The Brothers Cheeryble make various
Declarations for themselves and others. Tim
Linkinwater makes a Declaration for himself
Some weeks had passed, and the first
shock of these events had subsided. Madeline
had been removed; Frank had been absent; and Nicholas
and Kate had begun to try in good earnest to stifle
their own regrets, and to live for each other and
for their mother—who, poor lady, could
in nowise be reconciled to this dull and altered state
of affairs—when there came one evening,
per favour of Mr Linkinwater, an invitation from the
brothers to dinner on the next day but one: comprehending,
not only Mrs Nickleby, Kate, and Nicholas, but little
Miss La Creevy, who was most particularly mentioned.
‘Now, my dears,’ said
Mrs Nickleby, when they had rendered becoming honour
to the bidding, and Tim had taken his departure, ’what
does this mean?’
‘What do you mean, mother?’ asked
Nicholas, smiling.
‘I say, my dear,’ rejoined
that lady, with a face of unfathomable mystery, ’what
does this invitation to dinner mean? What is
its intention and object?’
’I conclude it means, that on
such a day we are to eat and drink in their house,
and that its intent and object is to confer pleasure
upon us,’ said Nicholas.
‘And that’s all you conclude it is, my
dear?’
‘I have not yet arrived at anything deeper,
mother.’
‘Then I’ll just tell you
one thing,’ said Mrs Nickleby, you’ll find
yourself a little surprised; that’s all.
You may depend upon it that this means something
besides dinner.’
‘Tea and supper, perhaps,’ suggested Nicholas.
‘I wouldn’t be absurd,
my dear, if I were you,’ replied Mrs Nickleby,
in a lofty manner, ’because it’s not by
any means becoming, and doesn’t suit you at
all. What I mean to say is, that the Mr Cheerybles
don’t ask us to dinner with all this ceremony
for nothing. Never mind; wait and see.
You won’t believe anything I say, of course.
It’s much better to wait; a great deal better;
it’s satisfactory to all parties, and there
can be no disputing. All I say is, remember
what I say now, and when I say I said so, don’t
say I didn’t.’
With this stipulation, Mrs Nickleby,
who was troubled, night and day, with a vision of
a hot messenger tearing up to the door to announce
that Nicholas had been taken into partnership, quitted
that branch of the subject, and entered upon a new
one.
‘It’s a very extraordinary
thing,’ she said, ’a most extraordinary
thing, that they should have invited Miss La Creevy.
It quite astonishes me, upon my word it does.
Of course it’s very pleasant that she should
be invited, very pleasant, and I have no doubt that
she’ll conduct herself extremely well; she always
does. It’s very gratifying to think that
we should have been the means of introducing her into
such society, and I’m quite glad of it—quite
rejoiced—for she certainly is an exceedingly
well-behaved and good-natured little person.
I could wish that some friend would mention to her
how very badly she has her cap trimmed, and what very
preposterous bows those are, but of course that’s
impossible, and if she likes to make a fright of herself,
no doubt she has a perfect right to do so. We
never see ourselves—never do, and never
did— and I suppose we never shall.’
This moral reflection reminding her
of the necessity of being peculiarly smart on the
occasion, so as to counterbalance Miss La Creevy,
and be herself an effectual set-off and atonement,
led Mrs Nickleby into a consultation with her daughter
relative to certain ribbons, gloves, and trimmings:
which, being a complicated question, and one of paramount
importance, soon routed the previous one, and put
it to flight.
The great day arriving, the good lady
put herself under Kate’s hands an hour or so
after breakfast, and, dressing by easy stages, completed
her toilette in sufficient time to allow of her daughter’s
making hers, which was very simple, and not very long,
though so satisfactory that she had never appeared
more charming or looked more lovely. Miss La
Creevy, too, arrived with two bandboxes (whereof the
bottoms fell out as they were handed from the coach)
and something in a newspaper, which a gentleman had
sat upon, coming down, and which was obliged to be
ironed again, before it was fit for service.
At last, everybody was dressed, including Nicholas,
who had come home to fetch them, and they went away
in a coach sent by the brothers for the purpose:
Mrs Nickleby wondering very much what they would have
for dinner, and cross-examining Nicholas as to the
extent of his discoveries in the morning; whether he
had smelt anything cooking at all like turtle, and
if not, what he had smelt; and diversifying the conversation
with reminiscences of dinners to which she had gone
some twenty years ago, concerning which she particularised
not only the dishes but the guests, in whom her hearers
did not feel a very absorbing interest, as not one
of them had ever chanced to hear their names before.
The old butler received them with
profound respect and many smiles, and ushered them
into the drawing-room, where they were received by
the brothers with so much cordiality and kindness that
Mrs Nickleby was quite in a flutter, and had scarcely
presence of mind enough, even to patronise Miss La
Creevy. Kate was still more affected by the
reception: for, knowing that the brothers were
acquainted with all that had passed between her and
Frank, she felt her position a most delicate and trying
one, and was trembling on the arm of Nicholas, when
Mr Charles took her in his, and led her to another
part of the room.
‘Have you seen Madeline, my
dear,’ he said, ’since she left your house?’
‘No, sir!’ replied Kate. ‘Not
once.’
‘And not heard from her, eh? Not heard
from her?’
‘I have only had one letter,’
rejoined Kate, gently. ’I thought she
would not have forgotten me quite so soon.’
‘Ah,’ said the old man,
patting her on the head, and speaking as affectionately
as if she had been his favourite child. ’Poor
dear! what do you think of this, brother Ned?
Madeline has only written to her once, only once,
Ned, and she didn’t think she would have forgotten
her quite so soon, Ned.’
‘Oh! sad, sad; very sad!’ said Ned.
The brothers interchanged a glance,
and looking at Kate for a little time without speaking,
shook hands, and nodded as if they were congratulating
each other on something very delightful.
‘Well, well,’ said brother
Charles, ’go into that room, my dear—
that door yonder—and see if there’s
not a letter for you from her. I think there’s
one upon the table. You needn’t hurry back,
my love, if there is, for we don’t dine just
yet, and there’s plenty of time. Plenty
of time.’
Kate retired as she was directed.
Brother Charles, having followed her graceful figure
with his eyes, turned to Mrs Nickleby, and said:
’We took the liberty of naming
one hour before the real dinner-time, ma’am,
because we had a little business to speak about, which
would occupy the interval. Ned, my dear fellow,
will you mention what we agreed upon? Mr Nickleby,
sir, have the goodness to follow me.’
Without any further explanation, Mrs
Nickleby, Miss La Creevy, and brother Ned, were left
alone together, and Nicholas followed brother Charles
into his private room; where, to his great astonishment,
he encountered Frank, whom he supposed to be abroad.
‘Young men,’ said Mr Cheeryble, ‘shake
hands!’
‘I need no bidding to do that,’ said Nicholas,
extending his.
‘Nor I,’ rejoined Frank, as he clasped
it heartily.
The old gentleman thought that two
handsomer or finer young fellows could scarcely stand
side by side than those on whom he looked with so
much pleasure. Suffering his eyes to rest upon
them, for a short time in silence, he said, while
he seated himself at his desk:
’I wish to see you friends—close
and firm friends—and if I thought you otherwise,
I should hesitate in what I am about to say.
Frank, look here! Mr Nickleby, will you come
on the other side?’
The young men stepped up on either
hand of brother Charles, who produced a paper from
his desk, and unfolded it.
‘This,’ he said, ’is
a copy of the will of Madeline’s maternal grandfather,
bequeathing her the sum of twelve thousand pounds,
payable either upon her coming of age or marrying.
It would appear that this gentleman, angry with her
(his only relation) because she would not put herself
under his protection, and detach herself from the
society of her father, in compliance with his repeated
overtures, made a will leaving this property (which
was all he possessed) to a charitable institution.
He would seem to have repented this determination,
however, for three weeks afterwards, and in the same
month, he executed this. By some fraud, it was
abstracted immediately after his decease, and the other—the
only will found—was proved and administered.
Friendly negotiations, which have only just now terminated,
have been proceeding since this instrument came into
our hands, and, as there is no doubt of its authenticity,
and the witnesses have been discovered (after some
trouble), the money has been refunded. Madeline
has therefore obtained her right, and is, or will
be, when either of the contingencies which I have
mentioned has arisen, mistress of this fortune.
You understand me?’
Frank replied in the affirmative.
Nicholas, who could not trust himself to speak lest
his voice should be heard to falter, bowed his head.
‘Now, Frank,’ said the
old gentleman, ’you were the immediate means
of recovering this deed. The fortune is but a
small one; but we love Madeline; and such as it is,
we would rather see you allied to her with that, than
to any other girl we know who has three times the
money. Will you become a suitor to her for her
hand?’
’No, sir. I interested
myself in the recovery of that instrument, believing
that her hand was already pledged to one who has a
thousand times the claims upon her gratitude, and,
if I mistake not, upon her heart, that I or any other
man can ever urge. In this it seems I judged
hastily.’
‘As you always, do, sir,’
cried brother Charles, utterly forgetting his assumed
dignity, ’as you always do. How dare you
think, Frank, that we would have you marry for money,
when youth, beauty, and every amiable virtue and excellence
were to be had for love? How dared you, Frank,
go and make love to Mr Nickleby’s sister without
telling us first what you meant to do, and letting
us speak for you?’
‘I hardly dared to hope—’
’You hardly dared to hope!
Then, so much the greater reason for having our assistance!
Mr Nickleby, sir, Frank, although he judged hastily,
judged, for once, correctly. Madeline’s
heart is occupied. Give me your hand, sir;
it is occupied by you, and worthily and naturally.
This fortune is destined to be yours, but you have
a greater fortune in her, sir, than you would have
in money were it forty times told. She chooses
you, Mr Nickleby. She chooses as we, her dearest
friends, would have her choose. Frank chooses
as we would have him choose. He should
have your sister’s little hand, sir, if she
had refused it a score of times; ay, he should, and
he shall! You acted nobly, not knowing our sentiments,
but now you know them, sir, you must do as you are
bid. What! You are the children of a worthy
gentleman! The time was, sir, when my dear brother
Ned and I were two poor simple-hearted boys, wandering,
almost barefoot, to seek our fortunes: are we
changed in anything but years and worldly circumstances
since that time? No, God forbid! Oh, Ned,
Ned, Ned, what a happy day this is for you and me!
If our poor mother had only lived to see us now, Ned,
how proud it would have made her dear heart at last!’
Thus apostrophised, brother Ned, who
had entered with Mrs Nickleby, and who had been before
unobserved by the young men, darted forward, and fairly
hugged brother Charles in his arms.
‘Bring in my little Kate,’
said the latter, after a short silence. ’Bring
her in, Ned. Let me see Kate, let me kiss her.
I have a right to do so now; I was very near it when
she first came; I have often been very near it.
Ah! Did you find the letter, my bird?
Did you find Madeline herself, waiting for you and
expecting you? Did you find that she had not
quite forgotten her friend and nurse and sweet companion?
Why, this is almost the best of all!’
‘Come, come,’ said Ned,
’Frank will be jealous, and we shall have some
cutting of throats before dinner.’
’Then let him take her away,
Ned, let him take her away. Madeline’s
in the next room. Let all the lovers get out
of the way, and talk among themselves, if they’ve
anything to say. Turn ’em out, Ned, every
one!’
Brother Charles began the clearance
by leading the blushing girl to the door, and dismissing
her with a kiss. Frank was not very slow to
follow, and Nicholas had disappeared first of all.
So there only remained Mrs Nickleby and Miss La Creevy,
who were both sobbing heartily; the two brothers;
and Tim Linkinwater, who now came in to shake hands
with everybody: his round face all radiant and
beaming with smiles.
‘Well, Tim Linkinwater, sir,’
said brother Charles, who was always spokesman, ‘now
the young folks are happy, sir.’
’You didn’t keep ’em
in suspense as long as you said you would, though,’
returned Tim, archly. ’Why, Mr Nickleby
and Mr Frank were to have been in your room for I
don’t know how long; and I don’t know
what you weren’t to have told them before you
came out with the truth.’
‘Now, did you ever know such
a villain as this, Ned?’ said the old gentleman;
’did you ever know such a villain as Tim Linkinwater?
He accusing me of being impatient, and he the very
man who has been wearying us morning, noon, and night,
and torturing us for leave to go and tell ’em
what was in store, before our plans were half complete,
or we had arranged a single thing. A treacherous
dog!’
‘So he is, brother Charles,’
returned Ned; ’Tim is a treacherous dog.
Tim is not to be trusted. Tim is a wild young
fellow. He wants gravity and steadiness; he
must sow his wild oats, and then perhaps he’ll
become in time a respectable member of society.’
This being one of the standing jokes
between the old fellows and Tim, they all three laughed
very heartily, and might have laughed much longer,
but that the brothers, seeing that Mrs Nickleby was
labouring to express her feelings, and was really overwhelmed
by the happiness of the time, took her between them,
and led her from the room under pretence of having
to consult her on some most important arrangements.
Now, Tim and Miss La Creevy had met
very often, and had always been very chatty and pleasant
together—had always been great friends—
and consequently it was the most natural thing in the
world that Tim, finding that she still sobbed, should
endeavour to console her. As Miss La Creevy sat
on a large old-fashioned window-seat, where there
was ample room for two, it was also natural that Tim
should sit down beside her; and as to Tim’s
being unusually spruce and particular in his attire
that day, why it was a high festival and a great occasion,
and that was the most natural thing of all.
Tim sat down beside Miss La Creevy,
and, crossing one leg over the other so that his foot—he
had very comely feet and happened to be wearing the
neatest shoes and black silk stockings possible—should
come easily within the range of her eye, said in a
soothing way:
‘Don’t cry!’
‘I must,’ rejoined Miss La Creevy.
‘No, don’t,’ said Tim. ‘Please
don’t; pray don’t.’
‘I am so happy!’ sobbed the little woman.
‘Then laugh,’ said Tim. ‘Do
laugh.’
What in the world Tim was doing with
his arm, it is impossible to conjecture, but he knocked
his elbow against that part of the window which was
quite on the other side of Miss La Creevy; and it is
clear that it could have no business there.
‘Do laugh,’ said Tim, ‘or I’ll
cry.’
‘Why should you cry?’ asked Miss La Creevy,
smiling.
‘Because I’m happy too,’
said Tim. ’We are both happy, and I should
like to do as you do.’
Surely, there never was a man who
fidgeted as Tim must have done then; for he knocked
the window again—almost in the same place—and
Miss La Creevy said she was sure he’d break it.
‘I knew,’ said Tim, ‘that you would
be pleased with this scene.’
‘It was very thoughtful and
kind to remember me,’ returned Miss La Creevy.
‘Nothing could have delighted me half so much.’
Why on earth should Miss La Creevy
and Tim Linkinwater have said all this in a whisper?
It was no secret. And why should Tim Linkinwater
have looked so hard at Miss La Creevy, and why should
Miss La Creevy have looked so hard at the ground?
‘It’s a pleasant thing,’
said Tim, ’to people like us, who have passed
all our lives in the world alone, to see young folks
that we are fond of, brought together with so many
years of happiness before them.’
‘Ah!’ cried the little
woman with all her heart, ‘that it is!’
‘Although,’ pursued Tim
’although it makes one feel quite solitary and
cast away. Now don’t it?’
Miss La Creevy said she didn’t
know. And why should she say she didn’t
know? Because she must have known whether it
did or not.
‘It’s almost enough to
make us get married after all, isn’t it?’
said Tim.
‘Oh, nonsense!’ replied
Miss La Creevy, laughing. ‘We are too old.’
‘Not a bit,’ said Tim;
’we are too old to be single. Why shouldn’t
we both be married, instead of sitting through the
long winter evenings by our solitary firesides?
Why shouldn’t we make one fireside of it, and
marry each other?’
‘Oh, Mr Linkinwater, you’re joking!’
‘No, no, I’m not.
I’m not indeed,’ said Tim. ’I
will, if you will. Do, my dear!’
‘It would make people laugh so.’
’Let ’em laugh,’
cried Tim stoutly; ’we have good tempers I know,
and we’ll laugh too. Why, what hearty laughs
we have had since we’ve known each other!’
‘So we have,’ cried’
Miss La Creevy—giving way a little, as Tim
thought.
’It has been the happiest time
in all my life; at least, away from the counting-house
and Cheeryble Brothers,’ said Tim. ’Do,
my dear! Now say you will.’
‘No, no, we mustn’t think
of it,’ returned Miss La Creevy. ’What
would the brothers say?’
‘Why, God bless your soul!’
cried Tim, innocently, ’you don’t suppose
I should think of such a thing without their knowing
it! Why they left us here on purpose.’
’I can never look ’em
in the face again!’ exclaimed Miss La Creevy,
faintly.
‘Come,’ said Tim, ’let’s
be a comfortable couple. We shall live in the
old house here, where I have been for four-and-forty
year; we shall go to the old church, where I’ve
been, every Sunday morning, all through that time;
we shall have all my old friends about us—
Dick, the archway, the pump, the flower-pots, and Mr
Frank’s children, and Mr Nickleby’s children,
that we shall seem like grandfather and grandmother
to. Let’s be a comfortable couple, and
take care of each other! And if we should get
deaf, or lame, or blind, or bed-ridden, how glad we
shall be that we have somebody we are fond of, always
to talk to and sit with! Let’s be a comfortable
couple. Now, do, my dear!’
Five minutes after this honest and
straightforward speech, little Miss La Creevy and
Tim were talking as pleasantly as if they had been
married for a score of years, and had never once quarrelled
all the time; and five minutes after that, when Miss
La Creevy had bustled out to see if her eyes were
red and put her hair to rights, Tim moved with a stately
step towards the drawing-room, exclaiming as he went,
’There an’t such another woman in all London!
I know there an’t!’
By this time, the apoplectic butler
was nearly in fits, in consequence of the unheard-of
postponement of dinner. Nicholas, who had been
engaged in a manner in which every reader may imagine
for himself or herself, was hurrying downstairs in
obedience to his angry summons, when he encountered
a new surprise.
On his way down, he overtook, in one
of the passages, a stranger genteelly dressed in black,
who was also moving towards the dining-room.
As he was rather lame, and walked slowly, Nicholas
lingered behind, and was following him step by step,
wondering who he was, when he suddenly turned round
and caught him by both hands.
‘Newman Noggs!’ cried Nicholas joyfully
’Ah! Newman, your own Newman,
your own old faithful Newman! My dear boy, my
dear Nick, I give you joy—health, happiness,
every blessing! I can’t bear it—it’s
too much, my dear boy—it makes a child
of me!’
‘Where have you been?’
said Nicholas. ’What have you been doing?
How often have I inquired for you, and been told that
I should hear before long!’
‘I know, I know!’ returned
Newman. ’They wanted all the happiness
to come together. I’ve been helping ’em.
I—I—look at me, Nick, look
at me!’
‘You would never let me
do that,’ said Nicholas in a tone of gentle
reproach.
’I didn’t mind what I
was, then. I shouldn’t have had the heart
to put on gentleman’s clothes. They would
have reminded me of old times and made me miserable.
I am another man now, Nick. My dear boy, I
can’t speak. Don’t say anything to
me. Don’t think the worse of me for these
tears. You don’t know what I feel today;
you can’t, and never will!’
They walked in to dinner arm-in-arm,
and sat down side by side.
Never was such a dinner as that, since
the world began. There was the superannuated
bank clerk, Tim Linkinwater’s friend; and there
was the chubby old lady, Tim Linkinwater’s sister;
and there was so much attention from Tim Linkinwater’s
sister to Miss La Creevy, and there were so many jokes
from the superannuated bank clerk, and Tim Linkinwater
himself was in such tiptop spirits, and little Miss
La Creevy was in such a comical state, that of themselves
they would have composed the pleasantest party conceivable.
Then, there was Mrs Nickleby, so grand and complacent;
Madeline and Kate, so blushing and beautiful; Nicholas
and Frank, so devoted and proud; and all four so silently
and tremblingly happy; there was Newman so subdued
yet so overjoyed, and there were the twin brothers
so delighted and interchanging such looks, that the
old servant stood transfixed behind his master’s
chair, and felt his eyes grow dim as they wandered
round the table.
When the first novelty of the meeting
had worn off, and they began truly to feel how happy
they were, the conversation became more general, and
the harmony and pleasure if possible increased.
The brothers were in a perfect ecstasy; and their
insisting on saluting the ladies all round, before
they would permit them to retire, gave occasion to
the superannuated bank clerk to say so many good things,
that he quite outshone himself, and was looked upon
as a prodigy of humour.
‘Kate, my dear,’ said
Mrs Nickleby, taking her daughter aside, as soon as
they got upstairs, ’you don’t really mean
to tell me that this is actually true about Miss La
Creevy and Mr Linkinwater?’
‘Indeed it is, mama.’
‘Why, I never heard such a thing
in my life!’ exclaimed Mrs Nickleby.
‘Mr Linkinwater is a most excellent
creature,’ reasoned Kate, ’and, for his
age, quite young still.’
‘For his age, my dear!’
returned Mrs Nickleby, ’yes; nobody says anything
against him, except that I think he is the weakest
and most foolish man I ever knew. It’s
her age I speak of. That he should have
gone and offered himself to a woman who must be—ah,
half as old again as I am—and that she
should have dared to accept him! It don’t
signify, Kate; I’m disgusted with her!’
Shaking her head very emphatically
indeed, Mrs Nickleby swept away; and all the evening,
in the midst of the merriment and enjoyment that ensued,
and in which with that exception she freely participated,
conducted herself towards Miss La Creevy in a stately
and distant manner, designed to mark her sense of the
impropriety of her conduct, and to signify her extreme
and cutting disapprobation of the misdemeanour she
had so flagrantly committed.