I thought you spoke. Mrs
Lupin,' he continued, slowly rising 'I am not aware that I can be
of any service to you here. The gentleman is better, and you are as
good a nurse as he can have. Eh?'
This last note of interrogation bore reference to another change
of posture on the old man's part, which brought his face towards Mr
Pecksniff for the first time since he had turned away from him.
'If you desire to speak to me before I go, sir,' continued that
gentleman, after another pause, 'you may command my leisure; but I
must stipulate, in justice to myself, that you do so as to a
stranger, strictly as to a stranger.'
Now if Mr Pecksniff knew, from anything Martin Chuzzlewit had
expressed in gestures, that he wanted to speak to him, he could
only have found it out on some such principle as prevails in
melodramas, and in virtue of which the elderly farmer with the
comic son always knows what the dumb girl means when she takes
refuge in his garden, and relates her personal memoirs in
incomprehensible pantomime. But without stopping to make any
inquiry on this point, Martin Chuzzlewit signed to his young
companion to withdraw, which she immediately did, along with the
landlady leaving him and Mr Pecksniff alone together. For some time
they looked at each other in silence; or rather the old man looked
at Mr Pecksniff, and Mr Pecksniff again closing his eyes on all
outward objects, took an inward survey of his own breast. That it
amply repaid him for his trouble, and afforded a delicious and
enchanting prospect, was clear from the expression of his face.
'You wish me to speak to you as to a total stranger,' said the
old man, 'do you?'
Mr Pecksniff replied, by a shrug of his shoulders and an
apparent turning round of his eyes in their sockets before he
opened them, that he was still reduced to the necessity of
entertaining that desire.
'You shall be gratified,' said Martin. 'Sir, I am a rich man.
Not so rich as some suppose, perhaps, but yet wealthy. I am not a
miser sir, though even that charge is made against me, as I hear,
and currently believed. I have no pleasure in hoarding. I have no
pleasure in the possession of money, The devil that we call by that
name can give me nothing but unhappiness.'
It would be no description of Mr Pecksniff's gentleness of
manner to adopt the common parlance, and say that he looked at this
moment as if butter wouldn't melt in his mouth. He rather looked as
if any quantity of butter might have been made out of him, by
churning the milk of human kindness, as it spouted upwards from his
heart.
'For the same reason that I am not a hoarder of money,' said the
old man, 'I am not lavish of it. Some people find their
gratification in storing it up; and others theirs in parting with
it; but I have no gratification connected with the thing. Pain and
bitterness are the only goods it ever could procure for me. I hate
it. It is a spectre walking before me through the world, and making
every social pleasure hideous.'
A thought arose in Pecksniff's mind, which must have instantly
mounted to his face, or Martin Chuzzlewit would not have resumed as
quickly and as sternly as he did:
'You would advise me for my peace of mind, to get rid of this
source of misery, and transfer it to some one who could bear it
better. Even you, perhaps, would rid me of a burden under which I
suffer so grievously. But, kind stranger,' said the old man, whose
every feature darkened as he spoke, 'good Christian stranger, that
is a main part of my trouble. In other hands, I have known money do
good; in other hands I have known it triumphed in, and boasted of
with reason, as the master-key to all the brazen gates that close
upon the paths to worldly honour, fortune, and enjoyment. To what
man or woman; to what worthy, honest, incorruptible creature; shall
I confide such a talisman, either now or when I die? Do you know
any such person? YOUR virtues are of course inestimable, but can
you tell me of any other living creature who will bear the test of
contact with myself?'
'Of contact with yourself, sir?' echoed Mr Pecksniff.
'Aye,' returned the old man, 'the test of contact with me—with
me. You have heard of him whose misery (the gratification of his
own foolish wish) was, that he turned every thing he touched into
gold. The curse of my existence, and the realisation of my own mad
desire is that by the golden standard which I bear about me, I am
doomed to try the metal of all other men, and find it false and
hollow.'
Mr Pecksniff shook his head, and said, 'You think so.'
'Oh yes,' cried the old man, 'I think so! and in your telling me
"I think so," I recognize the true unworldly ring of YOUR metal. I
tell you, man,' he added, with increasing bitterness, 'that I have
gone, a rich man, among people of all grades and kinds; relatives,
friends, and strangers; among people in whom, when I was poor, I
had confidence, and justly, for they never once deceived me then,
or, to me, wronged each other. But I have never found one nature,
no, not one, in which, being wealthy and alone, I was not forced to
detect the latent corruption that lay hid within it waiting for
such as I to bring it forth. Treachery, deceit, and low design;
hatred of competitors, real or fancied, for my favour; meanness,
falsehood, baseness, and servility; or,' and here he looked closely
in his cousin's eyes, 'or an assumption of honest independence,
almost worse than all; these are the beauties which my wealth has
brought to light. Brother against brother, child against parent,
friends treading on the faces of friends, this is the social
company by whom my way has been attended. There are stories
told—they may be true or false—of rich men who, in the garb of
poverty, have found out virtue and rewarded it. They were dolts and
idiots for their pains. They should have made the search in their
own characters. They should have shown themselves fit objects to be
robbed and preyed upon and plotted against and adulated by any
knaves, who, but for joy, would have spat upon their coffins when
they died their dupes; and then their search would have ended as
mine has done, and they would be what I am.'
Mr Pecksniff, not at all knowing what it might be best to say in
the momentary pause which ensued upon these remarks, made an
elaborate demonstration of intending to deliver something very
oracular indeed; trusting to the certainty of the old man
interrupting him, before he should utter a word.
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