Page:Dickens - Our Mutual Friend, ed. Lang, 1897, vol.1.djvu/61

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

companion, and, let him be put out as he may, never once strikes me."

The listening boy gave a grunt here, as much as to say,"But he strikes me though!"

"Those are some of the pictures of what is past, Charley."

"Cut away again,"said the boy,"and give us a fortune-telling one; a future one."

"Well! There am I, continuing with father, and holding to father, because father loves me, and I love father. I can't so much as read a book, because, if I had learned, father would have thought I was deserting him, and I should have lost my influence. I have not the influence I want to have, I cannot stop some dreadful things I try to stop, but I go on in the hope and trust that the time will come. In the meanwhile I know that I am in some things a stay to father, and that if I was not faithful to him he would—in revengelike, or in disappointment, or both—go wild and bad."

"Give us a touch of the fortune-telling pictures about me."

"I was passing on to them, Charley,"said the girl, who had not changed her attitude since she began, and who now mournfully shook her head;"the others were all leading up. There are you——"

"Where am I, Liz?"

"Still in the hollow down by the flare."

"There seems to be the deuce-and-all in the hollow down by the flare,"said the boy, glancing from her eyes to the brazier, which had a grisly skeleton look on its long thin legs.

"There are you, Charley, working your way, in secret from father, at the school; and you get prizes; and you go on better and better; and you come to be a—what was it you called it when you told me about that?"

"Ha, ha! Fortune-telling not know the name!"cried the boy, seeming to be rather relieved by this default on the part of the hollow down by the flare."Pupil-teacher."

"You come to be a pupil-teacher, and you still go on better and better, and you rise to be a master full of learning