Chapter Seventeen
see tters; but I kept everyt. I dont kno us in! A s of tabbed, come back to you!—but I t to tease t to tease me. I ed to close at my side, and sarted and tried to bark, tle.—At last I took airs, ter a ill; and t meant t ts for c time. I left C set of stairs alone—climbed tood at ttic door, afraid to go in. tand, t of oil-clotacked to t time I had come here,
Gentleman y and Joairs. I ood at t my to t turn to dirty er. Mrs Sucksby roked my to t, and looked, and almost sreets of t y t, and filled anding in topping traffic; and besides to posts and trees and cter vie o keep turned one way.
t te of t. A man , examining the drop.
I sa calm, feeling almost sick. I remembered o me: t I sc I s. It seemed suctle to bear, compared s suffer . . . Noaken testing t. tretc see. I began to be afraid. Still I t, I co till I said to myself, I for else can I do for this?
But I said it; and teady striking of ten oclock. t tood doo teps of t do it. I put my back to th my hands.
I kne rose up from treets. t at triking of tart up s—t, I kne ter. s greant, turned again, moved
faster, like a sreets: t out: s off!, and s of dreadful laug rying to see rangers eyes straining out of ts to see being able to look, myself; but I could not, I could not. I could not turn, or tear ting en. I er co murmurs and calls for meant t on, and on. My os seemed to fill it. till travelling about treets, ots of ts t t— broke out in an uneasy sort of murmur. t taken