Is fraught with some Danger to Miss
Nickleby’s Peace of Mind
The place was a handsome suite of
private apartments in Regent Street; the time was
three o’clock in the afternoon to the dull and
plodding, and the first hour of morning to the gay
and spirited; the persons were Lord Frederick Verisopht,
and his friend Sir Mulberry Hawk.
These distinguished gentlemen were
reclining listlessly on a couple of sofas, with a
table between them, on which were scattered in rich
confusion the materials of an untasted breakfast.
Newspapers lay strewn about the room, but these,
like the meal, were neglected and unnoticed; not,
however, because any flow of conversation prevented
the attractions of the journals from being called into
request, for not a word was exchanged between the
two, nor was any sound uttered, save when one, in
tossing about to find an easier resting-place for
his aching head, uttered an exclamation of impatience,
and seemed for a moment to communicate a new restlessness
to his companion.
These appearances would in themselves
have furnished a pretty strong clue to the extent
of the debauch of the previous night, even if there
had not been other indications of the amusements in
which it had been passed. A couple of billiard
balls, all mud and dirt, two battered hats, a champagne
bottle with a soiled glove twisted round the neck,
to allow of its being grasped more surely in its capacity
of an offensive weapon; a broken cane; a card-case
without the top; an empty purse; a watch-guard snapped
asunder; a handful of silver, mingled with fragments
of half-smoked cigars, and their stale and crumbled
ashes;—these, and many other tokens of riot
and disorder, hinted very intelligibly at the nature
of last night’s gentlemanly frolics.
Lord Frederick Verisopht was the first
to speak. Dropping his slippered foot on the
ground, and, yawning heavily, he struggled into a
sitting posture, and turned his dull languid eyes towards
his friend, to whom he called in a drowsy voice.
‘Hallo!’ replied Sir Mulberry, turning
round.
‘Are we going to lie here all da-a-y?’
said the lord.
‘I don’t know that we’re
fit for anything else,’ replied Sir Mulberry;
’yet awhile, at least. I haven’t
a grain of life in me this morning.’
‘Life!’ cried Lord Verisopht.
’I feel as if there would be nothing so snug
and comfortable as to die at once.’
‘Then why don’t you die?’ said Sir
Mulberry.
With which inquiry he turned his face
away, and seemed to occupy himself in an attempt to
fall asleep.
His hopeful fiend and pupil drew a
chair to the breakfast-table, and essayed to eat;
but, finding that impossible, lounged to the window,
then loitered up and down the room with his hand to
his fevered head, and finally threw himself again
on his sofa, and roused his friend once more.
‘What the devil’s the
matter?’ groaned Sir Mulberry, sitting upright
on the couch.
Although Sir Mulberry said this with
sufficient ill-humour, he did not seem to feel himself
quite at liberty to remain silent; for, after stretching
himself very often, and declaring with a shiver that
it was ‘infernal cold,’ he made an experiment
at the breakfast-table, and proving more successful
in it than his less-seasoned friend, remained there.
‘Suppose,’ said Sir Mulberry,
pausing with a morsel on the point of his fork, ’suppose
we go back to the subject of little Nickleby, eh?’
‘Which little Nickleby; the
money-lender or the ga-a-l?’ asked Lord Verisopht.
‘You take me, I see,’
replied Sir Mulberry. ‘The girl, of course.’
‘You promised me you’d
find her out,’ said Lord Verisopht.
‘So I did,’ rejoined his
friend; ’but I have thought further of the matter
since then. You distrust me in the business—you
shall find her out yourself.’
‘Na-ay,’ remonstrated Lord Verisopht.
‘But I say yes,’ returned
his friend. ’You shall find her out yourself.
Don’t think that I mean, when you can—I
know as well as you that if I did, you could never
get sight of her without me. No. I say
you shall find her out—shall—and
I’ll put you in the way.’
’Now, curse me, if you ain’t
a real, deyvlish, downright, thorough-paced friend,’
said the young lord, on whom this speech had produced
a most reviving effect.
‘I’ll tell you how,’
said Sir Mulberry. ’She was at that dinner
as a bait for you.’
‘No!’ cried the young lord. ‘What
the dey—’
‘As a bait for you,’ repeated
his friend; ’old Nickleby told me so himself.’
‘What a fine old cock it is!’
exclaimed Lord Verisopht; ’a noble rascal!’
‘Yes,’ said Sir Mulberry,
‘he knew she was a smart little creature—’
‘Smart!’ interposed the
young lord. ’Upon my soul, Hawk, she’s
a perfect beauty—a—a picture,
a statue, a—a—upon my soul she
is!’
‘Well,’ replied Sir Mulberry,
shrugging his shoulders and manifesting an indifference,
whether he felt it or not; ’that’s a matter
of taste; if mine doesn’t agree with yours, so
much the better.’
‘Confound it!’ reasoned
the lord, ’you were thick enough with her that
day, anyhow. I could hardly get in a word.’
‘Well enough for once, well
enough for once,’ replied Sir Mulberry; ’but
not worth the trouble of being agreeable to again.
If you seriously want to follow up the niece, tell
the uncle that you must know where she lives and how
she lives, and with whom, or you are no longer a customer
of his. He’ll tell you fast enough.’
‘Why didn’t you say this
before?’ asked Lord Verisopht, ’instead
of letting me go on burning, consuming, dragging out
a miserable existence for an a-age!’
‘I didn’t know it, in
the first place,’ answered Sir Mulberry carelessly;
’and in the second, I didn’t believe you
were so very much in earnest.’
Now, the truth was, that in the interval
which had elapsed since the dinner at Ralph Nickleby’s,
Sir Mulberry Hawk had been furtively trying by every
means in his power to discover whence Kate had so
suddenly appeared, and whither she had disappeared.
Unassisted by Ralph, however, with whom he had held
no communication since their angry parting on that
occasion, all his efforts were wholly unavailing,
and he had therefore arrived at the determination of
communicating to the young lord the substance of the
admission he had gleaned from that worthy. To
this he was impelled by various considerations; among
which the certainty of knowing whatever the weak young
man knew was decidedly not the least, as the desire
of encountering the usurer’s niece again, and
using his utmost arts to reduce her pride, and revenge
himself for her contempt, was uppermost in his thoughts.
It was a politic course of proceeding, and one which
could not fail to redound to his advantage in every
point of view, since the very circumstance of his having
extorted from Ralph Nickleby his real design in introducing
his niece to such society, coupled with his extreme
disinterestedness in communicating it so freely to
his friend, could not but advance his interests in
that quarter, and greatly facilitate the passage of
coin (pretty frequent and speedy already) from the
pockets of Lord Frederick Verisopht to those of Sir
Mulberry Hawk.
Thus reasoned Sir Mulberry, and in
pursuance of this reasoning he and his friend soon
afterwards repaired to Ralph Nickleby’s, there
to execute a plan of operations concerted by Sir Mulberry
himself, avowedly to promote his friend’s object,
and really to attain his own.
They found Ralph at home, and alone.
As he led them into the drawing-room, the recollection
of the scene which had taken place there seemed to
occur to him, for he cast a curious look at Sir Mulberry,
who bestowed upon it no other acknowledgment than a
careless smile.
They had a short conference upon some
money matters then in progress, which were scarcely
disposed of when the lordly dupe (in pursuance of
his friend’s instructions) requested with some
embarrassment to speak to Ralph alone.
‘Alone, eh?’ cried Sir
Mulberry, affecting surprise. ’Oh, very
good. I’ll walk into the next room here.
Don’t keep me long, that’s all.’
So saying, Sir Mulberry took up his
hat, and humming a fragment of a song disappeared
through the door of communication between the two
drawing-rooms, and closed it after him.
‘Now, my lord,’ said Ralph, ‘what
is it?’
‘Nickleby,’ said his client,
throwing himself along the sofa on which he had been
previously seated, so as to bring his lips nearer
to the old man’s ear, ‘what a pretty creature
your niece is!’
‘Is she, my lord?’ replied
Ralph. ’Maybe—maybe—I
don’t trouble my head with such matters.’
‘You know she’s a deyvlish
fine girl,’ said the client. ’You
must know that, Nickleby. Come, don’t
deny that.’
‘Yes, I believe she is considered
so,’ replied Ralph. ’Indeed, I know
she is. If I did not, you are an authority on
such points, and your taste, my lord—on
all points, indeed—is undeniable.’
Nobody but the young man to whom these
words were addressed could have been deaf to the sneering
tone in which they were spoken, or blind to the look
of contempt by which they were accompanied. But
Lord Frederick Verisopht was both, and took them to
be complimentary.
‘Well,’ he said, ’p’raps
you’re a little right, and p’raps you’re
a little wrong—a little of both, Nickleby.
I want to know where this beauty lives, that I may
have another peep at her, Nickleby.’
‘Really—’ Ralph began in his
usual tones.
‘Don’t talk so loud,’
cried the other, achieving the great point of his
lesson to a miracle. ‘I don’t want
Hawk to hear.’
‘You know he is your rival,
do you?’ said Ralph, looking sharply at him.
‘He always is, d-a-amn him,’
replied the client; ’and I want to steal a march
upon him. Ha, ha, ha! He’ll cut up
so rough, Nickleby, at our talking together without
him. Where does she live, Nickleby, that’s
all? Only tell me where she lives, Nickleby.’
‘He bites,’ thought Ralph. ‘He
bites.’
‘Eh, Nickleby, eh?’ pursued the client.
‘Where does she live?’
‘Really, my lord,’ said
Ralph, rubbing his hands slowly over each other, ‘I
must think before I tell you.’
‘No, not a bit of it, Nickleby;
you mustn’t think at all,’ replied Verisopht.
‘Where is it?’
‘No good can come of your knowing,’
replied Ralph. ’She has been virtuously
and well brought up; to be sure she is handsome, poor,
unprotected! Poor girl, poor girl.’
Ralph ran over this brief summary
of Kate’s condition as if it were merely passing
through his own mind, and he had no intention to speak
aloud; but the shrewd sly look which he directed at
his companion as he delivered it, gave this poor assumption
the lie.
‘I tell you I only want to see
her,’ cried his client. ’A ma-an
may look at a pretty woman without harm, mayn’t
he? Now, where does she live? You
know you’re making a fortune out of me, Nickleby,
and upon my soul nobody shall ever take me to anybody
else, if you only tell me this.’
‘As you promise that, my lord,’
said Ralph, with feigned reluctance, ’and as
I am most anxious to oblige you, and as there’s
no harm in it—no harm—I’ll
tell you. But you had better keep it to yourself,
my lord; strictly to yourself.’ Ralph pointed
to the adjoining room as he spoke, and nodded expressively.
The young lord, feigning to be equally
impressed with the necessity of this precaution, Ralph
disclosed the present address and occupation of his
niece, observing that from what he heard of the family
they appeared very ambitious to have distinguished
acquaintances, and that a lord could, doubtless, introduce
himself with great ease, if he felt disposed.
‘Your object being only to see
her again,’ said Ralph, ’you could effect
it at any time you chose by that means.’
Lord Verisopht acknowledged the hint
with a great many squeezes of Ralph’s hard,
horny hand, and whispering that they would now do well
to close the conversation, called to Sir Mulberry Hawk
that he might come back.
‘I thought you had gone to sleep,’
said Sir Mulberry, reappearing with an ill-tempered
air.
‘Sorry to detain you,’
replied the gull; ’but Nickleby has been so
ama-azingly funny that I couldn’t tear myself
away.’
‘No, no,’ said Ralph;
’it was all his lordship. You know what
a witty, humorous, elegant, accomplished man Lord
Frederick is. Mind the step, my lord—Sir
Mulberry, pray give way.’
With such courtesies as these, and
many low bows, and the same cold sneer upon his face
all the while, Ralph busied himself in showing his
visitors downstairs, and otherwise than by the slightest
possible motion about the corners of his mouth, returned
no show of answer to the look of admiration with which
Sir Mulberry Hawk seemed to compliment him on being
such an accomplished and most consummate scoundrel.
There had been a ring at the bell
a few minutes before, which was answered by Newman
Noggs just as they reached the hall. In the
ordinary course of business Newman would have either
admitted the new-comer in silence, or have requested
him or her to stand aside while the gentlemen passed
out. But he no sooner saw who it was, than as
if for some private reason of his own, he boldly departed
from the established custom of Ralph’s mansion
in business hours, and looking towards the respectable
trio who were approaching, cried in a loud and sonorous
voice, ‘Mrs Nickleby!’
‘Mrs Nickleby!’ cried
Sir Mulberry Hawk, as his friend looked back, and
stared him in the face.
It was, indeed, that well-intentioned
lady, who, having received an offer for the empty
house in the city directed to the landlord, had brought
it post-haste to Mr Nickleby without delay.
‘Nobody you know,’
said Ralph. ’Step into the office, my—my—dear.
I’ll be with you directly.’
‘Nobody I know!’ cried
Sir Mulberry Hawk, advancing to the astonished lady.
’Is this Mrs Nickleby—the mother
of Miss Nickleby—the delightful creature
that I had the happiness of meeting in this house
the very last time I dined here? But no;’
said Sir Mulberry, stopping short. ’No,
it can’t be. There is the same cast of
features, the same indescribable air of—But
no; no. This lady is too young for that.’
’I think you can tell the gentleman,
brother-in-law, if it concerns him to know,’
said Mrs Nickleby, acknowledging the compliment with
a graceful bend, ‘that Kate Nickleby is my daughter.’
‘Her daughter, my lord!’
cried Sir Mulberry, turning to his friend. ‘This
lady’s daughter, my lord.’
‘My lord!’ thought Mrs
Nickleby. ‘Well, I never did—’
‘This, then, my lord,’
said Sir Mulberry, ’is the lady to whose obliging
marriage we owe so much happiness. This lady
is the mother of sweet Miss Nickleby. Do you
observe the extraordinary likeness, my lord?
Nickleby—introduce us.’
Ralph did so, in a kind of desperation.
’Upon my soul, it’s a
most delightful thing,” said Lord Frederick,
pressing forward. ‘How de do?’
Mrs Nickleby was too much flurried
by these uncommonly kind salutations, and her regrets
at not having on her other bonnet, to make any immediate
reply, so she merely continued to bend and smile,
and betray great agitation.
‘A—and how is Miss
Nickleby?’ said Lord Frederick. ‘Well,
I hope?’
‘She is quite well, I’m
obliged to you, my lord,’ returned Mrs Nickleby,
recovering. ’Quite well. She wasn’t
well for some days after that day she dined here,
and I can’t help thinking, that she caught cold
in that hackney coach coming home. Hackney coaches,
my lord, are such nasty things, that it’s almost
better to walk at any time, for although I believe
a hackney coachman can be transported for life, if
he has a broken window, still they are so reckless,
that they nearly all have broken windows. I once
had a swelled face for six weeks, my lord, from riding
in a hackney coach—I think it was a hackney
coach,’ said Mrs Nickleby reflecting, ’though
I’m not quite certain whether it wasn’t
a chariot; at all events I know it was a dark green,
with a very long number, beginning with a nought and
ending with a nine—no, beginning with a
nine, and ending with a nought, that was it, and of
course the stamp-office people would know at once
whether it was a coach or a chariot if any inquiries
were made there—however that was, there
it was with a broken window and there was I for six
weeks with a swelled face—I think that was
the very same hackney coach, that we found out afterwards,
had the top open all the time, and we should never
even have known it, if they hadn’t charged us
a shilling an hour extra for having it open, which
it seems is the law, or was then, and a most shameful
law it appears to be—I don’t understand
the subject, but I should say the Corn Laws could
be nothing to that act of Parliament.’
Having pretty well run herself out
by this time, Mrs Nickleby stopped as suddenly as
she had started off; and repeated that Kate was quite
well. ‘Indeed,’ said Mrs Nickleby,
’I don’t think she ever was better, since
she had the hooping-cough, scarlet-fever, and measles,
all at the same time, and that’s the fact.’
‘Is that letter for me?’
growled Ralph, pointing to the little packet Mrs Nickleby
held in her hand.
‘For you, brother-in-law,’
replied Mrs Nickleby, ’and I walked all the
way up here on purpose to give it you.’
‘All the way up here!’
cried Sir Mulberry, seizing upon the chance of discovering
where Mrs Nickleby had come from. ’What
a confounded distance! How far do you call it
now?’
‘How far do I call it?’
said Mrs Nickleby. ’Let me see. It’s
just a mile from our door to the Old Bailey.’
‘No, no. Not so much as that,’ urged
Sir Mulberry.
‘Oh! It is indeed,’ said Mrs Nickleby.
‘I appeal to his lordship.’
‘I should decidedly say it was
a mile,’ remarked Lord Frederick, with a solemn
aspect.
‘It must be; it can’t
be a yard less,’ said Mrs Nickleby. ’All
down Newgate Street, all down Cheapside, all up Lombard
Street, down Gracechurch Street, and along Thames
Street, as far as Spigwiffin’s Wharf.
Oh! It’s a mile.’
‘Yes, on second thoughts I should
say it was,’ replied Sir Mulberry. ‘But
you don’t surely mean to walk all the way back?’
‘Oh, no,’ rejoined Mrs
Nickleby. ’I shall go back in an omnibus.
I didn’t travel about in omnibuses, when my
poor dear Nicholas was alive, brother-in-law.
But as it is, you know—’
‘Yes, yes,’ replied Ralph
impatiently, ’and you had better get back before
dark.’
‘Thank you, brother-in-law,
so I had,’ returned Mrs Nickleby. ’I
think I had better say goodbye, at once.’
‘Not stop and—rest?’
said Ralph, who seldom offered refreshments unless
something was to be got by it.
‘Oh dear me no,’ returned
Mrs Nickleby, glancing at the dial.
‘Lord Frederick,’ said
Sir Mulberry, ’we are going Mrs Nickleby’s
way. We’ll see her safe to the omnibus?’
‘By all means. Ye-es.’
‘Oh! I really couldn’t think of it!’
said Mrs Nickleby.
But Sir Mulberry Hawk and Lord Verisopht
were peremptory in their politeness, and leaving Ralph,
who seemed to think, not unwisely, that he looked
less ridiculous as a mere spectator, than he would
have done if he had taken any part in these proceedings,
they quitted the house with Mrs Nickleby between them;
that good lady in a perfect ecstasy of satisfaction,
no less with the attentions shown her by two titled
gentlemen, than with the conviction that Kate might
now pick and choose, at least between two large fortunes,
and most unexceptionable husbands.
As she was carried away for the moment
by an irresistible train of thought, all connected
with her daughter’s future greatness, Sir Mulberry
Hawk and his friend exchanged glances over the top
of the bonnet which the poor lady so much regretted
not having left at home, and proceeded to dilate with
great rapture, but much respect on the manifold perfections
of Miss Nickleby.
’What a delight, what a comfort,
what a happiness, this amiable creature must be to
you,’ said Sir Mulberry, throwing into his voice
an indication of the warmest feeling.
‘She is indeed, sir,’
replied Mrs Nickleby; ’she is the sweetest-tempered,
kindest-hearted creature—and so clever!’
‘She looks clayver,’ said
Lord Verisopht, with the air of a judge of cleverness.
‘I assure you she is, my lord,’
returned Mrs Nickleby. ’When she was at
school in Devonshire, she was universally allowed to
be beyond all exception the very cleverest girl there,
and there were a great many very clever ones too,
and that’s the truth—twenty-five
young ladies, fifty guineas a year without the et-ceteras,
both the Miss Dowdles the most accomplished, elegant,
fascinating creatures— Oh dear me!’
said Mrs Nickleby, ’I never shall forget what
pleasure she used to give me and her poor dear papa,
when she was at that school, never—such
a delightful letter every half-year, telling us that
she was the first pupil in the whole establishment,
and had made more progress than anybody else!
I can scarcely bear to think of it even now.
The girls wrote all the letters themselves,’
added Mrs Nickleby, ’and the writing-master
touched them up afterwards with a magnifying glass
and a silver pen; at least I think they wrote them,
though Kate was never quite certain about that, because
she didn’t know the handwriting of hers again;
but anyway, I know it was a circular which they all
copied, and of course it was a very gratifying thing—very
gratifying.’
With similar recollections Mrs Nickleby
beguiled the tediousness of the way, until they reached
the omnibus, which the extreme politeness of her new
friends would not allow them to leave until it actually
started, when they took their hats, as Mrs Nickleby
solemnly assured her hearers on many subsequent occasions,
‘completely off,’ and kissed their straw-coloured
kid gloves till they were no longer visible.
Mrs Nickleby leant back in the furthest
corner of the conveyance, and, closing her eyes, resigned
herself to a host of most pleasing meditations.
Kate had never said a word about having met either
of these gentlemen; ‘that,’ she thought,
’argues that she is strongly prepossessed in
favour of one of them.’ Then the question
arose, which one could it be. The lord was the
youngest, and his title was certainly the grandest;
still Kate was not the girl to be swayed by such considerations
as these. ’I will never put any constraint
upon her inclinations,’ said Mrs Nickleby to
herself; ’but upon my word I think there’s
no comparison between his lordship and Sir Mulberry—
Sir Mulberry is such an attentive gentlemanly creature,
so much manner, such a fine man, and has so much to
say for himself. I hope it’s Sir Mulberry—I
think it must be Sir Mulberry!’ And then her
thoughts flew back to her old predictions, and the
number of times she had said, that Kate with no fortune
would marry better than other people’s daughters
with thousands; and, as she pictured with the brightness
of a mother’s fancy all the beauty and grace
of the poor girl who had struggled so cheerfully with
her new life of hardship and trial, her heart grew
too full, and the tears trickled down her face.
Meanwhile, Ralph walked to and fro
in his little back-office, troubled in mind by what
had just occurred. To say that Ralph loved or
cared for—in the most ordinary acceptation
of those terms—any one of God’s creatures,
would be the wildest fiction. Still, there had
somehow stolen upon him from time to time a thought
of his niece which was tinged with compassion and
pity; breaking through the dull cloud of dislike or
indifference which darkened men and women in his eyes,
there was, in her case, the faintest gleam of light—a
most feeble and sickly ray at the best of times—but
there it was, and it showed the poor girl in a better
and purer aspect than any in which he had looked on
human nature yet.
‘I wish,’ thought Ralph,
’I had never done this. And yet it will
keep this boy to me, while there is money to be made.
Selling a girl—throwing her in the way
of temptation, and insult, and coarse speech.
Nearly two thousand pounds profit from him already
though. Pshaw! match-making mothers do the same
thing every day.’
He sat down, and told the chances,
for and against, on his fingers.
‘If I had not put them in the
right track today,’ thought Ralph, ’this
foolish woman would have done so. Well.
If her daughter is as true to herself as she should
be from what I have seen, what harm ensues?
A little teasing, a little humbling, a few tears.
Yes,’ said Ralph, aloud, as he locked his iron
safe. ’She must take her chance.
She must take her chance.’