<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>Brother Jacob</h1>
<h2 class="no-break">by George Eliot</h2>
<hr />
<h2><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p>Among the many fatalities attending the bloom of young desire, that of blindly
taking to the confectionery line has not, perhaps, been sufficiently
considered. How is the son of a British yeoman, who has been fed principally on
salt pork and yeast dumplings, to know that there is satiety for the human
stomach even in a paradise of glass jars full of sugared almonds and pink
lozenges, and that the tedium of life can reach a pitch where plum-buns at
discretion cease to offer the slightest excitement? Or how, at the tender age
when a confectioner seems to him a very prince whom all the world must
envy—who breakfasts on macaroons, dines on meringues, sups on
twelfth-cake, and fills up the intermediate hours with sugar-candy or
peppermint—how is he to foresee the day of sad wisdom, when he will
discern that the confectioner’s calling is not socially influential, or
favourable to a soaring ambition? I have known a man who turned out to have a
metaphysical genius, incautiously, in the period of youthful buoyancy, commence
his career as a dancing-master; and you may imagine the use that was made of
this initial mistake by opponents who felt themselves bound to warn the public
against his doctrine of the Inconceivable. He could not give up his
dancing-lessons, because he made his bread by them, and metaphysics would not
have found him in so much as salt to his bread. It was really the same with Mr.
David Faux and the confectionery business. His uncle, the butler at the great
house close by Brigford, had made a pet of him in his early boyhood, and it was
on a visit to this uncle that the confectioners’ shops in that brilliant
town had, on a single day, fired his tender imagination. He carried home the
pleasing illusion that a confectioner must be at once the happiest and the
foremost of men, since the things he made were not only the most beautiful to
behold, but the very best eating, and such as the Lord Mayor must always order
largely for his private recreation; so that when his father declared he must be
put to a trade, David chose his line without a moment’s hesitation; and,
with a rashness inspired by a sweet tooth, wedded himself irrevocably to
confectionery. Soon, however, the tooth lost its relish and fell into blank
indifference; and all the while, his mind expanded, his ambition took new
shapes, which could hardly be satisfied within the sphere his youthful ardour
had chosen. But what was he to do? He was a young man of much mental activity,
and, above all, gifted with a spirit of contrivance; but then, his faculties
would not tell with great effect in any other medium than that of candied
sugars, conserves, and pastry. Say what you will about the identity of the
reasoning process in all branches of thought, or about the advantage of coming
to subjects with a fresh mind, the adjustment of butter to flour, and of heat
to pastry, is <i>not</i> the best preparation for the office of prime minister;
besides, in the present imperfectly-organized state of society, there are
social barriers. David could invent delightful things in the way of drop-cakes,
and he had the widest views of the sugar department; but in other directions he
certainly felt hampered by the want of knowledge and practical skill; and the
world is so inconveniently constituted, that the vague consciousness of being a
fine fellow is no guarantee of success in any line of business.</p>
<p>This difficulty pressed with some severity on Mr. David Faux, even before his
apprenticeship was ended. His soul swelled with an impatient sense that he
ought to become something very remarkable—that it was quite out of the
question for him to put up with a narrow lot as other men did: he scorned the
idea that he could accept an average. He was sure there was nothing average
about him: even such a person as Mrs. Tibbits, the washer-woman, perceived it,
and probably had a preference for his linen. At that particular period he was
weighing out gingerbread nuts; but such an anomaly could not continue. No
position could be suited to Mr. David Faux that was not in the highest degree
easy to the flesh and flattering to the spirit. If he had fallen on the present
times, and enjoyed the advantages of a Mechanic’s Institute, he would
certainly have taken to literature and have written reviews; but his education
had not been liberal. He had read some novels from the adjoining circulating
library, and had even bought the story of <i>Inkle and Yarico</i>, which had
made him feel very sorry for poor Mr. Inkle; so that his ideas might not have
been below a certain mark of the literary calling; but his spelling and diction
were too unconventional.</p>
<p>When a man is not adequately appreciated or comfortably placed in his own
country, his thoughts naturally turn towards foreign climes; and David’s
imagination circled round and round the utmost limits of his geographical
knowledge, in search of a country where a young gentleman of pasty visage,
lipless mouth, and stumpy hair, would be likely to be received with the
hospitable enthusiasm which he had a right to expect. Having a general idea of
America as a country where the population was chiefly black, it appeared to him
the most propitious destination for an emigrant who, to begin with, had the
broad and easily recognizable merit of whiteness; and this idea gradually took
such strong possession of him that Satan seized the opportunity of suggesting
to him that he might emigrate under easier circumstances, if he supplied
himself with a little money from his master’s till. But that evil spirit,
whose understanding, I am convinced, has been much overrated, quite wasted his
time on this occasion. David would certainly have liked well to have some of
his master’s money in his pocket, if he had been sure his master would
have been the only man to suffer for it; but he was a cautious youth, and quite
determined to run no risks on his own account. So he stayed out his
apprenticeship, and committed no act of dishonesty that was at all likely to be
discovered, reserving his plan of emigration for a future opportunity. And the
circumstances under which he carried it out were in this wise. Having been at
home a week or two partaking of the family beans, he had used his leisure in
ascertaining a fact which was of considerable importance to him, namely, that
his mother had a small sum in guineas painfully saved from her maiden
perquisites, and kept in the corner of a drawer where her baby-linen had
reposed for the last twenty years—ever since her son David had taken to
his feet, with a slight promise of bow-legs which had not been altogether
unfulfilled. Mr. Faux, senior, had told his son very frankly, that he must not
look to being set up in business by <i>him</i>: with seven sons, and one of
them a very healthy and well-developed idiot, who consumed a dumpling about
eight inches in diameter every day, it was pretty well if they got a hundred
apiece at his death. Under these circumstances, what was David to do? It was
certainly hard that he should take his mother’s money; but he saw no
other ready means of getting any, and it was not to be expected that a young
man of his merit should put up with inconveniences that could be avoided.
Besides, it is not robbery to take property belonging to your mother: she
doesn’t prosecute you. And David was very well behaved to his mother; he
comforted her by speaking highly of himself to her, and assuring her that he
never fell into the vices he saw practised by other youths of his own age, and
that he was particularly fond of honesty. If his mother would have given him
her twenty guineas as a reward of this noble disposition, he really would not
have stolen them from her, and it would have been more agreeable to his
feelings. Nevertheless, to an active mind like David’s, ingenuity is not
without its pleasures: it was rather an interesting occupation to become
stealthily acquainted with the wards of his mother’s simple key (not in
the least like Chubb’s patent), and to get one that would do its work
equally well; and also to arrange a little drama by which he would escape
suspicion, and run no risk of forfeiting the prospective hundred at his
father’s death, which would be convenient in the improbable case of his
<i>not</i> making a large fortune in the “Indies.”</p>
<p>First, he spoke freely of his intention to start shortly for Liverpool and take
ship for America; a resolution which cost his good mother some pain, for, after
Jacob the idiot, there was not one of her sons to whom her heart clung more
than to her youngest-born, David. Next, it appeared to him that Sunday
afternoon, when everybody was gone to church except Jacob and the cowboy, was
so singularly favourable an opportunity for sons who wanted to appropriate
their mothers’ guineas, that he half thought it must have been kindly
intended by Providence for such purposes. Especially the third Sunday in Lent;
because Jacob had been out on one of his occasional wanderings for the last two
days; and David, being a timid young man, had a considerable dread and hatred
of Jacob, as of a large personage who went about habitually with a pitchfork in
his hand.</p>
<p>Nothing could be easier, then, than for David on this Sunday afternoon to
decline going to church, on the ground that he was going to tea at Mr.
Lunn’s, whose pretty daughter Sally had been an early flame of his, and,
when the church-goers were at a safe distance, to abstract the guineas from
their wooden box and slip them into a small canvas bag—nothing easier
than to call to the cowboy that he was going, and tell him to keep an eye on
the house for fear of Sunday tramps. David thought it would be easy, too, to
get to a small thicket and bury his bag in a hole he had already made and
covered up under the roots of an old hollow ash, and he had, in fact, found the
hole without a moment’s difficulty, had uncovered it, and was about
gently to drop the bag into it, when the sound of a large body rustling towards
him with something like a bellow was such a surprise to David, who, as a
gentleman gifted with much contrivance, was naturally only prepared for what he
expected, that instead of dropping the bag gently he let it fall so as to make
it untwist and vomit forth the shining guineas. In the same moment he looked up
and saw his dear brother Jacob close upon him, holding the pitchfork so that
the bright smooth prongs were a yard in advance of his own body, and about a
foot off David’s. (A learned friend, to whom I once narrated this
history, observed that it was David’s guilt which made these prongs
formidable, and that the “mens nil conscia sibi” strips a pitchfork
of all terrors. I thought this idea so valuable, that I obtained his leave to
use it on condition of suppressing his name.) Nevertheless, David did not
entirely lose his presence of mind; for in that case he would have sunk on the
earth or started backward; whereas he kept his ground and smiled at Jacob, who
nodded his head up and down, and said, “Hoich, Zavy!” in a
painfully equivocal manner. David’s heart was beating audibly, and if he
had had any lips they would have been pale; but his mental activity, instead of
being paralysed, was stimulated. While he was inwardly praying (he always
prayed when he was much frightened)—“Oh, save me this once, and
I’ll never get into danger again!”—he was thrusting his hand
into his pocket in search of a box of yellow lozenges, which he had brought
with him from Brigford among other delicacies of the same portable kind, as a
means of conciliating proud beauty, and more particularly the beauty of Miss
Sarah Lunn. Not one of these delicacies had he ever offered to poor Jacob, for
David was not a young man to waste his jujubes and barley-sugar in giving
pleasure to people from whom he expected nothing. But an idiot with equivocal
intentions and a pitchfork is as well worth flattering and cajoling as if he
were Louis Napoleon. So David, with a promptitude equal to the occasion, drew
out his box of yellow lozenges, lifted the lid, and performed a pantomime with
his mouth and fingers, which was meant to imply that he was delighted to see
his dear brother Jacob, and seized the opportunity of making him a small
present, which he would find particularly agreeable to the taste. Jacob, you
understand, was not an intense idiot, but within a certain limited range knew
how to choose the good and reject the evil: he took one lozenge, by way of
test, and sucked it as if he had been a philosopher; then, in as great an
ecstacy at its new and complex savour as Caliban at the taste of
Trinculo’s wine, chuckled and stroked this suddenly beneficent brother,
and held out his hand for more; for, except in fits of anger, Jacob was not
ferocious or needlessly predatory. David’s courage half returned, and he
left off praying; pouring a dozen lozenges into Jacob’s palm, and trying
to look very fond of him. He congratulated himself that he had formed the plan
of going to see Miss Sally Lunn this afternoon, and that, as a consequence, he
had brought with him these propitiatory delicacies: he was certainly a lucky
fellow; indeed, it was always likely Providence should be fonder of him than of
other apprentices, and since he <i>was</i> to be interrupted, why, an idiot was
preferable to any other sort of witness. For the first time in his life, David
thought he saw the advantage of idiots.</p>
<p>As for Jacob, he had thrust his pitchfork into the ground, and had thrown
himself down beside it, in thorough abandonment to the unprecedented pleasure
of having five lozenges in his mouth at once, blinking meanwhile, and making
inarticulate sounds of gustative content. He had not yet given any sign of
noticing the guineas, but in seating himself he had laid his broad right hand
on them, and unconsciously kept it in that position, absorbed in the sensations
of his palate. If he could only be kept so occupied with the lozenges as not to
see the guineas before David could manage to cover them! That was David’s
best hope of safety; for Jacob knew his mother’s guineas; it had been
part of their common experience as boys to be allowed to look at these handsome
coins, and rattle them in their box on high days and holidays, and among all
Jacob’s narrow experiences as to money, this was likely to be the most
memorable.</p>
<p>“Here, Jacob,” said David, in an insinuating tone, handing the box
to him, “I’ll give ’em all to you. Run!—make
haste!—else somebody’ll come and take ’em.”</p>
<p>David, not having studied the psychology of idiots, was not aware that they are
not to be wrought upon by imaginative fears. Jacob took the box with his left
hand, but saw no necessity for running away. Was ever a promising young man
wishing to lay the foundation of his fortune by appropriating his
mother’s guineas obstructed by such a day-mare as this? But the moment
must come when Jacob would move his right hand to draw off the lid of the tin
box, and then David would sweep the guineas into the hole with the utmost
address and swiftness, and immediately seat himself upon them. Ah, no!
It’s of no use to have foresight when you are dealing with an idiot: he
is not to be calculated upon. Jacob’s right hand was given to vague
clutching and throwing; it suddenly clutched the guineas as if they had been so
many pebbles, and was raised in an attitude which promised to scatter them like
seed over a distant bramble, when, from some prompting or other—probably
of an unwonted sensation—it paused, descended to Jacob’s knee, and
opened slowly under the inspection of Jacob’s dull eyes. David began to
pray again, but immediately desisted—another resource having occurred to
him.</p>
<p>“Mother! zinnies!” exclaimed the innocent Jacob. Then, looking at
David, he said, interrogatively, “Box?”</p>
<p>“Hush! hush!” said David, summoning all his ingenuity in this
severe strait. “See, Jacob!” He took the tin box from his
brother’s hand, and emptied it of the lozenges, returning half of them to
Jacob, but secretly keeping the rest in his own hand. Then he held out the
empty box, and said, “Here’s the box, Jacob! The box for the
guineas!” gently sweeping them from Jacob’s palm into the box.</p>
<p>This procedure was not objectionable to Jacob; on the contrary, the guineas
clinked so pleasantly as they fell, that he wished for a repetition of the
sound, and seizing the box, began to rattle it very gleefully. David, seizing
the opportunity, deposited his reserve of lozenges in the ground and hastily
swept some earth over them. “Look, Jacob!” he said, at last. Jacob
paused from his clinking, and looked into the hole, while David began to
scratch away the earth, as if in doubtful expectation. When the lozenges were
laid bare, he took them out one by one, and gave them to Jacob.
“Hush!” he said, in a loud whisper, “Tell nobody—all
for Jacob—hush—sh—sh! Put guineas in the
hole—they’ll come out like this!” To make the lesson more
complete, he took a guinea, and lowering it into the hole, said, “Put in
<i>so</i>.” Then, as he took the last lozenge out, he said, “Come
out <i>so</i>,” and put the lozenge into Jacob’s hospitable mouth.</p>
<p>Jacob turned his head on one side, looked first at his brother and then at the
hole, like a reflective monkey, and, finally, laid the box of guineas in the
hole with much decision. David made haste to add every one of the stray coins,
put on the lid, and covered it well with earth, saying in his meet coaxing
tone—</p>
<p>“Take ’m out to-morrow, Jacob; all for Jacob!
Hush—sh—sh!”</p>
<p>Jacob, to whom this once indifferent brother had all at once become a sort of
sweet-tasted fetish, stroked David’s best coat with his adhesive fingers,
and then hugged him with an accompaniment of that mingled chuckling and
gurgling by which he was accustomed to express the milder passions. But if he
had chosen to bite a small morsel out of his beneficent brother’s cheek,
David would have been obliged to bear it.</p>
<p>And here I must pause, to point out to you the short-sightedness of human
contrivance. This ingenious young man, Mr. David Faux, thought he had achieved
a triumph of cunning when he had associated himself in his brother’s
rudimentary mind with the flavour of yellow lozenges. But he had yet to learn
that it is a dreadful thing to make an idiot fond of you, when you yourself are
not of an affectionate disposition: especially an idiot with a
pitchfork—obviously a difficult friend to shake off by rough usage.</p>
<p>It may seem to you rather a blundering contrivance for a clever young man to
bury the guineas. But, if everything had turned out as David had calculated,
you would have seen that his plan was worthy of his talents. The guineas would
have lain safely in the earth while the theft was discovered, and David, with
the calm of conscious innocence, would have lingered at home, reluctant to say
good-bye to his dear mother while she was in grief about her guineas; till at
length, on the eve of his departure, he would have disinterred them in the
strictest privacy, and carried them on his own person without inconvenience.
But David, you perceive, had reckoned without his host, or, to speak more
precisely, without his idiot brother—an item of so uncertain and
fluctuating a character, that I doubt whether he would not have puzzled the
astute heroes of M. de Balzac, whose foresight is so remarkably at home in the
future.</p>
<p>It was clear to David now that he had only one alternative before him: he must
either renounce the guineas, by quietly putting them back in his mother’s
drawer (a course not unattended with difficulty); or he must leave more than a
suspicion behind him, by departing early the next morning without giving
notice, and with the guineas in his pocket. For if he gave notice that he was
going, his mother, he knew, would insist on fetching from her box of guineas
the three she had always promised him as his share; indeed, in his original
plan, he had counted on this as a means by which the theft would be discovered
under circumstances that would themselves speak for his innocence; but now, as
I need hardly explain, that well-combined plan was completely frustrated. Even
if David could have bribed Jacob with perpetual lozenges, an idiot’s
secrecy is itself betrayal. He dared not even go to tea at Mr. Lunn’s,
for in that case he would have lost sight of Jacob, who, in his impatience for
the crop of lozenges, might scratch up the box again while he was absent, and
carry it home—depriving him at once of reputation and guineas. No! he
must think of nothing all the rest of this day, but of coaxing Jacob and
keeping him out of mischief. It was a fatiguing and anxious evening to David;
nevertheless, he dared not go to sleep without tying a piece of string to his
thumb and great toe, to secure his frequent waking; for he meant to be up with
the first peep of dawn, and be far out of reach before breakfast-time. His
father, he thought, would certainly cut him off with a shilling; but what then?
Such a striking young man as he would be sure to be well received in the West
Indies: in foreign countries there are always openings—even for cats. It
was probable that some Princess Yarico would want him to marry her, and make
him presents of very large jewels beforehand; after which, he needn’t
marry her unless he liked. David had made up his mind not to steal any more,
even from people who were fond of him: it was an unpleasant way of making your
fortune in a world where you were likely to surprised in the act by brothers.
Such alarms did not agree with David’s constitution, and he had felt so
much nausea this evening that no doubt his liver was affected. Besides, he
would have been greatly hurt not to be thought well of in the world: he always
meant to make a figure, and be thought worthy of the best seats and the best
morsels.</p>
<p>Ruminating to this effect on the brilliant future in reserve for him, David by
the help of his check-string kept himself on the alert to seize the time of
earliest dawn for his rising and departure. His brothers, of course, were early
risers, but he should anticipate them by at least an hour and a half, and the
little room which he had to himself as only an occasional visitor, had its
window over the horse-block, so that he could slip out through the window
without the least difficulty. Jacob, the horrible Jacob, had an awkward trick
of getting up before everybody else, to stem his hunger by emptying the
milk-bowl that was “duly set” for him; but of late he had taken to
sleeping in the hay-loft, and if he came into the house, it would be on the
opposite side to that from which David was making his exit. There was no need
to think of Jacob; yet David was liberal enough to bestow a curse on
him—it was the only thing he ever did bestow gratuitously. His small
bundle of clothes was ready packed, and he was soon treading lightly on the
steps of the horse-block, soon walking at a smart pace across the fields
towards the thicket. It would take him no more than two minutes to get out the
box; he could make out the tree it was under by the pale strip where the bark
was off, although the dawning light was rather dimmer in the thicket. But what,
in the name of—burnt pastry—was that large body with a staff
planted beside it, close at the foot of the ash-tree? David paused, not to make
up his mind as to the nature of the apparition—he had not the happiness
of doubting for a moment that the staff was Jacob’s pitchfork—but
to gather the self-command necessary for addressing his brother with a
sufficiently honeyed accent. Jacob was absorbed in scratching up the earth, and
had not heard David’s approach.</p>
<p>“I say, Jacob,” said David in a loud whisper, just as the tin box
was lifted out of the hole.</p>
<p>Jacob looked up, and discerning his sweet-flavoured brother, nodded and grinned
in the dim light in a way that made him seem to David like a triumphant demon.
If he had been of an impetuous disposition, he would have snatched the
pitchfork from the ground and impaled this fraternal demon. But David was by no
means impetuous; he was a young man greatly given to calculate consequences, a
habit which has been held to be the foundation of virtue. But somehow it had
not precisely that effect in David: he calculated whether an action would harm
himself, or whether it would only harm other people. In the former case he was
very timid about satisfying his immediate desires, but in the latter he would
risk the result with much courage.</p>
<p>“Give it me, Jacob,” he said, stooping down and patting his
brother. “Let us see.”</p>
<p>Jacob, finding the lid rather tight, gave the box to his brother in perfect
faith. David raised the lids and shook his head, while Jacob put his finger in
and took out a guinea to taste whether the metamorphosis into lozenges was
complete and satisfactory.</p>
<p>“No, Jacob; too soon, too soon,” said David, when the guinea had
been tasted. “Give it me; we’ll go and bury it somewhere else;
we’ll put it in yonder,” he added, pointing vaguely toward the
distance.</p>
<p>David screwed on the lid, while Jacob, looking grave, rose and grasped his
pitchfork. Then, seeing David’s bundle, he snatched it, like a too
officious Newfoundland, stuck his pitchfork into it and carried it over his
shoulder in triumph as he accompanied David and the box out of the thicket.</p>
<p>What on earth was David to do? It would have been easy to frown at Jacob, and
kick him, and order him to get away; but David dared as soon have kicked the
bull. Jacob was quiet as long as he was treated indulgently; but on the
slightest show of anger, he became unmanageable, and was liable to fits of fury
which would have made him formidable even without his pitchfork. There was no
mastery to be obtained over him except by kindness or guile. David tried guile.</p>
<p>“Go, Jacob,” he said, when they were out of the
thicket—pointing towards the house as he spoke; “go and fetch me a
spade—a spade. But give <i>me</i> the bundle,” he added, trying to
reach it from the fork, where it hung high above Jacob’s tall shoulder.</p>
<p>But Jacob showed as much alacrity in obeying as a wasp shows in leaving a
sugar-basin. Near David, he felt himself in the vicinity of lozenges: he
chuckled and rubbed his brother’s back, brandishing the bundle higher out
of reach. David, with an inward groan, changed his tactics, and walked on as
fast as he could. It was not safe to linger. Jacob would get tired of following
him, or, at all events, could be eluded. If they could once get to the distant
highroad, a coach would overtake them, David would mount it, having previously
by some ingenious means secured his bundle, and then Jacob might howl and
flourish his pitchfork as much as he liked. Meanwhile he was under the fatal
necessity of being very kind to this ogre, and of providing a large breakfast
for him when they stopped at a roadside inn. It was already three hours since
they had started, and David was tired. Would no coach be coming up soon? he
inquired. No coach for the next two hours. But there was a carrier’s cart
to come immediately, on its way to the next town. If he could slip out, even
leaving his bundle behind, and get into the cart without Jacob! But there was a
new obstacle. Jacob had recently discovered a remnant of sugar-candy in one of
his brother’s tail-pockets; and, since then, had cautiously kept his hold
on that limb of the garment, perhaps with an expectation that there would be a
further development of sugar-candy after a longer or shorter interval. Now
every one who has worn a coat will understand the sensibilities that must keep
a man from starting away in a hurry when there is a grasp on his coat-tail.
David looked forward to being well received among strangers, but it might make
a difference if he had only one tail to his coat.</p>
<p>He felt himself in a cold perspiration. He could walk no more: he must get into
the cart and let Jacob get in with him. Presently a cheering idea occurred to
him: after so large a breakfast, Jacob would be sure to go to sleep in the
cart; you see at once that David meant to seize his bundle, jump out, and be
free. His expectation was partly fulfilled: Jacob did go to sleep in the cart,
but it was in a peculiar attitude—it was with his arms tightly fastened
round his dear brother’s body; and if ever David attempted to move, the
grasp tightened with the force of an affectionate boa-constrictor.</p>
<p>“Th’ innicent’s fond on you,” observed the carrier,
thinking that David was probably an amiable brother, and wishing to pay him a
compliment.</p>
<p>David groaned. The ways of thieving were not ways of pleasantness. Oh, why had
he an idiot brother? Oh, why, in general, was the world so constituted that a
man could not take his mother’s guineas comfortably? David became grimly
speculative.</p>
<p>Copious dinner at noon for Jacob; but little dinner, because little appetite,
for David. Instead of eating, he plied Jacob with beer; for through this
liberality he descried a hope. Jacob fell into a dead sleep, at last, without
having his arms round David, who paid the reckoning, took his bundle, and
walked off. In another half-hour he was on the coach on his way to Liverpool,
smiling the smile of the triumphant wicked. He was rid of Jacob—he was
bound for the Indies, where a gullible princess awaited him. He would never
steal any more, but there would be no need; he would show himself so deserving,
that people would make him presents freely. He must give up the notion of his
father’s legacy; but it was not likely he would ever want that trifle;
and even if he did—why, it was a compensation to think that in being for
ever divided from his family he was divided from Jacob, more terrible than
Gorgon or Demogorgon to David’s timid green eyes. Thank heaven, he should
never see Jacob any more!</p>
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