Publication 61
By Daniel on
Sunday, August 26, 2001
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After David happens upon the dreadful moment of Uriah scheming to hurt so many with the comments on Moldan and Annie, he is so hurt by the realisation of Uriah's scheme with two men he cares about. He is also incensed by Heap's complications of himself into the matter. Why doesn't David just knock him out right there (!) ?
Publication 62
By absent-minded on
Sunday, August 26, 2001
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He couldn't have done it before Heep ended his speech, because the problem was not Heep's deeds, but the truth. Even after Copperfield had hit Heep, he realised that he shouldn't have done it.
Just an opinion
Publication 1200
By Nibs on
Friday, May 8, 2009
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I am always thoroughly stunned by the way David just let Uriah do whatever he wants. The only way Uriah can function as a villain at all is by no real power of his own, but by the lack of confrontation from other characters. I think this is a weakness in David, even though he claims he is doing this for Agnes' sake.
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