An old Acquaintance is recognised
under melancholy Circumstances, and Dotheboys Hall
breaks up for ever
Nicholas was one of those whose joy
is incomplete unless it is shared by the friends of
adverse and less fortunate days. Surrounded by
every fascination of love and hope, his warm heart
yearned towards plain John Browdie. He remembered
their first meeting with a smile, and their second
with a tear; saw poor Smike once again with the bundle
on his shoulder trudging patiently by his side; and
heard the honest Yorkshireman’s rough words of
encouragement as he left them on their road to London.
Madeline and he sat down, very many
times, jointly to produce a letter which should acquaint
John at full length with his altered fortunes, and
assure him of his friendship and gratitude. It
so happened, however, that the letter could never
be written. Although they applied themselves
to it with the best intentions in the world, it chanced
that they always fell to talking about something else,
and when Nicholas tried it by himself, he found it
impossible to write one-half of what he wished to
say, or to pen anything, indeed, which on reperusal
did not appear cold and unsatisfactory compared with
what he had in his mind. At last, after going
on thus from day to day, and reproaching himself more
and more, he resolved (the more readily as Madeline
strongly urged him) to make a hasty trip into Yorkshire,
and present himself before Mr and Mrs Browdie without
a word of notice.
Thus it was that between seven and
eight o’clock one evening, he and Kate found
themselves in the Saracen’s Head booking-office,
securing a place to Greta Bridge by the next morning’s
coach. They had to go westward, to procure some
little necessaries for his journey, and, as it was
a fine night, they agreed to walk there, and ride home.
The place they had just been in called
up so many recollections, and Kate had so many anecdotes
of Madeline, and Nicholas so many anecdotes of Frank,
and each was so interested in what the other said,
and both were so happy and confiding, and had so much
to talk about, that it was not until they had plunged
for a full half-hour into that labyrinth of streets
which lies between Seven Dials and Soho, without emerging
into any large thoroughfare, that Nicholas began to
think it just possible they might have lost their way.
The possibility was soon converted
into a certainty; for, on looking about, and walking
first to one end of the street and then to the other,
he could find no landmark he could recognise, and was
fain to turn back again in quest of some place at
which he could seek a direction.
It was a by-street, and there was
nobody about, or in the few wretched shops they passed.
Making towards a faint gleam of light which streamed
across the pavement from a cellar, Nicholas was about
to descend two or three steps so as to render himself
visible to those below and make his inquiry, when
he was arrested by a loud noise of scolding in a woman’s
voice.
‘Oh come away!’ said Kate,
‘they are quarrelling. You’ll be
hurt.’
’Wait one instant, Kate.
Let us hear if there’s anything the matter,’
returned her brother. ‘Hush!’
‘You nasty, idle, vicious, good-for-nothing
brute,’ cried the woman, stamping on the ground,
‘why don’t you turn the mangle?’
‘So I am, my life and soul!’
replied the man’s voice. ’I am always
turning. I am perpetually turning, like a demd
old horse in a demnition mill. My life is one
demd horrid grind!’
‘Then why don’t you go
and list for a soldier?’ retorted the woman;
‘you’re welcome to.’
‘For a soldier!’ cried
the man. ’For a soldier! Would his
joy and gladness see him in a coarse red coat with
a little tail? Would she hear of his being slapped
and beat by drummers demnebly? Would she have
him fire off real guns, and have his hair cut, and
his whiskers shaved, and his eyes turned right and
left, and his trousers pipeclayed?’
‘Dear Nicholas,’ whispered
Kate, ’you don’t know who that is.
It’s Mr Mantalini I am confident.’
‘Do make sure! Peep at
him while I ask the way,’ said Nicholas.
‘Come down a step or two. Come!’
Drawing her after him, Nicholas crept
down the steps and looked into a small boarded cellar.
There, amidst clothes-baskets and clothes, stripped
up to his shirt-sleeves, but wearing still an old patched
pair of pantaloons of superlative make, a once brilliant
waistcoat, and moustache and whiskers as of yore,
but lacking their lustrous dye—there, endeavouring
to mollify the wrath of a buxom female—not
the lawful Madame Mantalini, but the proprietress of
the concern— and grinding meanwhile as
if for very life at the mangle, whose creaking noise,
mingled with her shrill tones, appeared almost to
deafen him—there was the graceful, elegant,
fascinating, and once dashing Mantalini.
‘Oh you false traitor!’
cried the lady, threatening personal violence on Mr
Mantalini’s face.
’False! Oh dem!
Now my soul, my gentle, captivating, bewitching, and
most demnebly enslaving chick-a-biddy, be calm,’
said Mr Mantalini, humbly.
‘I won’t!’ screamed
the woman. ‘I’ll tear your eyes out!’
‘Oh! What a demd savage lamb!’ cried
Mr Mantalini.
‘You’re never to be trusted,’
screamed the woman; ’you were out all day yesterday,
and gallivanting somewhere I know. You know you
were! Isn’t it enough that I paid two pound
fourteen for you, and took you out of prison and let
you live here like a gentleman, but must you go on
like this: breaking, my heart besides?’
’I will never break its heart,
I will be a good boy, and never do so any more; I
will never be naughty again; I beg its little pardon,’
said Mr Mantalini, dropping the handle of the mangle,
and folding his palms together; ’it is all up
with its handsome friend! He has gone to the
demnition bow-wows. It will have pity?
It will not scratch and claw, but pet and comfort?
Oh, demmit!’
Very little affected, to judge from
her action, by this tender appeal, the lady was on
the point of returning some angry reply, when Nicholas,
raising his voice, asked his way to Piccadilly.
Mr Mantalini turned round, caught
sight of Kate, and, without another word, leapt at
one bound into a bed which stood behind the door,
and drew the counterpane over his face: kicking
meanwhile convulsively.
‘Demmit,’ he cried, in
a suffocating voice, ’it’s little Nickleby!
Shut the door, put out the candle, turn me up in the
bedstead! Oh, dem, dem, dem!’
The woman looked, first at Nicholas,
and then at Mr Mantalini, as if uncertain on whom
to visit this extraordinary behaviour; but Mr Mantalini
happening by ill-luck to thrust his nose from under
the bedclothes, in his anxiety to ascertain whether
the visitors were gone, she suddenly, and with a dexterity
which could only have been acquired by long practice,
flung a pretty heavy clothes-basket at him, with so
good an aim that he kicked more violently than before,
though without venturing to make any effort to disengage
his head, which was quite extinguished. Thinking
this a favourable opportunity for departing before
any of the torrent of her wrath discharged itself
upon him, Nicholas hurried Kate off, and left the
unfortunate subject of this unexpected recognition
to explain his conduct as he best could.
The next morning he began his journey.
It was now cold, winter weather: forcibly recalling
to his mind under what circumstances he had first
travelled that road, and how many vicissitudes and
changes he had since undergone. He was alone
inside the greater part of the way, and sometimes,
when he had fallen into a doze, and, rousing himself,
looked out of the window, and recognised some place
which he well remembered as having passed, either
on his journey down, or in the long walk back with
poor Smike, he could hardly believe but that all which
had since happened had been a dream, and that they
were still plodding wearily on towards London, with
the world before them.
To render these recollections the
more vivid, it came on to snow as night set in; and,
passing through Stamford and Grantham, and by the
little alehouse where he had heard the story of the
bold Baron of Grogzwig, everything looked as if he
had seen it but yesterday, and not even a flake of
the white crust on the roofs had melted away.
Encouraging the train of ideas which flocked upon him,
he could almost persuade himself that he sat again
outside the coach, with Squeers and the boys; that
he heard their voices in the air; and that he felt
again, but with a mingled sensation of pain and pleasure
now, that old sinking of the heart, and longing after
home. While he was yet yielding himself up to
these fancies he fell asleep, and, dreaming of Madeline,
forgot them.
He slept at the inn at Greta Bridge
on the night of his arrival, and, rising at a very
early hour next morning, walked to the market town,
and inquired for John Browdie’s house.
John lived in the outskirts, now he was a family man;
and as everbody knew him, Nicholas had no difficulty
in finding a boy who undertook to guide him to his
residence.
Dismissing his guide at the gate,
and in his impatience not even stopping to admire
the thriving look of cottage or garden either, Nicholas
made his way to the kitchen door, and knocked lustily
with his stick.
‘Halloa!’ cried a voice
inside. ’Wa’et be the matther noo?
Be the toon a-fire? Ding, but thou mak’st
noise eneaf!’
With these words, John Browdie opened
the door himself, and opening his eyes too to their
utmost width, cried, as he clapped his hands together,
and burst into a hearty roar:
’Ecod, it be the godfeyther,
it be the godfeyther! Tilly, here be Misther
Nickleby. Gi’ us thee hond, mun.
Coom awa’, coom awa’. In wi ‘un,
doon beside the fire; tak’ a soop o’ thot.
Dinnot say a word till thou’st droonk it a’!
Oop wi’ it, mun. Ding! but I’m
reeght glod to see thee.’
Adapting his action to his text, John
dragged Nicholas into the kitchen, forced him down
upon a huge settle beside a blazing fire, poured out
from an enormous bottle about a quarter of a pint of
spirits, thrust it into his hand, opened his mouth
and threw back his head as a sign to him to drink
it instantly, and stood with a broad grin of welcome
overspreading his great red face like a jolly giant.
‘I might ha’ knowa’d,’
said John,;’ that nobody but thou would ha’
coom wi’ sike a knock as you. Thot was
the wa’ thou knocked at schoolmeasther’s
door, eh? Ha, ha, ha! But I say; wa’at
be a’ this aboot schoolmeasther?’
‘You know it then?’ said Nicholas.
‘They were talking aboot it,
doon toon, last neeght,’ replied John, ’but
neane on ’em seemed quite to un’erstan’
it, loike.’
‘After various shiftings and
delays,’ said Nicholas, ’he has been sentenced
to be transported for seven years, for being in the
unlawful possession of a stolen will; and, after that,
he has to suffer the consequence of a conspiracy.’
‘Whew!’ cried John, ‘a
conspiracy! Soom’at in the pooder-plot
wa’? Eh? Soom’at in the Guy
Faux line?’
’No, no, no, a conspiracy connected
with his school; I’ll explain it presently.’
‘Thot’s reeght!’
said John, ’explain it arter breakfast, not noo,
for thou be’est hoongry, and so am I; and Tilly
she mun’ be at the bottom o’ a’
explanations, for she says thot’s the mutual
confidence. Ha, ha, ha! Ecod, it’s
a room start, is the mutual confidence!’
The entrance of Mrs Browdie, with
a smart cap on, and very many apologies for their
having been detected in the act of breakfasting in
the kitchen, stopped John in his discussion of this
grave subject, and hastened the breakfast: which,
being composed of vast mounds of toast, new-laid eggs,
boiled ham, Yorkshire pie, and other cold substantials
(of which heavy relays were constantly appearing from
another kitchen under the direction of a very plump
servant), was admirably adapted to the cold bleak
morning, and received the utmost justice from all
parties. At last, it came to a close; and the
fire which had been lighted in the best parlour having
by this time burnt up, they adjourned thither, to
hear what Nicholas had to tell.
Nicholas told them all, and never
was there a story which awakened so many emotions
in the breasts of two eager listeners. At one
time, honest John groaned in sympathy, and at another
roared with joy; at one time he vowed to go up to
London on purpose to get a sight of the brothers Cheeryble;
and, at another, swore that Tim Linkinwater should
receive such a ham by coach, and carriage free, as
mortal knife had never carved. When Nicholas
began to describe Madeline, he sat with his mouth
wide open, nudging Mrs Browdie from time to time,
and exclaiming under his breath that she must be ‘raa’ther
a tidy sart,’ and when he heard at last that
his young friend had come down purposely to communicate
his good fortune, and to convey to him all those assurances
of friendship which he could not state with sufficient
warmth in writing—that the only object of
his journey was to share his happiness with them, and
to tell them that when he was married they must come
up to see him, and that Madeline insisted on it as
well as he—John could hold out no longer,
but after looking indignantly at his wife, and demanding
to know what she was whimpering for, drew his coat
sleeve over his eyes and blubbered outright.
‘Tell’ee wa’at though,’
said John seriously, when a great deal had been said
on both sides, ’to return to schoolmeasther.
If this news aboot ’un has reached school today,
the old ’ooman wean’t have a whole boan
in her boddy, nor Fanny neither.’
‘Oh, John!’ cried Mrs Browdie.
‘Ah! and Oh, John agean,’
replied the Yorkshireman. ’I dinnot know
what they lads mightn’t do. When it first
got aboot that schoolmeasther was in trouble, some
feythers and moothers sent and took their young chaps
awa’. If them as is left, should know waat’s
coom tiv’un, there’ll be sike a revolution
and rebel
But I think they’ll
a’ gang daft, and spill bluid like wather!’
In fact, John Browdie’s apprehensions
were so strong that he determined to ride over to
the school without delay, and invited Nicholas to
accompany him, which, however, he declined, pleading
that his presence might perhaps aggravate the bitterness
of their adversity.
‘Thot’s true!’ said
John; ‘I should ne’er ha’ thought
o’ thot.’
‘I must return tomorrow,’
said Nicholas, ’but I mean to dine with you
today, and if Mrs Browdie can give me a bed—’
‘Bed!’ cried John, ’I
wish thou couldst sleep in fower beds at once.
Ecod, thou shouldst have ’em a’.
Bide till I coom back; on’y bide till I coom
back, and ecod we’ll make a day of it.’
Giving his wife a hearty kiss, and
Nicholas a no less hearty shake of the hand, John
mounted his horse and rode off: leaving Mrs Browdie
to apply herself to hospitable preparations, and his
young friend to stroll about the neighbourhood, and
revisit spots which were rendered familiar to him
by many a miserable association.
John cantered away, and arriving at
Dotheboys Hall, tied his horse to a gate and made
his way to the schoolroom door, which he found locked
on the inside. A tremendous noise and riot arose
from within, and, applying his eye to a convenient
crevice in the wall, he did not remain long in ignorance
of its meaning.
The news of Mr Squeers’s downfall
had reached Dotheboys; that was quite clear.
To all appearance, it had very recently become known
to the young gentlemen; for the rebellion had just
broken out.
It was one of the brimstone-and-treacle
mornings, and Mrs Squeers had entered school according
to custom with the large bowl and spoon, followed
by Miss Squeers and the amiable Wackford: who,
during his father’s absence, had taken upon him
such minor branches of the executive as kicking the
pupils with his nailed boots, pulling the hair of
some of the smaller boys, pinching the others in aggravating
places, and rendering himself, in various similar ways,
a great comfort and happiness to his mother.
Their entrance, whether by premeditation or a simultaneous
impulse, was the signal of revolt. While one
detachment rushed to the door and locked it, and another
mounted on the desks and forms, the stoutest (and
consequently the newest) boy seized the cane, and confronting
Mrs Squeers with a stern countenance, snatched off
her cap and beaver bonnet, put them on his own head,
armed himself with the wooden spoon, and bade her,
on pain of death, go down upon her knees and take
a dose directly. Before that estimable lady could
recover herself, or offer the slightest retaliation,
she was forced into a kneeling posture by a crowd
of shouting tormentors, and compelled to swallow a
spoonful of the odious mixture, rendered more than
usually savoury by the immersion in the bowl of Master
Wackford’s head, whose ducking was intrusted
to another rebel. The success of this first
achievement prompted the malicious crowd, whose faces
were clustered together in every variety of lank and
half-starved ugliness, to further acts of outrage.
The leader was insisting upon Mrs Squeers repeating
her dose, Master Squeers was undergoing another dip
in the treacle, and a violent assault had been commenced
on Miss Squeers, when John Browdie, bursting open the
door with a vigorous kick, rushed to the rescue.
The shouts, screams, groans, hoots, and clapping
of hands, suddenly ceased, and a dead silence ensued.
‘Ye be noice chaps,’ said
John, looking steadily round. ’What’s
to do here, thou yoong dogs?’
‘Squeers is in prison, and we
are going to run away!’ cried a score of shrill
voices. ‘We won’t stop, we won’t
stop!’
‘Weel then, dinnot stop,’
replied John; ’who waants thee to stop?
Roon awa’ loike men, but dinnot hurt the women.’
‘Hurrah!’ cried the shrill voices, more
shrilly still.
‘Hurrah?’ repeated John.
’Weel, hurrah loike men too. Noo then,
look out. Hip—hip,—hip—hurrah!’
‘Hurrah!’ cried the voices.
‘Hurrah! Agean;’ said John.
‘Looder still.’
The boys obeyed.
‘Anoother!’ said John.
’Dinnot be afeared on it. Let’s
have a good ‘un!’
‘Hurrah!’
‘Noo then,’ said John,
‘let’s have yan more to end wi’,
and then coot off as quick as you loike. Tak’a
good breath noo—Squeers be in jail—the
school’s brokken oop—it’s a’
ower—past and gane— think o’
thot, and let it be a hearty ‘un! Hurrah!’
Such a cheer arose as the walls of
Dotheboys Hall had never echoed before, and were destined
never to respond to again. When the sound had
died away, the school was empty; and of the busy noisy
crowd which had peopled it but five minutes before,
not one remained.
‘Very well, Mr Browdie!’
said Miss Squeers, hot and flushed from the recent
encounter, but vixenish to the last; ’you’ve
been and excited our boys to run away. Now see
if we don’t pay you out for that, sir!
If my pa is unfortunate and trod down by henemies,
we’re not going to be basely crowed and conquered
over by you and ‘Tilda.’
‘Noa!’ replied John bluntly,
‘thou bean’t. Tak’ thy oath
o’ thot. Think betther o’ us, Fanny.
I tell ’ee both, that I’m glod the auld
man has been caught out at last—dom’d
glod—but ye’ll sooffer eneaf wi’out
any crowin’ fra’ me, and I be not the mun
to crow, nor be Tilly the lass, so I tell ’ee
flat. More than thot, I tell ’ee noo,
that if thou need’st friends to help thee awa’
from this place— dinnot turn up thy nose,
Fanny, thou may’st—thou’lt foind
Tilly and I wi’ a thout o’ old times aboot
us, ready to lend thee a hond. And when I say
thot, dinnot think I be asheamed of waa’t I’ve
deane, for I say again, Hurrah! and dom the schoolmeasther.
There!’
His parting words concluded, John
Browdie strode heavily out, remounted his nag, put
him once more into a smart canter, and, carolling
lustily forth some fragments of an old song, to which
the horse’s hoofs rang a merry accompaniment,
sped back to his pretty wife and to Nicholas.
For some days afterwards, the neighbouring
country was overrun with boys, who, the report went,
had been secretly furnished by Mr and Mrs Browdie,
not only with a hearty meal of bread and meat, but
with sundry shillings and sixpences to help them on
their way. To this rumour John always returned
a stout denial, which he accompanied, however, with
a lurking grin, that rendered the suspicious doubtful,
and fully confirmed all previous believers.
There were a few timid young children,
who, miserable as they had been, and many as were
the tears they had shed in the wretched school, still
knew no other home, and had formed for it a sort of
attachment, which made them weep when the bolder spirits
fled, and cling to it as a refuge. Of these,
some were found crying under hedges and in such places,
frightened at the solitude. One had a dead bird
in a little cage; he had wandered nearly twenty miles,
and when his poor favourite died, lost courage, and
lay down beside him. Another was discovered in
a yard hard by the school, sleeping with a dog, who
bit at those who came to remove him, and licked the
sleeping child’s pale face.
They were taken back, and some other
stragglers were recovered, but by degrees they were
claimed, or lost again; and, in course of time, Dotheboys
Hall and its last breaking-up began to be forgotten
by the neighbours, or to be only spoken of as among
the things that had been.