Some weeks passed without bringing
any change. We waited for Wemmick, and he made
no sign. If I had never known him out of Little
Britain, and had never enjoyed the privilege of being
on a familiar footing at the Castle, I might have
doubted him; not so for a moment, knowing him as I
did.
My worldly affairs began to wear a
gloomy appearance, and I was pressed for money by
more than one creditor. Even I myself began to
know the want of money (I mean of ready money in my
own pocket), and to relieve it by converting some
easily spared articles of jewellery into cash.
But I had quite determined that it would be a heartless
fraud to take more money from my patron in the existing
state of my uncertain thoughts and plans. Therefore,
I had sent him the unopened pocket-book by Herbert,
to hold in his own keeping, and I felt a kind of satisfaction
— whether it was a false kind or a true, I hardly
know — in not having profited by his generosity
since his revelation of himself.
As the time wore on, an impression
settled heavily upon me that Estella was married.
Fearful of having it confirmed, though it was all
but a conviction, I avoided the newspapers, and begged
Herbert (to whom I had confided the circumstances
of our last interview) never to speak of her to me.
Why I hoarded up this last wretched little rag of
the robe of hope that was rent and given to the winds,
how do I know! Why did you who read this, commit
that not dissimilar inconsistency of your own, last
year, last month, last week?
It was an unhappy life that I lived,
and its one dominant anxiety, towering over all its
other anxieties like a high mountain above a range
of mountains, never disappeared from my view.
Still, no new cause for fear arose. Let me
start from my bed as I would, with the terror fresh
upon me that he was discovered; let me sit listening
as I would, with dread, for Herbert’s returning
step at night, lest it should be fleeter than ordinary,
and winged with evil news; for all that, and much
more to like purpose, the round of things went on.
Condemned to inaction and a state of constant restlessness
and suspense, I rowed about in my boat, and waited,
waited, waited, as I best could.
There were states of the tide when,
having been down the river, I could not get back through
the eddy-chafed arches and starlings of old London
Bridge; then, I left my boat at a wharf near the Custom
House, to be brought up afterwards to the Temple stairs.
I was not averse to doing this, as it served to make
me and my boat a commoner incident among the water-side
people there. From this slight occasion, sprang
two meetings that I have now to tell of.
One afternoon, late in the month of
February, I came ashore at the wharf at dusk.
I had pulled down as far as Greenwich with the ebb
tide, and had turned with the tide. It had been
a fine bright day, but had become foggy as the sun
dropped, and I had had to feel my way back among the
shipping, pretty carefully. Both in going and
returning, I had seen the signal in his window, All
well.
As it was a raw evening and I was
cold, I thought I would comfort myself with dinner
at once; and as I had hours of dejection and solitude
before me if I went home to the Temple, I thought I
would afterwards go to the play. The theatre
where Mr. Wopsle had achieved his questionable triumph,
was in that waterside neighbourhood (it is nowhere
now), and to that theatre I resolved to go. I
was aware that Mr. Wopsle had not succeeded in reviving
the Drama, but, on the contrary, had rather partaken
of its decline. He had been ominously heard
of, through the playbills, as a faithful Black, in
connexion with a little girl of noble birth, and a
monkey. And Herbert had seen him as a predatory
Tartar of comic propensities, with a face like a red
brick, and an outrageous hat all over bells.
I dined at what Herbert and I used
to call a Geographical chop-house — where there
were maps of the world in porter-pot rims on every
half-yard of the table-cloths, and charts of gravy
on every one of the knives — to this day there
is scarcely a single chop-house within the Lord Mayor’s
dominions which is not Geographical — and wore
out the time in dozing over crumbs, staring at gas,
and baking in a hot blast of dinners. By-and-by,
I roused myself and went to the play.
There, I found a virtuous boatswain
in his Majesty’s service — a most excellent
man, though I could have wished his trousers not quite
so tight in some places and not quite so loose in others
— who knocked all the little men’s hats
over their eyes, though he was very generous and brave,
and who wouldn’t hear of anybody’s paying
taxes, though he was very patriotic. He had a
bag of money in his pocket, like a pudding in the
cloth, and on that property married a young person
in bed-furniture, with great rejoicings; the whole
population of Portsmouth (nine in number at the last
Census) turning out on the beach, to rub their own
hands and shake everybody else’s, and sing “Fill,
fill!” A certain dark-complexioned Swab, however,
who wouldn’t fill, or do anything else that
was proposed to him, and whose heart was openly stated
(by the boatswain) to be as black as his figure-head,
proposed to two other Swabs to get all mankind into
difficulties; which was so effectually done (the Swab
family having considerable political influence) that
it took half the evening to set things right, and
then it was only brought about through an honest little
grocer with a white hat, black gaiters, and red nose,
getting into a clock, with a gridiron, and listening,
and coming out, and knocking everybody down from behind
with the gridiron whom he couldn’t confute with
what he had overheard. This led to Mr. Wopsle’s
(who had never been heard of before) coming in with
a star and garter on, as a plenipotentiary of great
power direct from the Admiralty, to say that the Swabs
were all to go to prison on the spot, and that he
had brought the boatswain down the Union Jack, as a
slight acknowledgment of his public services.
The boatswain, unmanned for the first time, respectfully
dried his eyes on the Jack, and then cheering up and
addressing Mr. Wopsle as Your Honour, solicited permission
to take him by the fin. Mr. Wopsle conceding
his fin with a gracious dignity, was immediately shoved
into a dusty corner while everybody danced a hornpipe;
and from that corner, surveying the public with a
discontented eye, became aware of me.
The second piece was the last new
grand comic Christmas pantomime, in the first scene
of which, it pained me to suspect that I detected
Mr. Wopsle with red worsted legs under a highly magnified
phosphoric countenance and a shock of red curtain-fringe
for his hair, engaged in the manufacture of thunderbolts
in a mine, and displaying great cowardice when his
gigantic master came home (very hoarse) to dinner.
But he presently presented himself under worthier
circumstances; for, the Genius of Youthful Love being
in want of assistance — on account of the parental
brutality of an ignorant farmer who opposed the choice
of his daughter’s heart, by purposely falling
upon the object, in a flour sack, out of the firstfloor
window — summoned a sententious Enchanter; and
he, coming up from the antipodes rather unsteadily,
after an apparently violent journey, proved to be
Mr. Wopsle in a high-crowned hat, with a necromantic
work in one volume under his arm. The business
of this enchanter on earth, being principally to be
talked at, sung at, butted at, danced at, and flashed
at with fires of various colours, he had a good deal
of time on his hands. And I observed with great
surprise, that he devoted it to staring in my direction
as if he were lost in amazement.
There was something so remarkable
in the increasing glare of Mr. Wopsle’s eye,
and he seemed to be turning so many things over in
his mind and to grow so confused, that I could not
make it out. I sat thinking of it, long after
he had ascended to the clouds in a large watch-case,
and still I could not make it out. I was still
thinking of it when I came out of the theatre an hour
afterwards, and found him waiting for me near the
door.
“How do you do?” said
I, shaking hands with him as we turned down the street
together. “I saw that you saw me.”
“Saw you, Mr. Pip!” he
returned. “Yes, of course I saw you.
But who else was there?”
“Who else?”
“It is the strangest thing,”
said Mr. Wopsle, drifting into his lost look again;
“and yet I could swear to him.”
Becoming alarmed, I entreated Mr.
Wopsle to explain his meaning.
“Whether I should have noticed
him at first but for your being there,” said
Mr. Wopsle, going on in the same lost way, “I
can’t be positive; yet I think I should.”
Involuntarily I looked round me, as
I was accustomed to look round me when I went home;
for, these mysterious words gave me a chill.
“Oh! He can’t be
in sight,” said Mr. Wopsle. “He went
out, before I went off, I saw him go.”
Having the reason that I had, for
being suspicious, I even suspected this poor actor.
I mistrusted a design to entrap me into some admission.
Therefore, I glanced at him as we walked on together,
but said nothing.
“I had a ridiculous fancy that
he must be with you, Mr. Pip, till I saw that you
were quite unconscious of him, sitting behind you
there, like a ghost.”
My former chill crept over me again,
but I was resolved not to speak yet, for it was quite
consistent with his words that he might be set on
to induce me to connect these references with Provis.
Of course, I was perfectly sure and safe that Provis
had not been there.
“I dare say you wonder at me,
Mr. Pip; indeed I see you do. But it is so very
strange! You’ll hardly believe what I am
going to tell you. I could hardly believe it
myself, if you told me.”
“Indeed?” said I.
“No, indeed. Mr. Pip,
you remember in old times a certain Christmas Day,
when you were quite a child, and I dined at Gargery’s,
and some soldiers came to the door to get a pair of
handcuffs mended?”
“I remember it very well.”
“And you remember that there
was a chase after two convicts, and that we joined
in it, and that Gargery took you on his back, and
that I took the lead and you kept up with me as well
as you could?”
“I remember it all very well.”
Better than he thought — except the last clause.
“And you remember that we came
up with the two in a ditch, and that there was a scuffle
between them, and that one of them had been severely
handled and much mauled about the face, by the other?”
“I see it all before me.”
“And that the soldiers lighted
torches, and put the two in the centre, and that we
went on to see the last of them, over the black marshes,
with the torchlight shining on their faces —
I am particular about that; with the torchlight shining
on their faces, when there was an outer ring of dark
night all about us?”
“Yes,” said I. “I remember
all that.”
“Then, Mr. Pip, one of those
two prisoners sat behind you tonight. I saw
him over your shoulder.”
“Steady!” I thought.
I asked him then, “Which of the two do you
suppose you saw?”
“The one who had been mauled,”
he answered readily, “and I’ll swear I
saw him! The more I think of him, the more certain
I am of him.”
“This is very curious!”
said I, with the best assumption I could put on, of
its being nothing more to me. “Very curious
indeed!”
I cannot exaggerate the enhanced disquiet
into which this conversation threw me, or the special
and peculiar terror I felt at Compeyson’s having
been behind me “like a ghost.” For,
if he had ever been out of my thoughts for a few moments
together since the hiding had begun, it was in those
very moments when he was closest to me; and to think
that I should be so unconscious and off my guard after
all my care, was as if I had shut an avenue of a hundred
doors to keep him out, and then had found him at my
elbow. I could not doubt either that he was there,
because I was there, and that however slight an appearance
of danger there might be about us, danger was always
near and active.
I put such questions to Mr. Wopsle
as, When did the man come in? He could not tell
me that; he saw me, and over my shoulder he saw the
man. It was not until he had seen him for some
time that he began to identify him; but he had from
the first vaguely associated him with me, and known
him as somehow belonging to me in the old village
time. How was he dressed? Prosperously,
but not noticeably otherwise; he thought, in black.
Was his face at all disfigured? No, he believed
not. I believed not, too, for, although in my
brooding state I had taken no especial notice of the
people behind me, I thought it likely that a face
at all disfigured would have attracted my attention.
When Mr. Wopsle had imparted to me
all that he could recall or I extract, and when I
had treated him to a little appropriate refreshment
after the fatigues of the evening, we parted.
It was between twelve and one o’clock when
I reached the Temple, and the gates were shut.
No one was near me when I went in and went home.
Herbert had come in, and we held a
very serious council by the fire. But there
was nothing to be done, saving to communicate to Wemmick
what I had that night found out, and to remind him
that we waited for his hint. As I thought that
I might compromise him if I went too often to the
Castle, I made this communication by letter.
I wrote it before I went to bed, and went out and posted
it; and again no one was near me. Herbert and
I agreed that we could do nothing else but be very
cautious. And we were very cautious indeed -
more cautious than before, if that were possible —
and I for my part never went near Chinks’s Basin,
except when I rowed by, and then I only looked at
Mill Pond Bank as I looked at anything else.