I was three-and-twenty years of age.
Not another word had I heard to enlighten me on the
subject of my expectations, and my twenty-third birthday
was a week gone. We had left Barnard’s
Inn more than a year, and lived in the Temple.
Our chambers were in Garden-court, down by the river.
Mr. Pocket and I had for some time
parted company as to our original relations, though
we continued on the best terms. Notwithstanding
my inability to settle to anything — which I
hope arose out of the restless and incomplete tenure
on which I held my means — I had a taste for
reading, and read regularly so many hours a day.
That matter of Herbert’s was still progressing,
and everything with me was as I have brought it down
to the close of the last preceding chapter.
Business had taken Herbert on a journey
to Marseilles. I was alone, and had a dull sense
of being alone. Dispirited and anxious, long
hoping that to-morrow or next week would clear my way,
and long disappointed, I sadly missed the cheerful
face and ready response of my friend.
It was wretched weather; stormy and
wet, stormy and wet; and mud, mud, mud, deep in all
the streets. Day after day, a vast heavy veil
had been driving over London from the East, and it
drove still, as if in the East there were an Eternity
of cloud and wind. So furious had been the gusts,
that high buildings in town had had the lead stripped
off their roofs; and in the country, trees had been
torn up, and sails of windmills carried away; and
gloomy accounts had come in from the coast, of shipwreck
and death. Violent blasts of rain had accompanied
these rages of wind, and the day just closed as I
sat down to read had been the worst of all.
Alterations have been made in that
part of the Temple since that time, and it has not
now so lonely a character as it had then, nor is it
so exposed to the river. We lived at the top
of the last house, and the wind rushing up the river
shook the house that night, like discharges of cannon,
or breakings of a sea. When the rain came with
it and dashed against the windows, I thought, raising
my eyes to them as they rocked, that I might have fancied
myself in a storm-beaten lighthouse. Occasionally,
the smoke came rolling down the chimney as though
it could not bear to go out into such a night; and
when I set the doors open and looked down the staircase,
the staircase lamps were blown out; and when I shaded
my face with my hands and looked through the black
windows (opening them ever so little, was out of the
question in the teeth of such wind and rain) I saw
that the lamps in the court were blown out, and that
the lamps on the bridges and the shore were shuddering,
and that the coal fires in barges on the river were
being carried away before the wind like red-hot splashes
in the rain.
I read with my watch upon the table,
purposing to close my book at eleven o’clock.
As I shut it, Saint Paul’s, and all the many
church-clocks in the City — some leading, some
accompanying, some following — struck that hour.
The sound was curiously flawed by the wind; and I
was listening, and thinking how the wind assailed and
tore it, when I heard a footstep on the stair.
What nervous folly made me start,
and awfully connect it with the footstep of my dead
sister, matters not. It was past in a moment,
and I listened again, and heard the footstep stumble
in coming on. Remembering then, that the staircase-lights
were blown out, I took up my reading-lamp and went
out to the stair-head. Whoever was below had
stopped on seeing my lamp, for all was quiet.
“There is some one down there,
is there not?” I called out, looking down.
“Yes,” said a voice from the darkness
beneath.
“What floor do you want?”
“The top. Mr. Pip.”
“That is my name. — There is nothing the
matter?”
“Nothing the matter,” returned the voice.
And the man came on.
I stood with my lamp held out over
the stair-rail, and he came slowly within its light.
It was a shaded lamp, to shine upon a book, and its
circle of light was very contracted; so that he was
in it for a mere instant, and then out of it.
In the instant, I had seen a face that was strange
to me, looking up with an incomprehensible air of
being touched and pleased by the sight of me.
Moving the lamp as the man moved,
I made out that he was substantially dressed, but
roughly; like a voyager by sea. That he had
long iron-grey hair. That his age was about sixty.
That he was a muscular man, strong on his legs, and
that he was browned and hardened by exposure to weather.
As he ascended the last stair or two, and the light
of my lamp included us both, I saw, with a stupid
kind of amazement, that he was holding out both his
hands to me.
“Pray what is your business?” I asked
him.
“My business?” he repeated,
pausing. “Ah! Yes. I will explain
my business, by your leave.”
“Do you wish to come in?”
“Yes,” he replied; “I wish to come
in, Master.”
I had asked him the question inhospitably
enough, for I resented the sort of bright and gratified
recognition that still shone in his face. I
resented it, because it seemed to imply that he expected
me to respond to it. But, I took him into the
room I had just left, and, having set the lamp on
the table, asked him as civilly as I could, to explain
himself.
He looked about him with the strangest
air — an air of wondering pleasure, as if he
had some part in the things he admired — and
he pulled off a rough outer coat, and his hat.
Then, I saw that his head was furrowed and bald,
and that the long iron-grey hair grew only on its
sides. But, I saw nothing that in the least explained
him. On the contrary, I saw him next moment,
once more holding out both his hands to me.
“What do you mean?” said
I, half suspecting him to be mad.
He stopped in his looking at me, and
slowly rubbed his right hand over his head.
“It’s disapinting to a man,” he said,
in a coarse broken voice, “arter having looked
for’ard so distant, and come so fur; but you’re
not to blame for that — neither on us is to blame
for that. I’ll speak in half a minute.
Give me half a minute, please.”
He sat down on a chair that stood
before the fire, and covered his forehead with his
large brown veinous hands. I looked at him attentively
then, and recoiled a little from him; but I did not
know him.
“There’s no one nigh,”
said he, looking over his shoulder; “is there?”
“Why do you, a stranger coming
into my rooms at this time of the night, ask that
question?” said I.
“You’re a game one,”
he returned, shaking his head at me with a deliberate
affection, at once most unintelligible and most exasperating;
“I’m glad you’ve grow’d up,
a game one! But don’t catch hold of me.
You’d be sorry arterwards to have done it.”
I relinquished the intention he had
detected, for I knew him! Even yet, I could
not recall a single feature, but I knew him!
If the wind and the rain had driven away the intervening
years, had scattered all the intervening objects,
had swept us to the churchyard where we first stood
face to face on such different levels, I could not
have known my convict more distinctly than I knew
him now as he sat in the chair before the fire.
No need to take a file from his pocket and show it
to me; no need to take the handkerchief from his neck
and twist it round his head; no need to hug himself
with both his arms, and take a shivering turn across
the room, looking back at me for recognition.
I knew him before he gave me one of those aids, though,
a moment before, I had not been conscious of remotely
suspecting his identity.
He came back to where I stood, and
again held out both his hands. Not knowing what
to do — for, in my astonishment I had lost my
self-possession — I reluctantly gave him my hands.
He grasped them heartily, raised them to his lips,
kissed them, and still held them.
“You acted noble, my boy,”
said he. “Noble, Pip! And I have
never forgot it!”
At a change in his manner as if he
were even going to embrace me, I laid a hand upon
his breast and put him away.
“Stay!” said I.
“Keep off! If you are grateful to me for
what I did when I was a little child, I hope you have
shown your gratitude by mending your way of life.
If you have come here to thank me, it was not necessary.
Still, however you have found me out, there must be
something good in the feeling that has brought you
here, and I will not repulse you; but surely you must
understand that — I—”
My attention was so attracted by the
singularity of his fixed look at me, that the words
died away on my tongue.
“You was a saying,” he
observed, when we had confronted one another in silence,
“that surely I must understand. What, surely
must I understand?”
“That I cannot wish to renew
that chance intercourse with you of long ago, under
these different circumstances. I am glad to believe
you have repented and recovered yourself. I am
glad to tell you so. I am glad that, thinking
I deserve to be thanked, you have come to thank me.
But our ways are different ways, none the less.
You are wet, and you look weary. Will you drink
something before you go?”
He had replaced his neckerchief loosely,
and had stood, keenly observant of me, biting a long
end of it. “I think,” he answered,
still with the end at his mouth and still observant
of me, “that I will drink (I thank you) afore
I go.”
There was a tray ready on a side-table.
I brought it to the table near the fire, and asked
him what he would have? He touched one of the
bottles without looking at it or speaking, and I made
him some hot rum-and-water. I tried to keep
my hand steady while I did so, but his look at me
as he leaned back in his chair with the long draggled
end of his neckerchief between his teeth — evidently
forgotten — made my hand very difficult to master.
When at last I put the glass to him, I saw with amazement
that his eyes were full of tears.
Up to this time I had remained standing,
not to disguise that I wished him gone. But
I was softened by the softened aspect of the man,
and felt a touch of reproach. “I hope,”
said I, hurriedly putting something into a glass for
myself, and drawing a chair to the table, “that
you will not think I spoke harshly to you just now.
I had no intention of doing it, and I am sorry for
it if I did. I wish you well, and happy!”
As I put my glass to my lips, he glanced
with surprise at the end of his neckerchief, dropping
from his mouth when he opened it, and stretched out
his hand. I gave him mine, and then he drank,
and drew his sleeve across his eyes and forehead.
“How are you living?” I asked him.
“I’ve been a sheep-farmer,
stock-breeder, other trades besides, away in the new
world,” said he: “many a thousand
mile of stormy water off from this.”
“I hope you have done well?”
“I’ve done wonderfully
well. There’s others went out alonger me
as has done well too, but no man has done nigh as
well as me. I’m famous for it.”
“I am glad to hear it.”
“I hope to hear you say so, my dear boy.”
Without stopping to try to understand
those words or the tone in which they were spoken,
I turned off to a point that had just come into my
mind.
“Have you ever seen a messenger
you once sent to me,” I inquired, “since
he undertook that trust?”
“Never set eyes upon him. I warn’t
likely to it.”
“He came faithfully, and he
brought me the two one-pound notes. I was a
poor boy then, as you know, and to a poor boy they
were a little fortune. But, like you, I have
done well since, and you must let me pay them back.
You can put them to some other poor boy’s use.”
I took out my purse.
He watched me as I laid my purse upon
the table and opened it, and he watched me as I separated
two one-pound notes from its contents. They were
clean and new, and I spread them out and handed them
over to him. Still watching me, he laid them
one upon the other, folded them long-wise, gave them
a twist, set fire to them at the lamp, and dropped
the ashes into the tray.
“May I make so bold,”
he said then, with a smile that was like a frown,
and with a frown that was like a smile, “as ask
you how you have done well, since you and me was out
on them lone shivering marshes?”
“How?”
“Ah!”
He emptied his glass, got up, and
stood at the side of the fire, with his heavy brown
hand on the mantelshelf. He put a foot up to
the bars, to dry and warm it, and the wet boot began
to steam; but, he neither looked at it, nor at the
fire, but steadily looked at me. It was only
now that I began to tremble.
When my lips had parted, and had shaped
some words that were without sound, I forced myself
to tell him (though I could not do it distinctly),
that I had been chosen to succeed to some property.
“Might a mere warmint ask what property?”
said he.
I faltered, “I don’t know.”
“Might a mere warmint ask whose property?”
said he.
I faltered again, “I don’t know.”
“Could I make a guess, I wonder,”
said the Convict, “at your income since you
come of age! As to the first figure now.
Five?”
With my heart beating like a heavy
hammer of disordered action, I rose out of my chair,
and stood with my hand upon the back of it, looking
wildly at him.
“Concerning a guardian,”
he went on. “There ought to have been some
guardian, or such-like, whiles you was a minor.
Some lawyer, maybe. As to the first letter of
that lawyer’s name now. Would it be J?”
All the truth of my position came
flashing on me; and its disappointments, dangers,
disgraces, consequences of all kinds, rushed in in
such a multitude that I was borne down by them and
had to struggle for every breath I drew.
“Put it,” he resumed,
“as the employer of that lawyer whose name begun
with a J, and might be Jaggers — put it as he
had come over sea to Portsmouth, and had landed there,
and had wanted to come on to you. ‘However,
you have found me out,’ you says just now.
Well! However, did I find you out? Why,
I wrote from Portsmouth to a person in London, for
particulars of your address. That person’s
name? Why, Wemmick.”
I could not have spoken one word,
though it had been to save my life. I stood,
with a hand on the chair-back and a hand on my breast,
where I seemed to be suffocating — I stood so,
looking wildly at him, until I grasped at the chair,
when the room began to surge and turn. He caught
me, drew me to the sofa, put me up against the cushions,
and bent on one knee before me: bringing the
face that I now well remembered, and that I shuddered
at, very near to mine.
“Yes, Pip, dear boy, I’ve
made a gentleman on you! It’s me wot has
done it! I swore that time, sure as ever I earned
a guinea, that guinea should go to you. I swore
arterwards, sure as ever I spec’lated and got
rich, you should get rich. I lived rough, that
you should live smooth; I worked hard, that you should
be above work. What odds, dear boy? Do
I tell it, fur you to feel a obligation? Not
a bit. I tell it, fur you to know as that there
hunted dunghill dog wot you kep life in, got his head
so high that he could make a gentleman — and,
Pip, you’re him!”
The abhorrence in which I held the
man, the dread I had of him, the repugnance with which
I shrank from him, could not have been exceeded if
he had been some terrible beast.
“Look’ee here, Pip.
I’m your second father. You’re my
son — more to me nor any son. I’ve
put away money, only for you to spend. When I
was a hired-out shepherd in a solitary hut, not seeing
no faces but faces of sheep till I half forgot wot
men’s and women’s faces wos like, I see
yourn. I drops my knife many a time in that hut
when I was a-eating my dinner or my supper, and I
says, ’Here’s the boy again, a-looking
at me whiles I eats and drinks!’ I see you there
a many times, as plain as ever I see you on them misty
marshes. ’Lord strike me dead!’
I says each time — and I goes out in the air
to say it under the open heavens — ’but
wot, if I gets liberty and money, I’ll make
that boy a gentleman!’ And I done it.
Why, look at you, dear boy! Look at these here
lodgings o’yourn, fit for a lord! A lord?
Ah! You shall show money with lords for wagers,
and beat ’em!”
In his heat and triumph, and in his
knowledge that I had been nearly fainting, he did
not remark on my reception of all this. It was
the one grain of relief I had.
“Look’ee here!”
he went on, taking my watch out of my pocket, and
turning towards him a ring on my finger, while I recoiled
from his touch as if he had been a snake, “a
gold ’un and a beauty: that’s a
gentleman’s, I hope! A diamond all set
round with rubies; that’s a gentleman’s,
I hope! Look at your linen; fine and beautiful!
Look at your clothes; better ain’t to be got!
And your books too,” turning his eyes round
the room, “mounting up, on their shelves, by
hundreds! And you read ’em; don’t
you? I see you’d been a reading of ’em
when I come in. Ha, ha, ha! You shall read
’em to me, dear boy! And if they’re
in foreign languages wot I don’t understand,
I shall be just as proud as if I did.”
Again he took both my hands and put
them to his lips, while my blood ran cold within me.
“Don’t you mind talking,
Pip,” said he, after again drawing his sleeve
over his eyes and forehead, as the click came in his
throat which I well remembered — and he was
all the more horrible to me that he was so much in
earnest; “you can’t do better nor keep
quiet, dear boy. You ain’t looked slowly
forward to this as I have; you wosn’t prepared
for this, as I wos. But didn’t you never
think it might be me?”
“O no, no, no,” I returned, “Never,
never!”
“Well, you see it wos me, and
single-handed. Never a soul in it but my own
self and Mr. Jaggers.”
“Was there no one else?” I asked.
“No,” said he, with a
glance of surprise: “who else should there
be? And, dear boy, how good looking you have
growed! There’s bright eyes somewheres
— eh? Isn’t there bright eyes somewheres,
wot you love the thoughts on?”
O Estella, Estella!
“They shall be yourn, dear boy,
if money can buy ’em. Not that a gentleman
like you, so well set up as you, can’t win ’em
off of his own game; but money shall back you!
Let me finish wot I was a-telling you, dear boy.
From that there hut and that there hiring-out, I
got money left me by my master (which died, and had
been the same as me), and got my liberty and went for
myself. In every single thing I went for, I
went for you. ’Lord strike a blight upon
it,’ I says, wotever it was I went for, ’if
it ain’t for him!’ It all prospered wonderful.
As I giv’ you to understand just now, I’m
famous for it. It was the money left me, and
the gains of the first few year wot I sent home to
Mr. Jaggers — all for you — when he first
come arter you, agreeable to my letter.”
O, that he had never come! That
he had left me at the forge — far from contented,
yet, by comparison happy!
“And then, dear boy, it was
a recompense to me, look’ee here, to know in
secret that I was making a gentleman. The blood
horses of them colonists might fling up the dust over
me as I was walking; what do I say? I says to
myself, ’I’m making a better gentleman
nor ever you’ll be!’ When one of ’em
says to another, ’He was a convict, a few year
ago, and is a ignorant common fellow now, for all
he’s lucky,’ what do I say? I says
to myself, ’If I ain’t a gentleman, nor
yet ain’t got no learning, I’m the owner
of such. All on you owns stock and land; which
on you owns a brought-up London gentleman?’
This way I kep myself a-going. And this way
I held steady afore my mind that I would for certain
come one day and see my boy, and make myself known
to him, on his own ground.”
He laid his hand on my shoulder.
I shuddered at the thought that for anything I knew,
his hand might be stained with blood.
“It warn’t easy, Pip,
for me to leave them parts, nor yet it warn’t
safe. But I held to it, and the harder it was,
the stronger I held, for I was determined, and my
mind firm made up. At last I done it. Dear
boy, I done it!”
I tried to collect my thoughts, but
I was stunned. Throughout, I had seemed to myself
to attend more to the wind and the rain than to him;
even now, I could not separate his voice from those
voices, though those were loud and his was silent.
“Where will you put me?”
he asked, presently. “I must be put somewheres,
dear boy.”
“To sleep?” said I.
“Yes. And to sleep long
and sound,” he answered; “for I’ve
been sea-tossed and sea-washed, months and months.”
“My friend and companion,”
said I, rising from the sofa, “is absent; you
must have his room.”
“He won’t come back to-morrow; will he?”
“No,” said I, answering
almost mechanically, in spite of my utmost efforts;
“not to-morrow.”
“Because, look’ee here,
dear boy,” he said, dropping his voice, and
laying a long finger on my breast in an impressive
manner, “caution is necessary.”
“How do you mean? Caution?”
“By G — , it’s Death!”
“What’s death?”
“I was sent for life.
It’s death to come back. There’s
been overmuch coming back of late years, and I should
of a certainty be hanged if took.”
Nothing was needed but this; the wretched
man, after loading wretched me with his gold and silver
chains for years, had risked his life to come to me,
and I held it there in my keeping! If I had
loved him instead of abhorring him; if I had been attracted
to him by the strongest admiration and affection,
instead of shrinking from him with the strongest repugnance;
it could have been no worse. On the contrary,
it would have been better, for his preservation would
then have naturally and tenderly addressed my heart.
My first care was to close the shutters,
so that no light might be seen from without, and then
to close and make fast the doors. While I did
so, he stood at the table drinking rum and eating biscuit;
and when I saw him thus engaged, I saw my convict on
the marshes at his meal again. It almost seemed
to me as if he must stoop down presently, to file
at his leg.
When I had gone into Herbert’s
room, and had shut off any other communication between
it and the staircase than through the room in which
our conversation had been held, I asked him if he would
go to bed? He said yes, but asked me for some
of my “gentleman’s linen” to put
on in the morning. I brought it out, and laid
it ready for him, and my blood again ran cold when
he again took me by both hands to give me good night.
I got away from him, without knowing
how I did it, and mended the fire in the room where
we had been together, and sat down by it, afraid to
go to bed. For an hour or more, I remained too
stunned to think; and it was not until I began to
think, that I began fully to know how wrecked I was,
and how the ship in which I had sailed was gone to
pieces.
Miss Havisham’s intentions towards
me, all a mere dream; Estella not designed for me;
I only suffered in Satis House as a convenience, a
sting for the greedy relations, a model with a mechanical
heart to practise on when no other practice was at
hand; those were the first smarts I had. But,
sharpest and deepest pain of all — it was for
the convict, guilty of I knew not what crimes, and
liable to be taken out of those rooms where I sat thinking,
and hanged at the Old Bailey door, that I had deserted
Joe.
I would not have gone back to Joe
now, I would not have gone back to Biddy now, for
any consideration: simply, I suppose, because
my sense of my own worthless conduct to them was greater
than every consideration. No wisdom on earth
could have given me the comfort that I should have
derived from their simplicity and fidelity; but I
could never, never, undo what I had done.
In every rage of wind and rush of
rain, I heard pursuers. Twice, I could have
sworn there was a knocking and whispering at the outer
door. With these fears upon me, I began either
to imagine or recall that I had had mysterious warnings
of this man’s approach. That, for weeks
gone by, I had passed faces in the streets which I
had thought like his. That, these likenesses
had grown more numerous, as he, coming over the sea,
had drawn nearer. That, his wicked spirit had
somehow sent these messengers to mine, and that now
on this stormy night he was as good as his word, and
with me.
Crowding up with these reflections
came the reflection that I had seen him with my childish
eyes to be a desperately violent man; that I had heard
that other convict reiterate that he had tried to
murder him; that I had seen him down in the ditch tearing
and fighting like a wild beast. Out of such
remembrances I brought into the light of the fire,
a half-formed terror that it might not be safe to
be shut up there with him in the dead of the wild solitary
night. This dilated until it filled the room,
and impelled me to take a candle and go in and look
at my dreadful burden.
He had rolled a handkerchief round
his head, and his face was set and lowering in his
sleep. But he was asleep, and quietly too, though
he had a pistol lying on the pillow. Assured
of this, I softly removed the key to the outside of
his door, and turned it on him before I again sat
down by the fire. Gradually I slipped from the
chair and lay on the floor. When I awoke, without
having parted in my sleep with the perception of my
wretchedness, the clocks of the Eastward churches
were striking five, the candles were wasted out, the
fire was dead, and the wind and rain intensified the
thick black darkness.
This is the end
of the second stage of Pip’s
expectations.