Descriptive of a Dinner at Mr Ralph
Nickleby’s, and of the Manner in which the Company
entertained themselves, before Dinner, at Dinner,
and after Dinner.
The bile and rancour of the worthy
Miss Knag undergoing no diminution during the remainder
of the week, but rather augmenting with every successive
hour; and the honest ire of all the young ladies rising,
or seeming to rise, in exact proportion to the good
spinster’s indignation, and both waxing very
hot every time Miss Nickleby was called upstairs;
it will be readily imagined that that young lady’s
daily life was none of the most cheerful or enviable
kind. She hailed the arrival of Saturday night,
as a prisoner would a few delicious hours’ respite
from slow and wearing torture, and felt that the poor
pittance for her first week’s labour would have
been dearly and hardly earned, had its amount been
trebled.
When she joined her mother, as usual,
at the street corner, she was not a little surprised
to find her in conversation with Mr Ralph Nickleby;
but her surprise was soon redoubled, no less by the
matter of their conversation, than by the smoothed
and altered manner of Mr Nickleby himself.
‘Ah! my dear!’ said Ralph;
’we were at that moment talking about you.’
‘Indeed!’ replied Kate,
shrinking, though she scarce knew why, from her uncle’s
cold glistening eye.
‘That instant,’ said Ralph.
’I was coming to call for you, making sure
to catch you before you left; but your mother and I
have been talking over family affairs, and the time
has slipped away so rapidly—’
‘Well, now, hasn’t it?’
interposed Mrs Nickleby, quite insensible to the sarcastic
tone of Ralph’s last remark. ’Upon
my word, I couldn’t have believed it possible,
that such a—Kate, my dear, you’re
to dine with your uncle at half-past six o’clock
tomorrow.’
Triumphing in having been the first
to communicate this extraordinary intelligence, Mrs
Nickleby nodded and smiled a great many times, to
impress its full magnificence on Kate’s wondering
mind, and then flew off, at an acute angle, to a committee
of ways and means.
‘Let me see,’ said the
good lady. ’Your black silk frock will
be quite dress enough, my dear, with that pretty little
scarf, and a plain band in your hair, and a pair of
black silk stock—Dear, dear,’ cried
Mrs Nickleby, flying off at another angle, ’if
I had but those unfortunate amethysts of mine—you
recollect them, Kate, my love—how they
used to sparkle, you know—but your papa,
your poor dear papa—ah! there never was
anything so cruelly sacrificed as those jewels were,
never!’ Overpowered by this agonising thought,
Mrs Nickleby shook her head, in a melancholy manner,
and applied her handkerchief to her eyes.
I don’t want them, mama, indeed,’
said Kate. ’Forget that you ever had them.’
‘Lord, Kate, my dear,’
rejoined Mrs Nickleby, pettishly, ’how like a
child you talk! Four-and-twenty silver tea-spoons,
brother-in-law, two gravies, four salts, all the amethysts—necklace,
brooch, and ear-rings—all made away with,
at the same time, and I saying, almost on my bended
knees, to that poor good soul, “Why don’t
you do something, Nicholas? Why don’t
you make some arrangement?” I am sure that
anybody who was about us at that time, will do me the
justice to own, that if I said that once, I said it
fifty times a day. Didn’t I, Kate, my
dear? Did I ever lose an opportunity of impressing
it on your poor papa?’
‘No, no, mama, never,’
replied Kate. And to do Mrs Nickleby justice,
she never had lost—and to do married ladies
as a body justice, they seldom do lose—any
occasion of inculcating similar golden percepts, whose
only blemish is, the slight degree of vagueness and
uncertainty in which they are usually enveloped.
‘Ah!’ said Mrs Nickleby,
with great fervour, ’if my advice had been taken
at the beginning—Well, I have always done
my duty, and that’s some comfort.’
When she had arrived at this reflection,
Mrs Nickleby sighed, rubbed her hands, cast up her
eyes, and finally assumed a look of meek composure;
thus importing that she was a persecuted saint, but
that she wouldn’t trouble her hearers by mentioning
a circumstance which must be so obvious to everybody.
‘Now,’ said Ralph, with
a smile, which, in common with all other tokens of
emotion, seemed to skulk under his face, rather than
play boldly over it—’to return to
the point from which we have strayed. I have
a little party of—of—gentlemen
with whom I am connected in business just now, at
my house tomorrow; and your mother has promised that
you shall keep house for me. I am not much used
to parties; but this is one of business, and such
fooleries are an important part of it sometimes.
You don’t mind obliging me?’
‘Mind!’ cried Mrs Nickleby. ‘My
dear Kate, why—’
‘Pray,’ interrupted Ralph,
motioning her to be silent. ’I spoke to
my niece.’
‘I shall be very glad, of course,
uncle,’ replied Kate; ’but I am afraid
you will find me awkward and embarrassed.’
‘Oh no,’ said Ralph; ’come
when you like, in a hackney coach—I’ll
pay for it. Good-night—a—a—God
bless you.’
The blessing seemed to stick in Mr
Ralph Nickleby’s throat, as if it were not used
to the thoroughfare, and didn’t know the way
out. But it got out somehow, though awkwardly
enough; and having disposed of it, he shook hands
with his two relatives, and abruptly left them.
‘What a very strongly marked
countenance your uncle has!’ said Mrs Nickleby,
quite struck with his parting look. ’I
don’t see the slightest resemblance to his poor
brother.’
‘Mama!’ said Kate reprovingly.
‘To think of such a thing!’
‘No,’ said Mrs Nickleby,
musing. ’There certainly is none.
But it’s a very honest face.’
The worthy matron made this remark
with great emphasis and elocution, as if it comprised
no small quantity of ingenuity and research; and,
in truth, it was not unworthy of being classed among
the extraordinary discoveries of the age. Kate
looked up hastily, and as hastily looked down again.
‘What has come over you, my
dear, in the name of goodness?’ asked Mrs Nickleby,
when they had walked on, for some time, in silence.
‘I was only thinking, mama,’ answered
Kate.
‘Thinking!’ repeated Mrs
Nickleby. ’Ay, and indeed plenty to think
about, too. Your uncle has taken a strong fancy
to you, that’s quite clear; and if some extraordinary
good fortune doesn’t come to you, after this,
I shall be a little surprised, that’s all.’
With this she launched out into sundry
anecdotes of young ladies, who had had thousand-pound
notes given them in reticules, by eccentric uncles;
and of young ladies who had accidentally met amiable
gentlemen of enormous wealth at their uncles’
houses, and married them, after short but ardent courtships;
and Kate, listening first in apathy, and afterwards
in amusement, felt, as they walked home, something
of her mother’s sanguine complexion gradually
awakening in her own bosom, and began to think that
her prospects might be brightening, and that better
days might be dawning upon them. Such is hope,
Heaven’s own gift to struggling mortals; pervading,
like some subtle essence from the skies, all things,
both good and bad; as universal as death, and more
infectious than disease!
The feeble winter’s sun—and
winter’s suns in the city are very feeble indeed—might
have brightened up, as he shone through the dim windows
of the large old house, on witnessing the unusual sight
which one half-furnished room displayed. In a
gloomy corner, where, for years, had stood a silent
dusty pile of merchandise, sheltering its colony of
mice, and frowning, a dull and lifeless mass, upon
the panelled room, save when, responding to the roll
of heavy waggons in the street without, it quaked
with sturdy tremblings and caused the bright eyes
of its tiny citizens to grow brighter still with fear,
and struck them motionless, with attentive ear and
palpitating heart, until the alarm had passed away—in
this dark corner, was arranged, with scrupulous care,
all Kate’s little finery for the day; each article
of dress partaking of that indescribable air of jauntiness
and individuality which empty garments—whether
by association, or that they become moulded, as it
were, to the owner’s form—will take,
in eyes accustomed to, or picturing, the wearer’s
smartness. In place of a bale of musty goods,
there lay the black silk dress: the neatest possible
figure in itself. The small shoes, with toes
delicately turned out, stood upon the very pressure
of some old iron weight; and a pile of harsh discoloured
leather had unconsciously given place to the very
same little pair of black silk stockings, which had
been the objects of Mrs Nickleby’s peculiar
care. Rats and mice, and such small gear, had
long ago been starved, or had emigrated to better
quarters: and, in their stead, appeared gloves,
bands, scarfs, hair-pins, and many other little devices,
almost as ingenious in their way as rats and mice
themselves, for the tantalisation of mankind.
About and among them all, moved Kate herself, not
the least beautiful or unwonted relief to the stern,
old, gloomy building.
In good time, or in bad time, as the
reader likes to take it—for Mrs Nickleby’s
impatience went a great deal faster than the clocks
at that end of the town, and Kate was dressed to the
very last hair-pin a full hour and a half before
it was at all necessary to begin to think about it—in
good time, or in bad time, the toilet was completed;
and it being at length the hour agreed upon for starting,
the milkman fetched a coach from the nearest stand,
and Kate, with many adieux to her mother, and many
kind messages to Miss La Creevy, who was to come to
tea, seated herself in it, and went away in state,
if ever anybody went away in state in a hackney coach
yet. And the coach, and the coachman, and the
horses, rattled, and jangled, and whipped, and cursed,
and swore, and tumbled on together, until they came
to Golden Square.
The coachman gave a tremendous double
knock at the door, which was opened long before he
had done, as quickly as if there had been a man behind
it, with his hand tied to the latch. Kate, who
had expected no more uncommon appearance than Newman
Noggs in a clean shirt, was not a little astonished
to see that the opener was a man in handsome livery,
and that there were two or three others in the hall.
There was no doubt about its being the right house,
however, for there was the name upon the door; so
she accepted the laced coat-sleeve which was tendered
her, and entering the house, was ushered upstairs,
into a back drawing-room, where she was left alone.
If she had been surprised at the apparition
of the footman, she was perfectly absorbed in amazement
at the richness and splendour of the furniture.
The softest and most elegant carpets, the most exquisite
pictures, the costliest mirrors; articles of richest
ornament, quite dazzling from their beauty and perplexing
from the prodigality with which they were scattered
around; encountered her on every side. The very
staircase nearly down to the hall-door, was crammed
with beautiful and luxurious things, as though the
house were brimful of riches, which, with a very trifling
addition, would fairly run over into the street.
Presently, she heard a series of loud
double knocks at the street-door, and after every
knock some new voice in the next room; the tones of
Mr Ralph Nickleby were easily distinguishable at first,
but by degrees they merged into the general buzz of
conversation, and all she could ascertain was, that
there were several gentlemen with no very musical
voices, who talked very loud, laughed very heartily,
and swore more than she would have thought quite necessary.
But this was a question of taste.
At length, the door opened, and Ralph
himself, divested of his boots, and ceremoniously
embellished with black silks and shoes, presented
his crafty face.
‘I couldn’t see you before,
my dear,’ he said, in a low tone, and pointing,
as he spoke, to the next room. ’I was engaged
in receiving them. Now—shall I take
you in?’
‘Pray, uncle,’ said Kate,
a little flurried, as people much more conversant
with society often are, when they are about to enter
a room full of strangers, and have had time to think
of it previously, ‘are there any ladies here?’
‘No,’ said Ralph, shortly, ‘I don’t
know any.’
‘Must I go in immediately?’ asked Kate,
drawing back a little.
‘As you please,’ said
Ralph, shrugging his shoulders. ’They are
all come, and dinner will be announced directly afterwards—that’s
all.’
Kate would have entreated a few minutes’
respite, but reflecting that her uncle might consider
the payment of the hackney-coach fare a sort of bargain
for her punctuality, she suffered him to draw her
arm through his, and to lead her away.
Seven or eight gentlemen were standing
round the fire when they went in, and, as they were
talking very loud, were not aware of their entrance
until Mr Ralph Nickleby, touching one on the coat-sleeve,
said in a harsh emphatic voice, as if to attract general
attention—
‘Lord Frederick Verisopht, my niece, Miss Nickleby.’
The group dispersed, as if in great
surprise, and the gentleman addressed, turning round,
exhibited a suit of clothes of the most superlative
cut, a pair of whiskers of similar quality, a moustache,
a head of hair, and a young face.
‘Eh!’ said the gentleman. ‘What—the—deyvle!’
With which broken ejaculations, he
fixed his glass in his eye, and stared at Miss Nickleby
in great surprise.
‘My niece, my lord,’ said Ralph.
‘Then my ears did not deceive
me, and it’s not wa-a-x work,’ said his
lordship. ‘How de do? I’m very
happy.’ And then his lordship turned to
another superlative gentleman, something older, something
stouter, something redder in the face, and something
longer upon town, and said in a loud whisper that
the girl was ‘deyvlish pitty.’
‘Introduce me, Nickleby,’
said this second gentleman, who was lounging with
his back to the fire, and both elbows on the chimneypiece.
‘Sir Mulberry Hawk,’ said Ralph.
‘Otherwise the most knowing
card in the pa-ack, Miss Nickleby,’ said Lord
Frederick Verisopht.
‘Don’t leave me out, Nickleby,’
cried a sharp-faced gentleman, who was sitting on
a low chair with a high back, reading the paper.
‘Mr Pyke,’ said Ralph.
‘Nor me, Nickleby,’ cried
a gentleman with a flushed face and a flash air, from
the elbow of Sir Mulberry Hawk.
‘Mr Pluck,’ said Ralph.
Then wheeling about again, towards a gentleman with
the neck of a stork and the legs of no animal in particular,
Ralph introduced him as the Honourable Mr Snobb; and
a white-headed person at the table as Colonel Chowser.
The colonel was in conversation with somebody, who
appeared to be a make-weight, and was not introduced
at all.
There were two circumstances which,
in this early stage of the party, struck home to Kate’s
bosom, and brought the blood tingling to her face.
One was the flippant contempt with which the guests
evidently regarded her uncle, and the other, the easy
insolence of their manner towards herself. That
the first symptom was very likely to lead to the aggravation
of the second, it needed no great penetration to foresee.
And here Mr Ralph Nickleby had reckoned without his
host; for however fresh from the country a young lady
(by nature) may be, and however unacquainted with conventional
behaviour, the chances are, that she will have quite
as strong an innate sense of the decencies and proprieties
of life as if she had run the gauntlet of a dozen
London seasons—possibly a stronger one,
for such senses have been known to blunt in this improving
process.
When Ralph had completed the ceremonial
of introduction, he led his blushing niece to a seat.
As he did so, he glanced warily round as though to
assure himself of the impression which her unlooked-for
appearance had created.
‘An unexpected playsure, Nickleby,’
said Lord Frederick Verisopht, taking his glass out
of his right eye, where it had, until now, done duty
on Kate, and fixing it in his left, to bring it to
bear on Ralph.
‘Designed to surprise you, Lord
Frederick,’ said Mr Pluck.
‘Not a bad idea,’ said
his lordship, ’and one that would almost warrant
the addition of an extra two and a half per cent.’
‘Nickleby,’ said Sir Mulberry
Hawk, in a thick coarse voice, ’take the hint,
and tack it on the other five-and-twenty, or whatever
it is, and give me half for the advice.’
Sir Mulberry garnished this speech
with a hoarse laugh, and terminated it with a pleasant
oath regarding Mr Nickleby’s limbs, whereat
Messrs Pyke and Pluck laughed consumedly.
These gentlemen had not yet quite
recovered the jest, when dinner was announced, and
then they were thrown into fresh ecstasies by a similar
cause; for Sir Mulberry Hawk, in an excess of humour,
shot dexterously past Lord Frederick Verisopht who
was about to lead Kate downstairs, and drew her arm
through his up to the elbow.
‘No, damn it, Verisopht,’
said Sir Mulberry, ’fair play’s a jewel,
and Miss Nickleby and I settled the matter with our
eyes ten minutes ago.’
‘Ha, ha, ha!’ laughed
the honourable Mr Snobb, ’very good, very good.’
Rendered additionally witty by this
applause, Sir Mulberry Hawk leered upon his friends
most facetiously, and led Kate downstairs with an
air of familiarity, which roused in her gentle breast
such burning indignation, as she felt it almost impossible
to repress. Nor was the intensity of these feelings
at all diminished, when she found herself placed at
the top of the table, with Sir Mulberry Hawk and Lord
Frederick Verisopht on either side.
‘Oh, you’ve found your
way into our neighbourhood, have you?’ said
Sir Mulberry as his lordship sat down.
‘Of course,’ replied Lord
Frederick, fixing his eyes on Miss Nickleby, ‘how
can you a-ask me?’
‘Well, you attend to your dinner,’
said Sir Mulberry, ’and don’t mind Miss
Nickleby and me, for we shall prove very indifferent
company, I dare say.’
‘I wish you’d interfere
here, Nickleby,’ said Lord Frederick.
‘What is the matter, my lord?’
demanded Ralph from the bottom of the table, where
he was supported by Messrs Pyke and Pluck.
‘This fellow, Hawk, is monopolising
your niece,’ said Lord Frederick.
’He has a tolerable share of
everything that you lay claim to, my lord,’
said Ralph with a sneer.
‘’Gad, so he has,’
replied the young man; ’deyvle take me if I know
which is master in my house, he or I.’
‘I know,’ muttered Ralph.
‘I think I shall cut him off
with a shilling,’ said the young nobleman, jocosely.
‘No, no, curse it,’ said
Sir Mulberry. ’When you come to the shilling—the
last shilling—I’ll cut you fast enough;
but till then, I’ll never leave you—you
may take your oath of it.’
This sally (which was strictly founded
on fact) was received with a general roar, above which,
was plainly distinguishable the laughter of Mr Pyke
and Mr Pluck, who were, evidently, Sir Mulberry’s
toads in ordinary. Indeed, it was not difficult
to see, that the majority of the company preyed upon
the unfortunate young lord, who, weak and silly as
he was, appeared by far the least vicious of the party.
Sir Mulberry Hawk was remarkable for his tact in ruining,
by himself and his creatures, young gentlemen of fortune—a
genteel and elegant profession, of which he had undoubtedly
gained the head. With all the boldness of an
original genius, he had struck out an entirely new
course of treatment quite opposed to the usual method;
his custom being, when he had gained the ascendancy
over those he took in hand, rather to keep them down
than to give them their own way; and to exercise his
vivacity upon them openly, and without reserve.
Thus, he made them butts, in a double sense, and while
he emptied them with great address, caused them to
ring with sundry well-administered taps, for the
diversion of society.
The dinner was as remarkable for the
splendour and completeness of its appointments as
the mansion itself, and the company were remarkable
for doing it ample justice, in which respect Messrs
Pyke and Pluck particularly signalised themselves;
these two gentlemen eating of every dish, and drinking
of every bottle, with a capacity and perseverance
truly astonishing. They were remarkably fresh,
too, notwithstanding their great exertions: for,
on the appearance of the dessert, they broke out again,
as if nothing serious had taken place since breakfast.
‘Well,’ said Lord Frederick,
sipping his first glass of port, ’if this is
a discounting dinner, all I have to say is, deyvle
take me, if it wouldn’t be a good pla-an to
get discount every day.’
‘You’ll have plenty of
it, in your time,’ returned Sir Mulberry Hawk;
‘Nickleby will tell you that.’
‘What do you say, Nickleby?’
inquired the young man; ’am I to be a good customer?’
‘It depends entirely on circumstances,
my lord,’ replied Ralph.
‘On your lordship’s circumstances,’
interposed Colonel Chowser of the Militia—and
the race-courses.
The gallant colonel glanced at Messrs
Pyke and Pluck as if he thought they ought to laugh
at his joke; but those gentlemen, being only engaged
to laugh for Sir Mulberry Hawk, were, to his signal
discomfiture, as grave as a pair of undertakers.
To add to his defeat, Sir Mulberry, considering any
such efforts an invasion of his peculiar privilege,
eyed the offender steadily, through his glass, as
if astonished at his presumption, and audibly stated
his impression that it was an ‘infernal liberty,’
which being a hint to Lord Frederick, he put up his
glass, and surveyed the object of censure as if he
were some extraordinary wild animal then exhibiting
for the first time. As a matter of course, Messrs
Pyke and Pluck stared at the individual whom Sir Mulberry
Hawk stared at; so, the poor colonel, to hide his
confusion, was reduced to the necessity of holding
his port before his right eye and affecting to scrutinise
its colour with the most lively interest.
All this while, Kate had sat as silently
as she could, scarcely daring to raise her eyes, lest
they should encounter the admiring gaze of Lord Frederick
Verisopht, or, what was still more embarrassing, the
bold looks of his friend Sir Mulberry. The latter
gentleman was obliging enough to direct general attention
towards her.
‘Here is Miss Nickleby,’
observed Sir Mulberry, ’wondering why the deuce
somebody doesn’t make love to her.’
‘No, indeed,’ said Kate,
looking hastily up, ‘I—’ and
then she stopped, feeling it would have been better
to have said nothing at all.
‘I’ll hold any man fifty
pounds,’ said Sir Mulberry, ’that Miss
Nickleby can’t look in my face, and tell me she
wasn’t thinking so.’
‘Done!’ cried the noble gull. ‘Within
ten minutes.’
‘Done!’ responded Sir
Mulberry. The money was produced on both sides,
and the Honourable Mr Snobb was elected to the double
office of stake-holder and time-keeper.
‘Pray,’ said Kate, in
great confusion, while these preliminaries were in
course of completion. ’Pray do not make
me the subject of any bets. Uncle, I cannot
really—’
‘Why not, my dear?’ replied
Ralph, in whose grating voice, however, there was
an unusual huskiness, as though he spoke unwillingly,
and would rather that the proposition had not been
broached. ’It is done in a moment; there
is nothing in it. If the gentlemen insist on
it—’
‘I don’t insist on it,’
said Sir Mulberry, with a loud laugh. ’That
is, I by no means insist upon Miss Nickleby’s
making the denial, for if she does, I lose; but I
shall be glad to see her bright eyes, especially as
she favours the mahogany so much.’
‘So she does, and it’s
too ba-a-d of you, Miss Nickleby,’ said the
noble youth.
‘Quite cruel,’ said Mr Pyke.
‘Horrid cruel,’ said Mr Pluck.
‘I don’t care if I do
lose,’ said Sir Mulberry; ’for one tolerable
look at Miss Nickleby’s eyes is worth double
the money.’
‘More,’ said Mr Pyke.
‘Far more,’ said Mr Pluck.
‘How goes the enemy, Snobb?’ asked Sir
Mulberry Hawk.
‘Four minutes gone.’
‘Bravo!’
‘Won’t you ma-ake one
effort for me, Miss Nickleby?’ asked Lord Frederick,
after a short interval.
‘You needn’t trouble yourself
to inquire, my buck,’ said Sir Mulberry; ’Miss
Nickleby and I understand each other; she declares
on my side, and shows her taste. You haven’t
a chance, old fellow. Time, Snobb?’
‘Eight minutes gone.’
‘Get the money ready,’ said Sir Mulberry;
‘you’ll soon hand over.’
‘Ha, ha, ha!’ laughed Mr Pyke.
Mr Pluck, who always came second,
and topped his companion if he could, screamed outright.
The poor girl, who was so overwhelmed
with confusion that she scarcely knew what she did,
had determined to remain perfectly quiet; but fearing
that by so doing she might seem to countenance Sir
Mulberry’s boast, which had been uttered with
great coarseness and vulgarity of manner, raised her
eyes, and looked him in the face. There was
something so odious, so insolent, so repulsive in
the look which met her, that, without the power to
stammer forth a syllable, she rose and hurried from
the room. She restrained her tears by a great
effort until she was alone upstairs, and then gave
them vent.
‘Capital!’ said Sir Mulberry Hawk, putting
the stakes in his pocket.
‘That’s a girl of spirit, and we’ll
drink her health.’
It is needless to say, that Pyke and
Co. responded, with great warmth of manner, to this
proposal, or that the toast was drunk with many little
insinuations from the firm, relative to the completeness
of Sir Mulberry’s conquest. Ralph, who,
while the attention of the other guests was attracted
to the principals in the preceding scene, had eyed
them like a wolf, appeared to breathe more freely now
his niece was gone; the decanters passing quickly
round, he leaned back in his chair, and turned his
eyes from speaker to speaker, as they warmed with
wine, with looks that seemed to search their hearts,
and lay bare, for his distempered sport, every idle
thought within them.
Meanwhile Kate, left wholly to herself,
had, in some degree, recovered her composure.
She had learnt from a female attendant, that her
uncle wished to see her before she left, and had also
gleaned the satisfactory intelligence, that the gentlemen
would take coffee at table. The prospect of
seeing them no more, contributed greatly to calm her
agitation, and, taking up a book, she composed herself
to read.
She started sometimes, when the sudden
opening of the dining-room door let loose a wild shout
of noisy revelry, and more than once rose in great
alarm, as a fancied footstep on the staircase impressed
her with the fear that some stray member of the party
was returning alone. Nothing occurring, however,
to realise her apprehensions, she endeavoured to fix
her attention more closely on her book, in which by
degrees she became so much interested, that she had
read on through several chapters without heed of time
or place, when she was terrified by suddenly hearing
her name pronounced by a man’s voice close at
her ear.
The book fell from her hand.
Lounging on an ottoman close beside her, was Sir
Mulberry Hawk, evidently the worse—if a
man be a ruffian at heart, he is never the better—for
wine.
‘What a delightful studiousness!’
said this accomplished gentleman. ‘Was
it real, now, or only to display the eyelashes?’
Kate, looking anxiously towards the
door, made no reply.
’I have looked at ’em
for five minutes,’ said Sir Mulberry. ’Upon
my soul, they’re perfect. Why did I speak,
and destroy such a pretty little picture?’
‘Do me the favour to be silent
now, sir,’ replied Kate.
‘No, don’t,’ said
Sir Mulberry, folding his crushed hat to lay his elbow
on, and bringing himself still closer to the young
lady; ’upon my life, you oughtn’t to.
Such a devoted slave of yours, Miss Nickleby—it’s
an infernal thing to treat him so harshly, upon my
soul it is.’
‘I wish you to understand, sir,’
said Kate, trembling in spite of herself, but speaking
with great indignation, ’that your behaviour
offends and disgusts me. If you have a spark
of gentlemanly feeling remaining, you will leave me.’
‘Now why,’ said Sir Mulberry,
’why will you keep up this appearance of excessive
rigour, my sweet creature? Now, be more natural—my
dear Miss Nickleby, be more natural—do.’
Kate hastily rose; but as she rose,
Sir Mulberry caught her dress, and forcibly detained
her.
‘Let me go, sir,’ she
cried, her heart swelling with anger. ’Do
you hear? Instantly—this moment.’
‘Sit down, sit down,’
said Sir Mulberry; ‘I want to talk to you.’
‘Unhand me, sir, this instant,’ cried
Kate.
‘Not for the world,’ rejoined
Sir Mulberry. Thus speaking, he leaned over,
as if to replace her in her chair; but the young lady,
making a violent effort to disengage herself, he lost
his balance, and measured his length upon the ground.
As Kate sprung forward to leave the room, Mr Ralph
Nickleby appeared in the doorway, and confronted her.
‘What is this?’ said Ralph.
‘It is this, sir,’ replied
Kate, violently agitated: ’that beneath
the roof where I, a helpless girl, your dead brother’s
child, should most have found protection, I have been
exposed to insult which should make you shrink to
look upon me. Let me pass you.’
Ralph did shrink, as the indignant
girl fixed her kindling eye upon him; but he did not
comply with her injunction, nevertheless: for
he led her to a distant seat, and returning, and approaching
Sir Mulberry Hawk, who had by this time risen, motioned
towards the door.
‘Your way lies there, sir,’
said Ralph, in a suppressed voice, that some devil
might have owned with pride.
‘What do you mean by that?’
demanded his friend, fiercely.
The swoln veins stood out like sinews
on Ralph’s wrinkled forehead, and the nerves
about his mouth worked as though some unendurable
emotion wrung them; but he smiled disdainfully, and
again pointed to the door.
‘Do you know me, you old madman?’ asked
Sir Mulberry.
‘Well,’ said Ralph.
The fashionable vagabond for the moment quite quailed
under the steady look of the older sinner, and walked
towards the door, muttering as he went.
‘You wanted the lord, did you?’
he said, stopping short when he reached the door,
as if a new light had broken in upon him, and confronting
Ralph again. ‘Damme, I was in the way,
was I?’
Ralph smiled again, but made no answer.
‘Who brought him to you first?’
pursued Sir Mulberry; ’and how, without me,
could you ever have wound him in your net as you have?’
‘The net is a large one, and
rather full,’ said Ralph. ’Take care
that it chokes nobody in the meshes.’
’You would sell your flesh and
blood for money; yourself, if you have not already
made a bargain with the devil,’ retorted the
other. ’Do you mean to tell me that your
pretty niece was not brought here as a decoy for the
drunken boy downstairs?’
Although this hurried dialogue was
carried on in a suppressed tone on both sides, Ralph
looked involuntarily round to ascertain that Kate
had not moved her position so as to be within hearing.
His adversary saw the advantage he had gained, and
followed it up.
‘Do you mean to tell me,’
he asked again, ’that it is not so? Do
you mean to say that if he had found his way up here
instead of me, you wouldn’t have been a little
more blind, and a little more deaf, and a little less
flourishing, than you have been? Come, Nickleby,
answer me that.’
‘I tell you this,’ replied
Ralph, ’that if I brought her here, as a matter
of business—’
‘Ay, that’s the word,’
interposed Sir Mulberry, with a laugh. ‘You’re
coming to yourself again now.’
‘—As a matter of
business,’ pursued Ralph, speaking slowly and
firmly, as a man who has made up his mind to say no
more, ’because I thought she might make some
impression on the silly youth you have taken in hand
and are lending good help to ruin, I knew—knowing
him—that it would be long before he outraged
her girl’s feelings, and that unless he offended
by mere puppyism and emptiness, he would, with a little
management, respect the sex and conduct even of his
usurer’s niece. But if I thought to draw
him on more gently by this device, I did not think
of subjecting the girl to the licentiousness and brutality
of so old a hand as you. And now we understand
each other.’
‘Especially as there was nothing
to be got by it—eh?’ sneered Sir
Mulberry.
‘Exactly so,’ said Ralph.
He had turned away, and looked over his shoulder
to make this last reply. The eyes of the two
worthies met, with an expression as if each rascal
felt that there was no disguising himself from the
other; and Sir Mulberry Hawk shrugged his shoulders
and walked slowly out.
His friend closed the door, and looked
restlessly towards the spot where his niece still
remained in the attitude in which he had left her.
She had flung herself heavily upon the couch, and
with her head drooping over the cushion, and her face
hidden in her hands, seemed to be still weeping in
an agony of shame and grief.
Ralph would have walked into any poverty-stricken
debtor’s house, and pointed him out to a bailiff,
though in attendance upon a young child’s death-bed,
without the smallest concern, because it would have
been a matter quite in the ordinary course of business,
and the man would have been an offender against his
only code of morality. But, here was a young
girl, who had done no wrong save that of coming into
the world alive; who had patiently yielded to all his
wishes; who had tried hard to please him—above
all, who didn’t owe him money—and
he felt awkward and nervous.
Ralph took a chair at some distance;
then, another chair a little nearer; then, moved a
little nearer still; then, nearer again, and finally
sat himself on the same sofa, and laid his hand on
Kate’s arm.
‘Hush, my dear!’ he said,
as she drew it back, and her sobs burst out afresh.
‘Hush, hush! Don’t mind it, now;
don’t think of it.’
‘Oh, for pity’s sake,
let me go home,’ cried Kate. ’Let
me leave this house, and go home.’
‘Yes, yes,’ said Ralph.
’You shall. But you must dry your eyes
first, and compose yourself. Let me raise your
head. There— there.’
‘Oh, uncle!’ exclaimed
Kate, clasping her hands. ’What have I
done —what have I done—that
you should subject me to this? If I had wronged
you in thought, or word, or deed, it would have been
most cruel to me, and the memory of one you must have
loved in some old time; but—’
‘Only listen to me for a moment,’
interrupted Ralph, seriously alarmed by the violence
of her emotions. ’I didn’t know it
would be so; it was impossible for me to foresee it.
I did all I could.— Come, let us walk
about. You are faint with the closeness of the
room, and the heat of these lamps. You will be
better now, if you make the slightest effort.’
‘I will do anything,’
replied Kate, ‘if you will only send me home.’
‘Well, well, I will,’
said Ralph; ’but you must get back your own
looks; for those you have, will frighten them, and
nobody must know of this but you and I. Now let us
walk the other way. There. You look better
even now.’
With such encouragements as these,
Ralph Nickleby walked to and fro, with his niece leaning
on his arm; actually trembling beneath her touch.
In the same manner, when he judged
it prudent to allow her to depart, he supported her
downstairs, after adjusting her shawl and performing
such little offices, most probably for the first time
in his life. Across the hall, and down the steps,
Ralph led her too; nor did he withdraw his hand until
she was seated in the coach.
As the door of the vehicle was roughly
closed, a comb fell from Kate’s hair, close
at her uncle’s feet; and as he picked it up,
and returned it into her hand, the light from a neighbouring
lamp shone upon her face. The lock of hair that
had escaped and curled loosely over her brow, the
traces of tears yet scarcely dry, the flushed cheek,
the look of sorrow, all fired some dormant train of
recollection in the old man’s breast; and the
face of his dead brother seemed present before him,
with the very look it bore on some occasion of boyish
grief, of which every minutest circumstance flashed
upon his mind, with the distinctness of a scene of
yesterday.
Ralph Nickleby, who was proof against
all appeals of blood and kindred—who was
steeled against every tale of sorrow and distress—
staggered while he looked, and went back into his house,
as a man who had seen a spirit from some world beyond
the grave.