Page 45 (1/2)
'I don't say as that is everything, but if you wish e is not a person as I like to keep in the house
I wish you to know'--Mrs Cork suddenly became excited and venomous--
'that I'm a respectable woman, and have always let my apartments to
respectable people, and do you think I should ever let theot about as I had had anybody as
wasn't respectable? Where was she last night? And do you suppose as
me as has been a married woman can't see the condition she's in? I
say as you, Mrs Hopgood, ought to be asha
of such a person into a house like mine, and you'll please vacate
these premises on the day naed the door after her, and went down to her subterranean den
Mrs Hopgood did not tell her children the true reason for leaving
She merely said that Mrs Cork had been very impertinent, and that
they e instantly recollected
Great Ormond Street, but she did not know the nuotten Mrs Caffyn's name It was a
peculiar name, she had heard it only once, she had not noticed it
over the door, and her exhaustionto do with
her loss of ood