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But it is home! What else can I call home? Why should I ever forget it for a single moment? You never do, dear Little Dorrit, in any good and true service. I hope not, O I hope not! But it is better for me to stay there; much better, much more dutiful, much happier. Please dont go with me, let me go by myself. Good-bye, God bless you. Thank you, thank you. He felt that it was better to respect her entreaty, and did not move while her slight form went quickly away from him. When it had fluttered out of sight, he turned his face towards the water and stood thinking. She would have been distressed at any time by this discovery of the letters; but so much so, and in that unrestrainable way? No. When she had seen her father begging with his threadbare disguise on, when she had entreated him not to give her father money, she had been distressed, but not like this. Something had made her keenly and additionally sensitive just now. Now, was there some one in the hopeless unattainable distance? Or had the suspicion been brought into his mind, by his own associations of the troubled river running beneath the bridge with the same river higher up, its changeless tune upon the prow of the ferry-boat, so many miles an hour the peaceful flowing of the stream, here the rushes, there the lilies, nothing uncertain or unquiet? He thought of his poor child, Little Dorrit, for a long time there; he thought of her going home; he thought of her in the night; he thought of her when the day came round again. And the poor child Little Dorrit thought of himtoo faithfully, ah, too faithfully! in the shadow of the Marshalsea wall. |
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