Mr and Mrs Squeers at Home
Mr Squeers, being safely landed, left
Nicholas and the boys standing with the luggage in
the road, to amuse themselves by looking at the coach
as it changed horses, while he ran into the tavern
and went through the leg-stretching process at the
bar. After some minutes, he returned, with his
legs thoroughly stretched, if the hue of his nose
and a short hiccup afforded any criterion; and at the
same time there came out of the yard a rusty pony-chaise,
and a cart, driven by two labouring men.
‘Put the boys and the boxes
into the cart,’ said Squeers, rubbing his hands;
’and this young man and me will go on in the
chaise. Get in, Nickleby.’
Nicholas obeyed. Mr. Squeers
with some difficulty inducing the pony to obey also,
they started off, leaving the cart-load of infant
misery to follow at leisure.
‘Are you cold, Nickleby?’
inquired Squeers, after they had travelled some distance
in silence.
‘Rather, sir, I must say.’
‘Well, I don’t find fault
with that,’ said Squeers; ’it’s a
long journey this weather.’
‘Is it much farther to Dotheboys
Hall, sir?’ asked Nicholas.
‘About three mile from here,’
replied Squeers. ’But you needn’t
call it a Hall down here.’
Nicholas coughed, as if he would like to know why.
‘The fact is, it ain’t a Hall,’
observed Squeers drily.
‘Oh, indeed!’ said Nicholas,
whom this piece of intelligence much astonished.
‘No,’ replied Squeers.
’We call it a Hall up in London, because it
sounds better, but they don’t know it by that
name in these parts. A man may call his house
an island if he likes; there’s no act of Parliament
against that, I believe?’
‘I believe not, sir,’ rejoined Nicholas.
Squeers eyed his companion slyly,
at the conclusion of this little dialogue, and finding
that he had grown thoughtful and appeared in nowise
disposed to volunteer any observations, contented himself
with lashing the pony until they reached their journey’s
end.
‘Jump out,’ said Squeers.
’Hallo there! Come and put this horse
up. Be quick, will you!’
While the schoolmaster was uttering
these and other impatient cries, Nicholas had time
to observe that the school was a long, cold-looking
house, one storey high, with a few straggling out-buildings
behind, and a barn and stable adjoining. After
the lapse of a minute or two, the noise of somebody
unlocking the yard-gate was heard, and presently a
tall lean boy, with a lantern in his hand, issued
forth.
‘Is that you, Smike?’ cried Squeers.
‘Yes, sir,’ replied the boy.
‘Then why the devil didn’t you come before?’
‘Please, sir, I fell asleep
over the fire,’ answered Smike, with humility.
‘Fire! what fire? Where’s
there a fire?’ demanded the schoolmaster, sharply.
‘Only in the kitchen, sir,’
replied the boy. ’Missus said as I was
sitting up, I might go in there for a warm.’
‘Your missus is a fool,’
retorted Squeers. ’You’d have been
a deuced deal more wakeful in the cold, I’ll
engage.’
By this time Mr Squeers had dismounted;
and after ordering the boy to see to the pony, and
to take care that he hadn’t any more corn that
night, he told Nicholas to wait at the front-door a
minute while he went round and let him in.
A host of unpleasant misgivings, which
had been crowding upon Nicholas during the whole journey,
thronged into his mind with redoubled force when he
was left alone. His great distance from home
and the impossibility of reaching it, except on foot,
should he feel ever so anxious to return, presented
itself to him in most alarming colours; and as he
looked up at the dreary house and dark windows, and
upon the wild country round, covered with snow, he
felt a depression of heart and spirit which he had
never experienced before.
‘Now then!’ cried Squeers,
poking his head out at the front-door. ‘Where
are you, Nickleby?’
‘Here, sir,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Come in, then,’ said
Squeers ’the wind blows in, at this door, fit
to knock a man off his legs.’
Nicholas sighed, and hurried in.
Mr Squeers, having bolted the door to keep it shut,
ushered him into a small parlour scantily furnished
with a few chairs, a yellow map hung against the wall,
and a couple of tables; one of which bore some preparations
for supper; while, on the other, a tutor’s assistant,
a Murray’s grammar, half-a-dozen cards of terms,
and a worn letter directed to Wackford Squeers, Esquire,
were arranged in picturesque confusion.
They had not been in this apartment
a couple of minutes, when a female bounced into the
room, and, seizing Mr Squeers by the throat, gave
him two loud kisses: one close after the other,
like a postman’s knock. The lady, who
was of a large raw-boned figure, was about half a
head taller than Mr Squeers, and was dressed in a
dimity night-jacket; with her hair in papers; she had
also a dirty nightcap on, relieved by a yellow cotton
handkerchief which tied it under the chin.
‘How is my Squeery?’ said
this lady in a playful manner, and a very hoarse voice.
‘Quite well, my love,’
replied Squeers. ‘How’s the cows?’
‘All right, every one of’em,’ answered
the lady.
‘And the pigs?’ said Squeers.
‘As well as they were when you went away.’
‘Come; that’s a blessing,’
said Squeers, pulling off his great-coat. ‘The
boys are all as they were, I suppose?’
‘Oh, yes, they’re well
enough,’ replied Mrs Squeers, snappishly.
‘That young Pitcher’s had a fever.’
‘No!’ exclaimed Squeers.
’Damn that boy, he’s always at something
of that sort.’
‘Never was such a boy, I do
believe,’ said Mrs Squeers; ’whatever he
has is always catching too. I say it’s
obstinacy, and nothing shall ever convince me that
it isn’t. I’d beat it out of him;
and I told you that, six months ago.’
‘So you did, my love,’
rejoined Squeers. ’We’ll try what
can be done.’
Pending these little endearments,
Nicholas had stood, awkwardly enough, in the middle
of the room: not very well knowing whether he
was expected to retire into the passage, or to remain
where he was. He was now relieved from his perplexity
by Mr Squeers.
‘This is the new young man,
my dear,’ said that gentleman.
‘Oh,’ replied Mrs Squeers,
nodding her head at Nicholas, and eyeing him coldly
from top to toe.
‘He’ll take a meal with
us tonight,’ said Squeers, ’and go among
the boys tomorrow morning. You can give him
a shake-down here, tonight, can’t you?’
‘We must manage it somehow,’
replied the lady. ’You don’t much
mind how you sleep, I suppose, sir?’
No, indeed,’ replied Nicholas, ‘I am not
particular.’
‘That’s lucky,’
said Mrs Squeers. And as the lady’s humour
was considered to lie chiefly in retort, Mr Squeers
laughed heartily, and seemed to expect that Nicholas
should do the same.
After some further conversation between
the master and mistress relative to the success of
Mr Squeers’s trip and the people who had paid,
and the people who had made default in payment, a young
servant girl brought in a Yorkshire pie and some cold
beef, which being set upon the table, the boy Smike
appeared with a jug of ale.
Mr Squeers was emptying his great-coat
pockets of letters to different boys, and other small
documents, which he had brought down in them.
The boy glanced, with an anxious and timid expression,
at the papers, as if with a sickly hope that one among
them might relate to him. The look was a very
painful one, and went to Nicholas’s heart at
once; for it told a long and very sad history.
It induced him to consider the boy
more attentively, and he was surprised to observe
the extraordinary mixture of garments which formed
his dress. Although he could not have been less
than eighteen or nineteen years old, and was tall
for that age, he wore a skeleton suit, such as is
usually put upon very little boys, and which, though
most absurdly short in the arms and legs, was quite
wide enough for his attenuated frame. In order
that the lower part of his legs might be in perfect
keeping with this singular dress, he had a very large
pair of boots, originally made for tops, which might
have been once worn by some stout farmer, but were
now too patched and tattered for a beggar. Heaven
knows how long he had been there, but he still wore
the same linen which he had first taken down; for,
round his neck, was a tattered child’s frill,
only half concealed by a coarse, man’s neckerchief.
He was lame; and as he feigned to be busy in arranging
the table, glanced at the letters with a look so keen,
and yet so dispirited and hopeless, that Nicholas
could hardly bear to watch him.
‘What are you bothering about
there, Smike?’ cried Mrs Squeers; ’let
the things alone, can’t you?’
‘Eh!’ said Squeers, looking
up. ‘Oh! it’s you, is it?’
‘Yes, sir,’ replied the
youth, pressing his hands together, as though to control,
by force, the nervous wandering of his fingers.
‘Is there—’
‘Well!’ said Squeers.
‘Have you—did anybody—has
nothing been heard—about me?’
‘Devil a bit,’ replied Squeers testily.
The lad withdrew his eyes, and, putting
his hand to his face, moved towards the door.
‘Not a word,’ resumed
Squeers, ’and never will be. Now, this
is a pretty sort of thing, isn’t it, that you
should have been left here, all these years, and no
money paid after the first six—nor no notice
taken, nor no clue to be got who you belong to?
It’s a pretty sort of thing that I should have
to feed a great fellow like you, and never hope to
get one penny for it, isn’t it?’
The boy put his hand to his head as
if he were making an effort to recollect something,
and then, looking vacantly at his questioner, gradually
broke into a smile, and limped away.
‘I’ll tell you what, Squeers,’
remarked his wife as the door closed, ‘I think
that young chap’s turning silly.’
‘I hope not,’ said the
schoolmaster; ’for he’s a handy fellow
out of doors, and worth his meat and drink, anyway.
I should think he’d have wit enough for us
though, if he was. But come; let’s have
supper, for I am hungry and tired, and want to get
to bed.’
This reminder brought in an exclusive
steak for Mr Squeers, who speedily proceeded to do
it ample justice. Nicholas drew up his chair,
but his appetite was effectually taken away.
‘How’s the steak, Squeers?’ said
Mrs S.
‘Tender as a lamb,’ replied Squeers.
‘Have a bit.’
‘I couldn’t eat a morsel,’
replied his wife. ’What’ll the young
man take, my dear?’
‘Whatever he likes that’s
present,’ rejoined Squeers, in a most unusual
burst of generosity.
‘What do you say, Mr Knuckleboy?’
inquired Mrs Squeers.
‘I’ll take a little of
the pie, if you please,’ replied Nicholas.
‘A very little, for I’m not hungry.’
Well, it’s a pity to cut the
pie if you’re not hungry, isn’t it?’
said Mrs Squeers. ‘Will you try a bit of
the beef?’
‘Whatever you please,’
replied Nicholas abstractedly; ’it’s all
the same to me.’
Mrs Squeers looked vastly gracious
on receiving this reply; and nodding to Squeers, as
much as to say that she was glad to find the young
man knew his station, assisted Nicholas to a slice
of meat with her own fair hands.
‘Ale, Squeery?’ inquired
the lady, winking and frowning to give him to understand
that the question propounded, was, whether Nicholas
should have ale, and not whether he (Squeers) would
take any.
‘Certainly,’ said Squeers,
re-telegraphing in the same manner. ’A
glassful.’
So Nicholas had a glassful, and being
occupied with his own reflections, drank it, in happy
innocence of all the foregone proceedings.
‘Uncommon juicy steak that,’
said Squeers, as he laid down his knife and fork,
after plying it, in silence, for some time.
‘It’s prime meat,’
rejoined his lady. ’I bought a good large
piece of it myself on purpose for—’
‘For what!’ exclaimed
Squeers hastily. ‘Not for the—’
‘No, no; not for them,’
rejoined Mrs Squeers; ’on purpose for you against
you came home. Lor! you didn’t think I
could have made such a mistake as that.’
‘Upon my word, my dear, I didn’t
know what you were going to say,’ said Squeers,
who had turned pale.
‘You needn’t make yourself
uncomfortable,’ remarked his wife, laughing
heartily. ‘To think that I should be such
a noddy! Well!’
This part of the conversation was
rather unintelligible; but popular rumour in the neighbourhood
asserted that Mr Squeers, being amiably opposed to
cruelty to animals, not unfrequently purchased for
by consumption the bodies of horned cattle who had
died a natural death; possibly he was apprehensive
of having unintentionally devoured some choice morsel
intended for the young gentlemen.
Supper being over, and removed by
a small servant girl with a hungry eye, Mrs Squeers
retired to lock it up, and also to take into safe
custody the clothes of the five boys who had just arrived,
and who were half-way up the troublesome flight of
steps which leads to death’s door, in consequence
of exposure to the cold. They were then regaled
with a light supper of porridge, and stowed away, side
by side, in a small bedstead, to warm each other, and
dream of a substantial meal with something hot after
it, if their fancies set that way: which it is
not at all improbable they did.
Mr Squeers treated himself to a stiff
tumbler of brandy and water, made on the liberal half-and-half
principle, allowing for the dissolution of the sugar;
and his amiable helpmate mixed Nicholas the ghost
of a small glassful of the same compound. This
done, Mr and Mrs Squeers drew close up to the fire,
and sitting with their feet on the fender, talked
confidentially in whispers; while Nicholas, taking
up the tutor’s assistant, read the interesting
legends in the miscellaneous questions, and all the
figures into the bargain, with as much thought or
consciousness of what he was doing, as if he had been
in a magnetic slumber.
At length, Mr Squeers yawned fearfully,
and opined that it was high time to go to bed; upon
which signal, Mrs Squeers and the girl dragged in
a small straw mattress and a couple of blankets, and
arranged them into a couch for Nicholas.
‘We’ll put you into your
regular bedroom tomorrow, Nickelby,’ said Squeers.
‘Let me see! Who sleeps in Brooks’s’s
bed, my dear?’
‘In Brooks’s,’ said
Mrs Squeers, pondering. ’There’s
Jennings, little Bolder, Graymarsh, and what’s
his name.’
‘So there is,’ rejoined
Squeers. ‘Yes! Brooks is full.’
‘Full!’ thought Nicholas. ‘I
should think he was.’
‘There’s a place somewhere,
I know,’ said Squeers; ’but I can’t
at this moment call to mind where it is. However,
we’ll have that all settled tomorrow.
Good-night, Nickleby. Seven o’clock in
the morning, mind.’
‘I shall be ready, sir,’
replied Nicholas. ‘Good-night.’
‘I’ll come in myself and
show you where the well is,’ said Squeers.
’You’ll always find a little bit of soap
in the kitchen window; that belongs to you.’
Nicholas opened his eyes, but not
his mouth; and Squeers was again going away, when
he once more turned back.
‘I don’t know, I am sure,’
he said, ’whose towel to put you on; but if
you’ll make shift with something tomorrow morning,
Mrs Squeers will arrange that, in the course of the
day. My dear, don’t forget.’
‘I’ll take care,’
replied Mrs Squeers; ’and mind you take
care, young man, and get first wash. The teacher
ought always to have it; but they get the better of
him if they can.’
Mr Squeers then nudged Mrs Squeers
to bring away the brandy bottle, lest Nicholas should
help himself in the night; and the lady having seized
it with great precipitation, they retired together.
Nicholas, being left alone, took half-a-dozen
turns up and down the room in a condition of much
agitation and excitement; but, growing gradually calmer,
sat himself down in a chair, and mentally resolved
that, come what come might, he would endeavour, for
a time, to bear whatever wretchedness might be in
store for him, and that remembering the helplessness
of his mother and sister, he would give his uncle
no plea for deserting them in their need. Good
resolutions seldom fail of producing some good effect
in the mind from which they spring. He grew
less desponding, and—so sanguine and buoyant
is youth—even hoped that affairs at Dotheboys
Hall might yet prove better than they promised.
He was preparing for bed, with something
like renewed cheerfulness, when a sealed letter fell
from his coat pocket. In the hurry of leaving
London, it had escaped his attention, and had not occurred
to him since, but it at once brought back to him the
recollection of the mysterious behaviour of Newman
Noggs.
‘Dear me!’ said Nicholas;
‘what an extraordinary hand!’
It was directed to himself, was written
upon very dirty paper, and in such cramped and crippled
writing as to be almost illegible. After great
difficulty and much puzzling, he contrived to read
as follows:—
My dear young Man.
I know the world. Your father
did not, or he would not have done me a kindness when
there was no hope of return. You do not, or you
would not be bound on such a journey.
If ever you want a shelter in London
(don’t be angry at this, I once thought I never
should), they know where I live, at the sign of the
Crown, in Silver Street, Golden Square. It is
at the corner of Silver Street and James Street, with
a bar door both ways. You can come at night.
Once, nobody was ashamed—never mind that.
It’s all over.
Excuse errors. I should forget
how to wear a whole coat now. I have forgotten
all my old ways. My spelling may have gone with
them.
Newman Noggs.
P.S. If you should go near Barnard
Castle, there is good ale at the King’s Head.
Say you know me, and I am sure they will not charge
you for it. You may say Mr Noggs there, for I
was a gentleman then. I was indeed.
It may be a very undignified circumstances
to record, but after he had folded this letter and
placed it in his pocket-book, Nicholas Nickleby’s
eyes were dimmed with a moisture that might have been
taken for tears.