Mr Ralph Nickleby receives Sad Tidings
of his Brother, but bears up nobly against the Intelligence
communicated to him. The Reader is informed
how he liked Nicholas, who is herein introduced, and
how kindly he proposed to make his Fortune at once
Having rendered his zealous assistance
towards dispatching the lunch, with all that promptitude
and energy which are among the most important qualities
that men of business can possess, Mr Ralph Nickleby
took a cordial farewell of his fellow-speculators,
and bent his steps westward in unwonted good humour.
As he passed St Paul’s he stepped aside into
a doorway to set his watch, and with his hand on the
key and his eye on the cathedral dial, was intent upon
so doing, when a man suddenly stopped before him.
It was Newman Noggs.
‘Ah! Newman,’ said
Mr Nickleby, looking up as he pursued his occupation.
’The letter about the mortgage has come, has
it? I thought it would.’
‘Wrong,’ replied Newman.
‘What! and nobody called respecting
it?’ inquired Mr Nickleby, pausing. Noggs
shook his head.
‘What has come, then?’ inquired Mr
Nickleby.
‘I have,’ said Newman.
‘What else?’ demanded the master, sternly.
‘This,’ said Newman, drawing
a sealed letter slowly from his pocket. ’Post-mark,
Strand, black wax, black border, woman’s hand,
C. N. in the corner.’
‘Black wax?’ said Mr Nickleby,
glancing at the letter. ’I know something
of that hand, too. Newman, I shouldn’t
be surprised if my brother were dead.’
‘I don’t think you would,’ said
Newman, quietly.
‘Why not, sir?’ demanded Mr Nickleby.
‘You never are surprised,’ replied Newman,
‘that’s all.’
Mr Nickleby snatched the letter from
his assistant, and fixing a cold look upon him, opened,
read it, put it in his pocket, and having now hit
the time to a second, began winding up his watch.
‘It is as I expected, Newman,’
said Mr Nickleby, while he was thus engaged.
’He is dead. Dear me! Well,
that’s sudden thing. I shouldn’t
have thought it, really.’ With these touching
expressions of sorrow, Mr Nickleby replaced his watch
in his fob, and, fitting on his gloves to a nicety,
turned upon his way, and walked slowly westward with
his hands behind him.
‘Children alive?’ inquired Noggs, stepping
up to him.
‘Why, that’s the very
thing,’ replied Mr Nickleby, as though his thoughts
were about them at that moment. ‘They are
both alive.’
‘Both!’ repeated Newman Noggs, in a low
voice.
‘And the widow, too,’
added Mr Nickleby, ’and all three in London,
confound them; all three here, Newman.’
Newman fell a little behind his master,
and his face was curiously twisted as by a spasm;
but whether of paralysis, or grief, or inward laughter,
nobody but himself could possibly explain. The
expression of a man’s face is commonly a help
to his thoughts, or glossary on his speech; but the
countenance of Newman Noggs, in his ordinary moods,
was a problem which no stretch of ingenuity could solve.
‘Go home!’ said Mr Nickleby,
after they had walked a few paces: looking round
at the clerk as if he were his dog. The words
were scarcely uttered when Newman darted across the
road, slunk among the crowd, and disappeared in an
instant.
‘Reasonable, certainly!’
muttered Mr Nickleby to himself, as he walked on,
’very reasonable! My brother never did
anything for me, and I never expected it; the breath
is no sooner out of his body than I am to be looked
to, as the support of a great hearty woman, and a
grown boy and girl. What are they to me!
I never saw them.’
Full of these, and many other reflections
of a similar kind, Mr Nickleby made the best of his
way to the Strand, and, referring to his letter as
if to ascertain the number of the house he wanted,
stopped at a private door about half-way down that
crowded thoroughfare.
A miniature painter lived there, for
there was a large gilt frame screwed upon the street-door,
in which were displayed, upon a black velvet ground,
two portraits of naval dress coats with faces looking
out of them, and telescopes attached; one of a young
gentleman in a very vermilion uniform, flourishing
a sabre; and one of a literary character with a high
forehead, a pen and ink, six books, and a curtain.
There was, moreover, a touching representation of
a young lady reading a manuscript in an unfathomable
forest, and a charming whole length of a large-headed
little boy, sitting on a stool with his legs fore-shortened
to the size of salt-spoons. Besides these works
of art, there were a great many heads of old ladies
and gentlemen smirking at each other out of blue and
brown skies, and an elegantly written card of terms
with an embossed border.
Mr Nickleby glanced at these frivolities
with great contempt, and gave a double knock, which,
having been thrice repeated, was answered by a servant
girl with an uncommonly dirty face.
‘Is Mrs Nickleby at home, girl?’
demanded Ralph sharply.
‘Her name ain’t Nickleby,’
said the girl, ‘La Creevy, you mean.’
Mr Nickleby looked very indignant
at the handmaid on being thus corrected, and demanded
with much asperity what she meant; which she was about
to state, when a female voice proceeding from a perpendicular
staircase at the end of the passage, inquired who was
wanted.
‘Mrs Nickleby,’ said Ralph.
‘It’s the second floor,
Hannah,’ said the same voice; ’what a stupid
thing you are! Is the second floor at home?’
’Somebody went out just now,
but I think it was the attic which had been a cleaning
of himself,’ replied the girl.
‘You had better see,’
said the invisible female. ’Show the gentleman
where the bell is, and tell him he mustn’t knock
double knocks for the second floor; I can’t
allow a knock except when the bell’s broke,
and then it must be two single ones.’
‘Here,’ said Ralph, walking
in without more parley, ’I beg your pardon;
is that Mrs La what’s-her-name?’
‘Creevy—La Creevy,’
replied the voice, as a yellow headdress bobbed over
the banisters.
‘I’ll speak to you a moment,
ma’am, with your leave,’ said Ralph.
The voice replied that the gentleman
was to walk up; but he had walked up before it spoke,
and stepping into the first floor, was received by
the wearer of the yellow head-dress, who had a gown
to correspond, and was of much the same colour herself.
Miss La Creevy was a mincing young lady of fifty,
and Miss La Creevy’s apartment was the gilt
frame downstairs on a larger scale and something dirtier.
‘Hem!’ said Miss La Creevy,
coughing delicately behind her black silk mitten.
’A miniature, I presume. A very strongly-marked
countenance for the purpose, sir. Have you ever
sat before?’
‘You mistake my purpose, I see,
ma’am,’ replied Mr Nickleby, in his usual
blunt fashion. ’I have no money to throw
away on miniatures, ma’am, and nobody to give
one to (thank God) if I had. Seeing you on the
stairs, I wanted to ask a question of you, about some
lodgers here.’
Miss La Creevy coughed once more—this
cough was to conceal her disappointment—and
said, ‘Oh, indeed!’
’I infer from what you said
to your servant, that the floor above belongs to you,
ma’am,’ said Mr Nickleby.
Yes it did, Miss La Creevy replied.
The upper part of the house belonged to her, and
as she had no necessity for the second-floor rooms
just then, she was in the habit of letting them.
Indeed, there was a lady from the country and her
two children in them, at that present speaking.
‘A widow, ma’am?’ said Ralph.
‘Yes, she is a widow,’ replied the lady.
‘A poor widow, ma’am,’
said Ralph, with a powerful emphasis on that little
adjective which conveys so much.
‘Well, I’m afraid she is poor,’
rejoined Miss La Creevy.
‘I happen to know that she is,
ma’am,’ said Ralph. ’Now, what
business has a poor widow in such a house as this,
ma’am?’
‘Very true,’ replied Miss
La Creevy, not at all displeased with this implied
compliment to the apartments. ‘Exceedingly
true.’
‘I know her circumstances intimately,
ma’am,’ said Ralph; ’in fact, I
am a relation of the family; and I should recommend
you not to keep them here, ma’am.’
’I should hope, if there was
any incompatibility to meet the pecuniary obligations,’
said Miss La Creevy with another cough, ‘that
the lady’s family would—’
‘No they wouldn’t, ma’am,’
interrupted Ralph, hastily. ’Don’t
think it.’
‘If I am to understand that,’
said Miss La Creevy, ’the case wears a very
different appearance.’
‘You may understand it then,
ma’am,’ said Ralph, ’and make your
arrangements accordingly. I am the family, ma’am—at
least, I believe I am the only relation they have,
and I think it right that you should know I can’t
support them in their extravagances. How long
have they taken these lodgings for?’
‘Only from week to week,’
replied Miss La Creevy. ’Mrs Nickleby
paid the first week in advance.’
‘Then you had better get them
out at the end of it,’ said Ralph. ’They
can’t do better than go back to the country,
ma’am; they are in everybody’s way here.’
‘Certainly,’ said Miss
La Creevy, rubbing her hands, ’if Mrs Nickleby
took the apartments without the means of paying for
them, it was very unbecoming a lady.’
‘Of course it was, ma’am,’ said
Ralph.
‘And naturally,’ continued
Miss La Creevy, ’I who am, at present—
hem—an unprotected female, cannot afford
to lose by the apartments.’
‘Of course you can’t, ma’am,’
replied Ralph.
‘Though at the same time,’
added Miss La Creevy, who was plainly wavering between
her good-nature and her interest, ’I have nothing
whatever to say against the lady, who is extremely
pleasant and affable, though, poor thing, she seems
terribly low in her spirits; nor against the young
people either, for nicer, or better-behaved young
people cannot be.’
‘Very well, ma’am,’
said Ralph, turning to the door, for these encomiums
on poverty irritated him; ’I have done my duty,
and perhaps more than I ought: of course nobody
will thank me for saying what I have.’
‘I am sure I am very much obliged
to you at least, sir,’ said Miss La Creevy in
a gracious manner. ’Would you do me the
favour to look at a few specimens of my portrait painting?’
‘You’re very good, ma’am,’
said Mr Nickleby, making off with great speed; ’but
as I have a visit to pay upstairs, and my time is
precious, I really can’t.’
‘At any other time when you
are passing, I shall be most happy,’ said Miss
La Creevy. ’Perhaps you will have the kindness
to take a card of terms with you? Thank you—good-morning!’
‘Good-morning, ma’am,’
said Ralph, shutting the door abruptly after him to
prevent any further conversation. ’Now
for my sister-in-law. Bah!’
Climbing up another perpendicular
flight, composed with great mechanical ingenuity of
nothing but corner stairs, Mr Ralph Nickleby stopped
to take breath on the landing, when he was overtaken
by the handmaid, whom the politeness of Miss La Creevy
had dispatched to announce him, and who had apparently
been making a variety of unsuccessful attempts, since
their last interview, to wipe her dirty face clean,
upon an apron much dirtier.
‘What name?’ said the girl.
‘Nickleby,’ replied Ralph.
‘Oh! Mrs Nickleby,’
said the girl, throwing open the door, ’here’s
Mr Nickleby.’
A lady in deep mourning rose as Mr
Ralph Nickleby entered, but appeared incapable of
advancing to meet him, and leant upon the arm of a
slight but very beautiful girl of about seventeen,
who had been sitting by her. A youth, who appeared
a year or two older, stepped forward and saluted Ralph
as his uncle.
‘Oh,’ growled Ralph, with
an ill-favoured frown, ’you are Nicholas, I
suppose?’
‘That is my name, sir,’ replied the youth.
‘Put my hat down,’ said
Ralph, imperiously. ’Well, ma’am,
how do you do? You must bear up against sorrow,
ma’am; I always do.’
‘Mine was no common loss!’
said Mrs Nickleby, applying her handkerchief to her
eyes.
‘It was no UNcommon loss, ma’am,’
returned Ralph, as he coolly unbuttoned his spencer.
’Husbands die every day, ma’am, and wives
too.’
‘And brothers also, sir,’
said Nicholas, with a glance of indignation.
‘Yes, sir, and puppies, and
pug-dogs likewise,’ replied his uncle, taking
a chair. ’You didn’t mention in your
letter what my brother’s complaint was, ma’am.’
‘The doctors could attribute
it to no particular disease,’ said Mrs Nickleby;
shedding tears. ’We have too much reason
to fear that he died of a broken heart.’
‘Pooh!’ said Ralph, ’there’s
no such thing. I can understand a man’s
dying of a broken neck, or suffering from a broken
arm, or a broken head, or a broken leg, or a broken
nose; but a broken heart! —nonsense, it’s
the cant of the day. If a man can’t pay
his debts, he dies of a broken heart, and his widow’s
a martyr.’
‘Some people, I believe, have
no hearts to break,’ observed Nicholas, quietly.
‘How old is this boy, for God’s
sake?’ inquired Ralph, wheeling back his chair,
and surveying his nephew from head to foot with intense
scorn.
‘Nicholas is very nearly nineteen,’ replied
the widow.
‘Nineteen, eh!’ said Ralph;
’and what do you mean to do for your bread,
sir?’
‘Not to live upon my mother,’
replied Nicholas, his heart swelling as he spoke.
‘You’d have little enough
to live upon, if you did,’ retorted the uncle,
eyeing him contemptuously.
‘Whatever it be,’ said
Nicholas, flushed with anger, ’I shall not look
to you to make it more.’
‘Nicholas, my dear, recollect
yourself,’ remonstrated Mrs Nickleby.
‘Dear Nicholas, pray,’ urged the young
lady.
‘Hold your tongue, sir,’
said Ralph. ’Upon my word! Fine
beginnings, Mrs Nickleby—fine beginnings!’
Mrs Nickleby made no other reply than
entreating Nicholas by a gesture to keep silent; and
the uncle and nephew looked at each other for some
seconds without speaking. The face of the old
man was stern, hard-featured, and forbidding; that
of the young one, open, handsome, and ingenuous.
The old man’s eye was keen with the twinklings
of avarice and cunning; the young man’s bright
with the light of intelligence and spirit. His
figure was somewhat slight, but manly and well formed;
and, apart from all the grace of youth and comeliness,
there was an emanation from the warm young heart in
his look and bearing which kept the old man down.
However striking such a contrast as
this may be to lookers-on, none ever feel it with
half the keenness or acuteness of perfection with
which it strikes to the very soul of him whose inferiority
it marks. It galled Ralph to the heart’s
core, and he hated Nicholas from that hour.
The mutual inspection was at length
brought to a close by Ralph withdrawing his eyes,
with a great show of disdain, and calling Nicholas
‘a boy.’ This word is much used as
a term of reproach by elderly gentlemen towards their
juniors: probably with the view of deluding society
into the belief that if they could be young again,
they wouldn’t on any account.
‘Well, ma’am,’ said
Ralph, impatiently, ’the creditors have administered,
you tell me, and there’s nothing left for you?’
‘Nothing,’ replied Mrs Nickleby.
’And you spent what little money
you had, in coming all the way to London, to see what
I could do for you?’ pursued Ralph.
‘I hoped,’ faltered Mrs
Nickleby, ’that you might have an opportunity
of doing something for your brother’s children.
It was his dying wish that I should appeal to you
in their behalf.’
‘I don’t know how it is,’
muttered Ralph, walking up and down the room, ’but
whenever a man dies without any property of his own,
he always seems to think he has a right to dispose
of other people’s. What is your daughter
fit for, ma’am?’
‘Kate has been well educated,’
sobbed Mrs Nickleby. ’Tell your uncle,
my dear, how far you went in French and extras.’
The poor girl was about to murmur
something, when her uncle stopped her, very unceremoniously.
‘We must try and get you apprenticed
at some boarding-school,’ said Ralph.
’You have not been brought up too delicately
for that, I hope?’
‘No, indeed, uncle,’ replied
the weeping girl. ’I will try to do anything
that will gain me a home and bread.’
‘Well, well,’ said Ralph,
a little softened, either by his niece’s beauty
or her distress (stretch a point, and say the latter).
’You must try it, and if the life is too hard,
perhaps dressmaking or tambour-work will come lighter.
Have you ever done anything, sir?’ (turning
to his nephew.)
‘No,’ replied Nicholas, bluntly.
‘No, I thought not!’ said
Ralph. ’This is the way my brother brought
up his children, ma’am.’
’Nicholas has not long completed
such education as his poor father could give him,’
rejoined Mrs Nickleby, ‘and he was thinking of—’
‘Of making something of him
someday,’ said Ralph. ’The old story;
always thinking, and never doing. If my brother
had been a man of activity and prudence, he might
have left you a rich woman, ma’am: and
if he had turned his son into the world, as my father
turned me, when I wasn’t as old as that boy
by a year and a half, he would have been in a situation
to help you, instead of being a burden upon you, and
increasing your distress. My brother was a thoughtless,
inconsiderate man, Mrs Nickleby, and nobody, I am sure,
can have better reason to feel that, than you.’
This appeal set the widow upon thinking
that perhaps she might have made a more successful
venture with her one thousand pounds, and then she
began to reflect what a comfortable sum it would have
been just then; which dismal thoughts made her tears
flow faster, and in the excess of these griefs she
(being a well-meaning woman enough, but weak withal)
fell first to deploring her hard fate, and then to
remarking, with many sobs, that to be sure she had
been a slave to poor Nicholas, and had often told
him she might have married better (as indeed she had,
very often), and that she never knew in his lifetime
how the money went, but that if he had confided in
her they might all have been better off that day;
with other bitter recollections common to most married
ladies, either during their coverture, or afterwards,
or at both periods. Mrs Nickleby concluded by
lamenting that the dear departed had never deigned
to profit by her advice, save on one occasion; which
was a strictly veracious statement, inasmuch as he
had only acted upon it once, and had ruined himself
in consequence.
Mr Ralph Nickleby heard all this with
a half-smile; and when the widow had finished, quietly
took up the subject where it had been left before
the above outbreak.
‘Are you willing to work, sir?’
he inquired, frowning on his nephew.
‘Of course I am,’ replied Nicholas haughtily.
‘Then see here, sir,’
said his uncle. ’This caught my eye this
morning, and you may thank your stars for it.’
With this exordium, Mr Ralph Nickleby
took a newspaper from his pocket, and after unfolding
it, and looking for a short time among the advertisements,
read as follows:
’”Education.—At
Mr Wackford Squeers’s Academy, Dotheboys Hall,
at the delightful village of Dotheboys, near Greta
Bridge in Yorkshire, Youth are boarded, clothed, booked,
furnished with pocket-money, provided with all necessaries,
instructed in all languages living and dead, mathematics,
orthography, geometry, astronomy, trigonometry, the
use of the globes, algebra, single stick (if required),
writing, arithmetic, fortification, and every other
branch of classical literature. Terms, twenty
guineas per annum. No extras, no vacations, and
diet unparalleled. Mr Squeers is in town, and
attends daily, from one till four, at the Saracen’s
Head, Snow Hill. N.B. An able assistant
wanted. Annual salary 5 pounds. A Master
of Arts would be preferred.”
‘There!’ said Ralph, folding
the paper again. ’Let him get that situation,
and his fortune is made.’
‘But he is not a Master of Arts,’ said
Mrs Nickleby.
‘That,’ replied Ralph, ‘that, I
think, can be got over.’
‘But the salary is so small,
and it is such a long way off, uncle!’ faltered
Kate.
‘Hush, Kate my dear,’
interposed Mrs Nickleby; ’your uncle must know
best.’
‘I say,’ repeated Ralph,
tartly, ’let him get that situation, and his
fortune is made. If he don’t like that,
let him get one for himself. Without friends,
money, recommendation, or knowledge of business of
any kind, let him find honest employment in London,
which will keep him in shoe leather, and I’ll
give him a thousand pounds. At least,’
said Mr Ralph Nickleby, checking himself, ’I
would if I had it.’
‘Poor fellow!’ said the
young lady. ’Oh! uncle, must we be separated
so soon!’
’Don’t tease your uncle
with questions when he is thinking only for our good,
my love,’ said Mrs Nickleby. ’Nicholas,
my dear, I wish you would say something.’
‘Yes, mother, yes,’ said
Nicholas, who had hitherto remained silent and absorbed
in thought. ’If I am fortunate enough to
be appointed to this post, sir, for which I am so
imperfectly qualified, what will become of those I
leave behind?’
‘Your mother and sister, sir,’
replied Ralph, ’will be provided for, in that
case (not otherwise), by me, and placed in some sphere
of life in which they will be able to be independent.
That will be my immediate care; they will not remain
as they are, one week after your departure, I will
undertake.’
‘Then,’ said Nicholas,
starting gaily up, and wringing his uncle’s
hand, ’I am ready to do anything you wish me.
Let us try our fortune with Mr Squeers at once; he
can but refuse.’
‘He won’t do that,’
said Ralph. ’He will be glad to have you
on my recommendation. Make yourself of use to
him, and you’ll rise to be a partner in the
establishment in no time. Bless me, only think!
if he were to die, why your fortune’s made at
once.’
‘To be sure, I see it all,’
said poor Nicholas, delighted with a thousand visionary
ideas, that his good spirits and his inexperience
were conjuring up before him. ’Or suppose
some young nobleman who is being educated at the Hall,
were to take a fancy to me, and get his father to
appoint me his travelling tutor when he left, and when
we come back from the continent, procured me some handsome
appointment. Eh! uncle?’
‘Ah, to be sure!’ sneered Ralph.
’And who knows, but when he
came to see me when I was settled (as he would of
course), he might fall in love with Kate, who would
be keeping my house, and—and marry her,
eh! uncle? Who knows?’
‘Who, indeed!’ snarled Ralph.
‘How happy we should be!’
cried Nicholas with enthusiasm. ’The pain
of parting is nothing to the joy of meeting again.
Kate will be a beautiful woman, and I so proud to
hear them say so, and mother so happy to be with us
once again, and all these sad times forgotten, and—’
The picture was too bright a one to bear, and Nicholas,
fairly overpowered by it, smiled faintly, and burst
into tears.
This simple family, born and bred
in retirement, and wholly unacquainted with what is
called the world—a conventional phrase
which, being interpreted, often signifieth all the
rascals in it— mingled their tears together
at the thought of their first separation; and, this
first gush of feeling over, were proceeding to dilate
with all the buoyancy of untried hope on the bright
prospects before them, when Mr Ralph Nickleby suggested,
that if they lost time, some more fortunate candidate
might deprive Nicholas of the stepping-stone to fortune
which the advertisement pointed out, and so undermine
all their air-built castles. This timely reminder
effectually stopped the conversation. Nicholas,
having carefully copied the address of Mr Squeers,
the uncle and nephew issued forth together in quest
of that accomplished gentleman; Nicholas firmly persuading
himself that he had done his relative great injustice
in disliking him at first sight; and Mrs Nickleby
being at some pains to inform her daughter that she
was sure he was a much more kindly disposed person
than he seemed; which, Miss Nickleby dutifully remarked,
he might very easily be.
To tell the truth, the good lady’s
opinion had been not a little influenced by her brother-in-law’s
appeal to her better understanding, and his implied
compliment to her high deserts; and although she had
dearly loved her husband, and still doted on her children,
he had struck so successfully on one of those little
jarring chords in the human heart (Ralph was well acquainted
with its worst weaknesses, though he knew nothing
of its best), that she had already begun seriously
to consider herself the amiable and suffering victim
of her late husband’s imprudence.