Acquaints the Reader with the Cause
and Origin of the Interruption described in the last
Chapter, and with some other Matters necessary to
be known
Newman Noggs scrambled in violent
haste upstairs with the steaming beverage, which he
had so unceremoniously snatched from the table of
Mr Kenwigs, and indeed from the very grasp of the water-rate
collector, who was eyeing the contents of the tumbler,
at the moment of its unexpected abstraction, with
lively marks of pleasure visible in his countenance.
He bore his prize straight to his own back-garret,
where, footsore and nearly shoeless, wet, dirty, jaded,
and disfigured with every mark of fatiguing travel,
sat Nicholas and Smike, at once the cause and partner
of his toil; both perfectly worn out by their unwonted
and protracted exertion.
Newman’s first act was to compel
Nicholas, with gentle force, to swallow half of the
punch at a breath, nearly boiling as it was; and his
next, to pour the remainder down the throat of Smike,
who, never having tasted anything stronger than aperient
medicine in his whole life, exhibited various odd
manifestations of surprise and delight, during the
passage of the liquor down his throat, and turned up
his eyes most emphatically when it was all gone.
‘You are wet through,’
said Newman, passing his hand hastily over the coat
which Nicholas had thrown off; ’and I—I—haven’t
even a change,’ he added, with a wistful glance
at the shabby clothes he wore himself.
’I have dry clothes, or at least
such as will serve my turn well, in my bundle,’
replied Nicholas. ’If you look so distressed
to see me, you will add to the pain I feel already,
at being compelled, for one night, to cast myself
upon your slender means for aid and shelter.’
Newman did not look the less distressed
to hear Nicholas talking in this strain; but, upon
his young friend grasping him heartily by the hand,
and assuring him that nothing but implicit confidence
in the sincerity of his professions, and kindness
of feeling towards himself, would have induced him,
on any consideration, even to have made him acquainted
with his arrival in London, Mr Noggs brightened up
again, and went about making such arrangements as were
in his power for the comfort of his visitors, with
extreme alacrity.
These were simple enough; poor Newman’s
means halting at a very considerable distance short
of his inclinations; but, slight as they were, they
were not made without much bustling and running about.
As Nicholas had husbanded his scanty stock of money,
so well that it was not yet quite expended, a supper
of bread and cheese, with some cold beef from the
cook’s shop, was soon placed upon the table;
and these viands being flanked by a bottle of spirits
and a pot of porter, there was no ground for apprehension
on the score of hunger or thirst, at all events.
Such preparations as Newman had it in his power to
make, for the accommodation of his guests during the
night, occupied no very great time in completing;
and as he had insisted, as an express preliminary,
that Nicholas should change his clothes, and that
Smike should invest himself in his solitary coat (which
no entreaties would dissuade him from stripping off
for the purpose), the travellers partook of their
frugal fare, with more satisfaction than one of them
at least had derived from many a better meal.
They then drew near the fire, which
Newman Noggs had made up as well as he could, after
the inroads of Crowl upon the fuel; and Nicholas,
who had hitherto been restrained by the extreme anxiety
of his friend that he should refresh himself after
his journey, now pressed him with earnest questions
concerning his mother and sister.
‘Well,’ replied Newman,
with his accustomed taciturnity; ’both well.’
‘They are living in the city
still?’ inquired Nicholas.
‘They are,’ said Newman.
’And my sister,’—added
Nicholas. ’Is she still engaged in the
business which she wrote to tell me she thought she
should like so much?’
Newman opened his eyes rather wider
than usual, but merely replied by a gasp, which, according
to the action of the head that accompanied it, was
interpreted by his friends as meaning yes or no.
In the present instance, the pantomime consisted of
a nod, and not a shake; so Nicholas took the answer
as a favourable one.
‘Now listen to me,’ said
Nicholas, laying his hand on Newman’s shoulder.
’Before I would make an effort to see them,
I deemed it expedient to come to you, lest, by gratifying
my own selfish desire, I should inflict an injury
upon them which I can never repair. What has
my uncle heard from Yorkshire?’
Newman opened and shut his mouth,
several times, as though he were trying his utmost
to speak, but could make nothing of it, and finally
fixed his eyes on Nicholas with a grim and ghastly
stare.
‘What has he heard?’ urged
Nicholas, colouring. ’You see that I am
prepared to hear the very worst that malice can have
suggested. Why should you conceal it from me?
I must know it sooner or later; and what purpose
can be gained by trifling with the matter for a few
minutes, when half the time would put me in possession
of all that has occurred? Tell me at once, pray.’
‘Tomorrow morning,’ said Newman; ‘hear
it tomorrow.’
‘What purpose would that answer?’ urged
Nicholas.
‘You would sleep the better,’ replied
Newman.
‘I should sleep the worse,’
answered Nicholas, impatiently. ’Sleep!
Exhausted as I am, and standing in no common need of
rest, I cannot hope to close my eyes all night, unless
you tell me everything.’
‘And if I should tell you everything,’
said Newman, hesitating.
‘Why, then you may rouse my
indignation or wound my pride,’ rejoined Nicholas;
’but you will not break my rest; for if the scene
were acted over again, I could take no other part
than I have taken; and whatever consequences may accrue
to myself from it, I shall never regret doing as I
have done—never, if I starve or beg in
consequence. What is a little poverty or suffering,
to the disgrace of the basest and most inhuman cowardice!
I tell you, if I had stood by, tamely and passively,
I should have hated myself, and merited the contempt
of every man in existence. The black-hearted
scoundrel!’
With this gentle allusion to the absent
Mr Squeers, Nicholas repressed his rising wrath, and
relating to Newman exactly what had passed at Dotheboys
Hall, entreated him to speak out without more pressing.
Thus adjured, Mr Noggs took, from an old trunk, a
sheet of paper, which appeared to have been scrawled
over in great haste; and after sundry extraordinary
demonstrations of reluctance, delivered himself in
the following terms.
’My dear young man, you mustn’t
give way to—this sort of thing will never
do, you know—as to getting on in the world,
if you take everybody’s part that’s ill-treated—Damn
it, I am proud to hear of it; and would have done
it myself!’
Newman accompanied this very unusual
outbreak with a violent blow upon the table, as if,
in the heat of the moment, he had mistaken it for
the chest or ribs of Mr Wackford Squeers. Having,
by this open declaration of his feelings, quite precluded
himself from offering Nicholas any cautious worldly
advice (which had been his first intention), Mr Noggs
went straight to the point.
‘The day before yesterday,’
said Newman, ’your uncle received this letter.
I took a hasty copy of it, while he was out.
Shall I read it?’
‘If you please,’ replied
Nicholas. Newman Noggs accordingly read as follows:
’Dotheboys hall,
’Thursday morning.
’Sir,
’My pa requests me to write
to you, the doctors considering it doubtful whether
he will ever recuvver the use of his legs which prevents
his holding a pen.
’We are in a state of mind beyond
everything, and my pa is one mask of brooses both
blue and green likewise two forms are steepled in
his Goar. We were kimpelled to have him carried
down into the kitchen where he now lays. You
will judge from this that he has been brought very
low.
’When your nevew that you recommended
for a teacher had done this to my pa and jumped upon
his body with his feet and also langwedge which I
will not pollewt my pen with describing, he assaulted
my ma with dreadful violence, dashed her to the earth,
and drove her back comb several inches into her head.
A very little more and it must have entered her skull.
We have a medical certifiket that if it had, the
tortershell would have affected the brain.
’Me and my brother were then
the victims of his feury since which we have suffered
very much which leads us to the arrowing belief that
we have received some injury in our insides, especially
as no marks of violence are visible externally.
I am screaming out loud all the time I write and
so is my brother which takes off my attention rather
and I hope will excuse mistakes.
’The monster having sasiated
his thirst for blood ran away, taking with him a boy
of desperate caracter that he had excited to rebellyon,
and a garnet ring belonging to my ma, and not having
been apprehended by the constables is supposed to
have been took up by some stage-coach. My pa
begs that if he comes to you the ring may be returned,
and that you will let the thief and assassin go, as
if we prosecuted him he would only be transported,
and if he is let go he is sure to be hung before long
which will save us trouble and be much more satisfactory.
Hoping to hear from you when convenient
’I remain
’Yours and cetrer
’Fanny Squeers.
‘P.S. I pity his ignorance and despise
him.’
A profound silence succeeded to the
reading of this choice epistle, during which Newman
Noggs, as he folded it up, gazed with a kind of grotesque
pity at the boy of desperate character therein referred
to; who, having no more distinct perception of the
matter in hand, than that he had been the unfortunate
cause of heaping trouble and falsehood upon Nicholas,
sat mute and dispirited, with a most woe-begone and
heart-stricken look.
‘Mr Noggs,’ said Nicholas,
after a few moments’ reflection, ’I must
go out at once.’
‘Go out!’ cried Newman.
‘Yes,’ said Nicholas,
’to Golden Square. Nobody who knows me
would believe this story of the ring; but it may suit
the purpose, or gratify the hatred of Mr Ralph Nickleby
to feign to attach credence to it. It is due—not
to him, but to myself—that I should state
the truth; and moreover, I have a word or two to exchange
with him, which will not keep cool.’
‘They must,’ said Newman.
‘They must not, indeed,’
rejoined Nicholas firmly, as he prepared to leave
the house.
‘Hear me speak,’ said
Newman, planting himself before his impetuous young
friend. ’He is not there. He is away
from town. He will not be back for three days;
and I know that letter will not be answered before
he returns.’
‘Are you sure of this?’
asked Nicholas, chafing violently, and pacing the
narrow room with rapid strides.
‘Quite,’ rejoined Newman.
’He had hardly read it when he was called away.
Its contents are known to nobody but himself and us.’
‘Are you certain?’ demanded
Nicholas, precipitately; ’not even to my mother
or sister? If I thought that they—I
will go there—I must see them. Which
is the way? Where is it?’
‘Now, be advised by me,’
said Newman, speaking for the moment, in his earnestness,
like any other man—’make no effort
to see even them, till he comes home. I know
the man. Do not seem to have been tampering
with anybody. When he returns, go straight to
him, and speak as boldly as you like. Guessing
at the real truth, he knows it as well as you or I.
Trust him for that.’
‘You mean well to me, and should
know him better than I can,’ replied Nicholas,
after some consideration. ‘Well; let it
be so.’
Newman, who had stood during the foregoing
conversation with his back planted against the door,
ready to oppose any egress from the apartment by force,
if necessary, resumed his seat with much satisfaction;
and as the water in the kettle was by this time boiling,
made a glassful of spirits and water for Nicholas,
and a cracked mug-full for the joint accommodation
of himself and Smike, of which the two partook in
great harmony, while Nicholas, leaning his head upon
his hand, remained buried in melancholy meditation.
Meanwhile, the company below stairs,
after listening attentively and not hearing any noise
which would justify them in interfering for the gratification
of their curiosity, returned to the chamber of the
Kenwigses, and employed themselves in hazarding a great
variety of conjectures relative to the cause of Mr
Noggs’ sudden disappearance and detention.
‘Lor, I’ll tell you what,’
said Mrs Kenwigs. ’Suppose it should be
an express sent up to say that his property has all
come back again!’
‘Dear me,’ said Mr Kenwigs;
’it’s not impossible. Perhaps, in
that case, we’d better send up and ask if he
won’t take a little more punch.’
‘Kenwigs!’ said Mr Lillyvick,
in a loud voice, ’I’m surprised at you.’
‘What’s the matter, sir?’
asked Mr Kenwigs, with becoming submission to the
collector of water-rates.
‘Making such a remark as that,
sir,’ replied Mr Lillyvick, angrily. ’He
has had punch already, has he not, sir? I consider
the way in which that punch was cut off, if I may
use the expression, highly disrespectful to this company;
scandalous, perfectly scandalous. It may be
the custom to allow such things in this house, but
it’s not the kind of behaviour that I’ve
been used to see displayed, and so I don’t mind
telling you, Kenwigs. A gentleman has a glass
of punch before him to which he is just about to set
his lips, when another gentleman comes and collars
that glass of punch, without a “with your leave”,
or “by your leave”, and carries that glass
of punch away. This may be good manners—I
dare say it is—but I don’t understand
it, that’s all; and what’s more, I don’t
care if I never do. It’s my way to speak
my mind, Kenwigs, and that is my mind; and if you
don’t like it, it’s past my regular time
for going to bed, and I can find my way home without
making it later.’
Here was an untoward event!
The collector had sat swelling and fuming in offended
dignity for some minutes, and had now fairly burst
out. The great man—the rich relation—the
unmarried uncle— who had it in his power
to make Morleena an heiress, and the very baby a legatee—was
offended. Gracious Powers, where was this to
end!
‘I am very sorry, sir,’ said Mr Kenwigs,
humbly.
‘Don’t tell me you’re
sorry,’ retorted Mr Lillyvick, with much sharpness.
‘You should have prevented it, then.’
The company were quite paralysed by
this domestic crash. The back-parlour sat with
her mouth wide open, staring vacantly at the collector,
in a stupor of dismay; the other guests were scarcely
less overpowered by the great man’s irritation.
Mr Kenwigs, not being skilful in such matters, only
fanned the flame in attempting to extinguish it.
‘I didn’t think of it,
I am sure, sir,’ said that gentleman. ’I
didn’t suppose that such a little thing as a
glass of punch would have put you out of temper.’
’Out of temper! What the
devil do you mean by that piece of impertinence, Mr
Kenwigs?’ said the collector. ’Morleena,
child— give me my hat.’
‘Oh, you’re not going,
Mr Lillyvick, sir,’ interposed Miss Petowker,
with her most bewitching smile.
But still Mr Lillyvick, regardless
of the siren, cried obdurately, ‘Morleena, my
hat!’ upon the fourth repetition of which demand,
Mrs Kenwigs sunk back in her chair, with a cry that
might have softened a water-butt, not to say a water-collector;
while the four little girls (privately instructed
to that effect) clasped their uncle’s drab shorts
in their arms, and prayed him, in imperfect English,
to remain.
‘Why should I stop here, my
dears?’ said Mr Lillyvick; ’I’m not
wanted here.’
‘Oh, do not speak so cruelly,
uncle,’ sobbed Mrs Kenwigs, ’unless you
wish to kill me.’
‘I shouldn’t wonder if
some people were to say I did,’ replied Mr Lillyvick,
glancing angrily at Kenwigs. ‘Out of temper!’
‘Oh! I cannot bear to
see him look so, at my husband,’ cried Mrs Kenwigs.
‘It’s so dreadful in families. Oh!’
‘Mr Lillyvick,’ said Kenwigs,
’I hope, for the sake of your niece, that you
won’t object to be reconciled.’
The collector’s features relaxed,
as the company added their entreaties to those of
his nephew-in-law. He gave up his hat, and held
out his hand.
‘There, Kenwigs,’ said
Mr Lillyvick; ’and let me tell you, at the same
time, to show you how much out of temper I was, that
if I had gone away without another word, it would
have made no difference respecting that pound or two
which I shall leave among your children when I die.’
‘Morleena Kenwigs,’ cried
her mother, in a torrent of affection. ’Go
down upon your knees to your dear uncle, and beg him
to love you all his life through, for he’s more
a angel than a man, and I’ve always said so.’
Miss Morleena approaching to do homage,
in compliance with this injunction, was summarily
caught up and kissed by Mr Lillyvick; and thereupon
Mrs Kenwigs darted forward and kissed the collector,
and an irrepressible murmur of applause broke from
the company who had witnessed his magnanimity.
The worthy gentleman then became once
more the life and soul of the society; being again
reinstated in his old post of lion, from which high
station the temporary distraction of their thoughts
had for a moment dispossessed him. Quadruped
lions are said to be savage, only when they are hungry;
biped lions are rarely sulky longer than when their
appetite for distinction remains unappeased.
Mr Lillyvick stood higher than ever; for he had shown
his power; hinted at his property and testamentary
intentions; gained great credit for disinterestedness
and virtue; and, in addition to all, was finally accommodated
with a much larger tumbler of punch than that which
Newman Noggs had so feloniously made off with.
‘I say! I beg everybody’s
pardon for intruding again,’ said Crowl, looking
in at this happy juncture; ’but what a queer
business this is, isn’t it? Noggs has
lived in this house, now going on for five years,
and nobody has ever been to see him before, within
the memory of the oldest inhabitant.’
‘It’s a strange time of
night to be called away, sir, certainly,’ said
the collector; ’and the behaviour of Mr Noggs
himself, is, to say the least of it, mysterious.’
‘Well, so it is,’ rejoined
Growl; ’and I’ll tell you what’s
more—I think these two geniuses, whoever
they are, have run away from somewhere.’
‘What makes you think that,
sir?’ demanded the collector, who seemed, by
a tacit understanding, to have been chosen and elected
mouthpiece to the company. ’You have no
reason to suppose that they have run away from anywhere
without paying the rates and taxes due, I hope?’
Mr Crowl, with a look of some contempt,
was about to enter a general protest against the payment
of rates or taxes, under any circumstances, when he
was checked by a timely whisper from Kenwigs, and
several frowns and winks from Mrs K., which providentially
stopped him.
‘Why the fact is,’ said
Crowl, who had been listening at Newman’s door
with all his might and main; ’the fact is, that
they have been talking so loud, that they quite disturbed
me in my room, and so I couldn’t help catching
a word here, and a word there; and all I heard, certainly
seemed to refer to their having bolted from some place
or other. I don’t wish to alarm Mrs Kenwigs;
but I hope they haven’t come from any jail or
hospital, and brought away a fever or some unpleasantness
of that sort, which might be catching for the children.’
Mrs Kenwigs was so overpowered by
this supposition, that it needed all the tender attentions
of Miss Petowker, of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane,
to restore her to anything like a state of calmness;
not to mention the assiduity of Mr Kenwigs, who held
a fat smelling-bottle to his lady’s nose, until
it became matter of some doubt whether the tears which
coursed down her face were the result of feelings
or SAL VOLATILE.
The ladies, having expressed their
sympathy, singly and separately, fell, according to
custom, into a little chorus of soothing expressions,
among which, such condolences as ’Poor dear!’—’I
should feel just the same, if I was her’—’To
be sure, it’s a very trying thing’—and
’Nobody but a mother knows what a mother’s
feelings is,’ were among the most prominent,
and most frequently repeated. In short, the
opinion of the company was so clearly manifested,
that Mr Kenwigs was on the point of repairing to Mr
Noggs’s room, to demand an explanation, and had
indeed swallowed a preparatory glass of punch, with
great inflexibility and steadiness of purpose, when
the attention of all present was diverted by a new
and terrible surprise.
This was nothing less than the sudden
pouring forth of a rapid succession of the shrillest
and most piercing screams, from an upper story; and
to all appearance from the very two-pair back, in which
the infant Kenwigs was at that moment enshrined.
They were no sooner audible, than Mrs Kenwigs, opining
that a strange cat had come in, and sucked the baby’s
breath while the girl was asleep, made for the door,
wringing her hands, and shrieking dismally; to the
great consternation and confusion of the company.
‘Mr Kenwigs, see what it is;
make haste!’ cried the sister, laying violent
hands upon Mrs Kenwigs, and holding her back by force.
’Oh don’t twist about so, dear, or I
can never hold you.’
‘My baby, my blessed, blessed,
blessed, blessed baby!’ screamed Mrs Kenwigs,
making every blessed louder than the last. ’My
own darling, sweet, innocent Lillyvick—Oh
let me go to him. Let me go-o-o-o!’
Pending the utterance of these frantic
cries, and the wails and lamentations of the four
little girls, Mr Kenwigs rushed upstairs to the room
whence the sounds proceeded; at the door of which,
he encountered Nicholas, with the child in his arms,
who darted out with such violence, that the anxious
father was thrown down six stairs, and alighted on
the nearest landing-place, before he had found time
to open his mouth to ask what was the matter.
‘Don’t be alarmed,’
cried Nicholas, running down; ’here it is; it’s
all out, it’s all over; pray compose yourselves;
there’s no harm done;’ and with these,
and a thousand other assurances, he delivered the
baby (whom, in his hurry, he had carried upside down),
to Mrs Kenwigs, and ran back to assist Mr Kenwigs,
who was rubbing his head very hard, and looking much
bewildered by his tumble.
Reassured by this cheering intelligence,
the company in some degree recovered from their fears,
which had been productive of some most singular instances
of a total want of presence of mind; thus, the bachelor
friend had, for a long time, supported in his arms
Mrs Kenwigs’s sister, instead of Mrs Kenwigs;
and the worthy Mr Lillyvick had been actually seen,
in the perturbation of his spirits, to kiss Miss Petowker
several times, behind the room-door, as calmly as
if nothing distressing were going forward.
‘It is a mere nothing,’
said Nicholas, returning to Mrs Kenwigs; ’the
little girl, who was watching the child, being tired
I suppose, fell asleep, and set her hair on fire.’
‘Oh you malicious little wretch!’
cried Mrs Kenwigs, impressively shaking her forefinger
at the small unfortunate, who might be thirteen years
old, and was looking on with a singed head and a frightened
face.
‘I heard her cries,’ continued
Nicholas, ’and ran down, in time to prevent
her setting fire to anything else. You may depend
upon it that the child is not hurt; for I took it
off the bed myself, and brought it here to convince
you.’
This brief explanation over, the infant,
who, as he was christened after the collector! rejoiced
in the names of Lillyvick Kenwigs, was partially suffocated
under the caresses of the audience, and squeezed to
his mother’s bosom, until he roared again.
The attention of the company was then directed, by
a natural transition, to the little girl who had had
the audacity to burn her hair off, and who, after
receiving sundry small slaps and pushes from the more
energetic of the ladies, was mercifully sent home:
the ninepence, with which she was to have been rewarded,
being escheated to the Kenwigs family.
‘And whatever we are to say
to you, sir,’ exclaimed Mrs Kenwigs, addressing
young Lillyvick’s deliverer, ‘I am sure
I don’t know.’
‘You need say nothing at all,’
replied Nicholas. ’I have done nothing
to found any very strong claim upon your eloquence,
I am sure.’
‘He might have been burnt to
death, if it hadn’t been for you, sir,’
simpered Miss Petowker.
‘Not very likely, I think,’
replied Nicholas; ’for there was abundance of
assistance here, which must have reached him before
he had been in any danger.’
‘You will let us drink your
health, anyvays, sir!’ said Mr Kenwigs motioning
towards the table.
‘—In my absence,
by all means,’ rejoined Nicholas, with a smile.
’I have had a very fatiguing journey, and should
be most indifferent company—a far greater
check upon your merriment, than a promoter of it,
even if I kept awake, which I think very doubtful.
If you will allow me, I’ll return to my friend,
Mr Noggs, who went upstairs again, when he found nothing
serious had occurred. Good-night.’
Excusing himself, in these terms,
from joining in the festivities, Nicholas took a most
winning farewell of Mrs Kenwigs and the other ladies,
and retired, after making a very extraordinary impression
upon the company.
‘What a delightful young man!’ cried Mrs
Kenwigs.
‘Uncommon gentlemanly, really,’
said Mr Kenwigs. ’Don’t you think
so, Mr Lillyvick?’
‘Yes,’ said the collector,
with a dubious shrug of his shoulders, ‘He is
gentlemanly, very gentlemanly—in appearance.’
‘I hope you don’t see
anything against him, uncle?’ inquired Mrs Kenwigs.
‘No, my dear,’ replied
the collector, ’no. I trust he may not
turn out—well—no matter—my
love to you, my dear, and long life to the baby!’
‘Your namesake,’ said Mrs Kenwigs, with
a sweet smile.
‘And I hope a worthy namesake,’
observed Mr Kenwigs, willing to propitiate the collector.
’I hope a baby as will never disgrace his godfather,
and as may be considered, in arter years, of a piece
with the Lillyvicks whose name he bears. I do
say—and Mrs Kenwigs is of the same sentiment,
and feels it as strong as I do—that I consider
his being called Lillyvick one of the greatest blessings
and Honours of my existence.’
‘The greatest blessing, Kenwigs,’
murmured his lady.
‘The greatest blessing,’
said Mr Kenwigs, correcting himself. ’A
blessing that I hope, one of these days, I may be able
to deserve.’
This was a politic stroke of the Kenwigses,
because it made Mr Lillyvick the great head and fountain
of the baby’s importance. The good gentleman
felt the delicacy and dexterity of the touch, and at
once proposed the health of the gentleman, name unknown,
who had signalised himself, that night, by his coolness
and alacrity.
‘Who, I don’t mind saying,’
observed Mr Lillyvick, as a great concession, ’is
a good-looking young man enough, with manners that
I hope his character may be equal to.’
‘He has a very nice face and
style, really,’ said Mrs Kenwigs.
‘He certainly has,’ added
Miss Petowker. ’There’s something
in his appearance quite—dear, dear, what’s
that word again?’
‘What word?’ inquired Mr Lillyvick.
‘Why—dear me, how
stupid I am,’ replied Miss Petowker, hesitating.
’What do you call it, when Lords break off door-knockers
and beat policemen, and play at coaches with other
people’s money, and all that sort of thing?’
‘Aristocratic?’ suggested the collector.
‘Ah! aristocratic,’ replied
Miss Petowker; ’something very aristocratic
about him, isn’t there?’
The gentleman held their peace, and
smiled at each other, as who should say, ‘Well!
there’s no accounting for tastes;’ but
the ladies resolved unanimously that Nicholas had
an aristocratic air; and nobody caring to dispute
the position, it was established triumphantly.
The punch being, by this time, drunk
out, and the little Kenwigses (who had for some time
previously held their little eyes open with their
little forefingers) becoming fractious, and requesting
rather urgently to be put to bed, the collector made
a move by pulling out his watch, and acquainting the
company that it was nigh two o’clock; whereat
some of the guests were surprised and others shocked,
and hats and bonnets being groped for under the tables,
and in course of time found, their owners went away,
after a vast deal of shaking of hands, and many remarks
how they had never spent such a delightful evening,
and how they marvelled to find it so late, expecting
to have heard that it was half-past ten at the very
latest, and how they wished that Mr and Mrs Kenwigs
had a wedding-day once a week, and how they wondered
by what hidden agency Mrs Kenwigs could possibly have
managed so well; and a great deal more of the same
kind. To all of which flattering expressions,
Mr and Mrs Kenwigs replied, by thanking every lady
and gentleman, SERIATIM, for the favour of their company,
and hoping they might have enjoyed themselves only
half as well as they said they had.
As to Nicholas, quite unconscious
of the impression he had produced, he had long since
fallen asleep, leaving Mr Newman Noggs and Smike to
empty the spirit bottle between them; and this office
they performed with such extreme good-will, that Newman
was equally at a loss to determine whether he himself
was quite sober, and whether he had ever seen any
gentleman so heavily, drowsily, and completely intoxicated
as his new acquaintance.