“I ask your pardon, Mr Wegg. I am so soured.”

“Yes, but hang it,” says Wegg argumentatively, “a well-governed mind can be soured sitting! And as to being regarded in lights, there’s bumpey lights as well as bony. In which,” again rubbing his head, “I object to regard myself.”

“I’ll bear it in memory, sir.”

“If you’ll be so good.” Mr Wegg slowly subdues his ironical tone and his lingering irritation, and resumes his pipe. “We were talking of old Mr Harmon being a friend of yours.”

“Not a friend, Mr Wegg. Only known to speak to, and to have a little deal with now and then. A very inquisitive character, Mr Wegg, regarding what was found in the dust. As inquisitive as secret.”

“Ah! You found him secret?” returns Wegg, with a greedy relish.

“He had always the look of it, and the manner of it.”

“Ah!” with another roll of his eyes. “As to what was found in the dust now. Did you ever hear him mention how he found it, my dear friend? Living on the mysterious premises, one would like to know. For instance, where he found things? Or, for instance, how he set about it? Whether he began at the top of the mounds, or whether he began at the bottom. Whether he prodded;” Mr Wegg’s pantomime is skilful and expressive here; “or whether he scooped? Should you say scooped, my dear Mr Venus; or should you — as a man — say prodded?”

“I should say neither, Mr Wegg.”

“As a fellow man, Mr Venus — mix again — why neither?”

“Because I suppose, sir, that what was found, was found in the sorting and sifting. All the mounds are sorted and sifted?”

“You shall see ’em and pass your opinion. Mix again.”

On each occasion of his saying “mix again,” Mr Wegg, with a hop on his wooden leg, hitches his chair a little nearer; more as if he were proposing that himself and Mr Venus should mix again, than that they should replenish their glasses.

“Living (as I said before) on the mysterious premises,” says Wegg when the other has acted on his hospitable entreaty, “one likes to know. Would you be inclined to say now — as a brother — that he ever hid things in the dust, as well as found ’em?”

“Mr Wegg, on the whole I should say he might.”

Mr Wegg claps on his spectacles, and admiringly surveys Mr Venus from head to foot.

“As a mortal equally with myself, whose hand I take in mine for the first time this day, having unaccountably overlooked that act so full of boundless confidence binding a fellow-creetur to a fellow creetur,” says Wegg, holding Mr Venus’s palm out, flat and ready for smiting, and now smiting it; “as such — and no other — for I scorn all lowlier ties betwixt myself and the man walking with his face erect that alone I call my Twin — regarded and regarding in this trustful bond — what do you think he might have hid?”

“It is but a supposition, Mr Wegg.”


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