Great Expectations by Charles Dickens Chapter 54 Page 9

to be passive or resigned, as I understood it; but he had no notion of meeting danger half way. When it came upon him, he confronted it, but it must come before he troubled himself.

“If you knowed, dear boy,” he said to me, “what it is to sit here alonger my dear boy and have my smoke, arter having been day by day betwixt four walls, you'd envy me.

But you don't know what it is.”

“I think I know the delights of freedom,” I answered.

“Ah,” said he, shaking his head gravely. “But you don't know it equal to me. You must have been under lock and key, dear boy, to know it equal to me, — but I ain't a going to be low.