A
fine young man, a very fine young man! I would submit to you,
whether we might not remove Mr Chuzzlewit's distrust of us, and
vindicate our own disinterestedness by—'
'If Mr George Chuzzlewit has anything to say to ME,' interposed
the strong-minded woman, sternly, 'I beg him to speak out like a
man; and not to look at me and my daughters as if he could eat
us.'
'As to looking, I have heard it said, Mrs Ned,' returned Mr
George, angrily, 'that a cat is free to contemplate a monarch; and
therefore I hope I have some right, having been born a member of
this family, to look at a person who only came into it by marriage.
As to eating, I beg to say, whatever bitterness your jealousies and
disappointed expectations may suggest to you, that I am not a
cannibal, ma'am.'
'I don't know that!' cried the strong-minded woman.
'At all events, if I was a cannibal,' said Mr George Chuzzlewit,
greatly stimulated by this retort, 'I think it would occur to me
that a lady who had outlived three husbands, and suffered so very
little from their loss, must be most uncommonly tough.'
The strong-minded woman immediately rose.
'And I will further add,' said Mr George, nodding his head
violently at every second syllable; 'naming no names, and therefore
hurting nobody but those whose consciences tell them they are
alluded to, that I think it would be much more decent and becoming,
if those who hooked and crooked themselves into this family by
getting on the blind side of some of its members before marriage,
and manslaughtering them afterwards by crowing over them to that
strong pitch that they were glad to die, would refrain from acting
the part of vultures in regard to other members of this family who
are living. I think it would be full as well, if not better, if
those individuals would keep at home, contenting themselves with
what they have got (luckily for them) already; instead of hovering
about, and thrusting their fingers into, a family pie, which they
flavour much more than enough, I can tell them, when they are fifty
miles away.'
'I might have been prepared for this!' cried the strong-minded
woman, looking about her with a disdainful smile as she moved
towards the door, followed by her three daughters. 'Indeed I was
fully prepared for it from the first. What else could I expect in
such an atmosphere as this!'
'Don't direct your halfpay-officers' gaze at me, ma'am, if you
please,' interposed Miss Charity; 'for I won't bear it.'
This was a smart stab at a pension enjoyed by the strong-minded
woman, during her second widowhood and before her last coverture.
It told immensely.
'I passed from the memory of a grateful country, you very
miserable minx,' said Mrs Ned, 'when I entered this family; and I
feel now, though I did not feel then, that it served me right, and
that I lost my claim upon the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland when I so degraded myself. Now, my dears, if you're quite
ready, and have sufficiently improved yourselves by taking to heart
the genteel example of these two young ladies, I think we'll go. Mr
Pecksniff, we are very much obliged to you, really. We came to be
entertained, and you have far surpassed our utmost expectations, in
the amusement you have provided for us. Thank you. Good-bye!'
With such departing words, did this strong-minded female
paralyse the Pecksniffian energies; and so she swept out of the
room, and out of the house, attended by her daughters, who, as with
one accord, elevated their three noses in the air, and joined in a
contemptuous titter. As they passed the parlour window on the
outside, they were seen to counterfeit a perfect transport of
delight among themselves; and with this final blow and great
discouragement for those within, they vanished.
Before Mr Pecksniff or any of his remaining visitors could offer
a remark, another figure passed this window, coming, at a great
rate in the opposite direction; and immediately afterwards, Mr
Spottletoe burst into the chamber. Compared with his present state
of heat, he had gone out a man of snow or ice. His head distilled
such oil upon his whiskers, that they were rich and clogged with
unctuous drops; his face was violently inflamed, his limbs
trembled; and he gasped and strove for breath.
'My good sir!' cried Mr Pecksniff.
'Oh yes!' returned the other; 'oh yes, certainly! Oh to be sure!
Oh, of course! You hear him? You hear him? all of you!'
'What's the matter?' cried several voices.
'Oh nothing!' cried Spottletoe, still gasping. 'Nothing at all!
It's of no consequence! Ask him! HE'll tell you!'
'I do not understand our friend,' said Mr Pecksniff, looking
about him in utter amazement. 'I assure you that he is quite
unintelligible to me.'
'Unintelligible, sir!' cried the other. 'Unintelligible! Do you
mean to say, sir, that you don't know what has happened! That you
haven't decoyed us here, and laid a plot and a plan against us!
Will you venture to say that you didn't know Mr Chuzzlewit was
going, sir, and that you don't know he's gone, sir?'
'Gone!' was the general cry.
'Gone,' echoed Mr Spottletoe. 'Gone while we were sitting here.
Gone. Nobody knows where he's gone. Oh, of course not! Nobody knew
he was going. Oh, of course not! The landlady thought up to the
very last moment that they were merely going for a ride; she had no
other suspicion. Oh, of course not! She's not this fellow's
creature. Oh, of course not!'
Adding to these exclamations a kind of ironical howl, and gazing
upon the company for one brief instant afterwards, in a sudden
silence, the irritated gentleman started off again at the same
tremendous pace, and was seen no more.
It was in vain for Mr Pecksniff to assure them that this new and
opportune evasion of the family was at least as great a shock and
surprise to him as to anybody else. Of all the bullyings and
denunciations that were ever heaped on one unlucky head, none can
ever have exceeded in energy and heartiness those with which he was
complimented by each of his remaining relatives, singly, upon
bidding him farewell.
The moral position taken by Mr Tigg was something quite
tremendous; and the deaf cousin, who had the complicated
aggravation of seeing all the proceedings and hearing nothing but
the catastrophe, actually scraped her shoes upon the scraper, and
afterwards distributed impressions of them all over the top step,
in token that she shook the dust from her feet before quitting that
dissembling and perfidious mansion.
Mr Pecksniff had, in short, but one comfort, and that was the
knowledge that all these his relations and friends had hated him to
the very utmost extent before; and that he, for his part, had not
distributed among them any more love than, with his ample capital
in that respect, he could comfortably afford to part with. This
view of his affairs yielded him great consolation; and the fact
deserves to be noted, as showing with what ease a good man may be
consoled under circumstances of failure and disappointment.
CHAPTER FIVE
CONTAINING A FULL ACCOUNT OF THE INSTALLATION OF MR PECKSNIFF'S
NEW PUPIL INTO THE BOSOM OF MR PECKSNIFF'S FAMILY. WITH ALL THE
FESTIVITIES HELD ON THAT OCCASION, AND THE GREAT ENJOYMENT OF MR
PINCH
The best of architects and land surveyors kept a horse, in whom
the enemies already mentioned more than once in these pages
pretended to detect a fanciful resemblance to his master. Not in
his outward person, for he was a raw-boned, haggard horse, always
on a much shorter allowance of corn than Mr Pecksniff; but in his
moral character, wherein, said they, he was full of promise, but of
no performance. He was always in a manner, going to go, and never
going. When at his slowest rate of travelling he would sometimes
lift up his legs so high, and display such mighty action, that it
was difficult to believe he was doing less than fourteen miles an
hour; and he was for ever so perfectly satisfied with his own
speed, and so little disconcerted by opportunities of comparing
himself with the fastest trotters, that the illusion was the more
difficult of resistance. He was a kind of animal who infused into
the breasts of strangers a lively sense of hope, and possessed all
those who knew him better with a grim despair. In what respect,
having these points of character, he might be fairly likened to his
master, that good man's slanderers only can explain. But it is a
melancholy truth, and a deplorable instance of the uncharitableness
of the world, that they made the comparison.
In this horse, and the hooded vehicle, whatever its proper name
might be, to which he was usually harnessed—it was more like a gig
with a tumour than anything else—all Mr Pinch's thoughts and wishes
centred, one bright frosty morning; for with this gallant equipage
he was about to drive to Salisbury alone, there to meet with the
new pupil, and thence to bring him home in triumph.
Blessings on thy simple heart, Tom Pinch, how proudly dost thou
button up that scanty coat, called by a sad misnomer, for these
many years, a 'great' one; and how thoroughly, as with thy cheerful
voice thou pleasantly adjurest Sam the hostler 'not to let him go
yet,' dost thou believe that quadruped desires to go, and would go
if he might! Who could repress a smile—of love for thee, Tom Pinch,
and not in jest at thy expense, for thou art poor enough already,
Heaven knows—to think that such a holiday as lies before thee
should awaken that quick flow and hurry of the spirits, in which
thou settest down again, almost untasted, on the kitchen
window-sill, that great white mug (put by, by thy own hands, last
night, that breakfast might not hold thee late), and layest yonder
crust upon the seat beside thee, to be eaten on the road, when thou
art calmer in thy high rejoicing! Who, as thou drivest off, a
happy, man, and noddest with a grateful lovingness to Pecksniff in
his nightcap at his chamber-window, would not cry, 'Heaven speed
thee, Tom, and send that thou wert going off for ever to some quiet
home where thou mightst live at peace, and sorrow should not touch
thee!'
What better time for driving, riding, walking, moving through
the air by any means, than a fresh, frosty morning, when hope runs
cheerily through the veins with the brisk blood, and tingles in the
frame from head to foot! This was the glad commencement of a
bracing day in early winter, such as may put the languid summer
season (speaking of it when it can't be had) to the blush, and
shame the spring for being sometimes cold by halves.
1 comment