Nicholas varies the Monotony of Dothebys
Hall by a most vigorous and remarkable proceeding,
which leads to Consequences of some Importance
The cold, feeble dawn of a January
morning was stealing in at the windows of the common
sleeping-room, when Nicholas, raising himself on his
arm, looked among the prostrate forms which on every
side surrounded him, as though in search of some particular
object.
It needed a quick eye to detect, from
among the huddled mass of sleepers, the form of any
given individual. As they lay closely packed
together, covered, for warmth’s sake, with their
patched and ragged clothes, little could be distinguished
but the sharp outlines of pale faces, over which the
sombre light shed the same dull heavy colour; with,
here and there, a gaunt arm thrust forth: its
thinness hidden by no covering, but fully exposed
to view, in all its shrunken ugliness. There
were some who, lying on their backs with upturned
faces and clenched hands, just visible in the leaden
light, bore more the aspect of dead bodies than of
living creatures; and there were others coiled up
into strange and fantastic postures, such as might
have been taken for the uneasy efforts of pain to gain
some temporary relief, rather than the freaks of slumber.
A few— and these were among the youngest
of the children—slept peacefully on, with
smiles upon their faces, dreaming perhaps of home;
but ever and again a deep and heavy sigh, breaking
the stillness of the room, announced that some new
sleeper had awakened to the misery of another day;
and, as morning took the place of night, the smiles
gradually faded away, with the friendly darkness which
had given them birth.
Dreams are the bright creatures of
poem and legend, who sport on earth in the night season,
and melt away in the first beam of the sun, which
lights grim care and stern reality on their daily
pilgrimage through the world.
Nicholas looked upon the sleepers;
at first, with the air of one who gazes upon a scene
which, though familiar to him, has lost none of its
sorrowful effect in consequence; and, afterwards, with
a more intense and searching scrutiny, as a man would
who missed something his eye was accustomed to meet,
and had expected to rest upon. He was still
occupied in this search, and had half risen from his
bed in the eagerness of his quest, when the voice
of Squeers was heard, calling from the bottom of the
stairs.
‘Now then,’ cried that
gentleman, ’are you going to sleep all day,
up there—’
‘You lazy hounds?’ added
Mrs Squeers, finishing the sentence, and producing,
at the same time, a sharp sound, like that which is
occasioned by the lacing of stays.
‘We shall be down directly, sir,’ replied
Nicholas.
‘Down directly!’ said
Squeers. ’Ah! you had better be down directly,
or I’ll be down upon some of you in less.
Where’s that Smike?’
Nicholas looked hurriedly round again,
but made no answer.
‘Smike!’ shouted Squeers.
‘Do you want your head broke
in a fresh place, Smike?’ demanded his amiable
lady in the same key.
Still there was no reply, and still
Nicholas stared about him, as did the greater part
of the boys, who were by this time roused.
‘Confound his impudence!’
muttered Squeers, rapping the stair-rail impatiently
with his cane. ‘Nickleby!’
‘Well, sir.’
‘Send that obstinate scoundrel down; don’t
you hear me calling?’
‘He is not here, sir,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Don’t tell me a lie,’ retorted
the schoolmaster. ‘He is.’
‘He is not,’ retorted Nicholas angrily,
‘don’t tell me one.’
‘We shall soon see that,’
said Mr Squeers, rushing upstairs. ’I’ll
find him, I warrant you.’
With which assurance, Mr Squeers bounced
into the dormitory, and, swinging his cane in the
air ready for a blow, darted into the corner where
the lean body of the drudge was usually stretched at
night. The cane descended harmlessly upon the
ground. There was nobody there.
‘What does this mean?’
said Squeers, turning round with a very pale face.
‘Where have you hid him?’
‘I have seen nothing of him
since last night,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Come,’ said Squeers,
evidently frightened, though he endeavoured to look
otherwise, ‘you won’t save him this way.
Where is he?’
‘At the bottom of the nearest
pond for aught I know,’ rejoined Nicholas in
a low voice, and fixing his eyes full on the master’s
face.
‘Damn you, what do you mean
by that?’ retorted Squeers in great perturbation.
Without waiting for a reply, he inquired of the boys
whether any one among them knew anything of their missing
schoolmate.
There was a general hum of anxious
denial, in the midst of which, one shrill voice was
heard to say (as, indeed, everybody thought):
‘Please, sir, I think Smike’s run away,
sir.’
‘Ha!’ cried Squeers, turning sharp round.
‘Who said that?’
‘Tomkins, please sir,’
rejoined a chorus of voices. Mr Squeers made
a plunge into the crowd, and at one dive, caught a
very little boy, habited still in his night-gear,
and the perplexed expression of whose countenance,
as he was brought forward, seemed to intimate that
he was as yet uncertain whether he was about to be
punished or rewarded for the suggestion. He
was not long in doubt.
‘You think he has run away, do you, sir?’
demanded Squeers.
‘Yes, please sir,’ replied the little
boy.
‘And what, sir,’ said
Squeers, catching the little boy suddenly by the arms
and whisking up his drapery in a most dexterous manner,
’what reason have you to suppose that any boy
would want to run away from this establishment?
Eh, sir?’
The child raised a dismal cry, by
way of answer, and Mr Squeers, throwing himself into
the most favourable attitude for exercising his strength,
beat him until the little urchin in his writhings
actually rolled out of his hands, when he mercifully
allowed him to roll away, as he best could.
‘There,’ said Squeers.
’Now if any other boy thinks Smike has run
away, I shall be glad to have a talk with him.’
There was, of course, a profound silence,
during which Nicholas showed his disgust as plainly
as looks could show it.
‘Well, Nickleby,’ said
Squeers, eyeing him maliciously. ’You
think he has run away, I suppose?’
‘I think it extremely likely,’
replied Nicholas, in a quiet manner.
‘Oh, you do, do you?’
sneered Squeers. ‘Maybe you know he has?’
‘I know nothing of the kind.’
‘He didn’t tell you he
was going, I suppose, did he?’ sneered Squeers.
‘He did not,’ replied
Nicholas; ’I am very glad he did not, for it
would then have been my duty to have warned you in
time.’
‘Which no doubt you would have
been devilish sorry to do,’ said Squeers in
a taunting fashion.
‘I should indeed,’ replied
Nicholas. ’You interpret my feelings with
great accuracy.’
Mrs Squeers had listened to this conversation,
from the bottom of the stairs; but, now losing all
patience, she hastily assumed her night-jacket, and
made her way to the scene of action.
‘What’s all this here
to-do?’ said the lady, as the boys fell off
right and left, to save her the trouble of clearing
a passage with her brawny arms. ’What
on earth are you a talking to him for, Squeery!’
‘Why, my dear,’ said Squeers,
’the fact is, that Smike is not to be found.’
‘Well, I know that,’ said
the lady, ’and where’s the wonder?
If you get a parcel of proud-stomached teachers that
set the young dogs a rebelling, what else can you
look for? Now, young man, you just have the
kindness to take yourself off to the schoolroom, and
take the boys off with you, and don’t you stir
out of there till you have leave given you, or you
and I may fall out in a way that’ll spoil your
beauty, handsome as you think yourself, and so I tell
you.’
‘Indeed!’ said Nicholas.
‘Yes; and indeed and indeed
again, Mister Jackanapes,’ said the excited
lady; ’and I wouldn’t keep such as you
in the house another hour, if I had my way.’
‘Nor would you if I had mine,’
replied Nicholas. ‘Now, boys!’
‘Ah! Now, boys,’
said Mrs Squeers, mimicking, as nearly as she could,
the voice and manner of the usher. ’Follow
your leader, boys, and take pattern by Smike if you
dare. See what he’ll get for himself,
when he is brought back; and, mind! I tell you
that you shall have as bad, and twice as bad, if you
so much as open your mouths about him.’
‘If I catch him,’ said
Squeers, ’I’ll only stop short of flaying
him alive. I give you notice, boys.’
‘If you catch him,’
retorted Mrs Squeers, contemptuously; ’you are
sure to; you can’t help it, if you go the right
way to work. Come! Away with you!’
With these words, Mrs Squeers dismissed
the boys, and after a little light skirmishing with
those in the rear who were pressing forward to get
out of the way, but were detained for a few moments
by the throng in front, succeeded in clearing the
room, when she confronted her spouse alone.
‘He is off,’ said Mrs
Squeers. ’The cow-house and stable are
locked up, so he can’t be there; and he’s
not downstairs anywhere, for the girl has looked.
He must have gone York way, and by a public road
too.’
‘Why must he?’ inquired Squeers.
‘Stupid!’ said Mrs Squeers angrily.
‘He hadn’t any money, had he?’
‘Never had a penny of his own
in his whole life, that I know of,’ replied
Squeers.
‘To be sure,’ rejoined
Mrs Squeers, ’and he didn’t take anything
to eat with him; that I’ll answer for.
Ha! ha! ha!’
‘Ha! ha! ha!’ laughed Squeers.
‘Then, of course,’ said
Mrs S., ’he must beg his way, and he could do
that, nowhere, but on the public road.’
‘That’s true,’ exclaimed Squeers,
clapping his hands.
’True! Yes; but you would
never have thought of it, for all that, if I hadn’t
said so,’ replied his wife. ’Now,
if you take the chaise and go one road, and I borrow
Swallow’s chaise, and go the other, what with
keeping our eyes open, and asking questions, one or
other of us is pretty certain to lay hold of him.’
The worthy lady’s plan was adopted
and put in execution without a moment’s delay.
After a very hasty breakfast, and the prosecution
of some inquiries in the village, the result of which
seemed to show that he was on the right track, Squeers
started forth in the pony-chaise, intent upon discovery
and vengeance. Shortly afterwards, Mrs Squeers,
arrayed in the white top-coat, and tied up in various
shawls and handkerchiefs, issued forth in another chaise
and another direction, taking with her a good-sized
bludgeon, several odd pieces of strong cord, and a
stout labouring man: all provided and carried
upon the expedition, with the sole object of assisting
in the capture, and (once caught) insuring the safe
custody of the unfortunate Smike.
Nicholas remained behind, in a tumult
of feeling, sensible that whatever might be the upshot
of the boy’s flight, nothing but painful and
deplorable consequences were likely to ensue from it.
Death, from want and exposure to the weather, was the
best that could be expected from the protracted wandering
of so poor and helpless a creature, alone and unfriended,
through a country of which he was wholly ignorant.
There was little, perhaps, to choose between this
fate and a return to the tender mercies of the Yorkshire
school; but the unhappy being had established a hold
upon his sympathy and compassion, which made his heart
ache at the prospect of the suffering he was destined
to undergo. He lingered on, in restless anxiety,
picturing a thousand possibilities, until the evening
of next day, when Squeers returned, alone, and unsuccessful.
‘No news of the scamp!’
said the schoolmaster, who had evidently been stretching
his legs, on the old principle, not a few times during
the journey. ’I’ll have consolation
for this out of somebody, Nickleby, if Mrs Squeers
don’t hunt him down; so I give you warning.’
‘It is not in my power to console
you, sir,’ said Nicholas. ’It is
nothing to me.’
‘Isn’t it?’ said
Squeers in a threatening manner. ‘We shall
see!’
‘We shall,’ rejoined Nicholas.
’Here’s the pony run right
off his legs, and me obliged to come home with a hack
cob, that’ll cost fifteen shillings besides other
expenses,’ said Squeers; ‘who’s to
pay for that, do you hear?’
Nicholas shrugged his shoulders and remained silent.
‘I’ll have it out of somebody,
I tell you,’ said Squeers, his usual harsh crafty
manner changed to open bullying ’None of your
whining vapourings here, Mr Puppy, but be off to your
kennel, for it’s past your bedtime! Come!
Get out!’
Nicholas bit his lip and knit his
hands involuntarily, for his fingerends tingled to
avenge the insult; but remembering that the man was
drunk, and that it could come to little but a noisy
brawl, he contented himself with darting a contemptuous
look at the tyrant, and walked, as majestically as
he could, upstairs: not a little nettled, however,
to observe that Miss Squeers and Master Squeers, and
the servant girl, were enjoying the scene from a snug
corner; the two former indulging in many edifying
remarks about the presumption of poor upstarts, which
occasioned a vast deal of laughter, in which even
the most miserable of all miserable servant girls
joined: while Nicholas, stung to the quick, drew
over his head such bedclothes as he had, and sternly
resolved that the outstanding account between himself
and Mr Squeers should be settled rather more speedily
than the latter anticipated.
Another day came, and Nicholas was
scarcely awake when he heard the wheels of a chaise
approaching the house. It stopped. The
voice of Mrs Squeers was heard, and in exultation,
ordering a glass of spirits for somebody, which was
in itself a sufficient sign that something extraordinary
had happened. Nicholas hardly dared to look
out of the window; but he did so, and the very first
object that met his eyes was the wretched Smike:
so bedabbled with mud and rain, so haggard and worn,
and wild, that, but for his garments being such as
no scarecrow was ever seen to wear, he might have been
doubtful, even then, of his identity.
‘Lift him out,’ said Squeers,
after he had literally feasted his eyes, in silence,
upon the culprit. ‘Bring him in; bring
him in!’
‘Take care,’ cried Mrs
Squeers, as her husband proffered his assistance.
’We tied his legs under the apron and made’em
fast to the chaise, to prevent his giving us the slip
again.’
With hands trembling with delight,
Squeers unloosened the cord; and Smike, to all appearance
more dead than alive, was brought into the house and
securely locked up in a cellar, until such time as
Mr Squeers should deem it expedient to operate upon
him, in presence of the assembled school.
Upon a hasty consideration of the
circumstances, it may be matter of surprise to some
persons, that Mr and Mrs Squeers should have taken
so much trouble to repossess themselves of an incumbrance
of which it was their wont to complain so loudly;
but their surprise will cease when they are informed
that the manifold services of the drudge, if performed
by anybody else, would have cost the establishment
some ten or twelve shillings per week in the shape
of wages; and furthermore, that all runaways were,
as a matter of policy, made severe examples of, at
Dotheboys Hall, inasmuch as, in consequence of the
limited extent of its attractions, there was but little
inducement, beyond the powerful impulse of fear, for
any pupil, provided with the usual number of legs
and the power of using them, to remain.
The news that Smike had been caught
and brought back in triumph, ran like wild-fire through
the hungry community, and expectation was on tiptoe
all the morning. On tiptoe it was destined to
remain, however, until afternoon; when Squeers, having
refreshed himself with his dinner, and further strengthened
himself by an extra libation or so, made his appearance
(accompanied by his amiable partner) with a countenance
of portentous import, and a fearful instrument of
flagellation, strong, supple, wax-ended, and new,—in
short, purchased that morning, expressly for the occasion.
‘Is every boy here?’ asked
Squeers, in a tremendous voice.
Every boy was there, but every boy
was afraid to speak, so Squeers glared along the lines
to assure himself; and every eye drooped, and every
head cowered down, as he did so.
‘Each boy keep his place,’
said Squeers, administering his favourite blow to
the desk, and regarding with gloomy satisfaction the
universal start which it never failed to occasion.
’Nickleby! to your desk, sir.’
It was remarked by more than one small
observer, that there was a very curious and unusual
expression in the usher’s face; but he took
his seat, without opening his lips in reply.
Squeers, casting a triumphant glance at his assistant
and a look of most comprehensive despotism on the
boys, left the room, and shortly afterwards returned,
dragging Smike by the collar—or rather by
that fragment of his jacket which was nearest the
place where his collar would have been, had he boasted
such a decoration.
In any other place, the appearance
of the wretched, jaded, spiritless object would have
occasioned a murmur of compassion and remonstrance.
It had some effect, even there; for the lookers-on
moved uneasily in their seats; and a few of the boldest
ventured to steal looks at each other, expressive
of indignation and pity.
They were lost on Squeers, however,
whose gaze was fastened on the luckless Smike, as
he inquired, according to custom in such cases, whether
he had anything to say for himself.
‘Nothing, I suppose?’
said Squeers, with a diabolical grin.
Smike glanced round, and his eye rested,
for an instant, on Nicholas, as if he had expected
him to intercede; but his look was riveted on his
desk.
‘Have you anything to say?’
demanded Squeers again: giving his right arm
two or three flourishes to try its power and suppleness.
’Stand a little out of the way, Mrs Squeers,
my dear; I’ve hardly got room enough.’
‘Spare me, sir!’ cried Smike.
‘Oh! that’s all, is it?’
said Squeers. ’Yes, I’ll flog you
within an inch of your life, and spare you that.’
‘Ha, ha, ha,’ laughed
Mrs Squeers, ’that’s a good ‘un!’
‘I was driven to do it,’
said Smike faintly; and casting another imploring
look about him.
‘Driven to do it, were you?’
said Squeers. ’Oh! it wasn’t your
fault; it was mine, I suppose—eh?’
‘A nasty, ungrateful, pig-headed,
brutish, obstinate, sneaking dog,’ exclaimed
Mrs Squeers, taking Smike’s head under her arm,
and administering a cuff at every epithet; ‘what
does he mean by that?’
‘Stand aside, my dear,’
replied Squeers. ‘We’ll try and find
out.’
Mrs Squeers, being out of breath with
her exertions, complied. Squeers caught the boy
firmly in his grip; one desperate cut had fallen on
his body—he was wincing from the lash and
uttering a scream of pain—it was raised
again, and again about to fall—when Nicholas
Nickleby, suddenly starting up, cried ‘Stop!’
in a voice that made the rafters ring.
‘Who cried stop?’ said
Squeers, turning savagely round.
‘I,’ said Nicholas, stepping
forward. ‘This must not go on.’
‘Must not go on!’ cried Squeers, almost
in a shriek.
‘No!’ thundered Nicholas.
Aghast and stupefied by the boldness
of the interference, Squeers released his hold of
Smike, and, falling back a pace or two, gazed upon
Nicholas with looks that were positively frightful.
‘I say must not,’ repeated
Nicholas, nothing daunted; ’shall not.
I will prevent it.’
Squeers continued to gaze upon him,
with his eyes starting out of his head; but astonishment
had actually, for the moment, bereft him of speech.
’You have disregarded all my
quiet interference in the miserable lad’s behalf,’
said Nicholas; ’you have returned no answer to
the letter in which I begged forgiveness for him,
and offered to be responsible that he would remain
quietly here. Don’t blame me for this
public interference. You have brought it upon
yourself; not I.’
‘Sit down, beggar!’ screamed
Squeers, almost beside himself with rage, and seizing
Smike as he spoke.
‘Wretch,’ rejoined Nicholas,
fiercely, ’touch him at your peril! I
will not stand by, and see it done. My blood
is up, and I have the strength of ten such men as
you. Look to yourself, for by Heaven I will
not spare you, if you drive me on!’
‘Stand back,’ cried Squeers, brandishing
his weapon.
‘I have a long series of insults
to avenge,’ said Nicholas, flushed with passion;
’and my indignation is aggravated by the dastardly
cruelties practised on helpless infancy in this foul
den. Have a care; for if you do raise the devil
within me, the consequences shall fall heavily upon
your own head!’
He had scarcely spoken, when Squeers,
in a violent outbreak of wrath, and with a cry like
the howl of a wild beast, spat upon him, and struck
him a blow across the face with his instrument of
torture, which raised up a bar of livid flesh as it
was inflicted. Smarting with the agony of the
blow, and concentrating into that one moment all his
feelings of rage, scorn, and indignation, Nicholas
sprang upon him, wrested the weapon from his hand,
and pinning him by the throat, beat the ruffian till
he roared for mercy.
The boys—with the exception
of Master Squeers, who, coming to his father’s
assistance, harassed the enemy in the rear—moved
not, hand or foot; but Mrs Squeers, with many shrieks
for aid, hung on to the tail of her partner’s
coat, and endeavoured to drag him from his infuriated
adversary; while Miss Squeers, who had been peeping
through the keyhole in expectation of a very different
scene, darted in at the very beginning of the attack,
and after launching a shower of inkstands at the usher’s
head, beat Nicholas to her heart’s content;
animating herself, at every blow, with the recollection
of his having refused her proffered love, and thus
imparting additional strength to an arm which (as
she took after her mother in this respect) was, at
no time, one of the weakest.
Nicholas, in the full torrent of his
violence, felt the blows no more than if they had
been dealt with feathers; but, becoming tired of the
noise and uproar, and feeling that his arm grew weak
besides, he threw all his remaining strength into
half-a-dozen finishing cuts, and flung Squeers from
him with all the force he could muster. The violence
of his fall precipitated Mrs Squeers completely over
an adjacent form; and Squeers striking his head against
it in his descent, lay at his full length on the ground,
stunned and motionless.
Having brought affairs to this happy
termination, and ascertained, to his thorough satisfaction,
that Squeers was only stunned, and not dead (upon
which point he had had some unpleasant doubts at first),
Nicholas left his family to restore him, and retired
to consider what course he had better adopt.
He looked anxiously round for Smike, as he left the
room, but he was nowhere to be seen.
After a brief consideration, he packed
up a few clothes in a small leathern valise, and,
finding that nobody offered to oppose his progress,
marched boldly out by the front-door, and shortly
afterwards, struck into the road which led to Greta
Bridge.
When he had cooled sufficiently to
be enabled to give his present circumstances some
little reflection, they did not appear in a very encouraging
light; he had only four shillings and a few pence in
his pocket, and was something more than two hundred
and fifty miles from London, whither he resolved to
direct his steps, that he might ascertain, among other
things, what account of the morning’s proceedings
Mr Squeers transmitted to his most affectionate uncle.
Lifting up his eyes, as he arrived
at the conclusion that there was no remedy for this
unfortunate state of things, he beheld a horseman
coming towards him, whom, on nearer approach, he discovered,
to his infinite chagrin, to be no other than Mr John
Browdie, who, clad in cords and leather leggings,
was urging his animal forward by means of a thick
ash stick, which seemed to have been recently cut from
some stout sapling.
‘I am in no mood for more noise
and riot,’ thought Nicholas, ’and yet,
do what I will, I shall have an altercation with this
honest blockhead, and perhaps a blow or two from yonder
staff.’
In truth, there appeared some reason
to expect that such a result would follow from the
encounter, for John Browdie no sooner saw Nicholas
advancing, than he reined in his horse by the footpath,
and waited until such time as he should come up; looking
meanwhile, very sternly between the horse’s
ears, at Nicholas, as he came on at his leisure.
‘Servant, young genelman,’ said John.
‘Yours,’ said Nicholas.
‘Weel; we ha’ met at last,’
observed John, making the stirrup ring under a smart
touch of the ash stick.
‘Yes,’ replied Nicholas,
hesitating. ‘Come!’ he said, frankly,
after a moment’s pause, ’we parted on no
very good terms the last time we met; it was my fault,
I believe; but I had no intention of offending you,
and no idea that I was doing so. I was very sorry
for it, afterwards. Will you shake hands?’
‘Shake honds!’ cried the
good-humoured Yorkshireman; ’ah! that I weel;’
at the same time, he bent down from the saddle, and
gave Nicholas’s fist a huge wrench: ‘but
wa’at be the matther wi’ thy feace, mun?
it be all brokken loike.’
‘It is a cut,’ said Nicholas,
turning scarlet as he spoke,—’a blow;
but I returned it to the giver, and with good interest
too.’
’Noa, did ‘ee though?’
exclaimed John Browdie. ’Well deane!
I loike ‘un for thot.’
‘The fact is,’ said Nicholas,
not very well knowing how to make the avowal, ‘the
fact is, that I have been ill-treated.’
‘Noa!’ interposed John
Browdie, in a tone of compassion; for he was a giant
in strength and stature, and Nicholas, very likely,
in his eyes, seemed a mere dwarf; ‘dean’t
say thot.’
‘Yes, I have,’ replied
Nicholas, ’by that man Squeers, and I have beaten
him soundly, and am leaving this place in consequence.’
‘What!’ cried John Browdie,
with such an ecstatic shout, that the horse quite
shied at it. ’Beatten the schoolmeasther!
Ho! ho! ho! Beatten the schoolmeasther! who
ever heard o’ the loike o’ that noo!
Giv’ us thee hond agean, yoongster. Beatten
the schoolmeasther! Dang it, I loov’ thee
for’t.’
With these expressions of delight,
John Browdie laughed and laughed again—so
loud that the echoes, far and wide, sent back nothing
but jovial peals of merriment—and shook
Nicholas by the hand meanwhile, no less heartily.
When his mirth had subsided, he inquired what Nicholas
meant to do; on his informing him, to go straight to
London, he shook his head doubtfully, and inquired
if he knew how much the coaches charged to carry passengers
so far.
‘No, I do not,’ said Nicholas;
’but it is of no great consequence to me, for
I intend walking.’
‘Gang awa’ to Lunnun afoot!’ cried
John, in amazement.
‘Every step of the way,’
replied Nicholas. ’I should be many steps
further on by this time, and so goodbye!’
‘Nay noo,’ replied the
honest countryman, reining in his impatient horse,
‘stan’ still, tellee. Hoo much cash
hast thee gotten?’
‘Not much,’ said Nicholas,
colouring, ’but I can make it enough. Where
there’s a will, there’s a way, you know.’
John Browdie made no verbal answer
to this remark, but putting his hand in his pocket,
pulled out an old purse of solid leather, and insisted
that Nicholas should borrow from him whatever he required
for his present necessities.
‘Dean’t be afeard, mun,’
he said; ‘tak’ eneaf to carry thee whoam.
Thee’lt pay me yan day, a’ warrant.’
Nicholas could by no means be prevailed
upon to borrow more than a sovereign, with which loan
Mr Browdie, after many entreaties that he would accept
of more (observing, with a touch of Yorkshire caution,
that if he didn’t spend it all, he could put
the surplus by, till he had an opportunity of remitting
it carriage free), was fain to content himself.
‘Tak’ that bit o’
timber to help thee on wi’, mun,’ he added,
pressing his stick on Nicholas, and giving his hand
another squeeze; ’keep a good heart, and bless
thee. Beatten the schoolmeasther! ‘Cod
it’s the best thing a’ve heerd this twonty
year!’
So saying, and indulging, with more
delicacy than might have been expected from him, in
another series of loud laughs, for the purpose of
avoiding the thanks which Nicholas poured forth, John
Browdie set spurs to his horse, and went off at a
smart canter: looking back, from time to time,
as Nicholas stood gazing after him, and waving his
hand cheerily, as if to encourage him on his way.
Nicholas watched the horse and rider until they disappeared
over the brow of a distant hill, and then set forward
on his journey.
He did not travel far that afternoon,
for by this time it was nearly dark, and there had
been a heavy fall of snow, which not only rendered
the way toilsome, but the track uncertain and difficult
to find, after daylight, save by experienced wayfarers.
He lay, that night, at a cottage, where beds were
let at a cheap rate to the more humble class of travellers;
and, rising betimes next morning, made his way before
night to Boroughbridge. Passing through that
town in search of some cheap resting-place, he stumbled
upon an empty barn within a couple of hundred yards
of the roadside; in a warm corner of which, he stretched
his weary limbs, and soon fell asleep.
When he awoke next morning, and tried
to recollect his dreams, which had been all connected
with his recent sojourn at Dotheboys Hall, he sat
up, rubbed his eyes and stared—not with
the most composed countenance possible—at
some motionless object which seemed to be stationed
within a few yards in front of him.
‘Strange!’ cried Nicholas;
’can this be some lingering creation of the
visions that have scarcely left me! It cannot
be real—and yet I—I am awake!
Smike!’
The form moved, rose, advanced, and
dropped upon its knees at his feet. It was Smike
indeed.
‘Why do you kneel to me?’
said Nicholas, hastily raising him.
’To go with you—anywhere—everywhere—to
the world’s end—to the churchyard
grave,’ replied Smike, clinging to his hand.
’Let me, oh do let me. You are my home—my
kind friend—take me with you, pray.’
‘I am a friend who can do little
for you,’ said Nicholas, kindly. ‘How
came you here?’
He had followed him, it seemed; had
never lost sight of him all the way; had watched while
he slept, and when he halted for refreshment; and
had feared to appear before, lest he should be sent
back. He had not intended to appear now, but
Nicholas had awakened more suddenly than he looked
for, and he had had no time to conceal himself.
‘Poor fellow!’ said Nicholas,
’your hard fate denies you any friend but one,
and he is nearly as poor and helpless as yourself.’
‘May I—may I go with
you?’ asked Smike, timidly. ’I will
be your faithful hard-working servant, I will, indeed.
I want no clothes,’ added the poor creature,
drawing his rags together; ’these will do very
well. I only want to be near you.’
‘And you shall,’ cried
Nicholas. ’And the world shall deal by
you as it does by me, till one or both of us shall
quit it for a better. Come!’
With these words, he strapped his
burden on his shoulders, and, taking his stick in
one hand, extended the other to his delighted charge;
and so they passed out of the old barn, together.