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Both the father and the lawyer looked at Dolly Dolly was in truth the accuser through the mouthpiece of his attorney Squercus were being taken 'I, on behalf of my client,' said Mr Bideawhile, 'will consent to wait till Friday at noon'

'I presuestaffe

Dolly Longestaffe was certainly not an impressionable person, but Melmotte's eloquence had moved even him It was not that he was sorry for the h he had been absolutely sure that Meled,--and did not now go so far into the matter as to abandon that conviction,--he had been talked into crediting the reasons given for Melmotte's temporary distress, and also into a belief that theof the effect which Melmotte's false confessions had had upon Lord Nidderdale, they now also had on Dolly Longestaffe 'I'll ask Squercum, you know,' he said

'Of course Mr Squercum will act as you instruct hio to him at once I can't do any iven ized Then it was settled that they three should meet in that very room on Friday at noon, and that the pay that as his father would be attended by Bideawhile, so would he be attended by Squercurace