1 Pickering, similarly attired, comes in.
2 Pickering: we have taken on a stiff job.
3 Pickering sits down in Doolittle's place.
4 Pickering is too much taken aback to rise.
5 Pickering returns to his chair on her right.
6 The parlor-maid returns, ushering in Pickering.
7 It is these little things that matter, Pickering.
8 Presently Higgins and Pickering are heard on the stairs.
9 Pickering: this chap has a certain natural gift of rhetoric.
10 Pickering retires to the easy-chair at the hearth and sits down.
11 When Pickering starts shouting nobody can get a word in edgeways.
12 Pickering returns, with the contents of the letter-box in his hand.
13 You know, Pickering, that woman has the most extraordinary ideas about me.
14 Pickering: if we listen to this man another minute, we shall have no convictions left.
15 Pickering comes from the hearth to the chair and sits astride it with his arms on the back.
16 Pickering is seated at the table, putting down some cards and a tuning-fork which he has been using.
17 The pathos of this deplorable figure, with its innocent vanity and consequential air, touches Pickering, who has already straightened himself in the presence of Mrs. Pearce.
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