<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<p class="p4">Leave we now, with story pending, Biddy and
Eoa, Pearl, and even Amy; thee, too, rare Bull,
and thee, O Rufus, overcast with anger. It is
time to track the steps of him whom Fortune, blithe
at her cruel trade, shall track as far as Gades,
Cantaber, and wild Syrtes, where the Moorish
billow is for ever heaving. Will he exclaim with
the poet, who certainly was a jolly mortal,—“I
praise her while she is my guest. If she flap her
nimble wings, I renounce her charities; and wrap
me in my manhood robe, and woo the upright
poverty, the bride without a dower.” “A very fine
sentiment, Master Horace; but were you not a
little too fond even of Sabine and Lesbian—when
the Massic juice was beyond your credit—to do
anything more than <i>feel</i> it?”</p>
<p>As Cradock Nowell trudged that night towards
the Brockenhurst Station, before he got very far
from Amy, and while her tears were still on his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
cheek, he felt a little timid lick, a weak offering of
sympathy.</p>
<p>Hereby black Wena made known to him that
she was melted by his misfortunes, and saw that
the right and most feeling course, and the one
most pleasing to her dead master, was the transfer
of her allegiance, and the swearing of fealty to the
brother. To which conclusion the tender mode in
which she was being carried conduced, perhaps,
considerably; for she was wrapped in Claytonʼs
woolly jacket, enthroned on Cradockʼs broad right
arm, and with only her black nose exposed to the
moon. So she jogged along very comfortably,
until she had made up her mind, and given
Cradock the kiss of seisin.</p>
<p>“Dear little thing,” he cried, for he looked on
her now as Amyʼs keepsake, “you shall go with me
wherever I go. You are faithful enough to starve
with me; but you shall not starve until after
me.”</p>
<p>Then he put her down, for he thought that a
little run would do her good, and, in spite of all
her misery, Amy had kept her pretty plump,
plumper than she herself was; and it became no
joke to carry her, with a travelling–bag, &c., after
the first half mile.</p>
<p>Then Wena capered about, and barked, and
came and licked his shoe, and offered to carry the
coat for him. As he would not let her do this,
she occupied her mind with the rabbits, which
were out upon the feed largely, and were the last<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span>
she would see for a long while, except the fat
Ostenders.</p>
<p>When he got to London, and took small lodgings
at a Mrs. Ducksacreʼs, “greengrocer and general
fruiterer, Mortimer–street, Cavendish–square,”—I
quote from the ladyʼs bags: confound it, there!
I am always saying improper things; <i>honi soit</i>—I
mean, of course, her paper bags—it was not long
before he made two important discoveries, valuable
rather than gratifying.</p>
<p>The first of these discoveries was, that our university
portals are a mere side–postern, and not the
great <i>janua mundi</i>. He found his classical scholarship,
his early fame at Oxford, his love of elegant
literature, rather a disadvantage than a recommendation
for business.</p>
<p>“Prigs, sir, prigs,” said a member of an eminent
City firm; “of course, I donʼt mean to be personal;
but I have always found you Oxford men prigs,
quite unfit for desk–work. You fancy you know
so much; you are always discovering mareʼs–nests,
and you wonʼt bear to be spoken to, even if you
stick to your work; which, I assure you, is quite
the exception. Then you hold yourself aloof, with
your stupid etiquette, from the other young men,
who are quite as good as you are. I assure you,
the place was too hot to hold us with the last
Oxford man we took in the counting–house; he
gave himself such airs, the donkey! I vowed
never to do it again: and I never will, sir. Good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span>
morning, sir; Gregson, show this gentleman the
way out.”</p>
<p>Gregson did so with a grin, for Cradockʼs face
proved that the principal had not been altogether
wrong.</p>
<p>Is this prejudice, or, rather, perhaps, I should
say, this aversion, disappearing now–a–days, or is it
upon the increase? At any rate, one cause of it is
being removed most rapidly; for the buckram etiquette
of Oxford will soon become a tradition. We
will only hope she may not run too far into the
free and easy.</p>
<p>Cradockʼs other discovery was that 50<i>l.</i> is no
large capital to commence in life with, especially
when the owner does not find his start prepared
for him; fails to prepare it for himself; and has
never been used to economy. He would not apply
to any of his fatherʼs friends, or of the people
whom he had known in London, to help him in
this emergency. He would rather starve than do
that; for he had dropped all name and claim of
Nowell, and cut his life in twain at manhood;
and the parts should never join again. Only one
feeling should be common to the two existences,
to the happy and the wretched life; that one feeling
was the love of Amy, and, what now seemed
part of it, his gratitude to her father.</p>
<p>John Rosedew had given him a letter to a clergyman
in London, a man of high standing and
extensive influence, whom John had known at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span>
college. But the youth had not undertaken to
deliver that credential, and he never did so. It
would have kept him to his identity, which (so far
as the world was concerned) he wished to change
entirely, immediately, and irrevocably. So he
called himself “Nowell” no longer—although the
name is common enough in one form or another:
the Nowells of Nowelhurst, however, are proud
of the double <i>l</i>, and think a good deal of the <i>w</i>—and
Cradock Nowell became “Charles Newman,”
without license of Her Majesty.</p>
<p>Even before his vain attempts to enter the
stronghold of commerce, and before he had
learned that Oxford men are not thought “<i>prima
virorum</i>,” he had lifted the latch of literature, but
the door would not swing back for him. The
<i>mare magnum</i>—to mix metaphors, although bars
are added to the Lucrine—the <i>mare magnum</i> of
letters was more like his native element; and, if
he once could have gotten—bare–footed as we
must be—over the jagged rocks which hedge that
sea, I believe he might have swum there.</p>
<p>In one respect he was fortunate. The publishers
upon whom he called were gentlemen, and
told him the truth.</p>
<p>“Oh, poetry!” exclaimed one and all, as their
eyes fell upon his manuscript, “we cannot take
it on our own account; and, if we published it
at your expense, we should only be robbing you.”</p>
<p>“Indeed!” replied Cradock, in the first surprise;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span>
“is there no chance, then, of a sale
for it?”</p>
<p>“None whatever. Poetry, unless it be some
oneʼs whose name is well known, is a perfect drug
in the market. In the course of ten or a dozen
years, by advertising continually, by influence
among the reviewers, by hitting some popular
vein, or being taken up by some authority, you
might attain an audience. Are you ready to encounter
all this? Even if you are, we must decline,
we are sorry to say, to have anything to do
with it.”</p>
<p>“Verse, eh? Better have cut your throat,”
more tersely replied an elderly gentleman, well
known for his rudeness to authors. However, even
that last was a friend, when compared with some
whom it might have been his evil luck to consult.
They advertise their patent methods of putting a
work before the public, without any risk to the
author, &c. &c. Disinterested gentlemen! They
are to have no profit whatever, except from the
sale of the work, and they know they wonʼt sell five
copies.</p>
<p>However, there are not many of this sort in an
honourable and most important profession; and
Cradock Nowell was lucky enough not to fall in
with any of them. So he accepted the verdict so
unanimously returned, and stored away with a heavy
heart his laborious little manuscript. It was only
a translation in verse of the Halieutics, and a few<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span>
short original pieces—the former at any rate valuable,
as having been revised by John Rosedew.</p>
<p>There are courts and alleys in the neighbourhood
of Mortimer–street which, for misery and poverty,
dirt and desperation, may vie with almost any of
the more famous shames of London.</p>
<p>Cradockʼs own great trouble, the sympathy he
had met with, and the comfort he received from it,
had begun by this time to soften his heart, and
render it more sensitive to the distress of others.
At first, it had been far otherwise. The feeling of
bitter injustice, resentment at, and defiance of, a
blow which seemed to him so unmerited, and, worse
than all, his own fatherʼs base and low mistrust of
him—who could have been surprised if these things,
acting upon a sad lone heart, and a bold mind beginning
to think for itself, had made the owner an
infidel? And very likely they would have done
so, when he was removed from John Rosedewʼs
influence, but for that scene with Amy. He loved
that girl so warmly, so devotedly, so purely, that,
when he found his love returned in equal quantity
and quality, it renewed his faith in justice. He
saw that there is a measure and law, even where
all appears to be anarchy and anomaly; that the
hand of God is not stretched forth upon His
children wantonly; that we cannot gauge His
circling survey by the three–inch space between
human eyes, neither does He rest His balance on
His earthly footstool. So Cradock escaped the
deadly harm, which almost seems designed to poise<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
that noblest gift of Heaven—a free and glorious
intellect—he escaped it through the mercy which
gave him true affection.</p>
<p>And now once more he looked with love upon
his fellow–men, such love as the frigid atheist
school shall never form nor educate—which truth
alone to a great heart might be conclusive against
that school—the love which few religions except
our own inculcate, and no other takes for its
essence.</p>
<p>As yet he was too young to know the blind and
inhuman selfishness, the formality and truckling,
and the other paltry dishonesties, which still exist
and try to cheat us under the name of “Society.”
The cant is going by already. Every man who
dares to think knows that its laws are obsolete,
because they have not for their basis either of these
three—truth, simplicity, charity.</p>
<p>Even that young man was astonished at the
manner in which society ignores its broader and
only true meaning—fellowship among men—and
renounces all other duties, save that of shaking
from its shoes its fellow–dust. He could not look
upon the scenes so nigh to him, and to each other,
parted often by nothing more than nine inches of
brick or two inches of deal; the wealth and the
want, the feast and the famine, the satiety and the
ravening, the euphemy and the blasphemy—though
sometimes that last got inside the door, blew its
nose, and was infidelity; the prudery and the indecency,
the whispered lie and the yelled one, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span>
sale of maidens by their mothers, or of women
by themselves—though here again the difference
was never very perceptible; all this impious contrast,
spread as if for Godʼs approval, for the Universal
Fatherʼs blessing, in the land most chiefly
blessed by Him: which of His sons, not cast out
for ever, could look on it without weeping?</p>
<p>Cradock did something more than weep. He
went with his little stock of money, though he
knew it could not do much; and he tried to help
in little ways, though as yet he had no experience.
He bought meat, and clothes, and took
things out of pawn, and tried to make peace where
fights were.</p>
<p>At first he was grossly insulted, as a meddlesome
swell; but, when he had done two or three good
things, and done them as a brother should, he
began to be owned among them. In one thing he
was right, although he had no experience; he
confined his exertions to a very narrow compass.
Of course he got imposed upon—of course he
helped the unworthy; but after a while he began
to know them, and even the unworthy—some two
hundred per cent.—began to have faint ideas of
trying to deserve good luck.</p>
<p>One man who attempted to pick Cradʼs pocket
was knocked down by the biggest thief there.
“I wish I had a heap of money,” said Cradock,
every day; “I must keep some for myself, I suppose.
Perhaps, after all, I was wrong, in throwing
up so hastily my chance of doing good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>Then he remembered that, but for his trouble,
he might never have thought of the good to be
done. And the good done to him was threefold
as much as he could do to others. Every day he
grew less selfish, less imperious, less exacting;
every day he saw more clearly the good which is
in the worst of us.</p>
<p>There is a flint of peculiar character—I know
not the local name of it—which is found sometimes
on the great Chissel Bank, and away towards
Lyme Regis. It is as hard, and sullen, and dull a
flint (with even the outside polish lost from the
chafing of the waves)—a stone as grey and foggy–looking;—as
ever Deucalion took the trouble to cast
away over the left into an empty world. Yet it
has, through the heart of it, traversing it from pole
to pole (for its shape is always conical) a thread, a
spindle, a siphuncle, of the richest golden hue.
None but those who are used to it can see the head
of the golden column, can even guess its existence.
The stone is not hollow; it is quite distinct from
all pudding–stones and conglomerates.</p>
<p>Many such flints poor Crad came across, and
sought in vain for the beauty of them. He never
tried to split them with a hammer, as too many do
of our Boanergæ; but he was too young to see or
feel the chord of the golden siphuncle. One, especially,
one great fellow, was harder and rougher
than any flint, like the matrix of the concentric
jasper.</p>
<p>“Confound that fellow,” said Cradock to himself;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</SPAN></span>
“I never shall get at the heart of him. If
my pluck were up a little more. Iʼd fight him;
though I know he would lick me. Heʼd be sorry
for me afterwards.”</p>
<p>Issachar Jupp could lick any two men in the
court. He was a bargee, of good intentions—at
least, when he took to the cuddy; but his horses
had pulled crosswise ever since; and the devil
knew, better than the angels, what his nature now
was.</p>
<p>“None of your d—d Scripture–reading for me!”
he cried, when Cradock came near him; though
the young man had never attempted anything of
the sort.</p>
<p>He knew that the Word of God is not bread to
a blackguardʼs empty belly. And another thing
he knew—that he was not of the age and aspect
for John Bunyanʼs business. Moreover, Jupp was
wonderfully jealous of his wife, a gentle but
grimy woman, forty–five years old, whom he larruped
every day; although he might be an infidel,
he would ensure his wifeʼs fidelity. Nevertheless,
he had his pure vein, and Cradock at last got
at it.</p>
<p>Mrs. and Miss Ducksacre were very good–hearted
women, but, like many other women of that fibre,
whose education has been neglected, of a hot and
hasty order. Not that we need suppose the
pepper to be neutralized by the refinement, only
to be absorbed more equably, and transfused more
generally.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>A little thing came feeling the way into the
narrow, dingy shop, one dark November evening,
groping along by the sacks of potatoes (all of them
“seconds,” for the firm did not deal much in
“Ware Regents”), feeling its way along the sacks
which towered above its head, like bulky snow–giants
embrowned with thaw; and then by the
legs of the “tatie–bin,” with the great scales hanging
above it, and then by the heap of lighting–wood,
piled in halfpenny bundles, with the ends
against the wall; and so the little thing emerged
between two mighty hills of coleworts, and under
the frugal gas–burner, and congratulated itself,
with a hug of the heart, upon safety.</p>
<p>“Take care, my dear,” cried Mrs. Ducksacre,
looking large behind the counter, “or youʼll tumble
down the coal–trap, where the black bogeys lives.
Bless my heart, if it ainʼt little Loo! Why, Loo,
I hardly knew you. You ainʼt looking like yourself
a bit, child. And who sent you out at this time of
night? What a shame, to be sure!”</p>
<p>Loo, the pride of Issachar Jupp, was rather a
pretty little body, about three and a half years old,
“going on for four,” as she loved to say, if anybody
asked her; and her pale but clean face would have
been <i>very</i> pretty, if her mother would have let her
hair alone. But it was all combed back, and tied
tightly behind, like the tail of a horse at a fair, or
as affording a spout to pour the little girl out by.
She looked up at Mrs. Ducksacre, while her fingers
played with the coleworts, for her hands were hot,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span>
and this cooled them; and then, with the instinct
of nature, she stuck up for her father and mother.</p>
<p>“Pease, maʼam, Loo not fray much,”—though
her trembling frock belied her, all over the throat
and the heart of it—“and father don from home,
maʼam, on the Wasintote” [Basingstoke canal],
“and mother dot nobody, onʼy Loo, to do thins.
And she send this, ‘cause Looʼs poor troat be bad,
maʼam.”</p>
<p>The little child, whose throat was tied up with
worn flannel from the char–bucket, with the grey
edge still upon it, wriggled in and out of her shape
and self, in the way only children can do; and at
length drew, from some innermost shrine, a halfpenny
and a farthing.</p>
<p>“And what am I to give you for it, Loo? Oh,
you poor little thing, how very hoarse you are!”</p>
<p>Loo, with a confidence in human nature purely
non–Londinian, had placed her cash upon the altar,
upon the inside of which so many worship, while
on the outside so many are sacrificed; without
circumlocution, the counter. Her eyes were below
the rim of it, till she stood upon tiptoe with one
foot, while the other was up in the colewort roots,
and then she could see the money, and she poked
out her little lips at it, as if she would fain suck it
back again.</p>
<p>“Pease, maʼam, Looʼs troat so bad, mother are
goin to make a ‘tew, tree haʼporth of tipe and a
haʼporth of ‘egents, and a fardy of inons!”</p>
<p>“What a splendid stew, Loo!” said Mrs. Ducksacre,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
seeming to smell it; “and so you want a
haʼporth of taties, and a farthingʼs worth of onions.
And you shall have them, my dear, and as good a
three farthings’ worth as ever was put up in London.
Where are you going to put them all?”</p>
<p>Loo opened her sore throat, and pointed down
it. She had not yet lost her appetite; and that
child did love tripe so.</p>
<p>“No, no, I donʼt mean that, Loo. I know you
have a nice room inside; though some will be for
mother, wonʼt it, now? I mean, how are you
going to carry it home?”</p>
<p>“In Looʼs pinney,” replied the child, delighted
with her success; for ever so many people had
told her, that the Ducksacres now were getting so
high, they would soon leave off making farthings–worths;
and any tradesman who does that is above
the sphere of the street–child.</p>
<p>“My dear, your pinney wonʼt hold them, potatoes
are so cheap now”—she had just sworn they
were awfully dear to a person she disliked—“I am
sure you canʼt carry a haʼporth. Oh, Mr. Newman,
you are so good–natured”—Cradock was just
coming in, rather glum from another failure—“I
really donʼt believe you would think you were bemeaning
yourself by going home with this poor
little atom.”</p>
<p>“I should rather hope I would not,” replied
Cradock, looking grand.</p>
<p>“Oh, I did not know. I beg your pardon, Iʼm
sure. I would go myself, only Sally is out, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
the boy gone home ever so long ago. I beg your
pardon, Iʼm sure, Mr. Newman; I thought you
were so good–natured.”</p>
<p>“Mrs. Ducksacre,” said Cradock, “you utterly
misunderstand me. I replied to the form of your
sentence, perhaps, rather than to its meaning.
What I meant was, that I should rather hope I
would not think it below me to go home with this
little dear. If I could suppose it any disgrace to
me, I should deserve to be kicked by your errand–boy
all round this shop, Mrs. Ducksacre; and I
am surprised you misunderstand me so. Why, I
know this little girl well; and her name is Louisa
Jupp.”</p>
<p>“Tiss Loo,” said the little child, standing up on
tiptoe, and spreading out her arms to Cradock.
All the children loved him, as the little ones at
Nowelhurst would run after Mr. Rosedew. Children
are even better judges of character than
dogs.</p>
<p>“Why, you poor little soul,” said Crad, as he
seated her on his strong right arm with her little
cheek to his, and she drew a thousand straws of
light through her lashes from the gas–jet, which
she had never yet been so close to, “how hot and
dry your lips are! I hope you are not taking the—sickness”—he
was going to say “fever,” but
feared to frighten Loo.</p>
<p>“Mother fray,” cried the small girl, proud of
the importance accruing to her, “Loo dot wever;
Irishers dot bad wever on the foor below mother.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span>
Loo det nice thins, and lay abed, if me dot the
wever.”</p>
<p>“Put the poor childʼs things, whatever they are,
in a basket, Mrs. Ducksacre. How odd her little
legs feel! And a shillingʼs worth of grapes, if you
please, in a bag by themselves. Hereʼs the money
for them. You know Iʼll bring back the basket.
But the bags donʼt come back, do they?”</p>
<p>“No, sir, of course not. Half–a–crown a gross
for the small ones, with the name and the cross–handle
basket, and the cabbage and carrots, sir.
Sixpence more for cornopean–pattern with a pineapple,
and grapes and oranges. But lor, sir, the
cornopean” [cornucopiæ] “would frighten half our
customers. The basket–pattern pays better for an
advertisement than to get them back again, even if
parties would bring them, which I knows well they
never would, sir.”</p>
<p>Then Cradock set forth with the child on his
arm, his coat thrown over his shoulders, and the
best shillingʼs worth of foreign grapes—Mrs. Ducksacre
never bought English ones—and the best
three farthingʼs worth of potatoes and onions that
was made that day by any tradesman in any part
of London, not excluding “them low costers,” as
the Ducksacre firm expressed it.</p>
<p>Little Loo Juppʼs sore throat proved to be, as
Cradock feared it would, the first symptom of
scarlet fever; and the young man had the pleasure—one
of the highest and purest pleasures which
any man can have—of saving a human life. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
watched that trembling flame of life, and fostered
it, and sheltered it, as if “the hopes of a nation
hung”—as the penny–a–liners love to say of some
babe not a whit more valuable—upon its feeble
flicker. He hired another room for her, where the
air was purer; he made the doctor attend to the
case, which at first that doctor cared little to do;
he brought her many a trifling comfort; in a
word, he waited upon her so that the old women
of the court called him thenceforth “Nurse Newman.”</p>
<p>“What, you here again, you white–livered young
sneak!” cried Issachar Jupp, reeling in at the
door, just as Cradock was coming out; “take that,
then——” and he lifted a great oak bludgeon, newly
cut from the towing–path of the Basingstoke Canal.
If Cradock had not been as quick as lightning,
and caught the stick over the bargemanʼs shoulder,
there would have been weeping and wailing and a
lifelong woe for Amy.</p>
<p>“Hush,” he said; “donʼt make such a noise,
man. Your child is at the point of death, in the
room overhead.”</p>
<p>Poor Crad, naturally of a bright complexion, but
pale from long unhappiness, might now have retorted
the compliment as to the “pallor jecoris.”
The bargee turned so pale, that he looked like a
collierʼs tablecloth. Then he planted his heavy
stick on the ground; else he would have lain flat
on his threshold.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“My Loo, my Loo!” was all he could say;
“oh my Loo! <i>Itʼs a lie, sir!</i>”</p>
<p>“I wish it was,” replied Cradock; “take my
arm, Mr. Jupp. Donʼt be over–frightened. We
hope with all our hearts to save her, and to–night
we shall know. Already I think I perceive some
change in her breathing, though her tongue is like
a furnace.”</p>
<p>He spoke with a tone and in a voice which no
man ever has described, nor shall, but which every
born man feels to be genuine, long ere he can
think.</p>
<p>“[Condemn] me for a [sanguineous] fool,” cried
Jupp, with two enormous tears guttering down the
coal–dust, and his great chest heaving and wanting
to sob, only it didnʼt know the way; “[condemn]
my eyes for swearing so, and making such a
[female dog] of myself, but what the [Hades] am
I to do? Oh my Loo, my Loo! If you die, Iʼll go
to [Hades] after you.”</p>
<p>Excuse me for washing out this speech to regulation
weakness; perhaps it was entered in white
on high, as the turn of a life of blackness.</p>
<p>Cradock turned away, and trembled. Who can
see a rugged man split to the bottom of his nature,
and not himself be splintered? I donʼt believe that
any can: not even the cold iron scoundrels whom
modern plays delight in.</p>
<p>“Now come up with me, Mr. Jupp,” said Crad,
taking care not to look at him, “out at this door,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span>
in at the other. Poor little soul! she has been so
good. You canʼt think how good she has been.
And she has taken her medicine so nicely.”</p>
<p>“Pray God Almighty not to [condemn] me, for
not [condemning] myself enough,” said Issachar
Jupp, below his breath, as he leaned on Cradockʼs
arm.</p>
<p>It was his form of prayer; and it meant more
than most of ours do. Though I may be discarded
by turtle–dove quill–drivers for daring to record it,
will he ever be worse for uttering it? Of course,
it was very shocking; but far more so to men than
to angels.</p>
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