CHAPTER 10
I BECOME NEGLECTED, AND AM PROVIDED FOR
The first act of business Miss Murdstone
performed when the day of the solemnity was over,
and light was freely admitted into the house, was
to give Peggotty a month’s warning. Much
as Peggotty would have disliked such a service, I
believe she would have retained it, for my sake, in
preference to the best upon earth. She told me
we must part, and told me why; and we condoled with
one another, in all sincerity.
As to me or my future, not a word
was said, or a step taken. Happy they would
have been, I dare say, if they could have dismissed
me at a month’s warning too. I mustered
courage once, to ask Miss Murdstone when I was going
back to school; and she answered dryly, she believed
I was not going back at all. I was told nothing
more. I was very anxious to know what was going
to be done with me, and so was Peggotty; but neither
she nor I could pick up any information on the subject.
There was one change in my condition,
which, while it relieved me of a great deal of present
uneasiness, might have made me, if I had been capable
of considering it closely, yet more uncomfortable
about the future. It was this. The constraint
that had been put upon me, was quite abandoned.
I was so far from being required to keep my dull
post in the parlour, that on several occasions, when
I took my seat there, Miss Murdstone frowned to me
to go away. I was so far from being warned off
from Peggotty’s society, that, provided I was
not in Mr. Murdstone’s, I was never sought out
or inquired for. At first I was in daily dread
of his taking my education in hand again, or of Miss
Murdstone’s devoting herself to it; but I soon
began to think that such fears were groundless, and
that all I had to anticipate was neglect.
I do not conceive that this discovery
gave me much pain then. I was still giddy with
the shock of my mother’s death, and in a kind
of stunned state as to all tributary things.
I can recollect, indeed, to have speculated, at odd
times, on the possibility of my not being taught any
more, or cared for any more; and growing up to be
a shabby, moody man, lounging an idle life away, about
the village; as well as on the feasibility of my getting
rid of this picture by going away somewhere, like
the hero in a story, to seek my fortune: but
these were transient visions, daydreams I sat looking
at sometimes, as if they were faintly painted or written
on the wall of my room, and which, as they melted
away, left the wall blank again.
‘Peggotty,’ I said in
a thoughtful whisper, one evening, when I was warming
my hands at the kitchen fire, ’Mr. Murdstone
likes me less than he used to. He never liked
me much, Peggotty; but he would rather not even see
me now, if he can help it.’
‘Perhaps it’s his sorrow,’
said Peggotty, stroking my hair.
’I am sure, Peggotty, I am sorry
too. If I believed it was his sorrow, I should
not think of it at all. But it’s not that;
oh, no, it’s not that.’
‘How do you know it’s
not that?’ said Peggotty, after a silence.
’Oh, his sorrow is another and
quite a different thing. He is sorry at this
moment, sitting by the fireside with Miss Murdstone;
but if I was to go in, Peggotty, he would be something
besides.’
‘What would he be?’ said Peggotty.
‘Angry,’ I answered, with
an involuntary imitation of his dark frown.
’If he was only sorry, he wouldn’t look
at me as he does. I am only sorry, and it makes
me feel kinder.’
Peggotty said nothing for a little
while; and I warmed my hands, as silent as she.
‘Davy,’ she said at length.
‘Yes, Peggotty?’ ’I
have tried, my dear, all ways I could think of —
all the ways there are, and all the ways there ain’t,
in short — to get a suitable service here, in
Blunderstone; but there’s no such a thing, my
love.’
‘And what do you mean to do,
Peggotty,’ says I, wistfully. ’Do
you mean to go and seek your fortune?’
‘I expect I shall be forced
to go to Yarmouth,’ replied Peggotty, ‘and
live there.’
‘You might have gone farther
off,’ I said, brightening a little, ’and
been as bad as lost. I shall see you sometimes,
my dear old Peggotty, there. You won’t
be quite at the other end of the world, will you?’
‘Contrary ways, please God!’
cried Peggotty, with great animation. ’As
long as you are here, my pet, I shall come over every
week of my life to see you. One day, every week
of my life!’
I felt a great weight taken off my
mind by this promise: but even this was not all,
for Peggotty went on to say:
’I’m a-going, Davy, you
see, to my brother’s, first, for another fortnight’s
visit — just till I have had time to look about
me, and get to be something like myself again.
Now, I have been thinking that perhaps, as they don’t
want you here at present, you might be let to go along
with me.’
If anything, short of being in a different
relation to every one about me, Peggotty excepted,
could have given me a sense of pleasure at that time,
it would have been this project of all others.
The idea of being again surrounded by those honest
faces, shining welcome on me; of renewing the peacefulness
of the sweet Sunday morning, when the bells were ringing,
the stones dropping in the water, and the shadowy
ships breaking through the mist; of roaming up and
down with little Em’ly, telling her my troubles,
and finding charms against them in the shells and
pebbles on the beach; made a calm in my heart.
It was ruffled next moment, to be sure, by a doubt
of Miss Murdstone’s giving her consent; but even
that was set at rest soon, for she came out to take
an evening grope in the store-closet while we were
yet in conversation, and Peggotty, with a boldness
that amazed me, broached the topic on the spot.
‘The boy will be idle there,’
said Miss Murdstone, looking into a pickle-jar, ’and
idleness is the root of all evil. But, to be
sure, he would be idle here — or anywhere, in
my opinion.’
Peggotty had an angry answer ready,
I could see; but she swallowed it for my sake, and
remained silent.
‘Humph!’ said Miss Murdstone,
still keeping her eye on the pickles; ’it is
of more importance than anything else — it is
of paramount importance — that my brother should
not be disturbed or made uncomfortable. I suppose
I had better say yes.’
I thanked her, without making any
demonstration of joy, lest it should induce her to
withdraw her assent. Nor could I help thinking
this a prudent course, since she looked at me out of
the pickle-jar, with as great an access of sourness
as if her black eyes had absorbed its contents.
However, the permission was given, and was never
retracted; for when the month was out, Peggotty and
I were ready to depart.
Mr. Barkis came into the house for
Peggotty’s boxes. I had never known him
to pass the garden-gate before, but on this occasion
he came into the house. And he gave me a look
as he shouldered the largest box and went out, which
I thought had meaning in it, if meaning could ever
be said to find its way into Mr. Barkis’s visage.
Peggotty was naturally in low spirits
at leaving what had been her home so many years, and
where the two strong attachments of her life —
for my mother and myself — had been formed.
She had been walking in the churchyard, too, very
early; and she got into the cart, and sat in it with
her handkerchief at her eyes.
So long as she remained in this condition,
Mr. Barkis gave no sign of life whatever. He
sat in his usual place and attitude like a great stuffed
figure. But when she began to look about her,
and to speak to me, he nodded his head and grinned
several times. I have not the least notion at
whom, or what he meant by it.
‘It’s a beautiful day,
Mr. Barkis!’ I said, as an act of politeness.
‘It ain’t bad,’
said Mr. Barkis, who generally qualified his speech,
and rarely committed himself.
‘Peggotty is quite comfortable
now, Mr. Barkis,’ I remarked, for his satisfaction.
‘Is she, though?’ said Mr. Barkis.
After reflecting about it, with a
sagacious air, Mr. Barkis eyed her, and said:
‘Are you pretty comfortable?’
Peggotty laughed, and answered in the affirmative.
‘But really and truly, you know.
Are you?’ growled Mr. Barkis, sliding nearer
to her on the seat, and nudging her with his elbow.
‘Are you? Really and truly pretty comfortable?
Are you? Eh?’
At each of these inquiries Mr. Barkis
shuffled nearer to her, and gave her another nudge;
so that at last we were all crowded together in the
left-hand corner of the cart, and I was so squeezed
that I could hardly bear it.
Peggotty calling his attention to
my sufferings, Mr. Barkis gave me a little more room
at once, and got away by degrees. But I could
not help observing that he seemed to think he had hit
upon a wonderful expedient for expressing himself
in a neat, agreeable, and pointed manner, without
the inconvenience of inventing conversation.
He manifestly chuckled over it for some time.
By and by he turned to Peggotty again, and repeating,
’Are you pretty comfortable though?’ bore
down upon us as before, until the breath was nearly
edged out of my body. By and by he made another
descent upon us with the same inquiry, and the same
result. At length, I got up whenever I saw him
coming, and standing on the foot-board, pretended
to look at the prospect; after which I did very well.
He was so polite as to stop at a public-house,
expressly on our account, and entertain us with broiled
mutton and beer. Even when Peggotty was in the
act of drinking, he was seized with one of those approaches,
and almost choked her. But as we drew nearer
to the end of our journey, he had more to do and less
time for gallantry; and when we got on Yarmouth pavement,
we were all too much shaken and jolted, I apprehend,
to have any leisure for anything else.
Mr. Peggotty and Ham waited for us
at the old place. They received me and Peggotty
in an affectionate manner, and shook hands with Mr.
Barkis, who, with his hat on the very back of his head,
and a shame-faced leer upon his countenance, and pervading
his very legs, presented but a vacant appearance,
I thought. They each took one of Peggotty’s
trunks, and we were going away, when Mr. Barkis solemnly
made a sign to me with his forefinger to come under
an archway.
‘I say,’ growled Mr. Barkis, ‘it
was all right.’
I looked up into his face, and answered,
with an attempt to be very profound: ‘Oh!’
‘It didn’t come to a end
there,’ said Mr. Barkis, nodding confidentially.
‘It was all right.’
Again I answered, ‘Oh!’
‘You know who was willin’,’
said my friend. ’It was Barkis, and Barkis
only.’
I nodded assent.
‘It’s all right,’
said Mr. Barkis, shaking hands; ’I’m a
friend of your’n. You made it all right,
first. It’s all right.’
In his attempts to be particularly
lucid, Mr. Barkis was so extremely mysterious, that
I might have stood looking in his face for an hour,
and most assuredly should have got as much information
out of it as out of the face of a clock that had stopped,
but for Peggotty’s calling me away. As
we were going along, she asked me what he had said;
and I told her he had said it was all right.
‘Like his impudence,’
said Peggotty, ’but I don’t mind that!
Davy dear, what should you think if I was to think
of being married?’
’Why — I suppose you would
like me as much then, Peggotty, as you do now?’
I returned, after a little consideration.
Greatly to the astonishment of the
passengers in the street, as well as of her relations
going on before, the good soul was obliged to stop
and embrace me on the spot, with many protestations
of her unalterable love.
‘Tell me what should you say,
darling?’ she asked again, when this was over,
and we were walking on.
‘If you were thinking of being
married — to Mr. Barkis, Peggotty?’
‘Yes,’ said Peggotty.
’I should think it would be
a very good thing. For then you know, Peggotty,
you would always have the horse and cart to bring you
over to see me, and could come for nothing, and be
sure of coming.’
‘The sense of the dear!’
cried Peggotty. ’What I have been thinking
of, this month back! Yes, my precious; and I
think I should be more independent altogether, you
see; let alone my working with a better heart in my
own house, than I could in anybody else’s now.
I don’t know what I might be fit for, now, as
a servant to a stranger. And I shall be always
near my pretty’s resting-place,’ said
Peggotty, musing, ’and be able to see it when
I like; and when I lie down to rest, I may be laid
not far off from my darling girl!’
We neither of us said anything for a little while.
‘But I wouldn’t so much
as give it another thought,’ said Peggotty,
cheerily ’if my Davy was anyways against it —
not if I had been asked in church thirty times three
times over, and was wearing out the ring in my pocket.’
‘Look at me, Peggotty,’
I replied; ’and see if I am not really glad,
and don’t truly wish it!’ As indeed I
did, with all my heart.
‘Well, my life,’ said
Peggotty, giving me a squeeze, ’I have thought
of it night and day, every way I can, and I hope the
right way; but I’ll think of it again, and speak
to my brother about it, and in the meantime we’ll
keep it to ourselves, Davy, you and me. Barkis
is a good plain creature,’ said Peggotty, ’and
if I tried to do my duty by him, I think it would
be my fault if I wasn’t — if I wasn’t
pretty comfortable,’ said Peggotty, laughing
heartily. This quotation from Mr. Barkis was
so appropriate, and tickled us both so much, that
we laughed again and again, and were quite in a pleasant
humour when we came within view of Mr. Peggotty’s
cottage.
It looked just the same, except that
it may, perhaps, have shrunk a little in my eyes;
and Mrs. Gummidge was waiting at the door as if she
had stood there ever since. All within was the
same, down to the seaweed in the blue mug in my bedroom.
I went into the out-house to look about me; and the
very same lobsters, crabs, and crawfish possessed
by the same desire to pinch the world in general,
appeared to be in the same state of conglomeration
in the same old corner.
But there was no little Em’ly
to be seen, so I asked Mr. Peggotty where she was.
‘She’s at school, sir,’
said Mr. Peggotty, wiping the heat consequent on the
porterage of Peggotty’s box from his forehead;
‘she’ll be home,’ looking at the
Dutch clock, ’in from twenty minutes to half-an-hour’s
time. We all on us feel the loss of her, bless
ye!’
Mrs. Gummidge moaned.
‘Cheer up, Mawther!’ cried Mr. Peggotty.
‘I feel it more than anybody
else,’ said Mrs. Gummidge; ’I’m a
lone lorn creetur’, and she used to be a’most
the only thing that didn’t go contrary with
me.’
Mrs. Gummidge, whimpering and shaking
her head, applied herself to blowing the fire.
Mr. Peggotty, looking round upon us while she was
so engaged, said in a low voice, which he shaded with
his hand: ’The old ‘un!’ From
this I rightly conjectured that no improvement had
taken place since my last visit in the state of Mrs.
Gummidge’s spirits.
Now, the whole place was, or it should
have been, quite as delightful a place as ever; and
yet it did not impress me in the same way. I
felt rather disappointed with it. Perhaps it
was because little Em’ly was not at home.
I knew the way by which she would come, and presently
found myself strolling along the path to meet her.
A figure appeared in the distance
before long, and I soon knew it to be Em’ly,
who was a little creature still in stature, though
she was grown. But when she drew nearer, and
I saw her blue eyes looking bluer, and her dimpled
face looking brighter, and her whole self prettier
and gayer, a curious feeling came over me that made
me pretend not to know her, and pass by as if I were
looking at something a long way off. I have
done such a thing since in later life, or I am mistaken.
Little Em’ly didn’t care
a bit. She saw me well enough; but instead of
turning round and calling after me, ran away laughing.
This obliged me to run after her, and she ran so fast
that we were very near the cottage before I caught
her.
‘Oh, it’s you, is it?’ said little
Em’ly.
‘Why, you knew who it was, Em’ly,’
said I.
‘And didn’t you know
who it was?’ said Em’ly. I was going
to kiss her, but she covered her cherry lips with
her hands, and said she wasn’t a baby now, and
ran away, laughing more than ever, into the house.
She seemed to delight in teasing me,
which was a change in her I wondered at very much.
The tea table was ready, and our little locker was
put out in its old place, but instead of coming to
sit by me, she went and bestowed her company upon
that grumbling Mrs. Gummidge: and on Mr. Peggotty’s
inquiring why, rumpled her hair all over her face
to hide it, and could do nothing but laugh.
‘A little puss, it is!’
said Mr. Peggotty, patting her with his great hand.
‘So sh’ is! so sh’
is!’ cried Ham. ‘Mas’r Davy
bor’, so sh’ is!’ and he sat and
chuckled at her for some time, in a state of mingled
admiration and delight, that made his face a burning
red.
Little Em’ly was spoiled by
them all, in fact; and by no one more than Mr. Peggotty
himself, whom she could have coaxed into anything,
by only going and laying her cheek against his rough
whisker. That was my opinion, at least, when
I saw her do it; and I held Mr. Peggotty to be thoroughly
in the right. But she was so affectionate and
sweet-natured, and had such a pleasant manner of being
both sly and shy at once, that she captivated me more
than ever.
She was tender-hearted, too; for when,
as we sat round the fire after tea, an allusion was
made by Mr. Peggotty over his pipe to the loss I had
sustained, the tears stood in her eyes, and she looked
at me so kindly across the table, that I felt quite
thankful to her.
‘Ah!’ said Mr. Peggotty,
taking up her curls, and running them over his hand
like water, ’here’s another orphan, you
see, sir. And here,’ said Mr. Peggotty,
giving Ham a backhanded knock in the chest, ’is
another of ’em, though he don’t look much
like it.’
‘If I had you for my guardian,
Mr. Peggotty,’ said I, shaking my head, ‘I
don’t think I should feel much like it.’
‘Well said, Mas’r Davy
bor’!’ cried Ham, in an ecstasy.
’Hoorah! Well said! Nor more you
wouldn’t! Hor! Hor!’ —
Here he returned Mr. Peggotty’s back-hander,
and little Em’ly got up and kissed Mr. Peggotty.
‘And how’s your friend, sir?’ said
Mr. Peggotty to me.
‘Steerforth?’ said I.
‘That’s the name!’
cried Mr. Peggotty, turning to Ham. ’I
knowed it was something in our way.’
‘You said it was Rudderford,’ observed
Ham, laughing.
‘Well!’ retorted Mr. Peggotty.
’And ye steer with a rudder, don’t ye?
It ain’t fur off. How is he, sir?’
‘He was very well indeed when
I came away, Mr. Peggotty.’
‘There’s a friend!’
said Mr. Peggotty, stretching out his pipe. ’There’s
a friend, if you talk of friends! Why, Lord love
my heart alive, if it ain’t a treat to look
at him!’
‘He is very handsome, is he
not?’ said I, my heart warming with this praise.
‘Handsome!’ cried Mr.
Peggotty. ’He stands up to you like —
like a — why I don’t know what he don’t
stand up to you like. He’s so bold!’
‘Yes! That’s just
his character,’ said I. ’He’s
as brave as a lion, and you can’t think how
frank he is, Mr. Peggotty.’
‘And I do suppose, now,’
said Mr. Peggotty, looking at me through the smoke
of his pipe, ’that in the way of book-larning
he’d take the wind out of a’most anything.’
‘Yes,’ said I, delighted;
’he knows everything. He is astonishingly
clever.’
‘There’s a friend!’
murmured Mr. Peggotty, with a grave toss of his head.
‘Nothing seems to cost him any
trouble,’ said I. ’He knows a task
if he only looks at it. He is the best cricketer
you ever saw. He will give you almost as many
men as you like at draughts, and beat you easily.’
Mr. Peggotty gave his head another
toss, as much as to say: ’Of course he
will.’
‘He is such a speaker,’
I pursued, ’that he can win anybody over; and
I don’t know what you’d say if you were
to hear him sing, Mr. Peggotty.’
Mr. Peggotty gave his head another
toss, as much as to say: ’I have no doubt
of it.’
‘Then, he’s such a generous,
fine, noble fellow,’ said I, quite carried away
by my favourite theme, ’that it’s hardly
possible to give him as much praise as he deserves.
I am sure I can never feel thankful enough for the
generosity with which he has protected me, so much
younger and lower in the school than himself.’
I was running on, very fast indeed,
when my eyes rested on little Em’ly’s
face, which was bent forward over the table, listening
with the deepest attention, her breath held, her blue
eyes sparkling like jewels, and the colour mantling
in her cheeks. She looked so extraordinarily
earnest and pretty, that I stopped in a sort of wonder;
and they all observed her at the same time, for as
I stopped, they laughed and looked at her.
‘Em’ly is like me,’
said Peggotty, ‘and would like to see him.’
Em’ly was confused by our all
observing her, and hung down her head, and her face
was covered with blushes. Glancing up presently
through her stray curls, and seeing that we were all
looking at her still (I am sure I, for one, could
have looked at her for hours), she ran away, and kept
away till it was nearly bedtime.
I lay down in the old little bed in
the stern of the boat, and the wind came moaning on
across the flat as it had done before. But I
could not help fancying, now, that it moaned of those
who were gone; and instead of thinking that the sea
might rise in the night and float the boat away, I
thought of the sea that had risen, since I last heard
those sounds, and drowned my happy home. I recollect,
as the wind and water began to sound fainter in my
ears, putting a short clause into my prayers, petitioning
that I might grow up to marry little Em’ly,
and so dropping lovingly asleep.
The days passed pretty much as they
had passed before, except — it was a great exception-
that little Em’ly and I seldom wandered on the
beach now. She had tasks to learn, and needle-work
to do; and was absent during a great part of each
day. But I felt that we should not have had
those old wanderings, even if it had been otherwise.
Wild and full of childish whims as Em’ly was,
she was more of a little woman than I had supposed.
She seemed to have got a great distance away from
me, in little more than a year. She liked me,
but she laughed at me, and tormented me; and when I
went to meet her, stole home another way, and was
laughing at the door when I came back, disappointed.
The best times were when she sat quietly at work
in the doorway, and I sat on the wooden step at her
feet, reading to her. It seems to me, at this
hour, that I have never seen such sunlight as on those
bright April afternoons; that I have never seen such
a sunny little figure as I used to see, sitting in
the doorway of the old boat; that I have never beheld
such sky, such water, such glorified ships sailing
away into golden air.
On the very first evening after our
arrival, Mr. Barkis appeared in an exceedingly vacant
and awkward condition, and with a bundle of oranges
tied up in a handkerchief. As he made no allusion
of any kind to this property, he was supposed to have
left it behind him by accident when he went away;
until Ham, running after him to restore it, came back
with the information that it was intended for Peggotty.
After that occasion he appeared every evening at exactly
the same hour, and always with a little bundle, to
which he never alluded, and which he regularly put
behind the door and left there. These offerings
of affection were of a most various and eccentric
description. Among them I remember a double set
of pigs’ trotters, a huge pin-cushion, half
a bushel or so of apples, a pair of jet earrings,
some Spanish onions, a box of dominoes, a canary bird
and cage, and a leg of pickled pork.
Mr. Barkis’s wooing, as I remember
it, was altogether of a peculiar kind. He very
seldom said anything; but would sit by the fire in
much the same attitude as he sat in his cart, and stare
heavily at Peggotty, who was opposite. One night,
being, as I suppose, inspired by love, he made a dart
at the bit of wax-candle she kept for her thread,
and put it in his waistcoat-pocket and carried it
off. After that, his great delight was to produce
it when it was wanted, sticking to the lining of his
pocket, in a partially melted state, and pocket it
again when it was done with. He seemed to enjoy
himself very much, and not to feel at all called upon
to talk. Even when he took Peggotty out for
a walk on the flats, he had no uneasiness on that
head, I believe; contenting himself with now and then
asking her if she was pretty comfortable; and I remember
that sometimes, after he was gone, Peggotty would throw
her apron over her face, and laugh for half-an-hour.
Indeed, we were all more or less amused, except that
miserable Mrs. Gummidge, whose courtship would appear
to have been of an exactly parallel nature, she was
so continually reminded by these transactions of the
old one.
At length, when the term of my visit
was nearly expired, it was given out that Peggotty
and Mr. Barkis were going to make a day’s holiday
together, and that little Em’ly and I were to
accompany them. I had but a broken sleep the
night before, in anticipation of the pleasure of a
whole day with Em’ly. We were all astir
betimes in the morning; and while we were yet at breakfast,
Mr. Barkis appeared in the distance, driving a chaise-cart
towards the object of his affections.
Peggotty was dressed as usual, in
her neat and quiet mourning; but Mr. Barkis bloomed
in a new blue coat, of which the tailor had given
him such good measure, that the cuffs would have rendered
gloves unnecessary in the coldest weather, while the
collar was so high that it pushed his hair up on end
on the top of his head. His bright buttons,
too, were of the largest size. Rendered complete
by drab pantaloons and a buff waistcoat, I thought
Mr. Barkis a phenomenon of respectability.
When we were all in a bustle outside
the door, I found that Mr. Peggotty was prepared with
an old shoe, which was to be thrown after us for luck,
and which he offered to Mrs. Gummidge for that purpose.
‘No. It had better be
done by somebody else, Dan’l,’ said Mrs.
Gummidge. ‘I’m a lone lorn creetur’
myself, and everythink that reminds me of creetur’s
that ain’t lone and lorn, goes contrary with
me.’
‘Come, old gal!’ cried
Mr. Peggotty. ‘Take and heave it.’
‘No, Dan’l,’ returned
Mrs. Gummidge, whimpering and shaking her head.
’If I felt less, I could do more. You
don’t feel like me, Dan’l; thinks don’t
go contrary with you, nor you with them; you had better
do it yourself.’
But here Peggotty, who had been going
about from one to another in a hurried way, kissing
everybody, called out from the cart, in which we all
were by this time (Em’ly and I on two little
chairs, side by side), that Mrs. Gummidge must do
it. So Mrs. Gummidge did it; and, I am sorry
to relate, cast a damp upon the festive character
of our departure, by immediately bursting into tears,
and sinking subdued into the arms of Ham, with the
declaration that she knowed she was a burden, and
had better be carried to the House at once.
Which I really thought was a sensible idea, that Ham
might have acted on.
Away we went, however, on our holiday
excursion; and the first thing we did was to stop
at a church, where Mr. Barkis tied the horse to some
rails, and went in with Peggotty, leaving little Em’ly
and me alone in the chaise. I took that occasion
to put my arm round Em’ly’s waist, and
propose that as I was going away so very soon now,
we should determine to be very affectionate to one
another, and very happy, all day. Little Em’ly
consenting, and allowing me to kiss her, I became
desperate; informing her, I recollect, that I never
could love another, and that I was prepared to shed
the blood of anybody who should aspire to her affections.
How merry little Em’ly made
herself about it! With what a demure assumption
of being immensely older and wiser than I, the fairy
little woman said I was ‘a silly boy’;
and then laughed so charmingly that I forgot the pain
of being called by that disparaging name, in the pleasure
of looking at her.
Mr. Barkis and Peggotty were a good
while in the church, but came out at last, and then
we drove away into the country. As we were going
along, Mr. Barkis turned to me, and said, with a wink,
— by the by, I should hardly have thought, before,
that he could wink:
‘What name was it as I wrote up in the cart?’
‘Clara Peggotty,’ I answered.
’What name would it be as I
should write up now, if there was a tilt here?’
‘Clara Peggotty, again?’ I suggested.
‘Clara Peggotty Barkis!’
he returned, and burst into a roar of laughter that
shook the chaise.
In a word, they were married, and
had gone into the church for no other purpose.
Peggotty was resolved that it should be quietly done;
and the clerk had given her away, and there had been
no witnesses of the ceremony. She was a little
confused when Mr. Barkis made this abrupt announcement
of their union, and could not hug me enough in token
of her unimpaired affection; but she soon became herself
again, and said she was very glad it was over.
We drove to a little inn in a by-road,
where we were expected, and where we had a very comfortable
dinner, and passed the day with great satisfaction.
If Peggotty had been married every day for the last
ten years, she could hardly have been more at her ease
about it; it made no sort of difference in her:
she was just the same as ever, and went out for a
stroll with little Em’ly and me before tea,
while Mr. Barkis philosophically smoked his pipe, and
enjoyed himself, I suppose, with the contemplation
of his happiness. If so, it sharpened his appetite;
for I distinctly call to mind that, although he had
eaten a good deal of pork and greens at dinner, and
had finished off with a fowl or two, he was obliged
to have cold boiled bacon for tea, and disposed of
a large quantity without any emotion.
I have often thought, since, what
an odd, innocent, out-of-the-way kind of wedding it
must have been! We got into the chaise again
soon after dark, and drove cosily back, looking up
at the stars, and talking about them. I was
their chief exponent, and opened Mr. Barkis’s
mind to an amazing extent. I told him all I knew,
but he would have believed anything I might have taken
it into my head to impart to him; for he had a profound
veneration for my abilities, and informed his wife
in my hearing, on that very occasion, that I was ‘a
young Roeshus’ — by which I think he meant
prodigy.
When we had exhausted the subject
of the stars, or rather when I had exhausted the mental
faculties of Mr. Barkis, little Em’ly and I
made a cloak of an old wrapper, and sat under it for
the rest of the journey. Ah, how I loved her!
What happiness (I thought) if we were married, and
were going away anywhere to live among the trees and
in the fields, never growing older, never growing wiser,
children ever, rambling hand in hand through sunshine
and among flowery meadows, laying down our heads on
moss at night, in a sweet sleep of purity and peace,
and buried by the birds when we were dead! Some
such picture, with no real world in it, bright with
the light of our innocence, and vague as the stars
afar off, was in my mind all the way. I am glad
to think there were two such guileless hearts at Peggotty’s
marriage as little Em’ly’s and mine.
I am glad to think the Loves and Graces took such
airy forms in its homely procession.
Well, we came to the old boat again
in good time at night; and there Mr. and Mrs. Barkis
bade us good-bye, and drove away snugly to their own
home. I felt then, for the first time, that I
had lost Peggotty. I should have gone to bed
with a sore heart indeed under any other roof but
that which sheltered little Em’ly’s head.
Mr. Peggotty and Ham knew what was
in my thoughts as well as I did, and were ready with
some supper and their hospitable faces to drive it
away. Little Em’ly came and sat beside
me on the locker for the only time in all that visit;
and it was altogether a wonderful close to a wonderful
day.
It was a night tide; and soon after
we went to bed, Mr. Peggotty and Ham went out to fish.
I felt very brave at being left alone in the solitary
house, the protector of Em’ly and Mrs. Gummidge,
and only wished that a lion or a serpent, or any ill-disposed
monster, would make an attack upon us, that I might
destroy him, and cover myself with glory. But
as nothing of the sort happened to be walking about
on Yarmouth flats that night, I provided the best
substitute I could by dreaming of dragons until morning.
With morning came Peggotty; who called
to me, as usual, under my window as if Mr. Barkis
the carrier had been from first to last a dream too.
After breakfast she took me to her own home, and a
beautiful little home it was. Of all the moveables
in it, I must have been impressed by a certain old
bureau of some dark wood in the parlour (the tile-floored
kitchen was the general sitting-room), with a retreating
top which opened, let down, and became a desk, within
which was a large quarto edition of Foxe’s Book
of Martyrs. This precious volume, of which I
do not recollect one word, I immediately discovered
and immediately applied myself to; and I never visited
the house afterwards, but I kneeled on a chair, opened
the casket where this gem was enshrined, spread my
arms over the desk, and fell to devouring the book
afresh. I was chiefly edified, I am afraid,
by the pictures, which were numerous, and represented
all kinds of dismal horrors; but the Martyrs and Peggotty’s
house have been inseparable in my mind ever since,
and are now.
I took leave of Mr. Peggotty, and
Ham, and Mrs. Gummidge, and little Em’ly, that
day; and passed the night at Peggotty’s, in a
little room in the roof (with the Crocodile Book on
a shelf by the bed’s head) which was to be always
mine, Peggotty said, and should always be kept for
me in exactly the same state.
’Young or old, Davy dear, as
long as I am alive and have this house over my head,’
said Peggotty, ’you shall find it as if I expected
you here directly minute. I shall keep it every
day, as I used to keep your old little room, my darling;
and if you was to go to China, you might think of
it as being kept just the same, all the time you were
away.’
I felt the truth and constancy of
my dear old nurse, with all my heart, and thanked
her as well as I could. That was not very well,
for she spoke to me thus, with her arms round my neck,
in the morning, and I was going home in the morning,
and I went home in the morning, with herself and Mr.
Barkis in the cart. They left me at the gate,
not easily or lightly; and it was a strange sight to
me to see the cart go on, taking Peggotty away, and
leaving me under the old elm-trees looking at the
house, in which there was no face to look on mine
with love or liking any more.
And now I fell into a state of neglect,
which I cannot look back upon without compassion.
I fell at once into a solitary condition, – apart
from all friendly notice, apart from the society of
all other boys of my own age, apart from all companionship
but my own spiritless thoughts, — which seems
to cast its gloom upon this paper as I write.
What would I have given, to have been
sent to the hardest school that ever was kept! —
to have been taught something, anyhow, anywhere!
No such hope dawned upon me. They disliked me;
and they sullenly, sternly, steadily, overlooked me.
I think Mr. Murdstone’s means were straitened
at about this time; but it is little to the purpose.
He could not bear me; and in putting me from him
he tried, as I believe, to put away the notion that
I had any claim upon him — and succeeded.
I was not actively ill-used.
I was not beaten, or starved; but the wrong that
was done to me had no intervals of relenting, and was
done in a systematic, passionless manner. Day
after day, week after week, month after month, I was
coldly neglected. I wonder sometimes, when I
think of it, what they would have done if I had been
taken with an illness; whether I should have lain down
in my lonely room, and languished through it in my
usual solitary way, or whether anybody would have
helped me out.
When Mr. and Miss Murdstone were at
home, I took my meals with them; in their absence,
I ate and drank by myself. At all times I lounged
about the house and neighbourhood quite disregarded,
except that they were jealous of my making any friends:
thinking, perhaps, that if I did, I might complain
to someone. For this reason, though Mr. Chillip
often asked me to go and see him (he was a widower,
having, some years before that, lost a little small
light-haired wife, whom I can just remember connecting
in my own thoughts with a pale tortoise-shell cat),
it was but seldom that I enjoyed the happiness of
passing an afternoon in his closet of a surgery; reading
some book that was new to me, with the smell of the
whole Pharmacopoeia coming up my nose, or pounding
something in a mortar under his mild directions.
For the same reason, added no doubt
to the old dislike of her, I was seldom allowed to
visit Peggotty. Faithful to her promise, she
either came to see me, or met me somewhere near, once
every week, and never empty-handed; but many and bitter
were the disappointments I had, in being refused permission
to pay a visit to her at her house. Some few
times, however, at long intervals, I was allowed to
go there; and then I found out that Mr. Barkis was
something of a miser, or as Peggotty dutifully expressed
it, was ’a little near’, and kept a heap
of money in a box under his bed, which he pretended
was only full of coats and trousers. In this
coffer, his riches hid themselves with such a tenacious
modesty, that the smallest instalments could only
be tempted out by artifice; so that Peggotty had to
prepare a long and elaborate scheme, a very Gunpowder
Plot, for every Saturday’s expenses.
All this time I was so conscious of
the waste of any promise I had given, and of my being
utterly neglected, that I should have been perfectly
miserable, I have no doubt, but for the old books.
They were my only comfort; and I was as true to them
as they were to me, and read them over and over I
don’t know how many times more.
I now approach a period of my life,
which I can never lose the remembrance of, while I
remember anything: and the recollection of which
has often, without my invocation, come before me like
a ghost, and haunted happier times.
I had been out, one day, loitering
somewhere, in the listless, meditative manner that
my way of life engendered, when, turning the corner
of a lane near our house, I came upon Mr. Murdstone
walking with a gentleman. I was confused, and
was going by them, when the gentleman cried:
‘What! Brooks!’
‘No, sir, David Copperfield,’ I said.
‘Don’t tell me.
You are Brooks,’ said the gentleman. ’You
are Brooks of Sheffield. That’s your name.’
At these words, I observed the gentleman
more attentively. His laugh coming to my remembrance
too, I knew him to be Mr. Quinion, whom I had gone
over to Lowestoft with Mr. Murdstone to see, before
- it is no matter — I need not recall when.
‘And how do you get on, and
where are you being educated, Brooks?’ said
Mr. Quinion.
He had put his hand upon my shoulder,
and turned me about, to walk with them. I did
not know what to reply, and glanced dubiously at Mr.
Murdstone.
‘He is at home at present,’
said the latter. ’He is not being educated
anywhere. I don’t know what to do with
him. He is a difficult subject.’
That old, double look was on me for
a moment; and then his eyes darkened with a frown,
as it turned, in its aversion, elsewhere.
‘Humph!’ said Mr. Quinion,
looking at us both, I thought. ’Fine weather!’
Silence ensued, and I was considering
how I could best disengage my shoulder from his hand,
and go away, when he said:
‘I suppose you are a pretty
sharp fellow still? Eh, Brooks?’
‘Aye! He is sharp enough,’
said Mr. Murdstone, impatiently. ’You
had better let him go. He will not thank you
for troubling him.’
On this hint, Mr. Quinion released
me, and I made the best of my way home. Looking
back as I turned into the front garden, I saw Mr.
Murdstone leaning against the wicket of the churchyard,
and Mr. Quinion talking to him. They were both
looking after me, and I felt that they were speaking
of me.
Mr. Quinion lay at our house that
night. After breakfast, the next morning, I
had put my chair away, and was going out of the room,
when Mr. Murdstone called me back. He then gravely
repaired to another table, where his sister sat herself
at her desk. Mr. Quinion, with his hands in
his pockets, stood looking out of window; and I stood
looking at them all.
‘David,’ said Mr. Murdstone,
’to the young this is a world for action; not
for moping and droning in.’
- ‘As you do,’ added his sister.
’Jane Murdstone, leave it to
me, if you please. I say, David, to the young
this is a world for action, and not for moping and
droning in. It is especially so for a young boy
of your disposition, which requires a great deal of
correcting; and to which no greater service can be
done than to force it to conform to the ways of the
working world, and to bend it and break it.’
‘For stubbornness won’t
do here,’ said his sister ’What it wants
is, to be crushed. And crushed it must be.
Shall be, too!’
He gave her a look, half in remonstrance,
half in approval, and went on:
’I suppose you know, David,
that I am not rich. At any rate, you know it
now. You have received some considerable education
already. Education is costly; and even if it
were not, and I could afford it, I am of opinion that
it would not be at all advantageous to you to be kept
at school. What is before you, is a fight with
the world; and the sooner you begin it, the better.’
I think it occurred to me that I had
already begun it, in my poor way: but it occurs
to me now, whether or no.
‘You have heard the “counting-house”
mentioned sometimes,’ said Mr. Murdstone.
‘The counting-house, sir?’ I repeated.
‘Of Murdstone and Grinby, in the wine trade,’
he replied.
I suppose I looked uncertain, for he went on hastily:
’You have heard the “counting-house”
mentioned, or the business, or the cellars, or the
wharf, or something about it.’
‘I think I have heard the business
mentioned, sir,’ I said, remembering what I
vaguely knew of his and his sister’s resources.
‘But I don’t know when.’
‘It does not matter when,’
he returned. ’Mr. Quinion manages that
business.’
I glanced at the latter deferentially
as he stood looking out of window.
’Mr. Quinion suggests that it
gives employment to some other boys, and that he sees
no reason why it shouldn’t, on the same terms,
give employment to you.’
‘He having,’ Mr. Quinion
observed in a low voice, and half turning round, ‘no
other prospect, Murdstone.’
Mr. Murdstone, with an impatient,
even an angry gesture, resumed, without noticing what
he had said:
’Those terms are, that you will
earn enough for yourself to provide for your eating
and drinking, and pocket-money. Your lodging
(which I have arranged for) will be paid by me.
So will your washing -’
‘- Which will be kept down to
my estimate,’ said his sister.
‘Your clothes will be looked
after for you, too,’ said Mr. Murdstone; ’as
you will not be able, yet awhile, to get them for
yourself. So you are now going to London, David,
with Mr. Quinion, to begin the world on your own account.’
‘In short, you are provided
for,’ observed his sister; ’and will please
to do your duty.’
Though I quite understood that the
purpose of this announcement was to get rid of me,
I have no distinct remembrance whether it pleased
or frightened me. My impression is, that I was
in a state of confusion about it, and, oscillating
between the two points, touched neither. Nor
had I much time for the clearing of my thoughts, as
Mr. Quinion was to go upon the morrow.
Behold me, on the morrow, in a much-worn
little white hat, with a black crape round it for
my mother, a black jacket, and a pair of hard, stiff
corduroy trousers — which Miss Murdstone considered
the best armour for the legs in that fight with the
world which was now to come off. Behold me so
attired, and with my little worldly all before me
in a small trunk, sitting, a lone lorn child (as Mrs.
Gummidge might have said), in the post-chaise that
was carrying Mr. Quinion to the London coach at Yarmouth!
See, how our house and church are lessening in the
distance; how the grave beneath the tree is blotted
out by intervening objects; how the spire points upwards
from my old playground no more, and the sky is empty!