<h2><SPAN name="chap30"></SPAN>Chapter XXX.</h2>
<p class="pfirst"><span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>fter
well considering the matter while I was dressing at the Blue Boar in the
morning, I resolved to tell my guardian that I doubted Orlick’s being the
right sort of man to fill a post of trust at Miss Havisham’s. “Why
of course he is not the right sort of man, Pip,” said my guardian,
comfortably satisfied beforehand on the general head, “because the man
who fills the post of trust never is the right sort of man.” It seemed
quite to put him into spirits to find that this particular post was not
exceptionally held by the right sort of man, and he listened in a satisfied
manner while I told him what knowledge I had of Orlick. “Very good,
Pip,” he observed, when I had concluded, “I’ll go round
presently, and pay our friend off.” Rather alarmed by this summary
action, I was for a little delay, and even hinted that our friend himself might
be difficult to deal with. “Oh no he won’t,” said my
guardian, making his pocket-handkerchief-point, with perfect confidence;
“I should like to see him argue the question with <i>me</i>.”</p>
<p>As we were going back together to London by the midday coach, and as I
breakfasted under such terrors of Pumblechook that I could scarcely hold my
cup, this gave me an opportunity of saying that I wanted a walk, and that I
would go on along the London road while Mr. Jaggers was occupied, if he would
let the coachman know that I would get into my place when overtaken. I was thus
enabled to fly from the Blue Boar immediately after breakfast. By then making a
loop of about a couple of miles into the open country at the back of
Pumblechook’s premises, I got round into the High Street again, a little
beyond that pitfall, and felt myself in comparative security.</p>
<p>It was interesting to be in the quiet old town once more, and it was not
disagreeable to be here and there suddenly recognised and stared after. One or
two of the tradespeople even darted out of their shops and went a little way
down the street before me, that they might turn, as if they had forgotten
something, and pass me face to face,—on which occasions I don’t
know whether they or I made the worse pretence; they of not doing it, or I of
not seeing it. Still my position was a distinguished one, and I was not at all
dissatisfied with it, until Fate threw me in the way of that unlimited
miscreant, Trabb’s boy.</p>
<p>Casting my eyes along the street at a certain point of my progress, I beheld
Trabb’s boy approaching, lashing himself with an empty blue bag. Deeming
that a serene and unconscious contemplation of him would best beseem me, and
would be most likely to quell his evil mind, I advanced with that expression of
countenance, and was rather congratulating myself on my success, when suddenly
the knees of Trabb’s boy smote together, his hair uprose, his cap fell
off, he trembled violently in every limb, staggered out into the road, and
crying to the populace, “Hold me! I’m so frightened!” feigned
to be in a paroxysm of terror and contrition, occasioned by the dignity of my
appearance. As I passed him, his teeth loudly chattered in his head, and with
every mark of extreme humiliation, he prostrated himself in the dust.</p>
<p>This was a hard thing to bear, but this was nothing. I had not advanced another
two hundred yards when, to my inexpressible terror, amazement, and indignation,
I again beheld Trabb’s boy approaching. He was coming round a narrow
corner. His blue bag was slung over his shoulder, honest industry beamed in his
eyes, a determination to proceed to Trabb’s with cheerful briskness was
indicated in his gait. With a shock he became aware of me, and was severely
visited as before; but this time his motion was rotatory, and he staggered
round and round me with knees more afflicted, and with uplifted hands as if
beseeching for mercy. His sufferings were hailed with the greatest joy by a
knot of spectators, and I felt utterly confounded.</p>
<p>I had not got as much further down the street as the post-office, when I again
beheld Trabb’s boy shooting round by a back way. This time, he was
entirely changed. He wore the blue bag in the manner of my great-coat, and was
strutting along the pavement towards me on the opposite side of the street,
attended by a company of delighted young friends to whom he from time to time
exclaimed, with a wave of his hand, “Don’t know yah!” Words
cannot state the amount of aggravation and injury wreaked upon me by
Trabb’s boy, when passing abreast of me, he pulled up his shirt-collar,
twined his side-hair, stuck an arm akimbo, and smirked extravagantly by,
wriggling his elbows and body, and drawling to his attendants,
“Don’t know yah, don’t know yah, ’pon my soul
don’t know yah!” The disgrace attendant on his immediately
afterwards taking to crowing and pursuing me across the bridge with crows, as
from an exceedingly dejected fowl who had known me when I was a blacksmith,
culminated the disgrace with which I left the town, and was, so to speak,
ejected by it into the open country.</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0245m.jpg" alt="[Illustration]" width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<p>But unless I had taken the life of Trabb’s boy on that occasion, I really
do not even now see what I could have done save endure. To have struggled with
him in the street, or to have exacted any lower recompense from him than his
heart’s best blood, would have been futile and degrading. Moreover, he
was a boy whom no man could hurt; an invulnerable and dodging serpent who, when
chased into a corner, flew out again between his captor’s legs,
scornfully yelping. I wrote, however, to Mr. Trabb by next day’s post, to
say that Mr. Pip must decline to deal further with one who could so far forget
what he owed to the best interests of society, as to employ a boy who excited
Loathing in every respectable mind.</p>
<p>The coach, with Mr. Jaggers inside, came up in due time, and I took my box-seat
again, and arrived in London safe,—but not sound, for my heart was gone.
As soon as I arrived, I sent a penitential codfish and barrel of oysters to Joe
(as reparation for not having gone myself), and then went on to Barnard’s
Inn.</p>
<p>I found Herbert dining on cold meat, and delighted to welcome me back. Having
despatched The Avenger to the coffee-house for an addition to the dinner, I
felt that I must open my breast that very evening to my friend and chum. As
confidence was out of the question with The Avenger in the hall, which could
merely be regarded in the light of an antechamber to the keyhole, I sent him to
the Play. A better proof of the severity of my bondage to that taskmaster could
scarcely be afforded, than the degrading shifts to which I was constantly
driven to find him employment. So mean is extremity, that I sometimes sent him
to Hyde Park corner to see what o’clock it was.</p>
<p>Dinner done and we sitting with our feet upon the fender, I said to Herbert,
“My dear Herbert, I have something very particular to tell you.”</p>
<p>“My dear Handel,” he returned, “I shall esteem and respect
your confidence.”</p>
<p>“It concerns myself, Herbert,” said I, “and one other
person.”</p>
<p>Herbert crossed his feet, looked at the fire with his head on one side, and
having looked at it in vain for some time, looked at me because I didn’t
go on.</p>
<p>“Herbert,” said I, laying my hand upon his knee, “I
love—I adore—Estella.”</p>
<p>Instead of being transfixed, Herbert replied in an easy matter-of-course way,
“Exactly. Well?”</p>
<p>“Well, Herbert? Is that all you say? Well?”</p>
<p>“What next, I mean?” said Herbert. “Of course I know
<i>that</i>.”</p>
<p>“How do you know it?” said I.</p>
<p>“How do I know it, Handel? Why, from you.”</p>
<p>“I never told you.”</p>
<p>“Told me! You have never told me when you have got your hair cut, but I
have had senses to perceive it. You have always adored her, ever since I have
known you. You brought your adoration and your portmanteau here together. Told
me! Why, you have always told me all day long. When you told me your own story,
you told me plainly that you began adoring her the first time you saw her, when
you were very young indeed.”</p>
<p>“Very well, then,” said I, to whom this was a new and not unwelcome
light, “I have never left off adoring her. And she has come back, a most
beautiful and most elegant creature. And I saw her yesterday. And if I adored
her before, I now doubly adore her.”</p>
<p>“Lucky for you then, Handel,” said Herbert, “that you are
picked out for her and allotted to her. Without encroaching on forbidden
ground, we may venture to say that there can be no doubt between ourselves of
that fact. Have you any idea yet, of Estella’s views on the adoration
question?”</p>
<p>I shook my head gloomily. “Oh! She is thousands of miles away, from
me,” said I.</p>
<p>“Patience, my dear Handel: time enough, time enough. But you have
something more to say?”</p>
<p>“I am ashamed to say it,” I returned, “and yet it’s no
worse to say it than to think it. You call me a lucky fellow. Of course, I am.
I was a blacksmith’s boy but yesterday; I am—what shall I say I
am—to-day?”</p>
<p>“Say a good fellow, if you want a phrase,” returned Herbert,
smiling, and clapping his hand on the back of mine—“a good fellow,
with impetuosity and hesitation, boldness and diffidence, action and dreaming,
curiously mixed in him.”</p>
<p>I stopped for a moment to consider whether there really was this mixture in my
character. On the whole, I by no means recognised the analysis, but thought it
not worth disputing.</p>
<p>“When I ask what I am to call myself to-day, Herbert,” I went on,
“I suggest what I have in my thoughts. You say I am lucky. I know I have
done nothing to raise myself in life, and that Fortune alone has raised me;
that is being very lucky. And yet, when I think of Estella—”</p>
<p>(“And when don’t you, you know?” Herbert threw in, with his
eyes on the fire; which I thought kind and sympathetic of him.)</p>
<p>“—Then, my dear Herbert, I cannot tell you how dependent and
uncertain I feel, and how exposed to hundreds of chances. Avoiding forbidden
ground, as you did just now, I may still say that on the constancy of one
person (naming no person) all my expectations depend. And at the best, how
indefinite and unsatisfactory, only to know so vaguely what they are!” In
saying this, I relieved my mind of what had always been there, more or less,
though no doubt most since yesterday.</p>
<p>“Now, Handel,” Herbert replied, in his gay, hopeful way, “it
seems to me that in the despondency of the tender passion, we are looking into
our gift-horse’s mouth with a magnifying-glass. Likewise, it seems to me
that, concentrating our attention on the examination, we altogether overlook
one of the best points of the animal. Didn’t you tell me that your
guardian, Mr. Jaggers, told you in the beginning, that you were not endowed
with expectations only? And even if he had not told you so,—though that
is a very large If, I grant,—could you believe that of all men in London,
Mr. Jaggers is the man to hold his present relations towards you unless he were
sure of his ground?”</p>
<p>I said I could not deny that this was a strong point. I said it (people often
do so, in such cases) like a rather reluctant concession to truth and
justice;—as if I wanted to deny it!</p>
<p>“I should think it <i>was</i> a strong point,” said Herbert,
“and I should think you would be puzzled to imagine a stronger; as to the
rest, you must bide your guardian’s time, and he must bide his
client’s time. You’ll be one-and-twenty before you know where you
are, and then perhaps you’ll get some further enlightenment. At all
events, you’ll be nearer getting it, for it must come at last.”</p>
<p>“What a hopeful disposition you have!” said I, gratefully admiring
his cheery ways.</p>
<p>“I ought to have,” said Herbert, “for I have not much else. I
must acknowledge, by the by, that the good sense of what I have just said is
not my own, but my father’s. The only remark I ever heard him make on
your story, was the final one, “The thing is settled and done, or Mr.
Jaggers would not be in it.” And now before I say anything more about my
father, or my father’s son, and repay confidence with confidence, I want
to make myself seriously disagreeable to you for a moment,—positively
repulsive.”</p>
<p>“You won’t succeed,” said I.</p>
<p>“O yes I shall!” said he. “One, two, three, and now I am in
for it. Handel, my good fellow;”—though he spoke in this light
tone, he was very much in earnest,—“I have been thinking since we
have been talking with our feet on this fender, that Estella surely cannot be a
condition of your inheritance, if she was never referred to by your guardian.
Am I right in so understanding what you have told me, as that he never referred
to her, directly or indirectly, in any way? Never even hinted, for instance,
that your patron might have views as to your marriage ultimately?”</p>
<p>“Never.”</p>
<p>“Now, Handel, I am quite free from the flavour of sour grapes, upon my
soul and honour! Not being bound to her, can you not detach yourself from
her?—I told you I should be disagreeable.”</p>
<p>I turned my head aside, for, with a rush and a sweep, like the old marsh winds
coming up from the sea, a feeling like that which had subdued me on the morning
when I left the forge, when the mists were solemnly rising, and when I laid my
hand upon the village finger-post, smote upon my heart again. There was silence
between us for a little while.</p>
<p>“Yes; but my dear Handel,” Herbert went on, as if we had been
talking, instead of silent, “its having been so strongly rooted in the
breast of a boy whom nature and circumstances made so romantic, renders it very
serious. Think of her bringing-up, and think of Miss Havisham. Think of what
she is herself (now I am repulsive and you abominate me). This may lead to
miserable things.”</p>
<p>“I know it, Herbert,” said I, with my head still turned away,
“but I can’t help it.”</p>
<p>“You can’t detach yourself?”</p>
<p>“No. Impossible!”</p>
<p>“You can’t try, Handel?”</p>
<p>“No. Impossible!”</p>
<p>“Well!” said Herbert, getting up with a lively shake as if he had
been asleep, and stirring the fire, “now I’ll endeavour to make
myself agreeable again!”</p>
<p>So he went round the room and shook the curtains out, put the chairs in their
places, tidied the books and so forth that were lying about, looked into the
hall, peeped into the letter-box, shut the door, and came back to his chair by
the fire: where he sat down, nursing his left leg in both arms.</p>
<p>“I was going to say a word or two, Handel, concerning my father and my
father’s son. I am afraid it is scarcely necessary for my father’s
son to remark that my father’s establishment is not particularly
brilliant in its housekeeping.”</p>
<p>“There is always plenty, Herbert,” said I, to say something
encouraging.</p>
<p>“O yes! and so the dustman says, I believe, with the strongest approval,
and so does the marine-store shop in the back street. Gravely, Handel, for the
subject is grave enough, you know how it is as well as I do. I suppose there
was a time once when my father had not given matters up; but if ever there was,
the time is gone. May I ask you if you have ever had an opportunity of
remarking, down in your part of the country, that the children of not exactly
suitable marriages are always most particularly anxious to be married?”</p>
<p>This was such a singular question, that I asked him in return, “Is it
so?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” said Herbert, “that’s what I want
to know. Because it is decidedly the case with us. My poor sister Charlotte,
who was next me and died before she was fourteen, was a striking example.
Little Jane is the same. In her desire to be matrimonially established, you
might suppose her to have passed her short existence in the perpetual
contemplation of domestic bliss. Little Alick in a frock has already made
arrangements for his union with a suitable young person at Kew. And indeed, I
think we are all engaged, except the baby.”</p>
<p>“Then you are?” said I.</p>
<p>“I am,” said Herbert; “but it’s a secret.”</p>
<p>I assured him of my keeping the secret, and begged to be favoured with further
particulars. He had spoken so sensibly and feelingly of my weakness that I
wanted to know something about his strength.</p>
<p>“May I ask the name?” I said.</p>
<p>“Name of Clara,” said Herbert.</p>
<p>“Live in London?”</p>
<p>“Yes, perhaps I ought to mention,” said Herbert, who had become
curiously crestfallen and meek, since we entered on the interesting theme,
“that she is rather below my mother’s nonsensical family notions.
Her father had to do with the victualling of passenger-ships. I think he was a
species of purser.”</p>
<p>“What is he now?” said I.</p>
<p>“He’s an invalid now,” replied Herbert.</p>
<p>“Living on—?”</p>
<p>“On the first floor,” said Herbert. Which was not at all what I
meant, for I had intended my question to apply to his means. “I have
never seen him, for he has always kept his room overhead, since I have known
Clara. But I have heard him constantly. He makes tremendous rows,—roars,
and pegs at the floor with some frightful instrument.” In looking at me
and then laughing heartily, Herbert for the time recovered his usual lively
manner.</p>
<p>“Don’t you expect to see him?” said I.</p>
<p>“O yes, I constantly expect to see him,” returned Herbert,
“because I never hear him, without expecting him to come tumbling through
the ceiling. But I don’t know how long the rafters may hold.”</p>
<p>When he had once more laughed heartily, he became meek again, and told me that
the moment he began to realise Capital, it was his intention to marry this
young lady. He added as a self-evident proposition, engendering low spirits,
“But you <i>can’t</i> marry, you know, while you’re looking
about you.”</p>
<p>As we contemplated the fire, and as I thought what a difficult vision to
realise this same Capital sometimes was, I put my hands in my pockets. A folded
piece of paper in one of them attracting my attention, I opened it and found it
to be the play-bill I had received from Joe, relative to the celebrated
provincial amateur of Roscian renown. “And bless my heart,” I
involuntarily added aloud, “it’s to-night!”</p>
<p>This changed the subject in an instant, and made us hurriedly resolve to go to
the play. So, when I had pledged myself to comfort and abet Herbert in the
affair of his heart by all practicable and impracticable means, and when
Herbert had told me that his affianced already knew me by reputation and that I
should be presented to her, and when we had warmly shaken hands upon our mutual
confidence, we blew out our candles, made up our fire, locked our door, and
issued forth in quest of Mr. Wopsle and Denmark.</p>
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