It was fortunate for me that I had
to take precautions to ensure (so far as I could)
the safety of my dreaded visitor; for, this thought
pressing on me when I awoke, held other thoughts in
a confused concourse at a distance.
The impossibility of keeping him concealed
in the chambers was self-evident. It could not
be done, and the attempt to do it would inevitably
engender suspicion. True, I had no Avenger in
my service now, but I was looked after by an inflammatory
old female, assisted by an animated rag-bag whom she
called her niece, and to keep a room secret from them
would be to invite curiosity and exaggeration.
They both had weak eyes, which I had long attributed
to their chronically looking in at keyholes, and they
were always at hand when not wanted; indeed that was
their only reliable quality besides larceny.
Not to get up a mystery with these people, I resolved
to announce in the morning that my uncle had unexpectedly
come from the country.
This course I decided on while I was
yet groping about in the darkness for the means of
getting a light. Not stumbling on the means
after all, I was fain to go out to the adjacent Lodge
and get the watchman there to come with his lantern.
Now, in groping my way down the black staircase I
fell over something, and that something was a man
crouching in a corner.
As the man made no answer when I asked
him what he did there, but eluded my touch in silence,
I ran to the Lodge and urged the watchman to come
quickly: telling him of the incident on the way
back. The wind being as fierce as ever, we did
not care to endanger the light in the lantern by rekindling
the extinguished lamps on the staircase, but we examined
the staircase from the bottom to the top and found
no one there. It then occurred to me as possible
that the man might have slipped into my rooms; so,
lighting my candle at the watchman’s, and leaving
him standing at the door, I examined them carefully,
including the room in which my dreaded guest lay asleep.
All was quiet, and assuredly no other man was in those
chambers.
It troubled me that there should have
been a lurker on the stairs, on that night of all
nights in the year, and I asked the watchman, on the
chance of eliciting some hopeful explanation as I handed
him a dram at the door, whether he had admitted at
his gate any gentleman who had perceptibly been dining
out? Yes, he said; at different times of the
night, three. One lived in Fountain Court, and
the other two lived in the Lane, and he had seen them
all go home. Again, the only other man who dwelt
in the house of which my chambers formed a part, had
been in the country for some weeks; and he certainly
had not returned in the night, because we had seen
his door with his seal on it as we came up-stairs.
“The night being so bad, sir,”
said the watchman, as he gave me back my glass, “uncommon
few have come in at my gate. Besides them three
gentlemen that I have named, I don’t call to
mind another since about eleven o’clock, when
a stranger asked for you.”
“My uncle,” I muttered. “Yes.”
“You saw him, sir?”
“Yes. Oh yes.”
“Likewise the person with him?”
“Person with him!” I repeated.
“I judged the person to be with
him,” returned the watchman. “The
person stopped, when he stopped to make inquiry of
me, and the person took this way when he took this
way.”
“What sort of person?”
The watchman had not particularly
noticed; he should say a working person; to the best
of his belief, he had a dust-coloured kind of clothes
on, under a dark coat. The watchman made more
light of the matter than I did, and naturally; not
having my reason for attaching weight to it.
When I had got rid of him, which I
thought it well to do without prolonging explanations,
my mind was much troubled by these two circumstances
taken together. Whereas they were easy of innocent
solution apart — as, for instance, some diner-out
or diner-at-home, who had not gone near this watchman’s
gate, might have strayed to my staircase and dropped
asleep there — and my nameless visitor might
have brought some one with him to show him the way
— still, joined, they had an ugly look to one
as prone to distrust and fear as the changes of a
few hours had made me.
I lighted my fire, which burnt with
a raw pale flare at that time of the morning, and
fell into a doze before it. I seemed to have
been dozing a whole night when the clocks struck six.
As there was full an hour and a half between me and
daylight, I dozed again; now, waking up uneasily,
with prolix conversations about nothing, in my ears;
now, making thunder of the wind in the chimney; at
length, falling off into a profound sleep from which
the daylight woke me with a start.
All this time I had never been able
to consider my own situation, nor could I do so yet.
I had not the power to attend to it. I was
greatly dejected and distressed, but in an incoherent
wholesale sort of way. As to forming any plan
for the future, I could as soon have formed an elephant.
When I opened the shutters and looked out at the
wet wild morning, all of a leaden hue; when I walked
from room to room; when I sat down again shivering,
before the fire, waiting for my laundress to appear;
I thought how miserable I was, but hardly knew why,
or how long I had been so, or on what day of the week
I made the reflection, or even who I was that made
it.
At last, the old woman and the niece
came in — the latter with a head not easily
distinguishable from her dusty broom — and testified
surprise at sight of me and the fire. To whom
I imparted how my uncle had come in the night and
was then asleep, and how the breakfast preparations
were to be modified accordingly. Then, I washed
and dressed while they knocked the furniture about
and made a dust; and so, in a sort of dream or sleep-waking,
I found myself sitting by the fire again, waiting
for — Him — to come to breakfast.
By-and-by, his door opened and he
came out. I could not bring myself to bear the
sight of him, and I thought he had a worse look by
daylight.
“I do not even know,”
said I, speaking low as he took his seat at the table,
“by what name to call you. I have given
out that you are my uncle.”
“That’s it, dear boy! Call me uncle.”
“You assumed some name, I suppose, on board
ship?”
“Yes, dear boy. I took the name of Provis.”
“Do you mean to keep that name?”
“Why, yes, dear boy, it’s
as good as another — unless you’d like
another.”
“What is your real name?” I asked him
in a whisper.
“Magwitch,” he answered, in the same tone;
“chrisen’d Abel.”
“What were you brought up to be?”
“A warmint, dear boy.”
He answered quite seriously, and used
the word as if it denoted some profession.
“When you came into the Temple
last night—” said I, pausing to wonder
whether that could really have been last night, which
seemed so long ago.
“Yes, dear boy?”
“When you came in at the gate
and asked the watchman the way here, had you any one
with you?”
“With me? No, dear boy.”
“But there was some one there?”
“I didn’t take particular
notice,” he said, dubiously, “not knowing
the ways of the place. But I think there was
a person, too, come in alonger me.”
“Are you known in London?”
“I hope not!” said he,
giving his neck a jerk with his forefinger that made
me turn hot and sick.
“Were you known in London, once?”
“Not over and above, dear boy. I was in
the provinces mostly.”
“Were you — tried — in London?”
“Which time?” said he, with a sharp look.
“The last time.”
He nodded. “First knowed Mr. Jaggers that
way. Jaggers was for me.”
It was on my lips to ask him what
he was tried for, but he took up a knife, gave it
a flourish, and with the words, “And what I done
is worked out and paid for!” fell to at his breakfast.
He ate in a ravenous way that was
very disagreeable, and all his actions were uncouth,
noisy, and greedy. Some of his teeth had failed
him since I saw him eat on the marshes, and as he turned
his food in his mouth, and turned his head sideways
to bring his strongest fangs to bear upon it, he looked
terribly like a hungry old dog. If I had begun
with any appetite, he would have taken it away, and
I should have sat much as I did — repelled from
him by an insurmountable aversion, and gloomily looking
at the cloth.
“I’m a heavy grubber,
dear boy,” he said, as a polite kind of apology
when he made an end of his meal, “but I always
was. If it had been in my constitution to be
a lighter grubber, I might ha’ got into lighter
trouble. Similarly, I must have my smoke.
When I was first hired out as shepherd t’other
side the world, it’s my belief I should ha’
turned into a molloncolly-mad sheep myself, if I hadn’t
a had my smoke.”
As he said so, he got up from the
table, and putting his hand into the breast of the
pea-coat he wore, brought out a short black pipe, and
a handful of loose tobacco of the kind that is called
Negro-head. Having filled his pipe, he put the
surplus tobacco back again, as if his pocket were
a drawer. Then, he took a live coal from the
fire with the tongs, and lighted his pipe at it, and
then turned round on the hearth-rug with his back
to the fire, and went through his favourite action
of holding out both his hands for mine.
“And this,” said he, dandling
my hands up and down in his, as he puffed at his pipe;
“and this is the gentleman what I made!
The real genuine One! It does me good fur to
look at you, Pip. All I stip’late, is,
to stand by and look at you, dear boy!”
I released my hands as soon as I could,
and found that I was beginning slowly to settle down
to the contemplation of my condition. What I
was chained to, and how heavily, became intelligible
to me, as I heard his hoarse voice, and sat looking
up at his furrowed bald head with its iron grey hair
at the sides.
“I mustn’t see my gentleman
a footing it in the mire of the streets; there mustn’t
be no mud on his boots. My gentleman must have
horses, Pip! Horses to ride, and horses to drive,
and horses for his servant to ride and drive as well.
Shall colonists have their horses (and blood ’uns,
if you please, good Lord!) and not my London gentleman?
No, no. We’ll show ’em another pair
of shoes than that, Pip; won’t us?”
He took out of his pocket a great
thick pocket-book, bursting with papers, and tossed
it on the table.
“There’s something worth
spending in that there book, dear boy. It’s
yourn. All I’ve got ain’t mine; it’s
yourn. Don’t you be afeerd on it.
There’s more where that come from. I’ve
come to the old country fur to see my gentleman spend
his money like a gentleman. That’ll be
my pleasure. My pleasure ’ull be fur to
see him do it. And blast you all!” he
wound up, looking round the room and snapping his
fingers once with a loud snap, “blast you every
one, from the judge in his wig, to the colonist a stirring
up the dust, I’ll show a better gentleman than
the whole kit on you put together!”
“Stop!” said I, almost
in a frenzy of fear and dislike, “I want to
speak to you. I want to know what is to be done.
I want to know how you are to be kept out of danger,
how long you are going to stay, what projects you
have.”
“Look’ee here, Pip,”
said he, laying his hand on my arm in a suddenly altered
and subdued manner; “first of all, look’ee
here. I forgot myself half a minute ago.
What I said was low; that’s what it was; low.
Look’ee here, Pip. Look over it.
I ain’t a-going to be low.”
“First,” I resumed, half-groaning,
“what precautions can be taken against your
being recognized and seized?”
“No, dear boy,” he said,
in the same tone as before, “that don’t
go first. Lowness goes first. I ain’t
took so many years to make a gentleman, not without
knowing what’s due to him. Look’ee
here, Pip. I was low; that’s what I was;
low. Look over it, dear boy.”
Some sense of the grimly-ludicrous
moved me to a fretful laugh, as I replied, “I
have looked over it. In Heaven’s name,
don’t harp upon it!”
“Yes, but look’ee here,”
he persisted. “Dear boy, I ain’t
come so fur, not fur to be low. Now, go on,
dear boy. You was a-saying—”
“How are you to be guarded from
the danger you have incurred?”
“Well, dear boy, the danger
ain’t so great. Without I was informed
agen, the danger ain’t so much to signify.
There’s Jaggers, and there’s Wemmick,
and there’s you. Who else is there to inform?”
“Is there no chance person who
might identify you in the street?” said I.
“Well,” he returned, “there
ain’t many. Nor yet I don’t intend
to advertise myself in the newspapers by the name
of A. M. come back from Botany Bay; and years have
rolled away, and who’s to gain by it?
Still, look’ee here, Pip. If the danger
had been fifty times as great, I should ha’
come to see you, mind you, just the same.”
“And how long do you remain?”
“How long?” said he, taking
his black pipe from his mouth, and dropping his jaw
as he stared at me. “I’m not a-going
back. I’ve come for good.”
“Where are you to live?”
said I. “What is to be done with you?
Where will you be safe?”
“Dear boy,” he returned,
“there’s disguising wigs can be bought
for money, and there’s hair powder, and spectacles,
and black clothes — shorts and what not.
Others has done it safe afore, and what others has
done afore, others can do agen. As to the where
and how of living, dear boy, give me your own opinions
on it.”
“You take it smoothly now,”
said I, “but you were very serious last night,
when you swore it was Death.”
“And so I swear it is Death,”
said he, putting his pipe back in his mouth, “and
Death by the rope, in the open street not fur from
this, and it’s serious that you should fully
understand it to be so. What then, when that’s
once done? Here I am. To go back now,
’ud be as bad as to stand ground — worse.
Besides, Pip, I’m here, because I’ve
meant it by you, years and years. As to what
I dare, I’m a old bird now, as has dared all
manner of traps since first he was fledged, and I’m
not afeerd to perch upon a scarecrow. If there’s
Death hid inside of it, there is, and let him come
out, and I’ll face him, and then I’ll
believe in him and not afore. And now let me
have a look at my gentleman agen.”
Once more, he took me by both hands
and surveyed me with an air of admiring proprietorship:
smoking with great complacency all the while.
It appeared to me that I could do
no better than secure him some quiet lodging hard
by, of which he might take possession when Herbert
returned: whom I expected in two or three days.
That the secret must be confided to Herbert as a
matter of unavoidable necessity, even if I could have
put the immense relief I should derive from sharing
it with him out of the question, was plain to me.
But it was by no means so plain to Mr. Provis (I resolved
to call him by that name), who reserved his consent
to Herbert’s participation until he should have
seen him and formed a favourable judgment of his physiognomy.
“And even then, dear boy,” said he, pulling
a greasy little clasped black Testament out of his
pocket, “we’ll have him on his oath.”
To state that my terrible patron carried
this little black book about the world solely to swear
people on in cases of emergency, would be to state
what I never quite established — but this I can
say, that I never knew him put it to any other use.
The book itself had the appearance of having been
stolen from some court of justice, and perhaps his
knowledge of its antecedents, combined with his own
experience in that wise, gave him a reliance on its
powers as a sort of legal spell or charm. On
this first occasion of his producing it, I recalled
how he had made me swear fidelity in the churchyard
long ago, and how he had described himself last night
as always swearing to his resolutions in his solitude.
As he was at present dressed in a
seafaring slop suit, in which he looked as if he had
some parrots and cigars to dispose of, I next discussed
with him what dress he should wear. He cherished
an extraordinary belief in the virtues of “shorts”
as a disguise, and had in his own mind sketched a
dress for himself that would have made him something
between a dean and a dentist. It was with considerable
difficulty that I won him over to the assumption of
a dress more like a prosperous farmer’s; and
we arranged that he should cut his hair close, and
wear a little powder. Lastly, as he had not
yet been seen by the laundress or her niece, he was
to keep himself out of their view until his change
of dress was made.
It would seem a simple matter to decide
on these precautions; but in my dazed, not to say
distracted, state, it took so long, that I did not
get out to further them, until two or three in the
afternoon. He was to remain shut up in the chambers
while I was gone, and was on no account to open the
door.
There being to my knowledge a respectable
lodging-house in Essex-street, the back of which looked
into the Temple, and was almost within hail of my
windows, I first of all repaired to that house, and
was so fortunate as to secure the second floor for
my uncle, Mr. Provis. I then went from shop
to shop, making such purchases as were necessary to
the change in his appearance. This business
transacted, I turned my face, on my own account, to
Little Britain. Mr. Jaggers was at his desk,
but, seeing me enter, got up immediately and stood
before his fire.
“Now, Pip,” said he, “be careful.”
“I will, sir,” I returned.
For, coming along I had thought well of what I was
going to say.
“Don’t commit yourself,”
said Mr. Jaggers, “and don’t commit any
one. You understand — any one. Don’t
tell me anything: I don’t want to know
anything; I am not curious.”
Of course I saw that he knew the man was come.
“I merely want, Mr. Jaggers,”
said I, “to assure myself that what I have been
told, is true. I have no hope of its being untrue,
but at least I may verify it.”
Mr. Jaggers nodded. “But
did you say ‘told’ or ’informed’?”
he asked me, with his head on one side, and not looking
at me, but looking in a listening way at the floor.
“Told would seem to imply verbal communication.
You can’t have verbal communication with a man
in New South Wales, you know.”
“I will say, informed, Mr. Jaggers.”
“Good.”
“I have been informed by a person
named Abel Magwitch, that he is the benefactor so
long unknown to me.”
“That is the man,” said Mr. Jaggers, ”
— in New South Wales.”
“And only he?” said I.
“And only he,” said Mr. Jaggers.
“I am not so unreasonable, sir,
as to think you at all responsible for my mistakes
and wrong conclusions; but I always supposed it was
Miss Havisham.”
“As you say, Pip,” returned
Mr. Jaggers, turning his eyes upon me coolly, and
taking a bite at his forefinger, “I am not at
all responsible for that.”
“And yet it looked so like it,
sir,” I pleaded with a downcast heart.
“Not a particle of evidence,
Pip,” said Mr. Jaggers, shaking his head and
gathering up his skirts. “Take nothing
on its looks; take everything on evidence. There’s
no better rule.”
“I have no more to say,”
said I, with a sigh, after standing silent for a little
while. “I have verified my information,
and there’s an end.”
“And Magwitch — in New
South Wales — having at last disclosed himself,”
said Mr. Jaggers, “you will comprehend, Pip,
how rigidly throughout my communication with you,
I have always adhered to the strict line of fact.
There has never been the least departure from the
strict line of fact. You are quite aware of that?”
“Quite, sir.”
“I communicated to Magwitch
— in New South Wales — when he first wrote
to me — from New South Wales — the caution
that he must not expect me ever to deviate from the
strict line of fact. I also communicated to
him another caution. He appeared to me to have
obscurely hinted in his letter at some distant idea
he had of seeing you in England here. I cautioned
him that I must hear no more of that; that he was
not at all likely to obtain a pardon; that he was
expatriated for the term of his natural life; and that
his presenting himself in this country would be an
act of felony, rendering him liable to the extreme
penalty of the law. I gave Magwitch that caution,”
said Mr. Jaggers, looking hard at me; “I wrote
it to New South Wales. He guided himself by it,
no doubt.”
“No doubt,” said I.
“I have been informed by Wemmick,”
pursued Mr. Jaggers, still looking hard at me, “that
he has received a letter, under date Portsmouth, from
a colonist of the name of Purvis, or—”
“Or Provis,” I suggested.
“Or Provis — thank you,
Pip. Perhaps it is Provis? Perhaps you
know it’s Provis?”
“Yes,” said I.
“You know it’s Provis.
A letter, under date Portsmouth, from a colonist
of the name of Provis, asking for the particulars of
your address, on behalf of Magwitch. Wemmick
sent him the particulars, I understand, by return
of post. Probably it is through Provis that
you have received the explanation of Magwitch —
in New South Wales?”
“It came through Provis,” I replied.
“Good day, Pip,” said
Mr. Jaggers, offering his hand; “glad to have
seen you. In writing by post to Magwitch —
in New South Wales — or in communicating with
him through Provis, have the goodness to mention that
the particulars and vouchers of our long account shall
be sent to you, together with the balance; for there
is still a balance remaining. Good day, Pip!”
We shook hands, and he looked hard
at me as long as he could see me. I turned at
the door, and he was still looking hard at me, while
the two vile casts on the shelf seemed to be trying
to get their eyelids open, and to force out of their
swollen throats, “O, what a man he is!”
Wemmick was out, and though he had
been at his desk he could have done nothing for me.
I went straight back to the Temple, where I found
the terrible Provis drinking rum-and-water and smoking
negro-head, in safety.
Next day the clothes I had ordered,
all came home, and he put them on. Whatever
he put on, became him less (it dismally seemed to me)
than what he had worn before. To my thinking,
there was something in him that made it hopeless to
attempt to disguise him. The more I dressed
him and the better I dressed him, the more he looked
like the slouching fugitive on the marshes.
This effect on my anxious fancy was partly referable,
no doubt, to his old face and manner growing more
familiar to me; but I believe too that he dragged one
of his legs as if there were still a weight of iron
on it, and that from head to foot there was Convict
in the very grain of the man.
The influences of his solitary hut-life
were upon him besides, and gave him a savage air that
no dress could tame; added to these, were the influences
of his subsequent branded life among men, and, crowning
all, his consciousness that he was dodging and hiding
now. In all his ways of sitting and standing,
and eating and drinking — of brooding about,
in a high-shouldered reluctant style — of taking
out his great horn-handled jack-knife and wiping it
on his legs and cutting his food — of lifting
light glasses and cups to his lips, as if they were
clumsy pannikins — of chopping a wedge off his
bread, and soaking up with it the last fragments of
gravy round and round his plate, as if to make the
most of an allowance, and then drying his finger-ends
on it, and then swallowing it — in these ways
and a thousand other small nameless instances arising
every minute in the day, there was Prisoner, Felon,
Bondsman, plain as plain could be.
It had been his own idea to wear that
touch of powder, and I had conceded the powder after
overcoming the shorts. But I can compare the
effect of it, when on, to nothing but the probable
effect of rouge upon the dead; so awful was the manner
in which everything in him that it was most desirable
to repress, started through that thin layer of pretence,
and seemed to come blazing out at the crown of his
head. It was abandoned as soon as tried, and
he wore his grizzled hair cut short.
Words cannot tell what a sense I had,
at the same time, of the dreadful mystery that he
was to me. When he fell asleep of an evening,
with his knotted hands clenching the sides of the
easy-chair, and his bald head tattooed with deep wrinkles
falling forward on his breast, I would sit and look
at him, wondering what he had done, and loading him
with all the crimes in the Calendar, until the impulse
was powerful on me to start up and fly from him.
Every hour so increased my abhorrence of him, that
I even think I might have yielded to this impulse
in the first agonies of being so haunted, notwithstanding
all he had done for me, and the risk he ran, but for
the knowledge that Herbert must soon come back.
Once, I actually did start out of bed in the night,
and begin to dress myself in my worst clothes, hurriedly
intending to leave him there with everything else
I possessed, and enlist for India as a private soldier.
I doubt if a ghost could have been
more terrible to me, up in those lonely rooms in the
long evenings and long nights, with the wind and the
rain always rushing by. A ghost could not have
been taken and hanged on my account, and the consideration
that he could be, and the dread that he would be,
were no small addition to my horrors. When he
was not asleep, or playing a complicated kind of patience
with a ragged pack of cards of his own — a game
that I never saw before or since, and in which he
recorded his winnings by sticking his jack-knife into
the table — when he was not engaged in either
of these pursuits, he would ask me to read to him —
“Foreign language, dear boy!” While I
complied, he, not comprehending a single word, would
stand before the fire surveying me with the air of
an Exhibitor, and I would see him, between the fingers
of the hand with which I shaded my face, appealing
in dumb show to the furniture to take notice of my
proficiency. The imaginary student pursued by
the misshapen creature he had impiously made, was not
more wretched than I, pursued by the creature who had
made me, and recoiling from him with a stronger repulsion,
the more he admired me and the fonder he was of me.
This is written of, I am sensible,
as if it had lasted a year. It lasted about
five days. Expecting Herbert all the time, I
dared not go out, except when I took Provis for an
airing after dark. At length, one evening when
dinner was over and I had dropped into a slumber quite
worn out — for my nights had been agitated and
my rest broken by fearful dreams — I was roused
by the welcome footstep on the staircase. Provis,
who had been asleep too, staggered up at the noise
I made, and in an instant I saw his jack-knife shining
in his hand.
“Quiet! It’s Herbert!”
I said; and Herbert came bursting in, with the airy
freshness of six hundred miles of France upon him.
“Handel, my dear fellow, how
are you, and again how are you, and again how are
you? I seem to have been gone a twelvemonth!
Why, so I must have been, for you have grown quite
thin and pale! Handel, my — Halloa!
I beg your pardon.”
He was stopped in his running on and
in his shaking hands with me, by seeing Provis.
Provis, regarding him with a fixed attention, was
slowly putting up his jack-knife, and groping in another
pocket for something else.
“Herbert, my dear friend,”
said I, shutting the double doors, while Herbert stood
staring and wondering, “something very strange
has happened. This is — a visitor of mine.”
“It’s all right, dear
boy!” said Provis coming forward, with his little
clasped black book, and then addressing himself to
Herbert. “Take it in your right hand.
Lord strike you dead on the spot, if ever you split
in any way sumever! Kiss it!”
“Do so, as he wishes it,”
I said to Herbert. So, Herbert, looking at me
with a friendly uneasiness and amazement, complied,
and Provis immediately shaking hands with him, said,
“Now you’re on your oath, you know.
And never believe me on mine, if Pip shan’t
make a gentleman on you!”