Page:Hopkinson Smith--In Dickens's London.djvu/17

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 * —It was over this balcony that the maid asked Sam Weller for No. 10's boots, and received the historic answer, "Vill he have 'em now or vait till he gits 'em?"|||4
 * —Where Mr. Pickwick first met Sam Weller when Mr. Wardle went in search of Jingle and Miss Wardle|||8
 * —In the house with the round-top door Dickens lived when a boy|||18
 * —Opposite Guy's Hospital, one of Bob Sawyer's haunts|||26
 * —Where Dickens boarded in 1837 and which he afterwards leased. Here he took his wife, and here her sister Mary died|||32
 * —In this box of a rear extension 10 x 8 x 8 feet Dickens wrote the last chapters of the "Pickwick Papers"|||36
 * —From which Mr. Pickwick and his party set out on their journey by stage to visit Mr. Winkle's father|||&emsp;40
 * }
 * —Opposite Guy's Hospital, one of Bob Sawyer's haunts|||26
 * —Where Dickens boarded in 1837 and which he afterwards leased. Here he took his wife, and here her sister Mary died|||32
 * —In this box of a rear extension 10 x 8 x 8 feet Dickens wrote the last chapters of the "Pickwick Papers"|||36
 * —From which Mr. Pickwick and his party set out on their journey by stage to visit Mr. Winkle's father|||&emsp;40
 * }
 * —In this box of a rear extension 10 x 8 x 8 feet Dickens wrote the last chapters of the "Pickwick Papers"|||36
 * —From which Mr. Pickwick and his party set out on their journey by stage to visit Mr. Winkle's father|||&emsp;40
 * }
 * }