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Charles Dickens: Life And Adventures Of Martin Chuzzlewit28. Chapter Twenty-eight (continued)'Oho!' he said, 'you're deaf, are you? You don't hear me, eh? So much the better for you. I hate you. I hate myself, for having, been fool enough to strap a pack upon my back for the pleasure of treading on it whenever I choose. Why, things have opened to me, now, so that I might marry almost where I liked. But I wouldn't; I'd keep single. I ought to be single, among the friends I know. Instead of that, here I am, tied like a log to you. Pah! Why do you show your pale face when I come home? Am I never to forget you?' 'How late it is!' she said cheerfully, opening the shutter after an interval of silence. 'Broad day, Jonas!' 'Broad day or black night, what do I care!' was the kind rejoinder. 'The night passed quickly, too. I don't mind sitting up, at all.' 'Sit up for me again, if you dare!' growled Jonas. 'I was reading,' she proceeded, 'all night long. I began when you went out, and read till you came home again. The strangest story, Jonas! And true, the book says. I'll tell it you to-morrow.' 'True, was it?' said Jonas, doggedly. 'So the book says.' 'Was there anything in it, about a man's being determined to conquer his wife, break her spirit, bend her temper, crush all her humours like so many nut-shells--kill her, for aught I know?' said Jonas. 'No. Not a word,' she answered quickly. 'Oh!' he returned. 'That'll be a true story though, before long; for all the book says nothing about it. It's a lying book, I see. A fit book for a lying reader. But you're deaf. I forgot that.' This is page 534 of 977. [Marked] This title is on Your Bookshelf. Buy a copy of Life And Adventures Of Martin Chuzzlewit at Amazon.com
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