Nicholas seeks to employ himself in
a New Capacity, and being unsuccessful, accepts an
engagement as Tutor in a Private Family
The first care of Nicholas, next morning,
was, to look after some room in which, until better
times dawned upon him, he could contrive to exist,
without trenching upon the hospitality of Newman Noggs,
who would have slept upon the stairs with pleasure,
so that his young friend was accommodated.
The vacant apartment to which the
bill in the parlour window bore reference, appeared,
on inquiry, to be a small back-room on the second
floor, reclaimed from the leads, and overlooking a
soot-bespeckled prospect of tiles and chimney-pots.
For the letting of this portion of the house from
week to week, on reasonable terms, the parlour lodger
was empowered to treat; he being deputed by the landlord
to dispose of the rooms as they became vacant, and
to keep a sharp look-out that the lodgers didn’t
run away. As a means of securing the punctual
discharge of which last service he was permitted to
live rent-free, lest he should at any time be tempted
to run away himself.
Of this chamber, Nicholas became the
tenant; and having hired a few common articles of
furniture from a neighbouring broker, and paid the
first week’s hire in advance, out of a small
fund raised by the conversion of some spare clothes
into ready money, he sat himself down to ruminate
upon his prospects, which, like the prospect outside
his window, were sufficiently confined and dingy.
As they by no means improved on better acquaintance,
and as familiarity breeds contempt, he resolved to
banish them from his thoughts by dint of hard walking.
So, taking up his hat, and leaving poor Smike to
arrange and rearrange the room with as much delight
as if it had been the costliest palace, he betook
himself to the streets, and mingled with the crowd
which thronged them.
Although a man may lose a sense of
his own importance when he is a mere unit among a
busy throng, all utterly regardless of him, it by
no means follows that he can dispossess himself, with
equal facility, of a very strong sense of the importance
and magnitude of his cares. The unhappy state
of his own affairs was the one idea which occupied
the brain of Nicholas, walk as fast as he would; and
when he tried to dislodge it by speculating on the
situation and prospects of the people who surrounded
him, he caught himself, in a few seconds, contrasting
their condition with his own, and gliding almost imperceptibly
back into his old train of thought again.
Occupied in these reflections, as
he was making his way along one of the great public
thoroughfares of London, he chanced to raise his eyes
to a blue board, whereon was inscribed, in characters
of gold, ’General Agency Office; for places
and situations of all kinds inquire within.’
It was a shop-front, fitted up with a gauze blind
and an inner door; and in the window hung a long and
tempting array of written placards, announcing vacant
places of every grade, from a secretary’s to
a foot-boy’s.
Nicholas halted, instinctively, before
this temple of promise, and ran his eye over the capital-text
openings in life which were so profusely displayed.
When he had completed his survey he walked on a little
way, and then back, and then on again; at length, after
pausing irresolutely several times before the door
of the General Agency Office, he made up his mind,
and stepped in.
He found himself in a little floor-clothed
room, with a high desk railed off in one corner, behind
which sat a lean youth with cunning eyes and a protruding
chin, whose performances in capital-text darkened
the window. He had a thick ledger lying open
before him, and with the fingers of his right hand
inserted between the leaves, and his eyes fixed on
a very fat old lady in a mob-cap—evidently
the proprietress of the establishment—who
was airing herself at the fire, seemed to be only
waiting her directions to refer to some entries contained
within its rusty clasps.
As there was a board outside, which
acquainted the public that servants-of-all-work were
perpetually in waiting to be hired from ten till four,
Nicholas knew at once that some half-dozen strong
young women, each with pattens and an umbrella, who
were sitting upon a form in one corner, were in attendance
for that purpose: especially as the poor things
looked anxious and weary. He was not quite so
certain of the callings and stations of two smart young
ladies who were in conversation with the fat lady before
the fire, until—having sat himself down
in a corner, and remarked that he would wait until
the other customers had been served—the
fat lady resumed the dialogue which his entrance had
interrupted.
‘Cook, Tom,’ said the
fat lady, still airing herself as aforesaid.
‘Cook,’ said Tom, turning
over some leaves of the ledger. ‘Well!’
‘Read out an easy place or two,’ said
the fat lady.
‘Pick out very light ones, if
you please, young man,’ interposed a genteel
female, in shepherd’s-plaid boots, who appeared
to be the client.
‘”Mrs Marker,”’ said Tom,
reading, ’”Russell Place, Russell Square; offers
eighteen guineas; tea and sugar found. Two in
family, and see very little company. Five servants
kept. No man. No followers.”’
‘Oh Lor!’ tittered the
client. ’That won’t do.
Read another, young man, will you?’
‘”Mrs Wrymug,”’ said Tom,
’”Pleasant Place, Finsbury. Wages, twelve
guineas. No tea, no sugar. Serious family—“’
‘Ah! you needn’t mind
reading that,’ interrupted the client.
‘”Three serious footmen,”’ said Tom, impressively.
‘Three? did you say?’ asked the client
in an altered tone.
‘Three serious footmen,’
replied Tom. ’”Cook, housemaid, and nursemaid;
each female servant required to join the Little Bethel
Congregation three times every Sunday—with
a serious footman. If the cook is more serious
than the footman, she will be expected to improve
the footman; if the footman is more serious than the
cook, he will be expected to improve the cook.”’
‘I’ll take the address
of that place,’ said the client; ’I don’t
know but what it mightn’t suit me pretty well.’
‘Here’s another,’
remarked Tom, turning over the leaves. ’”Family
of Mr Gallanbile, MP. Fifteen guineas, tea and
sugar, and servants allowed to see male cousins, if
godly. Note. Cold dinner in the kitchen
on the Sabbath, Mr Gallanbile being devoted to the
Observance question. No victuals whatever cooked
on the Lord’s Day, with the exception of dinner
for Mr and Mrs Gallanbile, which, being a work of
piety and necessity, is exempted. Mr Gallanbile
dines late on the day of rest, in order to prevent
the sinfulness of the cook’s dressing herself.”’
‘I don’t think that’ll
answer as well as the other,’ said the client,
after a little whispering with her friend. ’I’ll
take the other direction, if you please, young man.
I can but come back again, if it don’t do.’
Tom made out the address, as requested,
and the genteel client, having satisfied the fat lady
with a small fee, meanwhile, went away accompanied
by her friend.
As Nicholas opened his mouth, to request
the young man to turn to letter S, and let him know
what secretaryships remained undisposed of, there
came into the office an applicant, in whose favour
he immediately retired, and whose appearance both
surprised and interested him.
This was a young lady who could be
scarcely eighteen, of very slight and delicate figure,
but exquisitely shaped, who, walking timidly up to
the desk, made an inquiry, in a very low tone of voice,
relative to some situation as governess, or companion
to a lady. She raised her veil, for an instant,
while she preferred the inquiry, and disclosed a countenance
of most uncommon beauty, though shaded by a cloud
of sadness, which, in one so young, was doubly remarkable.
Having received a card of reference to some person
on the books, she made the usual acknowledgment, and
glided away.
She was neatly, but very quietly attired;
so much so, indeed, that it seemed as though her dress,
if it had been worn by one who imparted fewer graces
of her own to it, might have looked poor and shabby.
Her attendant—for she had one—was
a red-faced, round-eyed, slovenly girl, who, from
a certain roughness about the bare arms that peeped
from under her draggled shawl, and the half-washed-out
traces of smut and blacklead which tattooed her countenance,
was clearly of a kin with the servants-of-all-work
on the form: between whom and herself there had
passed various grins and glances, indicative of the
freemasonry of the craft.
This girl followed her mistress; and,
before Nicholas had recovered from the first effects
of his surprise and admiration, the young lady was
gone. It is not a matter of such complete and
utter improbability as some sober people may think,
that he would have followed them out, had he not been
restrained by what passed between the fat lady and
her book-keeper.
‘When is she coming again, Tom?’ asked
the fat lady.
‘Tomorrow morning,’ replied Tom, mending
his pen.
‘Where have you sent her to?’ asked the
fat lady.
‘Mrs Clark’s,’ replied Tom.
‘She’ll have a nice life
of it, if she goes there,’ observed the fat
lady, taking a pinch of snuff from a tin box.
Tom made no other reply than thrusting
his tongue into his cheek, and pointing the feather
of his pen towards Nicholas—reminders which
elicited from the fat lady an inquiry, of ’Now,
sir, what can we do for you?’
Nicholas briefly replied, that he
wanted to know whether there was any such post to
be had, as secretary or amanuensis to a gentleman.
‘Any such!’ rejoined the
mistress; ‘a-dozen-such. An’t there,
Tom?’
‘I should think so,’ answered
that young gentleman; and as he said it, he winked
towards Nicholas, with a degree of familiarity which
he, no doubt, intended for a rather flattering compliment,
but with which Nicholas was most ungratefully disgusted.
Upon reference to the book, it appeared
that the dozen secretaryships had dwindled down to
one. Mr Gregsbury, the great member of parliament,
of Manchester Buildings, Westminster, wanted a young
man, to keep his papers and correspondence in order;
and Nicholas was exactly the sort of young man that
Mr Gregsbury wanted.
’I don’t know what the
terms are, as he said he’d settle them himself
with the party,’ observed the fat lady; ’but
they must be pretty good ones, because he’s
a member of parliament.’
Inexperienced as he was, Nicholas
did not feel quite assured of the force of this reasoning,
or the justice of this conclusion; but without troubling
himself to question it, he took down the address,
and resolved to wait upon Mr Gregsbury without delay.
‘I don’t know what the
number is,’ said Tom; ’but Manchester
Buildings isn’t a large place; and if the worst
comes to the worst it won’t take you very long
to knock at all the doors on both sides of the way
till you find him out. I say, what a good-looking
gal that was, wasn’t she?’
‘What girl?’ demanded Nicholas, sternly.
‘Oh yes. I know—what
gal, eh?’ whispered Tom, shutting one eye, and
cocking his chin in the air. ’You didn’t
see her, you didn’t—I say, don’t
you wish you was me, when she comes tomorrow morning?’
Nicholas looked at the ugly clerk,
as if he had a mind to reward his admiration of the
young lady by beating the ledger about his ears, but
he refrained, and strode haughtily out of the office;
setting at defiance, in his indignation, those ancient
laws of chivalry, which not only made it proper and
lawful for all good knights to hear the praise of
the ladies to whom they were devoted, but rendered
it incumbent upon them to roam about the world, and
knock at head all such matter-of-fact and un-poetical
characters, as declined to exalt, above all the earth,
damsels whom they had never chanced to look upon or
hear of—as if that were any excuse!
Thinking no longer of his own misfortunes,
but wondering what could be those of the beautiful
girl he had seen, Nicholas, with many wrong turns,
and many inquiries, and almost as many misdirections,
bent his steps towards the place whither he had been
directed.
Within the precincts of the ancient
city of Westminster, and within half a quarter of
a mile of its ancient sanctuary, is a narrow and dirty
region, the sanctuary of the smaller members of Parliament
in modern days. It is all comprised in one street
of gloomy lodging-houses, from whose windows, in
vacation-time, there frown long melancholy rows of
bills, which say, as plainly as did the countenances
of their occupiers, ranged on ministerial and opposition
benches in the session which slumbers with its fathers,
‘To Let’, ‘To Let’. In
busier periods of the year these bills disappear,
and the houses swarm with legislators. There
are legislators in the parlours, in the first floor,
in the second, in the third, in the garrets; the small
apartments reek with the breath of deputations and
delegates. In damp weather, the place is rendered
close, by the steams of moist acts of parliament and
frouzy petitions; general postmen grow faint as they
enter its infected limits, and shabby figures in quest
of franks, flit restlessly to and fro like the troubled
ghosts of Complete Letter-writers departed.
This is Manchester Buildings; and here, at all hours
of the night, may be heard the rattling of latch-keys
in their respective keyholes: with now and then—when
a gust of wind sweeping across the water which washes
the Buildings’ feet, impels the sound towards
its entrance—the weak, shrill voice of some
young member practising tomorrow’s speech.
All the livelong day, there is a grinding of organs
and clashing and clanging of little boxes of music;
for Manchester Buildings is an eel-pot, which has no
outlet but its awkward mouth—a case-bottle
which has no thoroughfare, and a short and narrow
neck—and in this respect it may be typical
of the fate of some few among its more adventurous
residents, who, after wriggling themselves into Parliament
by violent efforts and contortions, find that it,
too, is no thoroughfare for them; that, like Manchester
Buildings, it leads to nothing beyond itself; and
that they are fain at last to back out, no wiser, no
richer, not one whit more famous, than they went in.
Into Manchester Buildings Nicholas
turned, with the address of the great Mr Gregsbury
in his hand. As there was a stream of people
pouring into a shabby house not far from the entrance,
he waited until they had made their way in, and then
making up to the servant, ventured to inquire if he
knew where Mr Gregsbury lived.
The servant was a very pale, shabby
boy, who looked as if he had slept underground from
his infancy, as very likely he had. ’Mr
Gregsbury?’ said he; ’Mr Gregsbury lodges
here. It’s all right. Come in!’
Nicholas thought he might as well
get in while he could, so in he walked; and he had
no sooner done so, than the boy shut the door, and
made off.
This was odd enough: but what
was more embarrassing was, that all along the passage,
and all along the narrow stairs, blocking up the window,
and making the dark entry darker still, was a confused
crowd of persons with great importance depicted in
their looks; who were, to all appearance, waiting
in silent expectation of some coming event.
From time to time, one man would whisper his neighbour,
or a little group would whisper together, and then
the whisperers would nod fiercely to each other, or
give their heads a relentless shake, as if they were
bent upon doing something very desperate, and were
determined not to be put off, whatever happened.
As a few minutes elapsed without anything
occurring to explain this phenomenon, and as he felt
his own position a peculiarly uncomfortable one, Nicholas
was on the point of seeking some information from
the man next him, when a sudden move was visible on
the stairs, and a voice was heard to cry, ’Now,
gentleman, have the goodness to walk up!’
So far from walking up, the gentlemen
on the stairs began to walk down with great alacrity,
and to entreat, with extraordinary politeness, that
the gentlemen nearest the street would go first; the
gentlemen nearest the street retorted, with equal courtesy,
that they couldn’t think of such a thing on
any account; but they did it, without thinking of
it, inasmuch as the other gentlemen pressing some
half-dozen (among whom was Nicholas) forward, and closing
up behind, pushed them, not merely up the stairs,
but into the very sitting-room of Mr Gregsbury, which
they were thus compelled to enter with most unseemly
precipitation, and without the means of retreat; the
press behind them, more than filling the apartment.
‘Gentlemen,’ said Mr Gregsbury,
’you are welcome. I am rejoiced to see
you.’
For a gentleman who was rejoiced to
see a body of visitors, Mr Gregsbury looked as uncomfortable
as might be; but perhaps this was occasioned by senatorial
gravity, and a statesmanlike habit of keeping his
feelings under control. He was a tough, burly,
thick-headed gentleman, with a loud voice, a pompous
manner, a tolerable command of sentences with no meaning
in them, and, in short, every requisite for a very
good member indeed.
‘Now, gentlemen,’ said
Mr Gregsbury, tossing a great bundle of papers into
a wicker basket at his feet, and throwing himself back
in his chair with his arms over the elbows, ’you
are dissatisfied with my conduct, I see by the newspapers.’
‘Yes, Mr Gregsbury, we are,’
said a plump old gentleman in a violent heat, bursting
out of the throng, and planting himself in the front.
‘Do my eyes deceive me,’
said Mr Gregsbury, looking towards the speaker, ‘or
is that my old friend Pugstyles?’
‘I am that man, and no other,
sir,’ replied the plump old gentleman.
‘Give me your hand, my worthy
friend,’ said Mr Gregsbury. ‘Pugstyles,
my dear friend, I am very sorry to see you here.’
‘I am very sorry to be here,
sir,’ said Mr Pugstyles; ’but your conduct,
Mr Gregsbury, has rendered this deputation from your
constituents imperatively necessary.’
‘My conduct, Pugstyles,’
said Mr Gregsbury, looking round upon the deputation
with gracious magnanimity—’my conduct
has been, and ever will be, regulated by a sincere
regard for the true and real interests of this great
and happy country. Whether I look at home, or
abroad; whether I behold the peaceful industrious communities
of our island home: her rivers covered with steamboats,
her roads with locomotives, her streets with cabs,
her skies with balloons of a power and magnitude hitherto
unknown in the history of aeronautics in this or any
other nation—I say, whether I look merely
at home, or, stretching my eyes farther, contemplate
the boundless prospect of conquest and possession—achieved
by British perseverance and British valour—which
is outspread before me, I clasp my hands, and turning
my eyes to the broad expanse above my head, exclaim,
“Thank Heaven, I am a Briton!”’
The time had been, when this burst
of enthusiasm would have been cheered to the very
echo; but now, the deputation received it with chilling
coldness. The general impression seemed to be,
that as an explanation of Mr Gregsbury’s political
conduct, it did not enter quite enough into detail;
and one gentleman in the rear did not scruple to remark
aloud, that, for his purpose, it savoured rather too
much of a ‘gammon’ tendency.
‘The meaning of that term—gammon,’
said Mr Gregsbury, ’is unknown to me.
If it means that I grow a little too fervid, or perhaps
even hyperbolical, in extolling my native land, I
admit the full justice of the remark. I am
proud of this free and happy country. My form
dilates, my eye glistens, my breast heaves, my heart
swells, my bosom burns, when I call to mind her greatness
and her glory.’
‘We wish, sir,’ remarked
Mr Pugstyles, calmly, ’to ask you a few questions.’
’If you please, gentlemen; my
time is yours—and my country’s—and
my country’s—’ said Mr Gregsbury.
This permission being conceded, Mr
Pugstyles put on his spectacles, and referred to a
written paper which he drew from his pocket; whereupon
nearly every other member of the deputation pulled
a written paper from his pocket, to check Mr
Pugstyles off, as he read the questions.
This done, Mr Pugstyles proceeded to business.
’Question number one.—Whether,
sir, you did not give a voluntary pledge previous
to your election, that in event of your being returned,
you would immediately put down the practice of coughing
and groaning in the House of Commons. And whether
you did not submit to be coughed and groaned down
in the very first debate of the session, and have
since made no effort to effect a reform in this respect?
Whether you did not also pledge yourself to astonish
the government, and make them shrink in their shoes?
And whether you have astonished them, and made them
shrink in their shoes, or not?’
‘Go on to the next one, my dear
Pugstyles,’ said Mr Gregsbury.
’Have you any explanation to
offer with reference to that question, sir?’
asked Mr Pugstyles.
‘Certainly not,’ said Mr Gregsbury.
The members of the deputation looked
fiercely at each other, and afterwards at the member.
‘Dear Pugstyles’ having taken a very long
stare at Mr Gregsbury over the tops of his spectacles,
resumed his list of inquiries.
’Question number two.—Whether,
sir, you did not likewise give a voluntary pledge
that you would support your colleague on every occasion;
and whether you did not, the night before last, desert
him and vote upon the other side, because the wife
of a leader on that other side had invited Mrs Gregsbury
to an evening party?’
‘Go on,’ said Mr Gregsbury.
‘Nothing to say on that, either, sir?’
asked the spokesman.
‘Nothing whatever,’ replied
Mr Gregsbury. The deputation, who had only seen
him at canvassing or election time, were struck dumb
by his coolness. He didn’t appear like
the same man; then he was all milk and honey; now
he was all starch and vinegar. But men are
so different at different times!
‘Question number three—and
last,’ said Mr Pugstyles, emphatically.
’Whether, sir, you did not state upon the hustings,
that it was your firm and determined intention to
oppose everything proposed; to divide the house upon
every question, to move for returns on every subject,
to place a motion on the books every day, and, in short,
in your own memorable words, to play the very devil
with everything and everybody?’ With this comprehensive
inquiry, Mr Pugstyles folded up his list of questions,
as did all his backers.
Mr Gregsbury reflected, blew his nose,
threw himself further back in his chair, came forward
again, leaning his elbows on the table, made a triangle
with his two thumbs and his two forefingers, and tapping
his nose with the apex thereof, replied (smiling as
he said it), ’I deny everything.’
At this unexpected answer, a hoarse
murmur arose from the deputation; and the same gentleman
who had expressed an opinion relative to the gammoning
nature of the introductory speech, again made a monosyllabic
demonstration, by growling out ‘Resign!’
Which growl being taken up by his fellows, swelled
into a very earnest and general remonstrance.
‘I am requested, sir, to express
a hope,’ said Mr Pugstyles, with a distant bow,
’that on receiving a requisition to that effect
from a great majority of your constituents, you will
not object at once to resign your seat in favour of
some candidate whom they think they can better trust.’
To this, Mr Gregsbury read the following
reply, which, anticipating the request, he had composed
in the form of a letter, whereof copies had been made
to send round to the newspapers.
’My dear Mr Pugstyles,
’Next to the welfare of our
beloved island—this great and free and
happy country, whose powers and resources are, I sincerely
believe, illimitable—I value that noble
independence which is an Englishman’s proudest
boast, and which I fondly hope to bequeath to my children,
untarnished and unsullied. Actuated by no personal
motives, but moved only by high and great constitutional
considerations; which I will not attempt to explain,
for they are really beneath the comprehension of those
who have not made themselves masters, as I have, of
the intricate and arduous study of politics; I would
rather keep my seat, and intend doing so.
’Will you do me the favour to
present my compliments to the constituent body, and
acquaint them with this circumstance?
’With great esteem,
’My dear Mr Pugstyles,
‘&c.&c.’
‘Then you will not resign, under
any circumstances?’ asked the spokesman.
Mr Gregsbury smiled, and shook his head.
‘Then, good-morning, sir,’ said Pugstyles,
angrily.
‘Heaven bless you!’ said
Mr Gregsbury. And the deputation, with many
growls and scowls, filed off as quickly as the narrowness
of the staircase would allow of their getting down.
The last man being gone, Mr Gregsbury
rubbed his hands and chuckled, as merry fellows will,
when they think they have said or done a more than
commonly good thing; he was so engrossed in this self-congratulation,
that he did not observe that Nicholas had been left
behind in the shadow of the window-curtains, until
that young gentleman, fearing he might otherwise overhear
some soliloquy intended to have no listeners, coughed
twice or thrice, to attract the member’s notice.
‘What’s that?’ said Mr Gregsbury,
in sharp accents.
Nicholas stepped forward, and bowed.
‘What do you do here, sir?’
asked Mr Gregsbury; ’a spy upon my privacy!
A concealed voter! You have heard my answer,
sir. Pray follow the deputation.’
‘I should have done so, if I
had belonged to it, but I do not,’ said Nicholas.
‘Then how came you here, sir?’
was the natural inquiry of Mr Gregsbury, MP.
‘And where the devil have you come from, sir?’
was the question which followed it.
‘I brought this card from the
General Agency Office, sir,’ said Nicholas,
’wishing to offer myself as your secretary, and
understanding that you stood in need of one.’
‘That’s all you have come
for, is it?’ said Mr Gregsbury, eyeing him in
some doubt.
Nicholas replied in the affirmative.
‘You have no connection with
any of those rascally papers have you?’ said
Mr Gregsbury. ’You didn’t get into
the room, to hear what was going forward, and put
it in print, eh?’
‘I have no connection, I am
sorry to say, with anything at present,’ rejoined
Nicholas,—politely enough, but quite at
his ease.
‘Oh!’ said Mr Gregsbury.
‘How did you find your way up here, then?’
Nicholas related how he had been forced
up by the deputation.
‘That was the way, was it?’
said Mr Gregsbury. ‘Sit down.’
Nicholas took a chair, and Mr Gregsbury
stared at him for a long time, as if to make certain,
before he asked any further questions, that there
were no objections to his outward appearance.
‘You want to be my secretary,
do you?’ he said at length.
‘I wish to be employed in that
capacity, sir,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Well,’ said Mr Gregsbury; ‘now
what can you do?’
‘I suppose,’ replied Nicholas,
smiling, ’that I can do what usually falls to
the lot of other secretaries.’
‘What’s that?’ inquired Mr Gregsbury.
‘What is it?’ replied Nicholas.
‘Ah! What is it?’
retorted the member, looking shrewdly at him, with
his head on one side.
‘A secretary’s duties
are rather difficult to define, perhaps,’ said
Nicholas, considering. ‘They include, I
presume, correspondence?’
‘Good,’ interposed Mr Gregsbury.
‘The arrangement of papers and documents?’
‘Very good.’
’Occasionally, perhaps, the
writing from your dictation; and possibly, sir,’
said Nicholas, with a half-smile, ’the copying
of your speech for some public journal, when you have
made one of more than usual importance.’
‘Certainly,’ rejoined Mr Gregsbury.
‘What else?’
‘Really,’ said Nicholas,
after a moment’s reflection, ’I am not
able, at this instant, to recapitulate any other duty
of a secretary, beyond the general one of making himself
as agreeable and useful to his employer as he can,
consistently with his own respectability, and without
overstepping that line of duties which he undertakes
to perform, and which the designation of his office
is usually understood to imply.’
Mr Gregsbury looked fixedly at Nicholas
for a short time, and then glancing warily round the
room, said in a suppressed voice:
‘This is all very well, Mr—what is
your name?’
‘Nickleby.’
’This is all very well, Mr Nickleby,
and very proper, so far as it goes—so far
as it goes, but it doesn’t go far enough.
There are other duties, Mr Nickleby, which a secretary
to a parliamentary gentleman must never lose sight
of. I should require to be crammed, sir.’
‘I beg your pardon,’ interposed
Nicholas, doubtful whether he had heard aright.
‘—To be crammed, sir,’ repeated
Mr Gregsbury.
‘May I beg your pardon again,
if I inquire what you mean, sir?’ said Nicholas.
‘My meaning, sir, is perfectly
plain,’ replied Mr Gregsbury with a solemn aspect.
’My secretary would have to make himself master
of the foreign policy of the world, as it is mirrored
in the newspapers; to run his eye over all accounts
of public meetings, all leading articles, and accounts
of the proceedings of public bodies; and to make notes
of anything which it appeared to him might be made
a point of, in any little speech upon the question
of some petition lying on the table, or anything of
that kind. Do you understand?’
‘I think I do, sir,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Then,’ said Mr Gregsbury,
’it would be necessary for him to make himself
acquainted, from day to day, with newspaper paragraphs
on passing events; such as “Mysterious disappearance,
and supposed suicide of a potboy,” or anything
of that sort, upon which I might found a question
to the Secretary of State for the Home Department.
Then, he would have to copy the question, and as much
as I remembered of the answer (including a little
compliment about independence and good sense); and
to send the manuscript in a frank to the local paper,
with perhaps half-a-dozen lines of leader, to the
effect, that I was always to be found in my place in
parliament, and never shrunk from the responsible
and arduous duties, and so forth. You see?’
Nicholas bowed.
‘Besides which,’ continued
Mr Gregsbury, ’I should expect him, now and
then, to go through a few figures in the printed tables,
and to pick out a few results, so that I might come
out pretty well on timber duty questions, and finance
questions, and so on; and I should like him to get
up a few little arguments about the disastrous effects
of a return to cash payments and a metallic currency,
with a touch now and then about the exportation of
bullion, and the Emperor of Russia, and bank notes,
and all that kind of thing, which it’s only
necessary to talk fluently about, because nobody understands
it. Do you take me?’
‘I think I understand,’ said Nicholas.
‘With regard to such questions
as are not political,’ continued Mr Gregsbury,
warming; ’and which one can’t be expected
to care a curse about, beyond the natural care of
not allowing inferior people to be as well off as
ourselves—else where are our privileges?—I
should wish my secretary to get together a few little
flourishing speeches, of a patriotic cast. For
instance, if any preposterous bill were brought forward,
for giving poor grubbing devils of authors a right
to their own property, I should like to say, that I
for one would never consent to opposing an insurmountable
bar to the diffusion of literature among the
people,—you understand?—that
the creations of the pocket, being man’s, might
belong to one man, or one family; but that the creations
of the brain, being God’s, ought as a matter
of course to belong to the people at large—and
if I was pleasantly disposed, I should like to make
a joke about posterity, and say that those who wrote
for posterity should be content to be rewarded by
the approbation of posterity; it might take with
the house, and could never do me any harm, because
posterity can’t be expected to know anything
about me or my jokes either—do you see?’
‘I see that, sir,’ replied Nicholas.
’You must always bear in mind,
in such cases as this, where our interests are not
affected,’ said Mr Gregsbury, ’to put it
very strong about the people, because it comes out
very well at election-time; and you could be as funny
as you liked about the authors; because I believe
the greater part of them live in lodgings, and are
not voters. This is a hasty outline of the chief
things you’d have to do, except waiting in the
lobby every night, in case I forgot anything, and
should want fresh cramming; and, now and then, during
great debates, sitting in the front row of the gallery,
and saying to the people about—’You
see that gentleman, with his hand to his face, and
his arm twisted round the pillar—that’s
Mr Gregsbury—the celebrated Mr Gregsbury,’—with
any other little eulogium that might strike you at
the moment. And for salary,’ said Mr Gregsbury,
winding up with great rapidity; for he was out of breath—’and
for salary, I don’t mind saying at once in round
numbers, to prevent any dissatisfaction—though
it’s more than I’ve been accustomed to
give —fifteen shillings a week, and find
yourself. There!’
With this handsome offer, Mr Gregsbury
once more threw himself back in his chair, and looked
like a man who had been most profligately liberal,
but is determined not to repent of it notwithstanding.
‘Fifteen shillings a week is
not much,’ said Nicholas, mildly.
‘Not much! Fifteen shillings
a week not much, young man?’ cried Mr Gregsbury.
‘Fifteen shillings a—’
‘Pray do not suppose that I
quarrel with the sum, sir,’ replied Nicholas;
’for I am not ashamed to confess, that whatever
it may be in itself, to me it is a great deal.
But the duties and responsibilities make the recompense
small, and they are so very heavy that I fear to undertake
them.’
‘Do you decline to undertake
them, sir?’ inquired Mr Gregsbury, with his
hand on the bell-rope.
’I fear they are too great for
my powers, however good my will may be, sir,’
replied Nicholas.
’That is as much as to say that
you had rather not accept the place, and that you
consider fifteen shillings a week too little,’
said Mr Gregsbury, ringing. ‘Do you decline
it, sir?’
‘I have no alternative but to
do so,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Door, Matthews!’ said
Mr Gregsbury, as the boy appeared.
‘I am sorry I have troubled
you unnecessarily, sir,’ said Nicholas,
‘I am sorry you have,’
rejoined Mr Gregsbury, turning his back upon him.
‘Door, Matthews!’
‘Good-morning, sir,’ said Nicholas.
‘Door, Matthews!’ cried Mr Gregsbury.
The boy beckoned Nicholas, and tumbling
lazily downstairs before him, opened the door, and
ushered him into the street. With a sad and
pensive air, he retraced his steps homewards.
Smike had scraped a meal together
from the remnant of last night’s supper, and
was anxiously awaiting his return. The occurrences
of the morning had not improved Nicholas’s appetite,
and, by him, the dinner remained untasted. He
was sitting in a thoughtful attitude, with the plate
which the poor fellow had assiduously filled with the
choicest morsels, untouched, by his side, when Newman
Noggs looked into the room.
‘Come back?’ asked Newman.
‘Yes,’ replied Nicholas,
’tired to death: and, what is worse, might
have remained at home for all the good I have done.’
‘Couldn’t expect to do
much in one morning,’ said Newman.
‘Maybe so, but I am sanguine,
and did expect,’ said Nicholas, ’and am
proportionately disappointed.’ Saying which,
he gave Newman an account of his proceedings.
‘If I could do anything,’
said Nicholas, ’anything, however slight, until
Ralph Nickleby returns, and I have eased my mind by
confronting him, I should feel happier. I should
think it no disgrace to work, Heaven knows.
Lying indolently here, like a half-tamed sullen beast,
distracts me.’
‘I don’t know,’
said Newman; ’small things offer—they
would pay the rent, and more—but you wouldn’t
like them; no, you could hardly be expected to undergo
it—no, no.’
‘What could I hardly be expected
to undergo?’ asked Nicholas, raising his eyes.
’Show me, in this wide waste of London, any
honest means by which I could even defray the weekly
hire of this poor room, and see if I shrink from resorting
to them! Undergo! I have undergone too
much, my friend, to feel pride or squeamishness now.
Except—’ added Nicholas hastily,
after a short silence, ’except such squeamishness
as is common honesty, and so much pride as constitutes
self-respect. I see little to choose, between
assistant to a brutal pedagogue, and toad-eater to
a mean and ignorant upstart, be he member or no member.’
’I hardly know whether I should
tell you what I heard this morning, or not,’
said Newman.
‘Has it reference to what you
said just now?’ asked Nicholas.
‘It has.’
‘Then in Heaven’s name,
my good friend, tell it me,’ said Nicholas.
’For God’s sake consider my deplorable
condition; and, while I promise to take no step without
taking counsel with you, give me, at least, a vote
in my own behalf.’
Moved by this entreaty, Newman stammered
forth a variety of most unaccountable and entangled
sentences, the upshot of which was, that Mrs Kenwigs
had examined him, at great length that morning, touching
the origin of his acquaintance with, and the whole
life, adventures, and pedigree of, Nicholas; that
Newman had parried these questions as long as he could,
but being, at length, hard pressed and driven into
a corner, had gone so far as to admit, that Nicholas
was a tutor of great accomplishments, involved in
some misfortunes which he was not at liberty to explain,
and bearing the name of Johnson. That Mrs Kenwigs,
impelled by gratitude, or ambition, or maternal pride,
or maternal love, or all four powerful motives conjointly,
had taken secret conference with Mr Kenwigs, and had
finally returned to propose that Mr Johnson should
instruct the four Miss Kenwigses in the French language
as spoken by natives, at the weekly stipend of five
shillings, current coin of the realm; being at the
rate of one shilling per week, per each Miss Kenwigs,
and one shilling over, until such time as the baby
might be able to take it out in grammar.
‘Which, unless I am very much
mistaken,’ observed Mrs Kenwigs in making the
proposition, ’will not be very long; for such
clever children, Mr Noggs, never were born into this
world, I do believe.’
‘There,’ said Newman,
’that’s all. It’s beneath you,
I know; but I thought that perhaps you might—’
‘Might!’ cried Nicholas,
with great alacrity; ’of course I shall.
I accept the offer at once. Tell the worthy
mother so, without delay, my dear fellow; and that
I am ready to begin whenever she pleases.’
Newman hastened, with joyful steps,
to inform Mrs Kenwigs of his friend’s acquiescence,
and soon returning, brought back word that they would
be happy to see him in the first floor as soon as
convenient; that Mrs Kenwigs had, upon the instant,
sent out to secure a second-hand French grammar and
dialogues, which had long been fluttering in the sixpenny
box at the bookstall round the corner; and that the
family, highly excited at the prospect of this addition
to their gentility, wished the initiatory lesson to
come off immediately.
And here it may be observed, that
Nicholas was not, in the ordinary sense of the word,
a young man of high spirit. He would resent an
affront to himself, or interpose to redress a wrong
offered to another, as boldly and freely as any knight
that ever set lance in rest; but he lacked that peculiar
excess of coolness and great-minded selfishness,
which invariably distinguish gentlemen of high spirit.
In truth, for our own part, we are disposed to look
upon such gentleman as being rather incumbrances than
otherwise in rising families: happening to be
acquainted with several whose spirit prevents their
settling down to any grovelling occupation, and only
displays itself in a tendency to cultivate moustachios,
and look fierce; and although moustachios and ferocity
are both very pretty things in their way, and very
much to be commended, we confess to a desire to see
them bred at the owner’s proper cost, rather
than at the expense of low-spirited people.
Nicholas, therefore, not being a high-spirited
young man according to common parlance, and deeming
it a greater degradation to borrow, for the supply
of his necessities, from Newman Noggs, than to teach
French to the little Kenwigses for five shillings a
week, accepted the offer with the alacrity already
described, and betook himself to the first floor with
all convenient speed.
Here, he was received by Mrs Kenwigs
with a genteel air, kindly intended to assure him
of her protection and support; and here, too, he found
Mr Lillyvick and Miss Petowker; the four Miss Kenwigses
on their form of audience; and the baby in a dwarf
porter’s chair with a deal tray before it, amusing
himself with a toy horse without a head; the said
horse being composed of a small wooden cylinder, not
unlike an Italian iron, supported on four crooked pegs,
and painted in ingenious resemblance of red wafers
set in blacking.
‘How do you do, Mr Johnson?’
said Mrs Kenwigs. ‘Uncle—Mr
Johnson.’
‘How do you do, sir?’
said Mr Lillyvick—rather sharply; for he
had not known what Nicholas was, on the previous night,
and it was rather an aggravating circumstance if a
tax collector had been too polite to a teacher.
‘Mr Johnson is engaged as private
master to the children, uncle,’ said Mrs Kenwigs.
‘So you said just now, my dear,’ replied
Mr Lillyvick.
‘But I hope,’ said Mrs
Kenwigs, drawing herself up, ’that that will
not make them proud; but that they will bless their
own good fortune, which has born them superior to
common people’s children. Do you hear,
Morleena?’
‘Yes, ma,’ replied Miss Kenwigs.
’And when you go out in the
streets, or elsewhere, I desire that you don’t
boast of it to the other children,’ said Mrs
Kenwigs; ’and that if you must say anything
about it, you don’t say no more than “We’ve
got a private master comes to teach us at home, but
we ain’t proud, because ma says it’s sinful.”
Do you hear, Morleena?’
‘Yes, ma,’ replied Miss Kenwigs again.
‘Then mind you recollect, and
do as I tell you,’ said Mrs Kenwigs. ‘Shall
Mr Johnson begin, uncle?’
‘I am ready to hear, if Mr Johnson
is ready to commence, my dear,’ said the collector,
assuming the air of a profound critic. ’What
sort of language do you consider French, sir?’
‘How do you mean?’ asked Nicholas.
‘Do you consider it a good language,
sir?’ said the collector; ’a pretty language,
a sensible language?’
‘A pretty language, certainly,’
replied Nicholas; ’and as it has a name for
everything, and admits of elegant conversation about
everything, I presume it is a sensible one.’
‘I don’t know,’
said Mr Lillyvick, doubtfully. ’Do you
call it a cheerful language, now?’
‘Yes,’ replied Nicholas,
‘I should say it was, certainly.’
‘It’s very much changed
since my time, then,’ said the collector, ‘very
much.’
‘Was it a dismal one in your
time?’ asked Nicholas, scarcely able to repress
a smile.
‘Very,’ replied Mr Lillyvick,
with some vehemence of manner. ’It’s
the war time that I speak of; the last war. It
may be a cheerful language. I should be sorry
to contradict anybody; but I can only say that I’ve
heard the French prisoners, who were natives, and
ought to know how to speak it, talking in such a dismal
manner, that it made one miserable to hear them.
Ay, that I have, fifty times, sir—fifty
times!’
Mr Lillyvick was waxing so cross,
that Mrs Kenwigs thought it expedient to motion to
Nicholas not to say anything; and it was not until
Miss Petowker had practised several blandishments,
to soften the excellent old gentleman, that he deigned
to break silence by asking,
‘What’s the water in French, sir?’
‘L’EAU,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Ah!’ said Mr Lillyvick,
shaking his head mournfully, ’I thought as much.
Lo, eh? I don’t think anything of that
language—nothing at all.’
‘I suppose the children may begin, uncle?’
said Mrs Kenwigs.
‘Oh yes; they may begin, my
dear,’ replied the collector, discontentedly.
‘I have no wish to prevent them.’
This permission being conceded, the
four Miss Kenwigses sat in a row, with their tails
all one way, and Morleena at the top: while Nicholas,
taking the book, began his preliminary explanations.
Miss Petowker and Mrs Kenwigs looked on, in silent
admiration, broken only by the whispered assurances
of the latter, that Morleena would have it all by
heart in no time; and Mr Lillyvick regarded the group
with frowning and attentive eyes, lying in wait for
something upon which he could open a fresh discussion
on the language.