when she wore shapeless worsted shoes—I might say, mufflers—many years ago!"
"You needn't taunt me with that, Pa," retorted Cherry, with a spiteful look. "I am not so many years older than my sister, either, though she is married to your friend!"
"Ah, human nature, human nature! Poor human nature!" said Mr. Pecksniff, shaking his head at human nature as if he didn't belong to it. "To think that this discord should arise from such a cause! oh dear, oh dear!"
"From such a cause indeed!" cried Cherry. "State the real cause, Pa, or I 'll state it myself. Mind! I will!"
Perhaps the energy with which she said this was infectious. However that may be, Mr. Pecksniff changed his tone and the expression of his face, for one of anger if not downright violence, when he said:
"You will! you have. You did yesterday. You do always. You have no decency; you make no secret of your temper; you have exposed yourself to Mr. Chuzzlewit, a hundred times."
"Myself!" cried Cherry, with a bitter smile. "Oh indeed! I don't mind that."
"Me too, then," said Mr. Pecksniff.
His daughter answered with a scornful laugh.
"And since we have come to an explanation, Charity," said Mr. Pecksniff, rolling his head portentously, "let me tell you that I won't allow it. None of your nonsense, Miss! I won't permit it to be done."
"I shall do," said Charity, rocking her chair backwards and forwards, and raising her voice to a high pitch, "I shall do, Pa, what I please and what I have done. I am not going to be crushed in everything, depend upon it. I 've been more shamefully used than anybody ever was in this world," here she began to cry and sob, "and may expect the worst treatment from you, I know. But I don't care for that. No I don't!"
Mr. Pecksniff was made so desperate by the loud tone in which she spoke, that, after looking about him in frantic uncertainty for some means of softening it, he rose and shook her until the ornamental bow of hair upon her head nodded like a plume. She was so very much astonished by this assault, that it really had the desired effect.
"I 'll do it again!" cried Mr. Pecksniff as he resumed his seat, and fetched his breath, "if you dare to talk in that loud manner. How do you mean about being shamefully used? If Mr. Jonas chose your sister in preference to you, who could help it, I should wish to know? What have I to do with it?"
"Wasn't I made a convenience of? Weren't my feelings trifled with? Didn't he address himself to me first?" sobbed Cherry, clasping her hands; "and oh good gracious, that I should live to be shook!"
"You 'll live to be shaken again," returned her parent, "if you drive me to that means of maintaining the decorum of this humble roof You surprise me. I wonder you have not more spirit. If Mr. Jonas didn't care for you, how could you wish to have him?"
"I wish to have him!" exclaimed Cherry. "I wish to have him, Pa!"