I now fell into a regular routine of apprenticeship life, which was

varied beyond the limits of the village and the marshes, by no more

remarkable circumstance than the arrival of my birthday and my paying

another visit to Miss Havisham. I found Miss Sarah Pocket still on duty

at the gate; I found Miss Havisham just as I had left her, and she spoke

of Estella in the very same way, if not in the very same words. The

interview lasted but a few minutes, and she gave me a guinea when I was

going, and told me to come again on my next birthday. I may mention at

once that this became an annual custom. I tried to decline taking the

guinea on the first occasion, but with no better effect than causing her

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to ask me very angrily, if I expected more? Then, and after that, I took

it.

So unchanging was the dull old house, the yellow light in the darkened

room, the faded spectre in the chair by the dressing-table glass, that

I felt as if the stopping of the clocks had stopped Time in that

mysterious place, and, while I and everything else outside it grew

older, it stood still. Daylight never entered the house as to my

thoughts and remembrances of it, any more than as to the actual fact. It

bewildered me, and under its influence I continued at heart to hate my

trade and to be ashamed of home.

Imperceptibly I became conscious of a change in Biddy, however. Her

shoes came up at the heel, her hair grew bright and neat, her hands were

always clean. She was not beautiful,--she was common, and could not be

like Estella,--but she was pleasant and wholesome and sweet-tempered.

She had not been with us more than a year (I remember her being newly

out of mourning at the time it struck me), when I observed to myself one

evening that she had curiously thoughtful and attentive eyes; eyes that

were very pretty and very good.

It came of my lifting up my own eyes from a task I was poring

at--writing some passages from a book, to improve myself in two ways at

once by a sort of stratagem--and seeing Biddy observant of what I was

about. I laid down my pen, and Biddy stopped in her needlework without

laying it down.

"Biddy," said I, "how do you manage it? Either I am very stupid, or you

are very clever."

"What is it that I manage? I don't know," returned Biddy, smiling.

She managed our whole domestic life, and wonderfully too; but I did not

mean that, though that made what I did mean more surprising.




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