Miss Knag, after doting on Kate Nickleby
for three whole Days, makes up her Mind to hate her
for evermore. The Causes which led Miss Knag
to form this Resolution
There are many lives of much pain,
hardship, and suffering, which, having no stirring
interest for any but those who lead them, are disregarded
by persons who do not want thought or feeling, but
who pamper their compassion and need high stimulants
to rouse it.
There are not a few among the disciples
of charity who require, in their vocation, scarcely
less excitement than the votaries of pleasure in theirs;
and hence it is that diseased sympathy and compassion
are every day expended on out-of-the-way objects, when
only too many demands upon the legitimate exercise
of the same virtues in a healthy state, are constantly
within the sight and hearing of the most unobservant
person alive. In short, charity must have its
romance, as the novelist or playwright must have his.
A thief in fustian is a vulgar character, scarcely
to be thought of by persons of refinement; but dress
him in green velvet, with a high-crowned hat, and
change the scene of his operations, from a thickly-peopled
city, to a mountain road, and you shall find in him
the very soul of poetry and adventure. So it
is with the one great cardinal virtue, which, properly
nourished and exercised, leads to, if it does not
necessarily include, all the others. It must
have its romance; and the less of real, hard, struggling
work-a-day life there is in that romance, the better.
The life to which poor Kate Nickleby
was devoted, in consequence of the unforeseen train
of circumstances already developed in this narrative,
was a hard one; but lest the very dulness, unhealthy
confinement, and bodily fatigue, which made up its
sum and substance, should deprive it of any interest
with the mass of the charitable and sympathetic, I
would rather keep Miss Nickleby herself in view just
now, than chill them in the outset, by a minute and
lengthened description of the establishment presided
over by Madame Mantalini.
‘Well, now, indeed, Madame Mantalini,’
said Miss Knag, as Kate was taking her weary way homewards
on the first night of her novitiate; ’that Miss
Nickleby is a very creditable young person—a
very creditable young person indeed—hem—upon
my word, Madame Mantalini, it does very extraordinary
credit even to your discrimination that you should
have found such a very excellent, very well-behaved,
very—hem—very unassuming young
woman to assist in the fitting on. I have seen
some young women when they had the opportunity of
displaying before their betters, behave in such a—oh,
dear—well— but you’re
always right, Madame Mantalini, always; and as I very
often tell the young ladies, how you do contrive to
be always right, when so many people are so often
wrong, is to me a mystery indeed.’
’Beyond putting a very excellent
client out of humour, Miss Nickleby has not done anything
very remarkable today—that I am aware of,
at least,’ said Madame Mantalini in reply.
‘Oh, dear!’ said Miss
Knag; ’but you must allow a great deal for inexperience,
you know.’
‘And youth?’ inquired Madame.
‘Oh, I say nothing about that,
Madame Mantalini,’ replied Miss Knag, reddening;
‘because if youth were any excuse, you wouldn’t
have—’
‘Quite so good a forewoman as
I have, I suppose,’ suggested Madame.
‘Well, I never did know anybody
like you, Madame Mantalini,’ rejoined Miss Knag
most complacently, ’and that’s the fact,
for you know what one’s going to say, before
it has time to rise to one’s lips. Oh,
very good! Ha, ha, ha!’
‘For myself,’ observed
Madame Mantalini, glancing with affected carelessness
at her assistant, and laughing heartily in her sleeve,
’I consider Miss Nickleby the most awkward girl
I ever saw in my life.’
‘Poor dear thing,’ said
Miss Knag, ’it’s not her fault. If
it was, we might hope to cure it; but as it’s
her misfortune, Madame Mantalini, why really you know,
as the man said about the blind horse, we ought to
respect it.’
‘Her uncle told me she had been
considered pretty,’ remarked Madame Mantalini.
’I think her one of the most ordinary girls
I ever met with.’
‘Ordinary!’ cried Miss
Knag with a countenance beaming delight; ’and
awkward! Well, all I can say is, Madame Mantalini,
that I quite love the poor girl; and that if she was
twice as indifferent-looking, and twice as awkward
as she is, I should be only so much the more her friend,
and that’s the truth of it.’
In fact, Miss Knag had conceived an
incipient affection for Kate Nickleby, after witnessing
her failure that morning, and this short conversation
with her superior increased the favourable prepossession
to a most surprising extent; which was the more remarkable,
as when she first scanned that young lady’s face
and figure, she had entertained certain inward misgivings
that they would never agree.
‘But now,’ said Miss Knag,
glancing at the reflection of herself in a mirror
at no great distance, ’I love her—I
quite love her—I declare I do!’
Of such a highly disinterested quality
was this devoted friendship, and so superior was it
to the little weaknesses of flattery or ill-nature,
that the kind-hearted Miss Knag candidly informed Kate
Nickleby, next day, that she saw she would never do
for the business, but that she need not give herself
the slightest uneasiness on this account, for that
she (Miss Knag), by increased exertions on her own
part, would keep her as much as possible in the background,
and that all she would have to do, would be to remain
perfectly quiet before company, and to shrink from
attracting notice by every means in her power.
This last suggestion was so much in accordance with
the timid girl’s own feelings and wishes, that
she readily promised implicit reliance on the excellent
spinster’s advice: without questioning,
or indeed bestowing a moment’s reflection upon,
the motives that dictated it.
‘I take quite a lively interest
in you, my dear soul, upon my word,’ said Miss
Knag; ’a sister’s interest, actually.
It’s the most singular circumstance I ever
knew.’
Undoubtedly it was singular, that
if Miss Knag did feel a strong interest in Kate Nickleby,
it should not rather have been the interest of a maiden
aunt or grandmother; that being the conclusion to
which the difference in their respective ages would
have naturally tended. But Miss Knag wore clothes
of a very youthful pattern, and perhaps her feelings
took the same shape.
‘Bless you!’ said Miss
Knag, bestowing a kiss upon Kate at the conclusion
of the second day’s work, ’how very awkward
you have been all day.’
’I fear your kind and open communication,
which has rendered me more painfully conscious of
my own defects, has not improved me,’ sighed
Kate.
‘No, no, I dare say not,’
rejoined Miss Knag, in a most uncommon flow of good
humour. ’But how much better that you should
know it at first, and so be able to go on, straight
and comfortable! Which way are you walking,
my love?’
‘Towards the city,’ replied Kate.
‘The city!’ cried Miss
Knag, regarding herself with great favour in the glass
as she tied her bonnet. ’Goodness gracious
me! now do you really live in the city?’
‘Is it so very unusual for anybody
to live there?’ asked Kate, half smiling.
’I couldn’t have believed
it possible that any young woman could have lived
there, under any circumstances whatever, for three
days together,’ replied Miss Knag.
‘Reduced—I should
say poor people,’ answered Kate, correcting
herself hastily, for she was afraid of appearing proud,
’must live where they can.’
‘Ah! very true, so they must;
very proper indeed!’ rejoined Miss Knag with
that sort of half-sigh, which, accompanied by two or
three slight nods of the head, is pity’s small
change in general society; ’and that’s
what I very often tell my brother, when our servants
go away ill, one after another, and he thinks the
back-kitchen’s rather too damp for ’em
to sleep in. These sort of people, I tell him,
are glad to sleep anywhere! Heaven suits the
back to the burden. What a nice thing it is
to think that it should be so, isn’t it?’
‘Very,’ replied Kate.
‘I’ll walk with you part
of the way, my dear,’ said Miss Knag, ’for
you must go very near our house; and as it’s
quite dark, and our last servant went to the hospital
a week ago, with St Anthony’s fire in her face,
I shall be glad of your company.’
Kate would willingly have excused
herself from this flattering companionship; but Miss
Knag having adjusted her bonnet to her entire satisfaction,
took her arm with an air which plainly showed how
much she felt the compliment she was conferring, and
they were in the street before she could say another
word.
‘I fear,’ said Kate, hesitating,
’that mama—my mother, I mean—is
waiting for me.’
‘You needn’t make the
least apology, my dear,’ said Miss Knag, smiling
sweetly as she spoke; ’I dare say she is a very
respectable old person, and I shall be quite—hem—quite
pleased to know her.’
As poor Mrs Nickleby was cooling—not
her heels alone, but her limbs generally at the street
corner, Kate had no alternative but to make her known
to Miss Knag, who, doing the last new carriage customer
at second-hand, acknowledged the introduction with
condescending politeness. The three then walked
away, arm in arm: with Miss Knag in the middle,
in a special state of amiability.
’I have taken such a fancy to
your daughter, Mrs Nickleby, you can’t think,’
said Miss Knag, after she had proceeded a little distance
in dignified silence.
‘I am delighted to hear it,’
said Mrs Nickleby; ’though it is nothing new
to me, that even strangers should like Kate.’
‘Hem!’ cried Miss Knag.
‘You will like her better when
you know how good she is,’ said Mrs Nickleby.
’It is a great blessing to me, in my misfortunes,
to have a child, who knows neither pride nor vanity,
and whose bringing-up might very well have excused
a little of both at first. You don’t know
what it is to lose a husband, Miss Knag.’
As Miss Knag had never yet known what
it was to gain one, it followed, very nearly as a
matter of course, that she didn’t know what
it was to lose one; so she said, in some haste, ’No,
indeed I don’t,’ and said it with an air
intending to signify that she should like to catch
herself marrying anybody—no, no, she knew
better than that.
‘Kate has improved even in this
little time, I have no doubt,’ said Mrs Nickleby,
glancing proudly at her daughter.
‘Oh! of course,’ said Miss Knag.
‘And will improve still more,’ added Mrs
Nickleby.
‘That she will, I’ll be
bound,’ replied Miss Knag, squeezing Kate’s
arm in her own, to point the joke.
‘She always was clever,’
said poor Mrs Nickleby, brightening up, ’always,
from a baby. I recollect when she was only two
years and a half old, that a gentleman who used to
visit very much at our house —Mr Watkins,
you know, Kate, my dear, that your poor papa went bail
for, who afterwards ran away to the United States,
and sent us a pair of snow shoes, with such an affectionate
letter that it made your poor dear father cry for
a week. You remember the letter? In which
he said that he was very sorry he couldn’t repay
the fifty pounds just then, because his capital was
all out at interest, and he was very busy making his
fortune, but that he didn’t forget you were
his god-daughter, and he should take it very unkind
if we didn’t buy you a silver coral and put
it down to his old account? Dear me, yes, my
dear, how stupid you are! and spoke so affectionately
of the old port wine that he used to drink a bottle
and a half of every time he came. You must remember,
Kate?’
‘Yes, yes, mama; what of him?’
‘Why, that Mr Watkins, my dear,’
said Mrs Nickleby slowly, as if she were making a
tremendous effort to recollect something of paramount
importance; ’that Mr Watkins—he wasn’t
any relation, Miss Knag will understand, to the Watkins
who kept the Old Boar in the village; by-the-bye,
I don’t remember whether it was the Old Boar
or the George the Third, but it was one of the two,
I know, and it’s much the same—that
Mr Watkins said, when you were only two years and a
half old, that you were one of the most astonishing
children he ever saw. He did indeed, Miss Knag,
and he wasn’t at all fond of children, and couldn’t
have had the slightest motive for doing it. I
know it was he who said so, because I recollect, as
well as if it was only yesterday, his borrowing twenty
pounds of her poor dear papa the very moment afterwards.’
Having quoted this extraordinary and
most disinterested testimony to her daughter’s
excellence, Mrs Nickleby stopped to breathe; and Miss
Knag, finding that the discourse was turning upon family
greatness, lost no time in striking in, with a small
reminiscence on her own account.
‘Don’t talk of lending
money, Mrs Nickleby,’ said Miss Knag, ’or
you’ll drive me crazy, perfectly crazy.
My mama—hem—was the most lovely
and beautiful creature, with the most striking and
exquisite —hem—the most exquisite
nose that ever was put upon a human face, I do believe,
Mrs Nickleby (here Miss Knag rubbed her own nose sympathetically);
the most delightful and accomplished woman, perhaps,
that ever was seen; but she had that one failing of
lending money, and carried it to such an extent that
she lent—hem—oh! thousands of
pounds, all our little fortunes, and what’s more,
Mrs Nickleby, I don’t think, if we were to live
till—till—hem—till
the very end of time, that we should ever get them
back again. I don’t indeed.’
After concluding this effort of invention
without being interrupted, Miss Knag fell into many
more recollections, no less interesting than true,
the full tide of which, Mrs Nickleby in vain attempting
to stem, at length sailed smoothly down by adding an
under-current of her own recollections; and so both
ladies went on talking together in perfect contentment;
the only difference between them being, that whereas
Miss Knag addressed herself to Kate, and talked very
loud, Mrs Nickleby kept on in one unbroken monotonous
flow, perfectly satisfied to be talking and caring
very little whether anybody listened or not.
In this manner they walked on, very
amicably, until they arrived at Miss Knag’s
brother’s, who was an ornamental stationer and
small circulating library keeper, in a by-street off
Tottenham Court Road; and who let out by the day,
week, month, or year, the newest old novels, whereof
the titles were displayed in pen-and-ink characters
on a sheet of pasteboard, swinging at his door-post.
As Miss Knag happened, at the moment, to be in the
middle of an account of her twenty-second offer from
a gentleman of large property, she insisted upon their
all going in to supper together; and in they went.
‘Don’t go away, Mortimer,’
said Miss Knag as they entered the shop. ’It’s
only one of our young ladies and her mother.
Mrs and Miss Nickleby.’
‘Oh, indeed!’ said Mr Mortimer Knag.
‘Ah!’
Having given utterance to these ejaculations
with a very profound and thoughtful air, Mr Knag slowly
snuffed two kitchen candles on the counter, and two
more in the window, and then snuffed himself from
a box in his waistcoat pocket.
There was something very impressive
in the ghostly air with which all this was done; and
as Mr Knag was a tall lank gentleman of solemn features,
wearing spectacles, and garnished with much less hair
than a gentleman bordering on forty, or thereabouts,
usually boasts, Mrs Nickleby whispered her daughter
that she thought he must be literary.
‘Past ten,’ said Mr Knag,
consulting his watch. ’Thomas, close the
warehouse.’
Thomas was a boy nearly half as tall
as a shutter, and the warehouse was a shop about the
size of three hackney coaches.
‘Ah!’ said Mr Knag once
more, heaving a deep sigh as he restored to its parent
shelf the book he had been reading. ’Well—yes—I
believe supper is ready, sister.’
With another sigh Mr Knag took up
the kitchen candles from the counter, and preceded
the ladies with mournful steps to a back-parlour,
where a charwoman, employed in the absence of the sick
servant, and remunerated with certain eighteenpences
to be deducted from her wages due, was putting the
supper out.
‘Mrs Blockson,’ said Miss
Knag, reproachfully, ’how very often I have
begged you not to come into the room with your bonnet
on!’
‘I can’t help it, Miss
Knag,’ said the charwoman, bridling up on the
shortest notice. ’There’s been a
deal o’cleaning to do in this house, and if
you don’t like it, I must trouble you to look
out for somebody else, for it don’t hardly pay
me, and that’s the truth, if I was to be hung
this minute.’
‘I don’t want any remarks
if you please,’ said Miss Knag, with a
strong emphasis on the personal pronoun. ’Is
there any fire downstairs for some hot water presently?’
‘No there is not, indeed, Miss
Knag,’ replied the substitute; ’and so
I won’t tell you no stories about it.’
‘Then why isn’t there?’ said Miss
Knag.
’Because there arn’t no
coals left out, and if I could make coals I would,
but as I can’t I won’t, and so I make bold
to tell you, Mem,’ replied Mrs Blockson.
‘Will you hold your tongue—female?’
said Mr Mortimer Knag, plunging violently into this
dialogue.
‘By your leave, Mr Knag,’
retorted the charwoman, turning sharp round.
’I’m only too glad not to speak in this
house, excepting when and where I’m spoke to,
sir; and with regard to being a female, sir, I should
wish to know what you considered yourself?’
‘A miserable wretch,’
exclaimed Mr Knag, striking his forehead. ’A
miserable wretch.’
’I’m very glad to find
that you don’t call yourself out of your name,
sir,’ said Mrs Blockson; ’and as I had
two twin children the day before yesterday was only
seven weeks, and my little Charley fell down a airy
and put his elber out, last Monday, I shall take it
as a favour if you’ll send nine shillings, for
one week’s work, to my house, afore the clock
strikes ten tomorrow.’
With these parting words, the good
woman quitted the room with great ease of manner,
leaving the door wide open; Mr Knag, at the same moment,
flung himself into the ‘warehouse,’ and
groaned aloud.
‘What is the matter with that
gentleman, pray?’ inquired Mrs Nickleby, greatly
disturbed by the sound.
‘Is he ill?’ inquired Kate, really alarmed.
‘Hush!’ replied Miss Knag;
’a most melancholy history. He was once
most devotedly attached to—hem—to
Madame Mantalini.’
‘Bless me!’ exclaimed Mrs Nickleby.
‘Yes,’ continued Miss
Knag, ’and received great encouragement too,
and confidently hoped to marry her. He has a
most romantic heart, Mrs Nickleby, as indeed—hem—as
indeed all our family have, and the disappointment
was a dreadful blow. He is a wonderfully accomplished
man—most extraordinarily accomplished—reads—hem—
reads every novel that comes out; I mean every novel
that—hem—that has any fashion
in it, of course. The fact is, that he did find
so much in the books he read, applicable to his own
misfortunes, and did find himself in every respect
so much like the heroes—because of course
he is conscious of his own superiority, as we all are,
and very naturally—that he took to scorning
everything, and became a genius; and I am quite sure
that he is, at this very present moment, writing another
book.’
‘Another book!’ repeated
Kate, finding that a pause was left for somebody to
say something.
‘Yes,’ said Miss Knag,
nodding in great triumph; ’another book, in
three volumes post octavo. Of course it’s
a great advantage to him, in all his little fashionable
descriptions, to have the benefit of my—hem—of
my experience, because, of course, few authors who
write about such things can have such opportunities
of knowing them as I have. He’s so wrapped
up in high life, that the least allusion to business
or worldly matters—like that woman just
now, for instance— quite distracts him;
but, as I often say, I think his disappointment a
great thing for him, because if he hadn’t been
disappointed he couldn’t have written about
blighted hopes and all that; and the fact is, if it
hadn’t happened as it has, I don’t believe
his genius would ever have come out at all.’
How much more communicative Miss Knag
might have become under more favourable circumstances,
it is impossible to divine, but as the gloomy one
was within ear-shot, and the fire wanted making up,
her disclosures stopped here. To judge from
all appearances, and the difficulty of making the
water warm, the last servant could not have been much
accustomed to any other fire than St Anthony’s;
but a little brandy and water was made at last, and
the guests, having been previously regaled with cold
leg of mutton and bread and cheese, soon afterwards
took leave; Kate amusing herself, all the way home,
with the recollection of her last glimpse of Mr Mortimer
Knag deeply abstracted in the shop; and Mrs Nickleby
by debating within herself whether the dressmaking
firm would ultimately become ‘Mantalini, Knag,
and Nickleby’, or ‘Mantalini, Nickleby,
and Knag’.
At this high point, Miss Knag’s
friendship remained for three whole days, much to
the wonderment of Madame Mantalini’s young ladies
who had never beheld such constancy in that quarter,
before; but on the fourth, it received a check no
less violent than sudden, which thus occurred.
It happened that an old lord of great
family, who was going to marry a young lady of no
family in particular, came with the young lady, and
the young lady’s sister, to witness the ceremony
of trying on two nuptial bonnets which had been ordered
the day before, and Madame Mantalini announcing the
fact, in a shrill treble, through the speaking-pipe,
which communicated with the workroom, Miss Knag darted
hastily upstairs with a bonnet in each hand, and presented
herself in the show-room, in a charming state of palpitation,
intended to demonstrate her enthusiasm in the cause.
The bonnets were no sooner fairly on, than Miss Knag
and Madame Mantalini fell into convulsions of admiration.
‘A most elegant appearance,’ said Madame
Mantalini.
‘I never saw anything so exquisite in all my
life,’ said Miss Knag.
Now, the old lord, who was a very
old lord, said nothing, but mumbled and chuckled in
a state of great delight, no less with the nuptial
bonnets and their wearers, than with his own address
in getting such a fine woman for his wife; and the
young lady, who was a very lively young lady, seeing
the old lord in this rapturous condition, chased the
old lord behind a cheval-glass, and then and there
kissed him, while Madame Mantalini and the other young
lady looked, discreetly, another way.
But, pending the salutation, Miss
Knag, who was tinged with curiosity, stepped accidentally
behind the glass, and encountered the lively young
lady’s eye just at the very moment when she kissed
the old lord; upon which the young lady, in a pouting
manner, murmured something about ‘an old thing,’
and ‘great impertinence,’ and finished
by darting a look of displeasure at Miss Knag, and
smiling contemptuously.
‘Madame Mantalini,’ said the young lady.
‘Ma’am,’ said Madame Mantalini.
‘Pray have up that pretty young creature we
saw yesterday.’
‘Oh yes, do,’ said the sister.
‘Of all things in the world,
Madame Mantalini,’ said the lord’s intended,
throwing herself languidly on a sofa, ’I hate
being waited upon by frights or elderly persons.
Let me always see that young creature, I beg, whenever
I come.’
‘By all means,’ said the
old lord; ’the lovely young creature, by all
means.’
‘Everybody is talking about
her,’ said the young lady, in the same careless
manner; ’and my lord, being a great admirer of
beauty, must positively see her.’
‘She is universally admired,’
replied Madame Mantalini. ’Miss Knag,
send up Miss Nickleby. You needn’t return.’
‘I beg your pardon, Madame Mantalini,
what did you say last?’ asked Miss Knag, trembling.
‘You needn’t return,’
repeated the superior, sharply. Miss Knag vanished
without another word, and in all reasonable time was
replaced by Kate, who took off the new bonnets and
put on the old ones: blushing very much to find
that the old lord and the two young ladies were staring
her out of countenance all the time.
‘Why, how you colour, child!’
said the lord’s chosen bride.
’She is not quite so accustomed
to her business, as she will be in a week or two,’
interposed Madame Mantalini with a gracious smile.
’I am afraid you have been giving
her some of your wicked looks, my lord,’ said
the intended.
‘No, no, no,’ replied
the old lord, ’no, no, I’m going to be
married, and lead a new life. Ha, ha, ha! a new
life, a new life! ha, ha, ha!’
It was a satisfactory thing to hear
that the old gentleman was going to lead a new life,
for it was pretty evident that his old one would not
last him much longer. The mere exertion of protracted
chuckling reduced him to a fearful ebb of coughing
and gasping; it was some minutes before he could find
breath to remark that the girl was too pretty for
a milliner.
’I hope you don’t think
good looks a disqualification for the business, my
lord,’ said Madame Mantalini, simpering.
‘Not by any means,’ replied
the old lord, ’or you would have left it long
ago.’
‘You naughty creature,’
said the lively lady, poking the peer with her parasol;
‘I won’t have you talk so. How dare
you?’
This playful inquiry was accompanied
with another poke, and another, and then the old lord
caught the parasol, and wouldn’t give it up
again, which induced the other lady to come to the
rescue, and some very pretty sportiveness ensued.
’You will see that those little
alterations are made, Madame Mantalini,’ said
the lady. ’Nay, you bad man, you positively
shall go first; I wouldn’t leave you behind
with that pretty girl, not for half a second.
I know you too well. Jane, my dear, let him
go first, and we shall be quite sure of him.’
The old lord, evidently much flattered
by this suspicion, bestowed a grotesque leer upon
Kate as he passed; and, receiving another tap with
the parasol for his wickedness, tottered downstairs
to the door, where his sprightly body was hoisted
into the carriage by two stout footmen.
‘Foh!’ said Madame Mantalini,
’how he ever gets into a carriage without thinking
of a hearse, I can’t think. There, take
the things away, my dear, take them away.’
Kate, who had remained during the
whole scene with her eyes modestly fixed upon the
ground, was only too happy to avail herself of the
permission to retire, and hasten joyfully downstairs
to Miss Knag’s dominion.
The circumstances of the little kingdom
had greatly changed, however, during the short period
of her absence. In place of Miss Knag being
stationed in her accustomed seat, preserving all the
dignity and greatness of Madame Mantalini’s representative,
that worthy soul was reposing on a large box, bathed
in tears, while three or four of the young ladies
in close attendance upon her, together with the presence
of hartshorn, vinegar, and other restoratives, would
have borne ample testimony, even without the derangement
of the head-dress and front row of curls, to her having
fainted desperately.
‘Bless me!’ said Kate,
stepping hastily forward, ’what is the matter?’
This inquiry produced in Miss Knag
violent symptoms of a relapse; and several young ladies,
darting angry looks at Kate, applied more vinegar
and hartshorn, and said it was ‘a shame.’
‘What is a shame?’ demanded
Kate. ’What is the matter? What has
happened? tell me.’
‘Matter!’ cried Miss Knag,
coming, all at once, bolt upright, to the great consternation
of the assembled maidens; ’matter! Fie
upon you, you nasty creature!’
‘Gracious!’ cried Kate,
almost paralysed by the violence with which the adjective
had been jerked out from between Miss Knag’s
closed teeth; ‘have I offended you?’
‘You offended me!’
retorted Miss Knag, ’you! a chit, a child,
an upstart nobody! Oh, indeed! Ha, ha!’
Now, it was evident, as Miss Knag
laughed, that something struck her as being exceedingly
funny; and as the young ladies took their tone from
Miss Knag—she being the chief—they
all got up a laugh without a moment’s delay,
and nodded their heads a little, and smiled sarcastically
to each other, as much as to say how very good that
was!
‘Here she is,’ continued
Miss Knag, getting off the box, and introducing Kate
with much ceremony and many low curtseys to the delighted
throng; ’here she is—everybody is
talking about her—the belle, ladies—the
beauty, the—oh, you bold-faced thing!’
At this crisis, Miss Knag was unable
to repress a virtuous shudder, which immediately communicated
itself to all the young ladies; after which, Miss
Knag laughed, and after that, cried.
‘For fifteen years,’ exclaimed
Miss Knag, sobbing in a most affecting manner, ’for
fifteen years have I been the credit and ornament
of this room and the one upstairs. Thank God,’
said Miss Knag, stamping first her right foot and
then her left with remarkable energy, ’I have
never in all that time, till now, been exposed to
the arts, the vile arts, of a creature, who disgraces
us with all her proceedings, and makes proper people
blush for themselves. But I feel it, I do feel
it, although I am disgusted.’
Miss Knag here relapsed into softness,
and the young ladies renewing their attentions, murmured
that she ought to be superior to such things, and
that for their part they despised them, and considered
them beneath their notice; in witness whereof, they
called out, more emphatically than before, that it
was a shame, and that they felt so angry, they did,
they hardly knew what to do with themselves.
‘Have I lived to this day to
be called a fright!’ cried Miss Knag, suddenly
becoming convulsive, and making an effort to tear her
front off.
‘Oh no, no,’ replied the
chorus, ‘pray don’t say so; don’t
now!’
‘Have I deserved to be called
an elderly person?’ screamed Miss Knag, wrestling
with the supernumeraries.
‘Don’t think of such things,
dear,’ answered the chorus.
‘I hate her,’ cried Miss
Knag; ’I detest and hate her. Never let
her speak to me again; never let anybody who is a friend
of mine speak to her; a slut, a hussy, an impudent
artful hussy!’ Having denounced the object
of her wrath, in these terms, Miss Knag screamed once,
hiccuped thrice, gurgled in her throat several times,
slumbered, shivered, woke, came to, composed her head-dress,
and declared herself quite well again.
Poor Kate had regarded these proceedings,
at first, in perfect bewilderment. She had then
turned red and pale by turns, and once or twice essayed
to speak; but, as the true motives of this altered
behaviour developed themselves, she retired a few paces,
and looked calmly on without deigning a reply.
Nevertheless, although she walked proudly to her
seat, and turned her back upon the group of little
satellites who clustered round their ruling planet
in the remotest corner of the room, she gave way,
in secret, to some such bitter tears as would have
gladdened Miss Knag’s inmost soul, if she could
have seen them fall.