The house in the city preserved its heavy dulness through all these

transactions, and the invalid within it turned the same unvarying

round of life. Morning, noon, and night, morning, noon, and night, each

recurring with its accompanying monotony, always the same reluctant

return of the same sequences of machinery, like a dragging piece of

clockwork.

The wheeled chair had its associated remembrances and reveries, one may

suppose, as every place that is made the station of a human being has.

Pictures of demolished streets and altered houses, as they formerly were

when the occupant of the chair was familiar with them, images of people

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as they too used to be, with little or no allowance made for the lapse

of time since they were seen; of these, there must have been many in the

long routine of gloomy days. To stop the clock of busy existence at the

hour when we were personally sequestered from it, to suppose mankind

stricken motionless when we were brought to a stand-still, to be unable

to measure the changes beyond our view by any larger standard than

the shrunken one of our own uniform and contracted existence, is the

infirmity of many invalids, and the mental unhealthiness of almost all

recluses.

What scenes and actors the stern woman most reviewed, as she sat

from season to season in her one dark room, none knew but herself. Mr

Flintwinch, with his wry presence brought to bear upon her daily like

some eccentric mechanical force, would perhaps have screwed it out of

her, if there had been less resistance in her; but she was too strong

for him. So far as Mistress Affery was concerned, to regard her

liege-lord and her disabled mistress with a face of blank wonder, to

go about the house after dark with her apron over her head, always to

listen for the strange noises and sometimes to hear them, and never

to emerge from her ghostly, dreamy, sleep-waking state, was occupation

enough for her.

There was a fair stroke of business doing, as Mistress Affery made out,

for her husband had abundant occupation in his little office, and saw

more people than had been used to come there for some years. This might

easily be, the house having been long deserted; but he did receive

letters, and comers, and keep books, and correspond. Moreover, he went

about to other counting-houses, and to wharves, and docks, and to the

Custom House,' and to Garraway's Coffee House, and the Jerusalem Coffee

House, and on 'Change; so that he was much in and out. He began, too,

sometimes of an evening, when Mrs Clennam expressed no particular wish

for his society, to resort to a tavern in the neighbourhood to look at

the shipping news and closing prices in the evening paper, and even to

exchange Small socialities with mercantile Sea Captains who frequented

that establishment.