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- Чарльз Диккенс
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"
Can
I
take
you
,
Estella
!
"
"
You
can
then
?
The
day
after
to
-
morrow
,
if
you
please
.
You
are
to
pay
all
charges
out
of
my
purse
,
You
hear
the
condition
of
your
going
?
"
"
And
must
obey
,
"
said
I
.
This
was
all
the
preparation
I
received
for
that
visit
,
or
for
others
like
it
;
Miss
Havisham
never
wrote
to
me
,
nor
had
I
ever
so
much
as
seen
her
handwriting
.
We
went
down
on
the
next
day
but
one
,
and
we
found
her
in
the
room
where
I
had
first
beheld
her
,
and
it
is
needless
to
add
that
there
was
no
change
in
Satis
House
.
She
was
even
more
dreadfully
fond
of
Estella
than
she
had
been
when
I
last
saw
them
together
;
I
repeat
the
word
advisedly
,
for
there
was
something
positively
dreadful
in
the
energy
of
her
looks
and
embraces
.
She
hung
upon
Estella
’
s
beauty
,
hung
upon
her
words
,
hung
upon
her
gestures
,
and
sat
mumbling
her
own
trembling
fingers
while
she
looked
at
her
,
as
though
she
were
devouring
the
beautiful
creature
she
had
reared
.
From
Estella
she
looked
at
me
,
with
a
searching
glance
that
seemed
to
pry
into
my
heart
and
probe
its
wounds
.
"
How
does
she
use
you
,
Pip
;
how
does
she
use
you
?
"
she
asked
me
again
,
with
her
witch
-
like
eagerness
,
even
in
Estella
’
s
hearing
.
But
,
when
we
sat
by
her
flickering
fire
at
night
,
she
was
most
weird
;
for
then
,
keeping
Estella
’
s
hand
drawn
through
her
arm
and
clutched
in
her
own
hand
,
she
extorted
from
her
,
by
dint
of
referring
back
to
what
Estella
had
told
her
in
her
regular
letters
,
the
names
and
conditions
of
the
men
whom
she
had
fascinated
;
and
as
Miss
Havisham
dwelt
upon
this
roll
,
with
the
intensity
of
a
mind
mortally
hurt
and
diseased
,
she
sat
with
her
other
hand
on
her
crutch
stick
,
and
her
chin
on
that
,
and
her
wan
bright
eyes
glaring
at
me
,
a
very
spectre
.
I
saw
in
this
,
wretched
though
it
made
me
,
and
bitter
the
sense
of
dependence
and
even
of
degradation
that
it
awakened
—
I
saw
in
this
that
Estella
was
set
to
wreak
Miss
Havisham
’
s
revenge
on
men
,
and
that
she
was
not
to
be
given
to
me
until
she
had
gratified
it
for
a
term
.
I
saw
in
this
,
a
reason
for
her
being
beforehand
assigned
to
me
.
Sending
her
out
to
attract
and
torment
and
do
mischief
,
Miss
Havisham
sent
her
with
the
malicious
assurance
that
she
was
beyond
the
reach
of
all
admirers
,
and
that
all
who
staked
upon
that
cast
were
secured
to
lose
.
I
saw
in
this
that
I
,
too
,
was
tormented
by
a
perversion
of
ingenuity
,
even
while
the
prize
was
reserved
for
me
.
I
saw
in
this
the
reason
for
my
being
staved
off
so
long
and
the
reason
for
my
late
guardian
’
s
declining
to
commit
himself
to
the
formal
knowledge
of
such
a
scheme
.
In
a
word
,
I
saw
in
this
Miss
Havisham
as
I
had
her
then
and
there
before
my
eyes
,
and
always
had
had
her
before
my
eyes
;
and
I
saw
in
this
,
the
distinct
shadow
of
the
darkened
and
unhealthy
house
in
which
her
life
was
hidden
from
the
sun
.
The
candles
that
lighted
that
room
of
hers
were
placed
in
sconces
on
the
wall
.
They
were
high
from
the
ground
,
and
they
burnt
with
the
steady
dulness
of
artificial
light
in
air
that
is
seldom
renewed
.
As
I
looked
round
at
them
,
and
at
the
pale
gloom
they
made
,
and
at
the
stopped
clock
,
and
at
the
withered
articles
of
bridal
dress
upon
the
table
and
the
ground
,
and
at
her
own
awful
figure
with
its
ghostly
reflection
thrown
large
by
the
fire
upon
the
ceiling
and
the
wall
,
I
saw
in
everything
the
construction
that
my
mind
had
come
to
,
repeated
and
thrown
back
to
me
.
My
thoughts
passed
into
the
great
room
across
the
landing
where
the
table
was
spread
,
and
I
saw
it
written
,
as
it
were
,
in
the
falls
of
the
cobwebs
from
the
centre
-
piece
,
in
the
crawlings
of
the
spiders
on
the
cloth
,
in
the
tracks
of
the
mice
as
they
betook
their
little
quickened
hearts
behind
the
panels
,
and
in
the
gropings
and
pausings
of
the
beetles
on
the
floor
.