How Ralph Nickleby’s Auxiliary
went about his Work, and how he prospered with it
It was a dark, wet, gloomy night in
autumn, when in an upper room of a mean house situated
in an obscure street, or rather court, near Lambeth,
there sat, all alone, a one-eyed man grotesquely habited,
either for lack of better garments or for purposes
of disguise, in a loose greatcoat, with arms half
as long again as his own, and a capacity of breadth
and length which would have admitted of his winding
himself in it, head and all, with the utmost ease,
and without any risk of straining the old and greasy
material of which it was composed.
So attired, and in a place so far
removed from his usual haunts and occupations, and
so very poor and wretched in its character, perhaps
Mrs Squeers herself would have had some difficulty
in recognising her lord: quickened though her
natural sagacity doubtless would have been by the
affectionate yearnings and impulses of a tender wife.
But Mrs Squeers’s lord it was; and in a tolerably
disconsolate mood Mrs Squeers’s lord appeared
to be, as, helping himself from a black bottle which
stood on the table beside him, he cast round the chamber
a look, in which very slight regard for the objects
within view was plainly mingled with some regretful
and impatient recollection of distant scenes and persons.
There were, certainly, no particular
attractions, either in the room over which the glance
of Mr Squeers so discontentedly wandered, or in the
narrow street into which it might have penetrated,
if he had thought fit to approach the window.
The attic chamber in which he sat was bare and mean;
the bedstead, and such few other articles of necessary
furniture as it contained, were of the commonest description,
in a most crazy state, and of a most uninviting appearance.
The street was muddy, dirty, and deserted. Having
but one outlet, it was traversed by few but the inhabitants
at any time; and the night being one of those on which
most people are glad to be within doors, it now presented
no other signs of life than the dull glimmering of
poor candles from the dirty windows, and few sounds
but the pattering of the rain, and occasionally the
heavy closing of some creaking door.
Mr Squeers continued to look disconsolately
about him, and to listen to these noises in profound
silence, broken only by the rustling of his large
coat, as he now and then moved his arm to raise his
glass to his lips. Mr Squeers continued to do
this for some time, until the increasing gloom warned
him to snuff the candle. Seeming to be slightly
roused by this exertion, he raised his eye to the ceiling,
and fixing it upon some uncouth and fantastic figures,
traced upon it by the wet and damp which had penetrated
through the roof, broke into the following soliloquy:
’Well, this is a pretty go,
is this here! An uncommon pretty go! Here
have I been, a matter of how many weeks—hard
upon six—a follering up this here blessed
old dowager petty larcenerer,’—Mr
Squeers delivered himself of this epithet with great
difficulty and effort,—’and Dotheboys
Hall a-running itself regularly to seed the while!
That’s the worst of ever being in with a owdacious
chap like that old Nickleby. You never know
when he’s done with you, and if you’re
in for a penny, you’re in for a pound.’
This remark, perhaps, reminded Mr
Squeers that he was in for a hundred pound at any
rate. His countenance relaxed, and he raised
his glass to his mouth with an air of greater enjoyment
of its contents than he had before evinced.
‘I never see,’ soliloquised
Mr Squeers in continuation, ’I never see nor
come across such a file as that old Nickleby.
Never! He’s out of everybody’s
depth, he is. He’s what you may call a
rasper, is Nickleby. To see how sly and cunning
he grubbed on, day after day, a-worming and plodding
and tracing and turning and twining of hisself about,
till he found out where this precious Mrs Peg was
hid, and cleared the ground for me to work upon.
Creeping and crawling and gliding, like a ugly, old,
bright-eyed, stagnation-blooded adder! Ah!
He’d have made a good ’un in our line,
but it would have been too limited for him; his genius
would have busted all bonds, and coming over every
obstacle, broke down all before it, till it erected
itself into a monneyment of—Well, I’ll
think of the rest, and say it when conwenient.’
Making a halt in his reflections at
this place, Mr Squeers again put his glass to his
lips, and drawing a dirty letter from his pocket,
proceeded to con over its contents with the air of
a man who had read it very often, and now refreshed
his memory rather in the absence of better amusement
than for any specific information.
‘The pigs is well,’ said
Mr Squeers, ’the cows is well, and the boys
is bobbish. Young Sprouter has been a-winking,
has he? I’ll wink him when I get back.
“Cobbey would persist in sniffing while he was
a-eating his dinner, and said that the beef was so
strong it made him.”—Very good, Cobbey,
we’ll see if we can’t make you sniff a
little without beef. “Pitcher was took
with another fever,”—of course he
was—“and being fetched by his friends,
died the day after he got home,”—of
course he did, and out of aggravation; it’s part
of a deep-laid system. There an’t another
chap in the school but that boy as would have died
exactly at the end of the quarter: taking it
out of me to the very last, and then carrying his spite
to the utmost extremity. “The juniorest
Palmer said he wished he was in Heaven.”
I really don’t know, I do not know what’s
to be done with that young fellow; he’s always
a-wishing something horrid. He said once, he
wished he was a donkey, because then he wouldn’t
have a father as didn’t love him! Pretty
wicious that for a child of six!’
Mr Squeers was so much moved by the
contemplation of this hardened nature in one so young,
that he angrily put up the letter, and sought, in
a new train of ideas, a subject of consolation.
‘It’s a long time to have
been a-lingering in London,’ he said; ’and
this is a precious hole to come and live in, even if
it has been only for a week or so. Still, one
hundred pound is five boys, and five boys takes a
whole year to pay one hundred pounds, and there’s
their keep to be substracted, besides. There’s
nothing lost, neither, by one’s being here;
because the boys’ money comes in just the same
as if I was at home, and Mrs Squeers she keeps them
in order. There’ll be some lost time to
make up, of course. There’ll be an arrear
of flogging as’ll have to be gone through:
still, a couple of days makes that all right, and
one don’t mind a little extra work for one hundred
pound. It’s pretty nigh the time to wait
upon the old woman. From what she said last night,
I suspect that if I’m to succeed at all, I shall
succeed tonight; so I’ll have half a glass more,
to wish myself success, and put myself in spirits.
Mrs Squeers, my dear, your health!’
Leering with his one eye as if the
lady to whom he drank had been actually present, Mr
Squeers—in his enthusiasm, no doubt—poured
out a full glass, and emptied it; and as the liquor
was raw spirits, and he had applied himself to the
same bottle more than once already, it is not surprising
that he found himself, by this time, in an extremely
cheerful state, and quite enough excited for his purpose.
What this purpose was soon appeared;
for, after a few turns about the room to steady himself,
he took the bottle under his arm and the glass in
his hand, and blowing out the candle as if he purposed
being gone some time, stole out upon the staircase,
and creeping softly to a door opposite his own, tapped
gently at it.
‘But what’s the use of
tapping?’ he said, ’She’ll never
hear. I suppose she isn’t doing anything
very particular; and if she is, it don’t much
matter, that I see.’
With this brief preface, Mr Squeers
applied his hand to the latch of the door, and thrusting
his head into a garret far more deplorable than that
he had just left, and seeing that there was nobody
there but an old woman, who was bending over a wretched
fire (for although the weather was still warm, the
evening was chilly), walked in, and tapped her on
the shoulder.
‘Well, my Slider,’ said Mr Squeers, jocularly.
‘Is that you?’ inquired Peg.
’Ah! it’s me, and me’s
the first person singular, nominative case, agreeing
with the verb “it’s”, and governed
by Squeers understood, as a acorn, a hour; but when
the h is sounded, the a only is to be used, as a and,
a art, a ighway,’ replied Mr Squeers, quoting
at random from the grammar. ’At least,
if it isn’t, you don’t know any better,
and if it is, I’ve done it accidentally.’
Delivering this reply in his accustomed
tone of voice, in which of course it was inaudible
to Peg, Mr Squeers drew a stool to the fire, and placing
himself over against her, and the bottle and glass
on the floor between them, roared out again, very
loud,
‘Well, my Slider!’
‘I hear you,’ said Peg, receiving him
very graciously.
‘I’ve come according to promise,’
roared Squeers.
‘So they used to say in that
part of the country I come from,’ observed Peg,
complacently, ‘but I think oil’s better.’
‘Better than what?’ roared
Squeers, adding some rather strong language in an
undertone.
‘No,’ said Peg, ‘of course not.’
‘I never saw such a monster
as you are!’ muttered Squeers, looking as amiable
as he possibly could the while; for Peg’s eye
was upon him, and she was chuckling fearfully, as
though in delight at having made a choice repartee,
‘Do you see this? This is a bottle.’
‘I see it,’ answered Peg.
‘Well, and do you see this?’
bawled Squeers. ‘This is a glass.’
Peg saw that too.
‘See here, then,’ said
Squeers, accompanying his remarks with appropriate
action, ’I fill the glass from the bottle, and
I say “Your health, Slider,” and empty
it; then I rinse it genteelly with a little drop,
which I’m forced to throw into the fire—hallo!
we shall have the chimbley alight next—fill
it again, and hand it over to you.’
‘Your health,’ said Peg.
‘She understands that, anyways,’
muttered Squeers, watching Mrs Sliderskew as she dispatched
her portion, and choked and gasped in a most awful
manner after so doing. ’Now then, let’s
have a talk. How’s the rheumatics?’
Mrs Sliderskew, with much blinking
and chuckling, and with looks expressive of her strong
admiration of Mr Squeers, his person, manners, and
conversation, replied that the rheumatics were better.
‘What’s the reason,’
said Mr Squeers, deriving fresh facetiousness from
the bottle; ’what’s the reason of rheumatics?
What do they mean? What do people have’em
for—eh?’
Mrs Sliderskew didn’t know,
but suggested that it was possibly because they couldn’t
help it.
‘Measles, rheumatics, hooping-cough,
fevers, agers, and lumbagers,’ said Mr Squeers,
’is all philosophy together; that’s what
it is. The heavenly bodies is philosophy, and
the earthly bodies is philosophy. If there’s
a screw loose in a heavenly body, that’s philosophy;
and if there’s screw loose in a earthly body,
that’s philosophy too; or it may be that sometimes
there’s a little metaphysics in it, but that’s
not often. Philosophy’s the chap for me.
If a parent asks a question in the classical, commercial,
or mathematical line, says I, gravely, “Why,
sir, in the first place, are you a philosopher?”—“No,
Mr Squeers,” he says, “I an’t.”
“Then, sir,” says I, “I am sorry
for you, for I shan’t be able to explain it.”
Naturally, the parent goes away and wishes he was
a philosopher, and, equally naturally, thinks I’m
one.’
Saying this, and a great deal more,
with tipsy profundity and a serio-comic air, and keeping
his eye all the time on Mrs Sliderskew, who was unable
to hear one word, Mr Squeers concluded by helping
himself and passing the bottle: to which Peg did
becoming reverence.
‘That’s the time of day!’
said Mr Squeers. ’You look twenty pound
ten better than you did.’
Again Mrs Sliderskew chuckled, but
modesty forbade her assenting verbally to the compliment.
‘Twenty pound ten better,’
repeated Mr Squeers, ’than you did that day
when I first introduced myself. Don’t you
know?’
‘Ah!’ said Peg, shaking
her head, ‘but you frightened me that day.’
‘Did I?’ said Squeers;
’well, it was rather a startling thing for a
stranger to come and recommend himself by saying that
he knew all about you, and what your name was, and
why you were living so quiet here, and what you had
boned, and who you boned it from, wasn’t it?’
Peg nodded her head in strong assent.
‘But I know everything that
happens in that way, you see,’ continued Squeers.
’Nothing takes place, of that kind, that I an’t
up to entirely. I’m a sort of a lawyer,
Slider, of first-rate standing, and understanding
too; I’m the intimate friend and confidential
adwiser of pretty nigh every man, woman, and child
that gets themselves into difficulties by being too
nimble with their fingers, I’m—’
Mr Squeers’s catalogue of his
own merits and accomplishments, which was partly the
result of a concerted plan between himself and Ralph
Nickleby, and flowed, in part, from the black bottle,
was here interrupted by Mrs Sliderskew.
‘Ha, ha, ha!’ she cried,
folding her arms and wagging her head; ’and
so he wasn’t married after all, wasn’t
he. Not married after all?’
‘No,’ replied Squeers, ‘that he
wasn’t!’
‘And a young lover come and carried off the
bride, eh?’ said Peg.
‘From under his very nose,’
replied Squeers; ’and I’m told the young
chap cut up rough besides, and broke the winders, and
forced him to swaller his wedding favour which nearly
choked him.’
‘Tell me all about it again,’
cried Peg, with a malicious relish of her old master’s
defeat, which made her natural hideousness something
quite fearful; ’let’s hear it all again,
beginning at the beginning now, as if you’d
never told me. Let’s have it every word
—now—now—beginning
at the very first, you know, when he went to the house
that morning!’
Mr Squeers, plying Mrs Sliderskew
freely with the liquor, and sustaining himself under
the exertion of speaking so loud by frequent applications
to it himself, complied with this request by describing
the discomfiture of Arthur Gride, with such improvements
on the truth as happened to occur to him, and the ingenious
invention and application of which had been very instrumental
in recommending him to her notice in the beginning
of their acquaintance. Mrs Sliderskew was in
an ecstasy of delight, rolling her head about, drawing
up her skinny shoulders, and wrinkling her cadaverous
face into so many and such complicated forms of ugliness,
as awakened the unbounded astonishment and disgust
even of Mr Squeers.
‘He’s a treacherous old
goat,’ said Peg, ’and cozened me with
cunning tricks and lying promises, but never mind.
I’m even with him. I’m even with
him.’
‘More than even, Slider,’
returned Squeers; ’you’d have been even
with him if he’d got married; but with the disappointment
besides, you’re a long way ahead. Out
of sight, Slider, quite out of sight. And that
reminds me,’ he added, handing her the glass,
’if you want me to give you my opinion of them
deeds, and tell you what you’d better keep and
what you’d better burn, why, now’s your
time, Slider.’
‘There an’t no hurry for
that,’ said Peg, with several knowing looks
and winks.
‘Oh! very well!’ observed
Squeers, ’it don’t matter to me; you asked
me, you know. I shouldn’t charge you nothing,
being a friend. You’re the best judge of
course. But you’re a bold woman, Slider.’
‘How do you mean, bold?’ said Peg.
’Why, I only mean that if it
was me, I wouldn’t keep papers as might hang
me, littering about when they might be turned into
money—them as wasn’t useful made
away with, and them as was, laid by somewheres, safe;
that’s all,’ returned Squeers; ’but
everybody’s the best judge of their own affairs.
All I say is, Slider, I wouldn’t do it.’
‘Come,’ said Peg, ’then you shall
see ’em.’
’I don’t want to see ’em,’
replied Squeers, affecting to be out of humour; ’don’t
talk as if it was a treat. Show ’em to
somebody else, and take their advice.’
Mr Squeers would, very likely, have
carried on the farce of being offended a little longer,
if Mrs Sliderskew, in her anxiety to restore herself
to her former high position in his good graces, had
not become so extremely affectionate that he stood
at some risk of being smothered by her caresses.
Repressing, with as good a grace as possible, these
little familiarities—for which, there is
reason to believe, the black bottle was at least as
much to blame as any constitutional infirmity on the
part of Mrs Sliderskew—he protested that
he had only been joking: and, in proof of his
unimpaired good-humour, that he was ready to examine
the deeds at once, if, by so doing, he could afford
any satisfaction or relief of mind to his fair friend.
‘And now you’re up, my
Slider,’ bawled Squeers, as she rose to fetch
them, ‘bolt the door.’
Peg trotted to the door, and after
fumbling at the bolt, crept to the other end of the
room, and from beneath the coals which filled the
bottom of the cupboard, drew forth a small deal box.
Having placed this on the floor at Squeers’s
feet, she brought, from under the pillow of her bed,
a small key, with which she signed to that gentleman
to open it. Mr Squeers, who had eagerly followed
her every motion, lost no time in obeying this hint:
and, throwing back the lid, gazed with rapture on
the documents which lay within.
‘Now you see,’ said Peg,
kneeling down on the floor beside him, and staying
his impatient hand; ’what’s of no use we’ll
burn; what we can get any money by, we’ll keep;
and if there’s any we could get him into trouble
by, and fret and waste away his heart to shreds, those
we’ll take particular care of; for that’s
what I want to do, and what I hoped to do when I left
him.’
‘I thought,’ said Squeers,
’that you didn’t bear him any particular
good-will. But, I say, why didn’t you take
some money besides?’
‘Some what?’ asked Peg.
‘Some money,’ roared Squeers.
’I do believe the woman hears me, and wants
to make me break a wessel, so that she may have the
pleasure of nursing me. Some money, Slider,
money!’
‘Why, what a man you are to
ask!’ cried Peg, with some contempt. ’If
I had taken money from Arthur Gride, he’d have
scoured the whole earth to find me—aye,
and he’d have smelt it out, and raked it up,
somehow, if I had buried it at the bottom of the deepest
well in England. No, no! I knew better
than that. I took what I thought his secrets
were hid in: and them he couldn’t afford
to make public, let’em be worth ever so much
money. He’s an old dog; a sly, old, cunning,
thankless dog! He first starved, and then tricked
me; and if I could I’d kill him.’
‘All right, and very laudable,’
said Squeers. ’But, first and foremost,
Slider, burn the box. You should never keep things
as may lead to discovery. Always mind that.
So while you pull it to pieces (which you can easily
do, for it’s very old and rickety) and burn it
in little bits, I’ll look over the papers and
tell you what they are.’
Peg, expressing her acquiescence in
this arrangement, Mr Squeers turned the box bottom
upwards, and tumbling the contents upon the floor,
handed it to her; the destruction of the box being
an extemporary device for engaging her attention,
in case it should prove desirable to distract it from
his own proceedings.
‘There!’ said Squeers;
’you poke the pieces between the bars, and make
up a good fire, and I’ll read the while.
Let me see, let me see.’ And taking the
candle down beside him, Mr Squeers, with great eagerness
and a cunning grin overspreading his face, entered
upon his task of examination.
If the old woman had not been very
deaf, she must have heard, when she last went to the
door, the breathing of two persons close behind it:
and if those two persons had been unacquainted with
her infirmity, they must probably have chosen that
moment either for presenting themselves or taking
to flight. But, knowing with whom they had to
deal, they remained quite still, and now, not only
appeared unobserved at the door—which was
not bolted, for the bolt had no hasp—but
warily, and with noiseless footsteps, advanced into
the room.
As they stole farther and farther
in by slight and scarcely perceptible degrees, and
with such caution that they scarcely seemed to breathe,
the old hag and Squeers little dreaming of any such
invasion, and utterly unconscious of there being any
soul near but themselves, were busily occupied with
their tasks. The old woman, with her wrinkled
face close to the bars of the stove, puffing at the
dull embers which had not yet caught the wood; Squeers
stooping down to the candle, which brought out the
full ugliness of his face, as the light of the fire
did that of his companion; both intently engaged,
and wearing faces of exultation which contrasted strongly
with the anxious looks of those behind, who took advantage
of the slightest sound to cover their advance, and,
almost before they had moved an inch, and all was
silent, stopped again. This, with the large
bare room, damp walls, and flickering doubtful light,
combined to form a scene which the most careless and
indifferent spectator (could any have been present)
could scarcely have failed to derive some interest
from, and would not readily have forgotten.
Of the stealthy comers, Frank Cheeryble
was one, and Newman Noggs the other. Newman
had caught up, by the rusty nozzle, an old pair of
bellows, which were just undergoing a flourish in the
air preparatory to a descent upon the head of Mr Squeers,
when Frank, with an earnest gesture, stayed his arm,
and, taking another step in advance, came so close
behind the schoolmaster that, by leaning slightly
forward, he could plainly distinguish the writing which
he held up to his eye.
Mr Squeers, not being remarkably erudite,
appeared to be considerably puzzled by this first
prize, which was in an engrossing hand, and not very
legible except to a practised eye. Having tried
it by reading from left to right, and from right to
left, and finding it equally clear both ways, he turned
it upside down with no better success.
‘Ha, ha, ha!’ chuckled
Peg, who, on her knees before the fire, was feeding
it with fragments of the box, and grinning in most
devilish exultation. ‘What’s that
writing about, eh?’
‘Nothing particular,’
replied Squeers, tossing it towards her. ’It’s
only an old lease, as well as I can make out.
Throw it in the fire.’
Mrs Sliderskew complied, and inquired
what the next one was.
‘This,’ said Squeers,
’is a bundle of overdue acceptances and renewed
bills of six or eight young gentlemen, but they’re
all MPs, so it’s of no use to anybody.
Throw it in the fire!’ Peg did as she was
bidden, and waited for the next.
‘This,’ said Squeers,
’seems to be some deed of sale of the right of
presentation to the rectory of Purechurch, in the valley
of Cashup. Take care of that, Slider, literally
for God’s sake. It’ll fetch its
price at the Auction Mart.’
‘What’s the next?’ inquired Peg.
‘Why, this,’ said Squeers,
’seems, from the two letters that’s with
it, to be a bond from a curate down in the country,
to pay half a year’s wages of forty pound for
borrowing twenty. Take care of that, for if
he don’t pay it, his bishop will very soon be
down upon him. We know what the camel and the
needle’s eye means; no man as can’t live
upon his income, whatever it is, must expect to go
to heaven at any price. It’s very odd;
I don’t see anything like it yet.’
‘What’s the matter?’ said Peg.
‘Nothing,’ replied Squeers, ‘only
I’m looking for—’
Newman raised the bellows again.
Once more, Frank, by a rapid motion of his arm, unaccompanied
by any noise, checked him in his purpose.
‘Here you are,’ said Squeers,
’bonds—take care of them. Warrant
of attorney—take care of that. Two
cognovits—take care of them. Lease
and release—burn that. Ah! “Madeline
Bray—come of age or marry—the
said Madeline”—here, burn that!’
Eagerly throwing towards the old woman
a parchment that he caught up for the purpose, Squeers,
as she turned her head, thrust into the breast of
his large coat, the deed in which these words had caught
his eye, and burst into a shout of triumph.
‘I’ve got it!’ said
Squeers. ’I’ve got it! Hurrah!
The plan was a good one, though the chance was desperate,
and the day’s our own at last!’
Peg demanded what he laughed at, but
no answer was returned. Newman’s arm could
no longer be restrained; the bellows, descending heavily
and with unerring aim on the very centre of Mr Squeers’s
head, felled him to the floor, and stretched him on
it flat and senseless.