Of Family Matters, Cares, Hopes, Disappointments,
and Sorrows
Although Mrs Nickleby had been made
acquainted by her son and daughter with every circumstance
of Madeline Bray’s history which was known to
them; although the responsible situation in which
Nicholas stood had been carefully explained to her,
and she had been prepared, even for the possible contingency
of having to receive the young lady in her own house,
improbable as such a result had appeared only a few
minutes before it came about, still, Mrs Nickleby,
from the moment when this confidence was first reposed
in her, late on the previous evening, had remained
in an unsatisfactory and profoundly mystified state,
from which no explanations or arguments could relieve
her, and which every fresh soliloquy and reflection
only aggravated more and more.
‘Bless my heart, Kate!’
so the good lady argued; ’if the Mr Cheerybles
don’t want this young lady to be married, why
don’t they file a bill against the Lord Chancellor,
make her a Chancery ward, and shut her up in the Fleet
prison for safety?—I have read of such
things in the newspapers a hundred times. Or,
if they are so very fond of her as Nicholas says they
are, why don’t they marry her themselves—one
of them I mean? And even supposing they don’t
want her to be married, and don’t want to marry
her themselves, why in the name of wonder should Nicholas
go about the world, forbidding people’s banns?’
‘I don’t think you quite
understand,’ said Kate, gently.
‘Well I am sure, Kate, my dear,
you’re very polite!’ replied Mrs Nickleby.
’I have been married myself I hope, and I have
seen other people married. Not understand, indeed!’
‘I know you have had great experience,
dear mama,’ said Kate; ’I mean that perhaps
you don’t quite understand all the circumstances
in this instance. We have stated them awkwardly,
I dare say.’
‘That I dare say you have,’
retorted her mother, briskly. ’That’s
very likely. I am not to be held accountable
for that; though, at the same time, as the circumstances
speak for themselves, I shall take the liberty, my
love, of saying that I do understand them, and perfectly
well too; whatever you and Nicholas may choose to think
to the contrary. Why is such a great fuss made
because this Miss Magdalen is going to marry somebody
who is older than herself? Your poor papa was
older than I was, four years and a half older.
Jane Dibabs—the Dibabses lived in the
beautiful little thatched white house one story high,
covered all over with ivy and creeping plants, with
an exquisite little porch with twining honysuckles
and all sorts of things: where the earwigs used
to fall into one’s tea on a summer evening,
and always fell upon their backs and kicked dreadfully,
and where the frogs used to get into the rushlight
shades when one stopped all night, and sit up and look
through the little holes like Christians—Jane
Dibabs, she married a man who was a great deal
older than herself, and would marry him, notwithstanding
all that could be said to the contrary, and she was
so fond of him that nothing was ever equal to it.
There was no fuss made about Jane Dibabs, and her
husband was a most honourable and excellent man, and
everybody spoke well of him. Then why should
there by any fuss about this Magdalen?’
’Her husband is much older;
he is not her own choice; his character is the very
reverse of that which you have just described.
Don’t you see a broad destinction between the
two cases?’ said Kate.
To this, Mrs Nickleby only replied
that she durst say she was very stupid, indeed she
had no doubt she was, for her own children almost
as much as told her so, every day of her life; to be
sure she was a little older than they, and perhaps
some foolish people might think she ought reasonably
to know best. However, no doubt she was wrong;
of course she was; she always was, she couldn’t
be right, she couldn’t be expected to be; so
she had better not expose herself any more; and to
all Kate’s conciliations and concessions for
an hour ensuing, the good lady gave no other replies
than Oh, certainly, why did they ask her?, Her
opinion was of no consequence, it didn’t matter
what she said, with many other rejoinders of the
same class.
In this frame of mind (expressed,
when she had become too resigned for speech, by nods
of the head, upliftings of the eyes, and little beginnings
of groans, converted, as they attracted attention,
into short coughs), Mrs Nickleby remained until Nicholas
and Kate returned with the object of their solicitude;
when, having by this time asserted her own importance,
and becoming besides interested in the trials of one
so young and beautiful, she not only displayed the
utmost zeal and solicitude, but took great credit to
herself for recommending the course of procedure which
her son had adopted: frequently declaring, with
an expressive look, that it was very fortunate things
were as they were: and hinting, that but
for great encouragement and wisdom on her own part,
they never could have been brought to that pass.
Not to strain the question whether
Mrs Nickleby had or had not any great hand in bringing
matters about, it is unquestionable that she had strong
ground for exultation. The brothers, on their
return, bestowed such commendations on Nicholas for
the part he had taken, and evinced so much joy at
the altered state of events and the recovery of their
young friend from trials so great and dangers so threatening,
that, as she more than once informed her daughter,
she now considered the fortunes of the family ‘as
good as’ made. Mr Charles Cheeryble, indeed,
Mrs Nickleby positively asserted, had, in the first
transports of his surprise and delight, ‘as good
as’ said so. Without precisely explaining
what this qualification meant, she subsided, whenever
she mentioned the subject, into such a mysterious
and important state, and had such visions of wealth
and dignity in perspective, that (vague and clouded
though they were) she was, at such times, almost as
happy as if she had really been permanently provided
for, on a scale of great splendour.
The sudden and terrible shock she
had received, combined with the great affliction and
anxiety of mind which she had, for a long time, endured,
proved too much for Madeline’s strength.
Recovering from the state of stupefaction into which
the sudden death of her father happily plunged her,
she only exchanged that condition for one of dangerous
and active illness. When the delicate physical
powers which have been sustained by an unnatural strain
upon the mental energies and a resolute determination
not to yield, at last give way, their degree of prostration
is usually proportionate to the strength of the effort
which has previously upheld them. Thus it was
that the illness which fell on Madeline was of no slight
or temporary nature, but one which, for a time, threatened
her reason, and—scarcely worse—her
life itself.
Who, slowly recovering from a disorder
so severe and dangerous, could be insensible to the
unremitting attentions of such a nurse as gentle,
tender, earnest Kate? On whom could the sweet
soft voice, the light step, the delicate hand, the
quiet, cheerful, noiseless discharge of those thousand
little offices of kindness and relief which we feel
so deeply when we are ill, and forget so lightly when
we are well—on whom could they make so deep
an impression as on a young heart stored with every
pure and true affection that women cherish; almost
a stranger to the endearments and devotion of its
own sex, save as it learnt them from itself; and rendered,
by calamity and suffering, keenly susceptible of the
sympathy so long unknown and so long sought in vain?
What wonder that days became as years in knitting
them together! What wonder, if with every hour
of returning health, there came some stronger and
sweeter recognition of the praises which Kate, when
they recalled old scenes—they seemed old
now, and to have been acted years ago—would
lavish on her brother! Where would have been
the wonder, even, if those praises had found a quick
response in the breast of Madeline, and if, with the
image of Nicholas so constantly recurring in the features
of his sister that she could scarcely separate the
two, she had sometimes found it equally difficult
to assign to each the feelings they had first inspired,
and had imperceptibly mingled with her gratitude to
Nicholas, some of that warmer feeling which she had
assigned to Kate?
‘My dear,’ Mrs Nickleby
would say, coming into the room with an elaborate
caution, calculated to discompose the nerves of an
invalid rather more than the entry of a horse-soldier
at full gallop; ’how do you find yourself tonight?
I hope you are better.’
‘Almost well, mama,’ Kate
would reply, laying down her work, and taking Madeline’s
hand in hers.
‘Kate!’ Mrs Nickleby would
say, reprovingly, ‘don’t talk so loud’
(the worthy lady herself talking in a whisper that
would have made the blood of the stoutest man run
cold in his veins).
Kate would take this reproof very
quietly, and Mrs Nickleby, making every board creak
and every thread rustle as she moved stealthily about,
would add:
’My son Nicholas has just come
home, and I have come, according to custom, my dear,
to know, from your own lips, exactly how you are;
for he won’t take my account, and never will.’
‘He is later than usual to-night,’
perhaps Madeline would reply. ‘Nearly half
an hour.’
’Well, I never saw such people
in all my life as you are, for time, up here!’
Mrs Nickleby would exclaim in great astonishment; ’I
declare I never did! I had not the least idea
that Nicholas was after his time, not the smallest.
Mr Nickleby used to say—your poor papa,
I am speaking of, Kate my dear—used to say,
that appetite was the best clock in the world, but
you have no appetite, my dear Miss Bray, I wish you
had, and upon my word I really think you ought to
take something that would give you one. I am
sure I don’t know, but I have heard that two
or three dozen native lobsters give an appetite, though
that comes to the same thing after all, for I suppose
you must have an appetite before you can take ’em.
If I said lobsters, I meant oysters, but of course
it’s all the same, though really how you came
to know about Nicholas—’
‘We happened to be just talking
about him, mama; that was it.’
’You never seem to me to be
talking about anything else, Kate, and upon my word
I am quite surprised at your being so very thoughtless.
You can find subjects enough to talk about sometimes,
and when you know how important it is to keep up Miss
Bray’s spirits, and interest her, and all that,
it really is quite extraordinary to me what can induce
you to keep on prose, prose, prose, din, din, din,
everlastingly, upon the same theme. You are a
very kind nurse, Kate, and a very good one, and I
know you mean very well; but I will say this—that
if it wasn’t for me, I really don’t know
what would become of Miss Bray’s spirits, and
so I tell the doctor every day. He says he wonders
how I sustain my own, and I am sure I very often wonder
myself how I can contrive to keep up as I do.
Of course it’s an exertion, but still, when
I know how much depends upon me in this house, I am
obliged to make it. There’s nothing praiseworthy
in that, but it’s necessary, and I do it.’
With that, Mrs Nickleby would draw
up a chair, and for some three-quarters of an hour
run through a great variety of distracting topics
in the most distracting manner possible; tearing herself
away, at length, on the plea that she must now go and
amuse Nicholas while he took his supper. After
a preliminary raising of his spirits with the information
that she considered the patient decidedly worse, she
would further cheer him up by relating how dull, listless,
and low-spirited Miss Bray was, because Kate foolishly
talked about nothing else but him and family matters.
When she had made Nicholas thoroughly comfortable with
these and other inspiriting remarks, she would discourse
at length on the arduous duties she had performed
that day; and, sometimes, be moved to tears in wondering
how, if anything were to happen to herself, the family
would ever get on without her.
At other times, when Nicholas came
home at night, he would be accompanied by Mr Frank
Cheeryble, who was commissioned by the brothers to
inquire how Madeline was that evening. On such
occasions (and they were of very frequent occurrence),
Mrs Nickleby deemed it of particular importance that
she should have her wits about her; for, from certain
signs and tokens which had attracted her attention,
she shrewdly suspected that Mr Frank, interested as
his uncles were in Madeline, came quite as much to
see Kate as to inquire after her; the more especially
as the brothers were in constant communication with
the medical man, came backwards and forwards very
frequently themselves, and received a full report from
Nicholas every morning. These were proud times
for Mrs Nickleby; never was anybody half so discreet
and sage as she, or half so mysterious withal; and
never were there such cunning generalship, and such
unfathomable designs, as she brought to bear upon Mr
Frank, with the view of ascertaining whether her suspicions
were well founded: and if so, of tantalising
him into taking her into his confidence and throwing
himself upon her merciful consideration. Extensive
was the artillery, heavy and light, which Mrs Nickleby
brought into play for the furtherance of these great
schemes; various and opposite the means which she
employed to bring about the end she had in view.
At one time, she was all cordiality and ease; at
another, all stiffness and frigidity. Now, she
would seem to open her whole heart to her unhappy
victim; the next time they met, she would receive
him with the most distant and studious reserve, as
if a new light had broken in upon her, and, guessing
his intentions, she had resolved to check them in
the bud; as if she felt it her bounden duty to act
with Spartan firmness, and at once and for ever to
discourage hopes which never could be realised.
At other times, when Nicholas was not there to overhear,
and Kate was upstairs busily tending her sick friend,
the worthy lady would throw out dark hints of an intention
to send her daughter to France for three or four years,
or to Scotland for the improvement of her health impaired
by her late fatigues, or to America on a visit, or
anywhere that threatened a long and tedious separation.
Nay, she even went so far as to hint, obscurely,
at an attachment entertained for her daughter by the
son of an old neighbour of theirs, one Horatio Peltirogus
(a young gentleman who might have been, at that time,
four years old, or thereabouts), and to represent it,
indeed, as almost a settled thing between the families—only
waiting for her daughter’s final decision, to
come off with the sanction of the church, and to the
unspeakable happiness and content of all parties.
It was in the full pride and glory
of having sprung this last mine one night with extraordinary
success, that Mrs Nickleby took the opportunity of
being left alone with her son before retiring to rest,
to sound him on the subject which so occupied her thoughts:
not doubting that they could have but one opinion respecting
it. To this end, she approached the question
with divers laudatory and appropriate remarks touching
the general amiability of Mr Frank Cheeryble.
‘You are quite right, mother,’
said Nicholas, ’quite right. He is a fine
fellow.’
‘Good-looking, too,’ said Mrs Nickleby.
‘Decidedly good-looking,’ answered Nicholas.
‘What may you call his nose,
now, my dear?’ pursued Mrs Nickleby, wishing
to interest Nicholas in the subject to the utmost.
‘Call it?’ repeated Nicholas.
‘Ah!’ returned his mother,
’what style of nose? What order of architecture,
if one may say so. I am not very learned in noses.
Do you call it a Roman or a Grecian?’
‘Upon my word, mother,’
said Nicholas, laughing, ’as well as I remember,
I should call it a kind of Composite, or mixed nose.
But I have no very strong recollection on the subject.
If it will afford you any gratification, I’ll
observe it more closely, and let you know.’
‘I wish you would, my dear,’
said Mrs Nickleby, with an earnest look.
‘Very well,’ returned Nicholas.
‘I will.’
Nicholas returned to the perusal of
the book he had been reading, when the dialogue had
gone thus far. Mrs Nickleby, after stopping a
little for consideration, resumed.
‘He is very much attached to you, Nicholas,
my dear.’
Nicholas laughingly said, as he closed
his book, that he was glad to hear it, and observed
that his mother seemed deep in their new friend’s
confidence already.
‘Hem!’ said Mrs Nickleby.
’I don’t know about that, my dear, but
I think it is very necessary that somebody should
be in his confidence; highly necessary.’
Elated by a look of curiosity from
her son, and the consciousness of possessing a great
secret, all to herself, Mrs Nickleby went on with
great animation:
’I am sure, my dear Nicholas,
how you can have failed to notice it, is, to me, quite
extraordinary; though I don’t know why I should
say that, either, because, of course, as far as it
goes, and to a certain extent, there is a great deal
in this sort of thing, especially in this early stage,
which, however clear it may be to females, can scarcely
be expected to be so evident to men. I don’t
say that I have any particular penetration in such
matters. I may have; those about me should know
best about that, and perhaps do know. Upon that
point I shall express no opinion, it wouldn’t
become me to do so, it’s quite out of the question,
quite.’
Nicholas snuffed the candles, put
his hands in his pockets, and, leaning back in his
chair, assumed a look of patient suffering and melancholy
resignation.
‘I think it my duty, Nicholas,
my dear,’ resumed his mother, ’to tell
you what I know: not only because you have a right
to know it too, and to know everything that happens
in this family, but because you have it in your power
to promote and assist the thing very much; and there
is no doubt that the sooner one can come to a clear
understanding on such subjects, it is always better,
every way. There are a great many things you
might do; such as taking a walk in the garden sometimes,
or sitting upstairs in your own room for a little
while, or making believe to fall asleep occasionally,
or pretending that you recollected some business,
and going out for an hour or so, and taking Mr Smike
with you. These seem very slight things, and
I dare say you will be amused at my making them of
so much importance; at the same time, my dear, I can
assure you (and you’ll find this out, Nicholas,
for yourself one of these days, if you ever fall in
love with anybody; as I trust and hope you will, provided
she is respectable and well conducted, and of course
you’d never dream of falling in love with anybody
who was not), I say, I can assure you that a great
deal more depends upon these little things than you
would suppose possible. If your poor papa was
alive, he would tell you how much depended on the parties
being left alone. Of course, you are not to
go out of the room as if you meant it and did it on
purpose, but as if it was quite an accident, and to
come back again in the same way. If you cough
in the passage before you open the door, or whistle
carelessly, or hum a tune, or something of that sort,
to let them know you’re coming, it’s always
better; because, of course, though it’s not only
natural but perfectly correct and proper under the
circumstances, still it is very confusing if you interrupt
young people when they are—when they are
sitting on the sofa, and—and all that sort
of thing: which is very nonsensical, perhaps,
but still they will do it.’
The profound astonishment with which
her son regarded her during this long address, gradually
increasing as it approached its climax in no way discomposed
Mrs Nickleby, but rather exalted her opinion of her
own cleverness; therefore, merely stopping to remark,
with much complacency, that she had fully expected
him to be surprised, she entered on a vast quantity
of circumstantial evidence of a particularly incoherent
and perplexing kind; the upshot of which was, to establish,
beyond the possibility of doubt, that Mr Frank Cheeryble
had fallen desperately in love with Kate.
‘With whom?’ cried Nicholas.
Mrs Nickleby repeated, with Kate.
‘What! Our Kate! My sister!’
‘Lord, Nicholas!’ returned
Mrs Nickleby, ’whose Kate should it be, if not
ours; or what should I care about it, or take any interest
in it for, if it was anybody but your sister?’
‘Dear mother,’ said Nicholas, ‘surely
it can’t be!’
‘Very good, my dear,’
replied Mrs Nickleby, with great confidence.
‘Wait and see.’
Nicholas had never, until that moment,
bestowed a thought upon the remote possibility of
such an occurrence as that which was now communicated
to him; for, besides that he had been much from home
of late and closely occupied with other matters, his
own jealous fears had prompted the suspicion that
some secret interest in Madeline, akin to that which
he felt himself, occasioned those visits of Frank
Cheeryble which had recently become so frequent.
Even now, although he knew that the observation of
an anxious mother was much more likely to be correct
in such a case than his own, and although she reminded
him of many little circumstances which, taken together,
were certainly susceptible of the construction she
triumphantly put upon them, he was not quite convinced
but that they arose from mere good-natured thoughtless
gallantry, which would have dictated the same conduct
towards any other girl who was young and pleasing.
At all events, he hoped so, and therefore tried to
believe it.
‘I am very much disturbed by
what you tell me,’ said Nicholas, after a little
reflection, ‘though I yet hope you may be mistaken.’
‘I don’t understand why
you should hope so,’ said Mrs Nickleby, ’I
confess; but you may depend upon it I am not.’
‘What of Kate?’ inquired Nicholas.
‘Why that, my dear,’ returned
Mrs Nickleby, ’is just the point upon which
I am not yet satisfied. During this sickness,
she has been constantly at Madeline’s bedside—never
were two people so fond of each other as they have
grown—and to tell you the truth, Nicholas,
I have rather kept her away now and then, because I
think it’s a good plan, and urges a young man
on. He doesn’t get too sure, you know.’
She said this with such a mingling
of high delight and self-congratulation, that it
was inexpressibly painful to Nicholas to dash her
hopes; but he felt that there was only one honourable
course before him, and that he was bound to take it.
‘Dear mother,’ he said
kindly, ’don’t you see that if there were
really any serious inclination on the part of Mr Frank
towards Kate, and we suffered ourselves for a moment
to encourage it, we should be acting a most dishonourable
and ungrateful part? I ask you if you don’t
see it, but I need not say that I know you don’t,
or you would have been more strictly on your guard.
Let me explain my meaning to you. Remember
how poor we are.’
Mrs Nickleby shook her head, and said,
through her tears, that poverty was not a crime.
‘No,’ said Nicholas, ’and
for that reason poverty should engender an honest
pride, that it may not lead and tempt us to unworthy
actions, and that we may preserve the self-respect
which a hewer of wood and drawer of water may maintain,
and does better in maintaining than a monarch in preserving
his. Think what we owe to these two brothers:
remember what they have done, and what they do every
day for us with a generosity and delicacy for which
the devotion of our whole lives would be a most imperfect
and inadequate return. What kind of return would
that be which would be comprised in our permitting
their nephew, their only relative, whom they regard
as a son, and for whom it would be mere childishness
to suppose they have not formed plans suitably adapted
to the education he has had, and the fortune he will
inherit—in our permitting him to marry a
portionless girl: so closely connected with us,
that the irresistible inference must be, that he was
entrapped by a plot; that it was a deliberate scheme,
and a speculation amongst us three? Bring the
matter clearly before yourself, mother. Now,
how would you feel, if they were married, and the
brothers, coming here on one of those kind errands
which bring them here so often, you had to break out
to them the truth? Would you be at ease, and
feel that you had played an open part?’
Poor Mrs Nickleby, crying more and
more, murmured that of course Mr Frank would ask the
consent of his uncles first.
’Why, to be sure, that would
place him in a better situation with them,’
said Nicholas, ’but we should still be open to
the same suspicions; the distance between us would
still be as great; the advantages to be gained would
still be as manifest as now. We may be reckoning
without our host in all this,’ he added more
cheerfully, ’and I trust, and almost believe
we are. If it be otherwise, I have that confidence
in Kate that I know she will feel as I do—and
in you, dear mother, to be assured that after a little
consideration you will do the same.’
After many more representations and
entreaties, Nicholas obtained a promise from Mrs Nickleby
that she would try all she could to think as he did;
and that if Mr Frank persevered in his attentions she
would endeavour to discourage them, or, at the least,
would render him no countenance or assistance.
He determined to forbear mentioning the subject to
Kate until he was quite convinced that there existed
a real necessity for his doing so; and resolved to
assure himself, as well as he could by close personal
observation, of the exact position of affairs.
This was a very wise resolution, but he was prevented
from putting it in practice by a new source of anxiety
and uneasiness.
Smike became alarmingly ill; so reduced
and exhausted that he could scarcely move from room
to room without assistance; and so worn and emaciated,
that it was painful to look upon him. Nicholas
was warned, by the same medical authority to whom
he had at first appealed, that the last chance and
hope of his life depended on his being instantly removed
from London. That part of Devonshire in which
Nicholas had been himself bred was named as the most
favourable spot; but this advice was cautiously coupled
with the information, that whoever accompanied him
thither must be prepared for the worst; for every
token of rapid consumption had appeared, and he might
never return alive.
The kind brothers, who were acquainted
with the poor creature’s sad history, dispatched
old Tim to be present at this consultation. That
same morning, Nicholas was summoned by brother Charles
into his private room, and thus addressed:
’My dear sir, no time must be
lost. This lad shall not die, if such human
means as we can use can save his life; neither shall
he die alone, and in a strange place. Remove
him tomorrow morning, see that he has every comfort
that his situation requires, and don’t leave
him; don’t leave him, my dear sir, until you
know that there is no longer any immediate danger.
It would be hard, indeed, to part you now.
No, no, no! Tim shall wait upon you tonight,
sir; Tim shall wait upon you tonight with a parting
word or two. Brother Ned, my dear fellow, Mr
Nickleby waits to shake hands and say goodbye; Mr
Nickleby won’t be long gone; this poor chap will
soon get better, very soon get better; and then he’ll
find out some nice homely country-people to leave
him with, and will go backwards and forwards sometimes—backwards
and forwards you know, Ned. And there’s
no cause to be downhearted, for he’ll very soon
get better, very soon. Won’t he, won’t
he, Ned?’
What Tim Linkinwater said, or what
he brought with him that night, needs not to be told.
Next morning Nicholas and his feeble companion began
their journey.
And who but one—and that
one he who, but for those who crowded round him then,
had never met a look of kindness, or known a word of
pity—could tell what agony of mind, what
blighted thoughts, what unavailing sorrow, were involved
in that sad parting?
‘See,’ cried Nicholas
eagerly, as he looked from the coach window, ’they
are at the corner of the lane still! And now
there’s Kate, poor Kate, whom you said you couldn’t
bear to say goodbye to, waving her handkerchief.
Don’t go without one gesture of farewell to
Kate!’
‘I cannot make it!’ cried
his trembling companion, falling back in his seat
and covering his eyes. ’Do you see her
now? Is she there still?’
‘Yes, yes!’ said Nicholas
earnestly. ’There! She waves her
hand again! I have answered it for you—and
now they are out of sight. Do not give way so
bitterly, dear friend, don’t. You will
meet them all again.’
He whom he thus encouraged, raised
his withered hands and clasped them fervently together.
‘In heaven. I humbly pray to God in heaven.’
It sounded like the prayer of a broken heart.