Containing a Scene of Distress, Which Will Appear Very Extraordinary to Most of Our Readers
- The next day, Tom gives Partridge a fifty-pound note.
- He tells Partridge to break it into smaller bills.
- Partridge thinks Tom must have robbed someone to get it.
- In fact, Lady Bellaston gave it to him.
- She knows that he hasn't got a penny in the world.
- Mrs. Miller invites Tom and Mr. Nightingale to lunch with her family.
- She has just been to visit a cousin of hers, who is having a baby.
- This cousin's second son Tommy is sick in bed next to his mother.
- Her thirteen year-old daughter is having to nurse both her mother and Tommy.
- And her husband is going without food so that his children have something to eat.
- They all love each other dearly, so they are trying to do their best to make one another feel better in the middle of these awful circumstances.
- But they all find it heartbreaking to see the others suffering.
- And worst of all, the poor father of the family is in this position partly because of his good heart.
- He put up the family's possessions as bail for his brother.
- The brother skipped town, so the bailiffs came to take away everything he owned a week before his wife gave birth.
- Tom is so filled with pity for this family that he takes Mrs. Miller aside and gives her that fifty pounds he got from Lady Bellaston.