Wherein Nicholas and his Sister forfeit
the good Opinion of all worldly and prudent People
On the next morning after Brooker’s
disclosure had been made, Nicholas returned home.
The meeting between him and those whom he had left
there was not without strong emotion on both sides;
for they had been informed by his letters of what
had occurred: and, besides that his griefs were
theirs, they mourned with him the death of one whose
forlorn and helpless state had first established a
claim upon their compassion, and whose truth of heart
and grateful earnest nature had, every day, endeared
him to them more and more.
‘I am sure,’ said Mrs
Nickleby, wiping her eyes, and sobbing bitterly, ’I
have lost the best, the most zealous, and most attentive
creature that has ever been a companion to me in my
life— putting you, my dear Nicholas, and
Kate, and your poor papa, and that well-behaved nurse
who ran away with the linen and the twelve small forks,
out of the question, of course. Of all the tractable,
equal-tempered, attached, and faithful beings that
ever lived, I believe he was the most so. To
look round upon the garden, now, that he took so much
pride in, or to go into his room and see it filled
with so many of those little contrivances for our comfort
that he was so fond of making, and made so well, and
so little thought he would leave unfinished—I
can’t bear it, I cannot really. Ah!
This is a great trial to me, a great trial.
It will be comfort to you, my dear Nicholas, to the
end of your life, to recollect how kind and good you
always were to him—so it will be to me,
to think what excellent terms we were always upon,
and how fond he always was of me, poor fellow!
It was very natural you should have been attached
to him, my dear—very—and of course
you were, and are very much cut up by this.
I am sure it’s only necessary to look at you
and see how changed you are, to see that; but nobody
knows what my feelings are—nobody can—it’s
quite impossible!’
While Mrs Nickleby, with the utmost
sincerity, gave vent to her sorrows after her own
peculiar fashion of considering herself foremost,
she was not the only one who indulged such feelings.
Kate, although well accustomed to forget herself when
others were to be considered, could not repress her
grief; Madeline was scarcely less moved than she;
and poor, hearty, honest little Miss La Creevy, who
had come upon one of her visits while Nicholas was
away, and had done nothing, since the sad news arrived,
but console and cheer them all, no sooner beheld him
coming in at the door, than she sat herself down upon
the stairs, and bursting into a flood of tears, refused
for a long time to be comforted.
‘It hurts me so,’ cried
the poor body, ’to see him come back alone.
I can’t help thinking what he must have suffered
himself. I wouldn’t mind so much if he
gave way a little more; but he bears it so manfully.’
‘Why, so I should,’ said Nicholas, ‘should
I not?’
‘Yes, yes,’ replied the
little woman, ’and bless you for a good creature!
but this does seem at first to a simple soul like me—I
know it’s wrong to say so, and I shall be sorry
for it presently— this does seem such a
poor reward for all you have done.’
‘Nay,’ said Nicholas gently,
’what better reward could I have, than the knowledge
that his last days were peaceful and happy, and the
recollection that I was his constant companion, and
was not prevented, as I might have been by a hundred
circumstances, from being beside him?’
‘To be sure,’ sobbed Miss
La Creevy; ’it’s very true, and I’m
an ungrateful, impious, wicked little fool, I know.’
With that, the good soul fell to crying
afresh, and, endeavouring to recover herself, tried
to laugh. The laugh and the cry, meeting each
other thus abruptly, had a struggle for the mastery;
the result was, that it was a drawn battle, and Miss
La Creevy went into hysterics.
Waiting until they were all tolerably
quiet and composed again, Nicholas, who stood in need
of some rest after his long journey, retired to his
own room, and throwing himself, dressed as he was,
upon the bed, fell into a sound sleep. When he
awoke, he found Kate sitting by his bedside, who,
seeing that he had opened his eyes, stooped down to
kiss him.
‘I came to tell you how glad
I am to see you home again.’
‘But I can’t tell you how glad I am to
see you, Kate.’
‘We have been wearying so for
your return,’ said Kate, ’mama and I,
and—and Madeline.’
‘You said in your last letter
that she was quite well,’ said Nicholas, rather
hastily, and colouring as he spoke. ’Has
nothing been said, since I have been away, about any
future arrangements that the brothers have in contemplation
for her?’
‘Oh, not a word,’ replied
Kate. ’I can’t think of parting from
her without sorrow; and surely, Nicholas, you
don’t wish it!’
Nicholas coloured again, and, sitting
down beside his sister on a little couch near the
window, said:
’No, Kate, no, I do not.
I might strive to disguise my real feelings from
anybody but you; but I will tell you that—briefly
and plainly, Kate—that I love her.’
Kate’s eyes brightened, and
she was going to make some reply, when Nicholas laid
his hand upon her arm, and went on:
‘Nobody must know this but you. She, last
of all.’
‘Dear Nicholas!’
’Last of all; never, though
never is a long day. Sometimes, I try to think
that the time may come when I may honestly tell her
this; but it is so far off; in such distant perspective,
so many years must elapse before it comes, and when
it does come (if ever) I shall be so unlike what I
am now, and shall have so outlived my days of youth
and romance—though not, I am sure, of love
for her—that even I feel how visionary
all such hopes must be, and try to crush them rudely
myself, and have the pain over, rather than suffer
time to wither them, and keep the disappointment in
store. No, Kate! Since I have been absent,
I have had, in that poor fellow who is gone, perpetually
before my eyes, another instance of the munificent
liberality of these noble brothers. As far as
in me lies, I will deserve it, and if I have wavered
in my bounden duty to them before, I am now determined
to discharge it rigidly, and to put further delays
and temptations beyond my reach.’
‘Before you say another word,
dear Nicholas,’ said Kate, turning pale, ’you
must hear what I have to tell you. I came on
purpose, but I had not the courage. What you
say now, gives me new heart.’ She faltered,
and burst into tears.
There was that in her manner which
prepared Nicholas for what was coming. Kate
tried to speak, but her tears prevented her.
‘Come, you foolish girl,’
said Nicholas; ’why, Kate, Kate, be a woman!
I think I know what you would tell me. It concerns
Mr Frank, does it not?’
Kate sunk her head upon his shoulder,
and sobbed out ‘Yes.’
‘And he has offered you his
hand, perhaps, since I have been away,’ said
Nicholas; ’is that it? Yes. Well,
well; it is not so difficult, you see, to tell me,
after all. He offered you his hand?’
‘Which I refused,’ said Kate.
‘Yes; and why?’
‘I told him,’ she said,
in a trembling voice, ’all that I have since
found you told mama; and while I could not conceal
from him, and cannot from you, that—that
it was a pang and a great trial, I did so firmly,
and begged him not to see me any more.’
‘That’s my own brave Kate!’
said Nicholas, pressing her to his breast. ‘I
knew you would.’
‘He tried to alter my resolution,’
said Kate, ’and declared that, be my decision
what it might, he would not only inform his uncles
of the step he had taken, but would communicate it
to you also, directly you returned. I am afraid,’
she added, her momentary composure forsaking her,
’I am afraid I may not have said, strongly enough,
how deeply I felt such disinterested love, and how
earnestly I prayed for his future happiness.
If you do talk together, I should—I should
like him to know that.’
’And did you suppose, Kate,
when you had made this sacrifice to what you knew
was right and honourable, that I should shrink from
mine?’ said Nicholas tenderly.
‘Oh no! not if your position had been the same,
but—’
‘But it is the same,’
interrupted Nicholas. ’Madeline is not
the near relation of our benefactors, but she is closely
bound to them by ties as dear; and I was first intrusted
with her history, specially because they reposed unbounded
confidence in me, and believed that I was as true
as steel. How base would it be of me to take
advantage of the circumstances which placed her here,
or of the slight service I was happily able to render
her, and to seek to engage her affections when the
result must be, if I succeeded, that the brothers
would be disappointed in their darling wish of establishing
her as their own child, and that I must seem to hope
to build my fortunes on their compassion for the young
creature whom I had so meanly and unworthily entrapped:
turning her very gratitude and warmth of heart to
my own purpose and account, and trading in her misfortunes!
I, too, whose duty, and pride, and pleasure, Kate,
it is to have other claims upon me which I will never
forget; and who have the means of a comfortable and
happy life already, and have no right to look beyond
it! I have determined to remove this weight
from my mind. I doubt whether I have not done
wrong, even now; and today I will, without reserve
or equivocation, disclose my real reasons to Mr Cherryble,
and implore him to take immediate measures for removing
this young lady to the shelter of some other roof.’
‘Today? so very soon?’
’I have thought of this for
weeks, and why should I postpone it? If the
scene through which I have just passed has taught me
to reflect, and has awakened me to a more anxious
and careful sense of duty, why should I wait until
the impression has cooled? You would not dissuade
me, Kate; now would you?’
‘You may grow rich, you know,’ said Kate.
‘I may grow rich!’ repeated
Nicholas, with a mournful smile, ’ay, and I
may grow old! But rich or poor, or old or young,
we shall ever be the same to each other, and in that
our comfort lies. What if we have but one home?
It can never be a solitary one to you and me.
What if we were to remain so true to these first impressions
as to form no others? It is but one more link
to the strong chain that binds us together.
It seems but yesterday that we were playfellows, Kate,
and it will seem but tomorrow when we are staid old
people, looking back to these cares as we look back,
now, to those of our childish days: and recollecting
with a melancholy pleasure that the time was, when
they could move us. Perhaps then, when we are
quaint old folks and talk of the times when our step
was lighter and our hair not grey, we may be even
thankful for the trials that so endeared us to each
other, and turned our lives into that current, down
which we shall have glided so peacefully and calmly.
And having caught some inkling of our story, the
young people about us— as young as you
and I are now, Kate—may come to us for sympathy,
and pour distresses which hope and inexperience could
scarcely feel enough for, into the compassionate ears
of the old bachelor brother and his maiden sister.’
Kate smiled through her tears as Nicholas
drew this picture; but they were not tears of sorrow,
although they continued to fall when he had ceased
to speak.
‘Am I not right, Kate?’
he said, after a short silence.
’Quite, quite, dear brother;
and I cannot tell you how happy I am that I have acted
as you would have had me.’
‘You don’t regret?’
‘N—n—no,’
said Kate timidly, tracing some pattern upon the ground
with her little foot. ’I don’t regret
having done what was honourable and right, of course;
but I do regret that this should have ever happened—at
least sometimes I regret it, and sometimes I —I
don’t know what I say; I am but a weak girl,
Nicholas, and it has agitated me very much.’
It is no vaunt to affirm that if Nicholas
had had ten thousand pounds at the minute, he would,
in his generous affection for the owner of the blushing
cheek and downcast eye, have bestowed its utmost farthing,
in perfect forgetfulness of himself, to secure her
happiness. But all he could do was to comfort
and console her by kind words; and words they were
of such love and kindness, and cheerful encouragement,
that poor Kate threw her arms about his neck, and
declared she would weep no more.
‘What man,’ thought Nicholas
proudly, while on his way, soon afterwards, to the
brothers’ house, ’would not be sufficiently
rewarded for any sacrifice of fortune by the possession
of such a heart as Kate’s, which, but that hearts
weigh light, and gold and silver heavy, is beyond
all praise? Frank has money, and wants no more.
Where would it buy him such a treasure as Kate?
And yet, in unequal marriages, the rich party is
always supposed to make a great sacrifice, and the
other to get a good bargain! But I am thinking
like a lover, or like an ass: which I suppose
is pretty nearly the same.’
Checking thoughts so little adapted
to the business on which he was bound, by such self-reproofs
as this and many others no less sturdy, he proceeded
on his way and presented himself before Tim Linkinwater.
‘Ah! Mr Nickleby!’
cried Tim, ’God bless you! how d’ye do?
Well? Say you’re quite well and never
better. Do now.’
‘Quite,’ said Nicholas, shaking him by
both hands.
‘Ah!’ said Tim, ’you
look tired though, now I come to look at you.
Hark! there he is, d’ye hear him? That
was Dick, the blackbird. He hasn’t been
himself since you’ve been gone. He’d
never get on without you, now; he takes as naturally
to you as he does to me.’
’Dick is a far less sagacious
fellow than I supposed him, if he thinks I am half
so well worthy of his notice as you,’ replied
Nicholas.
‘Why, I’ll tell you what,
sir,’ said Tim, standing in his favourite attitude
and pointing to the cage with the feather of his pen,
’it’s a very extraordinary thing about
that bird, that the only people he ever takes the
smallest notice of, are Mr Charles, and Mr Ned, and
you, and me.’
Here, Tim stopped and glanced anxiously
at Nicholas; then unexpectedly catching his eye repeated,
’And you and me, sir, and you and me.’
And then he glanced at Nicholas again, and, squeezing
his hand, said, ’I am a bad one at putting off
anything I am interested in. I didn’t
mean to ask you, but I should like to hear a few particulars
about that poor boy. Did he mention Cheeryble
Brothers at all?’
‘Yes,’ said Nicholas, ‘many and
many a time.’
‘That was right of him,’
returned Tim, wiping his eyes; ’that was very
right of him.’
‘And he mentioned your name
a score of times,’ said Nicholas, ’and
often bade me carry back his love to Mr Linkinwater.’
‘No, no, did he though?’
rejoined Tim, sobbing outright. ’Poor
fellow! I wish we could have had him buried in
town. There isn’t such a burying-ground
in all London as that little one on the other side
of the square—there are counting-houses
all round it, and if you go in there, on a fine day,
you can see the books and safes through the open windows.
And he sent his love to me, did he? I didn’t
expect he would have thought of me. Poor fellow,
poor fellow! His love too!’
Tim was so completely overcome by
this little mark of recollection, that he was quite
unequal to any more conversation at the moment.
Nicholas therefore slipped quietly out, and went to
brother Charles’s room.
If he had previously sustained his
firmness and fortitude, it had been by an effort which
had cost him no little pain; but the warm welcome,
the hearty manner, the homely unaffected commiseration,
of the good old man, went to his heart, and no inward
struggle could prevent his showing it.
‘Come, come, my dear sir,’
said the benevolent merchant; ’we must not be
cast down; no, no. We must learn to bear misfortune,
and we must remember that there are many sources of
consolation even in death. Every day that this
poor lad had lived, he must have been less and less
qualified for the world, and more and more unhappy
in is own deficiencies. It is better as it is,
my dear sir. Yes, yes, yes, it’s better
as it is.’
‘I have thought of all that,
sir,’ replied Nicholas, clearing his throat.
‘I feel it, I assure you.’
‘Yes, that’s well,’
replied Mr Cheeryble, who, in the midst of all his
comforting, was quite as much taken aback as honest
old Tim; ’that’s well. Where is
my brother Ned? Tim Linkinwater, sir, where
is my brother Ned?’
’Gone out with Mr Trimmers,
about getting that unfortunate man into the hospital,
and sending a nurse to his children,’ said Tim.
‘My brother Ned is a fine fellow,
a great fellow!’ exclaimed brother Charles as
he shut the door and returned to Nicholas. ’He
will be overjoyed to see you, my dear sir. We
have been speaking of you every day.’
‘To tell you the truth, sir,
I am glad to find you alone,’ said Nicholas,
with some natural hesitation; ’for I am anxious
to say something to you. Can you spare me a
very few minutes?’
‘Surely, surely,’ returned
brother Charles, looking at him with an anxious countenance.
‘Say on, my dear sir, say on.’
‘I scarcely know how, or where,
to begin,’ said Nicholas. ’If ever
one mortal had reason to be penetrated with love and
reverence for another: with such attachment as
would make the hardest service in his behalf a pleasure
and delight: with such grateful recollections
as must rouse the utmost zeal and fidelity of his nature:
those are the feelings which I should entertain for
you, and do, from my heart and soul, believe me!’
‘I do believe you,’ replied
the old gentleman, ’and I am happy in the belief.
I have never doubted it; I never shall. I am
sure I never shall.’
‘Your telling me that so kindly,’
said Nicholas, ’emboldens me to proceed.
When you first took me into your confidence, and
dispatched me on those missions to Miss Bray, I should
have told you that I had seen her long before; that
her beauty had made an impression upon me which I
could not efface; and that I had fruitlessly endeavoured
to trace her, and become acquainted with her history.
I did not tell you so, because I vainly thought I
could conquer my weaker feelings, and render every
consideration subservient to my duty to you.’
‘Mr Nickleby,’ said brother
Charles, ’you did not violate the confidence
I placed in you, or take an unworthy advantage of it.
I am sure you did not.’
‘I did not,’ said Nicholas,
firmly. ’Although I found that the necessity
for self-command and restraint became every day more
imperious, and the difficulty greater, I never, for
one instant, spoke or looked but as I would have done
had you been by. I never, for one moment, deserted
my trust, nor have I to this instant. But I
find that constant association and companionship with
this sweet girl is fatal to my peace of mind, and
may prove destructive to the resolutions I made in
the beginning, and up to this time have faithfully
kept. In short, sir, I cannot trust myself, and
I implore and beseech you to remove this young lady
from under the charge of my mother and sister without
delay. I know that to anyone but myself—to
you, who consider the immeasurable distance between
me and this young lady, who is now your ward, and the
object of your peculiar care—my loving
her, even in thought, must appear the height of rashness
and presumption. I know it is so. But who
can see her as I have seen, who can know what her
life has been, and not love her? I have no excuse
but that; and as I cannot fly from this temptation,
and cannot repress this passion, with its object constantly
before me, what can I do but pray and beseech you to
remove it, and to leave me to forget her?’
‘Mr Nickleby,’ said the
old man, after a short silence, ’you can do
no more. I was wrong to expose a young man like
you to this trial. I might have foreseen what
would happen. Thank you, sir, thank you.
Madeline shall be removed.’
’If you would grant me one favour,
dear sir, and suffer her to remember me with esteem,
by never revealing to her this confession—’
‘I will take care,’ said
Mr Cheeryble. ’And now, is this all you
have to tell me?’
‘No!’ returned Nicholas, meeting his eye,
‘it is not.’
‘I know the rest,’ said
Mr Cheeryble, apparently very much relieved by this
prompt reply. ‘When did it come to your
knowledge?’
‘When I reached home this morning.’
’You felt it your duty immediately
to come to me, and tell me what your sister no doubt
acquainted you with?’
‘I did,’ said Nicholas,
’though I could have wished to have spoken to
Mr Frank first.’
‘Frank was with me last night,’
replied the old gentleman. ’You have done
well, Mr Nickleby—very well, sir—and
I thank you again.’
Upon this head, Nicholas requested
permission to add a few words. He ventured to
hope that nothing he had said would lead to the estrangement
of Kate and Madeline, who had formed an attachment
for each other, any interruption of which would, he
knew, be attended with great pain to them, and, most
of all, with remorse and pain to him, as its unhappy
cause. When these things were all forgotten,
he hoped that Frank and he might still be warm friends,
and that no word or thought of his humble home, or
of her who was well contented to remain there and
share his quiet fortunes, would ever again disturb
the harmony between them. He recounted, as nearly
as he could, what had passed between himself and Kate
that morning: speaking of her with such warmth
of pride and affection, and dwelling so cheerfully
upon the confidence they had of overcoming any selfish
regrets and living contented and happy in each other’s
love, that few could have heard him unmoved.
More moved himself than he had been yet, he expressed
in a few hurried words—as expressive, perhaps,
as the most eloquent phrases—his devotion
to the brothers, and his hope that he might live and
die in their service.
To all this, brother Charles listened
in profound silence, and with his chair so turned
from Nicholas that his face could not be seen.
He had not spoken either, in his accustomed manner,
but with a certain stiffness and embarrassment very
foreign to it. Nicholas feared he had offended
him. He said, ’No, no, he had done quite
right,’ but that was all.
‘Frank is a heedless, foolish
fellow,’ he said, after Nicholas had paused
for some time; ’a very heedless, foolish fellow.
I will take care that this is brought to a close
without delay. Let us say no more upon the subject;
it’s a very painful one to me. Come to
me in half an hour; I have strange things to tell
you, my dear sir, and your uncle has appointed this
afternoon for your waiting upon him with me.’
‘Waiting upon him! With you, sir!’
cried Nicholas.
‘Ay, with me,’ replied
the old gentleman. ’Return to me in half
an hour, and I’ll tell you more.’
Nicholas waited upon him at the time
mentioned, and then learnt all that had taken place
on the previous day, and all that was known of the
appointment Ralph had made with the brothers; which
was for that night; and for the better understanding
of which it will be requisite to return and follow
his own footsteps from the house of the twin brothers.
Therefore, we leave Nicholas somewhat reassured by
the restored kindness of their manner towards him,
and yet sensible that it was different from what it
had been (though he scarcely knew in what respect):
so he was full of uneasiness, uncertainty, and disquiet.