Little Dorrit
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What was the secret the mother was trying to keep?
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Farrah
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May 10, 2011 01:30PM

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Arthur is the son of Mr. Clennam and a singer. The singer had been a poor orphan girl that Frederick Dorrit (Amy's uncle) had sort of taken under his wing, and he'd gotten her singing lessons (was her "patron" as the book calls it).
So when Mr. Clennam's uncle Gilbert Clennam (the man with all the money) died, he felt sorry for the singer, and left a legacy both to the singer (1000 guineas) and a legacy (another 1000 guineas) to Frederick Dorrit's youngest daughter (or niece, if he didn't have any daughters at 50). That niece would be Amy of course.


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I'm still wondering what was the financial 'fix' which Plancks figured out to get William Dorrit his money back; pay off his debt; and allow his family out of prison. I know how the Dorrits got into prison (the father, failing to service a royal contract) but what was the fortune which he regained?

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I'm still wondering what was the financial 'fix' which Plancks figured out to get William Dorrit his money back; pay off his debt; and allow his..."
He was the heir to a family fortune and Pancks eliminated all the possible relatives to finally figure out that William was the true heir to it.


Well, if she had given the money from the will to Amy, she wouldn’t have been in the Marshallsea her entire life. All of that would have been avoided if the Uncle’s money had gone to Little Dorrit.
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