THE LIFE OF CHARLES DICKENS

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TWENTY-EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS
BY FRED BARNARD

If he weakly showed the least disposition to hear it, Captain Porter, in a loud sonorous voice, gave him every word of it—Book 1, chap. ii.
One of whom told us she "had no money for beggar boys"—Book 1, chap. iii.

Jack Straw's Castle, memorable for many happy meetings in coming years—Book 2, chap. i.

"It a'nt a smokin' your way, sir, I says;" he says, "No more it is, coachman, and as long as it smokes anybody else's way, it's all right and I'm agreeable"—Book 2, chap. viii.

If you could but know how I hated one man in very dirty gaiters, and with very protruding upper teeth, who said to all comers after him, "So you've been introduced to our friend Dickens—eh!"—Book 3, Chap. ii.

He looked up at me; gave himself an odd, dogged kind of shake; and fixed his eyes on his book again—Book 4, chap. iv.

He is perhaps the most horrible bore in the country—Book 3, chap. v.

Visit to a tramps' lodging-house—Book 3, chap. viii.
Genoese washerwomen—Book 4, chap. v.

The Radicofani Wizard—Book 4, chap. vii.

"I say, what's French for a pillow!" "Is there any Italian phrase for a lump of sugar! Just look, will you!" "What the devil does echo mean! The garsong says echo to everything"—Book 4, Chap. vi.

Neapolitan lazzaroni—Book 4, chap. vii.
Reading "Dombey" at the snuff shop—Book 5, chap. vii.

"I have never been able to see what they are, because one of the old ladies always sits before them; but they look, outside, like very old backgammon boards"—Book 5, chap. iv.

"Halloa, Mrs. Gamp, what are you up to!"—Book 6, chap. i

ship Off Yarmouth—Book 6, chap. vi.

man and child Likewise an old man who ran over a milk-child rather than stop!—with no neckcloth, on principle; and with his mouth wide open to catch the morning air—Book 6, chap. vi.

Bye and bye I came upon a polenta-shop in the clouds, where an old Frenchman with an umbrella like a faded tropical leaf (it had not rained in Naples for six weeks) was staring at nothing at all, with a snuff-box in his hand—Book 7, chap. iii.

"C'est vrai donc," says the Duke, "Que Madame la Duchesse n'est plus!" ... "C'est trop vrai, Monseigneur."... "Tant mieux," says the Duke, and walks off deliberately, to the great satisfaction of the assemblage—Book 7, chap. v.

A warm corner in the pig-market at Boulogne—Book 7, chap. v.

Whenever he felt Toots coming again, he began to laugh and wipe his eyes afresh; and when Toots came once more, he gave a kind of cry, as if it were too much for him—Book 8, chap. iv.

He ... slightly cocked up his evil eye at the goldfinch. Instantly a raging thirst beset that bird; and when it was appeased he still drew several unnecessary buckets of water, leaping about his perch and sharpening his bill with irrepressible satisfaction—Book 8, chap. v.

The uneducated father in fustian and the educated boy in spectacles—Book 9, chap. v.

Sam Weller in Sierra Nevada—Book 9, chap. viii.

dog leaping in to man's arms In a transport of presence of mind and fury, he instantly caught him up in both hands, and threw him over his own head out into the entry, where the check-takers received him like a game at ball—Book 10, chap. ii.

"I beg your pardon, sir," he answered, "but if it hadn't been for my pipe, I should have been nowhere"—Book 11, chap. iii.
"In a miserable court at night," says Mr. Fields, "we found a haggard old woman blowing at a kind of pipe made of an old ink-bottle"—Book 1, chap. xii.

Transcriber's Notes:

Obvious punctuation repaired.

Page 24, "the" changed to "The" at start of sentence. (The body washed ashore)

Page 61, "i" changed to "I" (I'll eat my head)

Page 63, "i" changed to "I" (Directly I leave go)

Page 81, "i" changed to "I" (and I have the strength)

Page 82, "vi" changed to "xvi" (Chap. xvi.)

Page 85, "i" changed to "I" (here I am)

Page 86, first word of new sentence "He" capitalized. (He had now fallen)

Page 111, "i" changed to "I" (No, no, I'm not)

Page 111, "—Chap. lxiii." added to illustration

Page 117, "Heavans" changed to "Heavens" (Heavens! Can I write)

Page 150, "is'nt" changed to "isn't" (there he isn't)

Page 162, "—Chap. xlviii." added to illustration

Page 201, "xxvl" changed to "xxvi" (Chap. xxvi.)

Page 323, "Hamlet'8" changed to "Hamlet's" (Hamlet's aunt betrays)

Page 381, "Buckett" changed to "Bucket" (Mr. Bucket urging a sensible)

Page 402, "i" changed to "I" (that I have meant)

Page 431, "rome" changed to "Rome" (the walls of Rome)

Page 464, "sunday" changed to "Sunday" (theatre, Sunday night)

Page 521, "Wraeburn" changed to "Wrayburn" (Mr. Eugene Wrayburn)

Page 522, "p easant" changed to "pleasant" (It was a pleasant sight)

Page 545, "i" changed to "I" (if I gave it you)





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