Madam Mantalini finds herself in a
Situation of some Difficulty, and Miss Nickleby finds
herself in no Situation at all
The agitation she had undergone, rendered
Kate Nickleby unable to resume her duties at the dressmaker’s
for three days, at the expiration of which interval
she betook herself at the accustomed hour, and with
languid steps, to the temple of fashion where Madame
Mantalini reigned paramount and supreme.
The ill-will of Miss Knag had lost
nothing of its virulence in the interval. The
young ladies still scrupulously shrunk from all companionship
with their denounced associate; and when that exemplary
female arrived a few minutes afterwards, she was at
no pains to conceal the displeasure with which she
regarded Kate’s return.
‘Upon my word!’ said Miss
Knag, as the satellites flocked round, to relieve
her of her bonnet and shawl; ’I should have thought
some people would have had spirit enough to stop away
altogether, when they know what an incumbrance their
presence is to right-minded persons. But it’s
a queer world; oh! it’s a queer world!’
Miss Knag, having passed this comment
on the world, in the tone in which most people do
pass comments on the world when they are out of temper,
that is to say, as if they by no means belonged to
it, concluded by heaving a sigh, wherewith she seemed
meekly to compassionate the wickedness of mankind.
The attendants were not slow to echo
the sigh, and Miss Knag was apparently on the eve
of favouring them with some further moral reflections,
when the voice of Madame Mantalini, conveyed through
the speaking-tube, ordered Miss Nickleby upstairs to
assist in the arrangement of the show-room; a distinction
which caused Miss Knag to toss her head so much, and
bite her lips so hard, that her powers of conversation
were, for the time, annihilated.
‘Well, Miss Nickleby, child,’
said Madame Mantalini, when Kate presented herself;
‘are you quite well again?’
‘A great deal better, thank you,’ replied
Kate.
‘I wish I could say the same,’
remarked Madame Mantalini, seating herself with an
air of weariness.
‘Are you ill?’ asked Kate.
‘I am very sorry for that.’
‘Not exactly ill, but worried,
child—worried,’ rejoined Madame.
‘I am still more sorry to hear
that,’ said Kate, gently. ’Bodily
illness is more easy to bear than mental.’
‘Ah! and it’s much easier
to talk than to bear either,’ said Madame, rubbing
her nose with much irritability of manner. ’There,
get to your work, child, and put the things in order,
do.’
While Kate was wondering within herself
what these symptoms of unusual vexation portended,
Mr Mantalini put the tips of his whiskers, and, by
degrees, his head, through the half-opened door, and
cried in a soft voice—
‘Is my life and soul there?’
‘No,’ replied his wife.
’How can it say so, when it
is blooming in the front room like a little rose in
a demnition flower-pot?’ urged Mantalini.
’May its poppet come in and talk?’
‘Certainly not,’ replied
Madame: ’you know I never allow you here.
Go along!’
The poppet, however, encouraged perhaps
by the relenting tone of this reply, ventured to rebel,
and, stealing into the room, made towards Madame Mantalini
on tiptoe, blowing her a kiss as he came along.
’Why will it vex itself, and
twist its little face into bewitching nutcrackers?’
said Mantalini, putting his left arm round the waist
of his life and soul, and drawing her towards him with
his right.
‘Oh! I can’t bear you,’ replied
his wife.
‘Not—eh, not bear
me!’ exclaimed Mantalini. ’Fibs,
fibs. It couldn’t be. There’s
not a woman alive, that could tell me such a thing
to my face—to my own face.’
Mr Mantalini stroked his chin, as he said this, and
glanced complacently at an opposite mirror.
‘Such destructive extravagance,’
reasoned his wife, in a low tone.
’All in its joy at having gained
such a lovely creature, such a little Venus, such
a demd, enchanting, bewitching, engrossing, captivating
little Venus,’ said Mantalini.
‘See what a situation you have
placed me in!’ urged Madame.
‘No harm will come, no harm
shall come, to its own darling,’ rejoined Mr
Mantalini. ’It is all over; there will
be nothing the matter; money shall be got in; and
if it don’t come in fast enough, old Nickleby
shall stump up again, or have his jugular separated
if he dares to vex and hurt the little—’
‘Hush!’ interposed Madame. ‘Don’t
you see?’
Mr Mantalini, who, in his eagerness
to make up matters with his wife, had overlooked,
or feigned to overlook, Miss Nickleby hitherto, took
the hint, and laying his finger on his lip, sunk his
voice still lower. There was, then, a great deal
of whispering, during which Madame Mantalini appeared
to make reference, more than once, to certain debts
incurred by Mr Mantalini previous to her coverture;
and also to an unexpected outlay of money in payment
of the aforesaid debts; and furthermore, to certain
agreeable weaknesses on that gentleman’s part,
such as gaming, wasting, idling, and a tendency to
horse-flesh; each of which matters of accusation Mr
Mantalini disposed of, by one kiss or more, as its
relative importance demanded. The upshot of it
all was, that Madame Mantalini was in raptures with
him, and that they went upstairs to breakfast.
Kate busied herself in what she had
to do, and was silently arranging the various articles
of decoration in the best taste she could display,
when she started to hear a strange man’s voice
in the room, and started again, to observe, on looking
round, that a white hat, and a red neckerchief, and
a broad round face, and a large head, and part of
a green coat were in the room too.
‘Don’t alarm yourself,
miss,’ said the proprietor of these appearances.
‘I say; this here’s the mantie-making
consarn, an’t it?’
‘Yes,’ rejoined Kate,
greatly astonished. ‘What did you want?’
The stranger answered not; but, first
looking back, as though to beckon to some unseen person
outside, came, very deliberately, into the room, and
was closely followed by a little man in brown, very
much the worse for wear, who brought with him a mingled
fumigation of stale tobacco and fresh onions.
The clothes of this gentleman were much bespeckled
with flue; and his shoes, stockings, and nether garments,
from his heels to the waist buttons of his coat inclusive,
were profusely embroidered with splashes of mud, caught
a fortnight previously—before the setting-in
of the fine weather.
Kate’s very natural impression
was, that these engaging individuals had called with
the view of possessing themselves, unlawfully, of
any portable articles that chanced to strike their
fancy. She did not attempt to disguise her apprehensions,
and made a move towards the door.
‘Wait a minnit,’ said
the man in the green coat, closing it softly, and
standing with his back against it. ’This
is a unpleasant bisness. Vere’s your govvernor?’
‘My what—did you
say?’ asked Kate, trembling; for she thought
‘governor’ might be slang for watch or
money.
‘Mister Muntlehiney,’
said the man. ’Wot’s come on him?
Is he at home?’
‘He is above stairs, I believe,’
replied Kate, a little reassured by this inquiry.
‘Do you want him?’
‘No,’ replied the visitor.
’I don’t ezactly want him, if it’s
made a favour on. You can jist give him that
’ere card, and tell him if he wants to speak
to me, and save trouble, here I am; that’s
all.’
With these words, the stranger put
a thick square card into Kate’s hand, and, turning
to his friend, remarked, with an easy air, ’that
the rooms was a good high pitch;’ to which the
friend assented, adding, by way of illustration, ’that
there was lots of room for a little boy to grow up
a man in either on ’em, vithout much fear of
his ever bringing his head into contract vith the ceiling.’
After ringing the bell which would
summon Madame Mantalini, Kate glanced at the card,
and saw that it displayed the name of ‘Scaley,’
together with some other information to which she had
not had time to refer, when her attention was attracted
by Mr Scaley himself, who, walking up to one of the
cheval-glasses, gave it a hard poke in the centre
with his stick, as coolly as if it had been made of
cast iron.
‘Good plate this here, Tix,’
said Mr Scaley to his friend.
‘Ah!’ rejoined Mr Tix,
placing the marks of his four fingers, and a duplicate
impression of his thumb, on a piece of sky-blue silk;
’and this here article warn’t made for
nothing, mind you.’
From the silk, Mr Tix transferred
his admiration to some elegant articles of wearing
apparel, while Mr Scaley adjusted his neckcloth, at
leisure, before the glass, and afterwards, aided by
its reflection, proceeded to the minute consideration
of a pimple on his chin; in which absorbing occupation
he was yet engaged, when Madame Mantalini, entering
the room, uttered an exclamation of surprise which
roused him.
‘Oh! Is this the missis?’ inquired
Scaley.
‘It is Madame Mantalini,’ said Kate.
‘Then,’ said Mr Scaley,
producing a small document from his pocket and unfolding
it very slowly, ’this is a writ of execution,
and if it’s not conwenient to settle we’ll
go over the house at wunst, please, and take the inwentory.’
Poor Madame Mantalini wrung her hands
for grief, and rung the bell for her husband; which
done, she fell into a chair and a fainting fit, simultaneously.
The professional gentlemen, however, were not at
all discomposed by this event, for Mr Scaley, leaning
upon a stand on which a handsome dress was displayed
(so that his shoulders appeared above it, in nearly
the same manner as the shoulders of the lady for whom
it was designed would have done if she had had it on),
pushed his hat on one side and scratched his head with
perfect unconcern, while his friend Mr Tix, taking
that opportunity for a general survey of the apartment
preparatory to entering on business, stood with his
inventory-book under his arm and his hat in his hand,
mentally occupied in putting a price upon every object
within his range of vision.
Such was the posture of affairs when
Mr Mantalini hurried in; and as that distinguished
specimen had had a pretty extensive intercourse with
Mr Scaley’s fraternity in his bachelor days,
and was, besides, very far from being taken by surprise
on the present agitating occasion, he merely shrugged
his shoulders, thrust his hands down to the bottom
of his pockets, elevated his eyebrows, whistled a bar
or two, swore an oath or two, and, sitting astride
upon a chair, put the best face upon the matter with
great composure and decency.
‘What’s the demd total?’
was the first question he asked.
’Fifteen hundred and twenty-seven
pound, four and ninepence ha’penny,’ replied
Mr Scaley, without moving a limb.
‘The halfpenny be demd,’
said Mr Mantalini, impatiently.
‘By all means if you vish it,’
retorted Mr Scaley; ’and the ninepence.’
’It don’t matter to us
if the fifteen hundred and twenty-seven pound went
along with it, that I know on,’ observed Mr Tix.
‘Not a button,’ said Scaley.
‘Well,’ said the same
gentleman, after a pause, ’wot’s to be
done— anything? Is it only a small
crack, or a out-and-out smash? A break-up of
the constitootion is it?—werry good.
Then Mr Tom Tix, esk-vire, you must inform your angel
wife and lovely family as you won’t sleep at
home for three nights to come, along of being in possession
here. Wot’s the good of the lady a fretting
herself?’ continued Mr Scaley, as Madame Mantalini
sobbed. ’A good half of wot’s here
isn’t paid for, I des-say, and wot a consolation
oughtn’t that to be to her feelings!’
With these remarks, combining great
pleasantry with sound moral encouragement under difficulties,
Mr Scaley proceeded to take the inventory, in which
delicate task he was materially assisted by the uncommon
tact and experience of Mr Tix, the broker.
‘My cup of happiness’s
sweetener,’ said Mantalini, approaching his
wife with a penitent air; ‘will you listen to
me for two minutes?’
‘Oh! don’t speak to me,’
replied his wife, sobbing. ’You have ruined
me, and that’s enough.’
Mr Mantalini, who had doubtless well
considered his part, no sooner heard these words pronounced
in a tone of grief and severity, than he recoiled
several paces, assumed an expression of consuming mental
agony, rushed headlong from the room, and was, soon
afterwards, heard to slam the door of an upstairs
dressing-room with great violence.
‘Miss Nickleby,’ cried
Madame Mantalini, when this sound met her ear, ’make
haste, for Heaven’s sake, he will destroy himself!
I spoke unkindly to him, and he cannot bear it from
me. Alfred, my darling Alfred.’
With such exclamations, she hurried
upstairs, followed by Kate who, although she did not
quite participate in the fond wife’s apprehensions,
was a little flurried, nevertheless. The dressing-room
door being hastily flung open, Mr Mantalini was disclosed
to view, with his shirt-collar symmetrically thrown
back: putting a fine edge to a breakfast knife
by means of his razor strop.
‘Ah!’ cried Mr Mantalini,
‘interrupted!’ and whisk went the breakfast
knife into Mr Mantalini’s dressing-gown pocket,
while Mr Mantalini’s eyes rolled wildly, and
his hair floating in wild disorder, mingled with his
whiskers.
‘Alfred,’ cried his wife,
flinging her arms about him, ’I didn’t
mean to say it, I didn’t mean to say it!’
‘Ruined!’ cried Mr Mantalini.
’Have I brought ruin upon the best and purest
creature that ever blessed a demnition vagabond!
Demmit, let me go.’ At this crisis of
his ravings Mr Mantalini made a pluck at the breakfast
knife, and being restrained by his wife’s grasp,
attempted to dash his head against the wall—taking
very good care to be at least six feet from it.
‘Compose yourself, my own angel,’
said Madame. ’It was nobody’s fault;
it was mine as much as yours, we shall do very well
yet. Come, Alfred, come.’
Mr Mantalini did not think proper
to come to, all at once; but, after calling several
times for poison, and requesting some lady or gentleman
to blow his brains out, gentler feelings came upon
him, and he wept pathetically. In this softened
frame of mind he did not oppose the capture of the
knife—which, to tell the truth, he was
rather glad to be rid of, as an inconvenient and dangerous
article for a skirt pocket—and finally
he suffered himself to be led away by his affectionate
partner.
After a delay of two or three hours,
the young ladies were informed that their services
would be dispensed with until further notice, and
at the expiration of two days, the name of Mantalini
appeared in the list of bankrupts: Miss Nickleby
received an intimation per post, on the same morning,
that the business would be, in future, carried on
under the name of Miss Knag, and that her assistance
would no longer be required—a piece of intelligence
with which Mrs Nickleby was no sooner made acquainted,
than that good lady declared she had expected it all
along and cited divers unknown occasions on which
she had prophesied to that precise effect.
‘And I say again,’ remarked
Mrs Nickleby (who, it is scarcely necessary to observe,
had never said so before), ’I say again, that
a milliner’s and dressmaker’s is the very
last description of business, Kate, that you should
have thought of attaching yourself to. I don’t
make it a reproach to you, my love; but still I will
say, that if you had consulted your own mother—’
‘Well, well, mama,’ said
Kate, mildly: ’what would you recommend
now?’
‘Recommend!’ cried Mrs
Nickleby, ’isn’t it obvious, my dear, that
of all occupations in this world for a young lady
situated as you are, that of companion to some amiable
lady is the very thing for which your education, and
manners, and personal appearance, and everything else,
exactly qualify you? Did you never hear your
poor dear papa speak of the young lady who was the
daughter of the old lady who boarded in the same house
that he boarded in once, when he was a bachelor—what
was her name again? I know it began with a B,
and ended with g, but whether it was Waters or—no,
it couldn’t have been that, either; but whatever
her name was, don’t you know that that young
lady went as companion to a married lady who died soon
afterwards, and that she married the husband, and had
one of the finest little boys that the medical man
had ever seen—all within eighteen months?’
Kate knew, perfectly well, that this
torrent of favourable recollection was occasioned
by some opening, real or imaginary, which her mother
had discovered, in the companionship walk of life.
She therefore waited, very patiently, until all reminiscences
and anecdotes, bearing or not bearing upon the subject,
had been exhausted, and at last ventured to inquire
what discovery had been made. The truth then
came out. Mrs Nickleby had, that morning, had
a yesterday’s newspaper of the very first respectability
from the public-house where the porter came from;
and in this yesterday’s newspaper was an advertisement,
couched in the purest and most grammatical English,
announcing that a married lady was in want of a genteel
young person as companion, and that the married lady’s
name and address were to be known, on application
at a certain library at the west end of the town,
therein mentioned.
‘And I say,’ exclaimed
Mrs Nickleby, laying the paper down in triumph, ’that
if your uncle don’t object, it’s well worth
the trial.’
Kate was too sick at heart, after
the rough jostling she had already had with the world,
and really cared too little at the moment what fate
was reserved for her, to make any objection.
Mr Ralph Nickleby offered none, but, on the contrary,
highly approved of the suggestion; neither did he
express any great surprise at Madame Mantalini’s
sudden failure, indeed it would have been strange if
he had, inasmuch as it had been procured and brought
about chiefly by himself. So, the name and address
were obtained without loss of time, and Miss Nickleby
and her mama went off in quest of Mrs Wititterly,
of Cadogan Place, Sloane Street, that same forenoon.
Cadogan Place is the one slight bond
that joins two great extremes; it is the connecting
link between the aristocratic pavements of Belgrave
Square, and the barbarism of Chelsea. It is in
Sloane Street, but not of it. The people in
Cadogan Place look down upon Sloane Street, and think
Brompton low. They affect fashion too, and wonder
where the New Road is. Not that they claim to
be on precisely the same footing as the high folks
of Belgrave Square and Grosvenor Place, but that they
stand, with reference to them, rather in the light
of those illegitimate children of the great who are
content to boast of their connections, although their
connections disavow them. Wearing as much as
they can of the airs and semblances of loftiest rank,
the people of Cadogan Place have the realities of
middle station. It is the conductor which communicates
to the inhabitants of regions beyond its limit, the
shock of pride of birth and rank, which it has not
within itself, but derives from a fountain-head beyond;
or, like the ligament which unites the Siamese twins,
it contains something of the life and essence of two
distinct bodies, and yet belongs to neither.
Upon this doubtful ground, lived Mrs
Wititterly, and at Mrs Wititterly’s door Kate
Nickleby knocked with trembling hand. The door
was opened by a big footman with his head floured,
or chalked, or painted in some way (it didn’t
look genuine powder), and the big footman, receiving
the card of introduction, gave it to a little page;
so little, indeed, that his body would not hold, in
ordinary array, the number of small buttons which
are indispensable to a page’s costume, and they
were consequently obliged to be stuck on four abreast.
This young gentleman took the card upstairs on a
salver, and pending his return, Kate and her mother
were shown into a dining-room of rather dirty and
shabby aspect, and so comfortably arranged as to be
adapted to almost any purpose rather than eating and
drinking.
Now, in the ordinary course of things,
and according to all authentic descriptions of high
life, as set forth in books, Mrs Wititterly ought
to have been in her BOUDOIR; but whether it was that
Mr Wititterly was at that moment shaving himself in
the BOUDOIR or what not, certain it is that Mrs Wititterly
gave audience in the drawing-room, where was everything
proper and necessary, including curtains and furniture
coverings of a roseate hue, to shed a delicate bloom
on Mrs Wititterly’s complexion, and a little
dog to snap at strangers’ legs for Mrs Wititterly’s
amusement, and the afore-mentioned page, to hand chocolate
for Mrs Wititterly’s refreshment.
The lady had an air of sweet insipidity,
and a face of engaging paleness; there was a faded
look about her, and about the furniture, and about
the house. She was reclining on a sofa in such
a very unstudied attitude, that she might have been
taken for an actress all ready for the first scene
in a ballet, and only waiting for the drop curtain
to go up.
‘Place chairs.’
The page placed them.
‘Leave the room, Alphonse.’
The page left it; but if ever an Alphonse
carried plain Bill in his face and figure, that page
was the boy.
‘I have ventured to call, ma’am,’
said Kate, after a few seconds of awkward silence,
‘from having seen your advertisement.’
‘Yes,’ replied Mrs Wititterly,
’one of my people put it in the paper—Yes.’
‘I thought, perhaps,’
said Kate, modestly, ’that if you had not already
made a final choice, you would forgive my troubling
you with an application.’
‘Yes,’ drawled Mrs Wititterly again.
‘If you have already made a selection—’
‘Oh dear no,’ interrupted
the lady, ’I am not so easily suited. I
really don’t know what to say. You have
never been a companion before, have you?’
Mrs Nickleby, who had been eagerly
watching her opportunity, came dexterously in, before
Kate could reply. ’Not to any stranger,
ma’am,’ said the good lady; ’but
she has been a companion to me for some years.
I am her mother, ma’am.’
‘Oh!’ said Mrs Wititterly, ‘I apprehend
you.’
‘I assure you, ma’am,’
said Mrs Nickleby, ’that I very little thought,
at one time, that it would be necessary for my daughter
to go out into the world at all, for her poor dear
papa was an independent gentleman, and would have
been at this moment if he had but listened in time
to my constant entreaties and—’
‘Dear mama,’ said Kate, in a low voice.
‘My dear Kate, if you will allow
me to speak,’ said Mrs Nickleby, ’I shall
take the liberty of explaining to this lady—’
‘I think it is almost unnecessary, mama.’
And notwithstanding all the frowns
and winks with which Mrs Nickleby intimated that she
was going to say something which would clench the
business at once, Kate maintained her point by an expressive
look, and for once Mrs Nickleby was stopped upon the
very brink of an oration.
‘What are your accomplishments?’
asked Mrs Wititterly, with her eyes shut.
Kate blushed as she mentioned her
principal acquirements, and Mrs Nickleby checked them
all off, one by one, on her fingers; having calculated
the number before she came out. Luckily the two
calculations agreed, so Mrs Nickleby had no excuse
for talking.
‘You are a good temper?’
asked Mrs Wititterly, opening her eyes for an instant,
and shutting them again.
‘I hope so,’ rejoined Kate.
‘And have a highly respectable reference for
everything, have you?’
Kate replied that she had, and laid her uncle’s
card upon the table.
’Have the goodness to draw your
chair a little nearer, and let me look at you,’
said Mrs Wititterly; ’I am so very nearsighted
that I can’t quite discern your features.’
Kate complied, though not without
some embarrassment, with this request, and Mrs Wititterly
took a languid survey of her countenance, which lasted
some two or three minutes.
‘I like your appearance,’
said that lady, ringing a little bell. ‘Alphonse,
request your master to come here.’
The page disappeared on this errand,
and after a short interval, during which not a word
was spoken on either side, opened the door for an
important gentleman of about eight-and-thirty, of rather
plebeian countenance, and with a very light head of
hair, who leant over Mrs Wititterly for a little time,
and conversed with her in whispers.
‘Oh!’ he said, turning
round, ’yes. This is a most important
matter. Mrs Wititterly is of a very excitable
nature; very delicate, very fragile; a hothouse plant,
an exotic.’
‘Oh! Henry, my dear,’ interposed
Mrs Wititterly.
‘You are, my love, you know
you are; one breath—’ said Mr W.,
blowing an imaginary feather away. ‘Pho!
you’re gone!’
The lady sighed.
‘Your soul is too large for
your body,’ said Mr Wititterly. ’Your
intellect wears you out; all the medical men say so;
you know that there is not a physician who is not
proud of being called in to you. What is their
unanimous declaration? “My dear doctor,”
said I to Sir Tumley Snuffim, in this very room, the
very last time he came. “My dear doctor,
what is my wife’s complaint? Tell me all.
I can bear it. Is it nerves?” “My
dear fellow,” he said, “be proud of that
woman; make much of her; she is an ornament to the
fashionable world, and to you. Her complaint
is soul. It swells, expands, dilates—the
blood fires, the pulse quickens, the excitement increases—Whew!”’
Here Mr Wititterly, who, in the ardour of his description,
had flourished his right hand to within something less
than an inch of Mrs Nickleby’s bonnet, drew it
hastily back again, and blew his nose as fiercely
as if it had been done by some violent machinery.
‘You make me out worse than
I am, Henry,’ said Mrs Wititterly, with a faint
smile.
‘I do not, Julia, I do not,’
said Mr W. ’The society in which you move—necessarily
move, from your station, connection, and endowments—is
one vortex and whirlpool of the most frightful excitement.
Bless my heart and body, can I ever forget the night
you danced with the baronet’s nephew at the election
ball, at Exeter! It was tremendous.’
‘I always suffer for these triumphs
afterwards,’ said Mrs Wititterly.
‘And for that very reason,’
rejoined her husband, ’you must have a companion,
in whom there is great gentleness, great sweetness,
excessive sympathy, and perfect repose.’
Here, both Mr and Mrs Wititterly,
who had talked rather at the Nicklebys than to each
other, left off speaking, and looked at their two
hearers, with an expression of countenance which seemed
to say, ‘What do you think of all this?’
‘Mrs Wititterly,’ said
her husband, addressing himself to Mrs Nickleby, ’is
sought after and courted by glittering crowds and
brilliant circles. She is excited by the opera,
the drama, the fine arts, the—the—the—’
‘The nobility, my love,’ interposed Mrs
Wititterly.
‘The nobility, of course,’
said Mr Wititterly. ’And the military.
She forms and expresses an immense variety of opinions
on an immense variety of subjects. If some people
in public life were acquainted with Mrs Wititterly’s
real opinion of them, they would not hold their heads,
perhaps, quite as high as they do.’
‘Hush, Henry,’ said the lady; ‘this
is scarcely fair.’
‘I mention no names, Julia,’
replied Mr Wititterly; ’and nobody is injured.
I merely mention the circumstance to show that you
are no ordinary person, that there is a constant friction
perpetually going on between your mind and your body;
and that you must be soothed and tended. Now
let me hear, dispassionately and calmly, what are this
young lady’s qualifications for the office.’
In obedience to this request, the
qualifications were all gone through again, with the
addition of many interruptions and cross-questionings
from Mr Wititterly. It was finally arranged that
inquiries should be made, and a decisive answer addressed
to Miss Nickleby under cover of her uncle, within
two days. These conditions agreed upon, the
page showed them down as far as the staircase window;
and the big footman, relieving guard at that point,
piloted them in perfect safety to the street-door.
‘They are very distinguished
people, evidently,’ said Mrs Nickleby, as she
took her daughter’s arm. ’What a
superior person Mrs Wititterly is!’
‘Do you think so, mama?’ was all Kate’s
reply.
‘Why, who can help thinking
so, Kate, my love?’ rejoined her mother.
’She is pale though, and looks much exhausted.
I hope she may not be wearing herself out, but I
am very much afraid.’
These considerations led the deep-sighted
lady into a calculation of the probable duration of
Mrs Wititterly’s life, and the chances of the
disconsolate widower bestowing his hand on her daughter.
Before reaching home, she had freed Mrs Wititterly’s
soul from all bodily restraint; married Kate with
great splendour at St George’s, Hanover Square;
and only left undecided the minor question, whether
a splendid French-polished mahogany bedstead should
be erected for herself in the two-pair back of the
house in Cadogan Place, or in the three-pair front:
between which apartments she could not quite balance
the advantages, and therefore adjusted the question
at last, by determining to leave it to the decision
of her son-in-law.
The inquiries were made. The
answer—not to Kate’s very great joy—
was favourable; and at the expiration of a week she
betook herself, with all her movables and valuables,
to Mrs Wititterly’s mansion, where for the present
we will leave her.