Wherein Mr Ralph Nickleby is visited
by Persons with whom the Reader has been already made
acquainted
’What a demnition long time
you have kept me ringing at this confounded old cracked
tea-kettle of a bell, every tinkle of which is enough
to throw a strong man into blue convulsions, upon my
life and soul, oh demmit,’—said Mr
Mantalini to Newman Noggs, scraping his boots, as
he spoke, on Ralph Nickleby’s scraper.
‘I didn’t hear the bell
more than once,’ replied Newman.
‘Then you are most immensely
and outr-i-geously deaf,’ said Mr Mantalini,
‘as deaf as a demnition post.’
Mr Mantalini had got by this time
into the passage, and was making his way to the door
of Ralph’s office with very little ceremony,
when Newman interposed his body; and hinting that Mr
Nickleby was unwilling to be disturbed, inquired whether
the client’s business was of a pressing nature.
‘It is most demnebly particular,’
said Mr Mantalini. ’It is to melt some
scraps of dirty paper into bright, shining, chinking,
tinkling, demd mint sauce.’
Newman uttered a significant grunt,
and taking Mr Mantalini’s proffered card, limped
with it into his master’s office. As he
thrust his head in at the door, he saw that Ralph had
resumed the thoughtful posture into which he had fallen
after perusing his nephew’s letter, and that
he seemed to have been reading it again, as he once
more held it open in his hand. The glance was
but momentary, for Ralph, being disturbed, turned
to demand the cause of the interruption.
As Newman stated it, the cause himself
swaggered into the room, and grasping Ralph’s
horny hand with uncommon affection, vowed that he
had never seen him looking so well in all his life.
‘There is quite a bloom upon
your demd countenance,’ said Mr Mantalini, seating
himself unbidden, and arranging his hair and whiskers.
‘You look quite juvenile and jolly, demmit!’
‘We are alone,’ returned
Ralph, tartly. ‘What do you want with me?’
‘Good!’ cried Mr Mantalini,
displaying his teeth. ’What did I want!
Yes. Ha, ha! Very good. What
did I want. Ha, ha. Oh dem!’
‘What do you want, man?’ demanded
Ralph, sternly.
‘Demnition discount,’
returned Mr Mantalini, with a grin, and shaking his
head waggishly.
‘Money is scarce,’ said Ralph.
‘Demd scarce, or I shouldn’t want it,’
interrupted Mr Mantalini.
‘The times are bad, and one
scarcely knows whom to trust,’ continued Ralph.
’I don’t want to do business just now,
in fact I would rather not; but as you are a friend—how
many bills have you there?’
‘Two,’ returned Mr Mantalini.
‘What is the gross amount?’
‘Demd trifling—five-and-seventy.’
‘And the dates?’
‘Two months, and four.’
’I’ll do them for you—mind,
for you; I wouldn’t for many people—
for five-and-twenty pounds,’ said Ralph, deliberately.
‘Oh demmit!’ cried Mr
Mantalini, whose face lengthened considerably at this
handsome proposal.
‘Why, that leaves you fifty,’
retorted Ralph. ’What would you have?
Let me see the names.’
‘You are so demd hard, Nickleby,’
remonstrated Mr Mantalini.
‘Let me see the names,’
replied Ralph, impatiently extending his hand for
the bills. ’Well! They are not sure,
but they are safe enough. Do you consent to
the terms, and will you take the money? I don’t
want you to do so. I would rather you didn’t.’
‘Demmit, Nickleby, can’t you—’
began Mr Mantalini.
‘No,’ replied Ralph, interrupting
him. ’I can’t. Will you take
the money—down, mind; no delay, no going
into the city and pretending to negotiate with some
other party who has no existence, and never had.
Is it a bargain, or is it not?’
Ralph pushed some papers from him
as he spoke, and carelessly rattled his cash-box,
as though by mere accident. The sound was too
much for Mr Mantalini. He closed the bargain
directly it reached his ears, and Ralph told the money
out upon the table.
He had scarcely done so, and Mr Mantalini
had not yet gathered it all up, when a ring was heard
at the bell, and immediately afterwards Newman ushered
in no less a person than Madame Mantalini, at sight
of whom Mr Mantalini evinced considerable discomposure,
and swept the cash into his pocket with remarkable
alacrity.
‘Oh, you are here,’
said Madame Mantalini, tossing her head.
‘Yes, my life and soul, I am,’
replied her husband, dropping on his knees, and pouncing
with kitten-like playfulness upon a stray sovereign.
’I am here, my soul’s delight, upon Tom
Tiddler’s ground, picking up the demnition gold
and silver.’
‘I am ashamed of you,’
said Madame Mantalini, with much indignation.
’Ashamed—of me,
my joy? It knows it is talking demd charming
sweetness, but naughty fibs,’ returned Mr Mantalini.
’It knows it is not ashamed of its own popolorum
tibby.’
Whatever were the circumstances which
had led to such a result, it certainly appeared as
though the popolorum tibby had rather miscalculated,
for the nonce, the extent of his lady’s affection.
Madame Mantalini only looked scornful in reply; and,
turning to Ralph, begged him to excuse her intrusion.
‘Which is entirely attributable,’
said Madame, ’to the gross misconduct and most
improper behaviour of Mr Mantalini.’
‘Of me, my essential juice of pineapple!’
‘Of you,’ returned his
wife. ’But I will not allow it. I
will not submit to be ruined by the extravagance and
profligacy of any man. I call Mr Nickleby to
witness the course I intend to pursue with you.’
‘Pray don’t call me to
witness anything, ma’am,’ said Ralph.
‘Settle it between yourselves, settle it between
yourselves.’
‘No, but I must beg you as a
favour,’ said Madame Mantalini, ’to hear
me give him notice of what it is my fixed intention
to do—my fixed intention, sir,’ repeated
Madame Mantalini, darting an angry look at her husband.
‘Will she call me “Sir”?’
cried Mantalini. ’Me who dote upon her
with the demdest ardour! She, who coils her fascinations
round me like a pure angelic rattlesnake! It
will be all up with my feelings; she will throw me
into a demd state.’
‘Don’t talk of feelings,
sir,’ rejoined Madame Mantalini, seating herself,
and turning her back upon him. ‘You don’t
consider mine.’
‘I do not consider yours, my
soul!’ exclaimed Mr Mantalini.
‘No,’ replied his wife.
And notwithstanding various blandishments
on the part of Mr Mantalini, Madame Mantalini still
said no, and said it too with such determined and
resolute ill-temper, that Mr Mantalini was clearly
taken aback.
‘His extravagance, Mr Nickleby,’
said Madame Mantalini, addressing herself to Ralph,
who leant against his easy-chair with his hands behind
him, and regarded the amiable couple with a smile of
the supremest and most unmitigated contempt,—’his
extravagance is beyond all bounds.’
‘I should scarcely have supposed
it,’ answered Ralph, sarcastically.
‘I assure you, Mr Nickleby,
however, that it is,’ returned Madame Mantalini.
’It makes me miserable! I am under constant
apprehensions, and in constant difficulty. And
even this,’ said Madame Mantalini, wiping her
eyes, ’is not the worst. He took some
papers of value out of my desk this morning without
asking my permission.’
Mr Mantalini groaned slightly, and
buttoned his trousers pocket.
‘I am obliged,’ continued
Madame Mantalini, ’since our late misfortunes,
to pay Miss Knag a great deal of money for having her
name in the business, and I really cannot afford to
encourage him in all his wastefulness. As I
have no doubt that he came straight here, Mr Nickleby,
to convert the papers I have spoken of, into money,
and as you have assisted us very often before, and
are very much connected with us in this kind of matters,
I wish you to know the determination at which his
conduct has compelled me to arrive.’
Mr Mantalini groaned once more from
behind his wife’s bonnet, and fitting a sovereign
into one of his eyes, winked with the other at Ralph.
Having achieved this performance with great dexterity,
he whipped the coin into his pocket, and groaned again
with increased penitence.
‘I have made up my mind,’
said Madame Mantalini, as tokens of impatience manifested
themselves in Ralph’s countenance, ’to
allowance him.’
‘To do that, my joy?’
inquired Mr Mantalini, who did not seem to have caught
the words.
‘To put him,’ said Madame
Mantalini, looking at Ralph, and prudently abstaining
from the slightest glance at her husband, lest his
many graces should induce her to falter in her resolution,
’to put him upon a fixed allowance; and I say
that if he has a hundred and twenty pounds a year
for his clothes and pocket-money, he may consider
himself a very fortunate man.’
Mr Mantalini waited, with much decorum,
to hear the amount of the proposed stipend, but when
it reached his ears, he cast his hat and cane upon
the floor, and drawing out his pocket-handkerchief,
gave vent to his feelings in a dismal moan.
‘Demnition!’ cried Mr
Mantalini, suddenly skipping out of his chair, and
as suddenly skipping into it again, to the great discomposure
of his lady’s nerves. ’But no.
It is a demd horrid dream. It is not reality.
No!’
Comforting himself with this assurance,
Mr Mantalini closed his eyes and waited patiently
till such time as he should wake up.
‘A very judicious arrangement,’
observed Ralph with a sneer, ’if your husband
will keep within it, ma’am—as no doubt
he will.’
‘Demmit!’ exclaimed Mr
Mantalini, opening his eyes at the sound of Ralph’s
voice, ’it is a horrid reality. She is
sitting there before me. There is the graceful
outline of her form; it cannot be mistaken—there
is nothing like it. The two countesses had no
outlines at all, and the dowager’s was a demd
outline. Why is she so excruciatingly beautiful
that I cannot be angry with her, even now?’
‘You have brought it upon yourself,
Alfred,’ returned Madame Mantalini—still
reproachfully, but in a softened tone.
‘I am a demd villain!’
cried Mr Mantalini, smiting himself on the head.
’I will fill my pockets with change for a sovereign
in halfpence and drown myself in the Thames; but I
will not be angry with her, even then, for I will
put a note in the twopenny-post as I go along, to
tell her where the body is. She will be a lovely
widow. I shall be a body. Some handsome
women will cry; she will laugh demnebly.’
‘Alfred, you cruel, cruel creature,’
said Madame Mantalini, sobbing at the dreadful picture.
’She calls me cruel—me—me—who
for her sake will become a demd, damp, moist, unpleasant
body!’ exclaimed Mr Mantalini.
’You know it almost breaks my
heart, even to hear you talk of such a thing,’
replied Madame Mantalini.
‘Can I live to be mistrusted?’
cried her husband. ’Have I cut my heart
into a demd extraordinary number of little pieces,
and given them all away, one after another, to the
same little engrossing demnition captivater, and can
I live to be suspected by her? Demmit, no I can’t.’
’Ask Mr Nickleby whether the
sum I have mentioned is not a proper one,’ reasoned
Madame Mantalini.
‘I don’t want any sum,’
replied her disconsolate husband; ’I shall require
no demd allowance. I will be a body.’
On this repetition of Mr Mantalini’s
fatal threat, Madame Mantalini wrung her hands, and
implored the interference of Ralph Nickleby; and after
a great quantity of tears and talking, and several
attempts on the part of Mr Mantalini to reach the door,
preparatory to straightway committing violence upon
himself, that gentleman was prevailed upon, with difficulty,
to promise that he wouldn’t be a body.
This great point attained, Madame Mantalini argued
the question of the allowance, and Mr Mantalini did
the same, taking occasion to show that he could live
with uncommon satisfaction upon bread and water, and
go clad in rags, but that he could not support existence
with the additional burden of being mistrusted by the
object of his most devoted and disinterested affection.
This brought fresh tears into Madame Mantalini’s
eyes, which having just begun to open to some few
of the demerits of Mr Mantalini, were only open a
very little way, and could be easily closed again.
The result was, that without quite giving up the
allowance question, Madame Mantalini, postponed its
further consideration; and Ralph saw, clearly enough,
that Mr Mantalini had gained a fresh lease of his
easy life, and that, for some time longer at all events,
his degradation and downfall were postponed.
‘But it will come soon enough,’
thought Ralph; ’all love—bah! that
I should use the cant of boys and girls—is
fleeting enough; though that which has its sole root
in the admiration of a whiskered face like that of
yonder baboon, perhaps lasts the longest, as it originates
in the greater blindness and is fed by vanity.
Meantime the fools bring grist to my mill, so let
them live out their day, and the longer it is, the
better.’
These agreeable reflections occurred
to Ralph Nickleby, as sundry small caresses and endearments,
supposed to be unseen, were exchanged between the
objects of his thoughts.
‘If you have nothing more to
say, my dear, to Mr Nickleby,’ said Madame Mantalini,
’we will take our leaves. I am sure we
have detained him much too long already.’
Mr Mantalini answered, in the first
instance, by tapping Madame Mantalini several times
on the nose, and then, by remarking in words that
he had nothing more to say.
‘Demmit! I have, though,’
he added almost immediately, drawing Ralph into a
corner. ’Here’s an affair about your
friend Sir Mulberry. Such a demd extraordinary
out-of-the-way kind of thing as never was —eh?’
‘What do you mean?’ asked Ralph.
‘Don’t you know, demmit?’ asked
Mr Mantalini.
’I see by the paper that he
was thrown from his cabriolet last night, and severely
injured, and that his life is in some danger,’
answered Ralph with great composure; ’but I see
nothing extraordinary in that—accidents
are not miraculous events, when men live hard, and
drive after dinner.’
‘Whew!’ cried Mr Mantalini
in a long shrill whistle. ’Then don’t
you know how it was?’
‘Not unless it was as I have
just supposed,’ replied Ralph, shrugging his
shoulders carelessly, as if to give his questioner
to understand that he had no curiosity upon the subject.
‘Demmit, you amaze me,’ cried Mantalini.
Ralph shrugged his shoulders again,
as if it were no great feat to amaze Mr Mantalini,
and cast a wistful glance at the face of Newman Noggs,
which had several times appeared behind a couple of
panes of glass in the room door; it being a part of
Newman’s duty, when unimportant people called,
to make various feints of supposing that the bell
had rung for him to show them out: by way of a
gentle hint to such visitors that it was time to go.
‘Don’t you know,’
said Mr Mantalini, taking Ralph by the button, ’that
it wasn’t an accident at all, but a demd, furious,
manslaughtering attack made upon him by your nephew?’
‘What!’ snarled Ralph,
clenching his fists and turning a livid white.
‘Demmit, Nickleby, you’re
as great a tiger as he is,’ said Mantalini,
alarmed at these demonstrations.
‘Go on,’ cried Ralph.
’Tell me what you mean. What is this story?
Who told you? Speak,’ growled Ralph.
‘Do you hear me?’
‘’Gad, Nickleby,’
said Mr Mantalini, retreating towards his wife, ’what
a demneble fierce old evil genius you are! You’re
enough to frighten the life and soul out of her little
delicious wits—flying all at once into
such a blazing, ravaging, raging passion as never
was, demmit!’
‘Pshaw,’ rejoined Ralph,
forcing a smile. ‘It is but manner.’
‘It is a demd uncomfortable,
private-madhouse-sort of a manner,’ said Mr
Mantalini, picking up his cane.
Ralph affected to smile, and once
more inquired from whom Mr Mantalini had derived his
information.
‘From Pyke; and a demd, fine,
pleasant, gentlemanly dog it is,’ replied Mantalini.
‘Demnition pleasant, and a tip-top sawyer.’
‘And what said he?’ asked Ralph, knitting
his brows.
’That it happened this way—that
your nephew met him at a coffeehouse, fell upon him
with the most demneble ferocity, followed him to his
cab, swore he would ride home with him, if he rode
upon the horse’s back or hooked himself on to
the horse’s tail; smashed his countenance, which
is a demd fine countenance in its natural state; frightened
the horse, pitched out Sir Mulberry and himself, and—’
‘And was killed?’ interposed
Ralph with gleaming eyes. ’Was he?
Is he dead?’
Mantalini shook his head.
‘Ugh,’ said Ralph, turning
away. ‘Then he has done nothing.
Stay,’ he added, looking round again.
’He broke a leg or an arm, or put his shoulder
out, or fractured his collar-bone, or ground a rib
or two? His neck was saved for the halter, but
he got some painful and slow-healing injury for his
trouble? Did he? You must have heard that,
at least.’
‘No,’ rejoined Mantalini,
shaking his head again. ’Unless he was
dashed into such little pieces that they blew away,
he wasn’t hurt, for he went off as quiet and
comfortable as—as—as demnition,’
said Mr Mantalini, rather at a loss for a simile.
‘And what,’ said Ralph,
hesitating a little, ’what was the cause of
quarrel?’
‘You are the demdest, knowing
hand,’ replied Mr Mantalini, in an admiring
tone, ’the cunningest, rummest, superlativest
old fox—oh dem!—to pretend now
not to know that it was the little bright-eyed niece—the
softest, sweetest, prettiest—’
‘Alfred!’ interposed Madame Mantalini.
‘She is always right,’
rejoined Mr Mantalini soothingly, ’and when
she says it is time to go, it is time, and go she shall;
and when she walks along the streets with her own
tulip, the women shall say, with envy, she has got
a demd fine husband; and the men shall say with rapture,
he has got a demd fine wife; and they shall both be
right and neither wrong, upon my life and soul—oh
demmit!’
With which remarks, and many more,
no less intellectual and to the purpose, Mr Mantalini
kissed the fingers of his gloves to Ralph Nickleby,
and drawing his lady’s arm through his, led her
mincingly away.
‘So, so,’ muttered Ralph,
dropping into his chair; ’this devil is loose
again, and thwarting me, as he was born to do, at every
turn. He told me once there should be a day of
reckoning between us, sooner or later. I’ll
make him a true prophet, for it shall surely come.’
‘Are you at home?’ asked
Newman, suddenly popping in his head.
‘No,’ replied Ralph, with equal abruptness.
Newman withdrew his head, but thrust it in again.
‘You’re quite sure you’re not at
home, are you?’ said Newman.
‘What does the idiot mean?’ cried Ralph,
testily.
’He has been waiting nearly
ever since they first came in, and may have heard
your voice—that’s all,’ said
Newman, rubbing his hands.
‘Who has?’ demanded Ralph,
wrought by the intelligence he had just heard, and
his clerk’s provoking coolness, to an intense
pitch of irritation.
The necessity of a reply was superseded
by the unlooked-for entrance of a third party—the
individual in question—who, bringing his
one eye (for he had but one) to bear on Ralph Nickleby,
made a great many shambling bows, and sat himself
down in an armchair, with his hands on his knees,
and his short black trousers drawn up so high in the
legs by the exertion of seating himself, that they
scarcely reached below the tops of his Wellington
boots.’
‘Why, this is a surprise!’
said Ralph, bending his gaze upon the visitor, and
half smiling as he scrutinised him attentively; ’I
should know your face, Mr Squeers.’
‘Ah!’ replied that worthy,
’and you’d have know’d it better,
sir, if it hadn’t been for all that I’ve
been a-going through. Just lift that little
boy off the tall stool in the back-office, and tell
him to come in here, will you, my man?’ said
Squeers, addressing himself to Newman. ’Oh,
he’s lifted his-self off. My son, sir,
little Wackford. What do you think of him, sir,
for a specimen of the Dotheboys Hall feeding?
Ain’t he fit to bust out of his clothes, and
start the seams, and make the very buttons fly off
with his fatness? Here’s flesh!’
cried Squeers, turning the boy about, and indenting
the plumpest parts of his figure with divers pokes
and punches, to the great discomposure of his son
and heir. ’Here’s firmness, here’s
solidness! Why you can hardly get up enough of
him between your finger and thumb to pinch him anywheres.’
In however good condition Master Squeers
might have been, he certainly did not present this
remarkable compactness of person, for on his father’s
closing his finger and thumb in illustration of his
remark, he uttered a sharp cry, and rubbed the place
in the most natural manner possible.
‘Well,’ remarked Squeers,
a little disconcerted, ’I had him there; but
that’s because we breakfasted early this morning,
and he hasn’t had his lunch yet. Why you
couldn’t shut a bit of him in a door, when he’s
had his dinner. Look at them tears, sir,’
said Squeers, with a triumphant air, as Master Wackford
wiped his eyes with the cuff of his jacket, ‘there’s
oiliness!’
‘He looks well, indeed,’
returned Ralph, who, for some purposes of his own,
seemed desirous to conciliate the schoolmaster.
’But how is Mrs Squeers, and how are you?’
‘Mrs Squeers, sir,’ replied
the proprietor of Dotheboys, ’is as she always
is—a mother to them lads, and a blessing,
and a comfort, and a joy to all them as knows her.
One of our boys—gorging his-self with
vittles, and then turning in; that’s their way—got
a abscess on him last week. To see how she operated
upon him with a pen-knife! Oh Lor!’ said
Squeers, heaving a sigh, and nodding his head a great
many times, ‘what a member of society that woman
is!’
Mr Squeers indulged in a retrospective
look, for some quarter of a minute, as if this allusion
to his lady’s excellences had naturally led
his mind to the peaceful village of Dotheboys near
Greta Bridge in Yorkshire; and then looked at Ralph,
as if waiting for him to say something.
‘Have you quite recovered that
scoundrel’s attack?’ asked Ralph.
‘I’ve only just done it,
if I’ve done it now,’ replied Squeers.
’I was one blessed bruise, sir,’ said
Squeers, touching first the roots of his hair, and
then the toes of his boots, ’from here to
there. Vinegar and brown paper, vinegar
and brown paper, from morning to night. I suppose
there was a matter of half a ream of brown paper stuck
upon me, from first to last. As I laid all of
a heap in our kitchen, plastered all over, you might
have thought I was a large brown-paper parcel, chock
full of nothing but groans. Did I groan loud,
Wackford, or did I groan soft?’ asked Mr Squeers,
appealing to his son.
‘Loud,’ replied Wackford.
’Was the boys sorry to see me
in such a dreadful condition, Wackford, or was they
glad?’ asked Mr Squeers, in a sentimental manner.
‘Gl—’
‘Eh?’ cried Squeers, turning sharp round.
‘Sorry,’ rejoined his son.
‘Oh!’ said Squeers, catching
him a smart box on the ear. ’Then take
your hands out of your pockets, and don’t stammer
when you’re asked a question. Hold your
noise, sir, in a gentleman’s office, or I’ll
run away from my family and never come back any more;
and then what would become of all them precious and
forlorn lads as would be let loose on the world, without
their best friend at their elbers?’
‘Were you obliged to have medical attendance?’
inquired Ralph.
‘Ay, was I,’ rejoined
Squeers, ’and a precious bill the medical attendant
brought in too; but I paid it though.’
Ralph elevated his eyebrows in a manner
which might be expressive of either sympathy or astonishment—just
as the beholder was pleased to take it.
‘Yes, I paid it, every farthing,’
replied Squeers, who seemed to know the man he had
to deal with, too well to suppose that any blinking
of the question would induce him to subscribe towards
the expenses; ‘I wasn’t out of pocket
by it after all, either.’
‘No!’ said Ralph.
‘Not a halfpenny,’ replied
Squeers. ’The fact is, we have only one
extra with our boys, and that is for doctors when required—and
not then, unless we’re sure of our customers.
Do you see?’
‘I understand,’ said Ralph.
‘Very good,’ rejoined
Squeers. ’Then, after my bill was run up,
we picked out five little boys (sons of small tradesmen,
as was sure pay) that had never had the scarlet fever,
and we sent one to a cottage where they’d got
it, and he took it, and then we put the four others
to sleep with him, and they took it, and then
the doctor came and attended ’em once all round,
and we divided my total among ’em, and added
it on to their little bills, and the parents paid it.
Ha! ha! ha!’
‘And a good plan too,’
said Ralph, eyeing the schoolmaster stealthily.
‘I believe you,’ rejoined
Squeers. ’We always do it. Why, when
Mrs Squeers was brought to bed with little Wackford
here, we ran the hooping-cough through half-a-dozen
boys, and charged her expenses among ’em, monthly
nurse included. Ha! ha! ha!’
Ralph never laughed, but on this occasion
he produced the nearest approach to it that he could,
and waiting until Mr Squeers had enjoyed the professional
joke to his heart’s content, inquired what had
brought him to town.
‘Some bothering law business,’
replied Squeers, scratching his head, ’connected
with an action, for what they call neglect of a boy.
I don’t know what they would have. He
had as good grazing, that boy had, as there is about
us.’
Ralph looked as if he did not quite
understand the observation.
‘Grazing,’ said Squeers,
raising his voice, under the impression that as Ralph
failed to comprehend him, he must be deaf. ’When
a boy gets weak and ill and don’t relish his
meals, we give him a change of diet—turn
him out, for an hour or so every day, into a neighbour’s
turnip field, or sometimes, if it’s a delicate
case, a turnip field and a piece of carrots alternately,
and let him eat as many as he likes. There an’t
better land in the country than this perwerse lad
grazed on, and yet he goes and catches cold and indigestion
and what not, and then his friends brings a lawsuit
against me! Now, you’d hardly suppose,’
added Squeers, moving in his chair with the impatience
of an ill-used man, ’that people’s ingratitude
would carry them quite as far as that; would you?’
‘A hard case, indeed,’ observed Ralph.
‘You don’t say more than
the truth when you say that,’ replied Squeers.
’I don’t suppose there’s a man going,
as possesses the fondness for youth that I do.
There’s youth to the amount of eight hundred
pound a year at Dotheboys Hall at this present time.
I’d take sixteen hundred pound worth if I could
get ’em, and be as fond of every individual
twenty pound among ’em as nothing should equal
it!’
‘Are you stopping at your old quarters?’
asked Ralph.
‘Yes, we are at the Saracen,’
replied Squeers, ’and as it don’t want
very long to the end of the half-year, we shall continney
to stop there till I’ve collected the money,
and some new boys too, I hope. I’ve brought
little Wackford up, on purpose to show to parents and
guardians. I shall put him in the advertisement,
this time. Look at that boy—himself
a pupil. Why he’s a miracle of high feeding,
that boy is!’
‘I should like to have a word
with you,’ said Ralph, who had both spoken and
listened mechanically for some time, and seemed to
have been thinking.
‘As many words as you like,
sir,’ rejoined Squeers. ’Wackford,
you go and play in the back office, and don’t
move about too much or you’ll get thin, and
that won’t do. You haven’t got such
a thing as twopence, Mr Nickleby, have you?’
said Squeers, rattling a bunch of keys in his coat
pocket, and muttering something about its being all
silver.
‘I—think I have,’
said Ralph, very slowly, and producing, after much
rummaging in an old drawer, a penny, a halfpenny, and
two farthings.
‘Thankee,’ said Squeers,
bestowing it upon his son. ’Here!
You go and buy a tart—Mr Nickleby’s
man will show you where—and mind you buy
a rich one. Pastry,’ added Squeers, closing
the door on Master Wackford, ’makes his flesh
shine a good deal, and parents thinks that a healthy
sign.’
With this explanation, and a peculiarly
knowing look to eke it out, Mr Squeers moved his chair
so as to bring himself opposite to Ralph Nickleby
at no great distance off; and having planted it to
his entire satisfaction, sat down.
‘Attend to me,’ said Ralph, bending forward
a little.
Squeers nodded.
‘I am not to suppose,’
said Ralph, ’that you are dolt enough to forgive
or forget, very readily, the violence that was committed
upon you, or the exposure which accompanied it?’
‘Devil a bit,’ replied Squeers, tartly.
’Or to lose an opportunity of
repaying it with interest, if you could get one?’
said Ralph.
‘Show me one, and try,’ rejoined Squeers.
‘Some such object it was, that
induced you to call on me?’ said Ralph, raising
his eyes to the schoolmaster’s face.
‘N-n-no, I don’t know
that,’ replied Squeers. ’I thought
that if it was in your power to make me, besides the
trifle of money you sent, any compensation—’
‘Ah!’ cried Ralph, interrupting
him. ‘You needn’t go on.’
After a long pause, during which Ralph
appeared absorbed in contemplation, he again broke
silence by asking:
‘Who is this boy that he took with him?’
Squeers stated his name.
’Was he young or old, healthy
or sickly, tractable or rebellious? Speak out,
man,’ retorted Ralph.
‘Why, he wasn’t young,’
answered Squeers; ’that is, not young for a
boy, you know.’
‘That is, he was not a boy at
all, I suppose?’ interrupted Ralph.
‘Well,’ returned Squeers,
briskly, as if he felt relieved by the suggestion,
’he might have been nigh twenty. He wouldn’t
seem so old, though, to them as didn’t know
him, for he was a little wanting here,’ touching
his forehead; ’nobody at home, you know, if you
knocked ever so often.’
‘And you did knock pretty
often, I dare say?’ muttered Ralph.
‘Pretty well,’ returned Squeers with a
grin.
’When you wrote to acknowledge
the receipt of this trifle of money as you call it,’
said Ralph, ’you told me his friends had deserted
him long ago, and that you had not the faintest clue
or trace to tell you who he was. Is that the
truth?’
‘It is, worse luck!’ replied
Squeers, becoming more and more easy and familiar
in his manner, as Ralph pursued his inquiries with
the less reserve. ’It’s fourteen
years ago, by the entry in my book, since a strange
man brought him to my place, one autumn night, and
left him there; paying five pound five, for his first
quarter in advance. He might have been five
or six year old at that time—not more.’
‘What more do you know about him?’ demanded
Ralph.
‘Devilish little, I’m
sorry to say,’ replied Squeers. ’The
money was paid for some six or eight year, and then
it stopped. He had given an address in London,
had this chap; but when it came to the point, of course
nobody knowed anything about him. So I kept the
lad out of—out of—’
‘Charity?’ suggested Ralph drily.
‘Charity, to be sure,’
returned Squeers, rubbing his knees, ’and when
he begins to be useful in a certain sort of way, this
young scoundrel of a Nickleby comes and carries him
off. But the most vexatious and aggeravating
part of the whole affair is,’ said Squeers,
dropping his voice, and drawing his chair still closer
to Ralph, ’that some questions have been asked
about him at last—not of me, but, in a
roundabout kind of way, of people in our village.
So, that just when I might have had all arrears paid
up, perhaps, and perhaps—who knows? such
things have happened in our business before—a
present besides for putting him out to a farmer, or
sending him to sea, so that he might never turn up
to disgrace his parents, supposing him to be a natural
boy, as many of our boys are —damme, if
that villain of a Nickleby don’t collar him in
open day, and commit as good as highway robbery upon
my pocket.’
‘We will both cry quits with
him before long,’ said Ralph, laying his hand
on the arm of the Yorkshire schoolmaster.
‘Quits!’ echoed Squeers.
’Ah! and I should like to leave a small balance
in his favour, to be settled when he can. I only
wish Mrs Squeers could catch hold of him. Bless
her heart! She’d murder him, Mr Nickleby—she
would, as soon as eat her dinner.’
‘We will talk of this again,’
said Ralph. ’I must have time to think
of it. To wound him through his own affections
and fancies—. If I could strike him through
this boy—’
‘Strike him how you like, sir,’
interrupted Squeers, ’only hit him hard enough,
that’s all—and with that, I’ll
say good-morning. Here!—just chuck
that little boy’s hat off that corner peg, and
lift him off the stool will you?’
Bawling these requests to Newman Noggs,
Mr Squeers betook himself to the little back-office,
and fitted on his child’s hat with parental
anxiety, while Newman, with his pen behind his ear,
sat, stiff and immovable, on his stool, regarding
the father and son by turns with a broad stare.
‘He’s a fine boy, an’t
he?’ said Squeers, throwing his head a little
on one side, and falling back to the desk, the better
to estimate the proportions of little Wackford.
‘Very,’ said Newman.
‘Pretty well swelled out, an’t
he?’ pursued Squeers. ’He has the
fatness of twenty boys, he has.’
‘Ah!’ replied Newman,
suddenly thrusting his face into that of Squeers,
’he has;—the fatness of twenty
He’s got it all. God help that others.
Ha! ha! Oh Lord!’
Having uttered these fragmentary observations,
Newman dropped upon his desk and began to write with
most marvellous rapidity.
‘Why, what does the man mean?’
cried Squeers, colouring. ’Is he drunk?’
Newman made no reply.
‘Is he mad?’ said Squeers.
But, still Newman betrayed no consciousness
of any presence save his own; so, Mr Squeers comforted
himself by saying that he was both drunk and
mad; and, with this parting observation, he led his
hopeful son away.
In exact proportion as Ralph Nickleby
became conscious of a struggling and lingering regard
for Kate, had his detestation of Nicholas augmented.
It might be, that to atone for the weakness of inclining
to any one person, he held it necessary to hate some
other more intensely than before; but such had been
the course of his feelings. And now, to be defied
and spurned, to be held up to her in the worst and
most repulsive colours, to know that she was taught
to hate and despise him: to feel that there was
infection in his touch, and taint in his companionship—to
know all this, and to know that the mover of it all
was that same boyish poor relation who had twitted
him in their very first interview, and openly bearded
and braved him since, wrought his quiet and stealthy
malignity to such a pitch, that there was scarcely
anything he would not have hazarded to gratify it,
if he could have seen his way to some immediate retaliation.
But, fortunately for Nicholas, Ralph
Nickleby did not; and although he cast about all that
day, and kept a corner of his brain working on the
one anxious subject through all the round of schemes
and business that came with it, night found him at
last, still harping on the same theme, and still pursuing
the same unprofitable reflections.
‘When my brother was such as
he,’ said Ralph, ’the first comparisons
were drawn between us—always in my disfavour.
He was open, liberal, gallant, gay; I a crafty
hunks of cold and stagnant blood, with no passion
but love of saving, and no spirit beyond a thirst
for gain. I recollected it well when I first
saw this whipster; but I remember it better now.’
He had been occupied in tearing Nicholas’s
letter into atoms; and as he spoke, he scattered it
in a tiny shower about him.
‘Recollections like these,’
pursued Ralph, with a bitter smile, ’flock upon
me—when I resign myself to them—in
crowds, and from countless quarters. As a portion
of the world affect to despise the power of money,
I must try and show them what it is.’
And being, by this time, in a pleasant
frame of mind for slumber, Ralph Nickleby went to
bed.