CHAPTER 3
o say to timpson on urn impson ers: Mr Riley felt for impsons face s lig to on a Sunday for nearly fifteen years: it ural utor. Moreover, Mr Riley kneer elling? ulliver is alo say you o give. And if you deliver an opinion at all, it is mere stupidity not to do it ion and your otering it, and naturally get fond of it. telling to begin all concerning o tion of a man recommended on sucy, and on t, t if Mr tulliver o send tom to Stelling, Mr Riley would horoughly pig-headed fellow.
If you blame Mr Riley very severely for giving a recommendation on suc grounds, I must say you are rationeer and appraister ty years ago, ed to manifest a delicate scrupulosity lemen of t advanced stage of morality?
Besides, a man ain from doing a good-natured action, and one cant be good-natured all round. Nature ers an inconvenient parasite on an animal toe. If Mr Riley ion t based on valid evidence, elling to a paying pupil, and t leman. Consider, too, t all t little dim ideas and complacencies - of standing impson, of dispensing advice ional respect, of saying somet empically, e ingredients t along er to make up Mr Rileys consciousness on this occasion, would have been a mere blank.