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I
never
shall
forget
the
radiant
face
with
which
he
came
home
one
afternoon
,
and
told
me
,
as
a
mighty
piece
of
news
,
of
his
having
fallen
in
with
one
Clarriker
(
the
young
merchant
s
name
)
,
and
of
Clarriker
s
having
shown
an
extraordinary
inclination
towards
him
,
and
of
his
belief
that
the
opening
had
come
at
last
.
Day
by
day
as
his
hopes
grew
stronger
and
his
face
brighter
,
he
must
have
thought
me
a
more
and
more
affectionate
friend
,
for
I
had
the
greatest
difficulty
in
restraining
my
tears
of
triumph
when
I
saw
him
so
happy
.
At
length
,
the
thing
being
done
,
and
he
having
that
day
entered
Clarriker
s
House
,
and
he
having
talked
to
me
for
a
whole
evening
in
a
flush
of
pleasure
and
success
,
I
did
really
cry
in
good
earnest
when
I
went
to
bed
,
to
think
that
my
expectations
had
done
some
good
to
somebody
.
A
great
event
in
my
life
,
the
turning
point
of
my
life
,
now
opens
on
my
view
.
But
,
before
I
proceed
to
narrate
it
,
and
before
I
pass
on
to
all
the
changes
it
involved
,
I
must
give
one
chapter
to
Estella
.
It
is
not
much
to
give
to
the
theme
that
so
long
filled
my
heart
.
If
that
staid
old
house
near
the
Green
at
Richmond
should
ever
come
to
be
haunted
when
I
am
dead
,
it
will
be
haunted
,
surely
,
by
my
ghost
.
O
the
many
,
many
nights
and
days
through
which
the
unquiet
spirit
within
me
haunted
that
house
when
Estella
lived
there
!
Let
my
body
be
where
it
would
,
my
spirit
was
always
wandering
,
wandering
,
wandering
,
about
that
house
.
Отключить рекламу
The
lady
with
whom
Estella
was
placed
,
Mrs
.
Brandley
by
name
,
was
a
widow
,
with
one
daughter
several
years
older
than
Estella
.
The
mother
looked
young
,
and
the
daughter
looked
old
;
the
mother
s
complexion
was
pink
,
and
the
daughter
s
was
yellow
;
the
mother
set
up
for
frivolity
,
and
the
daughter
for
theology
.
They
were
in
what
is
called
a
good
position
,
and
visited
,
and
were
visited
by
,
numbers
of
people
.
Little
,
if
any
,
community
of
feeling
subsisted
between
them
and
Estella
,
but
the
understanding
was
established
that
they
were
necessary
to
her
,
and
that
she
was
necessary
to
them
.
Mrs
.
Brandley
had
been
a
friend
of
Miss
Havisham
s
before
the
time
of
her
seclusion
.
In
Mrs
.
Brandley
s
house
and
out
of
Mrs
.
Brandley
s
house
,
I
suffered
every
kind
and
degree
of
torture
that
Estella
could
cause
me
.
The
nature
of
my
relations
with
her
,
which
placed
me
on
terms
of
familiarity
without
placing
me
on
terms
of
favor
,
conduced
to
my
distraction
.
She
made
use
of
me
to
tease
other
admirers
,
and
she
turned
the
very
familiarity
between
herself
and
me
to
the
account
of
putting
a
constant
slight
on
my
devotion
to
her
.
If
I
had
been
her
secretary
,
steward
,
half
-
brother
,
poor
relation
if
I
had
been
a
younger
brother
of
her
appointed
husband
I
could
not
have
seemed
to
myself
further
from
my
hopes
when
I
was
nearest
to
her
.
The
privilege
of
calling
her
by
her
name
and
hearing
her
call
me
by
mine
became
,
under
the
circumstances
an
aggravation
of
my
trials
;
and
while
I
think
it
likely
that
it
almost
maddened
her
other
lovers
,
I
know
too
certainly
that
it
almost
maddened
me
.
She
had
admirers
without
end
.
No
doubt
my
jealousy
made
an
admirer
of
every
one
who
went
near
her
;
but
there
were
more
than
enough
of
them
without
that
.
Отключить рекламу
I
saw
her
often
at
Richmond
,
I
heard
of
her
often
in
town
,
and
I
used
often
to
take
her
and
the
Brandleys
on
the
water
;
there
were
picnics
,
fête
days
,
plays
,
operas
,
concerts
,
parties
,
all
sorts
of
pleasures
,
through
which
I
pursued
her
and
they
were
all
miseries
to
me
.
I
never
had
one
hour
s
happiness
in
her
society
,
and
yet
my
mind
all
round
the
four
-
and
-
twenty
hours
was
harping
on
the
happiness
of
having
her
with
me
unto
death
.
Throughout
this
part
of
our
intercourse
and
it
lasted
,
as
will
presently
be
seen
,
for
what
I
then
thought
a
long
time
she
habitually
reverted
to
that
tone
which
expressed
that
our
association
was
forced
upon
us
.
There
were
other
times
when
she
would
come
to
a
sudden
check
in
this
tone
and
in
all
her
many
tones
,
and
would
seem
to
pity
me
.
"
Pip
,
Pip
,
"
she
said
one
evening
,
coming
to
such
a
check
,
when
we
sat
apart
at
a
darkening
window
of
the
house
in
Richmond
;
"
will
you
never
take
warning
?
"