Little Dorrit - Page 363/462

Shall I tell you more? Remember! He knows nothing of it; we

must go to him, from here, to tell him of it!'

She seemed to entreat him for a little time. He held her in his arm,

and, after a pause, bent down his ear to listen. 'Did you ask me to go on?'

'Yes.' 'He will be a rich man. He is a rich man. A great sum of money

is waiting to be paid over to him as his inheritance; you are all

henceforth very wealthy. Bravest and best of children, I thank Heaven

that you are rewarded!' As he kissed her, she turned her head towards his shoulder, and raised

her arm towards his neck; cried out 'Father! Father! Father!' and

swooned away.

Upon which Flora returned to take care of her, and hovered about her on

a sofa, intermingling kind offices and incoherent scraps of conversation

in a manner so confounding, that whether she pressed the Marshalsea to

take a spoonful of unclaimed dividends, for it would do her good;

or whether she congratulated Little Dorrit's father on coming into

possession of a hundred thousand smelling-bottles; or whether she

explained that she put seventy-five thousand drops of spirits of

lavender on fifty thousand pounds of lump sugar, and that she entreated

Little Dorrit to take that gentle restorative; or whether she bathed the

foreheads of Doyce and Clennam in vinegar, and gave the late Mr F. more

air; no one with any sense of responsibility could have undertaken to

decide.

A tributary stream of confusion, moreover, poured in from an

adjoining bedroom, where Mr F.'s Aunt appeared, from the sound of her

voice, to be in a horizontal posture, awaiting her breakfast; and from

which bower that inexorable lady snapped off short taunts, whenever she

could get a hearing, as, 'Don't believe it's his doing!' and 'He needn't

take no credit to himself for it!' and 'It'll be long enough, I expect,

afore he'll give up any of his own money!' all designed to disparage

Clennam's share in the discovery, and to relieve those inveterate

feelings with which Mr F.'s Aunt regarded him.

But Little Dorrit's solicitude to get to her father, and to carry the

joyful tidings to him, and not to leave him in his jail a moment with

this happiness in store for him and still unknown to him, did more for

her speedy restoration than all the skill and attention on earth could

have done. 'Come with me to my dear father. Pray come and tell my dear

father!' were the first words she said. Her father, her father. She

spoke of nothing but him, thought of nothing but him. Kneeling down and

pouring out her thankfulness with uplifted hands, her thanks were for

her father. Flora's tenderness was quite overcome by this, and she launched out

among the cups and saucers into a wonderful flow of tears and speech.