Being for the Benefit of Mr Vincent
Crummles, and positively his last Appearance on this
Stage
It was with a very sad and heavy heart,
oppressed by many painful ideas, that Nicholas retraced
his steps eastward and betook himself to the counting-house
of Cheeryble Brothers. Whatever the idle hopes
he had suffered himself to entertain, whatever the
pleasant visions which had sprung up in his mind and
grouped themselves round the fair image of Madeline
Bray, they were now dispelled, and not a vestige of
their gaiety and brightness remained.
It would be a poor compliment to Nicholas’s
better nature, and one which he was very far from
deserving, to insinuate that the solution, and such
a solution, of the mystery which had seemed to surround
Madeline Bray, when he was ignorant even of her name,
had damped his ardour or cooled the fervour of his
admiration. If he had regarded her before, with
such a passion as young men attracted by mere beauty
and elegance may entertain, he was now conscious of
much deeper and stronger feelings. But, reverence
for the truth and purity of her heart, respect for
the helplessness and loneliness of her situation,
sympathy with the trials of one so young and fair and
admiration of her great and noble spirit, all seemed
to raise her far above his reach, and, while they
imparted new depth and dignity to his love, to whisper
that it was hopeless.
‘I will keep my word, as I have
pledged it to her,’ said Nicholas, manfully.
’This is no common trust that I have to discharge,
and I will perform the double duty that is imposed
upon me most scrupulously and strictly. My secret
feelings deserve no consideration in such a case as
this, and they shall have none.’
Still, there were the secret feelings
in existence just the same, and in secret Nicholas
rather encouraged them than otherwise; reasoning (if
he reasoned at all) that there they could do no harm
to anybody but himself, and that if he kept them to
himself from a sense of duty, he had an additional
right to entertain himself with them as a reward for
his heroism.
All these thoughts, coupled with what
he had seen that morning and the anticipation of his
next visit, rendered him a very dull and abstracted
companion; so much so, indeed, that Tim Linkinwater
suspected he must have made the mistake of a figure
somewhere, which was preying upon his mind, and seriously
conjured him, if such were the case, to make a clean
breast and scratch it out, rather than have his whole
life embittered by the tortures of remorse.
But in reply to these considerate
representations, and many others both from Tim and
Mr Frank, Nicholas could only be brought to state
that he was never merrier in his life; and so went
on all day, and so went towards home at night, still
turning over and over again the same subjects, thinking
over and over again the same things, and arriving
over and over again at the same conclusions.
In this pensive, wayward, and uncertain
state, people are apt to lounge and loiter without
knowing why, to read placards on the walls with great
attention and without the smallest idea of one word
of their contents, and to stare most earnestly through
shop-windows at things which they don’t see.
It was thus that Nicholas found himself poring with
the utmost interest over a large play-bill hanging
outside a Minor Theatre which he had to pass on his
way home, and reading a list of the actors and actresses
who had promised to do honour to some approaching
benefit, with as much gravity as if it had been a
catalogue of the names of those ladies and gentlemen
who stood highest upon the Book of Fate, and he had
been looking anxiously for his own. He glanced
at the top of the bill, with a smile at his own dulness,
as he prepared to resume his walk, and there saw announced,
in large letters with a large space between each of
them, ’Positively the last appearance of Mr Vincent
Crummles of Provincial Celebrity!!!’
‘Nonsense!’ said Nicholas,
turning back again. ‘It can’t be.’
But there it was. In one line
by itself was an announcement of the first night of
a new melodrama; in another line by itself was an
announcement of the last six nights of an old one;
a third line was devoted to the re-engagement of the
unrivalled African Knife-swallower, who had kindly
suffered himself to be prevailed upon to forego his
country engagements for one week longer; a fourth line
announced that Mr Snittle Timberry, having recovered
from his late severe indisposition, would have the
honour of appearing that evening; a fifth line said
that there were ’Cheers, Tears, and Laughter!’
every night; a sixth, that that was positively the
last appearance of Mr Vincent Crummles of Provincial
Celebrity.
‘Surely it must be the same
man,’ thought Nicholas. ’There can’t
be two Vincent Crummleses.’
The better to settle this question
he referred to the bill again, and finding that there
was a Baron in the first piece, and that Roberto (his
son) was enacted by one Master Crummles, and Spaletro
(his nephew) by one Master Percy Crummles—their
last appearances— and that, incidental
to the piece, was a characteristic dance by the characters,
and a castanet pas seul by the Infant Phenomenon—her
last appearance—he no longer entertained
any doubt; and presenting himself at the stage-door,
and sending in a scrap of paper with ’Mr Johnson’
written thereon in pencil, was presently conducted
by a Robber, with a very large belt and buckle round
his waist, and very large leather gauntlets on his
hands, into the presence of his former manager.
Mr Crummles was unfeignedly glad to
see him, and starting up from before a small dressing-glass,
with one very bushy eyebrow stuck on crooked over
his left eye, and the fellow eyebrow and the calf of
one of his legs in his hand, embraced him cordially;
at the same time observing, that it would do Mrs Crummles’s
heart good to bid him goodbye before they went.
‘You were always a favourite
of hers, Johnson,’ said Crummles, ’always
were from the first. I was quite easy in my mind
about you from that first day you dined with us.
One that Mrs Crummles took a fancy to, was sure to
turn out right. Ah! Johnson, what a woman
that is!’
’I am sincerely obliged to her
for her kindness in this and all other respects,’
said Nicholas. ‘But where are you going,’
that you talk about bidding goodbye?’
‘Haven’t you seen it in
the papers?’ said Crummles, with some dignity.
‘No,’ replied Nicholas.
‘I wonder at that,’ said
the manager. ’It was among the varieties.
I had the paragraph here somewhere—but I
don’t know—oh, yes, here it is.’
So saying, Mr Crummles, after pretending
that he thought he must have lost it, produced a square
inch of newspaper from the pocket of the pantaloons
he wore in private life (which, together with the
plain clothes of several other gentlemen, lay scattered
about on a kind of dresser in the room), and gave
it to Nicholas to read:
’The talented Vincent Crummles,
long favourably known to fame as a country manager
and actor of no ordinary pretensions, is about to
cross the Atlantic on a histrionic expedition.
Crummles is to be accompanied, we hear, by his lady
and gifted family. We know no man superior to
Crummles in his particular line of character, or one
who, whether as a public or private individual, could
carry with him the best wishes of a larger circle
of friends. Crummles is certain to succeed.’
‘Here’s another bit,’
said Mr Crummles, handing over a still smaller scrap.
‘This is from the notices to correspondents,
this one.’
Nicholas read it aloud. ’”Philo-Dramaticus.
Crummles, the country manager and actor, cannot be
more than forty-three, or forty-four years of age.
Crummles is not a Prussian, having been born
at Chelsea.” Humph!’ said Nicholas,
‘that’s an odd paragraph.’
‘Very,’ returned Crummles,
scratching the side of his nose, and looking at Nicholas
with an assumption of great unconcern. ’I
can’t think who puts these things in.
I didn’t.’
Still keeping his eye on Nicholas,
Mr Crummles shook his head twice or thrice with profound
gravity, and remarking, that he could not for the
life of him imagine how the newspapers found out the
things they did, folded up the extracts and put them
in his pocket again.
‘I am astonished to hear this
news,’ said Nicholas. ’Going to
America! You had no such thing in contemplation
when I was with you.’
‘No,’ replied Crummles,
’I hadn’t then. The fact is that
Mrs Crummles—most extraordinary woman,
Johnson.’ Here he broke off and whispered
something in his ear.
‘Oh!’ said Nicholas, smiling.
’The prospect of an addition to your family?’
‘The seventh addition, Johnson,’
returned Mr Crummles, solemnly. ’I thought
such a child as the Phenomenon must have been a closer;
but it seems we are to have another. She is
a very remarkable woman.’
‘I congratulate you,’
said Nicholas, ’and I hope this may prove a
phenomenon too.’
‘Why, it’s pretty sure
to be something uncommon, I suppose,’ rejoined
Mr Crummles. ’The talent of the other three
is principally in combat and serious pantomime.
I should like this one to have a turn for juvenile
tragedy; I understand they want something of that
sort in America very much. However, we must take
it as it comes. Perhaps it may have a genius
for the tight-rope. It may have any sort of
genius, in short, if it takes after its mother, Johnson,
for she is an universal genius; but, whatever its
genius is, that genius shall be developed.’
Expressing himself after these terms,
Mr Crummles put on his other eyebrow, and the calves
of his legs, and then put on his legs, which were
of a yellowish flesh-colour, and rather soiled about
the knees, from frequent going down upon those joints,
in curses, prayers, last struggles, and other strong
passages.
While the ex-manager completed his
toilet, he informed Nicholas that as he should have
a fair start in America from the proceeds of a tolerably
good engagement which he had been fortunate enough
to obtain, and as he and Mrs Crummles could scarcely
hope to act for ever (not being immortal, except in
the breath of Fame and in a figurative sense) he had
made up his mind to settle there permanently, in the
hope of acquiring some land of his own which would
support them in their old age, and which they could
afterwards bequeath to their children. Nicholas,
having highly commended the resolution, Mr Crummles
went on to impart such further intelligence relative
to their mutual friends as he thought might prove
interesting; informing Nicholas, among other things,
that Miss Snevellicci was happily married to an affluent
young wax-chandler who had supplied the theatre with
candles, and that Mr Lillyvick didn’t dare to
say his soul was his own, such was the tyrannical
sway of Mrs Lillyvick, who reigned paramount and supreme.
Nicholas responded to this confidence
on the part of Mr Crummles, by confiding to him his
own name, situation, and prospects, and informing
him, in as few general words as he could, of the circumstances
which had led to their first acquaintance. After
congratulating him with great heartiness on the improved
state of his fortunes, Mr Crummles gave him to understand
that next morning he and his were to start for Liverpool,
where the vessel lay which was to carry them from
the shores of England, and that if Nicholas wished
to take a last adieu of Mrs Crummles, he must repair
with him that night to a farewell supper, given in
honour of the family at a neighbouring tavern; at
which Mr Snittle Timberry would preside, while the
honours of the vice-chair would be sustained by the
African Swallower.
The room being by this time very warm
and somewhat crowded, in consequence of the influx
of four gentlemen, who had just killed each other
in the piece under representation, Nicholas accepted
the invitation, and promised to return at the conclusion
of the performances; preferring the cool air and twilight
out of doors to the mingled perfume of gas, orange-peel,
and gunpowder, which pervaded the hot and glaring
theatre.
He availed himself of this interval
to buy a silver snuff-box—the best his
funds would afford—as a token of remembrance
for Mr Crummles, and having purchased besides a pair
of ear-rings for Mrs Crummles, a necklace for the
Phenomenon, and a flaming shirt-pin for each of the
young gentlemen, he refreshed himself with a walk,
and returning a little after the appointed time, found
the lights out, the theatre empty, the curtain raised
for the night, and Mr Crummles walking up and down
the stage expecting his arrival.
‘Timberry won’t be long,’
said Mr Crummles. ’He played the audience
out tonight. He does a faithful black in the
last piece, and it takes him a little longer to wash
himself.’
‘A very unpleasant line of character,
I should think?’ said Nicholas.
‘No, I don’t know,’
replied Mr Crummles; ’it comes off easily enough,
and there’s only the face and neck. We
had a first-tragedy man in our company once, who,
when he played Othello, used to black himself all
over. But that’s feeling a part and going
into it as if you meant it; it isn’t usual;
more’s the pity.’
Mr Snittle Timberry now appeared,
arm-in-arm with the African Swallower, and, being
introduced to Nicholas, raised his hat half a foot,
and said he was proud to know him. The Swallower
said the same, and looked and spoke remarkably like
an Irishman.
‘I see by the bills that you
have been ill, sir,’ said Nicholas to Mr Timberry.
’I hope you are none the worse for your exertions
tonight?’
Mr Timberry, in reply, shook his head
with a gloomy air, tapped his chest several times
with great significancy, and drawing his cloak more
closely about him, said, ‘But no matter, no matter.
Come!’
It is observable that when people
upon the stage are in any strait involving the very
last extremity of weakness and exhaustion, they invariably
perform feats of strength requiring great ingenuity
and muscular power. Thus, a wounded prince or
bandit chief, who is bleeding to death and too faint
to move, except to the softest music (and then only
upon his hands and knees), shall be seen to approach
a cottage door for aid in such a series of writhings
and twistings, and with such curlings up of the legs,
and such rollings over and over, and such gettings
up and tumblings down again, as could never be achieved
save by a very strong man skilled in posture-making.
And so natural did this sort of performance come to
Mr Snittle Timberry, that on their way out of the
theatre and towards the tavern where the supper was
to be holden, he testified the severity of his recent
indisposition and its wasting effects upon the nervous
system, by a series of gymnastic performances which
were the admiration of all witnesses.
‘Why this is indeed a joy I
had not looked for!’ said Mrs Crummles, when
Nicholas was presented.
‘Nor I,’ replied Nicholas.
’It is by a mere chance that I have this opportunity
of seeing you, although I would have made a great
exertion to have availed myself of it.’
‘Here is one whom you know,’
said Mrs Crummles, thrusting forward the Phenomenon
in a blue gauze frock, extensively flounced, and trousers
of the same; ‘and here another—and
another,’ presenting the Master Crummleses.
’And how is your friend, the faithful Digby?’
‘Digby!’ said Nicholas,
forgetting at the instant that this had been Smike’s
theatrical name. ’Oh yes. He’s
quite—what am I saying?— he
is very far from well.’
‘How!’ exclaimed Mrs Crummles, with a
tragic recoil.
‘I fear,’ said Nicholas,
shaking his head, and making an attempt to smile,
’that your better-half would be more struck with
him now than ever.’
‘What mean you?’ rejoined
Mrs Crummles, in her most popular manner. ‘Whence
comes this altered tone?’
’I mean that a dastardly enemy
of mine has struck at me through him, and that while
he thinks to torture me, he inflicts on him such agonies
of terror and suspense as—You will excuse
me, I am sure,’ said Nicholas, checking himself.
’I should never speak of this, and never do,
except to those who know the facts, but for a moment
I forgot myself.’
With this hasty apology Nicholas stooped
down to salute the Phenomenon, and changed the subject;
inwardly cursing his precipitation, and very much
wondering what Mrs Crummles must think of so sudden
an explosion.
That lady seemed to think very little
about it, for the supper being by this time on table,
she gave her hand to Nicholas and repaired with a
stately step to the left hand of Mr Snittle Timberry.
Nicholas had the honour to support her, and Mr Crummles
was placed upon the chairman’s right; the Phenomenon
and the Master Crummleses sustained the vice.
The company amounted in number to
some twenty-five or thirty, being composed of such
members of the theatrical profession, then engaged
or disengaged in London, as were numbered among the
most intimate friends of Mr and Mrs Crummles.
The ladies and gentlemen were pretty equally balanced;
the expenses of the entertainment being defrayed by
the latter, each of whom had the privilege of inviting
one of the former as his guest.
It was upon the whole a very distinguished
party, for independently of the lesser theatrical
lights who clustered on this occasion round Mr Snittle
Timberry, there was a literary gentleman present who
had dramatised in his time two hundred and forty-seven
novels as fast as they had come out—some
of them faster than they had come out—and
who was a literary gentleman in consequence.
This gentleman sat on the left hand
of Nicholas, to whom he was introduced by his friend
the African Swallower, from the bottom of the table,
with a high eulogium upon his fame and reputation.
‘I am happy to know a gentleman
of such great distinction,’ said Nicholas, politely.
‘Sir,’ replied the wit,
’you’re very welcome, I’m sure.
The honour is reciprocal, sir, as I usually say when
I dramatise a book. Did you ever hear a definition
of fame, sir?’
‘I have heard several,’
replied Nicholas, with a smile. ’What is
yours?’
‘When I dramatise a book, sir,’
said the literary gentleman, ’that’s
fame. For its author.’
‘Oh, indeed!’ rejoined Nicholas.
‘That’s fame, sir,’ said the literary
gentleman.
’So Richard Turpin, Tom King,
and Jerry Abershaw have handed down to fame the names
of those on whom they committed their most impudent
robberies?’ said Nicholas.
‘I don’t know anything
about that, sir,’ answered the literary gentleman.
’Shakespeare dramatised stories
which had previously appeared in print, it is true,’
observed Nicholas.
‘Meaning Bill, sir?’ said
the literary gentleman. ’So he did.
Bill was an adapter, certainly, so he was—and
very well he adapted too— considering.’
‘I was about to say,’
rejoined Nicholas, ’that Shakespeare derived
some of his plots from old tales and legends in general
circulation; but it seems to me, that some of the
gentlemen of your craft, at the present day, have
shot very far beyond him—’
‘You’re quite right, sir,’
interrupted the literary gentleman, leaning back in
his chair and exercising his toothpick. ’Human
intellect, sir, has progressed since his time, is progressing,
will progress.’
‘Shot beyond him, I mean,’
resumed Nicholas, ’in quite another respect,
for, whereas he brought within the magic circle of
his genius, traditions peculiarly adapted for his
purpose, and turned familiar things into constellations
which should enlighten the world for ages, you drag
within the magic circle of your dulness, subjects
not at all adapted to the purposes of the stage, and
debase as he exalted. For instance, you take
the uncompleted books of living authors, fresh from
their hands, wet from the press, cut, hack, and carve
them to the powers and capacities of your actors, and
the capability of your theatres, finish unfinished
works, hastily and crudely vamp up ideas not yet worked
out by their original projector, but which have doubtless
cost him many thoughtful days and sleepless nights;
by a comparison of incidents and dialogue, down to
the very last word he may have written a fortnight
before, do your utmost to anticipate his plot—all
this without his permission, and against his will;
and then, to crown the whole proceeding, publish in
some mean pamphlet, an unmeaning farrago of garbled
extracts from his work, to which your name as author,
with the honourable distinction annexed, of having
perpetrated a hundred other outrages of the same description.
Now, show me the distinction between such pilfering
as this, and picking a man’s pocket in the street:
unless, indeed, it be, that the legislature has a
regard for pocket-handkerchiefs, and leaves men’s
brains, except when they are knocked out by violence,
to take care of themselves.’
‘Men must live, sir,’
said the literary gentleman, shrugging his shoulders.
‘That would be an equally fair
plea in both cases,’ replied Nicholas; ’but
if you put it upon that ground, I have nothing more
to say, than, that if I were a writer of books, and
you a thirsty dramatist, I would rather pay your tavern
score for six months, large as it might be, than have
a niche in the Temple of Fame with you for the humblest
corner of my pedestal, through six hundred generations.’
The conversation threatened to take
a somewhat angry tone when it had arrived thus far,
but Mrs Crummles opportunely interposed to prevent
its leading to any violent outbreak, by making some
inquiries of the literary gentleman relative to the
plots of the six new pieces which he had written by
contract to introduce the African Knife-swallower
in his various unrivalled performances. This
speedily engaged him in an animated conversation with
that lady, in the interest of which, all recollection
of his recent discussion with Nicholas very quickly
evaporated.
The board being now clear of the more
substantial articles of food, and punch, wine, and
spirits being placed upon it and handed about, the
guests, who had been previously conversing in little
groups of three or four, gradually fell off into a
dead silence, while the majority of those present
glanced from time to time at Mr Snittle Timberry,
and the bolder spirits did not even hesitate to strike
the table with their knuckles, and plainly intimate
their expectations, by uttering such encouragements
as ‘Now, Tim,’ ’Wake up, Mr Chairman,’
‘All charged, sir, and waiting for a toast,’
and so forth.
To these remonstrances Mr Timberry
deigned no other rejoinder than striking his chest
and gasping for breath, and giving many other indications
of being still the victim of indisposition—for
a man must not make himself too cheap either on the
stage or off—while Mr Crummles, who knew
full well that he would be the subject of the forthcoming
toast, sat gracefully in his chair with his arm thrown
carelessly over the back, and now and then lifted his
glass to his mouth and drank a little punch, with
the same air with which he was accustomed to take
long draughts of nothing, out of the pasteboard goblets
in banquet scenes.
At length Mr Snittle Timberry rose
in the most approved attitude, with one hand in the
breast of his waistcoat and the other on the nearest
snuff-box, and having been received with great enthusiasm,
proposed, with abundance of quotations, his friend
Mr Vincent Crummles: ending a pretty long speech
by extending his right hand on one side and his left
on the other, and severally calling upon Mr and Mrs
Crummles to grasp the same. This done, Mr Vincent
Crummles returned thanks, and that done, the African
Swallower proposed Mrs Vincent Crummles, in affecting
terms. Then were heard loud moans and sobs from
Mrs Crummles and the ladies, despite of which that
heroic woman insisted upon returning thanks herself,
which she did, in a manner and in a speech which has
never been surpassed and seldom equalled. It
then became the duty of Mr Snittle Timberry to give
the young Crummleses, which he did; after which Mr
Vincent Crummles, as their father, addressed the company
in a supplementary speech, enlarging on their virtues,
amiabilities, and excellences, and wishing that they
were the sons and daughter of every lady and gentleman
present. These solemnities having been succeeded
by a decent interval, enlivened by musical and other
entertainments, Mr Crummles proposed that ornament
of the profession, the African Swallower, his very
dear friend, if he would allow him to call him so;
which liberty (there being no particular reason why
he should not allow it) the African Swallower graciously
permitted. The literary gentleman was then about
to be drunk, but it being discovered that he had been
drunk for some time in another acceptation of the
term, and was then asleep on the stairs, the intention
was abandoned, and the honour transferred to the ladies.
Finally, after a very long sitting, Mr Snittle Timberry
vacated the chair, and the company with many adieux
and embraces dispersed.
Nicholas waited to the last to give
his little presents. When he had said goodbye
all round and came to Mr Crummles, he could not but
mark the difference between their present separation
and their parting at Portsmouth. Not a jot of
his theatrical manner remained; he put out his hand
with an air which, if he could have summoned it at
will, would have made him the best actor of his day
in homely parts, and when Nicholas shook it with the
warmth he honestly felt, appeared thoroughly melted.
‘We were a very happy little
company, Johnson,’ said poor Crummles.
’You and I never had a word. I shall be
very glad tomorrow morning to think that I saw you
again, but now I almost wish you hadn’t come.’
Nicholas was about to return a cheerful
reply, when he was greatly disconcerted by the sudden
apparition of Mrs Grudden, who it seemed had declined
to attend the supper in order that she might rise
earlier in the morning, and who now burst out of an
adjoining bedroom, habited in very extraordinary white
robes; and throwing her arms about his neck, hugged
him with great affection.
‘What! Are you going too?’
said Nicholas, submitting with as good a grace as
if she had been the finest young creature in the world.
‘Going?’ returned Mrs
Grudden. ‘Lord ha’ mercy, what do
you think they’d do without me?’
Nicholas submitted to another hug
with even a better grace than before, if that were
possible, and waving his hat as cheerfully as he could,
took farewell of the Vincent Crummleses.