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<h2> Chapter 8 </h2>
<h3> MR BOFFIN IN CONSULTATION </h3>
<p>Whosoever had gone out of Fleet Street into the Temple at the date of this
history, and had wandered disconsolate about the Temple until he stumbled
on a dismal churchyard, and had looked up at the dismal windows commanding
that churchyard until at the most dismal window of them all he saw a
dismal boy, would in him have beheld, at one grand comprehensive swoop of
the eye, the managing clerk, junior clerk, common-law clerk, conveyancing
clerk, chancery clerk, every refinement and department of clerk, of Mr
Mortimer Lightwood, erewhile called in the newspapers eminent solicitor.</p>
<p>Mr Boffin having been several times in communication with this clerkly
essence, both on its own ground and at the Bower, had no difficulty in
identifying it when he saw it up in its dusty eyrie. To the second floor
on which the window was situated, he ascended, much pre-occupied in mind
by the uncertainties besetting the Roman Empire, and much regretting the
death of the amiable Pertinax: who only last night had left the Imperial
affairs in a state of great confusion, by falling a victim to the fury of
the praetorian guards.</p>
<p>'Morning, morning, morning!' said Mr Boffin, with a wave of his hand, as
the office door was opened by the dismal boy, whose appropriate name was
Blight. 'Governor in?'</p>
<p>'Mr Lightwood gave you an appointment, sir, I think?'</p>
<p>'I don't want him to give it, you know,' returned Mr Boffin; 'I'll pay my
way, my boy.'</p>
<p>'No doubt, sir. Would you walk in? Mr Lightwood ain't in at the present
moment, but I expect him back very shortly. Would you take a seat in Mr
Lightwood's room, sir, while I look over our Appointment Book?' Young
Blight made a great show of fetching from his desk a long thin manuscript
volume with a brown paper cover, and running his finger down the day's
appointments, murmuring, 'Mr Aggs, Mr Baggs, Mr Caggs, Mr Daggs, Mr Faggs,
Mr Gaggs, Mr Boffin. Yes, sir; quite right. You are a little before your
time, sir. Mr Lightwood will be in directly.'</p>
<p>'I'm not in a hurry,' said Mr Boffin</p>
<p>'Thank you, sir. I'll take the opportunity, if you please, of entering
your name in our Callers' Book for the day.' Young Blight made another
great show of changing the volume, taking up a pen, sucking it, dipping
it, and running over previous entries before he wrote. As, 'Mr Alley, Mr
Balley, Mr Calley, Mr Dalley, Mr Falley, Mr Galley, Mr Halley, Mr Lalley,
Mr Malley. And Mr Boffin.'</p>
<p>'Strict system here; eh, my lad?' said Mr Boffin, as he was booked.</p>
<p>'Yes, sir,' returned the boy. 'I couldn't get on without it.'</p>
<p>By which he probably meant that his mind would have been shattered to
pieces without this fiction of an occupation. Wearing in his solitary
confinement no fetters that he could polish, and being provided with no
drinking-cup that he could carve, he had fallen on the device of ringing
alphabetical changes into the two volumes in question, or of entering vast
numbers of persons out of the Directory as transacting business with Mr
Lightwood. It was the more necessary for his spirits, because, being of a
sensitive temperament, he was apt to consider it personally disgraceful to
himself that his master had no clients.</p>
<p>'How long have you been in the law, now?' asked Mr Boffin, with a pounce,
in his usual inquisitive way.</p>
<p>'I've been in the law, now, sir, about three years.'</p>
<p>'Must have been as good as born in it!' said Mr Boffin, with admiration.
'Do you like it?'</p>
<p>'I don't mind it much,' returned Young Blight, heaving a sigh, as if its
bitterness were past.</p>
<p>'What wages do you get?'</p>
<p>'Half what I could wish,' replied young Blight.</p>
<p>'What's the whole that you could wish?'</p>
<p>'Fifteen shillings a week,' said the boy.</p>
<p>'About how long might it take you now, at a average rate of going, to be a
Judge?' asked Mr Boffin, after surveying his small stature in silence.</p>
<p>The boy answered that he had not yet quite worked out that little
calculation.</p>
<p>'I suppose there's nothing to prevent your going in for it?' said Mr
Boffin.</p>
<p>The boy virtually replied that as he had the honour to be a Briton who
never never never, there was nothing to prevent his going in for it. Yet
he seemed inclined to suspect that there might be something to prevent his
coming out with it.</p>
<p>'Would a couple of pound help you up at all?' asked Mr Boffin.</p>
<p>On this head, young Blight had no doubt whatever, so Mr Boffin made him a
present of that sum of money, and thanked him for his attention to his (Mr
Boffin's) affairs; which, he added, were now, he believed, as good as
settled.</p>
<p>Then Mr Boffin, with his stick at his ear, like a Familiar Spirit
explaining the office to him, sat staring at a little bookcase of Law
Practice and Law Reports, and at a window, and at an empty blue bag, and
at a stick of sealing-wax, and a pen, and a box of wafers, and an apple,
and a writing-pad—all very dusty—and at a number of inky
smears and blots, and at an imperfectly-disguised gun-case pretending to
be something legal, and at an iron box labelled HARMON ESTATE, until Mr
Lightwood appeared.</p>
<p>Mr Lightwood explained that he came from the proctor's, with whom he had
been engaged in transacting Mr Boffin's affairs.</p>
<p>'And they seem to have taken a deal out of you!' said Mr Boffin, with
commiseration.</p>
<p>Mr Lightwood, without explaining that his weariness was chronic, proceeded
with his exposition that, all forms of law having been at length complied
with, will of Harmon deceased having been proved, death of Harmon next
inheriting having been proved, &c., and so forth, Court of Chancery
having been moved, &c. and so forth, he, Mr Lightwood, had now the
gratification, honour, and happiness, again &c. and so forth, of
congratulating Mr Boffin on coming into possession as residuary legatee,
of upwards of one hundred thousand pounds, standing in the books of the
Governor and Company of the Bank of England, again &c. and so forth.</p>
<p>'And what is particularly eligible in the property Mr Boffin, is, that it
involves no trouble. There are no estates to manage, no rents to return so
much per cent upon in bad times (which is an extremely dear way of getting
your name into the newspapers), no voters to become parboiled in hot water
with, no agents to take the cream off the milk before it comes to table.
You could put the whole in a cash-box to-morrow morning, and take it with
you to—say, to the Rocky Mountains. Inasmuch as every man,'
concluded Mr Lightwood, with an indolent smile, 'appears to be under a
fatal spell which obliges him, sooner or later, to mention the Rocky
Mountains in a tone of extreme familiarity to some other man, I hope
you'll excuse my pressing you into the service of that gigantic range of
geographical bores.'</p>
<p>Without following this last remark very closely, Mr Boffin cast his
perplexed gaze first at the ceiling, and then at the carpet.</p>
<p>'Well,' he remarked, 'I don't know what to say about it, I am sure. I was
a'most as well as I was. It's a great lot to take care of.'</p>
<p>'My dear Mr Boffin, then DON'T take care of it!'</p>
<p>'Eh?' said that gentleman.</p>
<p>'Speaking now,' returned Mortimer, 'with the irresponsible imbecility of a
private individual, and not with the profundity of a professional adviser,
I should say that if the circumstance of its being too much, weighs upon
your mind, you have the haven of consolation open to you that you can
easily make it less. And if you should be apprehensive of the trouble of
doing so, there is the further haven of consolation that any number of
people will take the trouble off your hands.'</p>
<p>'Well! I don't quite see it,' retorted Mr Boffin, still perplexed. 'That's
not satisfactory, you know, what you're a-saying.'</p>
<p>'Is Anything satisfactory, Mr Boffin?' asked Mortimer, raising his
eyebrows.</p>
<p>'I used to find it so,' answered Mr Boffin, with a wistful look. 'While I
was foreman at the Bower—afore it WAS the Bower—I considered
the business very satisfactory. The old man was a awful Tartar (saying it,
I'm sure, without disrespect to his memory) but the business was a
pleasant one to look after, from before daylight to past dark. It's a'most
a pity,' said Mr Boffin, rubbing his ear, 'that he ever went and made so
much money. It would have been better for him if he hadn't so given
himself up to it. You may depend upon it,' making the discovery all of a
sudden, 'that HE found it a great lot to take care of!'</p>
<p>Mr Lightwood coughed, not convinced.</p>
<p>'And speaking of satisfactory,' pursued Mr Boffin, 'why, Lord save us!
when we come to take it to pieces, bit by bit, where's the
satisfactoriness of the money as yet? When the old man does right the poor
boy after all, the poor boy gets no good of it. He gets made away with, at
the moment when he's lifting (as one may say) the cup and sarser to his
lips. Mr Lightwood, I will now name to you, that on behalf of the poor
dear boy, me and Mrs Boffin have stood out against the old man times out
of number, till he has called us every name he could lay his tongue to. I
have seen him, after Mrs Boffin has given him her mind respecting the
claims of the nat'ral affections, catch off Mrs Boffin's bonnet (she wore,
in general, a black straw, perched as a matter of convenience on the top
of her head), and send it spinning across the yard. I have indeed. And
once, when he did this in a manner that amounted to personal, I should
have given him a rattler for himself, if Mrs Boffin hadn't thrown herself
betwixt us, and received flush on the temple. Which dropped her, Mr
Lightwood. Dropped her.'</p>
<p>Mr Lightwood murmured 'Equal honour—Mrs Boffin's head and heart.'</p>
<p>'You understand; I name this,' pursued Mr Boffin, 'to show you, now the
affairs are wound up, that me and Mrs Boffin have ever stood as we were in
Christian honour bound, the children's friend. Me and Mrs Boffin stood the
poor girl's friend; me and Mrs Boffin stood the poor boy's friend; me and
Mrs Boffin up and faced the old man when we momently expected to be turned
out for our pains. As to Mrs Boffin,' said Mr Boffin lowering his voice,
'she mightn't wish it mentioned now she's Fashionable, but she went so far
as to tell him, in my presence, he was a flinty-hearted rascal.'</p>
<p>Mr Lightwood murmured 'Vigorous Saxon spirit—Mrs Boffin's ancestors—bowmen—Agincourt
and Cressy.'</p>
<p>'The last time me and Mrs Boffin saw the poor boy,' said Mr Boffin,
warming (as fat usually does) with a tendency to melt, 'he was a child of
seven year old. For when he came back to make intercession for his sister,
me and Mrs Boffin were away overlooking a country contract which was to be
sifted before carted, and he was come and gone in a single hour. I say he
was a child of seven year old. He was going away, all alone and forlorn,
to that foreign school, and he come into our place, situate up the yard of
the present Bower, to have a warm at our fire. There was his little scanty
travelling clothes upon him. There was his little scanty box outside in
the shivering wind, which I was going to carry for him down to the
steamboat, as the old man wouldn't hear of allowing a sixpence
coach-money. Mrs Boffin, then quite a young woman and pictur of a
full-blown rose, stands him by her, kneels down at the fire, warms her two
open hands, and falls to rubbing his cheeks; but seeing the tears come
into the child's eyes, the tears come fast into her own, and she holds him
round the neck, like as if she was protecting him, and cries to me, "I'd
give the wide wide world, I would, to run away with him!" I don't say but
what it cut me, and but what it at the same time heightened my feelings of
admiration for Mrs Boffin. The poor child clings to her for awhile, as she
clings to him, and then, when the old man calls, he says "I must go! God
bless you!" and for a moment rests his heart against her bosom, and looks
up at both of us, as if it was in pain—in agony. Such a look! I went
aboard with him (I gave him first what little treat I thought he'd like),
and I left him when he had fallen asleep in his berth, and I came back to
Mrs Boffin. But tell her what I would of how I had left him, it all went
for nothing, for, according to her thoughts, he never changed that look
that he had looked up at us two. But it did one piece of good. Mrs Boffin
and me had no child of our own, and had sometimes wished that how we had
one. But not now. "We might both of us die," says Mrs Boffin, "and other
eyes might see that lonely look in our child." So of a night, when it was
very cold, or when the wind roared, or the rain dripped heavy, she would
wake sobbing, and call out in a fluster, "Don't you see the poor child's
face? O shelter the poor child!"—till in course of years it gently
wore out, as many things do.'</p>
<p>'My dear Mr Boffin, everything wears to rags,' said Mortimer, with a light
laugh.</p>
<p>'I won't go so far as to say everything,' returned Mr Boffin, on whom his
manner seemed to grate, 'because there's some things that I never found
among the dust. Well, sir. So Mrs Boffin and me grow older and older in
the old man's service, living and working pretty hard in it, till the old
man is discovered dead in his bed. Then Mrs Boffin and me seal up his box,
always standing on the table at the side of his bed, and having frequently
heerd tell of the Temple as a spot where lawyer's dust is contracted for,
I come down here in search of a lawyer to advise, and I see your young man
up at this present elevation, chopping at the flies on the window-sill
with his penknife, and I give him a Hoy! not then having the pleasure of
your acquaintance, and by that means come to gain the honour. Then you,
and the gentleman in the uncomfortable neck-cloth under the little archway
in Saint Paul's Churchyard—'</p>
<p>'Doctors' Commons,' observed Lightwood.</p>
<p>'I understood it was another name,' said Mr Boffin, pausing, 'but you know
best. Then you and Doctor Scommons, you go to work, and you do the thing
that's proper, and you and Doctor S. take steps for finding out the poor
boy, and at last you do find out the poor boy, and me and Mrs Boffin often
exchange the observation, "We shall see him again, under happy
circumstances." But it was never to be; and the want of satisfactoriness
is, that after all the money never gets to him.'</p>
<p>'But it gets,' remarked Lightwood, with a languid inclination of the head,
'into excellent hands.'</p>
<p>'It gets into the hands of me and Mrs Boffin only this very day and hour,
and that's what I am working round to, having waited for this day and hour
a' purpose. Mr Lightwood, here has been a wicked cruel murder. By that
murder me and Mrs Boffin mysteriously profit. For the apprehension and
conviction of the murderer, we offer a reward of one tithe of the property—a
reward of Ten Thousand Pound.'</p>
<p>'Mr Boffin, it's too much.'</p>
<p>'Mr Lightwood, me and Mrs Boffin have fixed the sum together, and we stand
to it.'</p>
<p>'But let me represent to you,' returned Lightwood, 'speaking now with
professional profundity, and not with individual imbecility, that the
offer of such an immense reward is a temptation to forced suspicion,
forced construction of circumstances, strained accusation, a whole
tool-box of edged tools.'</p>
<p>'Well,' said Mr Boffin, a little staggered, 'that's the sum we put o' one
side for the purpose. Whether it shall be openly declared in the new
notices that must now be put about in our names—'</p>
<p>'In your name, Mr Boffin; in your name.'</p>
<p>'Very well; in my name, which is the same as Mrs Boffin's, and means both
of us, is to be considered in drawing 'em up. But this is the first
instruction that I, as the owner of the property, give to my lawyer on
coming into it.'</p>
<p>'Your lawyer, Mr Boffin,' returned Lightwood, making a very short note of
it with a very rusty pen, 'has the gratification of taking the
instruction. There is another?'</p>
<p>'There is just one other, and no more. Make me as compact a little will as
can be reconciled with tightness, leaving the whole of the property to "my
beloved wife, Henerietty Boffin, sole executrix". Make it as short as you
can, using those words; but make it tight.'</p>
<p>At some loss to fathom Mr Boffin's notions of a tight will, Lightwood felt
his way.</p>
<p>'I beg your pardon, but professional profundity must be exact. When you
say tight—'</p>
<p>'I mean tight,' Mr Boffin explained.</p>
<p>'Exactly so. And nothing can be more laudable. But is the tightness to
bind Mrs Boffin to any and what conditions?'</p>
<p>'Bind Mrs Boffin?' interposed her husband. 'No! What are you thinking of!
What I want is, to make it all hers so tight as that her hold of it can't
be loosed.'</p>
<p>'Hers freely, to do what she likes with? Hers absolutely?'</p>
<p>'Absolutely?' repeated Mr Boffin, with a short sturdy laugh. 'Hah! I
should think so! It would be handsome in me to begin to bind Mrs Boffin at
this time of day!'</p>
<p>So that instruction, too, was taken by Mr Lightwood; and Mr Lightwood,
having taken it, was in the act of showing Mr Boffin out, when Mr Eugene
Wrayburn almost jostled him in the door-way. Consequently Mr Lightwood
said, in his cool manner, 'Let me make you two known to one another,' and
further signified that Mr Wrayburn was counsel learned in the law, and
that, partly in the way of business and partly in the way of pleasure, he
had imparted to Mr Wrayburn some of the interesting facts of Mr Boffin's
biography.</p>
<p>'Delighted,' said Eugene—though he didn't look so—'to know Mr
Boffin.'</p>
<p>'Thankee, sir, thankee,' returned that gentleman. 'And how do YOU like the
law?'</p>
<p>'A—not particularly,' returned Eugene.</p>
<p>'Too dry for you, eh? Well, I suppose it wants some years of sticking to,
before you master it. But there's nothing like work. Look at the bees.'</p>
<p>'I beg your pardon,' returned Eugene, with a reluctant smile, 'but will
you excuse my mentioning that I always protest against being referred to
the bees?'</p>
<p>'Do you!' said Mr Boffin.</p>
<p>'I object on principle,' said Eugene, 'as a biped—'</p>
<p>'As a what?' asked Mr Boffin.</p>
<p>'As a two-footed creature;—I object on principle, as a two-footed
creature, to being constantly referred to insects and four-footed
creatures. I object to being required to model my proceedings according to
the proceedings of the bee, or the dog, or the spider, or the camel. I
fully admit that the camel, for instance, is an excessively temperate
person; but he has several stomachs to entertain himself with, and I have
only one. Besides, I am not fitted up with a convenient cool cellar to
keep my drink in.'</p>
<p>'But I said, you know,' urged Mr Boffin, rather at a loss for an answer,
'the bee.'</p>
<p>'Exactly. And may I represent to you that it's injudicious to say the bee?
For the whole case is assumed. Conceding for a moment that there is any
analogy between a bee, and a man in a shirt and pantaloons (which I deny),
and that it is settled that the man is to learn from the bee (which I also
deny), the question still remains, what is he to learn? To imitate? Or to
avoid? When your friends the bees worry themselves to that highly
fluttered extent about their sovereign, and become perfectly distracted
touching the slightest monarchical movement, are we men to learn the
greatness of Tuft-hunting, or the littleness of the Court Circular? I am
not clear, Mr Boffin, but that the hive may be satirical.'</p>
<p>'At all events, they work,' said Mr Boffin.</p>
<p>'Ye-es,' returned Eugene, disparagingly, 'they work; but don't you think
they overdo it? They work so much more than they need—they make so
much more than they can eat—they are so incessantly boring and
buzzing at their one idea till Death comes upon them—that don't you
think they overdo it? And are human labourers to have no holidays, because
of the bees? And am I never to have change of air, because the bees don't?
Mr Boffin, I think honey excellent at breakfast; but, regarded in the
light of my conventional schoolmaster and moralist, I protest against the
tyrannical humbug of your friend the bee. With the highest respect for
you.'</p>
<p>'Thankee,' said Mr Boffin. 'Morning, morning!'</p>
<p>But, the worthy Mr Boffin jogged away with a comfortless impression he
could have dispensed with, that there was a deal of unsatisfactoriness in
the world, besides what he had recalled as appertaining to the Harmon
property. And he was still jogging along Fleet Street in this condition of
mind, when he became aware that he was closely tracked and observed by a
man of genteel appearance.</p>
<p>'Now then?' said Mr Boffin, stopping short, with his meditations brought
to an abrupt check, 'what's the next article?'</p>
<p>'I beg your pardon, Mr Boffin.'</p>
<p>'My name too, eh? How did you come by it? I don't know you.'</p>
<p>'No, sir, you don't know me.'</p>
<p>Mr Boffin looked full at the man, and the man looked full at him.</p>
<p>'No,' said Mr Boffin, after a glance at the pavement, as if it were made
of faces and he were trying to match the man's, 'I DON'T know you.'</p>
<p>'I am nobody,' said the stranger, 'and not likely to be known; but Mr
Boffin's wealth—'</p>
<p>'Oh! that's got about already, has it?' muttered Mr Boffin.</p>
<p>'—And his romantic manner of acquiring it, make him conspicuous. You
were pointed out to me the other day.'</p>
<p>'Well,' said Mr Boffin, 'I should say I was a disappintment to you when I
WAS pinted out, if your politeness would allow you to confess it, for I am
well aware I am not much to look at. What might you want with me? Not in
the law, are you?'</p>
<p>'No, sir.'</p>
<p>'No information to give, for a reward?'</p>
<p>'No, sir.'</p>
<p>There may have been a momentary mantling in the face of the man as he made
the last answer, but it passed directly.</p>
<p>'If I don't mistake, you have followed me from my lawyer's and tried to
fix my attention. Say out! Have you? Or haven't you?' demanded Mr Boffin,
rather angry.</p>
<p>'Yes.'</p>
<p>'Why have you?'</p>
<p>'If you will allow me to walk beside you, Mr Boffin, I will tell you.
Would you object to turn aside into this place—I think it is called
Clifford's Inn—where we can hear one another better than in the
roaring street?'</p>
<p>('Now,' thought Mr Boffin, 'if he proposes a game at skittles, or meets a
country gentleman just come into property, or produces any article of
jewellery he has found, I'll knock him down!' With this discreet
reflection, and carrying his stick in his arms much as Punch carries his,
Mr Boffin turned into Clifford's Inn aforesaid.)</p>
<p>'Mr Boffin, I happened to be in Chancery Lane this morning, when I saw you
going along before me. I took the liberty of following you, trying to make
up my mind to speak to you, till you went into your lawyer's. Then I
waited outside till you came out.'</p>
<p>('Don't quite sound like skittles, nor yet country gentleman, nor yet
jewellery,' thought Mr Boffin, 'but there's no knowing.')</p>
<p>'I am afraid my object is a bold one, I am afraid it has little of the
usual practical world about it, but I venture it. If you ask me, or if you
ask yourself—which is more likely—what emboldens me, I answer,
I have been strongly assured, that you are a man of rectitude and plain
dealing, with the soundest of sound hearts, and that you are blessed in a
wife distinguished by the same qualities.'</p>
<p>'Your information is true of Mrs Boffin, anyhow,' was Mr Boffin's answer,
as he surveyed his new friend again. There was something repressed in the
strange man's manner, and he walked with his eyes on the ground—though
conscious, for all that, of Mr Boffin's observation—and he spoke in
a subdued voice. But his words came easily, and his voice was agreeable in
tone, albeit constrained.</p>
<p>'When I add, I can discern for myself what the general tongue says of you—that
you are quite unspoiled by Fortune, and not uplifted—I trust you
will not, as a man of an open nature, suspect that I mean to flatter you,
but will believe that all I mean is to excuse myself, these being my only
excuses for my present intrusion.'</p>
<p>('How much?' thought Mr Boffin. 'It must be coming to money. How much?')</p>
<p>'You will probably change your manner of living, Mr Boffin, in your
changed circumstances. You will probably keep a larger house, have many
matters to arrange, and be beset by numbers of correspondents. If you
would try me as your Secretary—'</p>
<p>'As WHAT?' cried Mr Boffin, with his eyes wide open.</p>
<p>'Your Secretary.'</p>
<p>'Well,' said Mr Boffin, under his breath, 'that's a queer thing!'</p>
<p>'Or,' pursued the stranger, wondering at Mr Boffin's wonder, 'if you would
try me as your man of business under any name, I know you would find me
faithful and grateful, and I hope you would find me useful. You may
naturally think that my immediate object is money. Not so, for I would
willingly serve you a year—two years—any term you might
appoint—before that should begin to be a consideration between us.'</p>
<p>'Where do you come from?' asked Mr Boffin.</p>
<p>'I come,' returned the other, meeting his eye, 'from many countries.'</p>
<p>Boffin's acquaintances with the names and situations of foreign lands
being limited in extent and somewhat confused in quality, he shaped his
next question on an elastic model.</p>
<p>'From—any particular place?'</p>
<p>'I have been in many places.'</p>
<p>'What have you been?' asked Mr Boffin.</p>
<p>Here again he made no great advance, for the reply was, 'I have been a
student and a traveller.'</p>
<p>'But if it ain't a liberty to plump it out,' said Mr Boffin, 'what do you
do for your living?'</p>
<p>'I have mentioned,' returned the other, with another look at him, and a
smile, 'what I aspire to do. I have been superseded as to some slight
intentions I had, and I may say that I have now to begin life.'</p>
<p>Not very well knowing how to get rid of this applicant, and feeling the
more embarrassed because his manner and appearance claimed a delicacy in
which the worthy Mr Boffin feared he himself might be deficient, that
gentleman glanced into the mouldy little plantation or cat-preserve, of
Clifford's Inn, as it was that day, in search of a suggestion. Sparrows
were there, cats were there, dry-rot and wet-rot were there, but it was
not otherwise a suggestive spot.</p>
<p>'All this time,' said the stranger, producing a little pocket-book and
taking out a card, 'I have not mentioned my name. My name is Rokesmith. I
lodge at one Mr Wilfer's, at Holloway.'</p>
<p>Mr Boffin stared again.</p>
<p>'Father of Miss Bella Wilfer?' said he.</p>
<p>'My landlord has a daughter named Bella. Yes; no doubt.'</p>
<p>Now, this name had been more or less in Mr Boffin's thoughts all the
morning, and for days before; therefore he said:</p>
<p>'That's singular, too!' unconsciously staring again, past all bounds of
good manners, with the card in his hand. 'Though, by-the-bye, I suppose it
was one of that family that pinted me out?'</p>
<p>'No. I have never been in the streets with one of them.'</p>
<p>'Heard me talked of among 'em, though?'</p>
<p>'No. I occupy my own rooms, and have held scarcely any communication with
them.'</p>
<p>'Odder and odder!' said Mr Boffin. 'Well, sir, to tell you the truth, I
don't know what to say to you.'</p>
<p>'Say nothing,' returned Mr Rokesmith; 'allow me to call on you in a few
days. I am not so unconscionable as to think it likely that you would
accept me on trust at first sight, and take me out of the very street. Let
me come to you for your further opinion, at your leisure.'</p>
<p>'That's fair, and I don't object,' said Mr Boffin; 'but it must be on
condition that it's fully understood that I no more know that I shall ever
be in want of any gentleman as Secretary—it WAS Secretary you said;
wasn't it?'</p>
<p>'Yes.'</p>
<p>Again Mr Boffin's eyes opened wide, and he stared at the applicant from
head to foot, repeating 'Queer!—You're sure it was Secretary? Are
you?'</p>
<p>'I am sure I said so.'</p>
<p>—'As Secretary,' repeated Mr Boffin, meditating upon the word; 'I no
more know that I may ever want a Secretary, or what not, than I do that I
shall ever be in want of the man in the moon. Me and Mrs Boffin have not
even settled that we shall make any change in our way of life. Mrs
Boffin's inclinations certainly do tend towards Fashion; but, being
already set up in a fashionable way at the Bower, she may not make further
alterations. However, sir, as you don't press yourself, I wish to meet you
so far as saying, by all means call at the Bower if you like. Call in the
course of a week or two. At the same time, I consider that I ought to
name, in addition to what I have already named, that I have in my
employment a literary man—WITH a wooden leg—as I have no
thoughts of parting from.'</p>
<p>'I regret to hear I am in some sort anticipated,' Mr Rokesmith answered,
evidently having heard it with surprise; 'but perhaps other duties might
arise?'</p>
<p>'You see,' returned Mr Boffin, with a confidential sense of dignity, 'as
to my literary man's duties, they're clear. Professionally he declines and
he falls, and as a friend he drops into poetry.'</p>
<p>Without observing that these duties seemed by no means clear to Mr
Rokesmith's astonished comprehension, Mr Boffin went on:</p>
<p>'And now, sir, I'll wish you good-day. You can call at the Bower any time
in a week or two. It's not above a mile or so from you, and your landlord
can direct you to it. But as he may not know it by its new name of
Boffin's Bower, say, when you inquire of him, it's Harmon's; will you?'</p>
<p>'Harmoon's,' repeated Mr Rokesmith, seeming to have caught the sound
imperfectly, 'Harmarn's. How do you spell it?'</p>
<p>'Why, as to the spelling of it,' returned Mr Boffin, with great presence
of mind, 'that's YOUR look out. Harmon's is all you've got to say to HIM.
Morning, morning, morning!' And so departed, without looking back.</p>
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