Of the Great Bespeak for Miss Snevellicci,
and the first Appearance of Nicholas upon any Stage
Nicholas was up betimes in the morning;
but he had scarcely begun to dress, notwithstanding,
when he heard footsteps ascending the stairs, and
was presently saluted by the voices of Mr Folair the
pantomimist, and Mr Lenville, the tragedian.
‘House, house, house!’ cried Mr Folair.
’What, ho! within there” said Mr Lenville,
in a deep voice.
‘Confound these fellows!’
thought Nicholas; ’they have come to breakfast,
I suppose. I’ll open the door directly,
if you’ll wait an instant.’
The gentlemen entreated him not to
hurry himself; and, to beguile the interval, had a
fencing bout with their walking-sticks on the very
small landing-place: to the unspeakable discomposure
of all the other lodgers downstairs.
‘Here, come in,’ said
Nicholas, when he had completed his toilet. ‘In
the name of all that’s horrible, don’t
make that noise outside.’
‘An uncommon snug little box
this,’ said Mr Lenville, stepping into the front
room, and taking his hat off, before he could get in
at all. ‘Pernicious snug.’
’For a man at all particular
in such matters, it might be a trifle too snug,’
said Nicholas; ’for, although it is, undoubtedly,
a great convenience to be able to reach anything you
want from the ceiling or the floor, or either side
of the room, without having to move from your chair,
still these advantages can only be had in an apartment
of the most limited size.’
‘It isn’t a bit too confined
for a single man,’ returned Mr Lenville.
’That reminds me,—my wife, Mr Johnson,—I
hope she’ll have some good part in this piece
of yours?’
‘I glanced at the French copy
last night,’ said Nicholas. ’It looks
very good, I think.’
‘What do you mean to do for
me, old fellow?’ asked Mr Lenville, poking the
struggling fire with his walking-stick, and afterwards
wiping it on the skirt of his coat. ’Anything
in the gruff and grumble way?’
‘You turn your wife and child
out of doors,’ said Nicholas; ’and, in
a fit of rage and jealousy, stab your eldest son in
the library.’
‘Do I though!’ exclaimed
Mr Lenville. ‘That’s very good business.’
‘After which,’ said Nicholas,
’you are troubled with remorse till the last
act, and then you make up your mind to destroy yourself.
But, just as you are raising the pistol to your head,
a clock strikes—ten.’
‘I see,’ cried Mr Lenville. ‘Very
good.’
‘You pause,’ said Nicholas;
’you recollect to have heard a clock strike
ten in your infancy. The pistol falls from your
hand—you are overcome—you burst
into tears, and become a virtuous and exemplary character
for ever afterwards.’
‘Capital!’ said Mr Lenville:
’that’s a sure card, a sure card.
Get the curtain down with a touch of nature like
that, and it’ll be a triumphant success.’
‘Is there anything good for
me?’ inquired Mr Folair, anxiously.
‘Let me see,’ said Nicholas.
’You play the faithful and attached servant;
you are turned out of doors with the wife and child.’
‘Always coupled with that infernal
phenomenon,’ sighed Mr Folair; ’and we
go into poor lodgings, where I won’t take any
wages, and talk sentiment, I suppose?’
‘Why—yes,’
replied Nicholas: ‘that is the course of
the piece.’
‘I must have a dance of some
kind, you know,’ said Mr Folair. ’You’ll
have to introduce one for the phenomenon, so you’d
better make a pas de DEUX, and save time.’
‘There’s nothing easier
than that,’ said Mr Lenville, observing the
disturbed looks of the young dramatist.
‘Upon my word I don’t
see how it’s to be done,’ rejoined Nicholas.
‘Why, isn’t it obvious?’
reasoned Mr Lenville. ’Gadzooks, who can
help seeing the way to do it?—you astonish
me! You get the distressed lady, and the little
child, and the attached servant, into the poor lodgings,
don’t you?—Well, look here.
The distressed lady sinks into a chair, and buries
her face in her pocket-handkerchief. “What
makes you weep, mama?” says the child.
“Don’t weep, mama, or you’ll make
me weep too!”—“And me!”
says the favourite servant, rubbing his eyes with
his arm. “What can we do to raise your
spirits, dear mama?” says the little child.
“Ay, what can we do?” says the faithful
servant. “Oh, Pierre!” says the
distressed lady; “would that I could shake off
these painful thoughts.”—“Try,
ma’am, try,” says the faithful servant;
“rouse yourself, ma’am; be amused.”—“I
will,” says the lady, “I will learn to
suffer with fortitude. Do you remember that dance,
my honest friend, which, in happier days, you practised
with this sweet angel? It never failed to calm
my spirits then. Oh! let me see it once again
before I die!”—There it is—cue
for the band, before I die,—
and off they go. That’s the regular thing;
isn’t it, Tommy?’
‘That’s it,’ replied
Mr Folair. ’The distressed lady, overpowered
by old recollections, faints at the end of the dance,
and you close in with a picture.’
Profiting by these and other lessons,
which were the result of the personal experience of
the two actors, Nicholas willingly gave them the best
breakfast he could, and, when he at length got rid
of them, applied himself to his task: by no means
displeased to find that it was so much easier than
he had at first supposed. He worked very hard
all day, and did not leave his room until the evening,
when he went down to the theatre, whither Smike had
repaired before him to go on with another gentleman
as a general rebellion.
Here all the people were so much changed,
that he scarcely knew them. False hair, false
colour, false calves, false muscles—they
had become different beings. Mr Lenville was
a blooming warrior of most exquisite proportions;
Mr Crummles, his large face shaded by a profusion
of black hair, a Highland outlaw of most majestic bearing;
one of the old gentlemen a jailer, and the other a
venerable patriarch; the comic countryman, a fighting-man
of great valour, relieved by a touch of humour; each
of the Master Crummleses a prince in his own right;
and the low-spirited lover, a desponding captive.
There was a gorgeous banquet ready spread for the
third act, consisting of two pasteboard vases, one
plate of biscuits, a black bottle, and a vinegar cruet;
and, in short, everything was on a scale of the utmost
splendour and preparation.
Nicholas was standing with his back
to the curtain, now contemplating the first scene,
which was a Gothic archway, about two feet shorter
than Mr Crummles, through which that gentleman was
to make his first entrance, and now listening to a
couple of people who were cracking nuts in the gallery,
wondering whether they made the whole audience, when
the manager himself walked familiarly up and accosted
him.
‘Been in front tonight?’ said Mr Crummles.
‘No,’ replied Nicholas, ‘not yet.
I am going to see the play.’
‘We’ve had a pretty good
Let,’ said Mr Crummles. ’Four front
places in the centre, and the whole of the stage-box.’
‘Oh, indeed!’ said Nicholas; ‘a
family, I suppose?’
‘Yes,’ replied Mr Crummles,
’yes. It’s an affecting thing.
There are six children, and they never come unless
the phenomenon plays.’
It would have been difficult for any
party, family, or otherwise, to have visited the theatre
on a night when the phenomenon did not play,
inasmuch as she always sustained one, and not uncommonly
two or three, characters, every night; but Nicholas,
sympathising with the feelings of a father, refrained
from hinting at this trifling circumstance, and Mr
Crummles continued to talk, uninterrupted by him.
‘Six,’ said that gentleman;
’pa and ma eight, aunt nine, governess ten,
grandfather and grandmother twelve. Then, there’s
the footman, who stands outside, with a bag of oranges
and a jug of toast-and-water, and sees the play for
nothing through the little pane of glass in the box-door—it’s
cheap at a guinea; they gain by taking a box.’
‘I wonder you allow so many,’ observed
Nicholas.
‘There’s no help for it,’
replied Mr Crummles; ’it’s always expected
in the country. If there are six children, six
people come to hold them in their laps. A family-box
carries double always. Ring in the orchestra,
Grudden!’
That useful lady did as she was requested,
and shortly afterwards the tuning of three fiddles
was heard. Which process having been protracted
as long as it was supposed that the patience of the
audience could possibly bear it, was put a stop to
by another jerk of the bell, which, being the signal
to begin in earnest, set the orchestra playing a variety
of popular airs, with involuntary variations.
If Nicholas had been astonished at
the alteration for the better which the gentlemen
displayed, the transformation of the ladies was still
more extraordinary. When, from a snug corner
of the manager’s box, he beheld Miss Snevellicci
in all the glories of white muslin with a golden hem,
and Mrs Crummles in all the dignity of the outlaw’s
wife, and Miss Bravassa in all the sweetness of Miss
Snevellicci’s confidential friend, and Miss Belvawney
in the white silks of a page doing duty everywhere
and swearing to live and die in the service of everybody,
he could scarcely contain his admiration, which testified
itself in great applause, and the closest possible
attention to the business of the scene. The plot
was most interesting. It belonged to no particular
age, people, or country, and was perhaps the more
delightful on that account, as nobody’s previous
information could afford the remotest glimmering of
what would ever come of it. An outlaw had been
very successful in doing something somewhere, and
came home, in triumph, to the sound of shouts and
fiddles, to greet his wife—a lady of masculine
mind, who talked a good deal about her father’s
bones, which it seemed were unburied, though whether
from a peculiar taste on the part of the old gentleman
himself, or the reprehensible neglect of his relations,
did not appear. This outlaw’s wife was,
somehow or other, mixed up with a patriarch, living
in a castle a long way off, and this patriarch was
the father of several of the characters, but he didn’t
exactly know which, and was uncertain whether he had
brought up the right ones in his castle, or the wrong
ones; he rather inclined to the latter opinion, and,
being uneasy, relieved his mind with a banquet, during
which solemnity somebody in a cloak said ‘Beware!’
which somebody was known by nobody (except the audience)
to be the outlaw himself, who had come there, for reasons
unexplained, but possibly with an eye to the spoons.
There was an agreeable little surprise in the way
of certain love passages between the desponding captive
and Miss Snevellicci, and the comic fighting-man and
Miss Bravassa; besides which, Mr Lenville had several
very tragic scenes in the dark, while on throat-cutting
expeditions, which were all baffled by the skill and
bravery of the comic fighting-man (who overheard whatever
was said all through the piece) and the intrepidity
of Miss Snevellicci, who adopted tights, and therein
repaired to the prison of her captive lover, with a
small basket of refreshments and a dark lantern.
At last, it came out that the patriarch was the man
who had treated the bones of the outlaw’s father-in-law
with so much disrespect, for which cause and reason
the outlaw’s wife repaired to his castle to kill
him, and so got into a dark room, where, after a good
deal of groping in the dark, everybody got hold of
everybody else, and took them for somebody besides,
which occasioned a vast quantity of confusion, with
some pistolling, loss of life, and torchlight; after
which, the patriarch came forward, and observing,
with a knowing look, that he knew all about his children
now, and would tell them when they got inside, said
that there could not be a more appropriate occasion
for marrying the young people than that; and therefore
he joined their hands, with the full consent of the
indefatigable page, who (being the only other person
surviving) pointed with his cap into the clouds, and
his right hand to the ground; thereby invoking a blessing
and giving the cue for the curtain to come down, which
it did, amidst general applause.
‘What did you think of that?’
asked Mr Crummles, when Nicholas went round to the
stage again. Mr Crummles was very red and hot,
for your outlaws are desperate fellows to shout.
‘I think it was very capital
indeed,’ replied Nicholas; ’Miss Snevellicci
in particular was uncommonly good.’
‘She’s a genius,’
said Mr Crummles; ’quite a genius, that girl.
By-the-bye, I’ve been thinking of bringing
out that piece of yours on her bespeak night.’
‘When?’ asked Nicholas.
’The night of her bespeak.
Her benefit night, when her friends and patrons bespeak
the play,’ said Mr Crummles.
‘Oh! I understand,’ replied Nicholas.
‘You see,’ said Mr. Crummles,
’it’s sure to go, on such an occasion,
and even if it should not work up quite as well as
we expect, why it will be her risk, you know, and
not ours.’
‘Yours, you mean,’ said Nicholas.
‘I said mine, didn’t I?’
returned Mr Crummles. ’Next Monday week.
What do you say? You’ll have done it, and
are sure to be up in the lover’s part, long
before that time.’
‘I don’t know about “long
before,”’ replied Nicholas; ’but by
that time I think I can undertake to be ready.’
‘Very good,’ pursued Mr
Crummles, ’then we’ll call that settled.
Now, I want to ask you something else. There’s
a little—what shall I call it?—a
little canvassing takes place on these occasions.’
‘Among the patrons, I suppose?’ said Nicholas.
’Among the patrons; and the
fact is, that Snevellicci has had so many bespeaks
in this place, that she wants an attraction.
She had a bespeak when her mother-in-law died, and
a bespeak when her uncle died; and Mrs Crummles and
myself have had bespeaks on the anniversary of the
phenomenon’s birthday, and our wedding-day, and
occasions of that description, so that, in fact, there’s
some difficulty in getting a good one. Now,
won’t you help this poor girl, Mr Johnson?’
said Crummles, sitting himself down on a drum, and
taking a great pinch of snuff, as he looked him steadily
in the face.
‘How do you mean?’ rejoined Nicholas.
’Don’t you think you could
spare half an hour tomorrow morning, to call with
her at the houses of one or two of the principal people?’
murmured the manager in a persuasive tone.
‘Oh dear me,’ said Nicholas,
with an air of very strong objection, ‘I shouldn’t
like to do that.’
‘The infant will accompany her,’
said Mr Crummles. ’The moment it was suggested
to me, I gave permission for the infant to go.
There will not be the smallest impropriety—Miss
Snevellicci, sir, is the very soul of honour.
It would be of material service—the gentleman
from London—author of the new piece—actor
in the new piece—first appearance on any
boards—it would lead to a great bespeak,
Mr Johnson.’
’I am very sorry to throw a
damp upon the prospects of anybody, and more especially
a lady,’ replied Nicholas; ’but really
I must decidedly object to making one of the canvassing
party.’
‘What does Mr Johnson say, Vincent?’
inquired a voice close to his ear; and, looking round,
he found Mrs Crummles and Miss Snevellicci herself
standing behind him.
‘He has some objection, my dear,’
replied Mr Crummles, looking at Nicholas.
‘Objection!’ exclaimed
Mrs Crummles. ‘Can it be possible?’
‘Oh, I hope not!’ cried
Miss Snevellicci. ’You surely are not so
cruel—oh, dear me!—Well, I—to
think of that now, after all one’s looking forward
to it!’
‘Mr Johnson will not persist,
my dear,’ said Mrs Crummles. ’Think
better of him than to suppose it. Gallantry,
humanity, all the best feelings of his nature, must
be enlisted in this interesting cause.’
‘Which moves even a manager,’
said Mr Crummles, smiling.
‘And a manager’s wife,’
added Mrs Crummles, in her accustomed tragedy tones.
‘Come, come, you will relent, I know you will.’
‘It is not in my nature,’
said Nicholas, moved by these appeals, ’to resist
any entreaty, unless it is to do something positively
wrong; and, beyond a feeling of pride, I know nothing
which should prevent my doing this. I know nobody
here, and nobody knows me. So be it then.
I yield.’
Miss Snevellicci was at once overwhelmed
with blushes and expressions of gratitude, of which
latter commodity neither Mr nor Mrs Crummles was by
any means sparing. It was arranged that Nicholas
should call upon her, at her lodgings, at eleven next
morning, and soon after they parted: he to return
home to his authorship: Miss Snevellicci to dress
for the after-piece: and the disinterested manager
and his wife to discuss the probable gains of the
forthcoming bespeak, of which they were to have two-thirds
of the profits by solemn treaty of agreement.
At the stipulated hour next morning,
Nicholas repaired to the lodgings of Miss Snevellicci,
which were in a place called Lombard Street, at the
house of a tailor. A strong smell of ironing
pervaded the little passage; and the tailor’s
daughter, who opened the door, appeared in that flutter
of spirits which is so often attendant upon the periodical
getting up of a family’s linen.
‘Miss Snevellicci lives here,
I believe?’ said Nicholas, when the door was
opened.
The tailor’s daughter replied in the affirmative.
’Will you have the goodness
to let her know that Mr Johnson is here?’ said
Nicholas.
‘Oh, if you please, you’re
to come upstairs,’ replied the tailor’s
daughter, with a smile.
Nicholas followed the young lady,
and was shown into a small apartment on the first
floor, communicating with a back-room; in which, as
he judged from a certain half-subdued clinking sound,
as of cups and saucers, Miss Snevellicci was then
taking her breakfast in bed.
‘You’re to wait, if you
please,’ said the tailor’s daughter, after
a short period of absence, during which the clinking
in the back-room had ceased, and been succeeded by
whispering—’She won’t be long.’
As she spoke, she pulled up the window-blind,
and having by this means (as she thought) diverted
Mr Johnson’s attention from the room to the
street, caught up some articles which were airing on
the fender, and had very much the appearance of stockings,
and darted off.
As there were not many objects of
interest outside the window, Nicholas looked about
the room with more curiosity than he might otherwise
have bestowed upon it. On the sofa lay an old
guitar, several thumbed pieces of music, and a scattered
litter of curl-papers; together with a confused heap
of play-bills, and a pair of soiled white satin shoes
with large blue rosettes. Hanging over the back
of a chair was a half-finished muslin apron with little
pockets ornamented with red ribbons, such as waiting-women
wear on the stage, and (by consequence) are never
seen with anywhere else. In one corner stood
the diminutive pair of top-boots in which Miss Snevellicci
was accustomed to enact the little jockey, and, folded
on a chair hard by, was a small parcel, which bore
a very suspicious resemblance to the companion smalls.
But the most interesting object of
all was, perhaps, the open scrapbook, displayed in
the midst of some theatrical duodecimos that were
strewn upon the table; and pasted into which scrapbook
were various critical notices of Miss Snevellicci’s
acting, extracted from different provincial journals,
together with one poetic address in her honour, commencing—
Sing, God of Love, and
tell me in what dearth
Thrice-gifted Snevellicci
came on earth,
To thrill us with her
smile, her tear, her eye,
Sing, God of Love, and
tell me quickly why.
Besides this effusion, there were
innumerable complimentary allusions, also extracted
from newspapers, such as—’We observe
from an advertisement in another part of our paper
of today, that the charming and highly-talented Miss
Snevellicci takes her benefit on Wednesday, for which
occasion she has put forth a bill of fare that might
kindle exhilaration in the breast of a misanthrope.
In the confidence that our fellow-townsmen have not
lost that high appreciation of public utility and
private worth, for which they have long been so pre-eminently
distinguished, we predict that this charming actress
will be greeted with a bumper.’ ’To
Correspondents.—J.S. is misinformed when
he supposes that the highly-gifted and beautiful Miss
Snevellicci, nightly captivating all hearts at our
pretty and commodious little theatre, is not the
same lady to whom the young gentleman of immense fortune,
residing within a hundred miles of the good city of
York, lately made honourable proposals. We have
reason to know that Miss Snevellicci is the lady
who was implicated in that mysterious and romantic
affair, and whose conduct on that occasion did no less
honour to her head and heart, than do her histrionic
triumphs to her brilliant genius.’ A copious
assortment of such paragraphs as these, with long
bills of benefits all ending with ‘Come Early’,
in large capitals, formed the principal contents of
Miss Snevellicci’s scrapbook.
Nicholas had read a great many of
these scraps, and was absorbed in a circumstantial
and melancholy account of the train of events which
had led to Miss Snevellicci’s spraining her ankle
by slipping on a piece of orange-peel flung by a monster
in human form, (so the paper said,) upon the stage
at Winchester,—when that young lady herself,
attired in the coal-scuttle bonnet and walking-dress
complete, tripped into the room, with a thousand apologies
for having detained him so long after the appointed
time.
‘But really,’ said Miss
Snevellicci, ’my darling Led, who lives with
me here, was taken so very ill in the night that I
thought she would have expired in my arms.’
‘Such a fate is almost to be
envied,’ returned Nicholas, ’but I am
very sorry to hear it nevertheless.’
‘What a creature you are to
flatter!’ said Miss Snevellicci, buttoning her
glove in much confusion.
‘If it be flattery to admire
your charms and accomplishments,’ rejoined Nicholas,
laying his hand upon the scrapbook, ’you have
better specimens of it here.’
’Oh you cruel creature, to read
such things as those! I’m almost ashamed
to look you in the face afterwards, positively I am,’
said Miss Snevellicci, seizing the book and putting
it away in a closet. ‘How careless of Led!
How could she be so naughty!’
‘I thought you had kindly left
it here, on purpose for me to read,’ said Nicholas.
And really it did seem possible.
‘I wouldn’t have had you
see it for the world!’ rejoined Miss Snevellicci.
’I never was so vexed—never!
But she is such a careless thing, there’s no
trusting her.’
The conversation was here interrupted
by the entrance of the phenomenon, who had discreetly
remained in the bedroom up to this moment, and now
presented herself, with much grace and lightness,
bearing in her hand a very little green parasol with
a broad fringe border, and no handle. After
a few words of course, they sallied into the street.
The phenomenon was rather a troublesome
companion, for first the right sandal came down, and
then the left, and these mischances being repaired,
one leg of the little white trousers was discovered
to be longer than the other; besides these accidents,
the green parasol was dropped down an iron grating,
and only fished up again with great difficulty and
by dint of much exertion. However, it was impossible
to scold her, as she was the manager’s daughter,
so Nicholas took it all in perfect good humour, and
walked on, with Miss Snevellicci, arm-in-arm on one
side, and the offending infant on the other.
The first house to which they bent
their steps, was situated in a terrace of respectable
appearance. Miss Snevellicci’s modest
double-knock was answered by a foot-boy, who, in reply
to her inquiry whether Mrs Curdle was at home, opened
his eyes very wide, grinned very much, and said he
didn’t know, but he’d inquire. With
this he showed them into a parlour where he kept them
waiting, until the two women-servants had repaired
thither, under false pretences, to see the play-actors;
and having compared notes with them in the passage,
and joined in a vast quantity of whispering and giggling,
he at length went upstairs with Miss Snevellicci’s
name.
Now, Mrs Curdle was supposed, by those
who were best informed on such points, to possess
quite the London taste in matters relating to literature
and the drama; and as to Mr Curdle, he had written
a pamphlet of sixty-four pages, post octavo, on the
character of the Nurse’s deceased husband in
Romeo and Juliet, with an inquiry whether he really
had been a ‘merry man’ in his lifetime,
or whether it was merely his widow’s affectionate
partiality that induced her so to report him.
He had likewise proved, that by altering the received
mode of punctuation, any one of Shakespeare’s
plays could be made quite different, and the sense
completely changed; it is needless to say, therefore,
that he was a great critic, and a very profound and
most original thinker.
‘Well, Miss Snevellicci,’
said Mrs Curdle, entering the parlour, ‘and
how do you do?’
Miss Snevellicci made a graceful obeisance,
and hoped Mrs Curdle was well, as also Mr Curdle,
who at the same time appeared. Mrs Curdle was
dressed in a morning wrapper, with a little cap stuck
upon the top of her head. Mr Curdle wore a loose
robe on his back, and his right forefinger on his
forehead after the portraits of Sterne, to whom somebody
or other had once said he bore a striking resemblance.
’I venture to call, for the
purpose of asking whether you would put your name
to my bespeak, ma’am,’ said Miss Snevellicci,
producing documents.
‘Oh! I really don’t
know what to say,’ replied Mrs Curdle.
’It’s not as if the theatre was in its
high and palmy days—you needn’t stand,
Miss Snevellicci—the drama is gone, perfectly
gone.’
’As an exquisite embodiment
of the poet’s visions, and a realisation of
human intellectuality, gilding with refulgent light
our dreamy moments, and laying open a new and magic
world before the mental eye, the drama is gone, perfectly
gone,’ said Mr Curdle.
’What man is there, now living,
who can present before us all those changing and prismatic
colours with which the character of Hamlet is invested?’
exclaimed Mrs Curdle.
‘What man indeed—upon
the stage,’ said Mr Curdle, with a small reservation
in favour of himself. ’Hamlet! Pooh!
ridiculous! Hamlet is gone, perfectly gone.’
Quite overcome by these dismal reflections,
Mr and Mrs Curdle sighed, and sat for some short time
without speaking. At length, the lady, turning
to Miss Snevellicci, inquired what play she proposed
to have.
‘Quite a new one,’ said
Miss Snevellicci, ’of which this gentleman is
the author, and in which he plays; being his first
appearance on any stage. Mr Johnson is the gentleman’s
name.’
‘I hope you have preserved the
unities, sir?’ said Mr Curdle.
‘The original piece is a French
one,’ said Nicholas. ’There is abundance
of incident, sprightly dialogue, strongly-marked characters—’
‘—All unavailing
without a strict observance of the unities, sir,’
returned Mr Curdle. ‘The unities of the
drama, before everything.’
‘Might I ask you,’ said
Nicholas, hesitating between the respect he ought
to assume, and his love of the whimsical, ’might
I ask you what the unities are?’
Mr Curdle coughed and considered.
‘The unities, sir,’ he said, ’are
a completeness—a kind of universal dovetailedness
with regard to place and time—a sort of
a general oneness, if I may be allowed to use so strong
an expression. I take those to be the dramatic
unities, so far as I have been enabled to bestow attention
upon them, and I have read much upon the subject,
and thought much. I find, running through the
performances of this child,’ said Mr Curdle,
turning to the phenomenon, ’a unity of feeling,
a breadth, a light and shade, a warmth of colouring,
a tone, a harmony, a glow, an artistical development
of original conceptions, which I look for, in vain,
among older performers—I don’t know
whether I make myself understood?’
‘Perfectly,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Just so,’ said Mr Curdle,
pulling up his neckcloth. ’That is my
definition of the unities of the drama.’
Mrs Curdle had sat listening to this
lucid explanation with great complacency. It
being finished, she inquired what Mr Curdle thought,
about putting down their names.
‘I don’t know, my dear;
upon my word I don’t know,’ said Mr Curdle.
’If we do, it must be distinctly understood that
we do not pledge ourselves to the quality of the performances.
Let it go forth to the world, that we do not give
them the sanction of our names, but that we confer
the distinction merely upon Miss Snevellicci.
That being clearly stated, I take it to be, as it
were, a duty, that we should extend our patronage
to a degraded stage, even for the sake of the associations
with which it is entwined. Have you got two-and-sixpence
for half-a-crown, Miss Snevellicci?’ said Mr
Curdle, turning over four of those pieces of money.
Miss Snevellicci felt in all the corners
of the pink reticule, but there was nothing in any
of them. Nicholas murmured a jest about his
being an author, and thought it best not to go through
the form of feeling in his own pockets at all.
‘Let me see,’ said Mr
Curdle; ’twice four’s eight—four
shillings a-piece to the boxes, Miss Snevellicci,
is exceedingly dear in the present state of the drama—three
half-crowns is seven-and-six; we shall not differ
about sixpence, I suppose? Sixpence will not
part us, Miss Snevellicci?’
Poor Miss Snevellicci took the three
half-crowns, with many smiles and bends, and Mrs Curdle,
adding several supplementary directions relative to
keeping the places for them, and dusting the seat,
and sending two clean bills as soon as they came out,
rang the bell, as a signal for breaking up the conference.
‘Odd people those,’ said
Nicholas, when they got clear of the house.
‘I assure you,’ said Miss
Snevellicci, taking his arm, ’that I think myself
very lucky they did not owe all the money instead of
being sixpence short. Now, if you were to succeed,
they would give people to understand that they had
always patronised you; and if you were to fail, they
would have been quite certain of that from the very
beginning.’
At the next house they visited, they
were in great glory; for, there, resided the six children
who were so enraptured with the public actions of
the phenomenon, and who, being called down from the
nursery to be treated with a private view of that young
lady, proceeded to poke their fingers into her eyes,
and tread upon her toes, and show her many other little
attentions peculiar to their time of life.
‘I shall certainly persuade
Mr Borum to take a private box,’ said the lady
of the house, after a most gracious reception.
’I shall only take two of the children, and
will make up the rest of the party, of gentlemen—your
admirers, Miss Snevellicci. Augustus, you naughty
boy, leave the little girl alone.’
This was addressed to a young gentleman
who was pinching the phenomenon behind, apparently
with a view of ascertaining whether she was real.
‘I am sure you must be very
tired,’ said the mama, turning to Miss Snevellicci.
’I cannot think of allowing you to go, without
first taking a glass of wine. Fie, Charlotte,
I am ashamed of you! Miss Lane, my dear, pray
see to the children.’
Miss Lane was the governess, and this
entreaty was rendered necessary by the abrupt behaviour
of the youngest Miss Borum, who, having filched the
phenomenon’s little green parasol, was now carrying
it bodily off, while the distracted infant looked
helplessly on.
‘I am sure, where you ever learnt
to act as you do,’ said good-natured Mrs Borum,
turning again to Miss Snevellicci, ’I cannot
understand (Emma, don’t stare so); laughing in
one piece, and crying in the next, and so natural
in all—oh, dear!’
‘I am very happy to hear you
express so favourable an opinion,’ said Miss
Snevellicci. ‘It’s quite delightful
to think you like it.’
‘Like it!’ cried Mrs Borum.
’Who can help liking it? I would go to
the play, twice a week if I could: I dote upon
it—only you’re too affecting sometimes.
You do put me in such a state—into such
fits of crying! Goodness gracious me, Miss Lane,
how can you let them torment that poor child so!’
The phenomenon was really in a fair
way of being torn limb from limb; for two strong little
boys, one holding on by each of her hands, were dragging
her in different directions as a trial of strength.
However, Miss Lane (who had herself been too much
occupied in contemplating the grown-up actors, to pay
the necessary attention to these proceedings) rescued
the unhappy infant at this juncture, who, being recruited
with a glass of wine, was shortly afterwards taken
away by her friends, after sustaining no more serious
damage than a flattening of the pink gauze bonnet,
and a rather extensive creasing of the white frock
and trousers.
It was a trying morning; for there
were a great many calls to make, and everybody wanted
a different thing. Some wanted tragedies, and
others comedies; some objected to dancing; some wanted
scarcely anything else. Some thought the comic
singer decidedly low, and others hoped he would have
more to do than he usually had. Some people
wouldn’t promise to go, because other people
wouldn’t promise to go; and other people wouldn’t
go at all, because other people went. At length,
and by little and little, omitting something in this
place, and adding something in that, Miss Snevellicci
pledged herself to a bill of fare which was comprehensive
enough, if it had no other merit (it included among
other trifles, four pieces, divers songs, a few combats,
and several dances); and they returned home, pretty
well exhausted with the business of the day.
Nicholas worked away at the piece,
which was speedily put into rehearsal, and then worked
away at his own part, which he studied with great
perseverance and acted—as the whole company
said—to perfection. And at length
the great day arrived. The crier was sent round,
in the morning, to proclaim the entertainments with
the sound of bell in all the thoroughfares; and extra
bills of three feet long by nine inches wide, were
dispersed in all directions, flung down all the areas,
thrust under all the knockers, and developed in all
the shops. They were placarded on all the walls
too, though not with complete success, for an illiterate
person having undertaken this office during the indisposition
of the regular bill-sticker, a part were posted sideways,
and the remainder upside down.
At half-past five, there was a rush
of four people to the gallery-door; at a quarter
before six, there were at least a dozen; at six o’clock
the kicks were terrific; and when the elder Master
Crummles opened the door, he was obliged to run behind
it for his life. Fifteen shillings were taken
by Mrs Grudden in the first ten minutes.
Behind the scenes, the same unwonted
excitement prevailed. Miss Snevellicci was in
such a perspiration that the paint would scarcely
stay on her face. Mrs Crummles was so nervous
that she could hardly remember her part. Miss
Bravassa’s ringlets came out of curl with the
heat and anxiety; even Mr Crummles himself kept peeping
through the hole in the curtain, and running back,
every now and then, to announce that another man had
come into the pit.
At last, the orchestra left off, and
the curtain rose upon the new piece. The first
scene, in which there was nobody particular, passed
off calmly enough, but when Miss Snevellicci went on
in the second, accompanied by the phenomenon as child,
what a roar of applause broke out! The people
in the Borum box rose as one man, waving their hats
and handkerchiefs, and uttering shouts of ‘Bravo!’
Mrs Borum and the governess cast wreaths upon the stage,
of which, some fluttered into the lamps, and one crowned
the temples of a fat gentleman in the pit, who, looking
eagerly towards the scene, remained unconscious of
the honour; the tailor and his family kicked at the
panels of the upper boxes till they threatened to come
out altogether; the very ginger-beer boy remained
transfixed in the centre of the house; a young officer,
supposed to entertain a passion for Miss Snevellicci,
stuck his glass in his eye as though to hide a tear.
Again and again Miss Snevellicci curtseyed lower
and lower, and again and again the applause came down,
louder and louder. At length, when the phenomenon
picked up one of the smoking wreaths and put it on,
sideways, over Miss Snevellicci’s eye, it reached
its climax, and the play proceeded.
But when Nicholas came on for his
crack scene with Mrs Crummles, what a clapping of
hands there was! When Mrs Crummles (who was his
unworthy mother), sneered, and called him ‘presumptuous
boy,’ and he defied her, what a tumult of applause
came on! When he quarrelled with the other gentleman
about the young lady, and producing a case of pistols,
said, that if he was a gentleman, he would fight
him in that drawing-room, until the furniture was
sprinkled with the blood of one, if not of two—how
boxes, pit, and gallery, joined in one most vigorous
cheer! When he called his mother names, because
she wouldn’t give up the young lady’s
property, and she relenting, caused him to relent
likewise, and fall down on one knee and ask her blessing,
how the ladies in the audience sobbed! When he
was hid behind the curtain in the dark, and the wicked
relation poked a sharp sword in every direction, save
where his legs were plainly visible, what a thrill
of anxious fear ran through the house! His air,
his figure, his walk, his look, everything he said
or did, was the subject of commendation. There
was a round of applause every time he spoke.
And when, at last, in the pump-and-tub scene, Mrs
Grudden lighted the blue fire, and all the unemployed
members of the company came in, and tumbled down in
various directions—not because that had
anything to do with the plot, but in order to finish
off with a tableau—the audience (who had
by this time increased considerably) gave vent to
such a shout of enthusiasm as had not been heard in
those walls for many and many a day.
In short, the success both of new
piece and new actor was complete, and when Miss Snevellicci
was called for at the end of the play, Nicholas led
her on, and divided the applause.