The Crisis of the Project and its Result
There are not many men who lie abed
too late, or oversleep themselves, on their wedding
morning. A legend there is of somebody remarkable
for absence of mind, who opened his eyes upon the day
which was to give him a young wife, and forgetting
all about the matter, rated his servants for providing
him with such fine clothes as had been prepared for
the festival. There is also a legend of a young
gentleman, who, not having before his eyes the fear
of the canons of the church for such cases made and
provided, conceived a passion for his grandmother.
Both cases are of a singular and special kind and
it is very doubtful whether either can be considered
as a precedent likely to be extensively followed by
succeeding generations.
Arthur Gride had enrobed himself in
his marriage garments of bottle-green, a full hour
before Mrs Sliderskew, shaking off her more heavy
slumbers, knocked at his chamber door; and he had hobbled
downstairs in full array and smacked his lips over
a scanty taste of his favourite cordial, ere that
delicate piece of antiquity enlightened the kitchen
with her presence.
‘Faugh!’ said Peg, grubbing,
in the discharge of her domestic functions, among
a scanty heap of ashes in the rusty grate. ’Wedding
indeed! A precious wedding! He wants somebody
better than his old Peg to take care of him, does
he? And what has he said to me, many and many
a time, to keep me content with short food, small
wages, and little fire? “My will, Peg!
my will!” says he: “I’m a bachelor—no
friends—no relations, Peg.”
Lies! And now he’s to bring home a new
mistress, a baby-faced chit of a girl! If he
wanted a wife, the fool, why couldn’t he have
one suitable to his age, and that knew his ways?
She won’t come in my way, he says.
No, that she won’t, but you little think why,
Arthur boy!’
While Mrs Sliderskew, influenced possibly
by some lingering feelings of disappointment and personal
slight, occasioned by her old master’s preference
for another, was giving loose to these grumblings
below stairs, Arthur Gride was cogitating in the parlour
upon what had taken place last night.
‘I can’t think how he
can have picked up what he knows,’ said Arthur,
’unless I have committed myself—let
something drop at Bray’s, for instance—which
has been overheard. Perhaps I may. I shouldn’t
be surprised if that was it. Mr Nickleby was
often angry at my talking to him before we got outside
the door. I mustn’t tell him that part
of the business, or he’ll put me out of sorts,
and make me nervous for the day.’
Ralph was universally looked up to,
and recognised among his fellows as a superior genius,
but upon Arthur Gride his stern unyielding character
and consummate art had made so deep an impression,
that he was actually afraid of him. Cringing
and cowardly to the core by nature, Arthur Gride humbled
himself in the dust before Ralph Nickleby, and, even
when they had not this stake in common, would have
licked his shoes and crawled upon the ground before
him rather than venture to return him word for word,
or retort upon him in any other spirit than one of
the most slavish and abject sycophancy.
To Ralph Nickleby’s, Arthur
Gride now betook himself according to appointment;
and to Ralph Nickleby he related how, last night, some
young blustering blade, whom he had never seen, forced
his way into his house, and tried to frighten him
from the proposed nuptials. Told, in short, what
Nicholas had said and done, with the slight reservation
upon which he had determined.
‘Well, and what then?’ said Ralph.
‘Oh! nothing more,’ rejoined Gride.
‘He tried to frighten you,’
said Ralph, ’and you were frightened I
suppose; is that it?’
‘I frightened him by crying
thieves and murder,’ replied Gride. ’Once
I was in earnest, I tell you that, for I had more than
half a mind to swear he uttered threats, and demanded
my life or my money.’
‘Oho!’ said Ralph, eyeing him askew.
‘Jealous too!’
‘Dear now, see that!’
cried Arthur, rubbing his hands and affecting to laugh.
‘Why do you make those grimaces,
man?’ said Ralph; ’you are jealous
—and with good cause I think.’
’No, no, no; not with good cause,
hey? You don’t think with good cause,
do you?’ cried Arthur, faltering. ‘Do
you though, hey?’
‘Why, how stands the fact?’
returned Ralph. ’Here is an old man about
to be forced in marriage upon a girl; and to this old
man there comes a handsome young fellow—you
said he was handsome, didn’t you?’
‘No!’ snarled Arthur Gride.
‘Oh!’ rejoined Ralph,
’I thought you did. Well! Handsome
or not handsome, to this old man there comes a young
fellow who casts all manner of fierce defiances in
his teeth—gums I should rather say—
and tells him in plain terms that his mistress hates
him. What does he do that for? Philanthropy’s
sake?’
‘Not for love of the lady,’
replied Gride, ’for he said that no word of
love—his very words—had ever
passed between ’em.’
‘He said!’ repeated Ralph,
contemptuously. ’But I like him for one
thing, and that is, his giving you this fair warning
to keep your— what is it?—Tit-tit
or dainty chick—which?—under
lock and key. Be careful, Gride, be careful.
It’s a triumph, too, to tear her away from
a gallant young rival: a great triumph for an
old man! It only remains to keep her safe when
you have her—that’s all.’
‘What a man it is!’ cried
Arthur Gride, affecting, in the extremity of his torture,
to be highly amused. And then he added, anxiously,
‘Yes; to keep her safe, that’s all.
And that isn’t much, is it?’
‘Much!’ said Ralph, with
a sneer. ’Why, everybody knows what easy
things to understand and to control, women are.
But come, it’s very nearly time for you to
be made happy. You’ll pay the bond now,
I suppose, to save us trouble afterwards.’
‘Oh what a man you are!’ croaked Arthur.
‘Why not?’ said Ralph.
’Nobody will pay you interest for the money,
I suppose, between this and twelve o’clock; will
they?’
‘But nobody would pay you interest
for it either, you know,’ returned Arthur, leering
at Ralph with all the cunning and slyness he could
throw into his face.
‘Besides which,’ said
Ralph, suffering his lip to curl into a smile, ’you
haven’t the money about you, and you weren’t
prepared for this, or you’d have brought it
with you; and there’s nobody you’d so much
like to accommodate as me. I see. We trust
each other in about an equal degree. Are you
ready?’
Gride, who had done nothing but grin,
and nod, and chatter, during this last speech of Ralph’s,
answered in the affirmative; and, producing from his
hat a couple of large white favours, pinned one on
his breast, and with considerable difficulty induced
his friend to do the like. Thus accoutred, they
got into a hired coach which Ralph had in waiting,
and drove to the residence of the fair and most wretched
bride.
Gride, whose spirits and courage had
gradually failed him more and more as they approached
nearer and nearer to the house, was utterly dismayed
and cowed by the mournful silence which pervaded it.
The face of the poor servant girl, the only person
they saw, was disfigured with tears and want of sleep.
There was nobody to receive or welcome them; and
they stole upstairs into the usual sitting-room, more
like two burglars than the bridegroom and his friend.
‘One would think,’ said
Ralph, speaking, in spite of himself, in a low and
subdued voice, ’that there was a funeral going
on here, and not a wedding.’
‘He, he!’ tittered his
friend, ‘you are so—so very funny!’
‘I need be,’ remarked
Ralph, drily, ’for this is rather dull and chilling.
Look a little brisker, man, and not so hangdog like!’
‘Yes, yes, I will,’ said
Gride. ’But—but—you
don’t think she’s coming just yet, do
you?’
‘Why, I suppose she’ll
not come till she is obliged,’ returned Ralph,
looking at his watch, ’and she has a good half-hour
to spare yet. Curb your impatience.’
‘I—I—am
not impatient,’ stammered Arthur. ’I
wouldn’t be hard with her for the world.
Oh dear, dear, not on any account. Let her
take her time—her own time. Her time
shall be ours by all means.’
While Ralph bent upon his trembling
friend a keen look, which showed that he perfectly
understood the reason of this great consideration
and regard, a footstep was heard upon the stairs, and
Bray himself came into the room on tiptoe, and holding
up his hand with a cautious gesture, as if there were
some sick person near, who must not be disturbed.
‘Hush!’ he said, in a
low voice. ’She was very ill last night.
I thought she would have broken her heart.
She is dressed, and crying bitterly in her own room;
but she’s better, and quite quiet. That’s
everything!’
‘She is ready, is she?’ said Ralph.
‘Quite ready,’ returned the father.
’And not likely to delay us
by any young-lady weaknesses—fainting,
or so forth?’ said Ralph.
‘She may be safely trusted now,’
returned Bray. ’I have been talking to
her this morning. Here! Come a little this
way.’
He drew Ralph Nickleby to the further
end of the room, and pointed towards Gride, who sat
huddled together in a corner, fumbling nervously with
the buttons of his coat, and exhibiting a face, of
which every skulking and base expression was sharpened
and aggravated to the utmost by his anxiety and trepidation.
‘Look at that man,’ whispered
Bray, emphatically. ’This seems a cruel
thing, after all.’
‘What seems a cruel thing?’
inquired Ralph, with as much stolidity of face, as
if he really were in utter ignorance of the other’s
meaning.
‘This marriage,’ answered
Bray. ’Don’t ask me what. You
know as well as I do.’
Ralph shrugged his shoulders, in silent
deprecation of Bray’s impatience, and elevated
his eyebrows, and pursed his lips, as men do when
they are prepared with a sufficient answer to some
remark, but wait for a more favourable opportunity
of advancing it, or think it scarcely worth while
to answer their adversary at all.
‘Look at him. Does it not seem cruel?’
said Bray.
‘No!’ replied Ralph, boldly.
‘I say it does,’ retorted
Bray, with a show of much irritation. ’It
is a cruel thing, by all that’s bad and treacherous!’
When men are about to commit, or to
sanction the commission of some injustice, it is not
uncommon for them to express pity for the object either
of that or some parallel proceeding, and to feel themselves,
at the time, quite virtuous and moral, and immensely
superior to those who express no pity at all.
This is a kind of upholding of faith above works,
and is very comfortable. To do Ralph Nickleby
justice, he seldom practised this sort of dissimulation;
but he understood those who did, and therefore suffered
Bray to say, again and again, with great vehemence,
that they were jointly doing a very cruel thing, before
he again offered to interpose a word.
‘You see what a dry, shrivelled,
withered old chip it is,’ returned Ralph, when
the other was at length silent. ’If he
were younger, it might be cruel, but as it is—harkee,
Mr Bray, he’ll die soon, and leave her a rich
young widow! Miss Madeline consults your tastes
this time; let her consult her own next.’
‘True, true,’ said Bray,
biting his nails, and plainly very ill at ease.
’I couldn’t do anything better for her
than advise her to accept these proposals, could I?
Now, I ask you, Nickleby, as a man of the world;
could I?’
‘Surely not,’ answered
Ralph. ’I tell you what, sir; there are
a hundred fathers, within a circuit of five miles
from this place; well off; good, rich, substantial
men; who would gladly give their daughters, and their
own ears with them, to that very man yonder, ape and
mummy as he looks.’
‘So there are!’ exclaimed
Bray, eagerly catching at anything which seemed a
justification of himself. ’And so I told
her, both last night and today.’
‘You told her truth,’
said Ralph, ’and did well to do so; though I
must say, at the same time, that if I had a daughter,
and my freedom, pleasure, nay, my very health and
life, depended on her taking a husband whom I pointed
out, I should hope it would not be necessary to advance
any other arguments to induce her to consent to my
wishes.’
Bray looked at Ralph as if to see
whether he spoke in earnest, and having nodded twice
or thrice in unqualified assent to what had fallen
from him, said:
’I must go upstairs for a few
minutes, to finish dressing. When I come down,
I’ll bring Madeline with me. Do you know,
I had a very strange dream last night, which I have
not remembered till this instant. I dreamt that
it was this morning, and you and I had been talking
as we have been this minute; that I went upstairs,
for the very purpose for which I am going now; and
that as I stretched out my hand to take Madeline’s,
and lead her down, the floor sunk with me, and after
falling from such an indescribable and tremendous
height as the imagination scarcely conceives, except
in dreams, I alighted in a grave.’
’And you awoke, and found you
were lying on your back, or with your head hanging
over the bedside, or suffering some pain from indigestion?’
said Ralph. ’Pshaw, Mr Bray! Do as
I do (you will have the opportunity, now that a constant
round of pleasure and enjoyment opens upon you), and,
occupying yourself a little more by day, have no time
to think of what you dream by night.’
Ralph followed him, with a steady
look, to the door; and, turning to the bridegroom,
when they were again alone, said,
’Mark my words, Gride, you won’t
have to pay his annuity very long. You have
the devil’s luck in bargains, always. If
he is not booked to make the long voyage before many
months are past and gone, I wear an orange for a head!’
To this prophecy, so agreeable to
his ears, Arthur returned no answer than a cackle
of great delight. Ralph, throwing himself into
a chair, they both sat waiting in profound silence.
Ralph was thinking, with a sneer upon his lips, on
the altered manner of Bray that day, and how soon
their fellowship in a bad design had lowered his pride
and established a familiarity between them, when his
attentive ear caught the rustling of a female dress
upon the stairs, and the footstep of a man.
‘Wake up,’ he said, stamping
his foot impatiently upon the ground, ’and be
something like life, man, will you? They are
here. Urge those dry old bones of yours this
way. Quick, man, quick!’
Gride shambled forward, and stood,
leering and bowing, close by Ralph’s side, when
the door opened and there entered in haste—not
Bray and his daughter, but Nicholas and his sister
Kate.
If some tremendous apparition from
the world of shadows had suddenly presented itself
before him, Ralph Nickleby could not have been more
thunder-stricken than he was by this surprise.
His hands fell powerless by his side, he reeled back;
and with open mouth, and a face of ashy paleness,
stood gazing at them in speechless rage: his
eyes so prominent, and his face so convulsed and changed
by the passions which raged within him, that it would
have been difficult to recognise in him the same stern,
composed, hard-featured man he had been not a minute
ago.
‘The man that came to me last
night,’ whispered Gride, plucking at his elbow.
‘The man that came to me last night!’
‘I see,’ muttered Ralph,
’I know! I might have guessed as much
before. Across my every path, at every turn,
go where I will, do what I may, he comes!’
The absence of all colour from the
face; the dilated nostril; the quivering of the lips
which, though set firmly against each other, would
not be still; showed what emotions were struggling
for the mastery with Nicholas. But he kept them
down, and gently pressing Kate’s arm to reassure
her, stood erect and undaunted, front to front with
his unworthy relative.
As the brother and sister stood side
by side, with a gallant bearing which became them
well, a close likeness between them was apparent,
which many, had they only seen them apart, might have
failed to remark. The air, carriage, and very
look and expression of the brother were all reflected
in the sister, but softened and refined to the nicest
limit of feminine delicacy and attraction. More
striking still was some indefinable resemblance, in
the face of Ralph, to both. While they had never
looked more handsome, nor he more ugly; while they
had never held themselves more proudly, nor he shrunk
half so low; there never had been a time when this
resemblance was so perceptible, or when all the worst
characteristics of a face rendered coarse and harsh
by evil thoughts were half so manifest as now.
‘Away!’ was the first
word he could utter as he literally gnashed his teeth.
’Away! What brings you here? Liar,
scoundrel, dastard, thief!’
‘I come here,’ said Nicholas
in a low deep voice, ’to save your victim if
I can. Liar and scoundrel you are, in every action
of your life; theft is your trade; and double dastard
you must be, or you were not here today. Hard
words will not move me, nor would hard blows.
Here I stand, and will, till I have done my errand.’
‘Girl!’ said Ralph, ’retire!
We can use force to him, but I would not hurt you
if I could help it. Retire, you weak and silly
wench, and leave this dog to be dealt with as he deserves.’
‘I will not retire,’ cried
Kate, with flashing eyes and the red blood mantling
in her cheeks. ’You will do him no hurt
that he will not repay. You may use force with
me; I think you will, for I am a girl, and that
would well become you. But if I have a girl’s
weakness, I have a woman’s heart, and it is not
you who in a cause like this can turn that from its
purpose.’
‘And what may your purpose be,
most lofty lady?’ said Ralph.
’To offer to the unhappy subject
of your treachery, at this last moment,’ replied
Nicholas, ’a refuge and a home. If the
near prospect of such a husband as you have provided
will not prevail upon her, I hope she may be moved
by the prayers and entreaties of one of her own sex.
At all events they shall be tried. I myself,
avowing to her father from whom I come and by whom
I am commissioned, will render it an act of greater
baseness, meanness, and cruelty in him if he still
dares to force this marriage on. Here I wait
to see him and his daughter. For this I came
and brought my sister even into your presence.
Our purpose is not to see or speak with you; therefore
to you we stoop to say no more.’
‘Indeed!’ said Ralph.
’You persist in remaining here, ma’am,
do you?’
His niece’s bosom heaved with
the indignant excitement into which he had lashed
her, but she gave him no reply.
‘Now, Gride, see here,’
said Ralph. ’This fellow—I grieve
to say my brother’s son: a reprobate and
profligate, stained with every mean and selfish crime—this
fellow, coming here today to disturb a solemn ceremony,
and knowing that the consequence of his presenting
himself in another man’s house at such a time,
and persisting in remaining there, must be his being
kicked into the streets and dragged through them like
the vagabond he is—this fellow, mark you,
brings with him his sister as a protection, thinking
we would not expose a silly girl to the degradation
and indignity which is no novelty to him; and, even
after I have warned her of what must ensue, he still
keeps her by him, as you see, and clings to her apron-strings
like a cowardly boy to his mother’s. Is
not this a pretty fellow to talk as big as you have
heard him now?’
‘And as I heard him last night,’
said Arthur Gride; ’as I heard him last night
when he sneaked into my house, and—he! he!
he!—very soon sneaked out again, when I
nearly frightened him to death. And he
wanting to marry Miss Madeline too! Oh dear!
Is there anything else he’d like? Anything
else we can do for him, besides giving her up?
Would he like his debts paid and his house furnished,
and a few bank notes for shaving paper if he shaves
at all? He! he! he!’
‘You will remain, girl, will
you?’ said Ralph, turning upon Kate again, ’to
be hauled downstairs like a drunken drab, as I swear
you shall if you stop here? No answer!
Thank your brother for what follows. Gride,
call down Bray—and not his daughter.
Let them keep her above.’
‘If you value your head,’
said Nicholas, taking up a position before the door,
and speaking in the same low voice in which he had
spoken before, and with no more outward passion than
he had before displayed; ‘stay where you are!’
‘Mind me, and not him, and call
down Bray,’ said Ralph.
‘Mind yourself rather than either
of us, and stay where you are!’ said Nicholas.
‘Will you call down Bray?’ cried Ralph.
‘Remember that you come near me at your peril,’
said Nicholas.
Gride hesitated. Ralph being,
by this time, as furious as a baffled tiger, made
for the door, and, attempting to pass Kate, clasped
her arm roughly with his hand. Nicholas, with
his eyes darting fire, seized him by the collar.
At that moment, a heavy body fell with great violence
on the floor above, and, in an instant afterwards,
was heard a most appalling and terrific scream.
They all stood still, and gazed upon
each other. Scream succeeded scream; a heavy
pattering of feet succeeded; and many shrill voices
clamouring together were heard to cry, ‘He is
dead!’
‘Stand off!’ cried Nicholas,
letting loose all the passion he had restrained till
now; ’if this is what I scarcely dare to hope
it is, you are caught, villains, in your own toils.’
He burst from the room, and, darting
upstairs to the quarter from whence the noise proceeded,
forced his way through a crowd of persons who quite
filled a small bed-chamber, and found Bray lying on
the floor quite dead; his daughter clinging to the
body.
‘How did this happen?’
he cried, looking wildly about him.
Several voices answered together,
that he had been observed, through the half-opened
door, reclining in a strange and uneasy position upon
a chair; that he had been spoken to several times,
and not answering, was supposed to be asleep, until
some person going in and shaking him by the arm, he
fell heavily to the ground and was discovered to be
dead.
‘Who is the owner of this house?’
said Nicholas, hastily.
An elderly woman was pointed out to
him; and to her he said, as he knelt down and gently
unwound Madeline’s arms from the lifeless mass
round which they were entwined: ’I represent
this lady’s nearest friends, as her servant
here knows, and must remove her from this dreadful
scene. This is my sister to whose charge you
confide her. My name and address are upon that
card, and you shall receive from me all necessary
directions for the arrangements that must be made.
Stand aside, every one of you, and give me room and
air for God’s sake!’
The people fell back, scarce wondering
more at what had just occurred, than at the excitement
and impetuosity of him who spoke. Nicholas, taking
the insensible girl in his arms, bore her from the
chamber and downstairs into the room he had just quitted,
followed by his sister and the faithful servant, whom
he charged to procure a coach directly, while he and
Kate bent over their beautiful charge and endeavoured,
but in vain, to restore her to animation. The
girl performed her office with such expedition, that
in a very few minutes the coach was ready.
Ralph Nickleby and Gride, stunned
and paralysed by the awful event which had so suddenly
overthrown their schemes (it would not otherwise,
perhaps, have made much impression on them), and carried
away by the extraordinary energy and precipitation
of Nicholas, which bore down all before him, looked
on at these proceedings like men in a dream or trance.
It was not until every preparation was made for Madeline’s
immediate removal that Ralph broke silence by declaring
she should not be taken away.
‘Who says so?’ cried Nicholas,
rising from his knee and confronting them, but still
retaining Madeline’s lifeless hand in his.
‘I!’ answered Ralph, hoarsely.
‘Hush, hush!’ cried the
terrified Gride, catching him by the arm again.
‘Hear what he says.’
‘Ay!’ said Nicholas, extending
his disengaged hand in the air, ’hear what he
says. That both your debts are paid in the one
great debt of nature. That the bond, due today
at twelve, is now waste paper. That your contemplated
fraud shall be discovered yet. That your schemes
are known to man, and overthrown by Heaven. Wretches,
that he defies you both to do your worst.’
‘This man,’ said Ralph,
in a voice scarcely intelligible, ’this man
claims his wife, and he shall have her.’
’That man claims what is not
his, and he should not have her if he were fifty men,
with fifty more to back him,’ said Nicholas.
‘Who shall prevent him?’
‘I will.’
‘By what right I should like
to know,’ said Ralph. ’By what right
I ask?’
’By this right. That,
knowing what I do, you dare not tempt me further,’
said Nicholas, ’and by this better right; that
those I serve, and with whom you would have done me
base wrong and injury, are her nearest and her dearest
friends. In their name I bear her hence.
Give way!’
‘One word!’ cried Ralph, foaming at the
mouth.
‘Not one,’ replied Nicholas,
’I will not hear of one—save this.
Look to yourself, and heed this warning that I give
you! Your day is past, and night is comin’
on.’
‘My curse, my bitter, deadly curse, upon you,
boy!’
’Whence will curses come at
your command? Or what avails a curse or blessing
from a man like you? I tell you, that misfortune
and discovery are thickening about your head; that
the structures you have raised, through all your ill-spent
life, are crumbling into dust; that your path is beset
with spies; that this very day, ten thousand pounds
of your hoarded wealth have gone in one great crash!’
‘’Tis false!’ cried Ralph, shrinking
back.
’’Tis true, and you shall
find it so. I have no more words to waste.
Stand from the door. Kate, do you go first.
Lay not a hand on her, or on that woman, or on me,
or so much a brush their garments as they pass you
by!—You let them pass, and he blocks the
door again!’
Arthur Gride happened to be in the
doorway, but whether intentionally or from confusion
was not quite apparent. Nicholas swung him away,
with such violence as to cause him to spin round the
room until he was caught by a sharp angle of the wall,
and there knocked down; and then taking his beautiful
burden in his arms rushed out. No one cared
to stop him, if any were so disposed. Making
his way through a mob of people, whom a report of the
circumstances had attracted round the house, and carrying
Madeline, in his excitement, as easily as if she were
an infant, he reached the coach in which Kate and
the girl were already waiting, and, confiding his
charge to them, jumped up beside the coachman and bade
him drive away.