Chronicles the further Proceedings
of the Nickleby Family, and the Sequel of the Adventure
of the Gentleman in the Small-clothes
While Nicholas, absorbed in the one
engrossing subject of interest which had recently
opened upon him, occupied his leisure hours with thoughts
of Madeline Bray, and in execution of the commissions
which the anxiety of brother Charles in her behalf
imposed upon him, saw her again and again, and each
time with greater danger to his peace of mind and
a more weakening effect upon the lofty resolutions
he had formed, Mrs Nickleby and Kate continued to
live in peace and quiet, agitated by no other cares
than those which were connected with certain harassing
proceedings taken by Mr Snawley for the recovery of
his son, and their anxiety for Smike himself, whose
health, long upon the wane, began to be so much affected
by apprehension and uncertainty as sometimes to occasion
both them and Nicholas considerable uneasiness, and
even alarm.
It was no complaint or murmur on the
part of the poor fellow himself that thus disturbed
them. Ever eager to be employed in such slight
services as he could render, and always anxious to
repay his benefactors with cheerful and happy looks,
less friendly eyes might have seen in him no cause
for any misgiving. But there were times, and
often too, when the sunken eye was too bright, the
hollow cheek too flushed, the breath too thick and
heavy in its course, the frame too feeble and exhausted,
to escape their regard and notice.
There is a dread disease which so
prepares its victim, as it were, for death; which
so refines it of its grosser aspect, and throws around
familiar looks unearthly indications of the coming
change; a dread disease, in which the struggle between
soul and body is so gradual, quiet, and solemn, and
the result so sure, that day by day, and grain by
grain, the mortal part wastes and withers away, so
that the spirit grows light and sanguine with its
lightening load, and, feeling immortality at hand,
deems it but a new term of mortal life; a disease
in which death and life are so strangely blended, that
death takes the glow and hue of life, and life the
gaunt and grisly form of death; a disease which medicine
never cured, wealth never warded off, or poverty could
boast exemption from; which sometimes moves in giant
strides, and sometimes at a tardy sluggish pace, but,
slow or quick, is ever sure and certain.
It was with some faint reference in
his own mind to this disorder, though he would by
no means admit it, even to himself, that Nicholas
had already carried his faithful companion to a physician
of great repute. There was no cause for immediate
alarm, he said. There were no present symptoms
which could be deemed conclusive. The constitution
had been greatly tried and injured in childhood, but
still it might not be—and that was
all.
But he seemed to grow no worse, and,
as it was not difficult to find a reason for these
symptoms of illness in the shock and agitation he
had recently undergone, Nicholas comforted himself
with the hope that his poor friend would soon recover.
This hope his mother and sister shared with him;
and as the object of their joint solicitude seemed
to have no uneasiness or despondency for himself, but
each day answered with a quiet smile that he felt
better than he had upon the day before, their fears
abated, and the general happiness was by degrees restored.
Many and many a time in after years
did Nicholas look back to this period of his life,
and tread again the humble quiet homely scenes that
rose up as of old before him. Many and many a
time, in the twilight of a summer evening, or beside
the flickering winter’s fire—but
not so often or so sadly then—would his
thoughts wander back to these old days, and dwell
with a pleasant sorrow upon every slight remembrance
which they brought crowding home. The little
room in which they had so often sat long after it was
dark, figuring such happy futures; Kate’s cheerful
voice and merry laugh; how, if she were from home,
they used to sit and watch for her return scarcely
breaking silence but to say how dull it seemed without
her; the glee with which poor Smike would start from
the darkened corner where he used to sit, and hurry
to admit her, and the tears they often saw upon his
face, half wondering to see them too, and he so pleased
and happy; every little incident, and even slight words
and looks of those old days little heeded then, but
well remembered when busy cares and trials were quite
forgotten, came fresh and thick before him many and
many a time, and, rustling above the dusty growth
of years, came back green boughs of yesterday.
But there were other persons associated
with these recollections, and many changes came about
before they had being. A necessary reflection
for the purposes of these adventures, which at once
subside into their accustomed train, and shunning all
flighty anticipations or wayward wanderings, pursue
their steady and decorous course.
If the brothers Cheeryble, as they
found Nicholas worthy of trust and confidence, bestowed
upon him every day some new and substantial mark of
kindness, they were not less mindful of those who depended
on him. Various little presents to Mrs Nickleby,
always of the very things they most required, tended
in no slight degree to the improvement and embellishment
of the cottage. Kate’s little store of
trinkets became quite dazzling; and for company!
If brother Charles and brother Ned failed to look
in for at least a few minutes every Sunday, or one
evening in the week, there was Mr Tim Linkinwater
(who had never made half-a-dozen other acquaintances
in all his life, and who took such delight in his
new friends as no words can express) constantly coming
and going in his evening walks, and stopping to rest;
while Mr Frank Cheeryble happened, by some strange
conjunction of circumstances, to be passing the door
on some business or other at least three nights in
the week.
‘He is the most attentive young
man I ever saw, Kate,’ said Mrs Nickleby to
her daughter one evening, when this last-named gentleman
had been the subject of the worthy lady’s eulogium
for some time, and Kate had sat perfectly silent.
‘Attentive, mama!’ rejoined Kate.
‘Bless my heart, Kate!’
cried Mrs Nickleby, with her wonted suddenness, ‘what
a colour you have got; why, you’re quite flushed!’
‘Oh, mama! what strange things you fancy!’
‘It wasn’t fancy, Kate,
my dear, I’m certain of that,’ returned
her mother. ’However, it’s gone
now at any rate, so it don’t much matter whether
it was or not. What was it we were talking about?
Oh! Mr Frank. I never saw such attention
in my life, never.’
‘Surely you are not serious,’
returned Kate, colouring again; and this time beyond
all dispute.
‘Not serious!’ returned
Mrs Nickleby; ’why shouldn’t I be serious?
I’m sure I never was more serious. I will
say that his politeness and attention to me is one
of the most becoming, gratifying, pleasant things
I have seen for a very long time. You don’t
often meet with such behaviour in young men, and it
strikes one more when one does meet with it.’
‘Oh! attention to you,
mama,’ rejoined Kate quickly—’oh
yes.’
‘Dear me, Kate,’ retorted
Mrs Nickleby, ’what an extraordinary girl you
are! Was it likely I should be talking of his
attention to anybody else? I declare I’m
quite sorry to think he should be in love with a German
lady, that I am.’
‘He said very positively that
it was no such thing, mama,’ returned Kate.
’Don’t you remember his saying so that
very first night he came here? Besides,’
she added, in a more gentle tone, ’why should
we be sorry if it is the case? What is it
to us, mama?’
‘Nothing to us, Kate, perhaps,’
said Mrs Nickleby, emphatically; ’but something
to me, I confess. I like English people
to be thorough English people, and not half English
and half I don’t know what. I shall tell
him point-blank next time he comes, that I wish he
would marry one of his own country-women; and see what
he says to that.’
‘Pray don’t think of such
a thing, mama,’ returned Kate, hastily; ‘not
for the world. Consider. How very—’
‘Well, my dear, how very what?’
said Mrs Nickleby, opening her eyes in great astonishment.
Before Kate had returned any reply,
a queer little double knock announced that Miss La
Creevy had called to see them; and when Miss La Creevy
presented herself, Mrs Nickleby, though strongly disposed
to be argumentative on the previous question, forgot
all about it in a gush of supposes about the coach
she had come by; supposing that the man who drove
must have been either the man in the shirt-sleeves
or the man with the black eye; that whoever he was,
he hadn’t found that parasol she left inside
last week; that no doubt they had stopped a long while
at the Halfway House, coming down; or that perhaps
being full, they had come straight on; and, lastly,
that they, surely, must have passed Nicholas on the
road.
‘I saw nothing of him,’
answered Miss La Creevy; ’but I saw that dear
old soul Mr Linkinwater.’
’Taking his evening walk, and
coming on to rest here, before he turns back to the
city, I’ll be bound!’ said Mrs Nickleby.
‘I should think he was,’
returned Miss La Creevy; ’especially as young
Mr Cheeryble was with him.’
‘Surely that is no reason why
Mr Linkinwater should be coming here,’ said
Kate.
‘Why I think it is, my dear,’
said Miss La Creevy. ’For a young man,
Mr Frank is not a very great walker; and I observe
that he generally falls tired, and requires a good
long rest, when he has come as far as this.
But where is my friend?’ said the little woman,
looking about, after having glanced slyly at Kate.
’He has not been run away with again, has he?’
‘Ah! where is Mr Smike?’
said Mrs Nickleby; ’he was here this instant.’
Upon further inquiry, it turned out,
to the good lady’s unbounded astonishment, that
Smike had, that moment, gone upstairs to bed.
‘Well now,’ said Mrs Nickleby,
’he is the strangest creature! Last Tuesday—was
it Tuesday? Yes, to be sure it was; you recollect,
Kate, my dear, the very last time young Mr Cheeryble
was here—last Tuesday night he went off
in just the same strange way, at the very moment the
knock came to the door. It cannot be that he
don’t like company, because he is always fond
of people who are fond of Nicholas, and I am sure
young Mr Cheeryble is. And the strangest thing
is, that he does not go to bed; therefore it cannot
be because he is tired. I know he doesn’t
go to bed, because my room is the next one, and when
I went upstairs last Tuesday, hours after him, I found
that he had not even taken his shoes off; and he had
no candle, so he must have sat moping in the dark
all the time. Now, upon my word,’ said
Mrs Nickleby, ’when I come to think of it, that’s
very extraordinary!’
As the hearers did not echo this sentiment,
but remained profoundly silent, either as not knowing
what to say, or as being unwilling to interrupt, Mrs
Nickleby pursued the thread of her discourse after
her own fashion.
‘I hope,’ said that lady,
’that this unaccountable conduct may not be
the beginning of his taking to his bed and living there
all his life, like the Thirsty Woman of Tutbury, or
the Cock-lane Ghost, or some of those extraordinary
creatures. One of them had some connection with
our family. I forget, without looking back to
some old letters I have upstairs, whether it was my
great-grandfather who went to school with the Cock-lane
Ghost, or the Thirsty Woman of Tutbury who went to
school with my grandmother. Miss La Creevy, you
know, of course. Which was it that didn’t
mind what the clergyman said? The Cock-lane
Ghost or the Thirsty Woman of Tutbury?’
‘The Cock-lane Ghost, I believe.’
‘Then I have no doubt,’
said Mrs Nickleby, ’that it was with him my
great-grandfather went to school; for I know the master
of his school was a dissenter, and that would, in
a great measure, account for the Cock-lane Ghost’s
behaving in such an improper manner to the clergyman
when he grew up. Ah! Train up a Ghost—child,
I mean—’
Any further reflections on this fruitful
theme were abruptly cut short by the arrival of Tim
Linkinwater and Mr Frank Cheeryble; in the hurry of
receiving whom, Mrs Nickleby speedily lost sight of
everything else.
‘I am so sorry Nicholas is not
at home,’ said Mrs Nickleby. ’Kate,
my dear, you must be both Nicholas and yourself.’
‘Miss Nickleby need be but herself,’
said Frank. ’I—if I may venture
to say so—oppose all change in her.’
‘Then at all events she shall
press you to stay,’ returned Mrs Nickleby.
’Mr Linkinwater says ten minutes, but I cannot
let you go so soon; Nicholas would be very much vexed,
I am sure. Kate, my dear!’
In obedience to a great number of
nods, and winks, and frowns of extra significance,
Kate added her entreaties that the visitors would
remain; but it was observable that she addressed them
exclusively to Tim Linkinwater; and there was, besides,
a certain embarrassment in her manner, which, although
it was as far from impairing its graceful character
as the tinge it communicated to her cheek was from
diminishing her beauty, was obvious at a glance even
to Mrs Nickleby. Not being of a very speculative
character, however, save under circumstances when
her speculations could be put into words and uttered
aloud, that discreet matron attributed the emotion
to the circumstance of her daughter’s not happening
to have her best frock on: ‘though I never
saw her look better, certainly,’ she reflected
at the same time. Having settled the question
in this way, and being most complacently satisfied
that in this, and in all other instances, her conjecture
could not fail to be the right one, Mrs Nickleby dismissed
it from her thoughts, and inwardly congratulated herself
on being so shrewd and knowing.
Nicholas did not come home nor did
Smike reappear; but neither circumstance, to say the
truth, had any great effect upon the little party,
who were all in the best humour possible. Indeed,
there sprung up quite a flirtation between Miss La
Creevy and Tim Linkinwater, who said a thousand jocose
and facetious things, and became, by degrees, quite
gallant, not to say tender. Little Miss La Creevy,
on her part, was in high spirits, and rallied Tim on
having remained a bachelor all his life with so much
success, that Tim was actually induced to declare,
that if he could get anybody to have him, he didn’t
know but what he might change his condition even yet.
Miss La Creevy earnestly recommended a lady she knew,
who would exactly suit Mr Linkinwater, and had a very
comfortable property of her own; but this latter qualification
had very little effect upon Tim, who manfully protested
that fortune would be no object with him, but that
true worth and cheerfulness of disposition were what
a man should look for in a wife, and that if he had
these, he could find money enough for the moderate
wants of both. This avowal was considered so
honourable to Tim, that neither Mrs Nickleby nor Miss
La Creevy could sufficiently extol it; and stimulated
by their praises, Tim launched out into several other
declarations also manifesting the disinterestedness
of his heart, and a great devotion to the fair sex:
which were received with no less approbation.
This was done and said with a comical mixture of
jest and earnest, and, leading to a great amount of
laughter, made them very merry indeed.
Kate was commonly the life and soul
of the conversation at home; but she was more silent
than usual upon this occasion (perhaps because Tim
and Miss La Creevy engrossed so much of it), and, keeping
aloof from the talkers, sat at the window watching
the shadows as the evening closed in, and enjoying
the quiet beauty of the night, which seemed to have
scarcely less attractions to Frank, who first lingered
near, and then sat down beside, her. No doubt,
there are a great many things to be said appropriate
to a summer evening, and no doubt they are best said
in a low voice, as being most suitable to the peace
and serenity of the hour; long pauses, too, at times,
and then an earnest word or so, and then another interval
of silence which, somehow, does not seem like silence
either, and perhaps now and then a hasty turning away
of the head, or drooping of the eyes towards the ground,
all these minor circumstances, with a disinclination
to have candles introduced and a tendency to confuse
hours with minutes, are doubtless mere influences of
the time, as many lovely lips can clearly testify.
Neither is there the slightest reason why Mrs Nickleby
should have expressed surprise when, candles being
at length brought in, Kate’s bright eyes were
unable to bear the light which obliged her to avert
her face, and even to leave the room for some short
time; because, when one has sat in the dark so long,
candles are dazzling, and nothing can be more
strictly natural than that such results should be produced,
as all well-informed young people know. For
that matter, old people know it too, or did know it
once, but they forget these things sometimes, and
more’s the pity.
The good lady’s surprise, however,
did not end here. It was greatly increased when
it was discovered that Kate had not the least appetite
for supper: a discovery so alarming that there
is no knowing in what unaccountable efforts of oratory
Mrs Nickleby’s apprehensions might have been
vented, if the general attention had not been attracted,
at the moment, by a very strange and uncommon noise,
proceeding, as the pale and trembling servant girl
affirmed, and as everybody’s sense of hearing
seemed to affirm also, ’right down’ the
chimney of the adjoining room.
It being quite plain to the comprehension
of all present that, however extraordinary and improbable
it might appear, the noise did nevertheless proceed
from the chimney in question; and the noise (which
was a strange compound of various shuffling, sliding,
rumbling, and struggling sounds, all muffled by the
chimney) still continuing, Frank Cheeryble caught
up a candle, and Tim Linkinwater the tongs, and they
would have very quickly ascertained the cause of this
disturbance if Mrs Nickleby had not been taken very
faint, and declined being left behind, on any account.
This produced a short remonstrance, which terminated
in their all proceeding to the troubled chamber in
a body, excepting only Miss La Creevy, who, as the
servant girl volunteered a confession of having been
subject to fits in her infancy, remained with her
to give the alarm and apply restoratives, in case
of extremity.
Advancing to the door of the mysterious
apartment, they were not a little surprised to hear
a human voice, chanting with a highly elaborated expression
of melancholy, and in tones of suffocation which a
human voice might have produced from under five or
six feather-beds of the best quality, the once popular
air of ’Has she then failed in her truth, the
beautiful maid I adore?’ Nor, on bursting into
the room without demanding a parley, was their astonishment
lessened by the discovery that these romantic sounds
certainly proceeded from the throat of some man up
the chimney, of whom nothing was visible but a pair
of legs, which were dangling above the grate; apparently
feeling, with extreme anxiety, for the top bar whereon
to effect a landing.
A sight so unusual and unbusiness-like
as this, completely paralysed Tim Linkinwater, who,
after one or two gentle pinches at the stranger’s
ankles, which were productive of no effect, stood
clapping the tongs together, as if he were sharpening
them for another assault, and did nothing else.
‘This must be some drunken fellow,’
said Frank. ’No thief would announce his
presence thus.’
As he said this, with great indignation,
he raised the candle to obtain a better view of the
legs, and was darting forward to pull them down with
very little ceremony, when Mrs Nickleby, clasping her
hands, uttered a sharp sound, something between a scream
and an exclamation, and demanded to know whether the
mysterious limbs were not clad in small-clothes and
grey worsted stockings, or whether her eyes had deceived
her.
‘Yes,’ cried Frank, looking
a little closer. ’Small-clothes certainly,
and—and—rough grey stockings,
too. Do you know him, ma’am?’
‘Kate, my dear,’ said
Mrs Nickleby, deliberately sitting herself down in
a chair with that sort of desperate resignation which
seemed to imply that now matters had come to a crisis,
and all disguise was useless, ’you will have
the goodness, my love, to explain precisely how this
matter stands. I have given him no encouragement—none
whatever—not the least in the world.
You know that, my dear, perfectly well. He
was very respectful, exceedingly respectful, when
he declared, as you were a witness to; still at the
same time, if I am to be persecuted in this way, if
vegetable what’s-his-names and all kinds of
garden-stuff are to strew my path out of doors, and
gentlemen are to come choking up our chimneys at home,
I really don’t know—upon my word
I do not know—what is to become of
me. It’s a very hard case—harder
than anything I was ever exposed to, before I married
your poor dear papa, though I suffered a good deal
of annoyance then—but that, of course, I
expected, and made up my mind for. When I was
not nearly so old as you, my dear, there was a young
gentleman who sat next us at church, who used, almost
every Sunday, to cut my name in large letters in the
front of his pew while the sermon was going on.
It was gratifying, of course, naturally so, but still
it was an annoyance, because the pew was in a very
conspicuous place, and he was several times publicly
taken out by the beadle for doing it. But that
was nothing to this. This is a great deal worse,
and a great deal more embarrassing. I would
rather, Kate, my dear,’ said Mrs Nickleby, with
great solemnity, and an effusion of tears: ’I
would rather, I declare, have been a pig-faced lady,
than be exposed to such a life as this!’
Frank Cheeryble and Tim Linkinwater
looked, in irrepressible astonishment, first at each
other and then at Kate, who felt that some explanation
was necessary, but who, between her terror at the
apparition of the legs, her fear lest their owner should
be smothered, and her anxiety to give the least ridiculous
solution of the mystery that it was capable of bearing,
was quite unable to utter a single word.
‘He gives me great pain,’
continued Mrs Nickleby, drying her eyes, ’great
pain; but don’t hurt a hair of his head, I beg.
On no account hurt a hair of his head.’
It would not, under existing circumstances,
have been quite so easy to hurt a hair of the gentleman’s
head as Mrs Nickleby seemed to imagine, inasmuch as
that part of his person was some feet up the chimney,
which was by no means a wide one. But, as all
this time he had never left off singing about the
bankruptcy of the beautiful maid in respect of truth,
and now began not only to croak very feebly, but to
kick with great violence as if respiration became a
task of difficulty, Frank Cheeryble, without further
hesitation, pulled at the shorts and worsteds with
such heartiness as to bring him floundering into the
room with greater precipitation than he had quite
calculated upon.
‘Oh! yes, yes,’ said Kate,
directly the whole figure of this singular visitor
appeared in this abrupt manner. ’I know
who it is. Pray don’t be rough with him.
Is he hurt? I hope not. Oh, pray see
if he is hurt.’
‘He is not, I assure you,’
replied Frank, handling the object of his surprise,
after this appeal, with sudden tenderness and respect.
‘He is not hurt in the least.’
‘Don’t let him come any
nearer,’ said Kate, retiring as far as she could.
‘Oh, no, he shall not,’
rejoined Frank. ’You see I have him secure
here. But may I ask you what this means, and
whether you expected, this old gentleman?’
‘Oh, no,’ said Kate, ’of
course not; but he—mama does not think
so, I believe—but he is a mad gentleman
who has escaped from the next house, and must have
found an opportunity of secreting himself here.’
‘Kate,’ interposed Mrs
Nickleby with severe dignity, ’I am surprised
at you.’
‘Dear mama,’ Kate gently remonstrated.
‘I am surprised at you,’
repeated Mrs Nickleby; ’upon my word, Kate,
I am quite astonished that you should join the persecutors
of this unfortunate gentleman, when you know very
well that they have the basest designs upon his property,
and that that is the whole secret of it. It
would be much kinder of you, Kate, to ask Mr Linkinwater
or Mr Cheeryble to interfere in his behalf, and see
him righted. You ought not to allow your feelings
to influence you; it’s not right, very far from
it. What should my feelings be, do you suppose?
If anybody ought to be indignant, who is it?
I, of course, and very properly so. Still,
at the same time, I wouldn’t commit such an
injustice for the world. No,’ continued
Mrs Nickleby, drawing herself up, and looking another
way with a kind of bashful stateliness; ’this
gentleman will understand me when I tell him that
I repeat the answer I gave him the other day; that
I always will repeat it, though I do believe him to
be sincere when I find him placing himself in such
dreadful situations on my account; and that I request
him to have the goodness to go away directly, or it
will be impossible to keep his behaviour a secret from
my son Nicholas. I am obliged to him, very much
obliged to him, but I cannot listen to his addresses
for a moment. It’s quite impossible.’
While this address was in course of
delivery, the old gentleman, with his nose and cheeks
embellished with large patches of soot, sat upon the
ground with his arms folded, eyeing the spectators
in profound silence, and with a very majestic demeanour.
He did not appear to take the smallest notice of
what Mrs Nickleby said, but when she ceased to speak
he honoured her with a long stare, and inquired if
she had quite finished.
‘I have nothing more to say,’
replied that lady modestly. ’I really
cannot say anything more.’
‘Very good,’ said the
old gentleman, raising his voice, ’then bring
in the bottled lightning, a clean tumbler, and a corkscrew.’
Nobody executing this order, the old
gentleman, after a short pause, raised his voice again
and demanded a thunder sandwich. This article
not being forthcoming either, he requested to be served
with a fricassee of boot-tops and goldfish sauce,
and then laughing heartily, gratified his hearers
with a very long, very loud, and most melodious bellow.
But still Mrs Nickleby, in reply to
the significant looks of all about her, shook her
head as though to assure them that she saw nothing
whatever in all this, unless, indeed, it were a slight
degree of eccentricity. She might have remained
impressed with these opinions down to the latest moment
of her life, but for a slight train of circumstances,
which, trivial as they were, altered the whole complexion
of the case.
It happened that Miss La Creevy, finding
her patient in no very threatening condition, and
being strongly impelled by curiosity to see what was
going forward, bustled into the room while the old
gentleman was in the very act of bellowing. It
happened, too, that the instant the old gentleman
saw her, he stopped short, skipped suddenly on his
feet, and fell to kissing his hand violently:
a change of demeanour which almost terrified the little
portrait painter out of her senses, and caused her
to retreat behind Tim Linkinwater with the utmost
expedition.
‘Aha!’ cried the old gentleman,
folding his hands, and squeezing them with great force
against each other. ’I see her now; I see
her now! My love, my life, my bride, my peerless
beauty. She is come at last—at last—and
all is gas and gaiters!’
Mrs Nickleby looked rather disconcerted
for a moment, but immediately recovering, nodded to
Miss La Creevy and the other spectators several times,
and frowned, and smiled gravely, giving them to understand
that she saw where the mistake was, and would set
it all to rights in a minute or two.
‘She is come!’ said the
old gentleman, laying his hand upon his heart.
’Cormoran and Blunderbore! She is come!
All the wealth I have is hers if she will take me
for her slave. Where are grace, beauty, and
blandishments, like those? In the Empress of
Madagascar? No. In the Queen of Diamonds?
No. In Mrs Rowland, who every morning bathes
in Kalydor for nothing? No. Melt all these
down into one, with the three Graces, the nine Muses,
and fourteen biscuit-bakers’ daughters from
Oxford Street, and make a woman half as lovely.
Pho! I defy you.’
After uttering this rhapsody, the
old gentleman snapped his fingers twenty or thirty
times, and then subsided into an ecstatic contemplation
of Miss La Creevy’s charms. This affording
Mrs Nickleby a favourable opportunity of explanation,
she went about it straight.
‘I am sure,’ said the
worthy lady, with a prefatory cough, ’that it’s
a great relief, under such trying circumstances as
these, to have anybody else mistaken for me—a
very great relief; and it’s a circumstance that
never occurred before, although I have several times
been mistaken for my daughter Kate. I have no
doubt the people were very foolish, and perhaps ought
to have known better, but still they did take me for
her, and of course that was no fault of mine, and
it would be very hard indeed if I was to be made responsible
for it. However, in this instance, of course,
I must feel that I should do exceedingly wrong if
I suffered anybody— especially anybody
that I am under great obligations to—to
be made uncomfortable on my account. And therefore
I think it my duty to tell that gentleman that he
is mistaken, that I am the lady who he was told by
some impertinent person was niece to the Council of
Paving-stones, and that I do beg and entreat of him
to go quietly away, if it’s only for,’
here Mrs Nickleby simpered and hesitated, ‘for
my sake.’
It might have been expected that the
old gentleman would have been penetrated to the heart
by the delicacy and condescension of this appeal,
and that he would at least have returned a courteous
and suitable reply. What, then, was the shock
which Mrs Nickleby received, when, accosting her
in the most unmistakable manner, he replied in a loud
and sonourous voice: ‘Avaunt! Cat!’
‘Sir!’ cried Mrs Nickleby, in a faint
tone.
‘Cat!’ repeated the old
gentleman. ’Puss, Kit, Tit, Grimalkin,
Tabby, Brindle! Whoosh!’ with which last
sound, uttered in a hissing manner between his teeth,
the old gentleman swung his arms violently round and
round, and at the same time alternately advanced on
Mrs Nickleby, and retreated from her, in that species
of savage dance with which boys on market-days may
be seen to frighten pigs, sheep, and other animals,
when they give out obstinate indications of turning
down a wrong street.
Mrs Nickleby wasted no words, but
uttered an exclamation of horror and surprise, and
immediately fainted away.
‘I’ll attend to mama,’
said Kate, hastily; ’I am not at all frightened.
But pray take him away: pray take him away!’
Frank was not at all confident of
his power of complying with this request, until he
bethought himself of the stratagem of sending Miss
La Creevy on a few paces in advance, and urging the
old gentleman to follow her. It succeeded to
a miracle; and he went away in a rapture of admiration,
strongly guarded by Tim Linkinwater on one side, and
Frank himself on the other.
‘Kate,’ murmured Mrs Nickleby,
reviving when the coast was clear, ‘is he gone?’
She was assured that he was.
‘I shall never forgive myself,
Kate,’ said Mrs Nickleby. ’Never!
That gentleman has lost his senses, and I am the unhappy
cause.’
‘You the cause!’ said Kate, greatly
astonished.
‘I, my love,’ replied
Mrs Nickleby, with a desperate calmness. ’You
saw what he was the other day; you see what he is now.
I told your brother, weeks and weeks ago, Kate, that
I hoped a disappointment might not be too much for
him. You see what a wreck he is. Making
allowance for his being a little flighty, you know
how rationally, and sensibly, and honourably he talked,
when we saw him in the garden. You have heard
the dreadful nonsense he has been guilty of this night,
and the manner in which he has gone on with that poor
unfortunate little old maid. Can anybody doubt
how all this has been brought about?’
‘I should scarcely think they
could,’ said Kate mildly.
‘I should scarcely think so,
either,’ rejoined her mother. ’Well!
if I am the unfortunate cause of this, I have the satisfaction
of knowing that I am not to blame. I told Nicholas,
I said to him, “Nicholas, my dear, we should
be very careful how we proceed.” He would
scarcely hear me. If the matter had only been
properly taken up at first, as I wished it to be!
But you are both of you so like your poor papa.
However, I have my consolation, and that should
be enough for me!’
Washing her hands, thus, of all responsibility
under this head, past, present, or to come, Mrs Nickleby
kindly added that she hoped her children might never
have greater cause to reproach themselves than she
had, and prepared herself to receive the escort, who
soon returned with the intelligence that the old gentleman
was safely housed, and that they found his custodians,
who had been making merry with some friends, wholly
ignorant of his absence.
Quiet being again restored, a delicious
half-hour—so Frank called it, in the course
of subsequent conversation with Tim Linkinwater as
they were walking home—was spent in conversation,
and Tim’s watch at length apprising him that
it was high time to depart, the ladies were left alone,
though not without many offers on the part of Frank
to remain until Nicholas arrived, no matter what hour
of the night it might be, if, after the late neighbourly
irruption, they entertained the least fear of being
left to themselves. As their freedom from all
further apprehension, however, left no pretext for
his insisting on mounting guard, he was obliged to
abandon the citadel, and to retire with the trusty
Tim.
Nearly three hours of silence passed
away. Kate blushed to find, when Nicholas returned,
how long she had been sitting alone, occupied with
her own thoughts.
‘I really thought it had not
been half an hour,’ she said.
‘They must have been pleasant
thoughts, Kate,’ rejoined Nicholas gaily, ‘to
make time pass away like that. What were they
now?’
Kate was confused; she toyed with
some trifle on the table, looked up and smiled, looked
down and dropped a tear.
‘Why, Kate,’ said Nicholas,
drawing his sister towards him and kissing her, ’let
me see your face. No? Ah! that was but
a glimpse; that’s scarcely fair. A longer
look than that, Kate. Come—and I’ll
read your thoughts for you.’
There was something in this proposition,
albeit it was said without the slightest consciousness
or application, which so alarmed his sister, that
Nicholas laughingly changed the subject to domestic
matters, and thus gathered, by degrees, as they left
the room and went upstairs together, how lonely Smike
had been all night—and by very slow degrees,
too; for on this subject also, Kate seemed to speak
with some reluctance.
‘Poor fellow,’ said Nicholas,
tapping gently at his door, ’what can be the
cause of all this?’
Kate was hanging on her brother’s
arm. The door being quickly opened, she had
not time to disengage herself, before Smike, very
pale and haggard, and completely dressed, confronted
them.
‘And have you not been to bed?’ said Nicholas.
‘N—n—no,’ was the
reply.
Nicholas gently detained his sister,
who made an effort to retire; and asked, ‘Why
not?’
‘I could not sleep,’ said
Smike, grasping the hand which his friend extended
to him.
‘You are not well?’ rejoined Nicholas.
‘I am better, indeed. A great deal better,’
said Smike quickly.
‘Then why do you give way to
these fits of melancholy?’ inquired Nicholas,
in his kindest manner; ’or why not tell us the
cause? You grow a different creature, Smike.’
‘I do; I know I do,’ he
replied. ’I will tell you the reason one
day, but not now. I hate myself for this; you
are all so good and kind. But I cannot help
it. My heart is very full; you do not know how
full it is.’
He wrung Nicholas’s hand before
he released it; and glancing, for a moment, at the
brother and sister as they stood together, as if there
were something in their strong affection which touched
him very deeply, withdrew into his chamber, and was
soon the only watcher under that quiet roof.