Of the Proceedings of Nicholas, and
certain Internal Divisions in the Company of Mr Vincent
Crummles
The unexpected success and favour
with which his experiment at Portsmouth had been received,
induced Mr Crummles to prolong his stay in that town
for a fortnight beyond the period he had originally
assigned for the duration of his visit, during which
time Nicholas personated a vast variety of characters
with undiminished success, and attracted so many people
to the theatre who had never been seen there before,
that a benefit was considered by the manager a very
promising speculation. Nicholas assenting to
the terms proposed, the benefit was had, and by it
he realised no less a sum than twenty pounds.
Possessed of this unexpected wealth,
his first act was to enclose to honest John Browdie
the amount of his friendly loan, which he accompanied
with many expressions of gratitude and esteem, and
many cordial wishes for his matrimonial happiness.
To Newman Noggs he forwarded one half of the sum
he had realised, entreating him to take an opportunity
of handing it to Kate in secret, and conveying to
her the warmest assurances of his love and affection.
He made no mention of the way in which he had employed
himself; merely informing Newman that a letter addressed
to him under his assumed name at the Post Office,
Portsmouth, would readily find him, and entreating
that worthy friend to write full particulars of the
situation of his mother and sister, and an account
of all the grand things that Ralph Nickleby had done
for them since his departure from London.
‘You are out of spirits,’
said Smike, on the night after the letter had been
dispatched.
‘Not I!’ rejoined Nicholas,
with assumed gaiety, for the confession would have
made the boy miserable all night; ’I was thinking
about my sister, Smike.’
‘Sister!’
‘Ay.’
‘Is she like you?’ inquired Smike.
‘Why, so they say,’ replied
Nicholas, laughing, ’only a great deal handsomer.’
‘She must be very beautiful,’
said Smike, after thinking a little while with his
hands folded together, and his eyes bent upon his
friend.
’Anybody who didn’t know
you as well as I do, my dear fellow, would say you
were an accomplished courtier,’ said Nicholas.
‘I don’t even know what
that is,’ replied Smike, shaking his head.
‘Shall I ever see your sister?’
‘To be sure,’ cried Nicholas;
’we shall all be together one of these days—when
we are rich, Smike.’
’How is it that you, who are
so kind and good to me, have nobody to be kind to
you?’ asked Smike. ‘I cannot make
that out.’
‘Why, it is a long story,’
replied Nicholas, ’and one you would have some
difficulty in comprehending, I fear. I have an
enemy—you understand what that is?’
‘Oh, yes, I understand that,’ said Smike.
‘Well, it is owing to him,’
returned Nicholas. ’He is rich, and not
so easily punished as your old enemy, Mr Squeers.
He is my uncle, but he is a villain, and has done
me wrong.’
‘Has he though?’ asked
Smike, bending eagerly forward. ’What is
his name? Tell me his name.’
‘Ralph—Ralph Nickleby.’
‘Ralph Nickleby,’ repeated
Smike. ’Ralph. I’ll get that
name by heart.’
He had muttered it over to himself
some twenty times, when a loud knock at the door disturbed
him from his occupation. Before he could open
it, Mr Folair, the pantomimist, thrust in his head.
Mr Folair’s head was usually
decorated with a very round hat, unusually high in
the crown, and curled up quite tight in the brims.
On the present occasion he wore it very much on one
side, with the back part forward in consequence of
its being the least rusty; round his neck he wore
a flaming red worsted comforter, whereof the straggling
ends peeped out beneath his threadbare Newmarket coat,
which was very tight and buttoned all the way up.
He carried in his hand one very dirty glove, and
a cheap dress cane with a glass handle; in short,
his whole appearance was unusually dashing, and demonstrated
a far more scrupulous attention to his toilet than
he was in the habit of bestowing upon it.
‘Good-evening, sir,’ said
Mr Folair, taking off the tall hat, and running his
fingers through his hair. ’I bring a communication.
Hem!’
‘From whom and what about?’
inquired Nicholas. ’You are unusually
mysterious tonight.’
‘Cold, perhaps,’ returned
Mr Folair; ’cold, perhaps. That is the
fault of my position—not of myself, Mr Johnson.
My position as a mutual friend requires it, sir.’
Mr Folair paused with a most impressive look, and
diving into the hat before noticed, drew from thence
a small piece of whity-brown paper curiously folded,
whence he brought forth a note which it had served
to keep clean, and handing it over to Nicholas, said—
‘Have the goodness to read that, sir.’
Nicholas, in a state of much amazement,
took the note and broke the seal, glancing at Mr Folair
as he did so, who, knitting his brow and pursing up
his mouth with great dignity, was sitting with his
eyes steadily fixed upon the ceiling.
It was directed to blank Johnson,
Esq., by favour of Augustus Folair, Esq.; and the
astonishment of Nicholas was in no degree lessened,
when he found it to be couched in the following laconic
terms:—
“Mr Lenville presents his kind
regards to Mr Johnson, and will feel obliged if he
will inform him at what hour tomorrow morning it will
be most convenient to him to meet Mr L. at the Theatre,
for the purpose of having his nose pulled in the presence
of the company.
“Mr Lenville requests Mr Johnson
not to neglect making an appointment, as he has invited
two or three professional friends to witness the ceremony,
and cannot disappoint them upon any account whatever.
“Portsmouth, Tuesday night.”
Indignant as he was at this impertinence,
there was something so exquisitely absurd in such
a cartel of defiance, that Nicholas was obliged to
bite his lip and read the note over two or three times
before he could muster sufficient gravity and sternness
to address the hostile messenger, who had not taken
his eyes from the ceiling, nor altered the expression
of his face in the slightest degree.
‘Do you know the contents of
this note, sir?’ he asked, at length.
‘Yes,’ rejoined Mr Folair,
looking round for an instant, and immediately carrying
his eyes back again to the ceiling.
‘And how dare you bring it here,
sir?’ asked Nicholas, tearing it into very little
pieces, and jerking it in a shower towards the messenger.
‘Had you no fear of being kicked downstairs,
sir?’
Mr Folair turned his head—now
ornamented with several fragments of the note—towards
Nicholas, and with the same imperturbable dignity,
briefly replied ‘No.’
‘Then,’ said Nicholas,
taking up the tall hat and tossing it towards the
door, ’you had better follow that article of
your dress, sir, or you may find yourself very disagreeably
deceived, and that within a dozen seconds.’
‘I say, Johnson,’ remonstrated
Mr Folair, suddenly losing all his dignity, ’none
of that, you know. No tricks with a gentleman’s
wardrobe.’
‘Leave the room,’ returned
Nicholas. ’How could you presume to come
here on such an errand, you scoundrel?’
‘Pooh! pooh!’ said Mr
Folair, unwinding his comforter, and gradually getting
himself out of it. ‘There—that’s
enough.’
‘Enough!’ cried Nicholas,
advancing towards him. ’Take yourself
off, sir.’
‘Pooh! pooh! I tell you,’
returned Mr Folair, waving his hand in deprecation
of any further wrath; ’I wasn’t in earnest.
I only brought it in joke.’
‘You had better be careful how
you indulge in such jokes again,’ said Nicholas,
’or you may find an allusion to pulling noses
rather a dangerous reminder for the subject of your
facetiousness. Was it written in joke, too,
pray?’
‘No, no, that’s the best
of it,’ returned the actor; ’right down
earnest—honour bright.’
Nicholas could not repress a smile
at the odd figure before him, which, at all times
more calculated to provoke mirth than anger, was especially
so at that moment, when with one knee upon the ground,
Mr Folair twirled his old hat round upon his hand,
and affected the extremest agony lest any of the nap
should have been knocked off—an ornament
which it is almost superfluous to say, it had not boasted
for many months.
‘Come, sir,’ said Nicholas,
laughing in spite of himself. ’Have the
goodness to explain.’
‘Why, I’ll tell you how
it is,’ said Mr Folair, sitting himself down
in a chair with great coolness. ’Since
you came here Lenville has done nothing but second
business, and, instead of having a reception every
night as he used to have, they have let him come on
as if he was nobody.’
‘What do you mean by a reception?’ asked
Nicholas.
‘Jupiter!’ exclaimed Mr
Folair, ’what an unsophisticated shepherd you
are, Johnson! Why, applause from the house when
you first come on. So he has gone on night after
night, never getting a hand, and you getting a couple
of rounds at least, and sometimes three, till at length
he got quite desperate, and had half a mind last night
to play Tybalt with a real sword, and pink you—not
dangerously, but just enough to lay you up for a month
or two.’
‘Very considerate,’ remarked Nicholas.
’Yes, I think it was under the
circumstances; his professional reputation being at
stake,’ said Mr Folair, quite seriously.
’But his heart failed him, and he cast about
for some other way of annoying you, and making himself
popular at the same time—for that’s
the point. Notoriety, notoriety, is the thing.
Bless you, if he had pinked you,’ said Mr Folair,
stopping to make a calculation in his mind, ’it
would have been worth—ah, it would have
been worth eight or ten shillings a week to him.
All the town would have come to see the actor who
nearly killed a man by mistake; I shouldn’t
wonder if it had got him an engagement in London.
However, he was obliged to try some other mode of getting
popular, and this one occurred to him. It’s
clever idea, really. If you had shown the white
feather, and let him pull your nose, he’d have
got it into the paper; if you had sworn the peace
against him, it would have been in the paper too,
and he’d have been just as much talked about
as you—don’t you see?’
‘Oh, certainly,’ rejoined
Nicholas; ’but suppose I were to turn the tables,
and pull his nose, what then? Would that
make his fortune?’
‘Why, I don’t think it
would,’ replied Mr Folair, scratching his head,
’because there wouldn’t be any romance
about it, and he wouldn’t be favourably known.
To tell you the truth though, he didn’t calculate
much upon that, for you’re always so mild-spoken,
and are so popular among the women, that we didn’t
suspect you of showing fight. If you did, however,
he has a way of getting out of it easily, depend upon
that.’
‘Has he?’ rejoined Nicholas.
’We will try, tomorrow morning. In the
meantime, you can give whatever account of our interview
you like best. Good-night.’
As Mr Folair was pretty well known
among his fellow-actors for a man who delighted in
mischief, and was by no means scrupulous, Nicholas
had not much doubt but that he had secretly prompted
the tragedian in the course he had taken, and, moreover,
that he would have carried his mission with a very
high hand if he had not been disconcerted by the very
unexpected demonstrations with which it had been received.
It was not worth his while to be serious with him,
however, so he dismissed the pantomimist, with a gentle
hint that if he offended again it would be under the
penalty of a broken head; and Mr Folair, taking the
caution in exceedingly good part, walked away to confer
with his principal, and give such an account of his
proceedings as he might think best calculated to carry
on the joke.
He had no doubt reported that Nicholas
was in a state of extreme bodily fear; for when that
young gentleman walked with much deliberation down
to the theatre next morning at the usual hour, he
found all the company assembled in evident expectation,
and Mr Lenville, with his severest stage face, sitting
majestically on a table, whistling defiance.
Now the ladies were on the side of
Nicholas, and the gentlemen (being jealous) were on
the side of the disappointed tragedian; so that the
latter formed a little group about the redoubtable
Mr Lenville, and the former looked on at a little
distance in some trepidation and anxiety. On
Nicholas stopping to salute them, Mr Lenville laughed
a scornful laugh, and made some general remark touching
the natural history of puppies.
‘Oh!’ said Nicholas, looking
quietly round, ‘are you there?’
‘Slave!’ returned Mr Lenville,
flourishing his right arm, and approaching Nicholas
with a theatrical stride. But somehow he appeared
just at that moment a little startled, as if Nicholas
did not look quite so frightened as he had expected,
and came all at once to an awkward halt, at which
the assembled ladies burst into a shrill laugh.
‘Object of my scorn and hatred!’
said Mr Lenville, ’I hold ye in contempt.’
Nicholas laughed in very unexpected
enjoyment of this performance; and the ladies, by
way of encouragement, laughed louder than before;
whereat Mr Lenville assumed his bitterest smile, and
expressed his opinion that they were ‘minions’.
‘But they shall not protect
ye!’ said the tragedian, taking an upward look
at Nicholas, beginning at his boots and ending at the
crown of his head, and then a downward one, beginning
at the crown of his head, and ending at his boots—which
two looks, as everybody knows, express defiance on
the stage. ’They shall not protect ye—
boy!’
Thus speaking, Mr Lenville folded
his arms, and treated Nicholas to that expression
of face with which, in melodramatic performances, he
was in the habit of regarding the tyrannical kings
when they said, ‘Away with him to the deepest
dungeon beneath the castle moat;’ and which,
accompanied with a little jingling of fetters, had
been known to produce great effects in its time.
Whether it was the absence of the
fetters or not, it made no very deep impression on
Mr Lenville’s adversary, however, but rather
seemed to increase the good-humour expressed in his
countenance; in which stage of the contest, one or
two gentlemen, who had come out expressly to witness
the pulling of Nicholas’s nose, grew impatient,
murmuring that if it were to be done at all it had
better be done at once, and that if Mr Lenville didn’t
mean to do it he had better say so, and not keep them
waiting there. Thus urged, the tragedian adjusted
the cuff of his right coat sleeve for the performance
of the operation, and walked in a very stately manner
up to Nicholas, who suffered him to approach to within
the requisite distance, and then, without the smallest
discomposure, knocked him down.
Before the discomfited tragedian could
raise his head from the boards, Mrs Lenville (who,
as has been before hinted, was in an interesting state)
rushed from the rear rank of ladies, and uttering
a piercing scream threw herself upon the body.
‘Do you see this, monster?
Do you see this?’ cried Mr Lenville, sitting
up, and pointing to his prostrate lady, who was holding
him very tight round the waist.
‘Come,’ said Nicholas,
nodding his head, ’apologise for the insolent
note you wrote to me last night, and waste no more
time in talking.’
‘Never!’ cried Mr Lenville.
‘Yes—yes—yes!’
screamed his wife. ’For my sake—for
mine, Lenville—forego all idle forms, unless
you would see me a blighted corse at your feet.’
‘This is affecting!’ said
Mr Lenville, looking round him, and drawing the back
of his hand across his eyes. ’The ties
of nature are strong. The weak husband and the
father—the father that is yet to be—relents.
I apologise.’
‘Humbly and submissively?’ said Nicholas.
‘Humbly and submissively,’
returned the tragedian, scowling upwards. ‘But
only to save her,—for a time will come—’
‘Very good,’ said Nicholas;
’I hope Mrs Lenville may have a good one; and
when it does come, and you are a father, you shall
retract it if you have the courage. There.
Be careful, sir, to what lengths your jealousy carries
you another time; and be careful, also, before you
venture too far, to ascertain your rival’s temper.’
With this parting advice Nicholas picked up Mr Lenville’s
ash stick which had flown out of his hand, and breaking
it in half, threw him the pieces and withdrew, bowing
slightly to the spectators as he walked out.
The profoundest deference was paid
to Nicholas that night, and the people who had been
most anxious to have his nose pulled in the morning,
embraced occasions of taking him aside, and telling
him with great feeling, how very friendly they took
it that he should have treated that Lenville so properly,
who was a most unbearable fellow, and on whom they
had all, by a remarkable coincidence, at one time
or other contemplated the infliction of condign punishment,
which they had only been restrained from administering
by considerations of mercy; indeed, to judge from
the invariable termination of all these stories, there
never was such a charitable and kind-hearted set of
people as the male members of Mr Crummles’s
company.
Nicholas bore his triumph, as he had
his success in the little world of the theatre, with
the utmost moderation and good humour. The crestfallen
Mr Lenville made an expiring effort to obtain revenge
by sending a boy into the gallery to hiss, but he
fell a sacrifice to popular indignation, and was promptly
turned out without having his money back.
‘Well, Smike,’ said Nicholas
when the first piece was over, and he had almost finished
dressing to go home, ‘is there any letter yet?’
‘Yes,’ replied Smike,
‘I got this one from the post-office.’
‘From Newman Noggs,’ said
Nicholas, casting his eye upon the cramped direction;
’it’s no easy matter to make his writing
out. Let me see—let me see.’
By dint of poring over the letter
for half an hour, he contrived to make himself master
of the contents, which were certainly not of a nature
to set his mind at ease. Newman took upon himself
to send back the ten pounds, observing that he had
ascertained that neither Mrs Nickleby nor Kate was
in actual want of money at the moment, and that a
time might shortly come when Nicholas might want it
more. He entreated him not to be alarmed at
what he was about to say;—there was no
bad news—they were in good health—but
he thought circumstances might occur, or were occurring,
which would render it absolutely necessary that Kate
should have her brother’s protection, and if
so, Newman said, he would write to him to that effect,
either by the next post or the next but one.
Nicholas read this passage very often,
and the more he thought of it the more he began to
fear some treachery upon the part of Ralph. Once
or twice he felt tempted to repair to London at all
hazards without an hour’s delay, but a little
reflection assured him that if such a step were necessary,
Newman would have spoken out and told him so at once.
’At all events I should prepare
them here for the possibility of my going away suddenly,’
said Nicholas; ’I should lose no time in doing
that.’ As the thought occurred to him,
he took up his hat and hurried to the green-room.
‘Well, Mr Johnson,’ said
Mrs Crummles, who was seated there in full regal costume,
with the phenomenon as the Maiden in her maternal
arms, ‘next week for Ryde, then for Winchester,
then for—’
‘I have some reason to fear,’
interrupted Nicholas, ’that before you leave
here my career with you will have closed.’
‘Closed!’ cried Mrs Crummles,
raising her hands in astonishment.
‘Closed!’ cried Miss Snevellicci,
trembling so much in her tights that she actually
laid her hand upon the shoulder of the manageress
for support.
‘Why he don’t mean to
say he’s going!’ exclaimed Mrs Grudden,
making her way towards Mrs Crummles. ‘Hoity
toity! Nonsense.’
The phenomenon, being of an affectionate
nature and moreover excitable, raised a loud cry,
and Miss Belvawney and Miss Bravassa actually shed
tears. Even the male performers stopped in their
conversation, and echoed the word ‘Going!’
although some among them (and they had been the loudest
in their congratulations that day) winked at each
other as though they would not be sorry to lose such
a favoured rival; an opinion, indeed, which the honest
Mr Folair, who was ready dressed for the savage, openly
stated in so many words to a demon with whom he was
sharing a pot of porter.
Nicholas briefly said that he feared
it would be so, although he could not yet speak with
any degree of certainty; and getting away as soon
as he could, went home to con Newman’s letter
once more, and speculate upon it afresh.
How trifling all that had been occupying
his time and thoughts for many weeks seemed to him
during that sleepless night, and how constantly and
incessantly present to his imagination was the one
idea that Kate in the midst of some great trouble and
distress might even then be looking—and
vainly too—for him!