A Retrospect
- David looks back on his school days.
- David is not the least successful boy in school, but he's still a long way off from being the first one (Adams).
- Adams is not as superior as Steerforth, but David still wonders what he'll be when he leaves the school – he's sure that Adam will be amazing.
- David has a crush on Miss Shepherd, who boards at a school run by the Misses Nettingalls.
- The Misses Nettingalls' pupils go to the same church that Doctor Strong's students attend.
- Luckily, David and Miss Shepherd also go to the same dancing school.
- David gives Miss Shepherd little presents: brazil nuts, cookies, and oranges.
- Slowly, however, they grow apart: David hears that Miss Shepherd wishes David didn't stare at her so much.
- Worse still, Miss Shepherd has a crush on Jones, one of his schoolfellows.
- One day, David happens to walk past the Misses Nettingalls' girls and sees Miss Shepherd making a face at him and then laughing to her friends. He's done with her.
- David grows older, and decides that he's above the Misses Nettingalls' young ladies. He's too good for them and for dancing school.
- Doctor Strong calls David a promising scholar, and Mr. Dick and Miss Betsey are both very proud of him.
- A young butcher in the town threatens to beat up Doctor Strong's boys because they think they're so great.
- In fact, he stops a couple of the younger boys and punches them.
- This butcher challenges David directly, and so David decides to fight him.
- The butcher totally kicks David's butt, and he has to stay home for a couple of days to recover.
- Agnes nurses David. She agrees that David had no choice but to fight the butcher (his honor was at stake!).
- Adams graduates from the school and goes on to become a lawyer.
- David no longer thinks Adams is so very great: he suddenly seems very meek and not at all grand.
- Now David is head boy! He feels about a million miles away from the little boy he was when he first arrived at Doctor Strong's school.
- And Agnes has also grown up: she is like a calm, sweet sister to David.
- David has fallen in love yet again, this time, with the eldest Miss Larkins.
- Miss Larkins is a tall woman of about thirty, and David is head over heels for her.
- David plans to go to a ball that he knows Miss Larkins will also attend.
- When he can't be with Miss Larkins, he tries to catch the eye of her father, Mr. Larkin.
- David worries that, at 17, he may be too young for Miss Larkins. But so what! He'll be 21 soon!
- Fantasies run through David's head of Miss Betsey giving him her blessing to marry Miss Larkins and offering him a fortune of 20,000 pounds.
- Sadly, in real life, he also notices that Miss Larkins is very popular with the army officers in the town: he starts to worry that she won't even notice him.
- So, David finally makes it to the ball and asks Miss Larkins to dance.
- David tells Miss Larkins that he doesn't want to dance with anyone else.
- They do dance together, and David is pleased that he has snatched Miss Larkins from the arms of Captain Bailey.
- David asks Miss Larkins for a flower, which he then kisses and pins to his chest. (Seriously.)
- Miss Larkins tells David that he is very bold, and then asks to be escorted back to Captain Bailey.
- Miss Larkins later approaches David with a plain, somewhat older gentleman on her arm.
- She introduces David to Mr. Chestle, who is in the hops trade (hops are flower clusters that are key in the beer and ale brewing process).
- David thinks that Mr. Chestle must be some friend of the family, and is very proud of the introduction.
- He's absolutely thrilled at this attention from Miss Larkins.
- That is, until several weeks later, when Agnes tells him at dinner that Miss Larkins has just gotten married.
- To Captain Bailey? Nope, to Mr. Chestle.
- David is miserable, stops wearing his best clothes, and throws away Miss Larkins' flower.
- Tired of the whole dating scene, David challenges the butcher to another fight and beats him.
- He feels a bit better. And that's David's rise to the age of 17!