Having the Misfortune to treat of
none but Common People, is necessarily of a Mean and
Vulgar Character
In that quarter of London in which
Golden Square is situated, there is a bygone, faded,
tumble-down street, with two irregular rows of tall
meagre houses, which seem to have stared each other
out of countenance years ago. The very chimneys
appear to have grown dismal and melancholy, from having
had nothing better to look at than the chimneys over
the way. Their tops are battered, and broken,
and blackened with smoke; and, here and there, some
taller stack than the rest, inclining heavily to one
side, and toppling over the roof, seems to mediate
taking revenge for half a century’s neglect,
by crushing the inhabitants of the garrets beneath.
The fowls who peck about the kennels,
jerking their bodies hither and thither with a gait
which none but town fowls are ever seen to adopt,
and which any country cock or hen would be puzzled
to understand, are perfectly in keeping with the crazy
habitations of their owners. Dingy, ill-plumed,
drowsy flutterers, sent, like many of the neighbouring
children, to get a livelihood in the streets, they
hop, from stone to stone, in forlorn search of some
hidden eatable in the mud, and can scarcely raise
a crow among them. The only one with anything
approaching to a voice, is an aged bantam at the baker’s;
and even he is hoarse, in consequence of bad living
in his last place.
To judge from the size of the houses,
they have been, at one time, tenanted by persons of
better condition than their present occupants; but
they are now let off, by the week, in floors or rooms,
and every door has almost as many plates or bell-handles
as there are apartments within. The windows
are, for the same reason, sufficiently diversified
in appearance, being ornamented with every variety
of common blind and curtain that can easily be imagined;
while every doorway is blocked up, and rendered nearly
impassable, by a motley collection of children and
porter pots of all sizes, from the baby in arms and
the half-pint pot, to the full-grown girl and half-gallon
can.
In the parlour of one of these houses,
which was perhaps a thought dirtier than any of its
neighbours; which exhibited more bell-handles, children,
and porter pots, and caught in all its freshness the
first gust of the thick black smoke that poured forth,
night and day, from a large brewery hard by; hung
a bill, announcing that there was yet one room to
let within its walls, though on what story the vacant
room could be—regard being had to the outward
tokens of many lodgers which the whole front displayed,
from the mangle in the kitchen window to the flower-pots
on the parapet—it would have been beyond
the power of a calculating boy to discover.
The common stairs of this mansion
were bare and carpetless; but a curious visitor who
had to climb his way to the top, might have observed
that there were not wanting indications of the progressive
poverty of the inmates, although their rooms were shut.
Thus, the first-floor lodgers, being flush of furniture,
kept an old mahogany table—real mahogany—on
the landing-place outside, which was only taken in,
when occasion required. On the second story,
the spare furniture dwindled down to a couple of old
deal chairs, of which one, belonging to the back-room,
was shorn of a leg, and bottomless. The story
above, boasted no greater excess than a worm-eaten
wash-tub; and the garret landing-place displayed
no costlier articles than two crippled pitchers, and
some broken blacking-bottles.
It was on this garret landing-place
that a hard-featured square-faced man, elderly and
shabby, stopped to unlock the door of the front attic,
into which, having surmounted the task of turning the
rusty key in its still more rusty wards, he walked
with the air of legal owner.
This person wore a wig of short, coarse,
red hair, which he took off with his hat, and hung
upon a nail. Having adopted in its place a dirty
cotton nightcap, and groped about in the dark till
he found a remnant of candle, he knocked at the partition
which divided the two garrets, and inquired, in a
loud voice, whether Mr Noggs had a light.
The sounds that came back were stifled
by the lath and plaster, and it seemed moreover as
though the speaker had uttered them from the interior
of a mug or other drinking vessel; but they were in
the voice of Newman, and conveyed a reply in the affirmative.
‘A nasty night, Mr Noggs!’
said the man in the nightcap, stepping in to light
his candle.
‘Does it rain?’ asked Newman.
‘Does it?’ replied the other pettishly.
‘I am wet through.’
‘It doesn’t take much
to wet you and me through, Mr Crowl,’ said Newman,
laying his hand upon the lappel of his threadbare coat.
‘Well; and that makes it the
more vexatious,’ observed Mr Crowl, in the same
pettish tone.
Uttering a low querulous growl, the
speaker, whose harsh countenance was the very epitome
of selfishness, raked the scanty fire nearly out of
the grate, and, emptying the glass which Noggs had
pushed towards him, inquired where he kept his coals.
Newman Noggs pointed to the bottom
of a cupboard, and Mr Crowl, seizing the shovel, threw
on half the stock: which Noggs very deliberately
took off again, without saying a word.
‘You have not turned saving,
at this time of day, I hope?’ said Crowl.
Newman pointed to the empty glass,
as though it were a sufficient refutation of the charge,
and briefly said that he was going downstairs to supper.
‘To the Kenwigses?’ asked Crowl.
Newman nodded assent.
‘Think of that now!’ said
Crowl. ’If I didn’t—thinking
that you were certain not to go, because you said
you wouldn’t—tell Kenwigs I couldn’t
come, and make up my mind to spend the evening with
you!’
‘I was obliged to go,’ said Newman.
‘They would have me.’
‘Well; but what’s to become
of me?’ urged the selfish man, who never thought
of anybody else. ’It’s all your fault.
I’ll tell you what —I’ll sit
by your fire till you come back again.’
Newman cast a despairing glance at
his small store of fuel, but, not having the courage
to say no—a word which in all his life he
never had said at the right time, either to himself
or anyone else—gave way to the proposed
arrangement. Mr Crowl immediately went about
making himself as comfortable, with Newman Nogg’s
means, as circumstances would admit of his being made.
The lodgers to whom Crowl had made
allusion under the designation of ‘the Kenwigses,’
were the wife and olive branches of one Mr Kenwigs,
a turner in ivory, who was looked upon as a person
of some consideration on the premises, inasmuch as
he occupied the whole of the first floor, comprising
a suite of two rooms. Mrs Kenwigs, too, was
quite a lady in her manners, and of a very genteel
family, having an uncle who collected a water-rate;
besides which distinction, the two eldest of her little
girls went twice a week to a dancing school in the
neighbourhood, and had flaxen hair, tied with blue
ribbons, hanging in luxuriant pigtails down their backs;
and wore little white trousers with frills round the
ankles—for all of which reasons, and many
more equally valid but too numerous to mention, Mrs
Kenwigs was considered a very desirable person to know,
and was the constant theme of all the gossips in the
street, and even three or four doors round the corner
at both ends.
It was the anniversary of that happy
day on which the Church of England as by law established,
had bestowed Mrs Kenwigs upon Mr Kenwigs; and in grateful
commemoration of the same, Mrs Kenwigs had invited
a few select friends to cards and a supper in the first
floor, and had put on a new gown to receive them in:
which gown, being of a flaming colour and made upon
a juvenile principle, was so successful that Mr Kenwigs
said the eight years of matrimony and the five children
seemed all a dream, and Mrs Kenwigs younger and more
blooming than on the very first Sunday he had kept
company with her.
Beautiful as Mrs Kenwigs looked when
she was dressed though, and so stately that you would
have supposed she had a cook and housemaid at least,
and nothing to do but order them about, she had a world
of trouble with the preparations; more, indeed, than
she, being of a delicate and genteel constitution,
could have sustained, had not the pride of housewifery
upheld her. At last, however, all the things
that had to be got together were got together, and
all the things that had to be got out of the way were
got out of the way, and everything was ready, and
the collector himself having promised to come, fortune
smiled upon the occasion.
The party was admirably selected.
There were, first of all, Mr Kenwigs and Mrs Kenwigs,
and four olive Kenwigses who sat up to supper; firstly,
because it was but right that they should have a treat
on such a day; and secondly, because their going to
bed, in presence of the company, would have been inconvenient,
not to say improper. Then, there was a young
lady who had made Mrs Kenwigs’s dress, and who—it
was the most convenient thing in the world—
living in the two-pair back, gave up her bed to the
baby, and got a little girl to watch it. Then,
to match this young lady, was a young man, who had
known Mr Kenwigs when he was a bachelor, and was much
esteemed by the ladies, as bearing the reputation of
a rake. To these were added a newly-married couple,
who had visited Mr and Mrs Kenwigs in their courtship;
and a sister of Mrs Kenwigs’s, who was quite
a beauty; besides whom, there was another young man,
supposed to entertain honourable designs upon the lady
last mentioned; and Mr Noggs, who was a genteel person
to ask, because he had been a gentleman once.
There were also an elderly lady from the back-parlour,
and one more young lady, who, next to the collector,
perhaps was the great lion of the party, being the
daughter of a theatrical fireman, who ‘went
on’ in the pantomime, and had the greatest turn
for the stage that was ever known, being able to sing
and recite in a manner that brought the tears into
Mrs Kenwigs’s eyes. There was only one
drawback upon the pleasure of seeing such friends,
and that was, that the lady in the back-parlour, who
was very fat, and turned of sixty, came in a low book-muslin
dress and short kid gloves, which so exasperated Mrs
Kenwigs, that that lady assured her visitors, in private,
that if it hadn’t happened that the supper was
cooking at the back-parlour grate at that moment, she
certainly would have requested its representative to
withdraw.
‘My dear,’ said Mr Kenwigs,
’wouldn’t it be better to begin a round
game?’
‘Kenwigs, my dear,’ returned
his wife, ’I am surprised at you. Would
you begin without my uncle?’
‘I forgot the collector,’
said Kenwigs; ’oh no, that would never do.’
‘He’s so particular,’
said Mrs Kenwigs, turning to the other married lady,
’that if we began without him, I should be out
of his will for ever.’
‘Dear!’ cried the married lady.
‘You’ve no idea what he
is,’ replied Mrs Kenwigs; ’and yet as good
a creature as ever breathed.’
‘The kindest-hearted man as ever was,’
said Kenwigs.
’It goes to his heart, I believe,
to be forced to cut the water off, when the people
don’t pay,’ observed the bachelor friend,
intending a joke.
‘George,’ said Mr Kenwigs,
solemnly, ‘none of that, if you please.’
‘It was only my joke,’ said the friend,
abashed.
‘George,’ rejoined Mr
Kenwigs, ’a joke is a wery good thing—a
wery good thing—but when that joke is made
at the expense of Mrs Kenwigs’s feelings, I
set my face against it. A man in public life
expects to be sneered at—it is the fault
of his elewated sitiwation, and not of himself.
Mrs Kenwigs’s relation is a public man, and
that he knows, George, and that he can bear; but putting
Mrs Kenwigs out of the question (if I could put
Mrs Kenwigs out of the question on such an occasion
as this), I have the honour to be connected with the
collector by marriage; and I cannot allow these remarks
in my—’ Mr Kenwigs was going to say
‘house,’ but he rounded the sentence with
‘apartments’.
At the conclusion of these observations,
which drew forth evidences of acute feeling from Mrs
Kenwigs, and had the intended effect of impressing
the company with a deep sense of the collector’s
dignity, a ring was heard at the bell.
‘That’s him,’ whispered
Mr Kenwigs, greatly excited. ’Morleena,
my dear, run down and let your uncle in, and kiss
him directly you get the door open. Hem!
Let’s be talking.’
Adopting Mr Kenwigs’s suggestion,
the company spoke very loudly, to look easy and unembarrassed;
and almost as soon as they had begun to do so, a short
old gentleman in drabs and gaiters, with a face that
might have been carved out of LIGNUM VITAE, for anything
that appeared to the contrary, was led playfully in
by Miss Morleena Kenwigs, regarding whose uncommon
Christian name it may be here remarked that it had
been invented and composed by Mrs Kenwigs previous
to her first lying-in, for the special distinction
of her eldest child, in case it should prove a daughter.
‘Oh, uncle, I am so glad
to see you,’ said Mrs Kenwigs, kissing the collector
affectionately on both cheeks. ‘So glad!’
‘Many happy returns of the day,
my dear,’ replied the collector, returning the
compliment.
Now, this was an interesting thing.
Here was a collector of water-rates, without his
book, without his pen and ink, without his double
knock, without his intimidation, kissing—actually
kissing—an agreeable female, and leaving
taxes, summonses, notices that he had called, or announcements
that he would never call again, for two quarters’
due, wholly out of the question. It was pleasant
to see how the company looked on, quite absorbed in
the sight, and to behold the nods and winks with which
they expressed their gratification at finding so much
humanity in a tax-gatherer.
‘Where will you sit, uncle?’
said Mrs Kenwigs, in the full glow of family pride,
which the appearance of her distinguished relation
occasioned.
‘Anywheres, my dear,’
said the collector, ‘I am not particular.’
Not particular! What a meek
collector! If he had been an author, who knew
his place, he couldn’t have been more humble.
‘Mr Lillyvick,’ said Kenwigs,
addressing the collector, ’some friends here,
sir, are very anxious for the honour of—thank
you—Mr and Mrs Cutler, Mr Lillyvick.’
‘Proud to know you, sir,’
said Mr Cutler; ’I’ve heerd of you very
often.’ These were not mere words of ceremony;
for, Mr Cutler, having kept house in Mr Lillyvick’s
parish, had heard of him very often indeed.
His attention in calling had been quite extraordinary.
‘George, you know, I think,
Mr Lillyvick,’ said Kenwigs; ’lady from
downstairs—Mr Lillyvick. Mr Snewkes—Mr
Lillyvick. Miss Green—Mr Lillyvick.
Mr Lillyvick—Miss Petowker of the Theatre
Royal, Drury Lane. Very glad to make two public
characters acquainted! Mrs Kenwigs, my dear,
will you sort the counters?’
Mrs Kenwigs, with the assistance of
Newman Noggs, (who, as he performed sundry little
acts of kindness for the children, at all times and
seasons, was humoured in his request to be taken no
notice of, and was merely spoken about, in a whisper,
as the decayed gentleman), did as he was desired;
and the greater part of the guests sat down to speculation,
while Newman himself, Mrs Kenwigs, and Miss Petowker
of the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, looked after the
supper-table.
While the ladies were thus busying
themselves, Mr Lillyvick was intent upon the game
in progress, and as all should be fish that comes
to a water-collector’s net, the dear old gentleman
was by no means scrupulous in appropriating to himself
the property of his neighbours, which, on the contrary,
he abstracted whenever an opportunity presented itself,
smiling good-humouredly all the while, and making
so many condescending speeches to the owners, that
they were delighted with his amiability, and thought
in their hearts that he deserved to be Chancellor
of the Exchequer at least.
After a great deal of trouble, and
the administration of many slaps on the head to the
infant Kenwigses, whereof two of the most rebellious
were summarily banished, the cloth was laid with much
elegance, and a pair of boiled fowls, a large piece
of pork, apple-pie, potatoes and greens, were served;
at sight of which, the worthy Mr Lillyvick vented
a great many witticisms, and plucked up amazingly:
to the immense delight and satisfaction of the whole
body of admirers.
Very well and very fast the supper
went off; no more serious difficulties occurring,
than those which arose from the incessant demand for
clean knives and forks; which made poor Mrs Kenwigs
wish, more than once, that private society adopted
the principle of schools, and required that every
guest should bring his own knife, fork, and spoon;
which doubtless would be a great accommodation in
many cases, and to no one more so than to the lady
and gentleman of the house, especially if the school
principle were carried out to the full extent, and
the articles were expected, as a matter of delicacy,
not to be taken away again.
Everybody having eaten everything,
the table was cleared in a most alarming hurry, and
with great noise; and the spirits, whereat the eyes
of Newman Noggs glistened, being arranged in order,
with water both hot and cold, the party composed themselves
for conviviality; Mr Lillyvick being stationed in
a large armchair by the fireside, and the four little
Kenwigses disposed on a small form in front of the
company with their flaxen tails towards them, and their
faces to the fire; an arrangement which was no sooner
perfected, than Mrs Kenwigs was overpowered by the
feelings of a mother, and fell upon the left shoulder
of Mr Kenwigs dissolved in tears.
‘They are so beautiful!’ said Mrs Kenwigs,
sobbing.
‘Oh, dear,’ said all the
ladies, ’so they are! it’s very natural
you should feel proud of that; but don’t give
way, don’t.’
‘I can—not help it,
and it don’t signify,’ sobbed Mrs Kenwigs;
’oh! they’re too beautiful to live, much
too beautiful!’
On hearing this alarming presentiment
of their being doomed to an early death in the flower
of their infancy, all four little girls raised a hideous
cry, and burying their heads in their mother’s
lap simultaneously, screamed until the eight flaxen
tails vibrated again; Mrs Kenwigs meanwhile clasping
them alternately to her bosom, with attitudes expressive
of distraction, which Miss Petowker herself might
have copied.
At length, the anxious mother permitted
herself to be soothed into a more tranquil state,
and the little Kenwigses, being also composed, were
distributed among the company, to prevent the possibility
of Mrs Kenwigs being again overcome by the blaze of
their combined beauty. This done, the ladies
and gentlemen united in prophesying that they would
live for many, many years, and that there was no occasion
at all for Mrs Kenwigs to distress herself; which,
in good truth, there did not appear to be; the loveliness
of the children by no means justifying her apprehensions.
‘This day eight year,’
said Mr Kenwigs after a pause. ’Dear me—
ah!’
This reflection was echoed by all
present, who said ‘Ah!’ first, and ‘dear
me,’ afterwards.
‘I was younger then,’ tittered Mrs Kenwigs.
‘No,’ said the collector.
‘Certainly not,’ added everybody.
‘I remember my niece,’
said Mr Lillyvick, surveying his audience with a grave
air; ’I remember her, on that very afternoon,
when she first acknowledged to her mother a partiality
for Kenwigs. “Mother,” she says,
“I love him.”’
‘”Adore him,” I said, uncle,’ interposed
Mrs Kenwigs.
‘”Love him,” I think, my dear,’
said the collector, firmly.
‘Perhaps you are right, uncle,’
replied Mrs Kenwigs, submissively. ‘I thought
it was “adore.”’
‘”Love,” my dear,’
retorted Mr Lillyvick. ’”Mother,” she
says, “I love him!” “What do I
hear?” cries her mother; and instantly falls
into strong conwulsions.’
A general exclamation of astonishment
burst from the company.
‘Into strong conwulsions,’
repeated Mr Lillyvick, regarding them with a rigid
look. ’Kenwigs will excuse my saying, in
the presence of friends, that there was a very great
objection to him, on the ground that he was beneath
the family, and would disgrace it. You remember,
Kenwigs?’
‘Certainly,’ replied that
gentleman, in no way displeased at the reminiscence,
inasmuch as it proved, beyond all doubt, what a high
family Mrs Kenwigs came of.
‘I shared in that feeling,’
said Mr Lillyvick: ’perhaps it was natural;
perhaps it wasn’t.’
A gentle murmur seemed to say, that,
in one of Mr Lillyvick’s station, the objection
was not only natural, but highly praiseworthy.
‘I came round to him in time,’
said Mr Lillyvick. ’After they were married,
and there was no help for it, I was one of the first
to say that Kenwigs must be taken notice of.
The family did take notice of him, in consequence,
and on my representation; and I am bound to say—and
proud to say—that I have always found him
a very honest, well-behaved, upright, respectable
sort of man. Kenwigs, shake hands.’
‘I am proud to do it, sir,’ said Mr Kenwigs.
‘So am I, Kenwigs,’ rejoined Mr Lillyvick.
‘A very happy life I have led with your niece,
sir,’ said Kenwigs.
‘It would have been your own
fault if you had not, sir,’ remarked Mr Lillyvick.
‘Morleena Kenwigs,’ cried
her mother, at this crisis, much affected, ‘kiss
your dear uncle!’
The young lady did as she was requested,
and the three other little girls were successively
hoisted up to the collector’s countenance, and
subjected to the same process, which was afterwards
repeated on them by the majority of those present.
‘Oh dear, Mrs Kenwigs,’
said Miss Petowker, ’while Mr Noggs is making
that punch to drink happy returns in, do let Morleena
go through that figure dance before Mr Lillyvick.’
‘No, no, my dear,’ replied
Mrs Kenwigs, ’it will only worry my uncle.’
‘It can’t worry him, I
am sure,’ said Miss Petowker. ’You
will be very much pleased, won’t you, sir?’
‘That I am sure I shall’
replied the collector, glancing at the punch-mixer.
‘Well then, I’ll tell
you what,’ said Mrs Kenwigs, ’Morleena
shall do the steps, if uncle can persuade Miss Petowker
to recite us the Blood-Drinker’s Burial, afterwards.’
There was a great clapping of hands
and stamping of feet, at this proposition; the subject
whereof, gently inclined her head several times, in
acknowledgment of the reception.
‘You know,’ said Miss
Petowker, reproachfully, ’that I dislike doing
anything professional in private parties.’
‘Oh, but not here!’ said
Mrs Kenwigs. ’We are all so very friendly
and pleasant, that you might as well be going through
it in your own room; besides, the occasion—’
‘I can’t resist that,’
interrupted Miss Petowker; ’anything in my humble
power I shall be delighted to do.’
Mrs Kenwigs and Miss Petowker had
arranged a small PROGRAMME of the entertainments between
them, of which this was the prescribed order, but
they had settled to have a little pressing on both
sides, because it looked more natural. The company
being all ready, Miss Petowker hummed a tune, and
Morleena danced a dance; having previously had the
soles of her shoes chalked, with as much care as if
she were going on the tight-rope. It was a very
beautiful figure, comprising a great deal of work
for the arms, and was received with unbounded applause.
‘If I was blessed with a—a
child—’ said Miss Petowker, blushing,
’of such genius as that, I would have her out
at the Opera instantly.’
Mrs Kenwigs sighed, and looked at
Mr Kenwigs, who shook his head, and observed that
he was doubtful about it.
‘Kenwigs is afraid,’ said Mrs K.
‘What of?’ inquired Miss Petowker, ‘not
of her failing?’
‘Oh no,’ replied Mrs Kenwigs,
’but if she grew up what she is now,—
only think of the young dukes and marquises.’
‘Very right,’ said the collector.
‘Still,’ submitted Miss
Petowker, ’if she took a proper pride in herself,
you know—’
‘There’s a good deal in
that,’ observed Mrs Kenwigs, looking at her
husband.
‘I only know—’
faltered Miss Petowker,—’it may be
no rule to be sure—but I have never found
any inconvenience or unpleasantness of that sort.’
Mr Kenwigs, with becoming gallantry,
said that settled the question at once, and that he
would take the subject into his serious consideration.
This being resolved upon, Miss Petowker was entreated
to begin the Blood-Drinker’s Burial; to which
end, that young lady let down her back hair, and taking
up her position at the other end of the room, with
the bachelor friend posted in a corner, to rush out
at the cue ‘in death expire,’ and catch
her in his arms when she died raving mad, went through
the performance with extraordinary spirit, and to
the great terror of the little Kenwigses, who were
all but frightened into fits.
The ecstasies consequent upon the
effort had not yet subsided, and Newman (who had not
been thoroughly sober at so late an hour for a long
long time,) had not yet been able to put in a word
of announcement, that the punch was ready, when a
hasty knock was heard at the room-door, which elicited
a shriek from Mrs Kenwigs, who immediately divined
that the baby had fallen out of bed.
‘Who is that?’ demanded Mr Kenwigs, sharply.
‘Don’t be alarmed, it’s
only me,’ said Crowl, looking in, in his nightcap.
’The baby is very comfortable, for I peeped
into the room as I came down, and it’s fast
asleep, and so is the girl; and I don’t think
the candle will set fire to the bed-curtain, unless
a draught was to get into the room—it’s
Mr Noggs that’s wanted.’
‘Me!’ cried Newman, much astonished.
‘Why, it is a queer hour,
isn’t it?’ replied Crowl, who was not best
pleased at the prospect of losing his fire; ’and
they are queer-looking people, too, all covered with
rain and mud. Shall I tell them to go away?’
‘No,’ said Newman, rising. ‘People?
How many?’
‘Two,’ rejoined Crowl.
‘Want me? By name?’ asked Newman.
‘By name,’ replied Crowl. ‘Mr
Newman Noggs, as pat as need be.’
Newman reflected for a few seconds,
and then hurried away, muttering that he would be
back directly. He was as good as his word; for,
in an exceedingly short time, he burst into the room,
and seizing, without a word of apology or explanation,
a lighted candle and tumbler of hot punch from the
table, darted away like a madman.
‘What the deuce is the matter
with him?’ exclaimed Crowl, throwing the door
open. ‘Hark! Is there any noise above?’
The guests rose in great confusion,
and, looking in each other’s faces with much
perplexity and some fear, stretched their necks forward,
and listened attentively.