Festivities are held in honour of
Nicholas, who suddenly withdraws himself from the
Society of Mr Vincent Crummles and his Theatrical
Companions
Mr Vincent Crummles was no sooner
acquainted with the public announcement which Nicholas
had made relative to the probability of his shortly
ceasing to be a member of the company, than he evinced
many tokens of grief and consternation; and, in the
extremity of his despair, even held out certain vague
promises of a speedy improvement not only in the amount
of his regular salary, but also in the contingent
emoluments appertaining to his authorship. Finding
Nicholas bent upon quitting the society—for
he had now determined that, even if no further tidings
came from Newman, he would, at all hazards, ease his
mind by repairing to London and ascertaining the exact
position of his sister—Mr Crummles was fain
to content himself by calculating the chances of his
coming back again, and taking prompt and energetic
measures to make the most of him before he went away.
‘Let me see,’ said Mr
Crummles, taking off his outlaw’s wig, the better
to arrive at a cool-headed view of the whole case.
’Let me see. This is Wednesday night.
We’ll have posters out the first thing in the
morning, announcing positively your last appearance
for tomorrow.’
‘But perhaps it may not be my
last appearance, you know,’ said Nicholas.
’Unless I am summoned away, I should be sorry
to inconvenience you by leaving before the end of
the week.’
‘So much the better,’
returned Mr Crummles. ’We can have positively
your last appearance, on Thursday—re-engagement
for one night more, on Friday—and, yielding
to the wishes of numerous influential patrons, who
were disappointed in obtaining seats, on Saturday.
That ought to bring three very decent houses.’
‘Then I am to make three last
appearances, am I?’ inquired Nicholas, smiling.
‘Yes,’ rejoined the manager,
scratching his head with an air of some vexation;
’three is not enough, and it’s very bungling
and irregular not to have more, but if we can’t
help it we can’t, so there’s no use in
talking. A novelty would be very desirable.
You couldn’t sing a comic song on the pony’s
back, could you?’
‘No,’ replied Nicholas, ‘I couldn’t
indeed.’
‘It has drawn money before now,’
said Mr Crummles, with a look of disappointment.
’What do you think of a brilliant display of
fireworks?’
‘That it would be rather expensive,’
replied Nicholas, drily.
‘Eighteen-pence would do it,’
said Mr Crummles. ’You on the top of a
pair of steps with the phenomenon in an attitude; “Farewell!”
on a transparency behind; and nine people at the wings
with a squib in each hand—all the dozen
and a half going off at once—it would be
very grand—awful from the front, quite awful.’
As Nicholas appeared by no means impressed
with the solemnity of the proposed effect, but, on
the contrary, received the proposition in a most irreverent
manner, and laughed at it very heartily, Mr Crummles
abandoned the project in its birth, and gloomily observed
that they must make up the best bill they could with
combats and hornpipes, and so stick to the legitimate
drama.
For the purpose of carrying this object
into instant execution, the manager at once repaired
to a small dressing-room, adjacent, where Mrs Crummles
was then occupied in exchanging the habiliments of
a melodramatic empress for the ordinary attire of
matrons in the nineteenth century. And with
the assistance of this lady, and the accomplished
Mrs Grudden (who had quite a genius for making out
bills, being a great hand at throwing in the notes
of admiration, and knowing from long experience exactly
where the largest capitals ought to go), he seriously
applied himself to the composition of the poster.
‘Heigho!’ sighed Nicholas,
as he threw himself back in the prompter’s chair,
after telegraphing the needful directions to Smike,
who had been playing a meagre tailor in the interlude,
with one skirt to his coat, and a little pocket-handkerchief
with a large hole in it, and a woollen nightcap, and
a red nose, and other distinctive marks peculiar to
tailors on the stage. ’Heigho! I wish
all this were over.’
‘Over, Mr Johnson!’ repeated
a female voice behind him, in a kind of plaintive
surprise.
‘It was an ungallant speech,
certainly,’ said Nicholas, looking up to see
who the speaker was, and recognising Miss Snevellicci.
’I would not have made it if I had known you
had been within hearing.’
‘What a dear that Mr Digby is!’
said Miss Snevellicci, as the tailor went off on the
opposite side, at the end of the piece, with great
applause. (Smike’s theatrical name was Digby.)
‘I’ll tell him presently,
for his gratification, that you said so,’ returned
Nicholas.
‘Oh you naughty thing!’
rejoined Miss Snevellicci. ’I don’t
know though, that I should much mind his knowing
my opinion of him; with some other people, indeed,
it might be—’ Here Miss Snevellicci
stopped, as though waiting to be questioned, but no
questioning came, for Nicholas was thinking about
more serious matters.
‘How kind it is of you,’
resumed Miss Snevellicci, after a short silence, ’to
sit waiting here for him night after night, night after
night, no matter how tired you are; and taking so much
pains with him, and doing it all with as much delight
and readiness as if you were coining gold by it!’
’He well deserves all the kindness
I can show him, and a great deal more,’ said
Nicholas. ’He is the most grateful, single-hearted,
affectionate creature that ever breathed.’
‘So odd, too,’ remarked Miss Snevellicci,
‘isn’t he?’
‘God help him, and those who
have made him so; he is indeed,’ rejoined Nicholas,
shaking his head.
‘He is such a devilish close
chap,’ said Mr Folair, who had come up a little
before, and now joined in the conversation. ’Nobody
can ever get anything out of him.’
‘What should they get out
of him?’ asked Nicholas, turning round with
some abruptness.
‘Zooks! what a fire-eater you
are, Johnson!’ returned Mr Folair, pulling up
the heel of his dancing shoe. ’I’m
only talking of the natural curiosity of the people
here, to know what he has been about all his life.’
’Poor fellow! it is pretty plain,
I should think, that he has not the intellect to have
been about anything of much importance to them or
anybody else,’ said Nicholas.
‘Ay,’ rejoined the actor,
contemplating the effect of his face in a lamp reflector,
‘but that involves the whole question, you know.’
‘What question?’ asked Nicholas.
’Why, the who he is and what
he is, and how you two, who are so different, came
to be such close companions,’ replied Mr Folair,
delighted with the opportunity of saying something
disagreeable. ‘That’s in everybody’s
mouth.’
‘The “everybody”
of the theatre, I suppose?’ said Nicholas, contemptuously.
‘In it and out of it too,’
replied the actor. ’Why, you know, Lenville
says—’
‘I thought I had silenced him
effectually,’ interrupted Nicholas, reddening.
‘Perhaps you have,’ rejoined
the immovable Mr Folair; ’if you have, he said
this before he was silenced: Lenville says that
you’re a regular stick of an actor, and that
it’s only the mystery about you that has caused
you to go down with the people here, and that Crummles
keeps it up for his own sake; though Lenville says
he don’t believe there’s anything at all
in it, except your having got into a scrape and run
away from somewhere, for doing something or other.’
‘Oh!’ said Nicholas, forcing a smile.
‘That’s a part of what
he says,’ added Mr Folair. ’I mention
it as the friend of both parties, and in strict confidence.
I don’t agree with him, you know. He
says he takes Digby to be more knave than fool; and
old Fluggers, who does the heavy business you know,
he says that when he delivered messages at Covent
Garden the season before last, there used to be a
pickpocket hovering about the coach-stand who had
exactly the face of Digby; though, as he very properly
says, Digby may not be the same, but only his brother,
or some near relation.’
‘Oh!’ cried Nicholas again.
‘Yes,’ said Mr Folair,
with undisturbed calmness, ’that’s what
they say. I thought I’d tell you, because
really you ought to know. Oh! here’s this
blessed phenomenon at last. Ugh, you little imposition,
I should like to—quite ready, my darling,—humbug—Ring
up, Mrs G., and let the favourite wake ’em.’
Uttering in a loud voice such of the
latter allusions as were complimentary to the unconscious
phenomenon, and giving the rest in a confidential
‘aside’ to Nicholas, Mr Folair followed
the ascent of the curtain with his eyes, regarded
with a sneer the reception of Miss Crummles as the
Maiden, and, falling back a step or two to advance
with the better effect, uttered a preliminary howl,
and ‘went on’ chattering his teeth and
brandishing his tin tomahawk as the Indian Savage.
’So these are some of the stories
they invent about us, and bandy from mouth to mouth!’
thought Nicholas. ’If a man would commit
an inexpiable offence against any society, large or
small, let him be successful. They will forgive
him any crime but that.’
’You surely don’t mind
what that malicious creature says, Mr Johnson?’
observed Miss Snevellicci in her most winning tones.
‘Not I,’ replied Nicholas.
’If I were going to remain here, I might think
it worth my while to embroil myself. As it is,
let them talk till they are hoarse. But here,’
added Nicholas, as Smike approached, ’here comes
the subject of a portion of their good-nature, so
let he and I say good night together.’
‘No, I will not let either of
you say anything of the kind,’ returned Miss
Snevellicci. ’You must come home and see
mama, who only came to Portsmouth today, and is dying
to behold you. Led, my dear, persuade Mr Johnson.’
‘Oh, I’m sure,’
returned Miss Ledrook, with considerable vivacity,
‘if you can’t persuade him—’
Miss Ledrook said no more, but intimated, by a dexterous
playfulness, that if Miss Snevellicci couldn’t
persuade him, nobody could.
’Mr and Mrs Lillyvick have taken
lodgings in our house, and share our sitting-room
for the present,’ said Miss Snevellicci.
’Won’t that induce you?’
‘Surely,’ returned Nicholas,
’I can require no possible inducement beyond
your invitation.’
‘Oh no! I dare say,’
rejoined Miss Snevellicci. And Miss Ledrook
said, ‘Upon my word!’ Upon which Miss
Snevellicci said that Miss Ledrook was a giddy thing;
and Miss Ledrook said that Miss Snevellicci needn’t
colour up quite so much; and Miss Snevellicci beat
Miss Ledrook, and Miss Ledrook beat Miss Snevellicci.
‘Come,’ said Miss Ledrook,
’it’s high time we were there, or we shall
have poor Mrs Snevellicci thinking that you have run
away with her daughter, Mr Johnson; and then we should
have a pretty to-do.’
‘My dear Led,’ remonstrated
Miss Snevellicci, ‘how you do talk!’
Miss Ledrook made no answer, but taking
Smike’s arm in hers, left her friend and Nicholas
to follow at their pleasure; which it pleased them,
or rather pleased Nicholas, who had no great fancy
for a TETE-A-TETE under the circumstances, to do at
once.
There were not wanting matters of
conversation when they reached the street, for it
turned out that Miss Snevellicci had a small basket
to carry home, and Miss Ledrook a small bandbox, both
containing such minor articles of theatrical costume
as the lady performers usually carried to and fro
every evening. Nicholas would insist upon carrying
the basket, and Miss Snevellicci would insist upon
carrying it herself, which gave rise to a struggle,
in which Nicholas captured the basket and the bandbox
likewise. Then Nicholas said, that he wondered
what could possibly be inside the basket, and attempted
to peep in, whereat Miss Snevellicci screamed, and
declared that if she thought he had seen, she was sure
she should faint away. This declaration was
followed by a similar attempt on the bandbox, and
similar demonstrations on the part of Miss Ledrook,
and then both ladies vowed that they wouldn’t
move a step further until Nicholas had promised that
he wouldn’t offer to peep again. At last
Nicholas pledged himself to betray no further curiosity,
and they walked on: both ladies giggling very
much, and declaring that they never had seen such
a wicked creature in all their born days—never.
Lightening the way with such pleasantry
as this, they arrived at the tailor’s house
in no time; and here they made quite a little party,
there being present besides Mr Lillyvick and Mrs Lillyvick,
not only Miss Snevellicci’s mama, but her papa
also. And an uncommonly fine man Miss Snevellicci’s
papa was, with a hook nose, and a white forehead,
and curly black hair, and high cheek bones, and altogether
quite a handsome face, only a little pimply as though
with drinking. He had a very broad chest had
Miss Snevellicci’s papa, and he wore a threadbare
blue dress-coat buttoned with gilt buttons tight across
it; and he no sooner saw Nicholas come into the room,
than he whipped the two forefingers of his right hand
in between the two centre buttons, and sticking his
other arm gracefully a-kimbo seemed to say, ’Now,
here I am, my buck, and what have you got to say to
me?’
Such was, and in such an attitude
sat Miss Snevellicci’s papa, who had been in
the profession ever since he had first played the ten-year-old
imps in the Christmas pantomimes; who could sing a
little, dance a little, fence a little, act a little,
and do everything a little, but not much; who had
been sometimes in the ballet, and sometimes in the
chorus, at every theatre in London; who was always
selected in virtue of his figure to play the military
visitors and the speechless noblemen; who always wore
a smart dress, and came on arm-in-arm with a smart
lady in short petticoats,—and always did
it too with such an air that people in the pit had
been several times known to cry out ‘Bravo!’
under the impression that he was somebody. Such
was Miss Snevellicci’s papa, upon whom some envious
persons cast the imputation that he occasionally beat
Miss Snevellicci’s mama, who was still a dancer,
with a neat little figure and some remains of good
looks; and who now sat, as she danced,—being
rather too old for the full glare of the foot-lights,—in
the background.
To these good people Nicholas was
presented with much formality. The introduction
being completed, Miss Snevellicci’s papa (who
was scented with rum-and-water) said that he was delighted
to make the acquaintance of a gentleman so highly
talented; and furthermore remarked, that there hadn’t
been such a hit made—no, not since the
first appearance of his friend Mr Glavormelly, at the
Coburg.
‘You have seen him, sir?’
said Miss Snevellicci’s papa.
‘No, really I never did,’ replied Nicholas.
‘You never saw my friend Glavormelly,
sir!’ said Miss Snevellicci’s papa.
‘Then you have never seen acting yet.
If he had lived—’
‘Oh, he is dead, is he?’ interrupted Nicholas.
‘He is,’ said Mr Snevellicci,
’but he isn’t in Westminster Abbey, more’s
the shame. He was a—. Well, no matter.
He is gone to that bourne from whence no traveller
returns. I hope he is appreciated there.’
So saying Miss Snevellicci’s
papa rubbed the tip of his nose with a very yellow
silk handkerchief, and gave the company to understand
that these recollections overcame him.
‘Well, Mr Lillyvick,’
said Nicholas, ‘and how are you?’
‘Quite well, sir,’ replied
the collector. ’There is nothing like
the married state, sir, depend upon it.’
‘Indeed!’ said Nicholas, laughing.
‘Ah! nothing like it, sir,’
replied Mr Lillyvick solemnly. ’How do
you think,’ whispered the collector, drawing
him aside, ’how do you think she looks tonight?’
‘As handsome as ever,’
replied Nicholas, glancing at the late Miss Petowker.
‘Why, there’s air about
her, sir,’ whispered the collector, ’that
I never saw in anybody. Look at her, now she
moves to put the kettle on. There! Isn’t
it fascination, sir?’
‘You’re a lucky man,’ said Nicholas.
‘Ha, ha, ha!’ rejoined
the collector. ’No. Do you think
I am though, eh? Perhaps I may be, perhaps I
may be. I say, I couldn’t have done much
better if I had been a young man, could I? You
couldn’t have done much better yourself, could
you—eh—could you?’ With
such inquires, and many more such, Mr Lillyvick jerked
his elbow into Nicholas’s side, and chuckled
till his face became quite purple in the attempt to
keep down his satisfaction.
By this time the cloth had been laid
under the joint superintendence of all the ladies,
upon two tables put together, one being high and narrow,
and the other low and broad. There were oysters
at the top, sausages at the bottom, a pair of snuffers
in the centre, and baked potatoes wherever it was
most convenient to put them. Two additional
chairs were brought in from the bedroom: Miss
Snevellicci sat at the head of the table, and Mr Lillyvick
at the foot; and Nicholas had not only the honour
of sitting next Miss Snevellicci, but of having Miss
Snevellicci’s mama on his right hand, and Miss
Snevellicci’s papa over the way. In short,
he was the hero of the feast; and when the table was
cleared and something warm introduced, Miss Snevellicci’s
papa got up and proposed his health in a speech containing
such affecting allusions to his coming departure, that
Miss Snevellicci wept, and was compelled to retire
into the bedroom.
‘Hush! Don’t take
any notice of it,’ said Miss Ledrook, peeping
in from the bedroom. ’Say, when she comes
back, that she exerts herself too much.’
Miss Ledrook eked out this speech
with so many mysterious nods and frowns before she
shut the door again, that a profound silence came
upon all the company, during which Miss Snevellicci’s
papa looked very big indeed—several sizes
larger than life—at everybody in turn,
but particularly at Nicholas, and kept on perpetually
emptying his tumbler and filling it again, until the
ladies returned in a cluster, with Miss Snevellicci
among them.
‘You needn’t alarm yourself
a bit, Mr Snevellicci,’ said Mrs Lillyvick.
’She is only a little weak and nervous; she
has been so ever since the morning.’
‘Oh,’ said Mr Snevellicci, ‘that’s
all, is it?’
‘Oh yes, that’s all.
Don’t make a fuss about it,’ cried all
the ladies together.
Now this was not exactly the kind
of reply suited to Mr Snevellicci’s importance
as a man and a father, so he picked out the unfortunate
Mrs Snevellicci, and asked her what the devil she meant
by talking to him in that way.
‘Dear me, my dear!’ said Mrs Snevellicci.
‘Don’t call me your dear,
ma’am,’ said Mr Snevellicci, ’if
you please.’
‘Pray, pa, don’t,’ interposed Miss
Snevellicci.
‘Don’t what, my child?’
‘Talk in that way.’
‘Why not?’ said Mr Snevellicci.
’I hope you don’t suppose there’s
anybody here who is to prevent my talking as I like?’
‘Nobody wants to, pa,’ rejoined his daughter.
‘Nobody would if they did want
to,’ said Mr Snevellicci. ’I am not
ashamed of myself, Snevellicci is my name; I’m
to be found in Broad Court, Bow Street, when I’m
in town. If I’m not at home, let any man
ask for me at the stage-door. Damme, they know
me at the stage-door I suppose. Most men have
seen my portrait at the cigar shop round the corner.
I’ve been mentioned in the newspapers before
now, haven’t I? Talk! I’ll
tell you what; if I found out that any man had been
tampering with the affections of my daughter, I wouldn’t
talk. I’d astonish him without talking;
that’s my way.’
So saying, Mr Snevellicci struck the
palm of his left hand three smart blows with his clenched
fist; pulled a phantom nose with his right thumb and
forefinger, and swallowed another glassful at a draught.
‘That’s my way,’ repeated Mr Snevellicci.
Most public characters have their
failings; and the truth is that Mr Snevellicci was
a little addicted to drinking; or, if the whole truth
must be told, that he was scarcely ever sober.
He knew in his cups three distinct stages of intoxication,—the
dignified—the quarrelsome—the
amorous. When professionally engaged he never
got beyond the dignified; in private circles he went
through all three, passing from one to another with
a rapidity of transition often rather perplexing to
those who had not the honour of his acquaintance.
Thus Mr Snevellicci had no sooner
swallowed another glassful than he smiled upon all
present in happy forgetfulness of having exhibited
symptoms of pugnacity, and proposed ’The ladies!
Bless their hearts!’ in a most vivacious manner.
’I love ’em,’ said
Mr Snevellicci, looking round the table, ’I love
‘em, every one.’
‘Not every one,’ reasoned Mr Lillyvick,
mildly.
‘Yes, every one,’ repeated Mr Snevellicci.
‘That would include the married
ladies, you know,’ said Mr Lillyvick.
‘I love them too, sir,’ said Mr Snevellicci.
The collector looked into the surrounding
faces with an aspect of grave astonishment, seeming
to say, ‘This is a nice man!’ and appeared
a little surprised that Mrs Lillyvick’s manner
yielded no evidences of horror and indignation.
‘One good turn deserves another,’
said Mr Snevellicci. ’I love them and
they love me.’ And as if this avowal were
not made in sufficient disregard and defiance of all
moral obligations, what did Mr Snevellicci do?
He winked—winked openly and undisguisedly;
winked with his right eye—upon Henrietta
Lillyvick!
The collector fell back in his chair
in the intensity of his astonishment. If anybody
had winked at her as Henrietta Petowker, it would
have been indecorous in the last degree; but as Mrs
Lillyvick! While he thought of it in a cold perspiration,
and wondered whether it was possible that he could
be dreaming, Mr Snevellicci repeated the wink, and
drinking to Mrs Lillyvick in dumb show, actually blew
her a kiss! Mr Lillyvick left his chair, walked
straight up to the other end of the table, and fell
upon him— literally fell upon him—instantaneously.
Mr Lillyvick was no light weight, and consequently
when he fell upon Mr Snevellicci, Mr Snevellicci fell
under the table. Mr Lillyvick followed him, and
the ladies screamed.
‘What is the matter with the
men! Are they mad?’ cried Nicholas, diving
under the table, dragging up the collector by main
force, and thrusting him, all doubled up, into a chair,
as if he had been a stuffed figure. ’What
do you mean to do? What do you want to do?
What is the matter with you?’
While Nicholas raised up the collector,
Smike had performed the same office for Mr Snevellicci,
who now regarded his late adversary in tipsy amazement.
‘Look here, sir,’ replied
Mr Lillyvick, pointing to his astonished wife, ’here
is purity and elegance combined, whose feelings have
been outraged—violated, sir!’
‘Lor, what nonsense he talks!’
exclaimed Mrs Lillyvick in answer to the inquiring
look of Nicholas. ‘Nobody has said anything
to me.’
‘Said, Henrietta!’ cried
the collector. ‘Didn’t I see him—’
Mr Lillyvick couldn’t bring himself to utter
the word, but he counterfeited the motion of the eye.
‘Well!’ cried Mrs Lillyvick.
’Do you suppose nobody is ever to look at me?
A pretty thing to be married indeed, if that was law!’
‘You didn’t mind it?’ cried the
collector.
‘Mind it!’ repeated Mrs
Lillyvick contemptuously. ’You ought to
go down on your knees and beg everybody’s pardon,
that you ought.’
‘Pardon, my dear?’ said the dismayed collector.
‘Yes, and mine first,’
replied Mrs Lillyvick. ’Do you suppose
I ain’t the best judge of what’s proper
and what’s improper?’
‘To be sure,’ cried all
the ladies. ’Do you suppose we shouldn’t
be the first to speak, if there was anything that
ought to be taken notice of?’
‘Do you suppose they don’t
know, sir?’ said Miss Snevellicci’s papa,
pulling up his collar, and muttering something about
a punching of heads, and being only withheld by considerations
of age. With which Miss Snevellicci’s
papa looked steadily and sternly at Mr Lillyvick for
some seconds, and then rising deliberately from his
chair, kissed the ladies all round, beginning with
Mrs Lillyvick.
The unhappy collector looked piteously
at his wife, as if to see whether there was any one
trait of Miss Petowker left in Mrs Lillyvick, and
finding too surely that there was not, begged pardon
of all the company with great humility, and sat down
such a crest-fallen, dispirited, disenchanted man,
that despite all his selfishness and dotage, he was
quite an object of compassion.
Miss Snevellicci’s papa being
greatly exalted by this triumph, and incontestable
proof of his popularity with the fair sex, quickly
grew convivial, not to say uproarious; volunteering
more than one song of no inconsiderable length, and
regaling the social circle between-whiles with recollections
of divers splendid women who had been supposed to
entertain a passion for himself, several of whom he
toasted by name, taking occasion to remark at the same
time that if he had been a little more alive to his
own interest, he might have been rolling at that moment
in his chariot-and-four. These reminiscences
appeared to awaken no very torturing pangs in the
breast of Mrs Snevellicci, who was sufficiently occupied
in descanting to Nicholas upon the manifold accomplishments
and merits of her daughter. Nor was the young
lady herself at all behind-hand in displaying her
choicest allurements; but these, heightened as they
were by the artifices of Miss Ledrook, had no effect
whatever in increasing the attentions of Nicholas,
who, with the precedent of Miss Squeers still fresh
in his memory, steadily resisted every fascination,
and placed so strict a guard upon his behaviour that
when he had taken his leave the ladies were unanimous
in pronouncing him quite a monster of insensibility.
Next day the posters appeared in due
course, and the public were informed, in all the colours
of the rainbow, and in letters afflicted with every
possible variation of spinal deformity, how that Mr
Johnson would have the honour of making his last appearance
that evening, and how that an early application for
places was requested, in consequence of the extraordinary
overflow attendant on his performances,—it
being a remarkable fact in theatrical history, but
one long since established beyond dispute, that it
is a hopeless endeavour to attract people to a theatre
unless they can be first brought to believe that they
will never get into it.
Nicholas was somewhat at a loss, on
entering the theatre at night, to account for the
unusual perturbation and excitement visible in the
countenances of all the company, but he was not long
in doubt as to the cause, for before he could make
any inquiry respecting it Mr Crummles approached,
and in an agitated tone of voice, informed him that
there was a London manager in the boxes.
‘It’s the phenomenon,
depend upon it, sir,’ said Crummles, dragging
Nicholas to the little hole in the curtain that he
might look through at the London manager. ’I
have not the smallest doubt it’s the fame of
the phenomenon—that’s the man; him
in the great-coat and no shirt-collar. She shall
have ten pound a week, Johnson; she shall not appear
on the London boards for a farthing less. They
shan’t engage her either, unless they engage
Mrs Crummles too— twenty pound a week for
the pair; or I’ll tell you what, I’ll throw
in myself and the two boys, and they shall have the
family for thirty. I can’t say fairer
than that. They must take us all, if none of
us will go without the others. That’s the
way some of the London people do, and it always answers.
Thirty pound a week—it’s too cheap,
Johnson. It’s dirt cheap.’
Nicholas replied, that it certainly
was; and Mr Vincent Crummles taking several huge pinches
of snuff to compose his feelings, hurried away to
tell Mrs Crummles that he had quite settled the only
terms that could be accepted, and had resolved not
to abate one single farthing.
When everybody was dressed and the
curtain went up, the excitement occasioned by the
presence of the London manager increased a thousand-fold.
Everybody happened to know that the London manager
had come down specially to witness his or her own performance,
and all were in a flutter of anxiety and expectation.
Some of those who were not on in the first scene,
hurried to the wings, and there stretched their necks
to have a peep at him; others stole up into the two
little private boxes over the stage-doors, and from
that position reconnoitred the London manager.
Once the London manager was seen to smile—he
smiled at the comic countryman’s pretending to
catch a blue-bottle, while Mrs Crummles was making
her greatest effect. ‘Very good, my fine
fellow,’ said Mr Crummles, shaking his fist
at the comic countryman when he came off, ’you
leave this company next Saturday night.’
In the same way, everybody who was
on the stage beheld no audience but one individual;
everybody played to the London manager. When
Mr Lenville in a sudden burst of passion called the
emperor a miscreant, and then biting his glove, said,
‘But I must dissemble,’ instead of looking
gloomily at the boards and so waiting for his cue,
as is proper in such cases, he kept his eye fixed upon
the London manager. When Miss Bravassa sang
her song at her lover, who according to custom stood
ready to shake hands with her between the verses,
they looked, not at each other, but at the London manager.
Mr Crummles died point blank at him; and when the two
guards came in to take the body off after a very hard
death, it was seen to open its eyes and glance at
the London manager. At length the London manager
was discovered to be asleep, and shortly after that
he woke up and went away, whereupon all the company
fell foul of the unhappy comic countryman, declaring
that his buffoonery was the sole cause; and Mr Crummles
said, that he had put up with it a long time, but
that he really couldn’t stand it any longer,
and therefore would feel obliged by his looking out
for another engagement.
All this was the occasion of much
amusement to Nicholas, whose only feeling upon the
subject was one of sincere satisfaction that the great
man went away before he appeared. He went through
his part in the two last pieces as briskly as he could,
and having been received with unbounded favour and
unprecedented applause—so said the bills
for next day, which had been printed an hour or two
before—he took Smike’s arm and walked
home to bed.
With the post next morning came a
letter from Newman Noggs, very inky, very short, very
dirty, very small, and very mysterious, urging Nicholas
to return to London instantly; not to lose an instant;
to be there that night if possible.
‘I will,’ said Nicholas.
’Heaven knows I have remained here for the
best, and sorely against my own will; but even now
I may have dallied too long. What can have happened?
Smike, my good fellow, here—take my purse.
Put our things together, and pay what little debts
we owe—quick, and we shall be in time for
the morning coach. I will only tell them that
we are going, and will return to you immediately.’
So saying, he took his hat, and hurrying
away to the lodgings of Mr Crummles, applied his hand
to the knocker with such hearty good-will, that he
awakened that gentleman, who was still in bed, and
caused Mr Bulph the pilot to take his morning’s
pipe very nearly out of his mouth in the extremity
of his surprise.
The door being opened, Nicholas ran
upstairs without any ceremony, and bursting into the
darkened sitting-room on the one-pair front, found
that the two Master Crummleses had sprung out of the
sofa-bedstead and were putting on their clothes with
great rapidity, under the impression that it was the
middle of the night, and the next house was on fire.
Before he could undeceive them, Mr
Crummles came down in a flannel gown and nightcap;
and to him Nicholas briefly explained that circumstances
had occurred which rendered it necessary for him to
repair to London immediately.
‘So goodbye,’ said Nicholas; ‘goodbye,
goodbye.’
He was half-way downstairs before
Mr Crummles had sufficiently recovered his surprise
to gasp out something about the posters.
‘I can’t help it,’
replied Nicholas. ’Set whatever I may have
earned this week against them, or if that will not
repay you, say at once what will. Quick, quick.’
‘We’ll cry quits about
that,’ returned Crummles. ’But can’t
we have one last night more?’
‘Not an hour—not
a minute,’ replied Nicholas, impatiently.
‘Won’t you stop to say
something to Mrs Crummles?’ asked the manager,
following him down to the door.
‘I couldn’t stop if it
were to prolong my life a score of years,’ rejoined
Nicholas. ’Here, take my hand, and with
it my hearty thanks.—Oh! that I should
have been fooling here!’
Accompanying these words with an impatient
stamp upon the ground, he tore himself from the manager’s
detaining grasp, and darting rapidly down the street
was out of sight in an instant.
‘Dear me, dear me,’ said
Mr Crummles, looking wistfully towards the point at
which he had just disappeared; ’if he only acted
like that, what a deal of money he’d draw!
He should have kept upon this circuit; he’d
have been very useful to me. But he don’t
know what’s good for him. He is an impetuous
youth. Young men are rash, very rash.’
Mr Crummles being in a moralising
mood, might possibly have moralised for some minutes
longer if he had not mechanically put his hand towards
his waistcoat pocket, where he was accustomed to keep
his snuff. The absence of any pocket at all in
the usual direction, suddenly recalled to his recollection
the fact that he had no waistcoat on; and this leading
him to a contemplation of the extreme scantiness of
his attire, he shut the door abruptly, and retired
upstairs with great precipitation.
Smike had made good speed while Nicholas
was absent, and with his help everything was soon
ready for their departure. They scarcely stopped
to take a morsel of breakfast, and in less than half
an hour arrived at the coach-office: quite out
of breath with the haste they had made to reach it
in time. There were yet a few minutes to spare,
so, having secured the places, Nicholas hurried into
a slopseller’s hard by, and bought Smike a great-coat.
It would have been rather large for a substantial
yeoman, but the shopman averring (and with considerable
truth) that it was a most uncommon fit, Nicholas would
have purchased it in his impatience if it had been
twice the size.
As they hurried up to the coach, which
was now in the open street and all ready for starting,
Nicholas was not a little astonished to find himself
suddenly clutched in a close and violent embrace, which
nearly took him off his legs; nor was his amazement
at all lessened by hearing the voice of Mr Crummles
exclaim, ’It is he—my friend, my
friend!’
‘Bless my heart,’ cried
Nicholas, struggling in the manager’s arms,
‘what are you about?’
The manager made no reply, but strained
him to his breast again, exclaiming as he did so,
‘Farewell, my noble, my lion-hearted boy!’
In fact, Mr Crummles, who could never
lose any opportunity for professional display, had
turned out for the express purpose of taking a public
farewell of Nicholas; and to render it the more imposing,
he was now, to that young gentleman’s most profound
annoyance, inflicting upon him a rapid succession of
stage embraces, which, as everybody knows, are performed
by the embracer’s laying his or her chin on
the shoulder of the object of affection, and looking
over it. This Mr Crummles did in the highest
style of melodrama, pouring forth at the same time
all the most dismal forms of farewell he could think
of, out of the stock pieces. Nor was this all,
for the elder Master Crummles was going through a similar
ceremony with Smike; while Master Percy Crummles, with
a very little second-hand camlet cloak, worn theatrically
over his left shoulder, stood by, in the attitude
of an attendant officer, waiting to convey the two
victims to the scaffold.
The lookers-on laughed very heartily,
and as it was as well to put a good face upon the
matter, Nicholas laughed too when he had succeeded
in disengaging himself; and rescuing the astonished
Smike, climbed up to the coach roof after him, and
kissed his hand in honour of the absent Mrs Crummles
as they rolled away.