Illustrative of the convivial Sentiment,
that the best of Friends must sometimes part
The pavement of Snow Hill had been
baking and frying all day in the heat, and the twain
Saracens’ heads guarding the entrance to the
hostelry of whose name and sign they are the duplicate
presentments, looked—or seemed, in the
eyes of jaded and footsore passers-by, to look—more
vicious than usual, after blistering and scorching
in the sun, when, in one of the inn’s smallest
sitting-rooms, through whose open window there rose,
in a palpable steam, wholesome exhalations from reeking
coach-horses, the usual furniture of a tea-table was
displayed in neat and inviting order, flanked by large
joints of roast and boiled, a tongue, a pigeon pie,
a cold fowl, a tankard of ale, and other little matters
of the like kind, which, in degenerate towns and cities,
are generally understood to belong more particularly
to solid lunches, stage-coach dinners, or unusually
substantial breakfasts.
Mr John Browdie, with his hands in
his pockets, hovered restlessly about these delicacies,
stopping occasionally to whisk the flies out of the
sugar-basin with his wife’s pocket-handkerchief,
or to dip a teaspoon in the milk-pot and carry it
to his mouth, or to cut off a little knob of crust,
and a little corner of meat, and swallow them at two
gulps like a couple of pills. After every one
of these flirtations with the eatables, he pulled
out his watch, and declared with an earnestness quite
pathetic that he couldn’t undertake to hold
out two minutes longer.
‘Tilly!’ said John to
his lady, who was reclining half awake and half asleep
upon a sofa.
‘Well, John!’
‘Well, John!’ retorted
her husband, impatiently. ’Dost thou feel
hoongry, lass?’
‘Not very,’ said Mrs Browdie.
‘Not vary!’ repeated John,
raising his eyes to the ceiling. ’Hear
her say not vary, and us dining at three, and loonching
off pasthry thot aggravates a mon ‘stead of
pacifying him! Not vary!’
‘Here’s a gen’l’man
for you, sir,’ said the waiter, looking in.
‘A wa’at for me?’
cried John, as though he thought it must be a letter,
or a parcel.
‘A gen’l’man, sir.’
‘Stars and garthers, chap!’
said John, ’wa’at dost thou coom and say
thot for? In wi’ ‘un.’
‘Are you at home, sir?’
‘At whoam!’ cried John,
’I wish I wur; I’d ha tea’d two hour
ago. Why, I told t’oother chap to look
sharp ootside door, and tell ’un d’rectly
he coom, thot we war faint wi’ hoonger.
In wi’ ’un. Aha! Thee hond,
Misther Nickleby. This is nigh to be the proodest
day o’ my life, sir. Hoo be all wi’
ye? Ding! But, I’m glod o’
this!’
Quite forgetting even his hunger in
the heartiness of his salutation, John Browdie shook
Nicholas by the hand again and again, slapping his
palm with great violence between each shake, to add
warmth to the reception.
‘Ah! there she be,’ said
John, observing the look which Nicholas directed towards
his wife. ’There she be—we shan’t
quarrel about her noo—eh? Ecod, when
I think o’ thot—but thou want’st
soom’at to eat. Fall to, mun, fall to,
and for wa’at we’re aboot to receive—’
No doubt the grace was properly finished,
but nothing more was heard, for John had already begun
to play such a knife and fork, that his speech was,
for the time, gone.
‘I shall take the usual licence,
Mr Browdie,’ said Nicholas, as he placed a chair
for the bride.
‘Tak’ whatever thou like’st,’
said John, ‘and when a’s gane, ca’
for more.’
Without stopping to explain, Nicholas
kissed the blushing Mrs Browdie, and handed her to
her seat.
‘I say,’ said John, rather
astounded for the moment, ‘mak’ theeself
quite at whoam, will ‘ee?’
‘You may depend upon that,’
replied Nicholas; ‘on one condition.’
‘And wa’at may thot be?’ asked John.
’That you make me a godfather
the very first time you have occasion for one.’
‘Eh! d’ye hear thot?’
cried John, laying down his knife and fork. ’A
godfeyther! Ha! ha! ha! Tilly—hear
till ’un—a godfeyther! Divn’t
say a word more, ye’ll never beat thot.
Occasion for ’un—a godfeyther!
Ha! ha! ha!’
Never was man so tickled with a respectable
old joke, as John Browdie was with this. He
chuckled, roared, half suffocated himself by laughing
large pieces of beef into his windpipe, roared again,
persisted in eating at the same time, got red in the
face and black in the forehead, coughed, cried, got
better, went off again laughing inwardly, got worse,
choked, had his back thumped, stamped about, frightened
his wife, and at last recovered in a state of the last
exhaustion and with the water streaming from his eyes,
but still faintly ejaculating, ‘A godfeyther—a
godfeyther, Tilly!’ in a tone bespeaking an
exquisite relish of the sally, which no suffering
could diminish.
‘You remember the night of our
first tea-drinking?’ said Nicholas.
‘Shall I e’er forget it, mun?’ replied
John Browdie.
’He was a desperate fellow that
night though, was he not, Mrs Browdie?’ said
Nicholas. ‘Quite a monster!’
’If you had only heard him as
we were going home, Mr Nickleby, you’d have
said so indeed,’ returned the bride. ’I
never was so frightened in all my life.’
‘Coom, coom,’ said John,
with a broad grin; ’thou know’st betther
than thot, Tilly.’
‘So I was,’ replied Mrs
Browdie. ’I almost made up my mind never
to speak to you again.’
‘A’most!’ said John,
with a broader grin than the last. ’A’most
made up her mind! And she wur coaxin’,
and coaxin’, and wheedlin’, and wheedlin’
a’ the blessed wa’. “Wa’at
didst thou let yon chap mak’ oop tiv’ee
for?” says I. “I deedn’t, John,”
says she, a squeedgin my arm. “You deedn’t?”
says I. “Noa,” says she, a squeedgin
of me agean.’
‘Lor, John!’ interposed
his pretty wife, colouring very much. ’How
can you talk such nonsense? As if I should have
dreamt of such a thing!’
’I dinnot know whether thou’d
ever dreamt of it, though I think that’s loike
eneaf, mind,’ retorted John; ’but thou
didst it. “Ye’re a feeckle, changeable
weathercock, lass,” says I. “Not
feeckle, John,” says she. “Yes,”
says I, “feeckle, dom’d feeckle.
Dinnot tell me thou bean’t, efther yon chap at
schoolmeasther’s,” says I. “Him!”
says she, quite screeching. “Ah! him!”
says I. “Why, John,” says she—and
she coom a deal closer and squeedged a deal harder
than she’d deane afore—“dost
thou think it’s nat’ral noo, that having
such a proper mun as thou to keep company wi’,
I’d ever tak’ opp wi’ such a leetle
scanty whipper-snapper as yon?” she says.
Ha! ha! ha! She said whipper-snapper! “Ecod!”
I says, “efther thot, neame the day, and let’s
have it ower!” Ha! ha! ha!’
Nicholas laughed very heartily at
this story, both on account of its telling against
himself, and his being desirous to spare the blushes
of Mrs Browdie, whose protestations were drowned in
peals of laughter from her husband. His good-nature
soon put her at her ease; and although she still denied
the charge, she laughed so heartily at it, that Nicholas
had the satisfaction of feeling assured that in all
essential respects it was strictly true.
‘This is the second time,’
said Nicholas, ’that we have ever taken a meal
together, and only third I have ever seen you; and
yet it really seems to me as if I were among old friends.’
‘Weel!’ observed the Yorkshireman, ‘so
I say.’
‘And I am sure I do,’ added his young
wife.
‘I have the best reason to be
impressed with the feeling, mind,’ said Nicholas;
’for if it had not been for your kindness of
heart, my good friend, when I had no right or reason
to expect it, I know not what might have become of
me or what plight I should have been in by this time.’
‘Talk aboot soom’at else,’
replied John, gruffly, ’and dinnot bother.’
‘It must be a new song to the
same tune then,’ said Nicholas, smiling.
’I told you in my letter that I deeply felt
and admired your sympathy with that poor lad, whom
you released at the risk of involving yourself in
trouble and difficulty; but I can never tell you how
greateful he and I, and others whom you don’t
know, are to you for taking pity on him.’
‘Ecod!’ rejoined John
Browdie, drawing up his chair; ’and I can never
tell you hoo gratful soom folks that we do know
would be loikewise, if they know’d I had
takken pity on him.’
‘Ah!’ exclaimed Mrs Browdie,
‘what a state I was in that night!’
’Were they at all disposed to
give you credit for assisting in the escape?’
inquired Nicholas of John Browdie.
‘Not a bit,’ replied the
Yorkshireman, extending his mouth from ear to ear.
’There I lay, snoog in schoolmeasther’s
bed long efther it was dark, and nobody coom nigh
the pleace. “Weel!” thinks I, “he’s
got a pretty good start, and if he bean’t whoam
by noo, he never will be; so you may coom as quick
as you loike, and foind us reddy” —that
is, you know, schoolmeasther might coom.’
‘I understand,’ said Nicholas.
‘Presently,’ resumed John,
’he did coom. I heerd door shut doonstairs,
and him a warking, oop in the daark. “Slow
and steddy,’ I says to myself, “tak’
your time, sir—no hurry.” He
cooms to the door, turns the key—turns
the key when there warn’t nothing to hoold the
lock—and ca’s oot ’Hallo, there!”—“Yes,”
thinks I, “you may do thot agean, and not wakken
anybody, sir.” “Hallo, there,”
he says, and then he stops. “Thou’d
betther not aggravate me,” says schoolmeasther,
efther a little time. “I’ll brak’
every boan in your boddy, Smike,” he says, efther
another little time. Then all of a soodden,
he sings oot for a loight, and when it cooms—ecod,
such a hoorly-boorly! “Wa’at’s
the matter?” says I. “He’s
gane,” says he,—stark mad wi’
vengeance. “Have you heerd nought?”
“Ees,” says I, “I heerd street-door
shut, no time at a’ ago. I heerd a person
run doon there” (pointing t’other wa’—eh?)
“Help!” he cries. “I’ll
help you,” says I; and off we set—the
wrong wa’! Ho! ho! ho!’
‘Did you go far?’ asked Nicholas.
‘Far!’ replied John; ’I
run him clean off his legs in quarther of an hoor.
To see old schoolmeasther wi’out his hat, skimming
along oop to his knees in mud and wather, tumbling
over fences, and rowling into ditches, and bawling
oot like mad, wi’ his one eye looking sharp
out for the lad, and his coat-tails flying out behind,
and him spattered wi’ mud all ower, face and
all! I tho’t I should ha’ dropped
doon, and killed myself wi’ laughing.’
John laughed so heartily at the mere
recollection, that he communicated the contagion to
both his hearers, and all three burst into peals of
laughter, which were renewed again and again, until
they could laugh no longer.
’He’s a bad ‘un,’
said John, wiping his eyes; ’a very bad ’un,
is schoolmeasther.’
‘I can’t bear the sight of him, John,’
said his wife.
‘Coom,’ retorted John,
’thot’s tidy in you, thot is. If
it wa’nt along o’ you, we shouldn’t
know nought aboot ’un. Thou know’d
’un first, Tilly, didn’t thou?’
‘I couldn’t help knowing
Fanny Squeers, John,’ returned his wife; ‘she
was an old playmate of mine, you know.’
‘Weel,’ replied John,
’dean’t I say so, lass? It’s
best to be neighbourly, and keep up old acquaintance
loike; and what I say is, dean’t quarrel if
‘ee can help it. Dinnot think so, Mr Nickleby?’
‘Certainly,’ returned
Nicholas; ’and you acted upon that principle
when I meet you on horseback on the road, after our
memorable evening.’
‘Sure-ly,’ said John. ‘Wa’at
I say, I stick by.’
‘And that’s a fine thing
to do, and manly too,’ said Nicholas, ’though
it’s not exactly what we understand by “coming
Yorkshire over us” in London. Miss Squeers
is stopping with you, you said in your note.’
‘Yes,’ replied John, ’Tilly’s
bridesmaid; and a queer bridesmaid she be, too.
She wean’t be a bride in a hurry, I reckon.’
‘For shame, John,’ said
Mrs Browdie; with an acute perception of the joke
though, being a bride herself.
‘The groom will be a blessed
mun,’ said John, his eyes twinkling at the idea.
‘He’ll be in luck, he will.’
‘You see, Mr Nickleby,’
said his wife, ’that it was in consequence of
her being here, that John wrote to you and fixed tonight,
because we thought that it wouldn’t be pleasant
for you to meet, after what has passed.’
‘Unquestionably. You were
quite right in that,’ said Nicholas, interrupting.
‘Especially,’ observed
Mrs Browdie, looking very sly, ’after what we
know about past and gone love matters.’
‘We know, indeed!’ said
Nicholas, shaking his head. ’You behaved
rather wickedly there, I suspect.’
‘O’ course she did,’
said John Browdie, passing his huge forefinger through
one of his wife’s pretty ringlets, and looking
very proud of her. ‘She wur always as
skittish and full o’ tricks as a—’
‘Well, as a what?’ said his wife.
‘As a woman,’ returned
John. ’Ding! But I dinnot know ought
else that cooms near it.’
‘You were speaking about Miss
Squeers,’ said Nicholas, with the view of stopping
some slight connubialities which had begun to pass
between Mr and Mrs Browdie, and which rendered the
position of a third party in some degree embarrassing,
as occasioning him to feel rather in the way than
otherwise.
‘Oh yes,’ rejoined Mrs
Browdie. ‘John ha’ done. John
fixed tonight, because she had settled that she would
go and drink tea with her father. And to make
quite sure of there being nothing amiss, and of your
being quite alone with us, he settled to go out there
and fetch her home.’
‘That was a very good arrangement,’
said Nicholas, ’though I am sorry to be the
occasion of so much trouble.’
‘Not the least in the world,’
returned Mrs Browdie; ’for we have looked forward
to see you—John and I have—with
the greatest possible pleasure. Do you know,
Mr Nickleby,’ said Mrs Browdie, with her archest
smile, ’that I really think Fanny Squeers was
very fond of you?’
‘I am very much obliged to her,’
said Nicholas; ’but upon my word, I never aspired
to making any impression upon her virgin heart.’
‘How you talk!’ tittered
Mrs Browdie. ’No, but do you know that
really—seriously now and without any joking—I
was given to understand by Fanny herself, that you
had made an offer to her, and that you two were going
to be engaged quite solemn and regular.’
‘Was you, ma’am—was
you?’ cried a shrill female voice, ’was
you given to understand that I—I—was
going to be engaged to an assassinating thief that
shed the gore of my pa? Do you—do
you think, ma’am—that I was very
fond of such dirt beneath my feet, as I couldn’t
condescend to touch with kitchen tongs, without blacking
and crocking myself by the contract? Do you,
ma’am—do you? Oh! base and
degrading ‘Tilda!’
With these reproaches Miss Squeers
flung the door wide open, and disclosed to the eyes
of the astonished Browdies and Nicholas, not only
her own symmetrical form, arrayed in the chaste white
garments before described (a little dirtier), but
the form of her brother and father, the pair of Wackfords.
‘This is the hend, is it?’
continued Miss Squeers, who, being excited, aspirated
her h’s strongly; ’this is the hend, is
it, of all my forbearance and friendship for that
double-faced thing—that viper, that—that—mermaid?’
(Miss Squeers hesitated a long time for this last
epithet, and brought it out triumphantly as last, as
if it quite clinched the business.) ’This is
the hend, is it, of all my bearing with her deceitfulness,
her lowness, her falseness, her laying herself out
to catch the admiration of vulgar minds, in a way
which made me blush for my—for my—’
‘Gender,’ suggested Mr
Squeers, regarding the spectators with a malevolent
eye—literally A malevolent eye.
‘Yes,’ said Miss Squeers;
’but I thank my stars that my ma is of the same—’
‘Hear, hear!’ remarked
Mr Squeers; ’and I wish she was here to have
a scratch at this company.’
‘This is the hend, is it,’
said Miss Squeers, tossing her head, and looking contemptuously
at the floor, ’of my taking notice of that rubbishing
creature, and demeaning myself to patronise her?’
‘Oh, come,’ rejoined Mrs
Browdie, disregarding all the endeavours of her spouse
to restrain her, and forcing herself into a front row,
‘don’t talk such nonsense as that.’
‘Have I not patronised you,
ma’am?’ demanded Miss Squeers.
‘No,’ returned Mrs Browdie.
‘I will not look for blushes
in such a quarter,’ said Miss Squeers, haughtily,
’for that countenance is a stranger to everything
but hignominiousness and red-faced boldness.’
‘I say,’ interposed John
Browdie, nettled by these accumulated attacks on his
wife, ‘dra’ it mild, dra’ it mild.’
‘You, Mr Browdie,’ said
Miss Squeers, taking him up very quickly, ’I
pity. I have no feeling for you, sir, but one
of unliquidated pity.’
‘Oh!’ said John.
‘No,’ said Miss Squeers,
looking sideways at her parent, ’although I
am a queer bridesmaid, and shan’t be
a bride in a hurry, and although my husband will
be in luck, I entertain no sentiments towards you,
sir, but sentiments of pity.’
Here Miss Squeers looked sideways
at her father again, who looked sideways at her, as
much as to say, ‘There you had him.’
‘I know what you’ve got
to go through,’ said Miss Squeers, shaking her
curls violently. ’I know what life is before
you, and if you was my bitterest and deadliest enemy,
I could wish you nothing worse.’
’Couldn’t you wish to
be married to him yourself, if that was the case?’
inquired Mrs Browdie, with great suavity of manner.
‘Oh, ma’am, how witty
you are,’ retorted Miss Squeers with a low curtsy,
’almost as witty, ma’am, as you are clever.
How very clever it was in you, ma’am, to choose
a time when I had gone to tea with my pa, and was
sure not to come back without being fetched!
What a pity you never thought that other people might
be as clever as yourself and spoil your plans!’
‘You won’t vex me, child,
with such airs as these,’ said the late Miss
Price, assuming the matron.
‘Don’t missis me,
ma’am, if you please,’ returned Miss Squeers,
sharply. ‘I’ll not bear it.
Is this the hend—’
‘Dang it a’,’ cried
John Browdie, impatiently. ’Say thee say
out, Fanny, and mak’ sure it’s the end,
and dinnot ask nobody whether it is or not.’
‘Thanking you for your advice
which was not required, Mr Browdie,’ returned
Miss Squeers, with laborious politeness, ’have
the goodness not to presume to meddle with my Christian
name. Even my pity shall never make me forget
what’s due to myself, Mr Browdie. ‘Tilda,’
said Miss Squeers, with such a sudden accession of
violence that John started in his boots, ’I
throw you off for ever, miss. I abandon you.
I renounce you. I wouldn’t,’ cried
Miss Squeers in a solemn voice, ’have a child
named ’Tilda, not to save it from its grave.’
‘As for the matther o’
that,’ observed John, ’it’ll be time
eneaf to think aboot neaming of it when it cooms.’
‘John!’ interposed his wife, ‘don’t
tease her.’
‘Oh! Tease, indeed!’
cried Miss Squeers, bridling up. ’Tease,
indeed! He, he! Tease, too! No, don’t
tease her. Consider her feelings, pray!’
’If it’s fated that listeners
are never to hear any good of themselves,’ said
Mrs Browdie, ’I can’t help it, and I am
very sorry for it. But I will say, Fanny, that
times out of number I have spoken so kindly of you
behind your back, that even you could have found no
fault with what I said.’
‘Oh, I dare say not, ma’am!’
cried Miss Squeers, with another curtsy. ’Best
thanks to you for your goodness, and begging and praying
you not to be hard upon me another time!’
‘I don’t know,’
resumed Mrs Browdie, ’that I have said anything
very bad of you, even now. At all events, what
I did say was quite true; but if I have, I am very
sorry for it, and I beg your pardon. You have
said much worse of me, scores of times, Fanny; but
I have never borne any malice to you, and I hope you’ll
not bear any to me.’
Miss Squeers made no more direct reply
than surveying her former friend from top to toe,
and elevating her nose in the air with ineffable disdain.
But some indistinct allusions to a ‘puss,’
and a ‘minx,’ and a ‘contemptible
creature,’ escaped her; and this, together with
a severe biting of the lips, great difficulty in swallowing,
and very frequent comings and goings of breath, seemed
to imply that feelings were swelling in Miss Squeers’s
bosom too great for utterance.
While the foregoing conversation was
proceeding, Master Wackford, finding himself unnoticed,
and feeling his preponderating inclinations strong
upon him, had by little and little sidled up to the
table and attacked the food with such slight skirmishing
as drawing his fingers round and round the inside
of the plates, and afterwards sucking them with infinite
relish; picking the bread, and dragging the pieces
over the surface of the butter; pocketing lumps of
sugar, pretending all the time to be absorbed in thought;
and so forth. Finding that no interference was
attempted with these small liberties, he gradually
mounted to greater, and, after helping himself to
a moderately good cold collation, was, by this time,
deep in the pie.
Nothing of this had been unobserved
by Mr Squeers, who, so long as the attention of the
company was fixed upon other objects, hugged himself
to think that his son and heir should be fattening
at the enemy’s expense. But there being
now an appearance of a temporary calm, in which the
proceedings of little Wackford could scarcely fail
to be observed, he feigned to be aware of the circumstance
for the first time, and inflicted upon the face of
that young gentleman a slap that made the very tea-cups
ring.
‘Eating!’ cried Mr Squeers,
’of what his father’s enemies has left!
It’s fit to go and poison you, you unnat’ral
boy.’
‘It wean’t hurt him,’
said John, apparently very much relieved by the prospect
of having a man in the quarrel; ‘let’ un
eat. I wish the whole school was here.
I’d give’em soom’at to stay their
unfort’nate stomachs wi’, if I spent the
last penny I had!’
Squeers scowled at him with the worst
and most malicious expression of which his face was
capable—it was a face of remarkable capability,
too, in that way—and shook his fist stealthily.
‘Coom, coom, schoolmeasther,’
said John, ‘dinnot make a fool o’ thyself;
for if I was to sheake mine—only once—thou’d
fa’ doon wi’ the wind o’ it.’
‘It was you, was it,’
returned Squeers, ’that helped off my runaway
boy? It was you, was it?’
‘Me!’ returned John, in
a loud tone. ‘Yes, it wa’ me, coom;
wa’at o’ that? It wa’ me.
Noo then!’
‘You hear him say he did it,
my child!’ said Squeers, appealing to his daughter.
‘You hear him say he did it!’
‘Did it!’ cried John.
’I’ll tell ’ee more; hear this,
too. If thou’d got another roonaway boy,
I’d do it agean. If thou’d got twonty
roonaway boys, I’d do it twonty times ower, and
twonty more to thot; and I tell thee more,’
said John, ’noo my blood is oop, that thou’rt
an old ra’ascal; and that it’s weel for
thou, thou be’est an old ‘un, or I’d
ha’ poonded thee to flour when thou told an
honest mun hoo thou’d licked that poor chap in
t’ coorch.’
‘An honest man!’ cried Squeers, with a
sneer.
‘Ah! an honest man,’ replied
John; ’honest in ought but ever putting legs
under seame table wi’ such as thou.’
‘Scandal!’ said Squeers,
exultingly. ’Two witnesses to it; Wackford
knows the nature of an oath, he does; we shall have
you there, sir. Rascal, eh?’ Mr Squeers
took out his pocketbook and made a note of it.
’Very good. I should say that was worth
full twenty pound at the next assizes, without the
honesty, sir.’
‘’Soizes,’ cried
John, ‘thou’d betther not talk to me o’
’Soizes. Yorkshire schools have been shown
up at ’Soizes afore noo, mun, and it’s
a ticklish soobjact to revive, I can tell ye.’
Mr Squeers shook his head in a threatening
manner, looking very white with passion; and taking
his daughter’s arm, and dragging little Wackford
by the hand, retreated towards the door.
‘As for you,’ said Squeers,
turning round and addressing Nicholas, who, as he
had caused him to smart pretty soundly on a former
occasion, purposely abstained from taking any part
in the discussion, ’see if I ain’t down
upon you before long. You’ll go a kidnapping
of boys, will you? Take care their fathers don’t
turn up—mark that—take care
their fathers don’t turn up, and send ’em
back to me to do as I like with, in spite of you.’
‘I am not afraid of that,’
replied Nicholas, shrugging his shoulders contemptuously,
and turning away.
‘Ain’t you!’ retorted
Squeers, with a diabolical look. ’Now then,
come along.’
‘I leave such society, with
my pa, for Hever,’ said Miss Squeers, looking
contemptuously and loftily round. ’I am
defiled by breathing the air with such creatures.
Poor Mr Browdie! He! he! he! I do pity
him, that I do; he’s so deluded. He! he!
he!—Artful and designing ‘Tilda!’
With this sudden relapse into the
sternest and most majestic wrath, Miss Squeers swept
from the room; and having sustained her dignity until
the last possible moment, was heard to sob and scream
and struggle in the passage.
John Browdie remained standing behind
the table, looking from his wife to Nicholas, and
back again, with his mouth wide open, until his hand
accidentally fell upon the tankard of ale, when he
took it up, and having obscured his features therewith
for some time, drew a long breath, handed it over
to Nicholas, and rang the bell.
‘Here, waither,’ said
John, briskly. ‘Look alive here.
Tak’ these things awa’, and let’s
have soomat broiled for sooper—vary comfortable
and plenty o’ it—at ten o’clock.
Bring soom brandy and soom wather, and a pair o’
slippers—the largest pair in the house—
and be quick aboot it. Dash ma wig!’ said
John, rubbing his hands, ’there’s no ganging
oot to neeght, noo, to fetch anybody whoam, and ecod,
we’ll begin to spend the evening in airnest.’