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قراءة كتاب Toppleton's Client; Or, A Spirit in Exile

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Toppleton's Client; Or, A Spirit in Exile

Toppleton's Client; Or, A Spirit in Exile

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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TOPPLETON'S CLIENT

OR
A SPIRIT IN EXILE


BY

JOHN KENDRICK BANGS




NEW YORK
CHARLES L. WEBSTER & COMPANY
1893

TO

F. D. S.

CONTENTS.


CHAPTER I.
  PAGE
Introducing Mr. Hopkins Toppleton 1

CHAPTER II.
Mr. Hopkins Toppleton leases an Office 13

CHAPTER III.
Mr. Hopkins Toppleton encounters a weary Spirit 25

CHAPTER IV.
The weary Spirit gives some Account of Himself 39

CHAPTER V.
Hopkins becomes better acquainted with the weary Spirit 55

CHAPTER VI.
The Spirit unfolds a horrid Tale 73

CHAPTER VII.
A Chapter of Profit and Loss 90

CHAPTER VIII.
Further Developments in the making of a Name 107

CHAPTER IX.
The crowning Act of Infamy 124

CHAPTER X.
The Spirit's Story is concluded 149

CHAPTER XI.
Toppleton consults the Law and forms an Opinion 167

CHAPTER XII.
Toppleton makes a fair Start 184

CHAPTER XIII.
At Barncastle Hall 201

CHAPTER XIV.
The Dinner and its Result 218

CHAPTER XV.
Barncastle confides in Hopkins 233

CHAPTER XVI.
Mr. Hopkins Toppleton makes a Discovery 251

CHAPTER XVII.
Epilogue 268

TOPPLETON'S CLIENT.


CHAPTER I.

INTRODUCING MR. HOPKINS TOPPLETON.
Mr. Hopkins Toppleton, Barrister of London and New York, was considered by his intimates a most fortunate young man. He was accounted the happy possessor of an income of something over fifty thousand dollars a year, derived from investments which time had shown to be as far removed from instability, and as little influenced by the fluctuations of the stock market, as the pyramids of Egypt themselves. Better than this, however, better even than personal beauty, with which he was plentifully endowed, Mr. Hopkins Toppleton was blessed with a great name, which he had received ready-made from his illustrious father, late head of the legal firm of Toppleton, Morley, Harkins, Perkins, Mawson, Bronson, Smithers and Hicks. The value of the name to Hopkins was unquestionable, since it enabled him, at his father's death, to enter that famous aggregation of legal talent as a special partner, although his knowledge of law was scant, receiving a share of the profits of the concern for the use of his patronymic, which, owing to his father's pre-eminent success at the Bar, Messrs. Morley, Harkins, et al., were anxious to retain. This desire of Mr. Toppleton's late associates was most

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