Smike becomes known to Mrs Nickleby
and Kate. Nicholas also meets with new Acquaintances.
Brighter Days seem to dawn upon the Family
Having established his mother and
sister in the apartments of the kind-hearted miniature
painter, and ascertained that Sir Mulberry Hawk was
in no danger of losing his life, Nicholas turned his
thoughts to poor Smike, who, after breakfasting with
Newman Noggs, had remained, in a disconsolate state,
at that worthy creature’s lodgings, waiting,
with much anxiety, for further intelligence of his
protector.
’As he will be one of our own
little household, wherever we live, or whatever fortune
is in reserve for us,’ thought Nicholas, ’I
must present the poor fellow in due form. They
will be kind to him for his own sake, and if not (on
that account solely) to the full extent I could wish,
they will stretch a point, I am sure, for mine.’
Nicholas said ‘they’,
but his misgivings were confined to one person.
He was sure of Kate, but he knew his mother’s
peculiarities, and was not quite so certain that Smike
would find favour in the eyes of Mrs Nickleby.
‘However,’ thought Nicholas
as he departed on his benevolent errand; ’she
cannot fail to become attached to him, when she knows
what a devoted creature he is, and as she must quickly
make the discovery, his probation will be a short
one.’
‘I was afraid,’ said Smike,
overjoyed to see his friend again, ’that you
had fallen into some fresh trouble; the time seemed
so long, at last, that I almost feared you were lost.’
‘Lost!’ replied Nicholas
gaily. ’You will not be rid of me so easily,
I promise you. I shall rise to the surface many
thousand times yet, and the harder the thrust that
pushes me down, the more quickly I shall rebound,
Smike. But come; my errand here is to take you
home.’
‘Home!’ faltered Smike, drawing timidly
back.
‘Ay,’ rejoined Nicholas, taking his arm.
‘Why not?’
‘I had such hopes once,’
said Smike; ’day and night, day and night, for
many years. I longed for home till I was weary,
and pined away with grief, but now—’
‘And what now?’ asked
Nicholas, looking kindly in his face. ’What
now, old friend?’
‘I could not part from you to
go to any home on earth,’ replied Smike, pressing
his hand; ’except one, except one. I shall
never be an old man; and if your hand placed me in
the grave, and I could think, before I died, that
you would come and look upon it sometimes with one
of your kind smiles, and in the summer weather, when
everything was alive—not dead like me—I
could go to that home almost without a tear.’
’Why do you talk thus, poor
boy, if your life is a happy one with me?’ said
Nicholas.
’Because I should change; not
those about me. And if they forgot me, I should
never know it,’ replied Smike. ’In
the churchyard we are all alike, but here there are
none like me. I am a poor creature, but I know
that.’
‘You are a foolish, silly creature,’
said Nicholas cheerfully. ’If that is
what you mean, I grant you that. Why, here’s
a dismal face for ladies’ company!—my
pretty sister too, whom you have so often asked me
about. Is this your Yorkshire gallantry?
For shame! for shame!’
Smike brightened up and smiled.
‘When I talk of home,’
pursued Nicholas, ’I talk of mine—which
is yours of course. If it were defined by any
particular four walls and a roof, God knows I should
be sufficiently puzzled to say whereabouts it lay;
but that is not what I mean. When I speak of
home, I speak of the place where—in default
of a better—those I love are gathered together;
and if that place were a gypsy’s tent, or a
barn, I should call it by the same good name notwithstanding.
And now, for what is my present home, which, however
alarming your expectations may be, will neither terrify
you by its extent nor its magnificence!’
So saying, Nicholas took his companion
by the arm, and saying a great deal more to the same
purpose, and pointing out various things to amuse
and interest him as they went along, led the way to
Miss La Creevy’s house.
‘And this, Kate,’ said
Nicholas, entering the room where his sister sat alone,
’is the faithful friend and affectionate fellow-traveller
whom I prepared you to receive.’
Poor Smike was bashful, and awkward,
and frightened enough, at first, but Kate advanced
towards him so kindly, and said, in such a sweet voice,
how anxious she had been to see him after all her
brother had told her, and how much she had to thank
him for having comforted Nicholas so greatly in their
very trying reverses, that he began to be very doubtful
whether he should shed tears or not, and became still
more flurried. However, he managed to say, in
a broken voice, that Nicholas was his only friend,
and that he would lay down his life to help him; and
Kate, although she was so kind and considerate, seemed
to be so wholly unconscious of his distress and embarrassment,
that he recovered almost immediately and felt quite
at home.
Then, Miss La Creevy came in; and
to her Smike had to be presented also. And Miss
La Creevy was very kind too, and wonderfully talkative:
not to Smike, for that would have made him uneasy at
first, but to Nicholas and his sister. Then,
after a time, she would speak to Smike himself now
and then, asking him whether he was a judge of likenesses,
and whether he thought that picture in the corner
was like herself, and whether he didn’t think
it would have looked better if she had made herself
ten years younger, and whether he didn’t think,
as a matter of general observation, that young ladies
looked better not only in pictures, but out of them
too, than old ones; with many more small jokes and
facetious remarks, which were delivered with such
good-humour and merriment, that Smike thought, within
himself, she was the nicest lady he had ever seen;
even nicer than Mrs Grudden, of Mr Vincent Crummles’s
theatre; and she was a nice lady too, and talked,
perhaps more, but certainly louder, than Miss La Creevy.
At length the door opened again, and
a lady in mourning came in; and Nicholas kissing the
lady in mourning affectionately, and calling her his
mother, led her towards the chair from which Smike
had risen when she entered the room.
’You are always kind-hearted,
and anxious to help the oppressed, my dear mother,’
said Nicholas, ’so you will be favourably disposed
towards him, I know.’
‘I am sure, my dear Nicholas,’
replied Mrs Nickleby, looking very hard at her new
friend, and bending to him with something more of
majesty than the occasion seemed to require: ’I
am sure any friend of yours has, as indeed he naturally
ought to have, and must have, of course, you know,
a great claim upon me, and of course, it is a very
great pleasure to me to be introduced to anybody you
take an interest in. There can he no doubt about
that; none at all; not the least in the world,’
said Mrs Nickleby. ’At the same time I
must say, Nicholas, my dear, as I used to say to your
poor dear papa, when he would bring gentlemen
home to dinner, and there was nothing in the house,
that if he had come the day before yesterday—no,
I don’t mean the day before yesterday now; I
should have said, perhaps, the year before last—we
should have been better able to entertain him.’
With which remarks, Mrs Nickleby turned
to her daughter, and inquired, in an audible whisper,
whether the gentleman was going to stop all night.
‘Because, if he is, Kate, my
dear,’ said Mrs Nickleby, ’I don’t
see that it’s possible for him to sleep anywhere,
and that’s the truth.’
Kate stepped gracefully forward, and
without any show of annoyance or irritation, breathed
a few words into her mother’s ear.
‘La, Kate, my dear,’ said
Mrs Nickleby, shrinking back, ’how you do tickle
one! Of course, I understand that, my love,
without your telling me; and I said the same to Nicholas,
and I am very much pleased. You didn’t
tell me, Nicholas, my dear,’ added Mrs Nickleby,
turning round with an air of less reserve than she
had before assumed, ‘what your friend’s
name is.’
‘His name, mother,’ replied Nicholas,
‘is Smike.’
The effect of this communication was
by no means anticipated; but the name was no sooner
pronounced, than Mrs Nickleby dropped upon a chair,
and burst into a fit of crying.
‘What is the matter?’
exclaimed Nicholas, running to support her.
‘It’s so like Pyke,’
cried Mrs Nickleby; ’so exactly like Pyke.
Oh! don’t speak to me—I shall be
better presently.’
And after exhibiting every symptom
of slow suffocation in all its stages, and drinking
about a tea-spoonful of water from a full tumbler,
and spilling the remainder, Mrs Nickleby was better,
and remarked, with a feeble smile, that she was very
foolish, she knew.
‘It’s a weakness in our
family,’ said Mrs Nickleby, ’so, of course,
I can’t be blamed for it. Your grandmama,
Kate, was exactly the same—precisely.
The least excitement, the slightest surprise—she
fainted away directly. I have heard her say,
often and often, that when she was a young lady, and
before she was married, she was turning a corner into
Oxford Street one day, when she ran against her own
hairdresser, who, it seems, was escaping from a bear;—the
mere suddenness of the encounter made her faint away
directly. Wait, though,’ added Mrs Nickleby,
pausing to consider. ’Let me be sure I’m
right. Was it her hairdresser who had escaped
from a bear, or was it a bear who had escaped from
her hairdresser’s? I declare I can’t
remember just now, but the hairdresser was a very handsome
man, I know, and quite a gentleman in his manners;
so that it has nothing to do with the point of the
story.’
Mrs Nickleby having fallen imperceptibly
into one of her retrospective moods, improved in temper
from that moment, and glided, by an easy change of
the conversation occasionally, into various other
anecdotes, no less remarkable for their strict application
to the subject in hand.
‘Mr Smike is from Yorkshire,
Nicholas, my dear?’ said Mrs Nickleby, after
dinner, and when she had been silent for some time.
‘Certainly, mother,’ replied
Nicholas. ’I see you have not forgotten
his melancholy history.’
‘O dear no,’ cried Mrs
Nickleby. ’Ah! melancholy, indeed.
You don’t happen, Mr Smike, ever to have dined
with the Grimbles of Grimble Hall, somewhere in the
North Riding, do you?’ said the good lady, addressing
herself to him. ’A very proud man, Sir
Thomas Grimble, with six grown-up and most lovely
daughters, and the finest park in the county.’
‘My dear mother,’ reasoned
Nicholas, ’do you suppose that the unfortunate
outcast of a Yorkshire school was likely to receive
many cards of invitation from the nobility and gentry
in the neighbourhood?’
’Really, my dear, I don’t
know why it should be so very extraordinary,’
said Mrs Nickleby. ’I know that when I
was at school, I always went at least twice every
half-year to the Hawkinses at Taunton Vale, and they
are much richer than the Grimbles, and connected with
them in marriage; so you see it’s not so very
unlikely, after all.’
Having put down Nicholas in this triumphant
manner, Mrs Nickleby was suddenly seized with a forgetfulness
of Smike’s real name, and an irresistible tendency
to call him Mr Slammons; which circumstance she attributed
to the remarkable similarity of the two names in point
of sound both beginning with an S, and moreover being
spelt with an M. But whatever doubt there might be
on this point, there was none as to his being a most
excellent listener; which circumstance had considerable
influence in placing them on the very best terms,
and inducing Mrs Nickleby to express the highest opinion
of his general deportment and disposition.
Thus, the little circle remained,
on the most amicable and agreeable footing, until
the Monday morning, when Nicholas withdrew himself
from it for a short time, seriously to reflect upon
the state of his affairs, and to determine, if he
could, upon some course of life, which would enable
him to support those who were so entirely dependent
upon his exertions.
Mr Crummles occurred to him more than
once; but although Kate was acquainted with the whole
history of his connection with that gentleman, his
mother was not; and he foresaw a thousand fretful
objections, on her part, to his seeking a livelihood
upon the stage. There were graver reasons, too,
against his returning to that mode of life.
Independently of those arising out of its spare and
precarious earnings, and his own internal conviction
that he could never hope to aspire to any great distinction,
even as a provincial actor, how could he carry his
sister from town to town, and place to place, and
debar her from any other associates than those with
whom he would be compelled, almost without distinction,
to mingle? ’It won’t do,’
said Nicholas, shaking his head; ’I must try
something else.’
It was much easier to make this resolution
than to carry it into effect. With no greater
experience of the world than he had acquired for himself
in his short trials; with a sufficient share of headlong
rashness and precipitation (qualities not altogether
unnatural at his time of life); with a very slender
stock of money, and a still more scanty stock of friends;
what could he do? ‘Egad!’ said Nicholas,
‘I’ll try that Register Office again.’
He smiled at himself as he walked
away with a quick step; for, an instant before, he
had been internally blaming his own precipitation.
He did not laugh himself out of the intention, however,
for on he went: picturing to himself, as he approached
the place, all kinds of splendid possibilities, and
impossibilities too, for that matter, and thinking
himself, perhaps with good reason, very fortunate
to be endowed with so buoyant and sanguine a temperament.
The office looked just the same as
when he had left it last, and, indeed, with one or
two exceptions, there seemed to be the very same placards
in the window that he had seen before. There
were the same unimpeachable masters and mistresses
in want of virtuous servants, and the same virtuous
servants in want of unimpeachable masters and mistresses,
and the same magnificent estates for the investment
of capital, and the same enormous quantities of capital
to be invested in estates, and, in short, the same
opportunities of all sorts for people who wanted to
make their fortunes. And a most extraordinary
proof it was of the national prosperity, that people
had not been found to avail themselves of such advantages
long ago.
As Nicholas stopped to look in at
the window, an old gentleman happened to stop too;
and Nicholas, carrying his eye along the window-panes
from left to right in search of some capital-text
placard which should be applicable to his own case,
caught sight of this old gentleman’s figure,
and instinctively withdrew his eyes from the window,
to observe the same more closely.
He was a sturdy old fellow in a broad-skirted
blue coat, made pretty large, to fit easily, and with
no particular waist; his bulky legs clothed in drab
breeches and high gaiters, and his head protected by
a low-crowned broad-brimmed white hat, such as a wealthy
grazier might wear. He wore his coat buttoned;
and his dimpled double chin rested in the folds of
a white neckerchief—not one of your stiff-starched
apoplectic cravats, but a good, easy, old-fashioned
white neckcloth that a man might go to bed in and
be none the worse for. But what principally attracted
the attention of Nicholas was the old gentleman’s
eye,—never was such a clear, twinkling,
honest, merry, happy eye, as that. And there
he stood, looking a little upward, with one hand thrust
into the breast of his coat, and the other playing
with his old-fashioned gold watch-chain: his head
thrown a little on one side, and his hat a little
more on one side than his head, (but that was evidently
accident; not his ordinary way of wearing it,) with
such a pleasant smile playing about his mouth, and
such a comical expression of mingled slyness, simplicity,
kind-heartedness, and good-humour, lighting up his
jolly old face, that Nicholas would have been content
to have stood there and looked at him until evening,
and to have forgotten, meanwhile, that there was such
a thing as a soured mind or a crabbed countenance to
be met with in the whole wide world.
But, even a very remote approach to
this gratification was not to be made, for although
he seemed quite unconscious of having been the subject
of observation, he looked casually at Nicholas; and
the latter, fearful of giving offence, resumed his
scrutiny of the window instantly.
Still, the old gentleman stood there,
glancing from placard to placard, and Nicholas could
not forbear raising his eyes to his face again.
Grafted upon the quaintness and oddity of his appearance,
was something so indescribably engaging, and bespeaking
so much worth, and there were so many little lights
hovering about the corners of his mouth and eyes,
that it was not a mere amusement, but a positive pleasure
and delight to look at him.
This being the case, it is no wonder
that the old man caught Nicholas in the fact, more
than once. At such times, Nicholas coloured
and looked embarrassed: for the truth is, that
he had begun to wonder whether the stranger could,
by any possibility, be looking for a clerk or secretary;
and thinking this, he felt as if the old gentleman
must know it.
Long as all this takes to tell, it
was not more than a couple of minutes in passing.
As the stranger was moving away, Nicholas caught
his eye again, and, in the awkwardness of the moment,
stammered out an apology.
‘No offence. Oh no offence!’ said
the old man.
This was said in such a hearty tone,
and the voice was so exactly what it should have been
from such a speaker, and there was such a cordiality
in the manner, that Nicholas was emboldened to speak
again.
‘A great many opportunities
here, sir,’ he said, half smiling as he motioned
towards the window.
’A great many people willing
and anxious to be employed have seriously thought
so very often, I dare say,’ replied the old man.
‘Poor fellows, poor fellows!’
He moved away as he said this; but
seeing that Nicholas was about to speak, good-naturedly
slackened his pace, as if he were unwilling to cut
him short. After a little of that hesitation
which may be sometimes observed between two people
in the street who have exchanged a nod, and are both
uncertain whether they shall turn back and speak,
or not, Nicholas found himself at the old man’s
side.
’You were about to speak, young
gentleman; what were you going to say?’
’Merely that I almost hoped—I
mean to say, thought—you had some object
in consulting those advertisements,’ said Nicholas.
‘Ay, ay? what object now—what
object?’ returned the old man, looking slyly
at Nicholas. ’Did you think I wanted a
situation now —eh? Did you think
I did?’
Nicholas shook his head.
‘Ha! ha!’ laughed the
old gentleman, rubbing his hands and wrists as if
he were washing them. ’A very natural thought,
at all events, after seeing me gazing at those bills.
I thought the same of you, at first; upon my word
I did.’
’If you had thought so at last,
too, sir, you would not have been far from the truth,’
rejoined Nicholas.
‘Eh?’ cried the old man,
surveying him from head to foot. ’What!
Dear me! No, no. Well-behaved young gentleman
reduced to such a necessity! No no, no no.’
Nicholas bowed, and bidding him good-morning,
turned upon his heel.
‘Stay,’ said the old man,
beckoning him into a bye street, where they could
converse with less interruption. ‘What
d’ye mean, eh?’
’Merely that your kind face
and manner—both so unlike any I have ever
seen—tempted me into an avowal, which, to
any other stranger in this wilderness of London, I
should not have dreamt of making,’ returned
Nicholas.
‘Wilderness! Yes, it is,
it is. Good! It is a wilderness,’
said the old man with much animation. ’It
was a wilderness to me once. I came here barefoot.
I have never forgotten it. Thank God!’
and he raised his hat from his head, and looked very
grave.
‘What’s the matter?
What is it? How did it all come about?’
said the old man, laying his hand on the shoulder
of Nicholas, and walking him up the street.
‘You’re—Eh?’ laying his
finger on the sleeve of his black coat. ‘Who’s
it for, eh?’
‘My father,’ replied Nicholas.
‘Ah!’ said the old gentleman
quickly. ’Bad thing for a young man to
lose his father. Widowed mother, perhaps?’
Nicholas sighed.
‘Brothers and sisters too? Eh?’
‘One sister,’ rejoined Nicholas.
‘Poor thing, poor thing!
You are a scholar too, I dare say?’ said the
old man, looking wistfully into the face of the young
one.
‘I have been tolerably well educated,’
said Nicholas.
‘Fine thing,’ said the
old gentleman, ’education a great thing:
a very great thing! I never had any. I
admire it the more in others. A very fine thing.
Yes, yes. Tell me more of your history.
Let me hear it all. No impertinent curiosity—no,
no, no.’
There was something so earnest and
guileless in the way in which all this was said, and
such a complete disregard of all conventional restraints
and coldnesses, that Nicholas could not resist it.
Among men who have any sound and sterling qualities,
there is nothing so contagious as pure openness of
heart. Nicholas took the infection instantly,
and ran over the main points of his little history
without reserve: merely suppressing names, and
touching as lightly as possible upon his uncle’s
treatment of Kate. The old man listened with
great attention, and when he had concluded, drew his
arm eagerly through his own.
‘Don’t say another word.
Not another word’ said he. ’Come
along with me. We mustn’t lose a minute.’
So saying, the old gentleman dragged
him back into Oxford Street, and hailing an omnibus
on its way to the city, pushed Nicholas in before
him, and followed himself.
As he appeared in a most extraordinary
condition of restless excitement, and whenever Nicholas
offered to speak, immediately interposed with:
’Don’t say another word, my dear sir, on
any account—not another word,’ the
young man thought it better to attempt no further
interruption. Into the city they journeyed accordingly,
without interchanging any conversation; and the farther
they went, the more Nicholas wondered what the end
of the adventure could possibly be.
The old gentleman got out, with great
alacrity, when they reached the Bank, and once more
taking Nicholas by the arm, hurried him along Threadneedle
Street, and through some lanes and passages on the
right, until they, at length, emerged in a quiet shady
little square. Into the oldest and cleanest-looking
house of business in the square, he led the way.
The only inscription on the door-post was ‘Cheeryble,
Brothers;’ but from a hasty glance at the directions
of some packages which were lying about, Nicholas supposed
that the brothers Cheeryble were German merchants.
Passing through a warehouse which
presented every indication of a thriving business,
Mr Cheeryble (for such Nicholas supposed him to be,
from the respect which had been shown him by the warehousemen
and porters whom they passed) led him into a little
partitioned-off counting-house like a large glass
case, in which counting-house there sat—as
free from dust and blemish as if he had been fixed
into the glass case before the top was put on, and
had never come out since—a fat, elderly,
large-faced clerk, with silver spectacles and a powdered
head.
‘Is my brother in his room,
Tim?’ said Mr Cheeryble, with no less kindness
of manner than he had shown to Nicholas.
‘Yes, he is, sir,’ replied
the fat clerk, turning his spectacle-glasses towards
his principal, and his eyes towards Nicholas, ’but
Mr Trimmers is with him.’
‘Ay! And what has he come
about, Tim?’ said Mr Cheeryble.
’He is getting up a subscription
for the widow and family of a man who was killed in
the East India Docks this morning, sir,’ rejoined
Tim. ‘Smashed, sir, by a cask of sugar.’
‘He is a good creature,’
said Mr Cheeryble, with great earnestness. ’He
is a kind soul. I am very much obliged to Trimmers.
Trimmers is one of the best friends we have.
He makes a thousand cases known to us that we should
never discover of ourselves. I am very much
obliged to Trimmers.’ Saying which, Mr
Cheeryble rubbed his hands with infinite delight,
and Mr Trimmers happening to pass the door that instant,
on his way out, shot out after him and caught him by
the hand.
’I owe you a thousand thanks,
Trimmers, ten thousand thanks. I take it very
friendly of you, very friendly indeed,’ said
Mr Cheeryble, dragging him into a corner to get out
of hearing. ’How many children are there,
and what has my brother Ned given, Trimmers?’
‘There are six children,’
replied the gentleman, ’and your brother has
given us twenty pounds.’
’My brother Ned is a good fellow,
and you’re a good fellow too, Trimmers,’
said the old man, shaking him by both hands with trembling
eagerness. ’Put me down for another twenty—or—stop
a minute, stop a minute. We mustn’t look
ostentatious; put me down ten pound, and Tim Linkinwater
ten pound. A cheque for twenty pound for Mr
Trimmers, Tim. God bless you, Trimmers—and
come and dine with us some day this week; you’ll
always find a knife and fork, and we shall be delighted.
Now, my dear sir—cheque from Mr Linkinwater,
Tim. Smashed by a cask of sugar, and six poor
children—oh dear, dear, dear!’
Talking on in this strain, as fast
as he could, to prevent any friendly remonstrances
from the collector of the subscription on the large
amount of his donation, Mr Cheeryble led Nicholas,
equally astonished and affected by what he had seen
and heard in this short space, to the half-opened
door of another room.
‘Brother Ned,’ said Mr
Cheeryble, tapping with his knuckles, and stooping
to listen, ’are you busy, my dear brother, or
can you spare time for a word or two with me?’
‘Brother Charles, my dear fellow,’
replied a voice from the inside, so like in its tones
to that which had just spoken, that Nicholas started,
and almost thought it was the same, ’don’t
ask me such a question, but come in directly.’
They went in, without further parley.
What was the amazement of Nicholas when his conductor
advanced, and exchanged a warm greeting with another
old gentleman, the very type and model of himself—the
same face, the same figure, the same coat, waistcoat,
and neckcloth, the same breeches and gaiters—nay,
there was the very same white hat hanging against
the wall!
As they shook each other by the hand:
the face of each lighted up by beaming looks of affection,
which would have been most delightful to behold in
infants, and which, in men so old, was inexpressibly
touching: Nicholas could observe that the last
old gentleman was something stouter than his brother;
this, and a slight additional shade of clumsiness
in his gait and stature, formed the only perceptible
difference between them. Nobody could have doubted
their being twin brothers.
‘Brother Ned,’ said Nicholas’s
friend, closing the room-door, ’here is a young
friend of mine whom we must assist. We must make
proper inquiries into his statements, in justice to
him as well as to ourselves, and if they are confirmed—as
I feel assured they will be—we must assist
him, we must assist him, brother Ned.’
‘It is enough, my dear brother,
that you say we should,’ returned the other.
’When you say that, no further inquiries are
needed. He shall be assisted. What
are his necessities, and what does he require?
Where is Tim Linkinwater? Let us have him here.’
Both the brothers, it may be here
remarked, had a very emphatic and earnest delivery;
both had lost nearly the same teeth, which imparted
the same peculiarity to their speech; and both spoke
as if, besides possessing the utmost serenity of mind
that the kindliest and most unsuspecting nature could
bestow, they had, in collecting the plums from Fortune’s
choicest pudding, retained a few for present use,
and kept them in their mouths.
‘Where is Tim Linkinwater?’ said brother
Ned.
‘Stop, stop, stop!’ said
brother Charles, taking the other aside. ’I’ve
a plan, my dear brother, I’ve a plan. Tim
is getting old, and Tim has been a faithful servant,
brother Ned; and I don’t think pensioning Tim’s
mother and sister, and buying a little tomb for the
family when his poor brother died, was a sufficient
recompense for his faithful services.’
‘No, no, no,’ replied
the other. ’Certainly not. Not half
enough, not half.’
‘If we could lighten Tim’s
duties,’ said the old gentleman, ’and
prevail upon him to go into the country, now and then,
and sleep in the fresh air, besides, two or three
times a week (which he could, if he began business
an hour later in the morning), old Tim Linkinwater
would grow young again in time; and he’s three
good years our senior now. Old Tim Linkinwater
young again! Eh, brother Ned, eh? Why,
I recollect old Tim Linkinwater quite a little boy,
don’t you? Ha, ha, ha! Poor Tim,
poor Tim!’
And the fine old fellows laughed pleasantly
together: each with a tear of regard for old
Tim Linkinwater standing in his eye.
‘But hear this first—hear
this first, brother Ned,’ said the old man,
hastily, placing two chairs, one on each side of Nicholas:
’I’ll tell it you myself, brother Ned,
because the young gentleman is modest, and is a scholar,
Ned, and I shouldn’t feel it right that he should
tell us his story over and over again as if he was
a beggar, or as if we doubted him. No, no no.’
‘No, no, no,’ returned
the other, nodding his head gravely. ’Very
right, my dear brother, very right.’
‘He will tell me I’m wrong,
if I make a mistake,’ said Nicholas’s
friend. ’But whether I do or not, you’ll
be very much affected, brother Ned, remembering the
time when we were two friendless lads, and earned
our first shilling in this great city.’
The twins pressed each other’s
hands in silence; and in his own homely manner, brother
Charles related the particulars he had heard from
Nicholas. The conversation which ensued was a
long one, and when it was over, a secret conference
of almost equal duration took place between brother
Ned and Tim Linkinwater in another room. It
is no disparagement to Nicholas to say, that before
he had been closeted with the two brothers ten minutes,
he could only wave his hand at every fresh expression
of kindness and sympathy, and sob like a little child.
At length brother Ned and Tim Linkinwater
came back together, when Tim instantly walked up to
Nicholas and whispered in his ear in a very brief
sentence (for Tim was ordinarily a man of few words),
that he had taken down the address in the Strand, and
would call upon him that evening, at eight.
Having done which, Tim wiped his spectacles and put
them on, preparatory to hearing what more the brothers
Cheeryble had got to say.
‘Tim,’ said brother Charles,
’you understand that we have an intention of
taking this young gentleman into the counting-house?’
Brother Ned remarked that Tim was
aware of that intention, and quite approved of it;
and Tim having nodded, and said he did, drew himself
up and looked particularly fat, and very important.
After which, there was a profound silence.
‘I’m not coming an hour
later in the morning, you know,’ said Tim, breaking
out all at once, and looking very resolute. ’I’m
not going to sleep in the fresh air; no, nor I’m
not going into the country either. A pretty
thing at this time of day, certainly. Pho!’
‘Damn your obstinacy, Tim Linkinwater,’
said brother Charles, looking at him without the faintest
spark of anger, and with a countenance radiant with
attachment to the old clerk. ’Damn your
obstinacy, Tim Linkinwater, what do you mean, sir?’
‘It’s forty-four year,’
said Tim, making a calculation in the air with his
pen, and drawing an imaginary line before he cast it
up, ’forty-four year, next May, since I first
kept the books of Cheeryble, Brothers. I’ve
opened the safe every morning all that time (Sundays
excepted) as the clock struck nine, and gone over the
house every night at half-past ten (except on Foreign
Post nights, and then twenty minutes before twelve)
to see the doors fastened, and the fires out.
I’ve never slept out of the back-attic one
single night. There’s the same mignonette
box in the middle of the window, and the same four
flower-pots, two on each side, that I brought with
me when I first came. There an’t—I’ve
said it again and again, and I’ll maintain it—there
an’t such a square as this in the world.
I know there an’t,’ said Tim, with
sudden energy, and looking sternly about him.
’Not one. For business or pleasure, in
summer-time or winter—I don’t care
which—there’s nothing like it.
There’s not such a spring in England as the pump
under the archway. There’s not such a view
in England as the view out of my window; I’ve
seen it every morning before I shaved, and I ought
to know something about it. I have slept in
that room,’ added Tim, sinking his voice a little,
’for four-and-forty year; and if it wasn’t
inconvenient, and didn’t interfere with business,
I should request leave to die there.’
‘Damn you, Tim Linkinwater,
how dare you talk about dying?’ roared the twins
by one impulse, and blowing their old noses violently.
‘That’s what I’ve
got to say, Mr Edwin and Mr Charles,’ said Tim,
squaring his shoulders again. ’This isn’t
the first time you’ve talked about superannuating
me; but, if you please, we’ll make it the last,
and drop the subject for evermore.’
With these words, Tim Linkinwater
stalked out, and shut himself up in his glass case,
with the air of a man who had had his say, and was
thoroughly resolved not to be put down.
The brothers interchanged looks, and
coughed some half-dozen times without speaking.
‘He must be done something with,
brother Ned,’ said the other, warmly; ’we
must disregard his old scruples; they can’t be
tolerated, or borne. He must be made a partner,
brother Ned; and if he won’t submit to it peaceably,
we must have recourse to violence.’
‘Quite right,’ replied
brother Ned, nodding his head as a man thoroughly
determined; ’quite right, my dear brother.
If he won’t listen to reason, we must do it
against his will, and show him that we are determined
to exert our authority. We must quarrel with
him, brother Charles.’
‘We must. We certainly
must have a quarrel with Tim Linkinwater,’ said
the other. ’But in the meantime, my dear
brother, we are keeping our young friend; and the
poor lady and her daughter will be anxious for his
return. So let us say goodbye for the present,
and —there, there—take care
of that box, my dear sir—and—no,
no, not a word now; but be careful of the crossings
and—’
And with any disjointed and unconnected
words which would prevent Nicholas from pouring forth
his thanks, the brothers hurried him out: shaking
hands with him all the way, and affecting very unsuccessfully—they
were poor hands at deception!—to be wholly
unconscious of the feelings that completely mastered
him.
Nicholas’s heart was too full
to allow of his turning into the street until he had
recovered some composure. When he at last glided
out of the dark doorway corner in which he had been
compelled to halt, he caught a glimpse of the twins
stealthily peeping in at one corner of the glass case,
evidently undecided whether they should follow up
their late attack without delay, or for the present
postpone laying further siege to the inflexible Tim
Linkinwater.
To recount all the delight and wonder
which the circumstances just detailed awakened at
Miss La Creevy’s, and all the things that were
done, said, thought, expected, hoped, and prophesied
in consequence, is beside the present course and purpose
of these adventures. It is sufficient to state,
in brief, that Mr Timothy Linkinwater arrived, punctual
to his appointment; that, oddity as he was, and jealous,
as he was bound to be, of the proper exercise of his
employers’ most comprehensive liberality, he
reported strongly and warmly in favour of Nicholas;
and that, next day, he was appointed to the vacant
stool in the counting-house of Cheeryble, Brothers,
with a present salary of one hundred and twenty pounds
a year.
‘And I think, my dear brother,’
said Nicholas’s first friend, ’that if
we were to let them that little cottage at Bow which
is empty, at something under the usual rent, now?
Eh, brother Ned?’
‘For nothing at all,’
said brother Ned. ’We are rich, and should
be ashamed to touch the rent under such circumstances
as these. Where is Tim Linkinwater?—for
nothing at all, my dear brother, for nothing at all.’
‘Perhaps it would be better
to say something, brother Ned,’ suggested the
other, mildly; ’it would help to preserve habits
of frugality, you know, and remove any painful sense
of overwhelming obligations. We might say fifteen
pound, or twenty pound, and if it was punctually paid,
make it up to them in some other way. And I
might secretly advance a small loan towards a little
furniture, and you might secretly advance another
small loan, brother Ned; and if we find them doing
well—as we shall; there’s no fear,
no fear—we can change the loans into gifts.
Carefully, brother Ned, and by degrees, and without
pressing upon them too much; what do you say now,
brother?’
Brother Ned gave his hand upon it,
and not only said it should be done, but had it done
too; and, in one short week, Nicholas took possession
of the stool, and Mrs Nickleby and Kate took possession
of the house, and all was hope, bustle, and light-heartedness.
There surely never was such a week
of discoveries and surprises as the first week of
that cottage. Every night when Nicholas came
home, something new had been found out. One day
it was a grapevine, and another day it was a boiler,
and another day it was the key of the front-parlour
closet at the bottom of the water-butt, and so on
through a hundred items. Then, this room was
embellished with a muslin curtain, and that room was
rendered quite elegant by a window-blind, and such
improvements were made, as no one would have supposed
possible. Then there was Miss La Creevy, who
had come out in the omnibus to stop a day or two and
help, and who was perpetually losing a very small
brown-paper parcel of tin tacks and a very large hammer,
and running about with her sleeves tucked up at the
wrists, and falling off pairs of steps and hurting
herself very much—and Mrs Nickleby, who
talked incessantly, and did something now and then,
but not often—and Kate, who busied herself
noiselessly everywhere, and was pleased with everything—and
Smike, who made the garden a perfect wonder to look
upon—and Nicholas, who helped and encouraged
them every one—all the peace and cheerfulness
of home restored, with such new zest imparted to every
frugal pleasure, and such delight to every hour of
meeting, as misfortune and separation alone could
give!
In short, the poor Nicklebys were
social and happy; while the rich Nickleby was alone
and miserable.