CHAPTER 32
THE BEGINNING OF A LONG JOURNEY
What is natural in me, is natural
in many other men, I infer, and so I am not afraid
to write that I never had loved Steerforth better
than when the ties that bound me to him were broken.
In the keen distress of the discovery of his unworthiness,
I thought more of all that was brilliant in him, I
softened more towards all that was good in him, I
did more justice to the qualities that might have
made him a man of a noble nature and a great name,
than ever I had done in the height of my devotion
to him. Deeply as I felt my own unconscious
part in his pollution of an honest home, I believed
that if I had been brought face to face with him, I
could not have uttered one reproach. I should
have loved him so well still — though he fascinated
me no longer — I should have held in so much
tenderness the memory of my affection for him, that
I think I should have been as weak as a spirit-wounded
child, in all but the entertainment of a thought that
we could ever be re-united. That thought I never
had. I felt, as he had felt, that all was at
an end between us. What his remembrances of me
were, I have never known — they were light enough,
perhaps, and easily dismissed — but mine of
him were as the remembrances of a cherished friend,
who was dead.
Yes, Steerforth, long removed from
the scenes of this poor history! My sorrow may
bear involuntary witness against you at the judgement
Throne; but my angry thoughts or my reproaches never
will, I know!
The news of what had happened soon
spread through the town; insomuch that as I passed
along the streets next morning, I overheard the people
speaking of it at their doors. Many were hard
upon her, some few were hard upon him, but towards
her second father and her lover there was but one
sentiment. Among all kinds of people a respect
for them in their distress prevailed, which was full
of gentleness and delicacy. The seafaring men
kept apart, when those two were seen early, walking
with slow steps on the beach; and stood in knots,
talking compassionately among themselves.
It was on the beach, close down by
the sea, that I found them. It would have been
easy to perceive that they had not slept all last
night, even if Peggotty had failed to tell me of their
still sitting just as I left them, when it was broad
day. They looked worn; and I thought Mr. Peggotty’s
head was bowed in one night more than in all the years
I had known him. But they were both as grave
and steady as the sea itself, then lying beneath a
dark sky, waveless — yet with a heavy roll upon
it, as if it breathed in its rest — and touched,
on the horizon, with a strip of silvery light from
the unseen sun.
‘We have had a mort of talk,
sir,’ said Mr. Peggotty to me, when we had all
three walked a little while in silence, ’of what
we ought and doen’t ought to do. But we
see our course now.’
I happened to glance at Ham, then
looking out to sea upon the distant light, and a frightful
thought came into my mind — not that his face
was angry, for it was not; I recall nothing but an
expression of stern determination in it — that
if ever he encountered Steerforth, he would kill him.
‘My dooty here, sir,’
said Mr. Peggotty, ’is done. I’m
a going to seek my -’ he stopped, and went on
in a firmer voice: ’I’m a going to
seek her. That’s my dooty evermore.’
He shook his head when I asked him
where he would seek her, and inquired if I were going
to London tomorrow? I told him I had not gone
today, fearing to lose the chance of being of any service
to him; but that I was ready to go when he would.
‘I’ll go along with you,
sir,’ he rejoined, ’if you’re agreeable,
tomorrow.’
We walked again, for a while, in silence.
’Ham,’he presently resumed,’he’ll
hold to his present work, and go and live along with
my sister. The old boat yonder -’
‘Will you desert the old boat,
Mr. Peggotty?’ I gently interposed.
‘My station, Mas’r Davy,’
he returned, ’ain’t there no longer; and
if ever a boat foundered, since there was darkness
on the face of the deep, that one’s gone down.
But no, sir, no; I doen’t mean as it should
be deserted. Fur from that.’
We walked again for a while, as before,
until he explained:
’My wishes is, sir, as it shall
look, day and night, winter and summer, as it has
always looked, since she fust know’d it.
If ever she should come a wandering back, I wouldn’t
have the old place seem to cast her off, you understand,
but seem to tempt her to draw nigher to ’t,
and to peep in, maybe, like a ghost, out of the wind
and rain, through the old winder, at the old seat by
the fire. Then, maybe, Mas’r Davy, seein’
none but Missis Gummidge there, she might take heart
to creep in, trembling; and might come to be laid
down in her old bed, and rest her weary head where
it was once so gay.’
I could not speak to him in reply, though I tried.
‘Every night,’ said Mr.
Peggotty, ’as reg’lar as the night comes,
the candle must be stood in its old pane of glass,
that if ever she should see it, it may seem to say
“Come back, my child, come back!” If ever
there’s a knock, Ham (partic’ler a soft
knock), arter dark, at your aunt’s door, doen’t
you go nigh it. Let it be her — not you
— that sees my fallen child!’
He walked a little in front of us,
and kept before us for some minutes. During
this interval, I glanced at Ham again, and observing
the same expression on his face, and his eyes still
directed to the distant light, I touched his arm.
Twice I called him by his name, in
the tone in which I might have tried to rouse a sleeper,
before he heeded me. When I at last inquired
on what his thoughts were so bent, he replied:
‘On what’s afore me, Mas’r
Davy; and over yon.’ ‘On the life
before you, do you mean?’ He had pointed confusedly
out to sea.
’Ay, Mas’r Davy.
I doen’t rightly know how ’tis, but from
over yon there seemed to me to come — the end
of it like,’ looking at me as if he were waking,
but with the same determined face.
‘What end?’ I asked, possessed by my former
fear.
’I doen’t know,’he
said, thoughtfully; ’I was calling to mind that
the beginning of it all did take place here —
and then the end come. But it’s gone!
Mas’r Davy,’ he added; answering, as I
think, my look; ’you han’t no call to be
afeerd of me: but I’m kiender muddled;
I don’t fare to feel no matters,’ —
which was as much as to say that he was not himself,
and quite confounded.
Mr. Peggotty stopping for us to join
him: we did so, and said no more. The remembrance
of this, in connexion with my former thought, however,
haunted me at intervals, even until the inexorable
end came at its appointed time.
We insensibly approached the old boat,
and entered. Mrs. Gummidge, no longer moping
in her especial corner, was busy preparing breakfast.
She took Mr. Peggotty’s hat, and placed his
seat for him, and spoke so comfortably and softly,
that I hardly knew her.
‘Dan’l, my good man,’
said she, ’you must eat and drink, and keep
up your strength, for without it you’ll do nowt.
Try, that’s a dear soul! An if I disturb
you with my clicketten,’ she meant her chattering,
‘tell me so, Dan’l, and I won’t.’
When she had served us all, she withdrew
to the window, where she sedulously employed herself
in repairing some shirts and other clothes belonging
to Mr. Peggotty, and neatly folding and packing them
in an old oilskin bag, such as sailors carry.
Meanwhile, she continued talking, in the same quiet
manner:
‘All times and seasons, you
know, Dan’l,’ said Mrs. Gummidge, ’I
shall be allus here, and everythink will look accordin’
to your wishes. I’m a poor scholar, but
I shall write to you, odd times, when you’re
away, and send my letters to Mas’r Davy.
Maybe you’ll write to me too, Dan’l,
odd times, and tell me how you fare to feel upon your
lone lorn journies.’
‘You’ll be a solitary
woman heer, I’m afeerd!’ said Mr. Peggotty.
‘No, no, Dan’l,’
she returned, ’I shan’t be that.
Doen’t you mind me. I shall have enough
to do to keep a Beein for you’ (Mrs. Gummidge
meant a home), ’again you come back — to
keep a Beein here for any that may hap to come back,
Dan’l. In the fine time, I shall set outside
the door as I used to do. If any should come
nigh, they shall see the old widder woman true to ’em,
a long way off.’
What a change in Mrs. Gummidge in
a little time! She was another woman.
She was so devoted, she had such a quick perception
of what it would be well to say, and what it would
be well to leave unsaid; she was so forgetful of herself,
and so regardful of the sorrow about her, that I held
her in a sort of veneration. The work she did
that day! There were many things to be brought
up from the beach and stored in the outhouse —
as oars, nets, sails, cordage, spars, lobster-pots,
bags of ballast, and the like; and though there was
abundance of assistance rendered, there being not a
pair of working hands on all that shore but would
have laboured hard for Mr. Peggotty, and been well
paid in being asked to do it, yet she persisted, all
day long, in toiling under weights that she was quite
unequal to, and fagging to and fro on all sorts of
unnecessary errands. As to deploring her misfortunes,
she appeared to have entirely lost the recollection
of ever having had any. She preserved an equable
cheerfulness in the midst of her sympathy, which was
not the least astonishing part of the change that had
come over her. Querulousness was out of the question.
I did not even observe her voice to falter, or a
tear to escape from her eyes, the whole day through,
until twilight; when she and I and Mr. Peggotty being
alone together, and he having fallen asleep in perfect
exhaustion, she broke into a half-suppressed fit of
sobbing and crying, and taking me to the door, said,
’Ever bless you, Mas’r Davy, be a friend
to him, poor dear!’ Then, she immediately ran
out of the house to wash her face, in order that she
might sit quietly beside him, and be found at work
there, when he should awake. In short I left
her, when I went away at night, the prop and staff
of Mr. Peggotty’s affliction; and I could not
meditate enough upon the lesson that I read in Mrs.
Gummidge, and the new experience she unfolded to me.
It was between nine and ten o’clock
when, strolling in a melancholy manner through the
town, I stopped at Mr. Omer’s door. Mr.
Omer had taken it so much to heart, his daughter told
me, that he had been very low and poorly all day,
and had gone to bed without his pipe.
‘A deceitful, bad-hearted girl,’
said Mrs. Joram. ’There was no good in
her, ever!’
‘Don’t say so,’ I returned.
‘You don’t think so.’
‘Yes, I do!’ cried Mrs. Joram, angrily.
‘No, no,’ said I.
Mrs. Joram tossed her head, endeavouring
to be very stern and cross; but she could not command
her softer self, and began to cry. I was young,
to be sure; but I thought much the better of her for
this sympathy, and fancied it became her, as a virtuous
wife and mother, very well indeed.
‘What will she ever do!’
sobbed Minnie. ’Where will she go!
What will become of her! Oh, how could she
be so cruel, to herself and him!’
I remembered the time when Minnie
was a young and pretty girl; and I was glad she remembered
it too, so feelingly.
‘My little Minnie,’ said
Mrs. Joram, ’has only just now been got to sleep.
Even in her sleep she is sobbing for Em’ly.
All day long, little Minnie has cried for her, and
asked me, over and over again, whether Em’ly
was wicked? What can I say to her, when Em’ly
tied a ribbon off her own neck round little Minnie’s
the last night she was here, and laid her head down
on the pillow beside her till she was fast asleep!
The ribbon’s round my little Minnie’s
neck now. It ought not to be, perhaps, but what
can I do? Em’ly is very bad, but they
were fond of one another. And the child knows
nothing!’
Mrs. Joram was so unhappy that her
husband came out to take care of her. Leaving
them together, I went home to Peggotty’s; more
melancholy myself, if possible, than I had been yet.
That good creature — I mean
Peggotty — all untired by her late anxieties
and sleepless nights, was at her brother’s, where
she meant to stay till morning. An old woman,
who had been employed about the house for some weeks
past, while Peggotty had been unable to attend to
it, was the house’s only other occupant besides
myself. As I had no occasion for her services,
I sent her to bed, by no means against her will, and
sat down before the kitchen fire a little while, to
think about all this.
I was blending it with the deathbed
of the late Mr. Barkis, and was driving out with the
tide towards the distance at which Ham had looked
so singularly in the morning, when I was recalled from
my wanderings by a knock at the door. There
was a knocker upon the door, but it was not that which
made the sound. The tap was from a hand, and
low down upon the door, as if it were given by a child.
It made me start as much as if it
had been the knock of a footman to a person of distinction.
I opened the door; and at first looked down, to my
amazement, on nothing but a great umbrella that appeared
to be walking about of itself. But presently
I discovered underneath it, Miss Mowcher.
I might not have been prepared to
give the little creature a very kind reception, if,
on her removing the umbrella, which her utmost efforts
were unable to shut up, she had shown me the ‘volatile’
expression of face which had made so great an impression
on me at our first and last meeting. But her
face, as she turned it up to mine, was so earnest;
and when I relieved her of the umbrella (which would
have been an inconvenient one for the Irish Giant),
she wrung her little hands in such an afflicted manner;
that I rather inclined towards her.
‘Miss Mowcher!’ said I,
after glancing up and down the empty street, without
distinctly knowing what I expected to see besides;
‘how do you come here? What is the matter?’
She motioned to me with her short right arm, to shut
the umbrella for her; and passing me hurriedly, went
into the kitchen. When I had closed the door,
and followed, with the umbrella in my hand, I found
her sitting on the corner of the fender — it
was a low iron one, with two flat bars at top to stand
plates upon — in the shadow of the boiler, swaying
herself backwards and forwards, and chafing her hands
upon her knees like a person in pain.
Quite alarmed at being the only recipient
of this untimely visit, and the only spectator of
this portentous behaviour, I exclaimed again, ’Pray
tell me, Miss Mowcher, what is the matter! are you
ill?’
‘My dear young soul,’
returned Miss Mowcher, squeezing her hands upon her
heart one over the other. ’I am ill here,
I am very ill. To think that it should come to
this, when I might have known it and perhaps prevented
it, if I hadn’t been a thoughtless fool!’
Again her large bonnet (very disproportionate
to the figure) went backwards and forwards, in her
swaying of her little body to and fro; while a most
gigantic bonnet rocked, in unison with it, upon the
wall.
‘I am surprised,’ I began,
’to see you so distressed and serious’-
when she interrupted me.
‘Yes, it’s always so!’
she said. ’They are all surprised, these
inconsiderate young people, fairly and full grown,
to see any natural feeling in a little thing like
me! They make a plaything of me, use me for
their amusement, throw me away when they are tired,
and wonder that I feel more than a toy horse or a wooden
soldier! Yes, yes, that’s the way.
The old way!’
‘It may be, with others,’
I returned, ’but I do assure you it is not with
me. Perhaps I ought not to be at all surprised
to see you as you are now: I know so little of
you. I said, without consideration, what I thought.’
‘What can I do?’ returned
the little woman, standing up, and holding out her
arms to show herself. ’See! What
I am, my father was; and my sister is; and my brother
is. I have worked for sister and brother these
many years — hard, Mr. Copperfield — all
day. I must live. I do no harm.
If there are people so unreflecting or so cruel, as
to make a jest of me, what is left for me to do but
to make a jest of myself, them, and everything?
If I do so, for the time, whose fault is that?
Mine?’
No. Not Miss Mowcher’s, I perceived.
‘If I had shown myself a sensitive
dwarf to your false friend,’ pursued the little
woman, shaking her head at me, with reproachful earnestness,
’how much of his help or good will do you think
I should ever have had? If little Mowcher (who
had no hand, young gentleman, in the making of herself)
addressed herself to him, or the like of him, because
of her misfortunes, when do you suppose her small
voice would have been heard? Little Mowcher would
have as much need to live, if she was the bitterest
and dullest of pigmies; but she couldn’t do
it. No. She might whistle for her bread
and butter till she died of Air.’
Miss Mowcher sat down on the fender
again, and took out her handkerchief, and wiped her
eyes.
’Be thankful for me, if you
have a kind heart, as I think you have,’ she
said, ’that while I know well what I am, I can
be cheerful and endure it all. I am thankful
for myself, at any rate, that I can find my tiny way
through the world, without being beholden to anyone;
and that in return for all that is thrown at me, in
folly or vanity, as I go along, I can throw bubbles
back. If I don’t brood over all I want,
it is the better for me, and not the worse for anyone.
If I am a plaything for you giants, be gentle with
me.’
Miss Mowcher replaced her handkerchief
in her pocket, looking at me with very intent expression
all the while, and pursued:
’I saw you in the street just
now. You may suppose I am not able to walk as
fast as you, with my short legs and short breath, and
I couldn’t overtake you; but I guessed where
you came, and came after you. I have been here
before, today, but the good woman wasn’t at
home.’
‘Do you know her?’ I demanded.
‘I know of her, and about her,’ she replied,
’from Omer and Joram.
I was there at seven o’clock this morning.
Do you remember what
Steerforth said to me about this unfortunate girl,
that time when
I saw you both at the inn?’
The great bonnet on Miss Mowcher’s
head, and the greater bonnet on the wall, began to
go backwards and forwards again when she asked this
question.
I remembered very well what she referred
to, having had it in my thoughts many times that day.
I told her so.
‘May the Father of all Evil
confound him,’ said the little woman, holding
up her forefinger between me and her sparkling eyes,
’and ten times more confound that wicked servant;
but I believed it was you who had a boyish passion
for her!’
‘I?’ I repeated.
‘Child, child! In the
name of blind ill-fortune,’ cried Miss Mowcher,
wringing her hands impatiently, as she went to and
fro again upon the fender, ’why did you praise
her so, and blush, and look disturbed?’
I could not conceal from myself that
I had done this, though for a reason very different
from her supposition.
‘What did I know?’ said
Miss Mowcher, taking out her handkerchief again, and
giving one little stamp on the ground whenever, at
short intervals, she applied it to her eyes with both
hands at once. ’He was crossing you and
wheedling you, I saw; and you were soft wax in his
hands, I saw. Had I left the room a minute, when
his man told me that “Young Innocence”
(so he called you, and you may call him “Old
Guilt” all the days of your life) had set his
heart upon her, and she was giddy and liked him, but
his master was resolved that no harm should come of
it — more for your sake than for hers —
and that that was their business here? How could
I but believe him? I saw Steerforth soothe
and please you by his praise of her! You were
the first to mention her name. You owned to an
old admiration of her. You were hot and cold,
and red and white, all at once when I spoke to you
of her. What could I think — what did
I think — but that you were a young libertine
in everything but experience, and had fallen into
hands that had experience enough, and could manage
you (having the fancy) for your own good? Oh!
oh! oh! They were afraid of my finding out the
truth,’ exclaimed Miss Mowcher, getting off
the fender, and trotting up and down the kitchen with
her two short arms distressfully lifted up, ’because
I am a sharp little thing — I need be, to get
through the world at all! — and they deceived
me altogether, and I gave the poor unfortunate girl
a letter, which I fully believe was the beginning of
her ever speaking to Littimer, who was left behind
on purpose!’
I stood amazed at the revelation of
all this perfidy, looking at Miss Mowcher as she walked
up and down the kitchen until she was out of breath:
when she sat upon the fender again, and, drying her
face with her handkerchief, shook her head for a long
time, without otherwise moving, and without breaking
silence.
‘My country rounds,’ she
added at length, ’brought me to Norwich, Mr.
Copperfield, the night before last. What I happened
to find there, about their secret way of coming and
going, without you — which was strange —
led to my suspecting something wrong. I got
into the coach from London last night, as it came through
Norwich, and was here this morning. Oh, oh,
oh! too late!’
Poor little Mowcher turned so chilly
after all her crying and fretting, that she turned
round on the fender, putting her poor little wet feet
in among the ashes to warm them, and sat looking at
the fire, like a large doll. I sat in a chair
on the other side of the hearth, lost in unhappy reflections,
and looking at the fire too, and sometimes at her.
‘I must go,’ she said
at last, rising as she spoke. ’It’s
late. You don’t mistrust me?’
Meeting her sharp glance, which was
as sharp as ever when she asked me, I could not on
that short challenge answer no, quite frankly.
‘Come!’ said she, accepting
the offer of my hand to help her over the fender,
and looking wistfully up into my face, ’you know
you wouldn’t mistrust me, if I was a full-sized
woman!’
I felt that there was much truth in
this; and I felt rather ashamed of myself.
‘You are a young man,’
she said, nodding. ’Take a word of advice,
even from three foot nothing. Try not to associate
bodily defects with mental, my good friend, except
for a solid reason.’
She had got over the fender now, and
I had got over my suspicion. I told her that
I believed she had given me a faithful account of
herself, and that we had both been hapless instruments
in designing hands. She thanked me, and said
I was a good fellow.
‘Now, mind!’ she exclaimed,
turning back on her way to the door, and looking shrewdly
at me, with her forefinger up again.- ’I have
some reason to suspect, from what I have heard —
my ears are always open; I can’t afford to spare
what powers I have — that they are gone abroad.
But if ever they return, if ever any one of them
returns, while I am alive, I am more likely than another,
going about as I do, to find it out soon. Whatever
I know, you shall know. If ever I can do anything
to serve the poor betrayed girl, I will do it faithfully,
please Heaven! And Littimer had better have
a bloodhound at his back, than little Mowcher!’
I placed implicit faith in this last
statement, when I marked the look with which it was
accompanied.
’Trust me no more, but trust
me no less, than you would trust a full-sized woman,’
said the little creature, touching me appealingly
on the wrist. ’If ever you see me again,
unlike what I am now, and like what I was when you
first saw me, observe what company I am in.
Call to mind that I am a very helpless and defenceless
little thing. Think of me at home with my brother
like myself and sister like myself, when my day’s
work is done. Perhaps you won’t, then,
be very hard upon me, or surprised if I can be distressed
and serious. Good night!’
I gave Miss Mowcher my hand, with
a very different opinion of her from that which I
had hitherto entertained, and opened the door to let
her out. It was not a trifling business to get
the great umbrella up, and properly balanced in her
grasp; but at last I successfully accomplished this,
and saw it go bobbing down the street through the
rain, without the least appearance of having anybody
underneath it, except when a heavier fall than usual
from some over-charged water-spout sent it toppling
over, on one side, and discovered Miss Mowcher struggling
violently to get it right. After making one or
two sallies to her relief, which were rendered futile
by the umbrella’s hopping on again, like an immense
bird, before I could reach it, I came in, went to
bed, and slept till morning.
In the morning I was joined by Mr.
Peggotty and by my old nurse, and we went at an early
hour to the coach office, where Mrs. Gummidge and
Ham were waiting to take leave of us.
‘Mas’r Davy,’ Ham
whispered, drawing me aside, while Mr. Peggotty was
stowing his bag among the luggage, ’his life
is quite broke up. He doen’t know wheer
he’s going; he doen’t know -what’s
afore him; he’s bound upon a voyage that’ll
last, on and off, all the rest of his days, take my
wured for ’t, unless he finds what he’s
a seeking of. I am sure you’ll be a friend
to him, Mas’r Davy?’
‘Trust me, I will indeed,’
said I, shaking hands with Ham earnestly.
’Thankee. Thankee, very
kind, sir. One thing furder. I’m
in good employ, you know, Mas’r Davy, and I
han’t no way now of spending what I gets.
Money’s of no use to me no more, except to live.
If you can lay it out for him, I shall do my work
with a better art. Though as to that, sir,’
and he spoke very steadily and mildly, ’you’re
not to think but I shall work at all times, like a
man, and act the best that lays in my power!’
I told him I was well convinced of
it; and I hinted that I hoped the time might even
come, when he would cease to lead the lonely life
he naturally contemplated now.
‘No, sir,’ he said, shaking
his head, ’all that’s past and over with
me, sir. No one can never fill the place that’s
empty. But you’ll bear in mind about the
money, as theer’s at all times some laying by
for him?’
Reminding him of the fact, that Mr.
Peggotty derived a steady, though certainly a very
moderate income from the bequest of his late brother-in-law,
I promised to do so. We then took leave of each
other. I cannot leave him even now, without remembering
with a pang, at once his modest fortitude and his
great sorrow.
As to Mrs. Gummidge, if I were to
endeavour to describe how she ran down the street
by the side of the coach, seeing nothing but Mr. Peggotty
on the roof, through the tears she tried to repress,
and dashing herself against the people who were coming
in the opposite direction, I should enter on a task
of some difficulty. Therefore I had better leave
her sitting on a baker’s door-step, out of breath,
with no shape at all remaining in her bonnet, and one
of her shoes off, lying on the pavement at a considerable
distance.
When we got to our journey’s
end, our first pursuit was to look about for a little
lodging for Peggotty, where her brother could have
a bed. We were so fortunate as to find one, of
a very clean and cheap description, over a chandler’s
shop, only two streets removed from me. When
we had engaged this domicile, I bought some cold meat
at an eating-house, and took my fellow-travellers home
to tea; a proceeding, I regret to state, which did
not meet with Mrs. Crupp’s approval, but quite
the contrary. I ought to observe, however, in
explanation of that lady’s state of mind, that
she was much offended by Peggotty’s tucking
up her widow’s gown before she had been ten
minutes in the place, and setting to work to dust my
bedroom. This Mrs. Crupp regarded in the light
of a liberty, and a liberty, she said, was a thing
she never allowed.
Mr. Peggotty had made a communication
to me on the way to London for which I was not unprepared.
It was, that he purposed first seeing Mrs. Steerforth.
As I felt bound to assist him in this, and also to
mediate between them; with the view of sparing the
mother’s feelings as much as possible, I wrote
to her that night. I told her as mildly as I
could what his wrong was, and what my own share in
his injury. I said he was a man in very common
life, but of a most gentle and upright character;
and that I ventured to express a hope that she would
not refuse to see him in his heavy trouble. I
mentioned two o’clock in the afternoon as the
hour of our coming, and I sent the letter myself by
the first coach in the morning.
At the appointed time, we stood at
the door — the door of that house where I had
been, a few days since, so happy: where my youthful
confidence and warmth of heart had been yielded up
so freely: which was closed against me henceforth:
which was now a waste, a ruin.
No Littimer appeared. The pleasanter
face which had replaced his, on the occasion of my
last visit, answered to our summons, and went before
us to the drawing-room. Mrs. Steerforth was sitting
there. Rosa Dartle glided, as we went in, from
another part of the room and stood behind her chair.
I saw, directly, in his mother’s
face, that she knew from himself what he had done.
It was very pale; and bore the traces of deeper emotion
than my letter alone, weakened by the doubts her fondness
would have raised upon it, would have been likely to
create. I thought her more like him than ever
I had thought her; and I felt, rather than saw, that
the resemblance was not lost on my companion.
She sat upright in her arm-chair,
with a stately, immovable, passionless air, that it
seemed as if nothing could disturb. She looked
very steadfastly at Mr. Peggotty when he stood before
her; and he looked quite as steadfastly at her.
Rosa Dartle’s keen glance comprehended all
of us. For some moments not a word was spoken.
She motioned to Mr. Peggotty to be
seated. He said, in a low voice, ’I shouldn’t
feel it nat’ral, ma’am, to sit down in
this house. I’d sooner stand.’
And this was succeeded by another silence, which
she broke thus:
’I know, with deep regret, what
has brought you here. What do you want of me?
What do you ask me to do?’
He put his hat under his arm, and
feeling in his breast for Emily’s letter, took
it out, unfolded it, and gave it to her. ‘Please
to read that, ma’am. That’s my niece’s
hand!’
She read it, in the same stately and
impassive way, — untouched by its contents,
as far as I could see, — and returned it to him.
‘”Unless he brings me back a
lady,”’ said Mr. Peggotty, tracing out that
part with his finger. ’I come to know,
ma’am, whether he will keep his wured?’
‘No,’ she returned.
‘Why not?’ said Mr. Peggotty.
’It is impossible. He
would disgrace himself. You cannot fail to know
that she is far below him.’
‘Raise her up!’ said Mr. Peggotty.
‘She is uneducated and ignorant.’
‘Maybe she’s not; maybe
she is,’ said Mr. Peggotty. ’I think
not, ma’am; but I’m no judge of them things.
Teach her better!’
’Since you oblige me to speak
more plainly, which I am very unwilling to do, her
humble connexions would render such a thing impossible,
if nothing else did.’
‘Hark to this, ma’am,’
he returned, slowly and quietly. ’You know
what it is to love your child. So do I. If she
was a hundred times my child, I couldn’t love
her more. You doen’t know what it is to
lose your child. I do. All the heaps of
riches in the wureld would be nowt to me (if they
was mine) to buy her back! But, save her from
this disgrace, and she shall never be disgraced by
us. Not one of us that she’s growed up
among, not one of us that’s lived along with
her and had her for their all in all, these many year,
will ever look upon her pritty face again. We’ll
be content to let her be; we’ll be content to
think of her, far off, as if she was underneath another
sun and sky; we’ll be content to trust her to
her husband, — to her little children, p’raps,
— and bide the time when all of us shall be
alike in quality afore our God!’
The rugged eloquence with which he
spoke, was not devoid of all effect. She still
preserved her proud manner, but there was a touch
of softness in her voice, as she answered:
’I justify nothing. I
make no counter-accusations. But I am sorry
to repeat, it is impossible. Such a marriage
would irretrievably blight my son’s career,
and ruin his prospects. Nothing is more certain
than that it never can take place, and never will.
If there is any other compensation -’
‘I am looking at the likeness
of the face,’ interrupted Mr. Peggotty, with
a steady but a kindling eye, ’that has looked
at me, in my home, at my fireside, in my boat —
wheer not? — smiling and friendly, when it
was so treacherous, that I go half wild when I think
of it. If the likeness of that face don’t
turn to burning fire, at the thought of offering money
to me for my child’s blight and ruin, it’s
as bad. I doen’t know, being a lady’s,
but what it’s worse.’
She changed now, in a moment.
An angry flush overspread her features; and she said,
in an intolerant manner, grasping the arm-chair tightly
with her hands:
’What compensation can you make
to me for opening such a pit between me and my
son? What is your love to mine? What is
your separation to ours?’
Miss Dartle softly touched her, and
bent down her head to whisper, but she would not hear
a word.
’No, Rosa, not a word!
Let the man listen to what I say! My son, who
has been the object of my life, to whom its every thought
has been devoted, whom I have gratified from a child
in every wish, from whom I have had no separate existence
since his birth, — to take up in a moment with
a miserable girl, and avoid me! To repay my
confidence with systematic deception, for her sake,
and quit me for her! To set this wretched fancy,
against his mother’s claims upon his duty, love,
respect, gratitude — claims that every day and
hour of his life should have strengthened into ties
that nothing could be proof against! Is this
no injury?’
Again Rosa Dartle tried to soothe
her; again ineffectually.
’I say, Rosa, not a word!
If he can stake his all upon the lightest object,
I can stake my all upon a greater purpose. Let
him go where he will, with the means that my love has
secured to him! Does he think to reduce me by
long absence? He knows his mother very little
if he does. Let him put away his whim now, and
he is welcome back. Let him not put her away
now, and he never shall come near me, living or dying,
while I can raise my hand to make a sign against it,
unless, being rid of her for ever, he comes humbly
to me and begs for my forgiveness. This is my
right. This is the acknowledgement I will
have. This is the separation that there
is between us! And is this,’ she added,
looking at her visitor with the proud intolerant air
with which she had begun, ’no injury?’
While I heard and saw the mother as
she said these words, I seemed to hear and see the
son, defying them. All that I had ever seen in
him of an unyielding, wilful spirit, I saw in her.
All the understanding that I had now of his misdirected
energy, became an understanding of her character too,
and a perception that it was, in its strongest springs,
the same.
She now observed to me, aloud, resuming
her former restraint, that it was useless to hear
more, or to say more, and that she begged to put an
end to the interview. She rose with an air of
dignity to leave the room, when Mr. Peggotty signified
that it was needless.
’Doen’t fear me being
any hindrance to you, I have no more to say, ma’am,’
he remarked, as he moved towards the door. ’I
come beer with no hope, and I take away no hope.
I have done what I thowt should be done, but I never
looked fur any good to come of my stan’ning
where I do. This has been too evil a house fur
me and mine, fur me to be in my right senses and expect
it.’
With this, we departed; leaving her
standing by her elbow-chair, a picture of a noble
presence and a handsome face.
We had, on our way out, to cross a
paved hall, with glass sides and roof, over which
a vine was trained. Its leaves and shoots were
green then, and the day being sunny, a pair of glass
doors leading to the garden were thrown open.
Rosa Dartle, entering this way with a noiseless step,
when we were close to them, addressed herself to me:
‘You do well,’ she said,
‘indeed, to bring this fellow here!’
Such a concentration of rage and scorn
as darkened her face, and flashed in her jet-black
eyes, I could not have thought compressible even into
that face. The scar made by the hammer was,
as usual in this excited state of her features, strongly
marked. When the throbbing I had seen before,
came into it as I looked at her, she absolutely lifted
up her hand, and struck it.
‘This is a fellow,’ she
said, ’to champion and bring here, is he not?
You are a true man!’
‘Miss Dartle,’ I returned,
’you are surely not so unjust as to condemn
me!’
‘Why do you bring division between
these two mad creatures?’ she returned.
’Don’t you know that they are both mad
with their own self-will and pride?’
‘Is it my doing?’ I returned.
‘Is it your doing!’ she
retorted. ’Why do you bring this man here?’
‘He is a deeply-injured man,
Miss Dartle,’ I replied. ’You may
not know it.’
‘I know that James Steerforth,’
she said, with her hand on her bosom, as if to prevent
the storm that was raging there, from being loud,
’has a false, corrupt heart, and is a traitor.
But what need I know or care about this fellow, and
his common niece?’
‘Miss Dartle,’ I returned,
’you deepen the injury. It is sufficient
already. I will only say, at parting, that you
do him a great wrong.’
‘I do him no wrong,’ she
returned. ’They are a depraved, worthless
set. I would have her whipped!’
Mr. Peggotty passed on, without a
word, and went out at the door.
‘Oh, shame, Miss Dartle! shame!’
I said indignantly. ’How can you bear
to trample on his undeserved affliction!’
‘I would trample on them all,’
she answered. ’I would have his house
pulled down. I would have her branded on the
face, dressed in rags, and cast out in the streets
to starve. If I had the power to sit in judgement
on her, I would see it done. See it done?
I would do it! I detest her. If I ever
could reproach her with her infamous condition, I
would go anywhere to do so. If I could hunt
her to her grave, I would. If there was any word
of comfort that would be a solace to her in her dying
hour, and only I possessed it, I wouldn’t part
with it for Life itself.’
The mere vehemence of her words can
convey, I am sensible, but a weak impression of the
passion by which she was possessed, and which made
itself articulate in her whole figure, though her voice,
instead of being raised, was lower than usual.
No description I could give of her would do justice
to my recollection of her, or to her entire deliverance
of herself to her anger. I have seen passion
in many forms, but I have never seen it in such a form
as that.
When I joined Mr. Peggotty, he was
walking slowly and thoughtfully down the hill.
He told me, as soon as I came up with him, that having
now discharged his mind of what he had purposed doing
in London, he meant ‘to set out on his travels’,
that night. I asked him where he meant to go?
He only answered, ’I’m a going, sir, to
seek my niece.’
We went back to the little lodging
over the chandler’s shop, and there I found
an opportunity of repeating to Peggotty what he had
said to me. She informed me, in return, that
he had said the same to her that morning. She
knew no more than I did, where he was going, but she
thought he had some project shaped out in his mind.
I did not like to leave him, under
such circumstances, and we all three dined together
off a beefsteak pie — which was one of the many
good things for which Peggotty was famous — and
which was curiously flavoured on this occasion, I
recollect well, by a miscellaneous taste of tea, coffee,
butter, bacon, cheese, new loaves, firewood, candles,
and walnut ketchup, continually ascending from the
shop. After dinner we sat for an hour or so
near the window, without talking much; and then Mr.
Peggotty got up, and brought his oilskin bag and his
stout stick, and laid them on the table.
He accepted, from his sister’s
stock of ready money, a small sum on account of his
legacy; barely enough, I should have thought, to keep
him for a month. He promised to communicate with
me, when anything befell him; and he slung his bag
about him, took his hat and stick, and bade us both
‘Good-bye!’
‘All good attend you, dear old
woman,’ he said, embracing Peggotty, ‘and
you too, Mas’r Davy!’ shaking hands with
me. ’I’m a-going to seek her, fur
and wide. If she should come home while I’m
away — but ah, that ain’t like to be!
— or if I should bring her back, my meaning
is, that she and me shall live and die where no one
can’t reproach her. If any hurt should
come to me, remember that the last words I left for
her was, “My unchanged love is with my darling
child, and I forgive her!”’
He said this solemnly, bare-headed;
then, putting on his hat, he went down the stairs,
and away. We followed to the door. It was
a warm, dusty evening, just the time when, in the great
main thoroughfare out of which that by-way turned,
there was a temporary lull in the eternal tread of
feet upon the pavement, and a strong red sunshine.
He turned, alone, at the corner of our shady street,
into a glow of light, in which we lost him.
Rarely did that hour of the evening
come, rarely did I wake at night, rarely did I look
up at the moon, or stars, or watch the falling rain,
or hear the wind, but I thought of his solitary figure
toiling on, poor pilgrim, and recalled the words:
’I’m a going to seek her,
fur and wide. If any hurt should come to me,
remember that the last words I left for her was, “My
unchanged love is with my darling child, and I forgive
her!”’