In which one Scene of this History is closed
Dividing the distance into two days’
journey, in order that his charge might sustain the
less exhaustion and fatigue from travelling so far,
Nicholas, at the end of the second day from their leaving
home, found himself within a very few miles of the
spot where the happiest years of his life had been
passed, and which, while it filled his mind with pleasant
and peaceful thoughts, brought back many painful and
vivid recollections of the circumstances in which
he and his had wandered forth from their old home,
cast upon the rough world and the mercy of strangers.
It needed no such reflections as those
which the memory of old days, and wanderings among
scenes where our childhood has been passed, usually
awaken in the most insensible minds, to soften the
heart of Nicholas, and render him more than usually
mindful of his drooping friend. By night and
day, at all times and seasons: always watchful,
attentive, and solicitous, and never varying in the
discharge of his self-imposed duty to one so friendless
and helpless as he whose sands of life were now fast
running out and dwindling rapidly away: he was
ever at his side. He never left him. To
encourage and animate him, administer to his wants,
support and cheer him to the utmost of his power,
was now his constant and unceasing occupation.
They procured a humble lodging in
a small farmhouse, surrounded by meadows where Nicholas
had often revelled when a child with a troop of merry
schoolfellows; and here they took up their rest.
At first, Smike was strong enough
to walk about, for short distances at a time, with
no other support or aid than that which Nicholas could
afford him. At this time, nothing appeared to
interest him so much as visiting those places which
had been most familiar to his friend in bygone days.
Yielding to this fancy, and pleased to find that
its indulgence beguiled the sick boy of many tedious
hours, and never failed to afford him matter for thought
and conversation afterwards, Nicholas made such spots
the scenes of their daily rambles: driving him
from place to place in a little pony-chair, and supporting
him on his arm while they walked slowly among these
old haunts, or lingered in the sunlight to take long
parting looks of those which were most quiet and beautiful.
It was on such occasions as these,
that Nicholas, yielding almost unconsciously to the
interest of old associations, would point out some
tree that he had climbed, a hundred times, to peep
at the young birds in their nest; and the branch from
which he used to shout to little Kate, who stood below
terrified at the height he had gained, and yet urging
him higher still by the intensity of her admiration.
There was the old house too, which they would pass
every day, looking up at the tiny window through which
the sun used to stream in and wake him on the summer
mornings—they were all summer mornings
then—and climbing up the garden-wall and
looking over, Nicholas could see the very rose-bush
which had come, a present to Kate, from some little
lover, and she had planted with her own hands.
There were the hedgerows where the brother and sister
had so often gathered wild flowers together, and the
green fields and shady paths where they had so often
strayed. There was not a lane, or brook, or
copse, or cottage near, with which some childish event
was not entwined, and back it came upon the mind—as
events of childhood do—nothing in itself:
perhaps a word, a laugh, a look, some slight distress,
a passing thought or fear: and yet more strongly
and distinctly marked, and better remembered, than
the hardest trials or severest sorrows of a year ago.
One of these expeditions led them
through the churchyard where was his father’s
grave. ‘Even here,’ said Nicholas
softly, ’we used to loiter before we knew what
death was, and when we little thought whose ashes
would rest beneath; and, wondering at the silence,
sit down to rest and speak below our breath.
Once, Kate was lost, and after an hour of fruitless
search, they found her, fast asleep, under that tree
which shades my father’s grave. He was
very fond of her, and said when he took her up in
his arms, still sleeping, that whenever he died he
would wish to be buried where his dear little child
had laid her head. You see his wish was not forgotten.’
Nothing more passed at the time, but
that night, as Nicholas sat beside his bed, Smike
started from what had seemed to be a slumber, and
laying his hand in his, prayed, as the tears coursed
down his face, that he would make him one solemn promise.
‘What is that?’ said Nicholas,
kindly. ’If I can redeem it, or hope to
do so, you know I will.’
‘I am sure you will,’
was the reply. ’Promise me that when I
die, I shall be buried near—as near as
they can make my grave—to the tree we saw
today.’
Nicholas gave the promise; he had
few words to give it in, but they were solemn and
earnest. His poor friend kept his hand in his,
and turned as if to sleep. But there were stifled
sobs; and the hand was pressed more than once, or
twice, or thrice, before he sank to rest, and slowly
loosed his hold.
In a fortnight’s time, he became
too ill to move about. Once or twice, Nicholas
drove him out, propped up with pillows; but the motion
of the chaise was painful to him, and brought on fits
of fainting, which, in his weakened state, were dangerous.
There was an old couch in the house, which was his
favourite resting-place by day; and when the sun shone,
and the weather was warm, Nicholas had this wheeled
into a little orchard which was close at hand, and
his charge being well wrapped up and carried out to
it, they used to sit there sometimes for hours together.
It was on one of these occasions that
a circumstance took place, which Nicholas, at the
time, thoroughly believed to be the mere delusion
of an imagination affected by disease; but which he
had, afterwards, too good reason to know was of real
and actual occurrence.
He had brought Smike out in his arms—poor
fellow! a child might have carried him then—to
see the sunset, and, having arranged his couch, had
taken his seat beside it. He had been watching
the whole of the night before, and being greatly fatigued
both in mind and body, gradually fell asleep.
He could not have closed his eyes
five minutes, when he was awakened by a scream, and
starting up in that kind of terror which affects a
person suddenly roused, saw, to his great astonishment,
that his charge had struggled into a sitting posture,
and with eyes almost starting from their sockets,
cold dew standing on his forehead, and in a fit of
trembling which quite convulsed his frame, was calling
to him for help.
‘Good Heaven, what is this?’
said Nicholas, bending over him. ’Be calm;
you have been dreaming.’
‘No, no, no!’ cried Smike,
clinging to him. ’Hold me tight.
Don’t let me go. There, there. Behind
the tree!’
Nicholas followed his eyes, which
were directed to some distance behind the chair from
which he himself had just risen. But, there
was nothing there.
‘This is nothing but your fancy,’
he said, as he strove to compose him; ‘nothing
else, indeed.’
‘I know better. I saw
as plain as I see now,’ was the answer.
’Oh! say you’ll keep me with you.
Swear you won’t leave me for an instant!’
‘Do I ever leave you?’
returned Nicholas. ’Lie down again—there!
You see I’m here. Now, tell me; what was
it?’
‘Do you remember,’ said
Smike, in a low voice, and glancing fearfully round,
’do you remember my telling you of the man who
first took me to the school?’
‘Yes, surely.’
’I raised my eyes, just now,
towards that tree—that one with the thick
trunk—and there, with his eyes fixed on
me, he stood!’
‘Only reflect for one moment,’
said Nicholas; ’granting, for an instant, that
it’s likely he is alive and wandering about a
lonely place like this, so far removed from the public
road, do you think that at this distance of time you
could possibly know that man again?’
‘Anywhere—in any
dress,’ returned Smike; ’but, just now,
he stood leaning upon his stick and looking at me,
exactly as I told you I remembered him. He was
dusty with walking, and poorly dressed—I
think his clothes were ragged—but directly
I saw him, the wet night, his face when he left me,
the parlour I was left in, and the people that were
there, all seemed to come back together. When
he knew I saw him, he looked frightened; for he started,
and shrunk away. I have thought of him by day,
and dreamt of him by night. He looked in my
sleep, when I was quite a little child, and has looked
in my sleep ever since, as he did just now.’
Nicholas endeavoured, by every persuasion
and argument he could think of, to convince the terrified
creature that his imagination had deceived him, and
that this close resemblance between the creation of
his dreams and the man he supposed he had seen was
but a proof of it; but all in vain. When he
could persuade him to remain, for a few moments, in
the care of the people to whom the house belonged,
he instituted a strict inquiry whether any stranger
had been seen, and searched himself behind the tree,
and through the orchard, and upon the land immediately
adjoining, and in every place near, where it was possible
for a man to lie concealed; but all in vain.
Satisfied that he was right in his original conjecture,
he applied himself to calming the fears of Smike,
which, after some time, he partially succeeded in
doing, though not in removing the impression upon
his mind; for he still declared, again and again, in
the most solemn and fervid manner, that he had positively
seen what he had described, and that nothing could
ever remove his conviction of its reality.
And now, Nicholas began to see that
hope was gone, and that, upon the partner of his poverty,
and the sharer of his better fortune, the world was
closing fast. There was little pain, little
uneasiness, but there was no rallying, no effort, no
struggle for life. He was worn and wasted to
the last degree; his voice had sunk so low, that he
could scarce be heard to speak. Nature was thoroughly
exhausted, and he had lain him down to die.
On a fine, mild autumn day, when all
was tranquil and at peace: when the soft sweet
air crept in at the open window of the quiet room,
and not a sound was heard but the gentle rustling of
the leaves: Nicholas sat in his old place by
the bedside, and knew that the time was nearly come.
So very still it was, that, every now and then, he
bent down his ear to listen for the breathing of him
who lay asleep, as if to assure himself that life
was still there, and that he had not fallen into that
deep slumber from which on earth there is no waking.
While he was thus employed, the closed
eyes opened, and on the pale face there came a placid
smile.
‘That’s well!’ said
Nicholas. ‘The sleep has done you good.’
‘I have had such pleasant dreams,’
was the answer. ’Such pleasant, happy
dreams!’
‘Of what?’ said Nicholas.
The dying boy turned towards him,
and, putting his arm about his neck, made answer,
‘I shall soon be there!’
After a short silence, he spoke again.
‘I am not afraid to die,’
he said. ’I am quite contented. I
almost think that if I could rise from this bed quite
well I would not wish to do so, now. You have
so often told me we shall meet again—so
very often lately, and now I feel the truth of that
so strongly— that I can even bear to part
from you.’
The trembling voice and tearful eye,
and the closer grasp of the arm which accompanied
these latter words, showed how they filled the speaker’s
heart; nor were there wanting indications of how deeply
they had touched the heart of him to whom they were
addressed.
‘You say well,’ returned
Nicholas at length, ’and comfort me very much,
dear fellow. Let me hear you say you are happy,
if you can.’
’I must tell you something,
first. I should not have a secret from you.
You would not blame me, at a time like this, I know.’
‘I blame you!’ exclaimed Nicholas.
’I am sure you would not.
You asked me why I was so changed, and—
and sat so much alone. Shall I tell you why?’
‘Not if it pains you,’
said Nicholas. ’I only asked that I might
make you happier, if I could.’
‘I know. I felt that,
at the time.’ He drew his friend closer
to him. ’You will forgive me; I could
not help it, but though I would have died to make
her happy, it broke my heart to see—I know
he loves her dearly—Oh! who could find
that out so soon as I?’
The words which followed were feebly
and faintly uttered, and broken by long pauses; but,
from them, Nicholas learnt, for the first time, that
the dying boy, with all the ardour of a nature concentrated
on one absorbing, hopeless, secret passion, loved
his sister Kate.
He had procured a lock of her hair,
which hung at his breast, folded in one or two slight
ribbons she had worn. He prayed that, when he
was dead, Nicholas would take it off, so that no eyes
but his might see it, and that when he was laid in
his coffin and about to be placed in the earth, he
would hang it round his neck again, that it might
rest with him in the grave.
Upon his knees Nicholas gave him this
pledge, and promised again that he should rest in
the spot he had pointed out. They embraced,
and kissed each other on the cheek.
‘Now,’ he murmured, ‘I am happy.’
He fell into a light slumber, and
waking smiled as before; then, spoke of beautiful
gardens, which he said stretched out before him, and
were filled with figures of men, women, and many children,
all with light upon their faces; then, whispered that
it was Eden—and so died.