLY BLEW HER A KISS--Chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: LASHING HIMSELF UP TO AN EXTRAORDINARY PITCH OF FURY,
-NEWMAN NOGGS JERKED HIMSELF ABOUT THE ROOM WITH THE MOST ECCENTRIC
-MOTION EVER BEHELD IN A HUMAN BEING--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "LOOK AT THEM TEARS, SIR!" SAID SQUEERS WITH A TRIUMPHANT
-AIR, AS MASTER WACKFORD WIPED HIS EYES WITH THE CUFF OF HIS JACKET;
-"THERE'S OILINESS"--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: SIR MULBERRY, SHORTENING HIS WHIP, APPLIED IT FURIOUSLY
-TO THE HEAD AND SHOULDERS OF NICHOLAS. IT WAS BROKEN IN THE STRUGGLE:
-NICHOLAS GAINED THE HEAVY HANDLE, AND WITH IT LAID OPEN ONE SIDE OF HIS
-ANTAGONIST'S FACE FROM THE EYE TO THE LIP--Chap. xxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: NIGHT FOUND HIM, AT LAST, STILL HARPING ON THE SAME
-THEME, AND STILL PURSUING THE SAME UNPROFITABLE REFLECTIONS--Chap.
-xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "I'M NOT COMING AN HOUR LATER IN THE MORNING, YOU KNOW,"
-SAID TIM, BREAKING OUT ALL AT ONCE, AND LOOKING VERY RESOLUTE. "I'M NOT
-GOING TO SLEEP IN THE FRESH AIR--NO, NOR I'M NOT GOING INTO THE COUNTRY
-EITHER"--Chap. xxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: WITH THIS THE DOCTOR LAUGHED; BUT HE DIDN'T LAUGH HALF AS
-MUCH AS A MARRIED FRIEND OF MRS. KENWIGS'S, WHO HAD JUST COME IN FROM
-THE SICK CHAMBER--Chap. xxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "YE'ES," SAID THE OTHER, TURNING FULL UPON HIM. "IF YOU
-HAD TOLD HIM WHO YOU WERE: IF YOU HAD GIVEN HIM YOUR CARD, AND FOUND
-OUT, AFTERWARDS, THAT HIS STATION OR CHARACTER PREVENTED YOUR FIGHTING
-HIM, IT WOULD HAVE BEEN BAD ENOUGH THEN"--Chap. xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: DARTING IN, COVERED SMIKE'S MOUTH WITH HIS HUGE HAND
-BEFORE HE COULD UTTER A SOUND--Chap. xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: THE MEDITATIVE OGRE--Chap. xl.]
-
-[Illustration: CONCLUDED BY STANDING ON ONE LEG, AND REPEATING HIS
-FAVOURITE BELLOW WITH INCREASED VEHEMENCE--Chap. xli.]
-
-[Illustration: "I SAY," SAID JOHN, RATHER ASTOUNDED FOR THE MOMENT,
-"MAK' THEESELF QUITE AT WHOAM, WILL 'EE?"--Chap. xlii.]
-
-[Illustration: FELL UPON HIS FACE IN A PASSION OF BITTER GRIEF--Chap.
-xliii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I AM A MOST MISERABLE AND WRETCHED OUTCAST, NEARLY SIXTY
-YEARS OLD, AND AS DESTITUTE AND HELPLESS AS A CHILD OF SIX"--Chap.
-xliv.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. SQUEERS EXECUTES AN IMPROMPTU "PAS SEUL"--Chap. xlv.]
-
-[Illustration: WAS PRESENTLY CONDUCTED BY A ROBBER, WITH A VERY LARGE
-BELT AND BUCKLE ROUND HIS WAIST, AND VERY LARGE LEATHER GAUNTLETS ON HIS
-HANDS, INTO THE PRESENCE OF HIS FORMER MANAGER--Chap. xlviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "NO MATTER! DO YOU THINK YOU BRING YOUR PALTRY MONEY HERE
-AS A FAVOUR OR A GIFT; OR AS A MATTER OF BUSINESS, AND IN RETURN FOR
-VALUE RECEIVED"--Chap. xlvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "AHA!" CRIED THE OLD GENTLEMAN, FOLDING HIS HANDS AND
-SQUEEZING THEM WITH GREAT FORCE AGAINST EACH OTHER. "I SEE HER NOW; I
-SEE HER NOW; MY LOVE, MY LIFE, MY BRIDE, MY PEERLESS BEAUTY! SHE IS COME
-AT LAST--AT LAST--AND ALL IS GAS AND GAITERS"--Chap. xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: TWO MEN, SEIZING EACH OTHER BY THE THROAT, STRUGGLED INTO
-THE MIDDLE OF THE ROOM--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: ALL THE LIGHT AND LIFE OF DAY CAME ON; AND AMIDST IT ALL,
-AND PRESSING DOWN THE GRASS WHOSE EVERY BLADE BORE TWENTY TINY LIVES,
-LAY THE DEAD MAN, WITH HIS STARK AND RIGID FACE TURNED UPWARDS TO THE
-SKY--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: "I'LL BE MARRIED IN THE BOTTLE-GREEN," CRIED ARTHUR
-GRIDE--Chap. li.]
-
-[Illustration: "THIEVES! THIEVES!" SHRIEKED THE USURER, STARTING UP AND
-FOLDING HIS BOOK TO HIS BREAST; "ROBBERS! MURDER!"--Chap. liii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I MUST BESEECH YOU TO CONTEMPLATE AGAIN THE FEARFUL
-COURSE TO WHICH YOU HAVE BEEN IMPELLED"--Chap. liii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE DREW RALPH NICKLEBY TO THE FURTHER END OF THE ROOM,
-AND POINTED TOWARDS GRIDE, WHO SAT HUDDLED TOGETHER IN A CORNER,
-FUMBLING NERVOUSLY WITH THE BUTTONS OF HIS COAT, AND EXHIBITING A FACE
-OF WHICH EVERY SKULKING AND BASE EXPRESSION WAS SHARPENED AND AGGRAVATED
-TO THE UTMOST OF HIS ANXIETY AND TREPIDATION--Chap. liv.]
-
-[Illustration: "THERE IS SOMETHING MISSING, YOU SAY," SAID RALPH,
-SHAKING HIM FURIOUSLY BY THE COLLAR. "WHAT IS IT?"--Chap. lvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO YOU SEE THIS? THIS IS A BOTTLE"--Chap. lvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHO TAMPERED WITH A SELFISH FATHER, URGING HIM TO SELL
-HIS DAUGHTER TO OLD ARTHUR GRIDE, AND TAMPERED WITH GRIDE TOO, AND DID
-SO IN THE LITTLE OFFICE, WITH A CLOSET IN THE ROOM"--Chap. lix.]
-
-[Illustration: "TOTAL, ALL UP WITH SQUEERS!"--Chap. lx.]
-
-[Illustration: RALPH MAKES ONE LAST APPOINTMENT--AND KEEPS IT--Chap.
-lxii.]
-
-[Illustration: CLASPING THE IRON RAILINGS WITH HIS HANDS, LOOKED EAGERLY
-IN, WONDERING WHICH MIGHT BE HIS GRAVE--Chap. lxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, MR. LINKINWATER, YOU'RE JOKING!" "NO, NO, I'M NOT.
-I'M NOT INDEED," SAID TIM. "I WILL, IF YOU WILL. DO, MY DEAR!"--Chap.
-lxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE LITTLE PEOPLE COULD DO NOTHING WITHOUT DEAR NEWMAN
-NOGGS--Chap. lxv.]
-
-
-
-
-MASTER HUMPHREY'S CLOCK AND OTHER STORIES
-
-[Illustration]
-
-NINE ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-
-[Illustration: AT SUCH TIMES, OR WHEN THE SHOUTS OF STRAGGLING BRAWLERS
-MET HER EAR, THE BOWYER'S DAUGHTER WOULD LOOK TIMIDLY BACK AT HUGH,
-BESEECHING HIM TO DRAW NEARER.--_Master Humphrey's Clock_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: AS HE SAT UPON A LOW SEAT BESIDE MY WIFE, I WOULD PEER AT
-HIM FOR HOURS TOGETHER FROM BEHIND A TREE.--_Master Humphrey's Clock_,
-chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "VITH THESE VORDS HE RUSHES INTO THE SHOP, BREAKS THE
-DUMMY'S NOSE WITH A BLOW OF HIS CURLIN'-IRONS, MELTS HIM DOWN AT THE
-PARLOUR FIRE, AND NEVER SMILES AFTERWARDS."--_Master Humphrey's Clock_,
-chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: AT LAST THEY MADE A HALT AT THE OPENING OF A LONELY,
-DESOLATE SPACE, AND, POINTING TO A BLACK OBJECT AT SOME DISTANCE, ASKED
-WILL IF HE SAW THAT YONDER.--_Master Humphrey's Clock_, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WITH A LOOK OF SCORN, SHE PUT INTO MY HAND A BIT OF
-PAPER, AND TOOK ANOTHER PARTNER. ON THE PAPER WAS PENCILLED, 'HEAVENS!
-CAN I WRITE THE WORD? IS MY HUSBAND A COW?'"--_Holiday Romance_, Part
-i.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT IS THE MATTER?" ASKED BROTHER HAUKYARD. "AY! WHAT
-IS THE MATTER?" ASKED BROTHER GIMBLET.--_George Silverman's
-Explanation_, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: GEORGE SILVERMAN WRITES HIS EXPLANATION.--Chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU SHALL SEE ME ONCE AGAIN IN THE BODY, WHEN YOU ARE
-TRIED FOR YOUR LIFE. YOU SHALL SEE ME ONCE AGAIN IN THE SPIRIT, WHEN THE
-CORD IS ROUND YOUR NECK AND THE CROWD ARE CRYING AGAINST YOU."--_Hunted
-Down_, chap. v.]
-
-
-
-
-THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THIRTY-NINE ILLUSTRATIONS BY C. GREEN
-
-
-[Illustration: THE DOOR BEING OPENED, THE CHILD ADDRESSED HIM AS HER
-GRANDFATHER--Chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: THE OLD MAN SAT HIMSELF DOWN IN A CHAIR, AND, WITH FOLDED
-HANDS, LOOKED SOMETIMES AT HIS GRANDSON AND SOMETIMES AT HIS STRANGE
-COMPANION--Chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN HE DID SIT DOWN, HE TUCKED UP HIS SLEEVES AND
-SQUARED HIS ELBOWS AND PUT HIS FACE CLOSE TO THE COPY-BOOK--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: DANIEL QUILP SAT HIMSELF DOWN IN A WHERRY TO CROSS TO THE
-OPPOSITE SHORE--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: HE SOON CAST HIS EYES UPON A CHAIR, INTO WHICH HE SKIPPED
-WITH UNCOMMON AGILITY, AND, PERCHING HIMSELF ON THE BACK WITH HIS FEET
-UPON THE SEAT, WAS THUS ENABLED TO LOOK ON--Chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "I'LL BEAT YOU TO PULP, YOU DOGS"--Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: "IS IT GOOD, BRASS, IS IT NICE, IS IT FRAGRANT?"--Chap.
-xi.]
-
-[Illustration: NOT TO BE BEHINDHAND IN THE BUSTLE, MR. QUILP WENT TO
-WORK WITH SURPRISING VIGOUR--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: NELLY, KNEELING DOWN BESIDE THE BOX, WAS SOON BUSILY
-ENGAGED IN HER TASK--Chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOW, GENTLEMEN," SAID JERRY, LOOKING AT THEM
-ATTENTIVELY, "THE DOG WHOSE NAME'S CALLED, EATS"--Chap. xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: THERE WAS BUT ONE LADY WHO SEEMED TO UNDERSTAND THE
-CHILD, AND SHE WAS ONE WHO SAT ALONE IN A HANDSOME CARRIAGE--Chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: A SMALL WHITE-HEADED BOY WITH A SUNBURNT FACE APPEARED AT
-THE DOOR WHILE HE WAS SPEAKING, AND STOPPING THERE TO MAKE A RUSTIC BOW,
-CAME IN--Chap. xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: AND THEN THEY WENT ON ARM-IN-ARM, VERY LOVINGLY
-TOGETHER--Chap. xxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE HANDED DOWN TO THEM THE TEA-TRAY, THE BREAD AND
-BUTTER, THE KNUCKLE OF HAM, AND, IN SHORT, EVERYTHING OF WHICH SHE HAD
-PARTAKEN HERSELF--Chap. xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "THAT, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN," SAID MRS. JARLEY, "IS
-JASPER PACKLEMERTON OF ATROCIOUS MEMORY"--Chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND IN THIS STATE AND CEREMONY RODE SLOWLY THROUGH THE
-TOWN EVERY MORNING--Chap. xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: IN SOME OF THESE FLOURISHES IT WENT CLOSE TO MISS SALLY'S
-HEAD--Chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU'RE THE WAX-WORK CHILD, ARE YOU NOT?"--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH PLEASE," SAID A LITTLE VOICE VERY LOW DOWN IN THE
-DOORWAY, "WILL YOU COME AND SHOW THE LODGINGS?"--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO YOU SEE THIS?"--Chap. xxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: AT LENGTH EVERYTHING WAS READY, AND THEY WENT OFF--Chap.
-xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: THE OLD MAN STOOD HELPLESSLY AMONG THEM FOR A LITTLE
-TIME--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: A MAN OF VERY UNCOUTH AND ROUGH APPEARANCE WAS STANDING
-OVER THEM--Chap. xliii.]
-
-[Illustration: "SHE IS QUITE EXHAUSTED," SAID THE SCHOOLMASTER--Chap.
-xlvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "AQUILINE!" CRIED QUILP, THRUSTING IN HIS HEAD--Chap.
-xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: BOTH MOTHER AND DAUGHTER, TREMBLING WITH TERROR AND COLD,
-.... OBEYED MR. QUILP'S DIRECTIONS IN SUBMISSIVE SILENCE--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: "HALLOA!"--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: ELEVATING HIS GLASS, DRANK TO THEIR NEXT MERRY-MEETING IN
-THAT JOVIAL SPOT--Chap. li.]
-
-
-[Illustration: THE CHILD SAT DOWN IN THIS OLD SILENT PLACE--Chap.
-liii.]
-
-[Illustration: "THEN, MARCHIONESS," SAID MR. SWIVELLER, "FIRE
-AWAY!"--Chap. lviii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE AIR WAS, "AWAY WITH MELANCHOLY"--Chap. lvlli.]
-
-[Illustration: "IS IT LIKE KIT--IS IT HIS PICTURE, HIS IMAGE, HIS VERY
-SELF?"--Chap. lxii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE MARCHIONESS JUMPED UP QUICKLY, AND CLAPPED HER
-HANDS--Chap. lxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE HAD NOTHING FOR IT NOW, THEREFORE, BUT TO RUN AFTER
-THE CHAISE--Chap. lxv.]
-
-[Illustration: TOM IMMEDIATELY WALKED UPON HIS HANDS TO THE WINDOW,
-AND--IF THE EXPRESSION BE ALLOWABLE--LOOKED IN WITH HIS SHOES--Chap.
-lxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE STRONG TIDE FILLED HIS THROAT, AND BORE HIM ON ITS
-RAPID CURRENT--Chap. lxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "MASTER!" HE CRIED, STOOPING ON ONE KNEE AND CATCHING AT
-HIS HAND. "DEAR MASTER! SPEAK TO ME!"--Chap. lxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: TWO WRETCHED PEOPLE WERE MORE THAN ONCE OBSERVED TO CRAWL
-AT DUSK FROM THE INMOST RECESSES OF ST. GILES'S--Chap. lxxiii.]
-
-
-
-
-BARNABY RUDGE
-
-A TALE OF THE RIOTS OF 'EIGHTY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-FORTY-SIX ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-
-[Illustration: "STAND--LET ME SEE YOUR FACE"--Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "DOES THE BOY KNOW WHAT HE'S A-SAYING OF!" CRIED THE
-ASTONISHED JOHN WILLETT--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I CAN'T TOUCH HIM!" CRIED THE IDIOT, FALLING BACK AND
-SHUDDERING AS WITH A STRONG SPASM; "HE'S BLOODY!"--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IF I AM EVER," SAID MRS. V.,--NOT SCOLDING, BUT IN A
-SORT OF MONOTONOUS REMONSTRANCE--"IN SPIRITS, IF I AM EVER CHEERFUL, IF
-I AM EVER MORE THAN USUALLY DISPOSED TO BE TALKATIVE AND COMFORTABLE,
-THIS IS THE WAY I AM TREATED"--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: THOSE LIPS WITHIN SIM'S REACH FROM DAY TO DAY, AND YET SO
-FAR OFF--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "CHESTER," SAID MR. HAREDALE AFTER A SHORT SILENCE,
-DURING WHICH HE HAD EYED HIS SMILING FACE FROM TIME TO TIME INTENTLY,
-"YOU HAVE THE HEAD AND HEART OF AN EVIL SPIRIT IN ALL MATTERS OF
-DECEPTION"--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "HE MELTS, I THINK. HE GOES LIKE A DROP OF FROTH. YOU
-LOOK AT HIM, AND THERE HE IS. YOU LOOK AT HIM AGAIN, AND--THERE HE
-ISN'T"--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: FATHER AND SON--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: "COME, COME, MASTER," CRIED THE FELLOW, URGED ON BY THE
-LOOKS OF HIS COMRADES, AND SLAPPING HIM ON THE SHOULDER; "BE MORE
-COMPANIONABLE AND COMMUNICATIVE. BE MORE THE GENTLEMAN IN THIS GOOD
-COMPANY"--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: WITH THAT HE ADVANCED, AND BENDING DOWN OVER THE
-PROSTRATE FORM, SOFTLY TURNED BACK THE HEAD AND LOOKED INTO THE
-FACE--Chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE SAT HERE, THOUGHTFUL AND APART, UNTIL THEIR TIME WAS
-OUT--Chap. xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: EMMA HAREDALE AND DOLLY VARDEN--Chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: "HUFF OR NO HUFF," SAID MR. TAPPERTIT, DETAINING HER BY
-THE WRIST. "WHAT DO YOU MEAN, JEZEBEL! WHAT WERE YOU GOING TO SAY!
-ANSWER ME!"--Chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: HOW THE ACCOMPLISHED GENTLEMAN SPENT THE EVENING IN THE
-MIDST OF A DAZZLING AND BRILLIANT CIRCLE--Chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: NOW HE WOULD CALL TO HER FROM THE TOPMOST BRANCH OF SOME
-HIGH TREE BY THE ROADSIDE--Chap. xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "I BEG PARDON--DO I ADDRESS MISS HAREDALE!"--Chap.
-xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: FINISHED BY DRIVING HIM WITH SURPRISING SWIFTNESS AGAINST
-A HEAP OF SPITTOONS IN ONE CORNER--Chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: LORD GEORGE GORDON LEAVING THE MAYPOLE--Chap. xxxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IF THEY'RE A DREAM," SAID SIM, "LET SCULPTURES HAVE SUCH
-WISIONS, AND CHISEL'EM OUT WHEN THEY WAKE. THIS IS REALITY. SLEEP HAS NO
-SUCH LIMBS AS THEM"--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "HA, HA!" ROARED THE FELLOW, SMITING HIS LEG; "FOR A
-GENTLEMAN AS 'ULL SAY A PLEASANT THING IN A PLEASANT WAY, GIVE ME MUSTER
-GASHFORD AGIN ALL LONDON AND WESTMINSTER!"--Chap. xxxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: A NICE TRIO--Chap. xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: GABRIEL VARDEN--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "HE RETORT!" CRIED HAREDALE. "LOOK YOU HERE, MY LORD. DO
-YOU KNOW THIS MAN!"--Chap. xliii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IN THE NAME OF GOD NO!" SHRIEKED THE WIDOW, DARTING
-FORWARD. "BARNABY--MY LORD--SEE--HE'LL COME BACK--BARNABY--BARNABY!"--Chap.
-xlviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "A BRAVE EVENING, MOTHER! IF WE HAD CHINKING IN OUR
-POCKETS BUT A FEW SPECKS OF THAT GOLD WHICH IS PILED UP YONDER IN THE
-SKY, WE SHOULD BE RICH FOR LIFE"--Chap. xlv.]
-
-[Illustration: THEN SEATING HIMSELF UNDER A SPREADING HONEYSUCKLE, AND
-STRETCHING HIS LEGS ACROSS THE THRESHOLD SO THAT NO PERSON COULD PASS IN
-OR OUT WITHOUT HIS KNOWLEDGE, HE TOOK FROM HIS POCKET A PIPE, FLINT,
-STEEL, AND TINDER-BOX, AND BEGAN TO SMOKE--Chap. xlv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE POLE SWEPT THE AIR ABOVE THE PEOPLE'S HEADS, AND THE
-MAN'S SADDLE WAS EMPTY IN AN INSTANT--Chap. xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: IT FLITTED ONWARD, AND WAS GONE--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU HAVE BEEN DRINKING," SAID THE LOCKSMITH--Chap. li.]
-
-[Illustration: FLUNG ITSELF UPON THE FOREMOST ONE, KNELT DOWN UPON ITS
-BREAST, AND CLUTCHED ITS THROAT WITH BOTH HANDS--Chap. lvi.]
-
-[Illustration: PUTTING HIS STAFF ACROSS HIS KNEES IN CASE OF ALARM OR
-SURPRISE, SUMMONED GRIP TO DINNER--Chap. lvii.]
-
-[Illustration: LOOKED MOODILY ON AS SHE FLEW TO MISS HAREDALE'S
-SIDE--Chap. lix.]
-
-[Illustration: "WILL YOU COME?"
-
-"I!" SAID THE LORD MAYOR MOST EMPHATICALLY. "CERTAINLY NOT"--Chap.
-lxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "STOP!" CRIED THE LOCKSMITH, IN A VOICE THAT MADE THEM
-FALTER--PRESENTING, AS HE SPOKE, A GUN. "LET AN OLD MAN DO THAT. YOU CAN
-SPARE HIM BETTER"--Chap. lxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE BURNING OF NEWGATE--Chap. lxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "NO OFFENCE, NO OFFENCE," SAID THAT PERSONAGE IN A
-CONCILIATORY TONE, AS HUGH STOPPED IN HIS DRAUGHT AND EYED HIM, WITH NO
-PLEASANT LOOK FROM HEAD TO FOOT--Chap. lxix.]
-
-[Illustration: "TENDER-HEARTED!" ECHOED DENNIS. "TENDER-HEARTED! LOOK AT
-THIS MAN. DO YOU CALL THIS CONSTITOOTIONAL! DO YOU SEE HIM SHOT THROUGH
-AND THROUGH, INSTEAD OF BEING WORKED OFF LIKE A BRITON! DAMME IF I KNOW
-WHICH PARTY TO SIDE WITH"--Chap. lxix.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU OUGHT TO BE THE BEST INSTEAD OF THE WORST," SAID
-HUGH, STOPPING BEFORE HIM. "HA, HA, HA! SEE THE HANGMAN WHEN IT COMES
-HOME TO HIM!"--Chap. lxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "I SHALL BLESS YOUR NAME," SOBBED THE LOCKSMITH'S LITTLE
-DAUGHTER, "AS LONG AS I LIVE"--Chap. lxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: SAT THE UNHAPPY AUTHOR OF ALL--LORD GEORGE GORDON--Chap.
-lxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE ROSE FROM HIS BED WITH A HEAVY SIGH, AND WRAPPED
-HIMSELF IN HIS MORNING GOWN. "SO SHE KEPT HER WORD," HE SAID, "AND WAS
-CONSTANT TO HER THREAT!"--Chap. lxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE LOCKSMITH'S RUDDY FACE AND BURLY FORM COULD BE
-DESCRIED, BEATING ABOUT AS THOUGH HE WAS STRUGGLING WITH A ROUGH
-SEA--Chap. lxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: RECLINING, IN AN EASY ATTITUDE, WITH HIS BACK AGAINST A
-TREE, AND CONTEMPLATING THE RUIN WITH AN EXPRESSION OF PLEASURE--Chap.
-lxxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: RAISING HIMSELF UPON HIS HANDS, HE GAZED AT HIM FOR AN
-INSTANT WITH SCORN AND HATRED IN HIS LOOK--Chap. lxxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: GRIP THE RAVEN--Chap. the last.]
-
-
-
-
-AMERICAN NOTES
-
-[Illustration]
-
-TEN ILLUSTRATIONS BY A. B. FROST
-
-
-[Illustration: "RATHER A HEAVY SEA ON, SIR, AND A HEAD WIND"--Chap. ii].
-
-[Illustration: RAILWAY DIALOGUE--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN SUDDENLY THE LIVELY HERO DASHES IN TO THE
-RESCUE--Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: IN THE WHITE HOUSE--Chap. vii]
-
-[Illustration: IN THE CABIN OF THE CANAL BOAT--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: EMIGRANTS--Chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOT YET AWHILE, SIR, NOT YET"--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND HAVING HIS WET PIPE PRESENTED TO HIM, ETC.--Chap.
-xv.]
-
-[Illustration: AS THE COACH STOPS A GENTLEMAN IN A STRAW HAT LOOKS OUT
-OF THE WINDOW--Chap. xiv.]
-
-
-
-
-THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT
-
-[Illustration]
-
-FIFTY-NINE ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-[Illustration: "I SEE YOU," CRIED MISS PECKSNIFF TO THE IDEAL INFLICTOR
-OF A RUNAWAY KNOCK, "YOU'LL CATCH IT; SIR!"--Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. PECKSNIFF, LOOKING SWEETLY OVER THE HALF-DOOR OF THE
-PAR, AND INTO THE VISTA OF SNUG PRIVACY BEYOND, MURMURED, "GOOD EVENING,
-MRS. LUPIN"--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WE WILL SAY, IF YOU PLEASE," ADDED MR. PECKSNIFF, WITH
-GREAT TENDERNESS OF MANNER, "THAT IT ARISES FROM A COLD IN THE HEAD, OR
-IS ATTRIBUTABLE TO SNUFF, OR SMELLING SALTS, OR ONIONS, OR ANYTHING BUT
-THE REAL CAUSE"--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. PECKSNIFF IS INTRODUCED TO A RELATIVE BY MR.
-TIGG--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "HE TURNED A WHIMSICAL FACE AND VERY MERRY PAIR OF BLUE
-EYES ON MR. PINCH."--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "LET US BE MERRY." HERE HE TOOK A CAPTAIN'S
-BISCUIT--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "STILL A-BED," REPLIED THE BOY; "I WISH THEY WOS STILL
-A-BED. THEY'RE VERY NOISY A-BED; ALL CALLING FOR THEIR BOOTS AT
-ONCE"--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH CHIV, CHIV," MURMURED MR. TIGG, "YOU HAVE A NOBLY
-INDEPENDENT NATURE, CHIV"--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU'RE A PAIR OF WHITTINGTONS, GENTS, WITHOUT THE CAT,
-... MY NAME IS TIGG; HOW DO YOU DO?"--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I SAY--THERE'S FOWLS TO-MORROW, NOT SKINNY ONES. OH
-NO!"--Chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO NOT REPINE, MY FRIENDS," SAID MR. PECKSNIFF,
-TENDERLY. "DO NOT WEEP FOR ME. IT IS CHRONIC"--Chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "WE SOMETIMES VENTURE TO CONSIDER HER RATHER A FINE
-FIGURE, SIR. SPEAKING AS AN ARTIST, I MAY PERHAPS BE PERMITTED TO
-SUGGEST, THAT ITS OUTLINE IS GRACEFUL AND CORRECT"--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: THE DOOR OF A SMALL GLASS OFFICE, WHICH WAS PARTITIONED
-OFF FROM THE REST OF THE ROOM, WAS SLOWLY OPENED, AND A LITTLE
-BLEAR-EYED, WEAZEN-FACED, ANCIENT MAN CAME CREEPING OUT.--Chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: "STAND OFF FOR A MOMENT, TOM," CRIED THE OLD PUPIL, ...
-"LET ME LOOK AT YOU! JUST THE SAME! NOT A BIT CHANGED!"--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I'M GOING UP," OBSERVED THE DRIVER; "HOUNSLOW, TEN MILES
-THIS SIDE LONDON"--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: STUCK HIS HANDS IN HIS SKIRT POCKETS AND SWAGGERED ROUND
-THE CORNER.--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: SEEING THAT THERE WAS NO ONE NEAR, AND THAT MARK WAS
-STILL INTENT UPON THE FOG, HE NOT ONLY LOOKED AT HER LIPS, BUT KISSED
-THEM INTO THE BARGAIN--Chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: ON BOARD THE "SCREW"--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT IS IN SUCH ENLIGHTENED MEANS," SAID A VOICE ALMOST IN
-MARTIN'S EAR, "THAT THE BUBBLING PASSIONS OF MY COUNTRY FIND A
-VENT"--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU'RE THE PLEASANTEST FELLOW I HAVE SEEN YET," SAID
-MARTIN, CLAPPING HIM ON THE BACK, "AND GIVE ME A BETTER APPETITE THAN
-BITTERS"--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: JINIRAL BLADDOCK!--Chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "MATTER!" CRIED THE VOICE OF MR. PECKSNIFF, AS PECKSNIFF
-IN THE FLESH SMILED AMIABLY UPON HIM. "THE MATTER, MR. JONAS!"--Chap.
-xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WELL, MRS. GAMP, AND HOW ARE _you!_ MRS. GAMP," SAID THE
-GENTLEMAN, IN A VOICE AS SOFT AS HIS STEP--Chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH! I DON'T MIND YOUR PINCHING," GRINNED JONAS, "A
-BIT"--Chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: "I WAS MERELY REMARKING, GENTLEMEN--THOUGH IT'S A POINT
-OF VERY LITTLE IMPORT--THAT THE QUEEN OF ENGLAND DOES NOT HAPPEN TO LIVE
-IN THE TOWER OF LONDON"--Chap. xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "WELL, SIR!" SAID THE CAPTAIN PUTTING HIS HAT A LITTLE
-MORE ON ONE SIDE, FOR IT WAS RATHER TIGHT IN THE CROWN: "YOU'RE QUITE A
-PUBLIC MAN I CALC'LATE"--Chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE FLOURISHED HIS STICK OVER TOM'S HEAD; BUT IN A MOMENT
-IT WAS SPINNING HARMLESSLY IN THE AIR, AND JONAS HIMSELF LAY SPRAWLING
-IN THE DITCH--Chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "LOOK ABOUT YOU," HE SAID, POINTING TO THE GRAVES; "AND
-REMEMBER THAT FROM YOUR BRIDAL HOUR TO THE DAY WHICH SEES YOU BROUGHT AS
-LOW AS THESE, AND LAID IN SUCH A BED, THERE WILL BE NO APPEAL AGAINST
-HIM!"--Chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHETHER I SICKS OR MONTHLIES, MA'AM ... I DO REQUIRE IT,
-WHICH I MAKES CONFESSION, TO BE BROUGHT REG'LAR AND DRAW'D MILD"--Chap.
-xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "THERE'S NOTHIN' HE DON'T KNOW; THAT'S MY OPINION,"
-OBSERVED MRS. GAMP. "ALL THE WICKEDNESS OF THE WORLD IS PRINT TO
-HIM"--Chap. xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SPIDER AND THE FLY--Chap. xxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "TIMES IS CHANGED, AIN'T THEY! I SAY, HOW YOU'VE
-GROWED!"--Chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: RUSTLING AMONG LAST YEAR'S LEAVES, WHOSE SCENT WOKE
-MEMORY OF THE PAST, THE PLACID PECKSNIFF STROLLED--Chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: "I SAY," CRIED TOM, IN GREAT EXCITEMENT, "HE IS A
-SCOUNDREL AND A VILLAIN! I DON'T CARE WHO HE IS, I SAY HE IS A
-DOUBLE-DYED AND MOST INTOLERABLE VILLAIN"--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "MR. PINCH," SAID MR. PECKSNIFF, SHAKING HIS HEAD, "OH,
-MR. PINCH! I WONDER HOW YOU CAN LOOK ME IN THE FACE!"--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: ON THE FOURTEENTH NIGHT HE KISSED MISS PECKSNIFF'S
-SNUFFERS, IN THE PASSAGE, WHEN SHE WENT UPSTAIRS TO BED: MEANING TO HAVE
-KISSED HER HAND, BUT MISSING IT--Chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "Jolly"--Chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHY, WHAT THE 'TARNAL!" CRIED THE CAPTAIN. "WELL! I DO
-ADMIRE AT THIS, I DO!"--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. PECKSNIFF, PLACID, CALM, BUT PROUD. HONESTLY PROUD
-... GENTLY TRAVELLING ACROSS THE DISC, AS IF HE WERE A FIGURE IN A MAGIC
-LANTERN--Chap. xxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "NO RIGHT!" CRIED THE BRASS AND COPPER FOUNDER--Chap.
-xxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. NADGETT PRODUCES THE RESULT OF HIS PRIVATE
-INQUIRIES--Chap. xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I AM GOING TO BEGIN, TOM. DON'T YOU WONDER WHY I BUTTER
-THE INSIDE OF THE BASIN!" SAID HIS BUSY LITTLE SISTER, "EH, TOM?"--Chap.
-xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: "I CAN'T SAY; IT'S IMPOSSIBLE TO TELL. I REALLY HAVE NO
-IDEA. BUT," SAID FIPS, TAKING OFF A VERY DEEP IMPRESSION OF THE
-WAFER-STAMP UPON THE CALF OF HIS LEFT LEG, AND LOOKING STEADILY AT TOM,
-"I DON'T KNOW THAT IT'S A MATTER OF MUCH CONSEQUENCE"--Chap. xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: MRS. GAMP CREATES A SENSATION WITH HER UMBRELLA--Chap.
-xl.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOW, COULD YOU CUT A MANS THROAT WITH SUCH A THING AS
-THIS!" DEMANDED JONAS--Chap. xli.]
-
-[Illustration: AWOKE TO FIND JONAS STANDING AT HIS BEDSIDE WATCHING HIM.
-AND THAT VERY DOOR WIDE OPEN.--Chap. xlii.]
-
-[Illustration: FAMILIAR FACES--Chap. xliii.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH FIE, FIE!" CRIED MR. PECKSNIFF. "YOU ARE VERY
-PLEASANT. THAT I AM SURE YOU DON'T! THAT I AM SURE YOU DON'T! HOW CAN
-YOU, YOU KNOW"--Chap. xliv.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. MODDLE, WITH A DARK LOOK, REPLIED: "THE DRIVERS WON'T
-DO IT"--Chap. xlvi.]
-
-[Illustration: MRS. GAMP FAVOURS THE COMPANY WITH AN EXHIBITION OF
-PROFESSIONAL SKILL--Chap. xlvi.]
-
-[Illustration: DONE--Chap. xlvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "SPEAK OUT!" SAID MARTIN, "AND SPEAK THE TRUTH"--Chap.
-xlvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THEN MRS. GAMP ROSE--MORALLY AND PHYSICALLY ROSE--AND
-DENOUNCED HER--Chap. xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: BROTHER AND SISTER--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: HE STARTED BACK AS HIS EYES MET THOSE, STANDING IN AN
-ANGLE OF THE WALL, AND STARING AT HIM. HIS NECKERCHIEF WAS OFF; HIS FACE
-WAS ASHY PALE--Chap. li.]
-
-[Illustration: THE FALL OF PECKSNIFF--Chap. lii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YES SIR," RETURNED MISS PECKSNIFF, MODESTLY, "I AM.
-I--MY DRESS IS RATHER--REALLY MRS. TODGERS!"--Chap. liv.]
-
-[Illustration: TOM'S REVERIE--Chap. liv.]
-
-
-
-
-CHRISTMAS BOOKS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-TWENTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-
-[Illustration: "IT'S NOT CONVENIENT," SAID SCROOGE, "AND IT'S NOT FAIR.
-IF I WAS TO STOP HALF-A-CROWN FOR IT, YOU'D THINK YOURSELF ILL USED,
-I'LL BE BOUND!"--_A Christmas Carol_, Stave i.]
-
-[Illustration: MARLEY'S GHOST--_A Christmas Carol_, Stave i.]
-
-[Illustration: HE HAD BEEN TIM'S BLOOD-HORSE ALL THE WAY FROM CHURCH,
-AND HAD COME HOME RAMPANT--_A Christmas Carol_, Stave iii.]
-
-[Illustration: THIS PLEASANTRY WAS RECEIVED WITH A GENERAL LAUGH--_A
-Christmas Carol_, Stave iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT DO YOU CALL THIS!" SAID JOE, "BED CURTAINS!"--_A
-Christmas Carol_, Stave iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "NO," SAID TOBY, AFTER ANOTHER SNIFF. "IT'S--IT'S
-MELLOWER THAN POLONIES. IT'S VERY NICE. IT IMPROVES EVERY MOMENT. IT'S
-TOO DECIDED FOR TROTTERS. AN'T IT!"--_The Chimes_, First Quarter]
-
-[Illustration: THE POOR MAN'S FRIEND.--_The Chimes_, Second Quarter]
-
-[Illustration: "NEVER MORE, MEG; NEVER MORE! HERE! HERE! CLOSE TO YOU,
-HOLDING TO YOU, FEELING YOUR DEAR BREATH UPON MY FACE!"--_The Chimes_,
-Third Quarter]
-
-[Illustration: "WHITHER THOU GOEST, I CAN NOT GO; WHERE THOU LODGEST, I
-DO NOT LODGE; THY PEOPLE ARE NOT MY PEOPLE; NOR THY GOD, MY GOD!"--_The
-Chimes_, Third Quarter]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU'RE IN SPIRITS TUGBY, MY DEAR," OBSERVED HIS WIFE....
-"NO," SAID TUGBY. "NO; NOT PARTICULAR. I'M A LITTLE ELEVATED. THE
-MUFFINS CAME SO PAT!"--_The Chimes_, Fourth Quarter]
-
-[Illustration: JOHN PEERYBINGLE'S FIRESIDE--_The Cricket on the Hearth_,
-Chirp the first]
-
-[Illustration: "DID ITS MOTHER MAKE IT UP A BEDS, THEN!" CRIED MISS
-SLOWBOY TO THE BABY; "AND DID ITS HAIR GROW BROWN AND CURLY WHEN ITS
-CAPS WAS LIFTED OFF, AND FRIGHTEN IT, A PRECIOUS PETS, A SITTING BY THE
-FIRES!"--_The Cricket on the Hearth_, Chirp the first]
-
-[Illustration: "THE EXTENT TO WHICH HE'S WINKING AT THIS MOMENT!"
-WHISPERED CALEB TO HIS DAUGHTER. "OH, MY GRACIOUS!"--_The Cricket on the
-Hearth_, Chirp the second]
-
-[Illustration: SUFFERING HIM TO CLASP HER ROUND THE WAIST, AS THEY MOVED
-SLOWLY DOWN THE DIM WOODEN GALLERY--_The Cricket on the Hearth_, Chirp
-the second]
-
-[Illustration: AFTER DINNER CALEB SANG THE SONG ABOUT THE SPARKLING
-BOWL--_The Cricket on the Hearth_, Chirp the third]
-
-[Illustration: THE PLOUGHSHARE STILL TURNED UP, FROM TIME TO TIME, SOME
-RUSTY BITS OF METAL, BUT IT WAS HARD TO SAY WHAT USE THEY HAD EVER
-SERVED, AND THOSE WHO FOUND THEM WONDERED AND DISPUTED--_The Battle of
-Life_, Part the first]
-
-[Illustration: "BY THE BYE," AND HE LOOKED INTO THE PRETTY FACE, STILL
-CLOSE TO HIS, "I SUPPOSE IT'S YOUR BIRTHDAY"--_The Battle of Life_, Part
-the first]
-
-[Illustration: "I THINK IT WILL BE BETTER NOT TO HEAR THIS, MR. CRAGGS!"
-SAID SNITCHEY, LOOKING AT HIM ACROSS THE CLIENT. "I THINK NOT," SAID
-CRAGGS--BOTH LISTENING ATTENTIVELY--_The Battle of Life_, Part the
-second]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT IS THE MATTER!" HE EXCLAIMED. "I DON'T KNOW. I--I
-AM AFRAID TO THINK. GO BACK. HARK!"--_The Battle of Life_, Part the
-second]
-
-[Illustration: GUESSED HALF ALOUD, "MILK AND WATER," "MONTHLY WARNING,"
-"MICE AND WALNUTS"--AND COULDN'T APPROACH HER MEANING--_The Battle of
-Life_, Part the third]
-
-[Illustration: "MERRY AND HAPPY, WAS IT?" ASKED THE CHEMIST IN A LOW
-VOICE. "MERRY AND HAPPY OLD MAN!"--_The Haunted Man_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: IT ROVED FROM DOOR-STEP TO DOOR-STEP, IN THE ARMS OF
-LITTLE JOHNNY TETTERBY, AND LAGGED HEAVILY AT THE REAR OF TROOPS OF
-JUVENILES WHO FOLLOWED THE TUMBLERS, ETC.--_The Haunted Man_, chap.
-ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "MR. REDLAW!" HE EXCLAIMED, AND STARTED UP--_The Haunted
-Man_, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I'M NOT A-GOING TO TAKE YOU THERE. LET ME BE OR I'LL
-HEAVE SOME FIRE AT YOU!"--_The Haunted Man_, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU SPEAK TO ME OF WHAT IS LYING HERE," THE PHANTOM
-INTERPOSED, AND POINTED WITH ITS FINGER TO THE BOY--_The Haunted Man_,
-chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT A WONDERFUL MAN YOU ARE, FATHER! HOW ARE YOU
-FATHER? ARE YOU REALLY PRETTY HEARTY, THOUGH?" SAID WILLIAM, SHAKING
-HANDS WITH HIM AGAIN, AND PATTING HIM AGAIN, AND RUBBING HIM GENTLY DOWN
-AGAIN--_The Haunted Man_, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SEDATE FACE IN THE PORTRAIT, WITH THE BEARD AND RUFF,
-LOOKED DOWN AT THEM--_The Haunted Man_, chap. iii.]
-
-
-
-
-PICTURES FROM ITALY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS BY GORDON THOMSON
-
-
-[Illustration: THE MALLE POST--_Going Through France_]
-
-[Illustration: PLAYING AT MORA--_Genoa and its Neighbourhood_]
-
-[Illustration: THE CHURCH AND THE WORLD--_To Parma, Modena, and
-Bologna_]
-
-[Illustration: AN ITALIAN DREAM]
-
-[Illustration: A SKETCH AT THE CARNIVAL--_Rome_]
-
-[Illustration: ARTISTS' MODELS--_Rome_]
-
-[Illustration: PRIESTS AND MONKS--_A Rapid Diorama_]
-
-
-
-
-DEALINGS WITH THE FIRM OF DOMBEY AND SON WHOLESALE, RETAIL AND FOR
-EXPORTATION
-
-[Illustration]
-
-SIXTY-TWO ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-
-[Illustration: A THOROUGH CONTRAST IN ALL RESPECTS TO MR. DOMBEY--Chap.
-ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I MAY BE FOND OF PENNYWINKLES, MRS. RICHARDS, BUT IT
-DON'T FOLLOW THAT I'M TO HAVE 'EM FOR TEA"--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "SO HERE'S TO DOMBEY--AND SON--AND DAUGHTER"--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. DOMBEY DISMOUNTING FIRST TO HELP THE LADIES
-OUT--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHY, WHAT CAN YOU WANT WITH DOMBEY AND SON'S!" ... "TO
-KNOW THE WAY THERE, IF YOU PLEASE."--Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: FLORENCE OBEYED AS FAST AS HER TREMBLING HANDS WOULD
-ALLOW; KEEPING, ALL THE WHILE, A FRIGHTENED EYE ON MRS. BROWN--Chap.
-vi.]
-
-[Illustration: DOMBEY AND SON--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: LISTENING TO THE SEA--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND WHEN HE GOT THERE, SAT DOWN IN A CHAIR, AND FELL INTO
-A SILENT FIT OF LAUGHTER WITH WHICH HE WAS SOMETIMES SEIZED, AND WHICH
-WAS ALWAYS PARTICULARLY AWFUL--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN THE DOCTOR SMILED AUSPICIOUSLY AT HIS AUTHOR, OR
-KNIT HIS BROWS, OR SHOOK HIS HEAD AND MADE WRY FACES AT HIM, AS MUCH AS
-TO SAY, "DON'T TELL ME, SIR; I KNOW BETTER," IT WAS TERRIFIC--Chap.
-xi.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOUR FATHER'S REGULARLY RICH, AIN'T HE!" INQUIRED MR.
-TOOTS. "YES, SIR," SAID PAUL; "HE'S DOMBEY AND SON"--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU RESPECT NOBODY, CARKER, I THINK," SAID MR. DOMBEY.
-"NO!" INQUIRED CARKER, WITH ANOTHER WIDE AND MOST FELINE SHOW OF HIS
-TEETH--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: DURING THIS CONVERSATION, WALTER HAD LOOKED FROM ONE
-BROTHER TO THE OTHER WITH PAIN AND AMAZEMENT--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: PAUL ALSO ASKED HIM, AS A PRACTICAL MAN, WHAT HE THOUGHT
-ABOUT KING ALFRED'S IDEA OF MEASURING TIME BY THE BURNING OF CANDLES, TO
-WHICH THE WORKMAN REPLIED THAT HE THOUGHT IT WOULD BE THE RUIN OF THE
-CLOCK TRADE IF IT WAS TO COME UP AGAIN--Chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE BREAKING-UP PARTY AT DOCTOR BLIMBER'S--Chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: BEFORE THEY HAD GONE VERY FAR, THEY ENCOUNTERED A WOMAN
-SELLING FLOWERS: WHEN THE CAPTAIN, STOPPING SHORT, AS IF STRUCK BY A
-HAPPY IDEA, MADE A PURCHASE OF THE LARGEST BUNDLE IN HER BASKET--Chap.
-xv.]
-
-[Illustration: ALL THIS TIME, THE BEREAVED FATHER HAS NOT BEEN SEEN EVEN
-BY HIS ATTENDANT; FOR HE SITS IN A CORNER OF HIS OWN DARK ROOM--Chap.
-xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS REPEATED OFTEN--VERY OFTEN, IN THE SHADOWY
-SOLITUDE; AND BROKEN MURMURS OF THE STRAIN STILL TREMBLED ON THE KEYS,
-WHEN THE SWEET VOICE WAS HUSHED IN TEARS--Chap. xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: TOOK UNCLE SOL'S SNUFF-COLOURED LAPPELS, ONE IN EACH
-HAND; KISSED HIM ON THE CHEEK, ETC.--Chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: "TAKE ADVICE FROM PLAIN OLD JOE, AND NEVER EDUCATE THAT
-SORT OF PEOPLE, SIR," RETURNED THE MAJOR. "DAMME, SIR, IT NEVER DOES! IT
-ALWAYS FAILS!"--Chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: WITHERS THE WAN, AT THIS PERIOD, HANDING ROUND THE TEA,
-MR. DOMBEY AGAIN ADDRESSED HIMSELF TO EDITH--Chap. xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO YOU KNOW THAT THERE IS SOME ONE HERE!" SHE RETURNED,
-NOW LOOKING AT HIM STEADILY--Chap. xxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "LET YOU ALONE!" SAID MR. CARKER. "WHAT! I HAVE GOT YOU,
-HAVE I!" THERE WAS NO DOUBT OF THAT, AND TIGHTLY TOO. "YOU DOG," SAID
-MR. CARKER, THROUGH HIS SET JAWS, "I'LL STRANGLE YOU!"--Chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT DO YOU WANT WITH CAPTAIN CUTTLE, I SHOULD WISH TO
-KNOW!" SAID MRS. MACSTINGER. "SHOULD YOU! THEN I'M SORRY THAT YOU WON'T
-BE SATISFIED," RETURNED MISS NIPPER--Chap. xxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE FLOWERS WERE SCATTERED ON THE GROUND LIKE DUST; THE
-EMPTY HANDS WERE SPREAD UPON THE FACE; AND ORPHANED FLORENCE, SHRINKING
-DOWN UPON THE GROUND, WEPT LONG AND BITTERLY--Chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE CAPTAIN'S VOICE WAS SO TREMENDOUS, AND HE CAME OUT OF
-HIS CORNER WITH SUCH WAY ON HIM, THAT ROB RETREATED BEFORE HIM INTO
-ANOTHER CORNER; HOLDING OUT THE KEYS AND PACKET, TO PREVENT HIMSELF FROM
-BEING RUN DOWN--Chap. xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "GO AND MEET HER!"--Chap. xxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "THANK YOU. I HAVE NO DESIRE TO READ IT," WAS HER
-ANSWER--Chap. xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "A CHILD!" SAID EDITH, LOOKING AT HER. "WHEN WAS I A
-CHILD! WHAT CHILDHOOD DID YOU EVER LEAVE TO ME!"--Chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: LUCRETIA TOX'S REVERIE--Chap. xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: ONE OF THE VERY TALL YOUNG MEN ON HIRE, WHOSE ORGAN OF
-VENERATION WAS IMPERFECTLY DEVELOPED, THRUSTING HIS TONGUE INTO HIS
-CHEEK, FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT OF THE OTHER VERY TALL YOUNG MAN ON HIRE,
-AS THE COUPLE TURNED INTO THE DINING-ROOM--Chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE STARTED, STOPPED, AND LOOKED IN--Chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: IN A FIRM, FREE HAND, THE BRIDE SUBSCRIBES HER NAME IN
-THE REGISTER--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "GO," SAID THE GOOD-HUMOURED MANAGER, GATHERING UP HIS
-SKIRTS, AND STANDING ASTRIDE ON THE HEARTH-RUG, "LIKE A SENSIBLE FELLOW,
-AND LET US HAVE NO TURNING OUT, OR ANY SUCH VIOLENT MEASURES"--Chap.
-xxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND READING SOFTLY TO HIMSELF, IN THE LITTLE BACK
-PARLOUR, AND STOPPING NOW AND THEN TO WIPE HIS EYES, THE CAPTAIN, IN A
-TRUE AND SIMPLE SPIRIT, COMMITTED WALTER'S BODY TO THE DEEP--Chap.
-xxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: A CERTAIN SKILFUL ACTION OF HIS FINGERS AS HE HUMMED SOME
-BARS, AND BEAT TIME ON THE SEAT BESIDE HIM, SEEMED TO DENOTE THE
-MUSICIAN--Chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "SHE'S COME BACK HARDER THAN SHE WENT!" CRIED THE MOTHER,
-LOOKING UP IN HER FACE, AND STILL HOLDING TO HER KNEES--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: WITHERS, MEETING HIM ON THE STAIRS, STOOD AMAZED AT THE
-BEAUTY OF HIS TEETH, AND AT HIS BRILLIANT SMILE--Chap. xxxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: RAN SNIGGERING OFF TO GET CHANGE, AND TOSSED IT AWAY WITH
-A PIEMAN--Chap. xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "AND YOU'RE A-GOING TO DESERT YOUR COLOURS, ARE YOU, MY
-LAD," SAID THE CAPTAIN, AFTER A LONG EXAMINATION OF HIS FACE--Chap.
-xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. TOOTS REPLIES BY LAUNCHING WILDLY OUT INTO MISS
-DOMBEY'S PRAISES, AND BY INSINUATIONS THAT SOMETIMES HE THINKS HE SHOULD
-LIKE TO BLOW HIS BRAINS OUT--Chap. xli.]
-
-[Illustration: "DOMBEY," SAYS COUSIN FEENIX, "UPON MY SOUL, I AM VERY
-MUCH SHOCKED TO SEE YOU ON SUCH A MELANCHOLY OCCASION"--Chap. xli.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO YOU CALL IT MANAGING THIS ESTABLISHMENT, MADAM," SAID
-MR. DOMBEY, "TO LEAVE A PERSON LIKE THIS AT LIBERTY TO COME AND TALK TO
-ME!"--Chap. xliv.]
-
-[Illustration: "MISS DOMBEY," RETURNED MR. TOOTS, "IF YOU'LL ONLY NAME
-ONE, YOU'LL--YOU'LL GIVE ME AN APPETITE. TO WHICH," SAID MR. TOOTS, WITH
-SOME SENTIMENT, "I HAVE LONG BEEN A STRANGER"--Chap. xliv.]
-
-[Illustration: FLUNG IT DOWN, AND TROD UPON THE GLITTERING HEAP--Chap.
-xlvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THROWN DOWN IN A COSTLY MASS UPON THE GROUND WAS EVERY
-ORNAMENT SHE HAD HAD SINCE SHE HAD BEEN HIS WIFE; EVERY DRESS SHE HAD
-WORN; AND EVERYTHING SHE HAD POSSESSED--Chap. xlvii.]
-
-[Illustration: FLORENCE MADE A MOTION WITH HER HAND TOWARDS HIM, REELED
-AND FELL UPON THE FLOOR--Chap. xlviii.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN HE HAD FILLED HIS PIPE IN AN ABSOLUTE REVERIE OF
-SATISFACTION, FLORENCE LIGHTED IT FOR HIM--Chap. xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: BLESSED TWILIGHT STEALING ON, AND SHADING HER SO
-SOOTHINGLY AND GRAVELY AS SHE FALLS ASLEEP, LIKE A HUSHED CHILD, UPON
-THE BOSOM SHE HAS CLUNG TO!--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: IT APPEARS THAT HE MET EVERYBODY CONCERNED IN THE LATE
-TRANSACTION, EVERYWHERE, AND SAID TO THEM, "SIR," OR "MADAM," AS THE
-CASE WAS, "WHY DO YOU LOOK SO PALE!" AT WHICH EACH SHUDDERED FROM HEAD
-TO FOOT, AND SAID, "OH, PERCH!" AND RAN AWAY--Chap. li.]
-
-[Illustration: D. I. J. O. N--Chap. lii.]
-
-[Illustration: STILL UPON HER KNEES, AND WITH HER EYES UPON THE
-FIRE--Chap. liii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE SAW THE FACE CHANGE FROM ITS VINDICTIVE PASSION TO A
-FAINT SICKNESS AND TERROR--Chap. lv.]
-
-[Illustration: AFTER THIS, HE SMOKED FOUR PIPES SUCCESSIVELY IN THE
-LITTLE PARLOUR BY HIMSELF, AND WAS DISCOVERED CHUCKLING AT THE
-EXPIRATION OF AS MANY HOURS--Chap. lvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "WY, IT'S MEAN .... THAT'S WHERE IT IS. IT'S
-MEAN!"--Chap. lvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "JOE HAD BEEN DECEIVED, SIR, TAKEN IN, HOODWINKED,
-BLINDFOLDED, BUT WAS BROAD AWAKE AGAIN, AND STARING"--Chap. lviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YES, MRS. PIPCHIN, IT IS," REPLIES COOK, ADVANCING. "AND
-WHAT THEN PRAY!"--Chap. lix.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, MY GOD, FORGIVE ME, FOR I NEED IT VERY MUCH!"--Chap.
-lix.]
-
-[Illustration: "NO, NO!" CRIED FLORENCE, SHRINKING BACK AS SHE ROSE UP,
-AND PUTTING OUT HER HANDS TO KEEP HER OFF. "MAMMA!"--Chap. lxi.]
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN CUTTLE GIVES THEM THE LOVELY PEG--Chap. lxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "DEAR GRANDPAPA, WHY DO YOU CRY WHEN YOU KISS ME?"--Chap.
-lxii.]
-
-
-
-
-THE PERSONAL HISTORY OF DAVID COPPERFIELD
-
-[Illustration]
-
-SIXTY-ONE ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-[Illustration: PEGGOTTY SEEMED TO SWELL AND GROW IMMENSELY LARGE. I
-PROPPED MY EYELIDS OPEN WITH MY TWO FOREFINGERS AND LOOKED PERSEVERINGLY
-AT HER, AS SHE SAT AT WORK--Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "DEAD, MR. PEGGOTTY!" I HINTED, AFTER A RESPECTFUL PAUSE.
-
-"DROWNDEAD," SAID MR. PEGGOTTY--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "THAT'S NOT IT!" SAID I, "THAT SHIP-LOOKING THING!"
-"THAT'S IT, MAS'R DAVY," RETURNED HAM--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND WHEN WE CAME AT LAST TO THE FIVE THOUSAND CHEESES
-(CANES HE MADE IT THAT DAY, I REMEMBER), MY MOTHER BURST OUT
-CRYING--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: I SAW TO MY AMAZEMENT, PEGGOTTY BURST FROM A HEDGE AND
-CLIMB INTO THE CART--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "HE KNOWS ME, AND I KNOW HIM. DO YOU KNOW ME! HEY!" SAID
-MR. CREAKLE, PINCHING MY EAR WITH FEROCIOUS PLAYFULNESS--Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: "LET HIM DENY IT," SAID STEERFORTH--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "DON'T GO, STEERFORTH, IF YOU PLEASE. THESE ARE TWO
-YARMOUTH BOATMEN--VERY KIND, GOOD PEOPLE--WHO ARE RELATIONS OF MY NURSE,
-AND HAVE COME FROM GRAVESEND TO SEE ME"--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "FATHER!" SAID MINNIE PLAYFULLY. "WHAT A PORPOISE YOU DO
-GROW!"--Chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: I BEGIN LIFE ON MY OWN ACCOUNT, AND DON'T LIKE IT--Chap.
-xi.]
-
-[Illustration: I AM PRESENTED TO MRS. MICAWBER--Chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE YOUNG MAN STILL REPLIED: "COME TO THE POLLIS!" AND
-WAS DRAGGING ME AGAINST THE DONKEY IN A VIOLENT MANNER, AS IF THERE WERE
-ANY AFFINITY BETWEEN THAT ANIMAL AND A MAGISTRATE--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, MY LUNGS AND LIVER, WILL YOU GO FOR
-THREEPENCE!"--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. MICAWBER, IMPRESSING THE NAMES OF THE STREETS AND THE
-SHAPES OF CORNER HOUSES UPON ME AS WE WENT ALONG, THAT I MIGHT FIND MY
-WAY BACK EASILY IN THE MORNING--Chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE BATTLE ON THE GREEN--Chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE ALWAYS ROUSED HIM WITH A QUESTION OR CARESS--Chap.
-xv.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, THANK YOU, MASTER COPPERFIELD," SAID URIAH HEEP,
-"FOR THAT REMARK! IT IS SO TRUE! 'UMBLE AS I AM, I KNOW IT IS SO TRUE!
-OH, THANK YOU, MASTER COPPERFIELD!"--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE DOCTOR'S WALK--Chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I ASK AN INESTIMABLE PRICE FOR IT, MISS LARKINS"....
-"INDEED! WHAT IS THAT!" RETURNS MISS LARKINS. "A FLOWER OF YOURS, THAT I
-MAY TREASURE IT AS A MISER DOES GOLD"--Chap. xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, REALLY! YOU KNOW HOW IGNORANT I AM, AND THAT I ONLY
-ASK FOR INFORMATION, BUT ISN'T IT ALWAYS SO! I THOUGHT THAT KIND OF LIFE
-WAS ON ALL HANDS UNDERSTOOD TO BE--EH!"--Chap. XX.]
-
-[Illustration: PRESENTLY THEY BROUGHT HER TO THE FIRESIDE, VERY MUCH
-CONFUSED, AND VERY SHY--Chap. xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "THAT IS A BLACK SHADOW TO BE FOLLOWING THE GIRL," SAID
-STEERFORTH, STANDING STILL; "WHAT DOES IT MEAN!"--Chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "TROT! MY DEAR TROT!" CRIED MY AUNT, IN A TERRIFIED
-WHISPER, AND PRESSING MY ARM. "I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO"--Chap, xxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND MRS. CRUPP SAID, THANK HEAVEN SHE HAD NOW FOUND
-SUMMUN SHE COULD CARE FOR--Chap. xxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: HAMLET'S AUNT BETRAYS THE FAMILY FAILING, AND INDULGES IN
-A SOLILOQUY ON "BLOOD"--Chap. xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: DORA--Chap. xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "HERE," DRAWING THE CLOTH OFF WITH GREAT PRIDE AND CARE,
-"ARE TWO PIECES OF FURNITURE TO COMMENCE WITH"--Chap. xxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. MICAWBER IN HIS ELEMENT--Chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE WAS FAST ASLEEP; LYING EASILY, WITH HIS HEAD UPON HIS
-ARM, AS I HAD OFTEN SEEN HIM LIE AT SCHOOL--Chap. xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: "GIVE ME BREATH ENOUGH," SAYS I TO MY DAUGHTER MINNIE,
-"AND I'LL FIND PASSAGES, MY DEAR"--Chap. xxx]
-
-[Illustration: "READ IT, SIR," HE SAID, IN A LOW SHIVERING VOICE. "SLOW,
-PLEASE. I DOEN'T KNOW AS I CAN UNDERSTAND"--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "TAKE A WORD OF ADVICE, EVEN FROM THREE FOOT NOTHING, TRY
-NOT TO ASSOCIATE BODILY DEFECTS WITH MENTAL, MY GOOD FRIEND, EXCEPT FOR
-A SOLID REASON"--Chap. xxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: UNDER THE LILAC TREE--Chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: I PARTED FROM HIM, POOR FELLOW, AT THE CORNER OF THE
-STREET, WITH HIS GREAT KITE AT HIS BACK, A VERY MONUMENT OF HUMAN
-MISERY--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "DEUCE TAKE THE MAN!" SAID MY AUNT STERNLY, "WHAT'S HE
-ABOUT! DON'T BE GALVANIC, SIR!"--Chap. xxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "I HARDLY EVER TAKE BREAKFAST, SIR," HE REPLIED WITH HIS
-HEAD THROWN BACK IN AN EASY CHAIR. "I FIND IT BORES ME"--Chap. xxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU HAVE HEARD MISS MURDSTONE," SAID MR. SPENLOW,
-TURNING TO ME. "I BEG TO ASK MR. COPPERFIELD, IF YOU HAVE ANYTHING TO
-SAY IN REPLY!"--Chap. xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "PAPA, YOU ARE NOT WELL. COME WITH ME!"--Chap. xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: I STOOD FACE TO FACE WITH MR. PEGGOTTY!--Chap. xl.]
-
-[Illustration: "I WONDER WHY YOU EVER FELL IN LOVE WITH ME!" SAID DORA,
-BEGINNING ON ANOTHER BUTTON OF MY COAT--Chap. xli.]
-
-[Illustration: HE CAUGHT THE HAND IN HIS, AND WE STOOD IN THAT
-CONNECTION, LOOKING AT EACH OTHER--Chap. xlii.]
-
-[Illustration: HOLDING THE PENS--Chap. xliv.]
-
-[Illustration: "THEN, I HAVE GOT IT, BOY!" SAID MR. DICK--Chap. xlv.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. LITTIMER TELLS HIS STORY--Chap. xlvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, THE RIVER!" SHE CRIED PASSIONATELY. "OH, THE
-RIVER!"--Chap. xlvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHEN I CAN RUN ABOUT AGAIN, AS I USED TO DO, AUNT," SAID
-DORA, "I SHALL MAKE JIP RACE. HE IS GETTING QUITE SLOW AND LAZY"--Chap.
-xlviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "AND THE NAME OF THE WHOLE ATROCIOUS MASS
-IS--HEEP!"--Chap. xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: ROSA DARTLE SPRANG UP FROM HER SEAT: RECOILED, AND IN
-RECOILING STRUCK AT HER, WITH A FACE OF SUCH MALIGNITY, SO DARKENED AND
-DISFIGURED BY PASSION, THAT I HAD ALMOST THROWN MYSELF BETWEEN
-THEM--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: "APPROACH ME AGAIN, YOU--YOU--YOU HEEP OF INFAMY," GASPED
-MR. MICAWBER, "AND IF YOUR HEAD IS HUMAN, I'LL BREAK IT. COME ON, COME
-ON"--Chap. lii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT IS MUCH BETTER AS IT IS!"--Chap. liii.]
-
-[Illustration: I HAVE MYSELF DIRECTED SOME ATTENTION, DURING THE PAST
-WEEK, TO THE ART OF BAKING--Chap. liv.]
-
-[Illustration: THEY DREW HIM TO MY VERY FEET--INSENSIBLE--DEAD--Chap.
-lv.]
-
-[Illustration: I FOUND MR. MICAWBER SITTING IN A CORNER, LOOKING DARKLY
-AT THE SHERIFF'S OFFICER WHO HAD EFFECTED THE CAPTURE--Chap. lvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE STORM--Chap. lv.]
-
-[Illustration: I WALKED UP TO WHERE HE WAS SITTING, AND SAID, "HOW DO
-YOU DO, MR. CHILLIP!"--Chap. lix.]
-
-[Illustration: FOR AN INSTANT, A DISTRESSFUL SHADOW CROSSED HER FACE;
-BUT, EVEN IN THE START IT GAVE ME, IT WAS GONE--Chap. lx.]
-
-[Illustration: I TOOK AGNES IN MY ARM TO THE BACK OF HER CHAIR, AND WE
-BOTH LEANED OVER HER--Chap. lxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IF A SHIP'S COOK THAT WAS TURNING SETTLER, MAS'R DAVY,
-DIDN'T MAKE OFFERS FUR TO MARRY MRS. GUMMIDGE, I'M GORMED--AND I CAN'T
-SAY NO FAIRER THAN THAT!"--Chap, lxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "TROTWOOD, YOU WILL BE GLAD TO HEAR THAT I SHALL FINISH
-THE MEMORIAL WHEN I HAVE NOTHING ELSE TO DO, AND THAT YOUR AUNT'S THE
-MOST EXTRAORDINARY WOMAN IN THE WORLD, SIR!"--Chap. lxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: BUT ONE FACE, SHINING ON ME LIKE A HEAVENLY LIGHT BY
-WHICH I SEE ALL OTHER OBJECTS, IS ABOVE THEM AND BEYOND THEM ALL--Chap.
-lxiv.]
-
-
-
-
-A CHILD'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND
-
-[Illustration]
-
-FIFTEEN ILLUSTRATIONS BY J. McL. RALSTON
-
-
-[Illustration: THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY AND THE DANES--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE ESCAPE OF QUEEN MATILDA FROM OXFORD CASTLE--Chap.
-xi.]
-
-[Illustration: HUBERT DE BURGH AND THE BLACK BAND--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE DUCHESS OF GLOUCESTER DOING PENANCE--Chap. xii, Part
-Third]
-
-[Illustration: KING JOHN OF FRANCE AT THE BATTLE OF POITIERS--Chap.
-xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: LAMBERT SIMNEL--Chap. xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: SIR EDWARD HOWARD--Chap. xxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SPANISH ARMADA--Chap, xxxi., Third Part]
-
-[Illustration: BEFORE HE WENT AWAY, THE LANDLORD CAME BEHIND HIS
-CHAIR--Chap. xxxiv., First Part]
-
-[Illustration: MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS LEAVING FRANCE--Chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SEIZURE OF GUY FAWKES--Chap. xxxii., First Part]
-
-[Illustration: OLIVER CROMWELL AND IRETON AT THE BLUE BOAR--Chap.
-xxxiii., Fourth Part]
-
-[Illustration: EXECUTION OF SIR CHARLES LUCAS AND SIR GEORGE
-LISLE--Chap. xxxiii., Fourth Part]
-
-[Illustration: CHARLES THE FIRST TAKING LEAVE OF HIS CHILDREN--Chap,
-xxxiii., Fourth Part]
-
-
-
-
-BLEAK HOUSE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-SIXTY-ONE ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-BY FRED BARNARD
-
-
-[Illustration: "WHO COPIED THAT!"--Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: I AM INTRODUCED TO CONVERSATION KENGE--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: IN AN ATMOSPHERE OF BORRIOBOOLA--GHA--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE LORD CHANCELLOR RELATES THE DEATH OF TOM
-JARNDYCE--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "WE ARE NOT SO PREJUDICED AS TO SUPPOSE THAT IN PRIVATE
-LIFE YOU ARE OTHERWISE THAN A VERY ESTIMABLE MAN, WITH A GREAT DEAL OF
-POETRY IN YOUR NATURE, OF WHICH YOU MAY NOT BE CONSCIOUS"--Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE GROWLERY--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: "ALFRED, MY YOUNGEST (FIVE), HAS VOLUNTARILY ENROLLED
-HIMSELF IN THE INFANT BONDS OF JOY, AND IS PLEDGED NEVER, THROUGH LIFE,
-TO USE TOBACCO IN ANY FORM"--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IF I WERE IN YOUR PLACE I WOULD SEIZE EVERY MASTER IN
-CHANCERY BY THE THROAT TO-MORROW MORNING, AND SHAKE HIM UNTIL HIS MONEY
-ROLLED OUT OF HIS POCKETS, AND HIS BONES RATTLED IN HIS SKIN"--Chap.
-ix.]
-
-[Illustration: NEMO--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: "HE WOS WERY GOOD TO ME, HE WOS!"--Chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHY, DO YOU KNOW HOW PRETTY YOU ARE, CHILD!" SHE SAYS,
-TOUCHING HER SHOULDER WITH HER TWO FORE-FINGERS--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: DEPORTMENT--Chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "HONOURED, INDEED," SAID SHE, "BY ANOTHER VISIT FROM THE
-WARDS IN JARNDYCE!"--Chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "'I'M FLY," SAYS JO. "BUT FEN LARKS, YOU KNOW. STOW
-HOOKING IT"--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: TO MY GREAT SURPRISE, ON GOING IN, I FOUND MY GUARDIAN
-STILL THERE, AND SITTING LOOKING AT THE ASHES--Chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I HAVE FRIGHTENED YOU!" SHE SAID--Chap. xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "JO"--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHO UD GO AND LET A NICE INNOCENT LODGING TO SUCH A
-REG'LAR ONE AS ME!"--Chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: "I AM GROWN UP, NOW, GUPPY. I HAVE ARRIVED AT
-MATURITY"--Chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: GRANDFATHER SMALLWEED ASTONISHES MR. GEORGE--Chap. xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "THERE SHE IS!" CRIES JO--Chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "O, YOU RIDICULOUS CHILD!" OBSERVED MRS. JELLYBY, WITH AN
-ABSTRACTED AIR, AS SHE LOOKED OVER THE DESPATCH LAST OPENED; "WHAT A
-GOOSE YOU ARE!"--Chap. xxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "OF ALL MY OLD ASSOCIATIONS, OF ALL MY OLD PURSUITS AND
-HOPES, OF ALL THE LIVING AND THE DEAD WORLD, THIS ONE POOR SOUL ALONE
-COMES NATURAL TO ME, AND I AM FIT FOR"--Chap. xxiv].
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT'S GONE OF YOUR FATHER AND YOUR MOTHER, EH!"--Chap.
-xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "I BELIEVE YOU!" SAYS MRS. BAGNET. "HE'S A BRITON. THAT'S
-WHAT WOOLWICH IS. A BRITON!"--Chap. xxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE IRONMASTER--Chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. GUPPY'S CATECHISM--Chap. xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: "O MY CHILD, O MY CHILD!"--Chap. xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: "NEVER HAVE A MISSION, MY DEAR CHILD"--Chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: AND HE SHIVERED IN THE WINDOW-SEAT WITH CHARLEY STANDING
-BY HIM, LIKE SOME WOUNDED ANIMAL THAT HAD BEEN FOUND IN A DITCH--Chap.
-xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: "MY LOVE, YOU KNOW THESE TWO GENTLEMEN!" ... "YES!" SAYS
-MRS. SNAGSBY, AND IN A RIGID MANNER ACKNOWLEDGES THEIR PRESENCE--Chap.
-xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I HAVE COME DOWN," REPEATS GRANDFATHER SMALLWEED,
-HOOKING THE AIR TOWARDS HIM WITH ALL HIS TEN FINGERS AT ONCE, "TO LOOK
-AFTER THE PROPERTY"--Chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: PUTS HIS HAND ON HIS BALD HEAD AGAIN, UNDER THIS NEW
-VERBAL SHOWER-BATH--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: MY MOTHER--Chap. xxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "FOR I AM CONSTANTLY BEING TAKEN IN THESE NETS," SAID MR.
-SKIMPOLE, LOOKING BEAMINGLY AT US OVER A GLASS OF WINE-AND-WATER, "AND
-AM CONSTANTLY BEING BAILED OUT--LIKE A BOAT"--Chap. xxxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: WE DANCED FOR AN HOUR WITH GREAT GRAVITY--Chap.
-xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE MADE NO SOUND OF LAUGHTER: BUT SHE ROLLED HER HEAD,
-AND SHOOK IT, AND PUT HER HANDKERCHIEF TO HER MOUTH, AND APPEALED TO
-CADDY WITH HER ELBOW--Chap. xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU ARE TO BE CONGRATULATED, MR. GUPPY, YOU ARE A
-FORTUNATE YOUNG MAN, SIR"--Chap. xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: UNDER THE LINCOLN'S INN TREES--Chap. xxxix]
-
-[Illustration: A BIRD OF ILL OMEN--Chap. xli.]
-
-[Illustration: "TURNS THE KEY UPON HER, MISTRESS," ILLUSTRATING WITH THE
-CELLAR KEY--Chap. xlii.]
-
-[Illustration: RICHARD--Chap. xlv.]
-
-[Illustration: HERE, AGAINST A HOARDING OF DECAYING TIMBER, HE IS
-BROUGHT TO BAY--Chap. xlvi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE CART IS SHAKEN ALL TO PIECES, AND THE RUGGED ROAD IS
-VERY NEAR ITS END--Chap. xlvii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. BUCKET URGING A SENSIBLE VIEW OF THE CASE WITH HIS
-FAT FOREFINGER--Chap. xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: PEEPY WAS SUFFICIENTLY DECORATED TO WALK HAND-IN-HAND
-WITH THE PROFESSOR OF DEPORTMENT--Chap. l.]
-
-[Illustration: "ESTHER, DEAR," SHE SAID VERY QUIETLY, "I AM NOT GOING
-HOME AGAIN"--Chap. li.]
-
-[Illustration: "HAS'NT A DOUBT--ZAMPLE--FAR BETTER HANG WRONG F'LER THAN
-NO F'LER"--Chap. liii.]
-
-[Illustration: "CAN YOU MAKE A HAUGHTY GENTLEMAN OF HIM ... THE POOR
-INFANT!"--Chap. liv.]
-
-[Illustration: HE PUTS HIS HANDS TOGETHER ... AND RAISING THEM TOWARDS
-HER BREAST, BOWS DOWN HIS HEAD, AND CRIES--Chap. lv.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. BUCKET IN LADY DEDLOCK'S BOUDOIR--Chap. lvi.]
-
-[Illustration: IN THE BRICKMAKER'S COTTAGE--Chap. lvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE OLD HOUSEKEEPER WEEPING SILENTLY; VOLUMNIA IN THE
-GREATEST AGITATION, WITH THE FRESHEST BLOOM ON HER CHEEKS; THE TROOPER
-WITH HIS ARMS FOLDED AND HIS HEAD A LITTLE BENT, RESPECTFULLY
-ATTENTIVE--Chap. lviii.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE LAY THERE, WITH ONE ARM CREEPING ROUND A BAR OF THE
-IRON GATE, AND SEEMING TO EMBRACE IT--Chap. lix.]
-
-[Illustration: "MISS SUMMERSON," SAID MR. VHOLES, VERY SLOWLY RUBBING
-HIS GLOVED HANDS, .... "THIS WAS AN ILL-ADVISED MARRIAGE OF MR.
-C'S"--Chap. lx.]
-
-[Illustration: "TO WHICH! SAY THAT AGAIN," CRIED MR. SMALLWEED, IN A
-SHRILL, SHARP VOICE--Chap. lxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "GET OUT WITH YOU. IF WE AIN'T GOOD ENOUGH FOR YOU, GO
-AND PROCURE SOMEBODY THAT IS GOOD ENOUGH. GO ALONG AND FIND 'EM"--Chap.
-lxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "BUT I NEVER OWN TO IT BEFORE THE OLD GIRL. DISCIPLINE
-MUST BE MAINTAINED"--Chap. lxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: VOLUMNIA'S DEVOTION TO SIR LEICESTER--Chap. lxvi.]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-HARD TIMES
-
-[Illustration]
-
-TWENTY ILLUSTRATIONS BY H. FRENCH
-
-
-[Illustration: "LOUISA!! THOMAS!"--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "THIS IS A VERY OBTRUSIVE LAD!" SAID MR. GRADGRIND--Chap.
-vi.]
-
-[Illustration: "HEAVEN'S MERCY, WOMAN!" HE CRIED, FALLING FARTHER OFF
-FROM THE FIGURE, "HAST THOU COME BACK AGEN!"--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT WOULD BE A FINE THING TO BE YOU, MISS LOUISA!"--Chap.
-ix.]
-
-[Illustration: HE FELT A TOUCH UPON HIS ARM--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE WENT DOWN ON HIS KNEE BEFORE HER ON THE POOR MEAN
-STAIRS, AND PUT AN END OF HER SHAWL TO HIS LIPS--Chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT A COMICAL BROTHER-IN-LAW YOU ARE!"--Book 2, chap.
-iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "LOUISA, MY DEAR, YOU ARE THE SUBJECT OF A PROPOSAL OF
-MARRIAGE THAT HAS BEEN MADE TO ME"--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: "THIS, SIR," SAID BOUNDERBY, "IS MY WIFE, MRS.
-BOUNDERBY"--Book 2, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "HEAVEN HELP US ALL IN THIS WORLD!"--Book 2, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "MRS. BOUNDERBY, I ESTEEM IT A MOST FORTUNATE ACCIDENT
-THAT I FIND YOU ALONE HERE"--Book 2, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: MRS. SPARSIT ADVANCED CLOSER TO THEM--Book 2, chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: LEFT ALONE WITH HER MOTHER, LOUISA SAW HER LYING WITH AN
-AWFUL LULL UPON HER FACE--Book 2, chap. ix]
-
-[Illustration: "I ONLY ENTREAT YOU TO BELIEVE, MY FAVOURITE CHILD, THAT
-I HAVE MEANT TO DO RIGHT"--Book 3, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU HAVE SEEN ME ONCE BEFORE, YOUNG LADY," SAID
-RACHAEL--Book 3, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOW, THETHILIA, I DON'T ATHK TO KNOW ANY THECRETH, BUT I
-THUPPOTHE I MAY CONTHIDER THITH TO BE MITH THQUIRE"--Book 3, chap.
-vii.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE STOOPED DOWN ON THE GRASS AT HIS SIDE, AND BENT OVER
-HIM--Book 3, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: HERE WAS LOUISA, ON THE NIGHT OF THE SAME DAY, WATCHING
-THE FIRE AS IN THE DAYS OF YORE--Book 3, chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: HE DREW UP A PLACARD, OFFERING TWENTY POUNDS REWARD, FOR
-THE APPREHENSION OF STEPHEN BLACKWOOD--Book 3, chap. iv.]
-
-
-
-
-LITTLE DORRIT
-
-[Illustration]
-
-FIFTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS BY J. MAHONEY
-
-
-[Illustration: IN MARSEILLES THAT DAY THERE WAS A VILLAINOUS PRISON. IN
-ONE OF ITS CHAMBERS, SO REPULSIVE A PLACE, THAT EVEN THE OBTRUSIVE STARS
-BLINKED AT IT, AND LEFT IT TO SUCH REFUSE OF REFLECTED LIGHT AS IT COULD
-FIND FOR ITSELF, WERE TWO MEN--Book 1, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOTHING CHANGED," SAID THE TRAVELLER, STOPPING TO LOOK
-ROUND. "DARK AND MISERABLE AS EVER"--Book 1, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE OBSERVER STOOD WITH HER HAND UPON HER OWN BOSOM,
-LOOKING AT THE GIRL--Book 1, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "BUT WHAT--HEY?--LORD FORGIVE US!"--MRS. FLINTWINCH
-MUTTERED SOME EJACULATION TO THIS EFFECT, AND TURNED GIDDY--FOR MR.
-FLINTWINCH AWAKE, WAS WATCHING MR. FLINTWINCH ASLEEP--Book 1, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: THEY LOOKED TEMPTING; EIGHT IN NUMBER, CIRCULARLY SET OUT
-ON A WHITE PLATE, ON A TRAY COVERED WITH A WHITE NAPKIN, FLANKED BY A
-SLICE OF BUTTERED FRENCH ROLL AND A LITTLE COMPACT GLASS OF COOL WINE
-AND WATER--Book 1, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "GIVE ME THE MONEY AGAIN," SAID THE OTHER EAGERLY, "AND
-I'LL KEEP IT AND NEVER SPEND IT"--Book 1, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: IN THE BACK GARRET--A SICKLY ROOM, WITH A TURNED UP
-BEDSTEAD IN IT, SO HASTILY AND RECENTLY TURNED UP THAT THE BLANKETS WERE
-BOILING OVER, AS IT WERE, AND KEEPING THE LID OPEN--A HALF FINISHED
-BREAKFAST OF COFFEE AND TOAST, FOR TWO PERSONS, WAS JUMBLED DOWN ANYHOW
-ON A RICKETY TABLE--Book 1, chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "IS IT," SAID BARNWELL JUNIOR, TAKING HEED OF HIS
-VISITOR'S BROWN FACE, "ANYTHING--ABOUT--TONNAGE--OR THAT SORT OF
-THING?"--Book 1, chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: ONE MAN, SLOWLY MOVING ON TOWARDS CHALONS, WAS THE ONLY
-VISIBLE FIGURE ON THE LANDSCAPE. CAIN MIGHT HAVE LOOKED AS LONELY AND
-AVOIDED--Book 1, chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: AND STOOPING DOWN TO PINCH THE CHEEK OF ANOTHER YOUNG
-CHILD WHO WAS SITTING ON THE FLOOR, STARING AT HIM, ASKED MRS. PLORNISH
-HOW OLD THAT FINE BOY WAS? "FOUR YEAR, JUST TURNED, SIR," SAID MRS.
-PLORNISH. "HE'S A FINE LITTLE FELLOW, A'INT HE, SIR, BUT THIS ONE IS
-RATHER SICKLY." SHE TENDERLY HUSHED THE BABY IN HER ARMS AS SHE SAID
-IT--Book 1, chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE PARLOUR FIRE TICKED IN THE GRATE. THERE WAS ONLY ONE
-PERSON ON THE PARLOUR HEARTH, AND THE LOUD WATCH IN HIS POCKET TICKED
-AUDIBLY. THE SERVANT MAID HAD TICKED THE TWO WORDS, "MR. CLENNAM," SO
-SOFTLY, THAT SHE HAD NOT BEEN HEARD; AND HE CONSEQUENTLY STOOD, WITHIN
-THE DOOR SHE HAD CLOSED, UNNOTICED--Book 1, chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: HIS DOOR WAS SOFTLY OPENED, AND THESE SPOKEN WORDS
-STARTLED HIM, AND CAME AS IF THEY WERE AN ANSWER, "LITTLE DORRIT"--Book
-1, chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: THEY WENT TO THE CLOSED GATE, AND PEEPED THROUGH INTO THE
-COURTYARD. "I HOPE HE IS SOUND ASLEEP," SAID LITTLE DORRIT, KISSING ONE
-OF THE BARS, "AND DOES NOT MISS ME." THE GATE WAS SO FAMILIAR, AND SO
-LIKE A COMPANION, THAT THEY PUT DOWN MAGGY'S BASKET IN A CORNER TO SERVE
-FOR A SEAT, AND KEEPING CLOSE TOGETHER, RESTED THERE FOR SOME TIME--Book
-1, chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: THEN THE BELL RANG ONCE MORE, AND THEN ONCE MORE, AND
-THEN KEPT ON RINGING; IN DESPITE OF WHICH IMPORTUNATE SUMMONS, AFFERY
-STILL SAT BEHIND HER APRON, RECOVERING HER BREATH. AT LAST MR.
-FLINTWINCH CAME SHUFFLING DOWN THE STAIRCASE INTO THE HALL, MUTTERING
-AND CALLING "AFFERY WOMAN!" ALL THE WAY. AFFERY STILL REMAINING BEHIND
-HER APRON, HE CAME STUMBLING DOWN THE KITCHEN STAIRS, CANDLE IN
-HAND--Book 1, chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: AS ARTHUR CAME OVER THE STYLE AND DOWN TO THE WATER'S
-EDGE, THE LOUNGER GLANCED AT HIM FOR A MOMENT AND THEN RESUMED HIS
-OCCUPATION OF IDLY TOSSING STONES INTO THE WATER WITH HIS FOOT.--Book 1,
-chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "O DON'T CRY!" SAID LITTLE DORRIT PITEOUSLY. "DON'T,
-DON'T! GOOD-BYE, JOHN. GOD BLESS YOU!" "GOOD-BYE, MISS AMY. GOOD-BYE!"
-AND SO HE LEFT HER--Book 1, chap, xviii.]
-
-[Illustration: AS SHE STOOD BEHIND HIM, LEANING OVER HIS CHAIR SO
-LOVINGLY, HE LOOKED WITH DOWNCAST EYES AT THE FIRE. AN UNEASINESS STOLE
-OVER HIM THAT WAS LIKE A TOUCH OF SHAME; AND WHEN HE SPOKE, AS HE
-PRESENTLY DID, IT WAS IN AN UNCONNECTED AND EMBARRASSED MANNER--Book 1,
-chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: THEY SPOKE NO MORE, ALL THE WAY BACK TO THE LODGING WHERE
-FANNY AND HER UNCLE LIVED. WHEN THEY ARRIVED THERE THEY FOUND THE OLD
-MAN PRACTISING HIS CLARIONET IN THE DOLEFULLEST MANNER IN A CORNER OF
-THE ROOM--Book 1, chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: ARTHUR CLENNAM WITH THE CARD IN HIS HAND, BETOOK HIMSELF
-TO THE ADDRESS SET FORTH ON IT, AND SPEEDILY ARRIVED THERE. IT WAS A
-VERY SMALL ESTABLISHMENT, WHEREIN A DECENT WOMAN SAT BEHIND THE COUNTER
-WORKING AT HER NEEDLE--Book 1, chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT NIMBLE FINGERS YOU HAVE," SAID FLORA, "BUT ARE YOU
-SURE YOU ARE WELL?" ... "OH YES, INDEED!" FLORA PUT HER FEET UPON THE
-FENDER AND SETTLED HERSELF FOR A THOROUGH GOOD ROMANTIC DISCLOSURE--Book
-1, chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: MOUNTING TO HIS ATTIC, ATTENDED BY MRS. PLORNISH AS
-INTERPRETER, HE FOUND MR. BAPTIST WITH NO FURNITURE BUT HIS BED ON THE
-GROUND, A TABLE AND A CHAIR, CARVING WITH THE AID OF A FEW SIMPLE TOOLS,
-IN THE BLITHEST WAY POSSIBLE. "NOW, OLD CHAP," SAID MR. PANCKS, "PAY
-UP!"--Book 1, chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. DOYCE HAD BEEN TO TWICKENHAM TO PASS THE DAY. CLENNAM
-HAD EXCUSED HIMSELF, MR. DOYCE WAS JUST COME HOME. HE PUT IN HIS HEAD AT
-THE DOOR OF CLENNAM'S SITTING-ROOM TO SAY GOOD NIGHT. "COME IN, COME
-IN!" SAID CLENNAM--Book 1, chap. xxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: HE WAS SLOWLY RESUMING HIS WAY, WHEN HE SAW A FIGURE IN
-THE PATH BEFORE HIM WHICH HE HAD, PERHAPS, ALREADY ASSOCIATED WITH THE
-EVENING AND ITS IMPRESSIONS. MINNIE WAS THERE ALONE--Book 1, chap.
-xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: WHY SHE SHOULD THEN STOOP DOWN AND LOOK IN AT THE
-KEY-HOLE OF THE DOOR, AS IF AN EYE WOULD OPEN IT, IT WOULD BE DIFFICULT
-TO SAY. FROM THIS POSTURE SHE STARTED SUDDENLY, WITH A HALF SCREAM,
-FEELING SOMETHING ON HER SHOULDER. IT WAS THE TOUCH OF A HAND; OF A
-MAN'S HAND--Book 1, chap. xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: THE STRANGER, TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THIS FITFUL
-ILLUMINATION OF HIS VISAGE, LOOKED INTENTLY AND WONDERINGLY AT HIM--Book
-1, chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: ON THEIR ARRIVAL AT MR. BLANDOIS'S ROOM, A BOTTLE OF PORT
-WINE WAS ORDERED BY THAT GALLANT GENTLEMAN; WHO COILED HIMSELF UP ON THE
-WINDOW-SEAT, WHILE MR. FLINTWINCH TOOK A CHAIR OPPOSITE TO HIM, WITH THE
-TABLE BETWEEN THEM--Book 1, chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: THEY WERE WITHIN FIVE MINUTES OF THEIR DESTINATION, WHEN,
-AT THE CORNER OF HER OWN STREET, THEY CAME UPON FANNY, IN HER NEW
-BONNET, BOUND FOR THE SAME PORT--Book 1, chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "DEAR LITTLE DORRIT, LET ME LAY IT DOWN." SHE YIELDED TO
-HIM, AND HE PUT IT ASIDE! HER HANDS WERE THEN NERVOUSLY CLASPING
-TOGETHER--Book 1, chap. xxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT A GOOD FELLOW YOU ARE, CLENNAM!" EXCLAIMED THE
-OTHER STOPPING TO LOOK AT HIM, AS IF WITH IRREPRESSIBLE ADMIRATION.
-"WHAT A CAPITAL FELLOW! YOU HAVE NEVER BEEN DISAPPOINTED. THAT'S EASY TO
-SEE."--Book 1, chap. xxxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: WORN OUT WITH HER OWN EMOTIONS, AND YIELDING TO THE
-SILENCE OF THE ROOM, HER HAND SLOWLY SLACKENED AND FAILED IN ITS FANNING
-MOVEMENT, AND HER HEAD DROPPED DOWN ON THE PILLOW AT HER FATHER'S SIDE.
-CLENNAM ROSE SOFTLY, OPENED AND CLOSED THE DOOR WITHOUT A SOUND--Book 1,
-chap. xxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: THROUGH THESE SPECTATORS, THE LITTLE PROCESSION, HEADED
-BY THE TWO BROTHERS, MOVED SLOWLY TO THE GATE. MR. DORRIT, YIELDING TO
-THE VAST SPECULATION HOW THE POOR CREATURES WERE TO GET ON WITHOUT HIM,
-WAS GREAT, AND SAD, BUT NOT ABSORBED--Book 1, chap. xxxvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "PERMIT ME!" SAID THE TRAVELLER, RISING AND HOLDING THE
-DOOR OPEN. "GOOD REPOSE! TO THE PLEASURE OF SEEING YOU ONCE MORE! TO
-TO-MORROW!" AS HE KISSED HER HAND, WITH HIS BEST MANNER, AND HIS
-DAINTIEST SMILE, THE YOUNG LADY DREW A LITTLE NEARER TO HER FATHER, AND
-PASSED HIM WITH A DREAD OF TOUCHING HIM--Book 2, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: NEVERTHELESS, AS THEY WOUND ROUND THE RUGGED WAY WHILE
-THE CONVENT WAS YET IN SIGHT, SHE MORE THAN ONCE LOOKED ROUND, AND
-DESCRIED MR. BLANDOIS, BACKED BY THE CONVENT SMOKE WHICH ROSE HIGH FROM
-THE CHIMNEYS IN A GOLDEN FILM, ALWAYS STANDING ON ONE JUTTING POINT
-LOOKING DOWN AFTER THEM--Book 2, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT OUGHT TO BRING A JUDGMENT ON US. BROTHER, I PROTEST
-AGAINST IT IN THE SIGHT OF GOD!" AS HIS HAND WENT ABOVE HIS HEAD AND
-CAME DOWN UPON THE TABLE, IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN A BLACKSMITH'S--Book 2,
-chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: LITTLE DORRIT WAS IN FRONT, WITH HER BROTHER AND MRS.
-GENERAL (MR. DORRIT HAD REMAINED AT HOME). BUT ON THE BRINK OF THE QUAY,
-THEY ALL CAME TOGETHER. SHE STARTED AGAIN TO FIND BLANDOIS CLOSE TO HER,
-HANDING FANNY INTO THE BOAT--Book 2, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: "GOOD-BYE, MY LOVE! GOOD-BYE!" THE LAST WORDS WERE SPOKEN
-ALOUD AS THE VIGILANT BLANDOIS STOPPED, TURNED HIS HEAD, AND LOOKED AT
-THEM FROM THE BOTTOM OF THE STAIRCASE--Book 2, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE STOPPED AT THE CORNER, SEEMING TO LOOK BACK
-EXPECTANTLY UP THE STREET AS IF HE HAD MADE AN APPOINTMENT WITH SOME ONE
-TO MEET HIM THERE; BUT HE KEPT A CAREFUL EYE ON THE THREE. WHEN THEY
-CAME TOGETHER, THE MAN TOOK OFF HIS HAT AND MADE MISS WADE A BOW--Book
-2, chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "DESPATCH THEN! ACHIEVE THEN! BRING MR. FLINTWINCH!
-ANNOUNCE ME TO MY LADY!" CRIED THE STRANGER, CLANKING ABOUT THE STONE
-FLOOR. "PRAY TELL ME, AFFERY," SAID ARTHUR ALOUD AND STERNLY, AS HE
-SURVEYED HIM FROM HEAD TO FOOT WITH INDIGNATION, "WHO IS THIS
-GENTLEMAN?"--Book 2, chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: THERE IS A CURTAIN, MORE DIRT-COLOURED THAN RED, WHICH
-DIVIDES IT, AND THE PART BEHIND THE CURTAIN MAKES THE PRIVATE
-SITTING-ROOM. WHEN I FIRST SAW HER THERE SHE WAS ALONE, AND HER WORK HAD
-FALLEN OUT OF HER HAND, AND SHE WAS LOOKING UP AT THE SKY SHINING
-THROUGH THE TOPS OF THE WINDOWS--Book 2, chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: "AND YOU HAVE REALLY INVESTED," CLENNAM HAD ALREADY
-PASSED TO THAT WORD, "YOUR THOUSAND POUNDS, PANCKS?" ... "TO BE SURE,
-SIR!" REPLIED PANCKS BOLDLY, WITH A PUFF OF SMOKE, "AND ONLY WISH IT
-TEN."--Book 2, chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: LITTLE DORRIT USED TO SIT AND MUSE HERE, MUCH AS SHE HAD
-BEEN USED TO WHILE AWAY THE TIME ON HER BALCONY IN VENICE. SEATED THUS
-ONE DAY, SHE WAS SOFTLY TOUCHED ON THE SHOULDER, AND FANNY SAID, "WELL,
-MY DEAR," AND TOOK HER SEAT AT HER SIDE--Book 2, chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "TO PRESERVE YOUR APPROBATION, MRS. GENERAL," SAID FANNY,
-RETURNING THE SMILE WITH ONE IN WHICH THERE WAS NO TRACE OF THOSE
-INGREDIENTS, "WILL OF COURSE BE THE HIGHEST OBJECT OF MY MARRIED LIFE;
-TO LOSE IT, WOULD OF COURSE BE PERFECT WRETCHEDNESS"--Book 2, chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHERE IS THIS MISSING MAN? HAVE YOU COME TO GIVE US
-INFORMATION WHERE HE IS? I HOPE YOU HAVE." "SO FAR FROM IT, I--HUM, HAVE
-COME TO SEEK INFORMATION."... "UNFORTUNATELY FOR US, THERE IS NONE TO BE
-GOT HERE. FLINTWINCH, SHOW THE GENTLEMAN THE HAND-BILL. GIVE HIM SEVERAL
-TO TAKE AWAY. HOLD THE LIGHT FOR HIM TO READ IT"--Book 2, chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SUN HAD GONE DOWN FULL FOUR HOURS, AND IT WAS LATER
-THAN MOST TRAVELLERS WOULD LIKE IT TO BE FOR FINDING THEMSELVES OUTSIDE
-THE WALLS OF ROME, WHEN MR. DORRIT'S CARRIAGE, STILL ON ITS LAST
-WEARISOME STAGE, RATTLED OVER THE SOLITARY CAMPAGNA--Book 2, chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: AS EACH OF THE TWO HANDSOME FACES LOOKED AT EACH OTHER,
-CLENNAM FELT HOW EACH OF THE TWO NATURES MUST BE CONSTANTLY TEARING THE
-OTHER TO PIECES--Book 2, chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: ONE FIGURE REPOSED UPON THE BED, THE OTHER KNEELING ON
-THE FLOOR, DROOPED OVER IT THE ARMS EASILY AND PEACEFULLY RESTING ON THE
-COVERLET; ... THE TWO BROTHERS WERE BEFORE THEIR FATHER; FAR BEYOND THE
-TWILIGHT JUDGMENTS OF THIS WORLD; HIGH ABOVE ITS MISTS AND
-OBSCURITIES--Book 2, chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: AFTER ONE OF THE NIGHTS THAT I HAVE SPOKEN OF, I CAME
-DOWN INTO A GREENHOUSE BEFORE BREAKFAST. CHARLOTTE (THE NAME OF MY FALSE
-YOUNG FRIEND) HAD GONE DOWN BEFORE ME, AND I HEARD HER AUNT SPEAKING TO
-HER ABOUT ME, AS I ENTERED. I STOPPED WHERE I WAS, AMONG THE LEAVES AND
-LISTENED--Book 2, chap. xxi.]
-
-[Illustration: "IF I DRAW YOU INTO THIS BLACK CLOSET AND SPEAK HERE."...
-"WHY DO YOU HIDE YOUR FACE?"... "BECAUSE I AM AFRAID OF SEEING
-SOMETHING."... "YOU CAN'T BE AFRAID OF SEEING ANYTHING IN THIS DARKNESS,
-AFFERY"--Book 2, chap. xxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "HE COULDN'T HAVE A BETTER NURSE TO BRING HIM ROUND," MR.
-SPARKLER MADE BOLD TO OPINE.... "FOR A WONDER I CAN AGREE WITH YOU,"
-RETURNED HIS WIFE, LANGUIDLY TURNING HER EYELIDS A LITTLE IN HIS
-DIRECTION, "AND CAN ADOPT YOUR WORDS"--Book 2, chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE DAY WAS SUNNY, AND THE MARSHALSEA, WITH THE HOT NOON
-STRIKING UPON IT WAS UNWONTEDLY QUIET. ARTHUR CLENNAM DROPPED INTO A
-SOLITARY ARM-CHAIR, ITSELF AS FADED AS ANY DEBTOR IN THE GAOL, AND
-YIELDED HIMSELF TO HIS THOUGHTS--Book 2, chap. xxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE AROSE AND OPENED IT, AND AN AGREEABLE VOICE ACCOSTED
-HIM WITH "HOW DO YOU DO, MR. CLENNAM? I HOPE I AM NOT UNWELCOME IN
-CALLING TO SEE YOU." IT WAS THE SPRIGHTLY YOUNG BARNACLE,
-FERDINAND--Book 2, chap. xxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND SHE CAME TOWARDS HIM WITH HER HANDS LAID ON HIS
-BREAST TO KEEP HIM IN HIS CHAIR, AND WITH HER KNEES UPON THE FLOOR AT
-HIS FEET, AND WITH HER LIPS RAISED UP TO KISS HIM, AND WITH HER TEARS
-DROPPING ON HIM AS THE RAIN FROM HEAVEN HAD DROPPED UPON THE FLOWERS,
-LITTLE DORRIT, A LOVING PRESENCE, CALLED HIM BY HIS NAME--Book 2, chap.
-xxix.]
-
-[Illustration: IN A MOMENT, AFFERY HAD THROWN THE STOCKING DOWN, STARTED
-UP, CAUGHT HOLD OF THE WINDOW-SILL WITH HER RIGHT HAND, LODGED HERSELF
-UPON THE WINDOW SEAT WITH HER RIGHT KNEE, AND WAS FLOURISHING HER LEFT
-HAND, BEATING EXPECTING ASSAILANTS OFF--Book 2, chap. xxx.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SUN HAD SET, AND THE STREETS WERE DIM IN THE DUSKY
-TWILIGHT, WHEN THE FIGURE, SO LONG UNUSED TO THEM, HURRIED ON ITS
-WAY--Book 2, chap. xxxi.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. PANCKS AND THE PATRIARCH WERE INSTANTLY THE CENTRE OF
-A PRESS, ALL EYES AND EARS; WINDOWS WERE THROWN OPEN, AND DOORSTEPS WERE
-THRONGED--Book 2, chap. xxxii.]
-
-[Illustration: SUCH A BOX HAD AFFERY FLINTWINCH SEEN IN THE FIRST OF HER
-DREAMS, GOING OUT OF THE OLD HOUSE ... THIS, TATTYCORAM PUT ON THE
-GROUND AT HER OLD MASTER'S FEET; THIS, TATTYCORAM FELL ON HER KNEES BY,
-AND PUT HER HANDS UPON....--Book 2, chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: LITTLE DORRIT AND HER HUSBAND WALKED OUT OF THE CHURCH
-ALONE--Chap. xxxiv.]
-
-
-
-
-REPRINTED PIECES
-
-NINE ILLUSTRATIONS BY E. G. DALZIEL
-
-
-[Illustration: THE MOMENT COMES, THE FIRE IS DYING--AND THE CHILD IS
-DEAD--_The Long Voyage_]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, GIT ALONG WITH YOU, SIR, IF YOU PLEASE, ME AND MRS.
-BIGBY DON'T WANT NO MALE PARTIES HERE"--_Births--Mrs. Meeks of a son_]
-
-[Illustration: "LOOK AT THE SNIVELLING MILKSOP," SAID MY UNCLE--_The
-Poor Relation's Story_]
-
-[Illustration: IN THE MIDST OF THE KITCHEN ... SITS A YOUNG, MODEST,
-GENTLE-LOOKING CREATURE, WITH A BEAUTIFUL CHILD IN HER LAP--_On Duty
-with Inspector Field_]
-
-[Illustration: "WHETHER HE WAS THE VICAR, OR MOSES, OR MR. BURCHILL, OR
-A CONGLOMERATION OF ALL FOUR, I KNEW NOT"--_The Ghost of Art_]
-
-[Illustration: "ARE YOU FROM THE COUNTRY, YOUNG MAN?" "YES," I SAY, "I
-AM"--_The Detective Police_]
-
-[Illustration: "IN ANOTHER ROOM WERE SEVERAL UGLY OLD WOMEN CROUCHING,
-WITCH-LIKE, ROUND A HEARTH, AND CHATTING AND NODDING, AFTER THE MANNER
-OF MONKEYS"--_A Walk in a Workhouse_]
-
-[Illustration: "MR. BLINKINS, ARE YOU ILL, SIR?"--_Our School_]
-
-[Illustration: HE TOOK HER IN HIS ARMS AND TOLD HER IT WAS FANCY--_A
-Christmas Tree_]
-
-
-
-
-A TALE OF TWO CITIES
-
-[Illustration]
-
-TWENTY-FIVE ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-
-[Illustration: MISS MANETTE CURTSIED TO MR. LORRY, WITH A PRETTY DESIRE
-TO CONVEY TO HIM THAT SHE FELT HOW MUCH OLDER AND WISER HE WAS THAN SHE.
-HE MADE HER ANOTHER BOW--Book 1, Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE WINE SHOP--Book 1, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SHOEMAKER--Book 1, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: MESSRS. CRUNCHER AND SON--Book 2, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: AND SMOOTHING HER RICH HAIR WITH AS MUCH PRIDE AS SHE
-COULD POSSIBLY HAVE TAKEN IN HER OWN HAIR IF SHE HAD BEEN THE VAINEST
-AND HANDSOMEST OF WOMEN--Book 2, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: THE LION AND THE JACKAL--Book 2, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: HE STOOPED A LITTLE, AND WITH HIS TATTERED BLUE CAP
-POINTED UNDER THE CARRIAGE. ALL HIS FELLOWS STOOPED TO LOOK UNDER THE
-CARRIAGE--Book 2, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: DRIVE HIM FAST FROM THE TOMB. THIS FROM JACQUES--Book 2,
-chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "THINK NOW AND THEN THAT THERE IS A MAN WHO WOULD GIVE
-HIS LIFE TO KEEP A LIFE YOU LOVE BESIDE YOU"--Book 2, chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT IS FRIGHTFUL, MESSIEURS. HOW CAN THE WOMEN AND
-CHILDREN DRAW WATER? WHO CAN GOSSIP OF AN EVENING UNDER THAT
-SHADOW?"--Book 2, chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: SAINT ANTOINE--Book 2, chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "STILL, THE DOCTOR, WITH SHADED FOREHEAD, BEAT HIS FOOT
-NERVOUSLY ON THE GROUND"--Book 2, chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: DRAGGED, AND STRUCK AT, AND STIFLED BY THE BUNCHES OF
-GRASS AND STRAW THAT WERE THRUST INTO HIS FACE BY HUNDREDS OF
-HANDS--Book 2, chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: AMONG THE TALKERS WAS STRYVER, OF THE KING'S BENCH BAR
-... BROACHING TO MONSEIGNEUR HIS DEVICES FOR BLOWING THE PEOPLE UP, AND
-EXTERMINATING THEM FROM THE FACE OF THE EARTH.--Book 2, chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: SOME REGISTERS WERE LYING OPEN ON A DESK AND AN OFFICER
-OF A COARSE DARK ASPECT PRESIDED OVER THESE--Book 3, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: THE GRINDSTONE--Book 3, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE CARMAGNOLE--Book 3, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: HERE MR. LORRY BECAME AWARE, FROM WHERE HE SAT, OF A MOST
-REMARKABLE GOBLIN SHADOW ON THE WALL--Book 3, chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: TWICE HE PUT HIS HAND TO THE WOUND IN HIS BREAST, AND
-WITH HIS FOREFINGER DREW A CROSS IN THE AIR--Book 3, chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: THE TRIAL OF EVRÉMONDE--Book 3, chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: AS HE WAS DRAWN AWAY, HIS WIFE RELEASED HIM, AND STOOD
-LOOKING AFTER HIM WITH HER HANDS TOUCHING ONE ANOTHER IN THE ATTITUDE OF
-PRAYER--Book 3, chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: HIS HEAD AND THROAT WERE BARE, AND, AS HE SPOKE WITH
-HELPLESS LOOK STRAYING ALL ROUND, HE TOOK HIS COAT OFF, AND LET IT DROP
-ON THE FLOOR--Book 3, chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU MIGHT, FROM YOUR APPEARANCE, BE THE WIFE OF
-LUCIFER," SAID MISS PROSS IN HER BREATHING. "NEVERTHELESS YOU SHALL NOT
-GET THE BETTER OF ME. I AM AN ENGLISHWOMAN"--Book 3, chap. xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE THIRD TUMBREL--Book 3, chap. xv.]
-
-
-
-
-THE UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELLER
-
-[Illustration]
-
-TWENTY-SIX ILLUSTRATIONS BY E. G. DALZIEL
-
-
-[Illustration: SAW FROM THE LADDER'S ELEVATION, AS HE LOOKED DOWN BY
-CHANCE TOWARDS THE SHORE, SOME DARK, TROUBLED OBJECT CLOSE IN WITH THE
-LAND--_The Shipwreck_]
-
-[Illustration: A CHEAP THEATRE, SUNDAY NIGHT--_Two Views of a Cheap
-Theatre_]
-
-[Illustration: STOOD A CREATURE REMOTELY IN THE LIKENESS OF A YOUNG MAN,
-WITH PUFFED, SALLOW FACE, AND A FIGURE ALL DIRTY AND SHINY AND SLIMY,
-WHO MAY HAVE BEEN THE YOUNGEST SON OF HIS FILTHY OLD FATHER,
-THAMES--_Wapping Workhouse_]
-
-[Illustration: MR. GRAZINGLANDS LOOKED INTO A PASTRYCOOK'S WINDOW,
-HESITATING AS TO THE EXPEDIENCY OF LUNCHING AT THAT ESTABLISHMENT
---_Refreshments for Travellers_]
-
-[Illustration: "BAGS TO HOLD YOUR MONEY," SAYS THE WITCH, SHAKING HER
-HEAD AND SETTING HER TEETH; "YOU AS HAS GOT IT"--_Poor Mercantile Jack_]
-
-[Illustration: THE TALL GLAZED HEAD-DRESS OF HIS WARRIOR STRAUDENHEIM
-INSTANTLY KNOCKED OFF--_Travelling Abroad_]
-
-[Illustration: HE WAS TAKEN INTO CUSTODY BY THE POLICE--_Shy
-Neighbourhoods_]
-
-[Illustration: "DROP OF SOMETHING TO DRINK," INTERPOSED THE STRANGER. "I
-AM AGREEABLE"--_Chambers_]
-
-[Illustration: "'THEN YOU'RE A TRAMP,' HE SES. 'I'D RATHER BE THAT THAN
-A BEADLE,' I SES"--_Tramps_]
-
-[Illustration: "AM I RED TO-NIGHT?" "YOU ARE," HE UNCOMPROMISINGLY
-ANSWERED--_Night Walks_]
-
-[Illustration: "A LEMON HAS PIPS, AND A YARD HAS SHIPS, AND I'LL HAVE
-CHIPS!"--_Nurses' Stories_]
-
-[Illustration: THE WIND BLOWS STIFFLY FROM THE NOR'-EAST ... AND THE
-SHAPELESS PASSENGERS LIE ABOUT IN MELANCHOLY BUNDLES--_The Calais Night
-Mail_]
-
-[Illustration: THEN DROPPED UPON HER KNEES BEFORE US, WITH PROTESTATIONS
-THAT WE WERE RIGHT--_Some Recollections of Mortality_]
-
-[Illustration: ON THE STARBOARD SIDE OF THE SHIP A GRIZZLED MAN DICTATED
-A LONG LETTER TO ANOTHER GRIZZLED MAN IN AN IMMENSE FUR CAP--_Bound for
-the Great Salt Lake_]
-
-[Illustration: BLINKING OLD MEN WHO ARE LET OUT OF THE WORKHOUSE BY THE
-HOUR HAVE A TENDENCY TO SIT ON BITS OF COPING STONE IN THESE CHURCHYARDS
-... THE MORE DEPRESSED CLASS OF BEGGARS TOO BRING HITHER BROKEN MEALS,
-AND MUNCH--_The City of the Absent_]
-
-[Illustration: MR. J. MELLOWS, OF THE "DOLPHIN'S HEAD"--_An old
-Stage-coaching House_]
-
-[Illustration: BUILDING H.M.S. ACHILLES--_Chatham Dockyard_]
-
-[Illustration: AT THE STATION THEY HAD BEEN SITTING ABOUT IN THEIR
-THREADBARE HOMESPUN GARMENTS ... SAD ENOUGH AT HEART, MOST OF THEM--_In
-the French-Flemish Country_]
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS AGREED THAT MR. BATTENS "OUGHT TO TAKE IT UP," AND
-MR. BATTENS WAS COMMUNICATED WITH ON THE SUBJECT--_Titbull's
-Almshouses_]
-
-[Illustration: AT THE UPPER END OF THIS DUNGEON ... THE ENGLISHMAN FIRST
-BEHELD HIM, SITTING ON AN IRON BEDSTEAD, TO WHICH HE WAS CHAINED BY A
-HEAVY CHAIN--_The Italian Prisoner_]
-
-[Illustration: TROTTING ABOUT AMONG THE BEDS, ON FAMILIAR TERMS WITH ALL
-THE PATIENTS, WAS A COMICAL MONGREL DOG CALLED POODLES--_A Small Star in
-the East_]
-
-[Illustration: OVER THE GROG, MIXED IN A BUCKET, PRESIDES THE
-BOATSWAIN'S MATE--_Aboard Ship_]
-
-[Illustration: THIS ENGAGING FIGURE APPROACHED THE FATAL LAMPS--_Mr.
-Barlow_]
-
-[Illustration: LOOK AT THIS GROUP AT A STREET CORNER--_The Ruffian_]
-
-[Illustration: AND WHITE RIDING HOOD WAS FINED TEN SHILLINGS--_The
-Ruffian_]
-
-
-
-
-GREAT EXPECTATIONS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THIRTY ILLUSTRATIONS BY F. A. FRASER
-
-[Illustration: "HOLD YOUR NOISE!" CRIED A HORRIBLE VOICE ... "KEEP
-STILL, YOU LITTLE DEVIL, OR I'LL CUT YOUR THROAT"--Chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: THE SERGEANT RAN IN FIRST--Chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHY, HERE'S A J!" SAID JOE, "AND A O EQUAL TO
-ANYTHINK!"--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE GAVE A CONTEMPTUOUS TOSS ... AND LEFT ME--Chap.
-viii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE SAID, "AHA! WOULD YOU!" AND BEGAN DANCING BACKWARDS
-AND FORWARDS--Chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: "WELL, PIP, YOU KNOW, ... YOU YOURSELF SEE ME PUT 'EM IN
-MY 'AT, AND THEREFORE YOU KNOW AS THEY ARE HERE"--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: ORLICK ... WAS VERY SOON AMONG THE COAL-DUST, AND IN NO
-HURRY TO COME OUT OF IT--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: THEN SHE SOFTLY PATTED MY SHOULDER IN A SOOTHING
-WAY--Chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOW, THIS," SAID MR. TRABB ... "IS A VERY SWEET
-ARTICLE"--Chap. xix]
-
-[Illustration: "SAY ANOTHER WORD--ONE SINGLE WORD--AND WEMMICK SHALL
-GIVE YOU YOUR MONEY BACK"--Chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: "THIS CHAP ... MURDERED HIS MASTER"--Chap. xxiv.]
-
-[Illustration: WE FOUND THE AGED HEATING THE POKER, WITH EXPECTANT
-EYES--Chap. xxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO YOU TAKE TEA, OR COFFEE, MR. GARGERY?"--Chap. xxvii.]
-
-[Illustration: DRAWLING TO HIS ATTENDANTS, "DON'T KNOW YAH, DON'T KNOW
-YAH!"--Chap. xxx]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, YOU MUST TAKE THE PURSE!"--Chap. xxxiii.]
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS FINE SUMMER WEATHER AGAIN--Chap. xxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT IS OF NO USE," SAID BIDDY--Chap. xxxv.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT!" SAID ESTELLA, PRESERVING HER ATTITUDE OF
-INDIFFERENCE AS SHE LEANED AGAINST THE GREAT CHIMNEY-PIECE, AND ONLY
-MOVING HER EYES, "DO YOU REPROACH ME FOR BEING COLD! YOU!"--Chap.
-xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHY SHOULD I LOOK AT HIM?" RETURNED ESTELLA--Chap.
-xxxviii.]
-
-[Illustration: I ROSE OUT OF MY CHAIR, AND STOOD WITH MY HAND UPON THE
-BACK OF IT, LOOKING WILDLY AT HIM--Chap. xxxix.]
-
-[Illustration: GRADUALLY I SLIPPED FROM THE CHAIR, AND LAY ON THE
-FLOOR--Chap. xl.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHEN I SAY TO COMPEYSON 'ONCE OUT OF THIS COURT, I'LL
-SMASH THAT FACE O' YOURN!' AIN'T IT COMPEYSON AS PRAYS THE JUDGE TO BE
-PROTECTED, AND GETS TWO TURNKEYS STOOD BETWIXT US!"--Chap. xiii]
-
-[Illustration: HE CAME BACK CALLING FOR A LIGHT FOR THE CIGAR IN HIS
-MOUTH, WHICH HE HAD FORGOTTEN. A MAN IN A DUST-COLOURED DRESS APPEARED
-WITH WHAT HE WANTED--Chap. xliii.]
-
-[Illustration: I HAD TO FEEL MY WAY BACK AMONG THE SHIPPING--Chap.
-xlvii.]
-
-[Illustration: I ENTREATED HER TO RISE--Chap. xlix.]
-
-[Illustration: "HIM THAT I SPEAK OF," SAID THE LANDLORD, "MR.
-PUMBLECHOOK"--Chap. lii.]
-
-[Illustration: "DO YOU KNOW THIS!" SAID HE--Chap. liii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE HAD SPOKEN HIS LAST WORDS--Chap. lvi.]
-
-[Illustration: WE SAT DOWN ON A BENCH THAT WAS NEAR--Chap. lix.]
-
-
-
-
-OUR MUTUAL FRIEND
-
-[Illustration]
-
-FIFTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-BY J. MAHONEY
-
-[Illustration: THE BIRD OF PREY--Chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "SHOW US A PICTURE," SAID THE BOY. "TELL US WHERE TO
-LOOK!"--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN IT CAME TO BELLA'S TURN TO SIGN HER NAME, MR.
-ROKESMITH, WHO WAS STANDING, AS HE HAD SAT, WITH A HESITATING HAND UPON
-THE TABLE, LOOKED AT HER STEALTHILY, BUT NARROWLY--Chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "HERE YOU ARE AGAIN," REPEATED MR. WEGG, MUSING. "AND
-WHAT ARE YOU NOW?"--Chap. v].
-
-[Illustration: LIZZIE, LOOKING FOR HER FATHER, SAW HIM COMING, AND STOOD
-UPON THE CAUSEWAY THAT HE MIGHT SEE HER--Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: AFTER HOLDING HER TO HIS BREAST WITH A PASSIONATE CRY, HE
-TOOK UP HIS BUNDLE AND DARTED OUT AT THE DOOR, WITH AN ARM ACROSS HER
-EYES--Book 1, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU'RE CASTING YOUR EYES ROUND THE SHOP, MR. WEGG. LET
-ME SHOW YOU A LIGHT"--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOODY!" SAID MRS. BOFFIN, COMING FROM HER FASHIONABLE
-SOFA TO HIS SIDE ON THE PLAIN SETTLE AND HOOKING HER COMFORTABLE ARM
-THROUGH HIS--Chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: THAT HE KNEW IT AS WELL AS SHE, SHE KNEW AS WELL AS HE,
-WHEN THEY WERE LEFT TOGETHER STANDING ON THE PATH BY THE
-GARDEN-GATE--Chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE SITS UPON HER STONE, AND TAKES NO HEED OF HIM--Chap.
-x.]
-
-[Illustration: "APPARENTLY ONE OF THE GHOSTS HAS LOST ITS WAY, AND
-DROPPED IN TO BE DIRECTED. LOOK AT THIS PHANTOM!"--Chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS A LITTLE WINDOW OF BUT FOUR PIECES OF GLASS, AND
-WAS NOT CURTAINED; HE CHOSE IT BECAUSE THE LARGER WINDOW NEAR IT
-WAS--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: THEY HAD OPENED THE DOOR AT THE BOTTOM OF THE STAIRCASE
-GIVING ON THE YARD, AND THEY STOOD IN THE SUN-LIGHT LOOKING AT THE
-SCRAWL OF THE TWO UNSTEADY CHILDISH HANDS TWO OR THREE STEPS UP THE
-STAIRCASE--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: "COME HERE, TODDLES AND PODDLES"--Chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. BRADLEY HEADSTONE, HIGHLY CERTIFICATED STIPENDIARY
-SCHOOLMASTER, DREW HIS RIGHT FORE-FINGER THROUGH ONE OF THE BUTTON-HOLES
-OF THE BOY'S COAT, AND LOOKED AT IT ATTENTIVELY--Book 2, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: HE STOOD LEANING BY THE DOOR AT LIZZIE'S SIDE--Book 2,
-chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "ONE THING, HOWEVER, I CAN DO FOR YOU," SAYS TWEMLOW,
-"AND THAT IS, WORK FOR YOU." VENEERING BLESSED HIM AGAIN--Book 2, chap.
-iii.]
-
-[Illustration: AH! HERE WAS ALFRED. HAVING STOLEN IN UNOBSERVED, HE
-PLAYFULLY LEANED ON THE BACK OF SOPHRONIA'S CHAIR--Book 2, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: PERCHED ON THE STOOL, WITH HIS HAT COCKED ON HIS HEAD,
-AND ONE OF HIS LEGS DANGLING, THE YOUTH OF FLEDGEBY HARDLY CONTRASTED TO
-ADVANTAGE WITH THE AGE OF THE JEWISH MAN AS HE STOOD WITH HIS BARE HEAD
-BOWED--Book 2, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "COME UP AND BE DEAD! COME UP AND BE DEAD"--Book 2, chap.
-v.]
-
-[Illustration: "GOOD EVENING, MR. WEGG. THE YARD-GATE LOCK SHOULD BE
-LOOKED TO, IF YOU PLEASE; IT DON'T CATCH"--Book 2, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU NEVER CHARGE ME, MISS WILFER," SAID THE SECRETARY,
-ENCOUNTERING HER BY CHANCE ALONE IN THE GREAT DRAWING-ROOM, "WITH
-COMMISSIONS FOR HOME. I SHALL ALWAYS BE HAPPY TO EXECUTE ANY COMMANDS
-YOU MAY HAVE IN THAT DIRECTION"--Book 2, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOW YOU MAY GIVE ME A KISS, PA"--Book 2, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: "A KISS FOR THE BOOFER LADY"--Book 2, chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "MEANING," RETURNED THE LITTLE CREATURE, "EVERY ONE OF
-YOU BUT YOU. HAH! NOW LOOK THIS LADY IN THE FACE. THIS IS MRS. TRUTH.
-THE HONOURABLE. FULL-DRESSED"--Book 2, chap. xi.]
-
-[Illustration: AND NOW, AS THE MAN HELD OUT THE BOTTLE TO FILL ALL
-ROUND, RIDERHOOD STOOD UP, LEANED OVER THE TABLE TO LOOK CLOSER AT THE
-KNIFE, AND STARED FROM IT TO HIM--Book 2, chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: YET THE COLD WAS MERCIFUL, FOR IT WAS THE COLD NIGHT AIR
-AND THE RAIN THAT RESTORED ME FROM A SWOON ON THE STONES OF THE
-CAUSEWAY--Book 2, chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: THE DARK LOOK OF HATRED AND REVENGE WITH WHICH THE WORDS
-BROKE FROM HIS LIVID LIPS ... MADE HER SO AFRAID OF HIM THAT SHE TURNED
-TO RUN AWAY. BUT HE CAUGHT HER BY THE ARM--Book 2, chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: MRS. LAMMLE, ON A SOFA BY A TABLE, INVITES MR. TWEMLOW'S
-ATTENTION TO A BOOK OF PORTRAITS IN HER HAND--Book 2, chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS AN EDIFYING SPECTACLE, THE YOUNG MAN IN HIS EASY
-CHAIR TAKING HIS COFFEE, AND THE OLD MAN, WITH HIS GREY HEAD BENT,
-STANDING AWAITING HIS PLEASURE--Book 3, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT'S SUMMAT RUN DOWN IN THE FOG"--Book 3, Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "OH, INDEED, SIR! I FANCY I CAN GUESS WHOM YOU THINK
-THAT'S LIKE"--Book 3, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: JENNY TWISTED HER VENERABLE FRIEND ASIDE, TO A
-BRILLIANTLY LIGHTED TOY-SHOP WINDOW, AND SAID, "NOW LOOK AT 'EM! ALL MY
-WORK!"--Book 3, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: FEIGNING TO BE INTENT ON HER EMBROIDERY, SHE SAT PLYING
-HER NEEDLE UNTIL HER BUSY HAND WAS STOPPED BY MRS. BOFFIN'S HAND BEING
-LIGHTLY LAID UPON IT--Book 3, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: "HE CAN NEVER BE GOING TO DIG UP THE POLE!" WHISPERED
-VENUS AS THEY DROPPED LOW AND KEPT CLOSE--Book 3, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: "THERE'LL SHORTLY BE AN END OF YOU," SAID WEGG,
-THREATENING IT WITH THE HAT-BOX, "YOUR VARNISH IS FADING"--Book 3, chap.
-vii.]
-
-[Illustration: LIZZIE HEXHAM VERY SOFTLY RAISED THE WEATHER-STAINED GREY
-HEAD, AND LIFTED HER AS HIGH AS HEAVEN--Book 3, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: SO THEY WALKED, SPEAKING OF THE NEWLY-FILLED-UP GRAVE,
-AND OF JOHNNY, AND OF MANY THINGS--Book 3, chap. ix.]
-
-[Illustration: "AND YOU SEE, AS I WAS SAYING, MORTIMER," REMARKED EUGENE
-ALOUD WITH THE UTMOST COOLNESS, AS THOUGH THERE WERE NO ONE WITHIN
-HEARING BUT THEMSELVES, "AND YOU SEE, AS I WAS SAYING--UNDERGOING
-GRINDING TORMENTS"--Book 3, chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE SHOOK THAT EMPHATIC LITTLE FOREFINGER OF HERS IN HIS
-FACE, AT PARTING, AS EARNESTLY AND REPROACHFULLY AS SHE HAD EVER SHAKEN
-IT AT HER GRIM OLD CHILD AT HOME--Book 3, chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. VENUS PRODUCED THE DOCUMENT, HOLDING ON BY HIS USUAL
-CORNER. MR. WEGG, HOLDING ON BY THE OPPOSITE CORNER, SAT DOWN ON THE
-SEAT SO LATELY VACATED BY MR. BOFFIN, AND LOOKED IT OVER--Book 3, chap.
-xiv.]
-
-[Illustration: "YOU HAVE BEEN A PLEASANT ROOM TO ME, DEAR ROOM! ADIEU!
-WE SHALL NEVER SEE EACH OTHER AGAIN"--Book 3, chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: THE CHERUB, WHOSE HAIR WOULD HAVE DONE FOR ITSELF UNDER
-THE INFLUENCE OF THIS AMAZING SPECTACLE, WHAT BELLA HAD JUST NOW DONE
-FOR IT, STAGGERED BACK INTO THE WINDOW SEAT FROM WHICH HE HAD RISEN, AND
-SURVEYED THE PAIR WITH HIS EYES DILATED TO THEIR UTMOST--Book 3, chap.
-xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: "NOW, DOLLS, WAKE UP!" "MIST WRAYBURN! DRECTION! FIFTEEN
-SHILLINGS!"--Book 3, chap. xvii.]
-
-[Illustration: ROGUE RIDERHOOD RECOGNISED HIS "T'OTHER GOVERNOR," MR.
-EUGENE WRAYBURN--Book 4, Chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: THERE WERE ACTUALLY TEARS IN THE BOLD WOMAN'S EYES AS THE
-SOFT-HEADED AND SOFT-HEARTED GIRL TWINED HER ARMS ABOUT HER NECK--Book
-4, chap. ii]
-
-[Illustration: IT WAS A PLEASANT SIGHT, IN THE MIDST OF THE GOLDEN
-BLOOM, TO SEE THIS SALT OLD GRUFF AND GLUM WAVING HIS SHOVEL HAT AT
-BELLA, WHILE HIS THIN WHITE HAIR FLOWED FREE, AS IF SHE HAD ONCE MORE
-LAUNCHED HIM INTO BLUE WATER AGAIN--Book 4, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "THERE!" SAID BELLA, WHEN SHE HAD AT LAST COMPLETED THE
-FINAL TOUCHES. "NOW YOU ARE SOMETHING LIKE A GENTEEL BOY! PUT YOUR
-JACKET ON AND COME AND HAVE YOUR SUPPER."--Book 4, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: HE HAD SAUNTERED FAR ENOUGH. BEFORE RETURNING TO RETRACE
-HIS STEPS, HE STOPPED UPON THE MARGIN TO LOOK DOWN AT THE REFLECTED
-NIGHT--Book 4, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: WHEN THE BATHER HAD FINISHED DRESSING, HE KNEELED ON THE
-GRASS, DOING SOMETHING WITH HIS HANDS, AND AGAIN STOOD UP WITH HIS
-BUNDLE UNDER HIS ARM. LOOKING ALL AROUND HIM WITH GREAT ATTENTION, HE
-THEN WENT TO THE RIVER'S EDGE, AND FLUNG IT IN AS FAR, AND YET AS
-LIGHTLY, AS HE COULD--Book 4, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: SHE TOOK THE LIBERTY OF OPENING AN INNER DOOR, AND THEN
-BEHELD THE EXTRAORDINARY SPECTACLE OF MR. FLEDGEBY IN A SHIRT, A PAIR OF
-TURKISH TROUSERS, AND A TURKISH CAP, ROLLING OVER AND OVER ON HIS OWN
-CARPET, AND SPLUTTERING WONDERFULLY--Book 4, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: MISS JENNY GAVE UP ALTOGETHER ON THIS PARTING TAKING
-PLACE BETWEEN THE FRIENDS, AND SITTING WITH HER BACK TOWARDS THE BED IN
-THE BOWER MADE BY BRIGHT HAIR WEPT HEARTILY THOUGH NOISELESSLY--Book 4,
-chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: BELLA'S HUSBAND STEPPED SOFTLY TO THE HALF-DOOR OF THE
-BAR AND STOOD THERE--Book 4, chap. xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT LOOKS AS IF THE OLD MAN'S SPIRIT HAD FOUND REST AT
-LAST; DON'T IT!" SAID MRS. BOFFIN--Book 4, chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: BRADLEY HESITATED FOR A MOMENT, BUT PLACED HIS USUAL
-SIGNATURE, ENLARGED, UPON THE BOARD--Book 4, chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: "THERE, THERE, THERE!" SAID MISS WREN, "FOR GOODNESS'
-SAKE STOP, GIANT, OR I SHALL BE SWALLOWED UP ALIVE BEFORE I KNOW
-IT"--Book 4, chap. xvi.]
-
-[Illustration: RIDERHOOD WENT OVER INTO THE SMOOTH PIT BACKWARDS, AND
-BRADLEY HEADSTONE UPON HIM--Book 4, chap. xv.]
-
-
-
-
-CHRISTMAS STORIES FROM "HOUSEHOLD WORDS" AND "ALL THE YEAR ROUND"
-
-[Illustration]
-
-TWENTY-THREE ILLUSTRATIONS BY E. G. DALZIEL
-
-
-[Illustration: "I'M ONLY A COMMON SOLDIER, SIR," SAID HE. "IT SIGNIFIES
-VERY LITTLE WHAT SUCH A POOR BRUTE COMES TO"--_Seven Poor Travellers_,
-chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: AND WHEN THE VISITOR (OPPRESSED WITH PIE) HAD FALLEN
-ASLEEP, THIS WICKED LANDLORD WOULD LOOK SOFTLY IN WITH A LAMP IN ONE
-HAND AND A KNIFE IN THE OTHER, WOULD CUT HIS THROAT, &C.--_Holly Tree
-Inn_, First Branch.]
-
-[Illustration: "MY DEAR CAPTAIN KAVENDER," SAYS HE. "OF ALL THE MEN ON
-EARTH, I WANTED TO SEE YOU MOST. I WAS ON MY WAY TO YOU"--_The Wreck of
-the Golden Mary_--The Wreck]
-
-[Illustration: "O CHRISTIAN GEORGE KING SAR BERRY SORRY!" SAYS THE SAMBO
-VAGABOND--_The Perils of Certain English Prisoners_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: A GRIZZLED PERSONAGE IN VELVETEEN, WITH A FACE SO CUT UP
-BY VARIETIES OF WEATHER THAT HE LOOKED AS IF HE HAD BEEN TATTOOED, WAS
-FOUND SMOKING A PIPE AT THE DOOR OF A WOODEN HOUSE ON WHEELS--_Going
-into Society_]
-
-[Illustration: AN IMPERTURBABLE AND SPEECHLESS MAN, HE HAD SAT AT HIS
-SUPPER, WITH STREAKER PRESENT IN A SWOON--_The Haunted House_, The
-Mortals in the House]
-
-[Illustration: "MIGHT YOU BE MARRIED NOW?" ASKED THE CAPTAIN WHEN HE HAD
-SOME TASK WITH THIS NEW ACQUAINTANCE.... "NOT YET." ... "GOING TO BE?"
-SAID THE CAPTAIN.... "I HOPE SO"--_A Message from the Sea_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT IS YOUR NAME, SIR, AND WHERE DO YOU COME FROM!"
-ASKED MR. MOPES THE HERMIT--_Tom Tiddler's Ground_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "BUT IT IS NOT IMPOSSIBLE THAT YOU ARE A PIG!" RETORTED
-MADAME BOUCLET--_Somebody's Luggage_, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I AM GLAD TO SEE YOU EMPLOYED," SAID MR. TRAVELLER....
-"I AM GLAD TO BE EMPLOYED," RETURNED THE TINKER-_Tom Tiddler's Ground_,
-chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: WILLING SOPHY DOWN UPON HER KNEES SCRUBBING EARLY AND
-LATE AND EVER CHEERFUL BUT ALWAYS SMILING WITH A BLACK FACE--_Mrs.
-Lirriper's Lodgings_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "COME, SIR! REMOVE ME TO MY VILE DUNGEON. WHERE IS MY
-MOULDY STRAW!"--_Mrs. Lirriper's Legacy_, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: AND AT LAST SITTING DOZING AGAINST A MUDDY CART WHEEL, I
-COME UPON THE POOR GIRL WHO WAS DEAF AND DUMB--_Dr. Marigold_]
-
-[Illustration: WHILE I WAS SPEAKING TO HIM, I SAW IT OPEN, AND A MAN
-LOOK IN, WHO VERY EARNESTLY AND MYSTERIOUSLY BECKONED TO ME--_Two Ghost
-Stories_, I.]
-
-[Illustration: "I TOOK YOU FOR SOME ONE ELSE YESTERDAY EVENING. THAT
-TROUBLES ME"--_Two Ghost Stories_, II.]
-
-[Illustration: "WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH TWOPENCE, IF I GAVE IT YOU!"...
-"'PEND IT"--_Mugby Junction_, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: COTCHED THE DECANTER OUT OF HIS HAND, AND SAID "PUT IT
-DOWN, I WON'T ALLOW THAT!"--_Mugby Junction_, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT'S FROM THE BEST CORNER OF OUR BEST
-FORTY-FIVE-YEAR-OLD BIN," SAID MR. WILDING.... "THANK YOU, SIR," SAID
-MR. BINTRY. "IT'S MOST EXCELLENT"--_No Thoroughfare_, Act i.]
-
-[Illustration: "WE ARE FAMOUS FOR THE GROWTH IN THIS VAULT, AREN'T
-WE!"--_No Thoroughfare_, Act i.]
-
-[Illustration: "IF THERE HAD BEEN A WRESTLE WITH A ROBBER, AS I
-DREAMED," SAID OBENREIZER, "YOU SEE I WAS STRIPPED FOR IT."... "AND
-ARMED TOO," SAID VENDALE, GLANCING AT HIS GIRDLE--_No Thoroughfare_, Act
-iii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE BECAME ROUSED TO THE KNOWLEDGE THAT OBENREIZER HAD SET
-UPON HIM, AND THAT THEY WERE STRUGGLING DESPERATELY IN THE SNOW--_No
-Thoroughfare_, Act iii.]
-
-[Illustration: AT THE SIDE DOOR OF THE CHURCH ARE THE SAME TWO MEN FROM
-THE HOSPICE--_No Thoroughfare_, Act iv.]
-
-
-
-
-THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOD
-
-TWELVE ILLUSTRATIONS BY SIR LUKE FILDES, R.A.
-
-
-[Illustration: IN THE COURT--Chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: UNDER THE TREES--Chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: AT THE PIANO--Chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: ON DANGEROUS GROUND--Chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. CRISPARKLE IS OVERPAID--Chap. x.]
-
-[Illustration: DURDLES CAUTIONS MR. SAPSEA AGAINST BOASTING--Chap.
-xii.]
-
-[Illustration: "GOOD-BYE, ROSEBUD, DARLING!"--Chap. xiii.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. GREWGIOUS HAS HIS SUSPICIONS--Chap. xv.]
-
-[Illustration: JASPER'S SACRIFICES--Chap. xix.]
-
-[Illustration: MR. GREWGIOUS EXPERIENCES A NEW SENSATION--Chap. xx.]
-
-[Illustration: UP THE RIVER--Chap. xxii.]
-
-[Illustration: SLEEPING IT OFF--Chap. xxiii.]
-
-
-
-
-THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-TWENTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS BY FRED BARNARD
-
-
-[Illustration: IF HE WEAKLY SHOWED THE LEAST DISPOSITION TO HEAR IT,
-CAPTAIN PORTER, IN A LOUD SONOROUS VOICE, GAVE HIM EVERY WORD OF
-IT--Book 1, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: ONE OF WHOM TOLD US SHE "HAD NO MONEY FOR BEGGAR
-BOYS"--Book 1, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: JACK STRAW'S CASTLE, MEMORABLE FOR MANY HAPPY MEETINGS IN
-COMING YEARS--Book 2, chap. i.]
-
-[Illustration: "IT A'NT A SMOKIN' YOUR WAY, SIR, I SAYS;" HE SAYS, "NO
-MORE IT IS, COACHMAN, AND AS LONG AS IT SMOKES ANYBODY ELSE'S WAY, IT'S
-ALL RIGHT AND I'M AGREEABLE"--Book 2, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: IF YOU COULD BUT KNOW HOW I HATED ONE MAN IN VERY DIRTY
-GAITERS, AND WITH VERY PROTRUDING UPPER TEETH, WHO SAID TO ALL COMERS
-AFTER HIM, "SO YOU'VE BEEN INTRODUCED TO OUR FRIEND DICKENS--EH!"--Book
-3, Chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: HE LOOKED UP AT ME; GAVE HIMSELF AN ODD, DOGGED KIND OF
-SHAKE; AND FIXED HIS EYES ON HIS BOOK AGAIN--Book 4, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: HE IS PERHAPS THE MOST HORRIBLE BORE IN THE COUNTRY--Book
-3, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: VISIT TO A TRAMPS' LODGING-HOUSE--Book 3, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: GENOESE WASHERWOMEN--Book 4, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: THE RADICOFANI WIZARD--Book 4, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I SAY, WHAT'S FRENCH FOR A PILLOW!" "IS THERE ANY
-ITALIAN PHRASE FOR A LUMP OF SUGAR! JUST LOOK, WILL YOU!" "WHAT THE
-DEVIL DOES ECHO MEAN! THE GARSONG SAYS ECHO TO EVERYTHING"--Book 4,
-Chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: NEAPOLITAN LAZZARONI--Book 4, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: READING "DOMBEY" AT THE SNUFF SHOP--Book 5, chap. vii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I HAVE NEVER BEEN ABLE TO SEE WHAT THEY ARE, BECAUSE ONE
-OF THE OLD LADIES ALWAYS SITS BEFORE THEM; BUT THEY LOOK, OUTSIDE, LIKE
-VERY OLD BACKGAMMON BOARDS"--Book 5, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: "HALLOA, MRS. GAMP, WHAT ARE YOU UP TO!"--Book 6, chap.
-i]
-
-[Illustration: OFF YARMOUTH--Book 6, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: LIKEWISE AN OLD MAN WHO RAN OVER A MILK-CHILD RATHER THAN
-STOP!--WITH NO NECKCLOTH, ON PRINCIPLE; AND WITH HIS MOUTH WIDE OPEN TO
-CATCH THE MORNING AIR--Book 6, chap. vi.]
-
-[Illustration: BYE AND BYE I CAME UPON A POLENTA-SHOP IN THE CLOUDS,
-WHERE AN OLD FRENCHMAN WITH AN UMBRELLA LIKE A FADED TROPICAL LEAF (IT
-HAD NOT RAINED IN NAPLES FOR SIX WEEKS) WAS STARING AT NOTHING AT ALL,
-WITH A SNUFF-BOX IN HIS HAND--Book 7, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "C'EST VRAI DONC," SAYS THE DUKE, "QUE MADAME LA DUCHESSE
-N'EST PLUS!"... "C'EST TROP VRAI, MONSEIGNEUR."... "TANT MIEUX," SAYS
-THE DUKE, AND WALKS OFF DELIBERATELY, TO THE GREAT SATISFACTION OF THE
-ASSEMBLAGE--Book 7, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: A WARM CORNER IN THE PIG-MARKET AT BOULOGNE--Book 7,
-chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: WHENEVER HE FELT TOOTS COMING AGAIN, HE BEGAN TO LAUGH
-AND WIPE HIS EYES AFRESH; AND WHEN TOOTS CAME ONCE MORE, HE GAVE A KIND
-OF CRY, AS IF IT WERE TOO MUCH FOR HIM--Book 8, chap. iv.]
-
-[Illustration: HE ... SLIGHTLY COCKED UP HIS EVIL EYE AT THE GOLDFINCH.
-INSTANTLY A RAGING THIRST BESET THAT BIRD; AND WHEN IT WAS APPEASED HE
-STILL DREW SEVERAL UNNECESSARY BUCKETS OF WATER, LEAPING ABOUT HIS PERCH
-AND SHARPENING HIS BILL WITH IRREPRESSIBLE SATISFACTION--Book 8, chap.
-v.]
-
-[Illustration: THE UNEDUCATED FATHER IN FUSTIAN AND THE EDUCATED BOY IN
-SPECTACLES--Book 9, chap. v.]
-
-[Illustration: SAM WELLER IN SIERRA NEVADA--Book 9, chap. viii.]
-
-[Illustration: IN A TRANSPORT OF PRESENCE OF MIND AND FURY, HE INSTANTLY
-CAUGHT HIM UP IN BOTH HANDS, AND THREW HIM OVER HIS OWN HEAD OUT INTO
-THE ENTRY, WHERE THE CHECK-TAKERS RECEIVED HIM LIKE A GAME AT BALL--Book
-10, chap. ii.]
-
-[Illustration: "I BEG YOUR PARDON, SIR," HE ANSWERED, "BUT IF IT HADN'T
-BEEN FOR MY PIPE, I SHOULD HAVE BEEN NOWHERE"--Book 11, chap. iii.]
-
-[Illustration: "IN A MISERABLE COURT AT NIGHT," SAYS MR. FIELDS, "WE
-FOUND A HAGGARD OLD WOMAN BLOWING AT A KIND OF PIPE MADE OF AN OLD
-INK-BOTTLE"--Book 1, chap. xii.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Many of these notes will only apply to the HTML version as they refer to
-captions that are small-capped in the original which cannot be
-represented in a plain text version.
-
-Obvious punctuation repaired.
-
-Page 24, "the" changed to "The" at start of sentence. (The body washed
-ashore)
-
-Page 61, "i" changed to "I" (I'll eat my head)
-
-Page 63, "i" changed to "I" (Directly I leave go)
-
-Page 81, "i" changed to "I" (and I have the strength)
-
-Page 82, "vi" changed to "xvi" (Chap. xvi.)
-
-Page 85, "i" changed to "I" (here I am)
-
-Page 86, first word of new sentence "He" capitalized. (He had now
-fallen)
-
-Page 111, "i" changed to "I" (No, no, I'm not)
-
-Page 111, "--Chap. lxiii." added to illustration
-
-Page 117, "Heavans" changed to "Heavens" (Heavens! Can I write)
-
-Page 150, "is'nt" changed to "isn't" (there he isn't)
-
-Page 162, "--Chap. xlviii." added to illustration
-
-Page 201, "xxvl" changed to "xxvi" (Chap. xxvi.)
-
-Page 323, "Hamlet'8" changed to "Hamlet's" (Hamlet's aunt betrays)
-
-Page 381, "Buckett" changed to "Bucket" (Mr. Bucket urging a sensible)
-
-Page 402, "i" changed to "I" (that I have meant)
-
-Page 431, "rome" changed to "Rome" (the walls of Rome)
-
-Page 464, "sunday" changed to "Sunday" (theatre, Sunday night)
-
-Page 521, "Wraeburn" changed to "Wrayburn" (Mr. Eugene Wrayburn)
-
-Page 522, "p easant" changed to "pleasant" (It was a pleasant sight)
-
-Page 545, "i" changed to "I" (if I gave it you)
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Scenes and Characters from the Works
-of Charles Dickens, by Charles Dickens
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCENES, CHARACTERS FROM DICKENS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 43207-8.txt or 43207-8.zip *****
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- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
<title>
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Scenes and Characters from the Works of Charles Dickens, by Charles Dickens.
@@ -77,52 +77,7 @@
</style>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Scenes and Characters from the Works of
-Charles Dickens, by Charles Dickens
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Scenes and Characters from the Works of Charles Dickens
- Being Eight Hundred and Sixty-six Pictures Printed From
- the Original Wood Blocks
-
-Author: Charles Dickens
-
-Illustrator: Various Artists
-
-Release Date: July 13, 2013 [EBook #43207]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCENES, CHARACTERS FROM DICKENS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Emmy and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43207 ***</div>
<div class="figcenter" style="width: 545px;">
<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="545" height="800" alt="created cover" />
@@ -5836,7 +5791,7 @@ in the air</span>&mdash;Book 3, chap. x.</span>
<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
<img src="images/i-475.jpg" width="600" height="453" alt="" />
-<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The trial of Evrémonde</span>&mdash;Book 3, chap. ix.</span>
+<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The trial of Evrémonde</span>&mdash;Book 3, chap. ix.</span>
</div>
<p>&nbsp;<br /><br /></p>
@@ -7301,382 +7256,6 @@ kind of pipe made of an old ink-bottle&quot;</span>&mdash;Book 1, chap. xii.</sp
<p>Page 545, "i" changed to "I" (if I gave it you)</p></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Scenes and Characters from the Works
-of Charles Dickens, by Charles Dickens
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCENES, CHARACTERS FROM DICKENS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 43207-h.htm or 43207-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/4/3/2/0/43207/
-
-Produced by Chris Curnow, Emmy and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
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