David Copperfield by Charles Dickens Chapter 42 Page 50

not be disturbed at an unseasonable hour, did not improve my temper; though my passion was cooling down.

Merely telling him that I should expect from him what I always had expected, and had never yet been disappointed in, I opened the door upon him, as if he had been a great walnut put there to be cracked, and went out of the house. But he slept out of the house too, at his mother’s lodging; and before I had gone many hundred yards, came up with me.

‘You know, Copperfield,’ he said, in my ear (I did not turn my head), ‘you’re in quite a wrong position’; which I felt to be true, and that made me chafe the more; ‘you can’t make this a brave thing, and you can’t help being forgiven.

I don’t intend to mention it to mother, nor to any living soul. I’m