Bless you for doing right, sir. Bless
you for hating me. And good night!'
So saying, Mr Pecksniff waved his right hand with much
solemnity, and once more inserting it in his waistcoat, departed.
There was emotion in his manner, but his step was firm. Subject to
human weaknesses, he was upheld by conscience.
Martin lay for some time, with an expression on his face of
silent wonder, not unmixed with rage; at length he muttered in a
whisper:
'What does this mean? Can the false-hearted boy have chosen such
a tool as yonder fellow who has just gone out? Why not! He has
conspired against me, like the rest, and they are but birds of one
feather. A new plot; a new plot! Oh self, self, self! At every turn
nothing but self!'
He fell to trifling, as he ceased to speak, with the ashes of
the burnt paper in the candlestick. He did so, at first, in pure
abstraction, but they presently became the subject of his
thoughts.
'Another will made and destroyed,' he said, 'nothing determined
on, nothing done, and I might have died to-night! I plainly see to
what foul uses all this money will be put at last,' he cried,
almost writhing in the bed; 'after filling me with cares and
miseries all my life, it will perpetuate discord and bad passions
when I am dead. So it always is. What lawsuits grow out of the
graves of rich men, every day; sowing perjury, hatred, and lies
among near kindred, where there should be nothing but love! Heaven
help us, we have much to answer for! Oh self, self, self! Every man
for himself, and no creature for me!'
Universal self! Was there nothing of its shadow in these
reflections, and in the history of Martin Chuzzlewit, on his own
showing?
CHAPTER FOUR
FROM WHICH IT WILL APPEAR THAT IF UNION BE STRENGTH, AND FAMILY
AFFECTION BE PLEASANT TO CONTEMPLATE, THE CHUZZLEWITS WERE THE
STRONGEST AND MOST AGREEABLE FAMILY IN THE WORLD
That worthy man Mr Pecksniff having taken leave of his cousin in
the solemn terms recited in the last chapter, withdrew to his own
home, and remained there three whole days; not so much as going out
for a walk beyond the boundaries of his own garden, lest he should
be hastily summoned to the bedside of his penitent and remorseful
relative, whom, in his ample benevolence, he had made up his mind
to forgive unconditionally, and to love on any terms. But such was
the obstinacy and such the bitter nature of that stern old man,
that no repentant summons came; and the fourth day found Mr
Pecksniff apparently much farther from his Christian object than
the first.
During the whole of this interval, he haunted the Dragon at all
times and seasons in the day and night, and, returning good for
evil evinced the deepest solicitude in the progress of the obdurate
invalid, in so much that Mrs Lupin was fairly melted by his
disinterested anxiety (for he often particularly required her to
take notice that he would do the same by any stranger or pauper in
the like condition), and shed many tears of admiration and
delight.
Meantime, old Martin Chuzzlewit remained shut up in his own
chamber, and saw no person but his young companion, saving the
hostess of the Blue Dragon, who was, at certain times, admitted to
his presence. So surely as she came into the room, however, Martin
feigned to fall asleep. It was only when he and the young lady were
alone, that he would utter a word, even in answer to the simplest
inquiry; though Mr Pecksniff could make out, by hard listening at
the door, that they two being left together, he was talkative
enough.
It happened on the fourth evening, that Mr Pecksniff walking, as
usual, into the bar of the Dragon and finding no Mrs Lupin there,
went straight upstairs; purposing, in the fervour of his
affectionate zeal, to apply his ear once more to the keyhole, and
quiet his mind by assuring himself that the hard-hearted patient
was going on well. It happened that Mr Pecksniff, coming softly
upon the dark passage into which a spiral ray of light usually
darted through the same keyhole, was astonished to find no such ray
visible; and it happened that Mr Pecksniff, when he had felt his
way to the chamber-door, stooping hurriedly down to ascertain by
personal inspection whether the jealousy of the old man had caused
this keyhole to be stopped on the inside, brought his head into
such violent contact with another head that he could not help
uttering in an audible voice the monosyllable 'Oh!' which was, as
it were, sharply unscrewed and jerked out of him by very anguish.
It happened then, and lastly, that Mr Pecksniff found himself
immediately collared by something which smelt like several damp
umbrellas, a barrel of beer, a cask of warm brandy-and-water, and a
small parlour-full of stale tobacco smoke, mixed; and was
straightway led downstairs into the bar from which he had lately
come, where he found himself standing opposite to, and in the grasp
of, a perfectly strange gentleman of still stranger appearance who,
with his disengaged hand, rubbed his own head very hard, and looked
at him, Pecksniff, with an evil countenance.
The gentleman was of that order of appearance which is currently
termed shabby-genteel, though in respect of his dress he can hardly
be said to have been in any extremities, as his fingers were a long
way out of his gloves, and the soles of his feet were at an
inconvenient distance from the upper leather of his boots. His
nether garments were of a bluish grey—violent in its colours once,
but sobered now by age and dinginess—and were so stretched and
strained in a tough conflict between his braces and his straps,
that they appeared every moment in danger of flying asunder at the
knees. His coat, in colour blue and of a military cut, was buttoned
and frogged up to his chin. His cravat was, in hue and pattern,
like one of those mantles which hairdressers are accustomed to wrap
about their clients, during the progress of the professional
mysteries. His hat had arrived at such a pass that it would have
been hard to determine whether it was originally white or black.
But he wore a moustache—a shaggy moustache too; nothing in the meek
and merciful way, but quite in the fierce and scornful style; the
regular Satanic sort of thing—and he wore, besides, a vast quantity
of unbrushed hair. He was very dirty and very jaunty; very bold and
very mean; very swaggering and very slinking; very much like a man
who might have been something better, and unspeakably like a man
who deserved to be something worse.
'You were eaves-dropping at that door, you vagabond!' said this
gentleman.
Mr Pecksniff cast him off, as Saint George might have repudiated
the Dragon in that animal's last moments, and said:
'Where is Mrs Lupin, I wonder! can the good woman possibly be
aware that there is a person here who—'
'Stay!' said the gentleman. 'Wait a bit. She DOES know. What
then?'
'What then, sir?' cried Mr Pecksniff. 'What then? Do you know,
sir, that I am the friend and relative of that sick gentleman? That
I am his protector, his guardian, his—'
'Not his niece's husband,' interposed the stranger, 'I'll be
sworn; for he was there before you.'
'What do you mean?' said Mr Pecksniff, with indignant surprise.
'What do you tell me, sir?'
'Wait a bit!' cried the other, 'Perhaps you are a cousin—the
cousin who lives in this place?'
'I AM the cousin who lives in this place,' replied the man of
worth.
'Your name is Pecksniff?' said the gentleman.
'It is.'
'I am proud to know you, and I ask your pardon,' said the
gentleman, touching his hat, and subsequently diving behind his
cravat for a shirt-collar, which however he did not succeed in
bringing to the surface. 'You behold in me, sir, one who has also
an interest in that gentleman upstairs. Wait a bit.'
As he said this, he touched the tip of his high nose, by way of
intimation that he would let Mr Pecksniff into a secret presently;
and pulling off his hat, began to search inside the crown among a
mass of crumpled documents and small pieces of what may be called
the bark of broken cigars; whence he presently selected the cover
of an old letter, begrimed with dirt and redolent of tobacco.
'Read that,' he cried, giving it to Mr Pecksniff.
'This is addressed to Chevy Slyme, Esquire,' said that
gentleman.
'You know Chevy Slyme, Esquire, I believe?' returned the
stranger.
Mr Pecksniff shrugged his shoulders as though he would say 'I
know there is such a person, and I am sorry for it.'
'Very good,' remarked the gentleman. 'That is my interest and
business here.' With that he made another dive for his shirt-collar
and brought up a string.
'Now, this is very distressing, my friend,' said Mr Pecksniff,
shaking his head and smiling composedly. 'It is very distressing to
me, to be compelled to say that you are not the person you claim to
be. I know Mr Slyme, my friend; this will not do; honesty is the
best policy you had better not; you had indeed.'
'Stop' cried the gentleman, stretching forth his right arm,
which was so tightly wedged into his threadbare sleeve that it
looked like a cloth sausage. 'Wait a bit!'
He paused to establish himself immediately in front of the fire
with his back towards it. Then gathering the skirts of his coat
under his left arm, and smoothing his moustache with his right
thumb and forefinger, he resumed:
'I understand your mistake, and I am not offended. Why? Because
it's complimentary. You suppose I would set myself up for Chevy
Slyme.
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