"Two fousand pounds," he said. "It's dashed rum. Wot 'ave I done to get two fousand pounds, Ann?"
"What 'aven't you—not to?" said Ann.
He reflected upon this view of the case.
"I shan't never give up this shop," he said at last.
"We're very 'appy 'ere," said Ann.
"Not if I 'ad fifty fousand pounds."
"No fear," said Ann.
"You got a shop," said Kipps, "and you come along in a year's time and there it is. But money—look 'ow it come and goes! There's no sense in money. You may kill yourself trying to get it, and then it comes when you aren't looking. There's my 'riginal money! Where is it now? Gone! And it's took young Walshingham with it, and 'e's gone, too. It's like playing skittles. 'Long comes the ball, right and left you fly, and there it is rolling away and not changed a bit. No sense in it! 'E's gone, and she's gone—gone off with that chap Revel, that sat with me at dinner. Merried man! And Chit'low rich! Lor'!—what a fine place that Gerrik Club is, to be sure, where I 'ad lunch wiv' 'im! Better'n any 'otel. Footmen in powder they got—not waiters, Ann—footmen! 'E's rich and me rich—in a sort of way.… Don't seem much sense in it, Ann, 'owever you look at it." He shook his head.
"I know one thing," said Kipps.
"What?"
"I'm going to put it in jest as many different banks