Nicholas despairs of rescuing Madeline
Bray, but plucks up his Spirits again, and determines
to attempt it. Domestic Intelligence of the
Kenwigses and Lillyvicks
Finding that Newman was determined
to arrest his progress at any hazard, and apprehensive
that some well-intentioned passenger, attracted by
the cry of ‘Stop thief,’ might lay violent
hands upon his person, and place him in a disagreeable
predicament from which he might have some difficulty
in extricating himself, Nicholas soon slackened his
pace, and suffered Newman Noggs to come up with him:
which he did, in so breathless a condition, that it
seemed impossible he could have held out for a minute
longer.
‘I will go straight to Bray’s,’
said Nicholas. ’I will see this man.
If there is a feeling of humanity lingering in his
breast, a spark of consideration for his own child,
motherless and friendless as she is, I will awaken
it.’
‘You will not,’ replied
Newman. ‘You will not, indeed.’
‘Then,’ said Nicholas,
pressing onward, ’I will act upon my first impulse,
and go straight to Ralph Nickleby.’
‘By the time you reach his house
he will be in bed,’ said Newman.
‘I’ll drag him from it,’ cried Nicholas.
‘Tut, tut,’ said Noggs. ‘Be
yourself.’
‘You are the best of friends
to me, Newman,’ rejoined Nicholas after a pause,
and taking his hand as he spoke. ’I have
made head against many trials; but the misery of another,
and such misery, is involved in this one, that I declare
to you I am rendered desperate, and know not how to
act.’
In truth, it did seem a hopeless case.
It was impossible to make any use of such intelligence
as Newman Noggs had gleaned, when he lay concealed
in the closet. The mere circumstance of the compact
between Ralph Nickleby and Gride would not invalidate
the marriage, or render Bray averse to it, who, if
he did not actually know of the existence of some
such understanding, doubtless suspected it. What
had been hinted with reference to some fraud on Madeline,
had been put, with sufficient obscurity by Arthur
Gride, but coming from Newman Noggs, and obscured
still further by the smoke of his pocket-pistol, it
became wholly unintelligible, and involved in utter
darkness.
‘There seems no ray of hope,’ said Nicholas.
’The greater necessity for coolness,
for reason, for consideration, for thought,’
said Newman, pausing at every alternate word, to look
anxiously in his friend’s face. ‘Where
are the brothers?’
’Both absent on urgent business,
as they will be for a week to come.’
’Is there no way of communicating
with them? No way of getting one of them here
by tomorrow night?’
‘Impossible!’ said Nicholas,
’the sea is between us and them. With
the fairest winds that ever blew, to go and return
would take three days and nights.’
‘Their nephew,’ said Newman, ‘their
old clerk.’
‘What could either do, that
I cannot?’ rejoined Nicholas. ’With
reference to them, especially, I am enjoined to the
strictest silence on this subject. What right
have I to betray the confidence reposed in me, when
nothing but a miracle can prevent this sacrifice?’
‘Think,’ urged Newman. ‘Is
there no way.’
‘There is none,’ said
Nicholas, in utter dejection. ’Not one.
The father urges, the daughter consents. These
demons have her in their toils; legal right, might,
power, money, and every influence are on their side.
How can I hope to save her?’
‘Hope to the last!’ said
Newman, clapping him on the back. ’Always
hope; that’s a dear boy. Never leave off
hoping; it don’t answer. Do you mind me,
Nick? It don’t answer. Don’t
leave a stone unturned. It’s always something,
to know you’ve done the most you could.
But, don’t leave off hoping, or it’s
of no use doing anything. Hope, hope, to the
last!’
Nicholas needed encouragement.
The suddenness with which intelligence of the two
usurers’ plans had come upon him, the little
time which remained for exertion, the probability,
almost amounting to certainty itself, that a few hours
would place Madeline Bray for ever beyond his reach,
consign her to unspeakable misery, and perhaps to
an untimely death; all this quite stunned and overwhelmed
him. Every hope connected with her that he had
suffered himself to form, or had entertained unconsciously,
seemed to fall at his feet, withered and dead.
Every charm with which his memory or imagination
had surrounded her, presented itself before him, only
to heighten his anguish and add new bitterness to
his despair. Every feeling of sympathy for her
forlorn condition, and of admiration for her heroism
and fortitude, aggravated the indignation which shook
him in every limb, and swelled his heart almost to
bursting.
But, if Nicholas’s own heart
embarrassed him, Newman’s came to his relief.
There was so much earnestness in his remonstrance,
and such sincerity and fervour in his manner, odd
and ludicrous as it always was, that it imparted to
Nicholas new firmness, and enabled him to say, after
he had walked on for some little way in silence:
’You read me a good lesson,
Newman, and I will profit by it. One step, at
least, I may take—am bound to take indeed—and
to that I will apply myself tomorrow.’
‘What is that?’ asked
Noggs wistfully. ’Not to threaten Ralph?
Not to see the father?’
‘To see the daughter, Newman,’
replied Nicholas. ’To do what, after all,
is the utmost that the brothers could do, if they were
here, as Heaven send they were! To reason with
her upon this hideous union, to point out to her all
the horrors to which she is hastening; rashly, it
may be, and without due reflection. To entreat
her, at least, to pause. She can have had no
counsellor for her good. Perhaps even I may move
her so far yet, though it is the eleventh hour, and
she upon the very brink of ruin.’
‘Bravely spoken!’ said
Newman. ’Well done, well done! Yes.
Very good.’
‘And I do declare,’ cried
Nicholas, with honest enthusiasm, ’that in this
effort I am influenced by no selfish or personal considerations,
but by pity for her, and detestation and abhorrence
of this scheme; and that I would do the same, were
there twenty rivals in the field, and I the last and
least favoured of them all.’
‘You would, I believe,’
said Newman. ’But where are you hurrying
now?’
‘Homewards,’ answered
Nicholas. ’Do you come with me, or I shall
say good-night?’
‘I’ll come a little way,
if you will but walk: not run,’ said Noggs.
‘I cannot walk tonight, Newman,’
returned Nicholas, hurriedly. ’I must
move rapidly, or I could not draw my breath.
I’ll tell you what I’ve said and done
tomorrow.’
Without waiting for a reply, he darted
off at a rapid pace, and, plunging into the crowds
which thronged the street, was quickly lost to view.
‘He’s a violent youth
at times,’ said Newman, looking after him; ’and
yet like him for it. There’s cause enough
now, or the deuce is in it. Hope! I said
hope, I think! Ralph Nickleby and Gride with
their heads together! And hope for the opposite
party! Ho! ho!’
It was with a very melancholy laugh
that Newman Noggs concluded this soliloquy; and it
was with a very melancholy shake of the head, and
a very rueful countenance, that he turned about, and
went plodding on his way.
This, under ordinary circumstances,
would have been to some small tavern or dram-shop;
that being his way, in more senses than one.
But, Newman was too much interested, and too anxious,
to betake himself even to this resource, and so, with
many desponding and dismal reflections, went straight
home.
It had come to pass, that afternoon,
that Miss Morleena Kenwigs had received an invitation
to repair next day, per steamer from Westminster Bridge,
unto the Eel-pie Island at Twickenham: there to
make merry upon a cold collation, bottled beer, shrub,
and shrimps, and to dance in the open air to the music
of a locomotive band, conveyed thither for the purpose:
the steamer being specially engaged by a dancing-master
of extensive connection for the accommodation of his
numerous pupils, and the pupils displaying their appreciation
of the dancing-master’s services, by purchasing
themselves, and inducing their friends to do the like,
divers light-blue tickets, entitling them to join
the expedition. Of these light-blue tickets,
one had been presented by an ambitious neighbour to
Miss Morleena Kenwigs, with an invitation to join her
daughters; and Mrs Kenwigs, rightly deeming that the
honour of the family was involved in Miss Morleena’s
making the most splendid appearance possible on so
short a notice, and testifying to the dancing-master
that there were other dancing-masters besides him,
and to all fathers and mothers present that other
people’s children could learn to be genteel
besides theirs, had fainted away twice under the magnitude
of her preparations, but, upheld by a determination
to sustain the family name or perish in the attempt,
was still hard at work when Newman Noggs came home.
Now, between the italian-ironing of
frills, the flouncing of trousers, the trimming of
frocks, the faintings and the comings-to again, incidental
to the occasion, Mrs Kenwigs had been so entirely
occupied, that she had not observed, until within half
an hour before, that the flaxen tails of Miss Morleena’s
hair were, in a manner, run to seed; and that, unless
she were put under the hands of a skilful hairdresser,
she never could achieve that signal triumph over the
daughters of all other people, anything less than
which would be tantamount to defeat. This discovery
drove Mrs Kenwigs to despair; for the hairdresser
lived three streets and eight dangerous crossings
off; Morleena could not be trusted to go there alone,
even if such a proceeding were strictly proper:
of which Mrs Kenwigs had her doubts; Mr Kenwigs had
not returned from business; and there was nobody to
take her. So, Mrs Kenwigs first slapped Miss
Kenwigs for being the cause of her vexation, and then
shed tears.
‘You ungrateful child!’
said Mrs Kenwigs, ’after I have gone through
what I have, this night, for your good.’
‘I can’t help it, ma,’
replied Morleena, also in tears; ’my hair will
grow.’
‘Don’t talk to me, you
naughty thing!’ said Mrs Kenwigs, ’don’t!
Even if I was to trust you by yourself and you were
to escape being run over, I know you’d run in
to Laura Chopkins,’ who was the daughter of
the ambitious neighbour, ’and tell her what you’re
going to wear tomorrow, I know you would. You’ve
no proper pride in yourself, and are not to be trusted
out of sight for an instant.’
Deploring the evil-mindedness of her
eldest daughter in these terms, Mrs Kenwigs distilled
fresh drops of vexation from her eyes, and declared
that she did believe there never was anybody so tried
as she was. Thereupon, Morleena Kenwigs wept
afresh, and they bemoaned themselves together.
Matters were at this point, as Newman
Noggs was heard to limp past the door on his way upstairs;
when Mrs Kenwigs, gaining new hope from the sound
of his footsteps, hastily removed from her countenance
as many traces of her late emotion as were effaceable
on so short a notice: and presenting herself
before him, and representing their dilemma, entreated
that he would escort Morleena to the hairdresser’s
shop.
‘I wouldn’t ask you, Mr
Noggs,’ said Mrs Kenwigs, ’if I didn’t
know what a good, kind-hearted creature you are; no,
not for worlds. I am a weak constitution, Mr
Noggs, but my spirit would no more let me ask a favour
where I thought there was a chance of its being refused,
than it would let me submit to see my children trampled
down and trod upon, by envy and lowness!’
Newman was too good-natured not to
have consented, even without this avowal of confidence
on the part of Mrs Kenwigs. Accordingly, a very
few minutes had elapsed, when he and Miss Morleena
were on their way to the hairdresser’s.
It was not exactly a hairdresser’s;
that is to say, people of a coarse and vulgar turn
of mind might have called it a barber’s; for
they not only cut and curled ladies elegantly, and
children carefully, but shaved gentlemen easily.
Still, it was a highly genteel establishment—quite
first-rate in fact—and there were displayed
in the window, besides other elegancies, waxen busts
of a light lady and a dark gentleman which were the
admiration of the whole neighbourhood. Indeed,
some ladies had gone so far as to assert, that the
dark gentleman was actually a portrait of the spirted
young proprietor; and the great similarity between
their head-dresses—both wore very glossy
hair, with a narrow walk straight down the middle,
and a profusion of flat circular curls on both sides—encouraged
the idea. The better informed among the sex,
however, made light of this assertion, for however
willing they were (and they were very willing) to
do full justice to the handsome face and figure of
the proprietor, they held the countenance of the dark
gentleman in the window to be an exquisite and abstract
idea of masculine beauty, realised sometimes, perhaps,
among angels and military men, but very rarely embodied
to gladden the eyes of mortals.
It was to this establishment that
Newman Noggs led Miss Kenwigs in safety. The
proprietor, knowing that Miss Kenwigs had three sisters,
each with two flaxen tails, and all good for sixpence
apiece, once a month at least, promptly deserted an
old gentleman whom he had just lathered for shaving,
and handing him over to the journeyman, (who was not
very popular among the ladies, by reason of his obesity
and middle age,) waited on the young lady himself.
Just as this change had been effected,
there presented himself for shaving, a big, burly,
good-humoured coal-heaver with a pipe in his mouth,
who, drawing his hand across his chin, requested to
know when a shaver would be disengaged.
The journeyman, to whom this question
was put, looked doubtfully at the young proprietor,
and the young proprietor looked scornfully at the
coal-heaver: observing at the same time:
‘You won’t get shaved here, my man.’
‘Why not?’ said the coal-heaver.
‘We don’t shave gentlemen
in your line,’ remarked the young proprietor.
’Why, I see you a shaving of
a baker, when I was a looking through the winder,
last week,’ said the coal-heaver.
‘It’s necessary to draw
the line somewheres, my fine feller,’ replied
the principal. ’We draw the line there.
We can’t go beyond bakers. If we was
to get any lower than bakers, our customers would
desert us, and we might shut up shop. You must
try some other establishment, sir. We couldn’t
do it here.’
The applicant stared; grinned at Newman
Noggs, who appeared highly entertained; looked slightly
round the shop, as if in depreciation of the pomatum
pots and other articles of stock; took his pipe out
of his mouth and gave a very loud whistle; and then
put it in again, and walked out.
The old gentleman who had just been
lathered, and who was sitting in a melancholy manner
with his face turned towards the wall, appeared quite
unconscious of this incident, and to be insensible
to everything around him in the depth of a reverie—a
very mournful one, to judge from the sighs he occasionally
vented—in which he was absorbed.
Affected by this example, the proprietor began to clip
Miss Kenwigs, the journeyman to scrape the old gentleman,
and Newman Noggs to read last Sunday’s paper,
all three in silence: when Miss Kenwigs uttered
a shrill little scream, and Newman, raising his eyes,
saw that it had been elicited by the circumstance of
the old gentleman turning his head, and disclosing
the features of Mr Lillyvick the collector.
The features of Mr Lillyvick they
were, but strangely altered. If ever an old
gentleman had made a point of appearing in public,
shaved close and clean, that old gentleman was Mr Lillyvick.
If ever a collector had borne himself like a collector,
and assumed, before all men, a solemn and portentous
dignity as if he had the world on his books and it
was all two quarters in arrear, that collector was
Mr Lillyvick. And now, there he sat, with the
remains of a beard at least a week old encumbering
his chin; a soiled and crumpled shirt-frill crouching,
as it were, upon his breast, instead of standing boldly
out; a demeanour so abashed and drooping, so despondent,
and expressive of such humiliation, grief, and shame;
that if the souls of forty unsubstantial housekeepers,
all of whom had had their water cut off for non-payment
of the rate, could have been concentrated in one body,
that one body could hardly have expressed such mortification
and defeat as were now expressed in the person of
Mr Lillyvick the collector.
Newman Noggs uttered his name, and
Mr Lillyvick groaned: then coughed to hide it.
But the groan was a full-sized groan, and the cough
was but a wheeze.
‘Is anything the matter?’ said Newman
Noggs.
‘Matter, sir!’ cried Mr
Lillyvick. ’The plug of life is dry, sir,
and but the mud is left.’
This speech—the style of
which Newman attributed to Mr Lillyvick’s recent
association with theatrical characters—not
being quite explanatory, Newman looked as if he were
about to ask another question, when Mr Lillyvick prevented
him by shaking his hand mournfully, and then waving
his own.
‘Let me be shaved!’ said
Mr Lillyvick. ’It shall be done before
Morleena; it is Morleena, isn’t it?’
‘Yes,’ said Newman.
‘Kenwigses have got a boy, haven’t they?’
inquired the collector.
Again Newman said ‘Yes.’
‘Is it a nice boy?’ demanded the collector.
‘It ain’t a very nasty
one,’ returned Newman, rather embarrassed by
the question.
‘Susan Kenwigs used to say,’
observed the collector, ’that if ever she had
another boy, she hoped it might be like me. Is
this one like me, Mr Noggs?’
This was a puzzling inquiry; but Newman
evaded it, by replying to Mr Lillyvick, that he thought
the baby might possibly come like him in time.
‘I should be glad to have somebody
like me, somehow,’ said Mr Lillyvick, ‘before
I die.’
‘You don’t mean to do that, yet awhile?’
said Newman.
Unto which Mr Lillyvick replied in
a solemn voice, ’Let me be shaved!’ and
again consigning himself to the hands of the journeyman,
said no more.
This was remarkable behaviour.
So remarkable did it seem to Miss Morleena, that
that young lady, at the imminent hazard of having her
ear sliced off, had not been able to forbear looking
round, some score of times, during the foregoing colloquy.
Of her, however, Mr Lillyvick took no notice:
rather striving (so, at least, it seemed to Newman
Noggs) to evade her observation, and to shrink into
himself whenever he attracted her regards. Newman
wondered very much what could have occasioned this
altered behaviour on the part of the collector; but,
philosophically reflecting that he would most likely
know, sooner or later, and that he could perfectly
afford to wait, he was very little disturbed by the
singularity of the old gentleman’s deportment.
The cutting and curling being at last
concluded, the old gentleman, who had been some time
waiting, rose to go, and, walking out with Newman
and his charge, took Newman’s arm, and proceeded
for some time without making any observation.
Newman, who in power of taciturnity was excelled
by few people, made no attempt to break silence; and
so they went on, until they had very nearly reached
Miss Morleena’s home, when Mr Lillyvick said:
‘Were the Kenwigses very much
overpowered, Mr Noggs, by that news?’
‘What news?’ returned Newman.
‘That about—my—being—’
‘Married?’ suggested Newman.
‘Ah!’ replied Mr Lillyvick,
with another groan; this time not even disguised by
a wheeze.
‘It made ma cry when she knew
it,’ interposed Miss Morleena, ’but we
kept it from her for a long time; and pa was very low
in his spirits, but he is better now; and I was very
ill, but I am better too.’
’Would you give your great-uncle
Lillyvick a kiss if he was to ask you, Morleena?’
said the collector, with some hesitation.
‘Yes; uncle Lillyvick, I would,’
returned Miss Morleena, with the energy of both her
parents combined; ’but not aunt Lillyvick.
She’s not an aunt of mine, and I’ll never
call her one.’
Immediately upon the utterance of
these words, Mr Lillyvick caught Miss Morleena up
in his arms, and kissed her; and, being by this time
at the door of the house where Mr Kenwigs lodged (which,
as has been before mentioned, usually stood wide open),
he walked straight up into Mr Kenwigs’s sitting-room,
and put Miss Morleena down in the midst. Mr
and Mrs Kenwigs were at supper. At sight of their
perjured relative, Mrs Kenwigs turned faint and pale,
and Mr Kenwigs rose majestically.
‘Kenwigs,’ said the collector, ‘shake
hands.’
‘Sir,’ said Mr Kenwigs,
’the time has been, when I was proud to shake
hands with such a man as that man as now surweys me.
The time has been, sir,’ said Mr Kenwigs, ’when
a wisit from that man has excited in me and my family’s
boozums sensations both nateral and awakening.
But, now, I look upon that man with emotions totally
surpassing everythink, and I ask myself where is his
Honour, where is his straight-for’ardness, and
where is his human natur?’
‘Susan Kenwigs,’ said
Mr Lillyvick, turning humbly to his niece, ‘don’t
you say anything to me?’
‘She is not equal to it, sir,’
said Mr Kenwigs, striking the table emphatically.
’What with the nursing of a healthy babby, and
the reflections upon your cruel conduct, four pints
of malt liquor a day is hardly able to sustain her.’
‘I am glad,’ said the
poor collector meekly, ’that the baby is a healthy
one. I am very glad of that.’
This was touching the Kenwigses on
their tenderest point. Mrs Kenwigs instantly
burst into tears, and Mr Kenwigs evinced great emotion.
‘My pleasantest feeling, all
the time that child was expected,’ said Mr Kenwigs,
mournfully, ’was a thinking, “If it’s
a boy, as I hope it may be; for I have heard its uncle
Lillyvick say again and again he would prefer our
having a boy next, if it’s a boy, what will his
uncle Lillyvick say? What will he like him to
be called? Will he be Peter, or Alexander, or
Pompey, or Diorgeenes, or what will he be?”
And now when I look at him; a precious, unconscious,
helpless infant, with no use in his little arms but
to tear his little cap, and no use in his little legs
but to kick his little self—when I see
him a lying on his mother’s lap, cooing and cooing,
and, in his innocent state, almost a choking hisself
with his little fist—when I see him such
a infant as he is, and think that that uncle Lillyvick,
as was once a-going to be so fond of him, has withdrawed
himself away, such a feeling of wengeance comes over
me as no language can depicter, and I feel as if even
that holy babe was a telling me to hate him.’
This affecting picture moved Mrs Kenwigs
deeply. After several imperfect words, which
vainly attempted to struggle to the surface, but were
drowned and washed away by the strong tide of her tears,
she spake.
‘Uncle,’ said Mrs Kenwigs,
’to think that you should have turned your back
upon me and my dear children, and upon Kenwigs which
is the author of their being—you who was
once so kind and affectionate, and who, if anybody
had told us such a thing of, we should have withered
with scorn like lightning—you that little
Lillyvick, our first and earliest boy, was named after
at the very altar! Oh gracious!’
‘Was it money that we cared
for?’ said Mr Kenwigs. ’Was it property
that we ever thought of?’
‘No,’ cried Mrs Kenwigs, ‘I scorn
it.’
‘So do I,’ said Mr Kenwigs, ‘and
always did.’
‘My feelings have been lancerated,’
said Mrs Kenwigs, ’my heart has been torn asunder
with anguish, I have been thrown back in my confinement,
my unoffending infant has been rendered uncomfortable
and fractious, Morleena has pined herself away to nothing;
all this I forget and forgive, and with you, uncle,
I never can quarrel. But never ask me to receive
her, never do it, uncle. For I will not,
I will not, I won’t, I won’t, I won’t!’
‘Susan, my dear,’ said Mr Kenwigs, ‘consider
your child.’
‘Yes,’ shrieked Mrs Kenwigs,
’I will consider my child! I will consider
my child! My own child, that no uncles can deprive
me of; my own hated, despised, deserted, cut-off little
child.’ And, here, the emotions of Mrs
Kenwigs became so violent, that Mr Kenwigs was fain
to administer hartshorn internally, and vinegar externally,
and to destroy a staylace, four petticoat strings,
and several small buttons.
Newman had been a silent spectator
of this scene; for Mr Lillyvick had signed to him
not to withdraw, and Mr Kenwigs had further solicited
his presence by a nod of invitation. When Mrs
Kenwigs had been, in some degree, restored, and Newman,
as a person possessed of some influence with her,
had remonstrated and begged her to compose herself,
Mr Lillyvick said in a faltering voice:
’I never shall ask anybody here
to receive my—I needn’t mention the
word; you know what I mean. Kenwigs and Susan,
yesterday was a week she eloped with a half-pay captain!’
Mr and Mrs Kenwigs started together.
‘Eloped with a half-pay captain,’
repeated Mr Lillyvick, ’basely and falsely eloped
with a half-pay captain. With a bottle-nosed
captain that any man might have considered himself
safe from. It was in this room,’ said
Mr Lillyvick, looking sternly round, ’that I
first see Henrietta Petowker. It is in this
room that I turn her off, for ever.’
This declaration completely changed
the whole posture of affairs. Mrs Kenwigs threw
herself upon the old gentleman’s neck, bitterly
reproaching herself for her late harshness, and exclaiming,
if she had suffered, what must his sufferings have
been! Mr Kenwigs grasped his hand, and vowed
eternal friendship and remorse. Mrs Kenwigs
was horror-stricken to think that she should ever have
nourished in her bosom such a snake, adder, viper,
serpent, and base crocodile as Henrietta Petowker.
Mr Kenwigs argued that she must have been bad indeed
not to have improved by so long a contemplation of
Mrs Kenwigs’s virtue. Mrs Kenwigs remembered
that Mr Kenwigs had often said that he was not quite
satisfied of the propriety of Miss Petowker’s
conduct, and wondered how it was that she could have
been blinded by such a wretch. Mr Kenwigs remembered
that he had had his suspicions, but did not wonder
why Mrs Kenwigs had not had hers, as she was all chastity,
purity, and truth, and Henrietta all baseness, falsehood,
and deceit. And Mr and Mrs Kenwigs both said,
with strong feelings and tears of sympathy, that everything
happened for the best; and conjured the good collector
not to give way to unavailing grief, but to seek consolation
in the society of those affectionate relations whose
arms and hearts were ever open to him.
‘Out of affection and regard
for you, Susan and Kenwigs,’ said Mr Lillyvick,
’and not out of revenge and spite against her,
for she is below it, I shall, tomorrow morning, settle
upon your children, and make payable to the survivors
of them when they come of age of marry, that money
that I once meant to leave ’em in my will.
The deed shall be executed tomorrow, and Mr Noggs
shall be one of the witnesses. He hears me promise
this, and he shall see it done.’
Overpowered by this noble and generous
offer, Mr Kenwigs, Mrs Kenwigs, and Miss Morleena
Kenwigs, all began to sob together; and the noise
of their sobbing, communicating itself to the next
room, where the children lay a-bed, and causing them
to cry too, Mr Kenwigs rushed wildly in, and bringing
them out in his arms, by two and two, tumbled them
down in their nightcaps and gowns at the feet of Mr
Lillyvick, and called upon them to thank and bless
him.
‘And now,’ said Mr Lillyvick,
when a heart-rending scene had ensued and the children
were cleared away again, ’give me some supper.
This took place twenty mile from town. I came
up this morning, and have being lingering about all
day, without being able to make up my mind to come
and see you. I humoured her in everything, she
had her own way, she did just as she pleased, and
now she has done this. There was twelve teaspoons
and twenty-four pound in sovereigns—I missed
them first—it’s a trial—I
feel I shall never be able to knock a double knock
again, when I go my rounds—don’t say
anything more about it, please—the spoons
were worth—never mind—never
mind!’
With such muttered outpourings as
these, the old gentleman shed a few tears; but, they
got him into the elbow-chair, and prevailed upon him,
without much pressing, to make a hearty supper, and
by the time he had finished his first pipe, and disposed
of half-a-dozen glasses out of a crown bowl of punch,
ordered by Mr Kenwigs, in celebration of his return
to the bosom of his family, he seemed, though still
very humble, quite resigned to his fate, and rather
relieved than otherwise by the flight of his wife.
‘When I see that man,’
said Mr Kenwigs, with one hand round Mrs Kenwigs’s
waist: his other hand supporting his pipe (which
made him wink and cough very much, for he was no smoker):
and his eyes on Morleena, who sat upon her uncle’s
knee, ’when I see that man as mingling, once
again, in the spear which he adorns, and see his affections
deweloping themselves in legitimate sitiwations, I
feel that his nature is as elewated and expanded,
as his standing afore society as a public character
is unimpeached, and the woices of my infant children
purvided for in life, seem to whisper to me softly,
“This is an ewent at which Evins itself looks
down!”’