Page:Oliver Twist (1838) vol. 2.djvu/259

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Oliver Twist.
241

CHAPTER XXXIII.

contains some introductory particulars relative to a young gentleman who now arrives upon the scene, and a new adventure which happened to oliver.

It was almost too much happiness to bear. Oliver felt stunned and stupified by the unexpected intelligence; he could not weep, or speak, or rest. He had scarcely the power of understanding any thing that had passed, until after a long ramble in the quiet evening air a burst of tears came to his relief, and he seemed to awaken all at once to a full sense of the joyful change that had occurred, and the almost insupportable load of anguish which had been taken from his breast.

The night was fast closing in when he returned homewards, laden with flowers which he had culled with peculiar care for the adorn-